Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, February 24, 1893, Image 6

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    af
Deworalic
Bellefonte,
"DISCIPLINE.
-—
a—p—
My life is full of scented fruits,
My garden blooms with stocks and cloves ;
You o'er the wall my fancy shoots,
And hankers after harsher loves.
Ah! why—my foolish heart repines—
Was | not housed within a waste ?
These velvet flowers and sirup wines
Are sweet, but are not to my taste.
A howling moor. a wattl ed hut.
A piercing smoke of sodden peat,
The savor of a russet nut,
Would make my weary pulses beat.
Oh, stupid brain that Llindly swerves!
Oh, heart that strives not, nor endures!
Since flov ers are hardships to your nerves,
Thank heaven a garden lot is yours!
— Edmund Gosses
———————
Raids Upon the Forests.
Dr. William Eve: ett Would Stay the Woodman's
Axe—He Makes an Eloquent Plea at the
Hingham Fair for the Preservation of the
American Forests— The Destruction of Profit
and Beauty Should be Checked at Once.
—
I have no advice w give about beets
or turnips, Ayshires or Devonshires, clod
crushers or pulpers. The most antiqua-
ted metayer in Lombardy, the laziest
cracker on the sandhills of Georgia,
could tell me all about farming in half
an hour. But I want, if I can, to inter-
est my friends here in one transcend-
ently important product of American
goil, which it concerns every one ot us
to plant, to watch, to foster, and yet
which is rapidly, going to ruin on ac-
count of our wilful criminal neglect—1I
mean our forests.
These are days when we are hearing a
great deal about protection. Every
class in the community, if there are such
things as classes in our community, i3
calling for it. Capitalists want protec-
tion; laborers want protection ; child-
ren and animals are the pets of organiz-
ed societies for their protection ; our
very buildings are taken in charge by
benevolent and disinterested insurance
companies ; but no one rises to protect
our trees, models of all that is beautiful,
all that is venerable, all that is useful,
agninst the wanton, senseless, shortsight-
ed, wicked enmity of ‘the pretended
friends of improvement.
There are some men in the world who
seem to think that after tha Lord plant
ed a garden in Eden, he set man within
it, not to till and to keep it, but to cut
the trees down. No sooner are they
aware of a hillside, clothed with sighing
pines ; a meadow dotted with umbra-
geous ehestnuts, an ancient highway.
SHELTERED WITH GOTHIC ELMS,
4 winding stream fed and gunrded by
ghady willows, than down comes the
axe on their roots.
“The hand of Douglas is his own,”
and nothing shall stay it. Mr. Glad-
stone cut down trees, and why should
not we? So the work of desolation pro-
ceeds, till the northwest wind has full
power to sweep down intc the unshelter
ed valleys, till the cattle, sweltering be-
neath the unchecked heat, find the
springs drying up by whose sides they
usd to rest, till the rivershrinks between
iis banks of flyhaunted mud and hears
dews and reins that once fed it sweeping
over its channel on the pitiless blast,
with no boughs to draw down their fos-
tering drops; till the blazing, dusty
road, trimmed by the commissioner's
shears into leafless, perky primness, sees
along its well weeded sides 20 shingle
palaces, with full freedom to look into
each other’s privacy, misnamed fora
queen whom their builders mispro-
pounce, and crowded into the ground
where 10 comfortable houres might have
nestled, each under the sacred protec-
tion of its own beautiful trees,
That this desolation of our fieids, our
roads and our streams is stupid and
tasteless, that improvers and road ecom-
missioners utterly misunderstand their
own business when ‘they fix things up
real nice,” is perhaps more comic than
serious,
But what shall we say of the whole-
sale, ruinous raid upon our forests which
goes on unchecked over thousands of
miles,
DESTROYING PROFIT AND BEAUTY
like an avalanche? Our fathers
began 1t when they cleared the
fslands in Boston harbor of their
wood, the wood on which ther
very existence depended, and began that
process of decay which has entailed an
expense of millions oa the nation in try-
ing to save the harbor from being all
gilted up by the washing of the islands;
from which the natural safeguards have
beer. swept away.
Winthrop and Dudley, had, at least
the excuse that there was no other fuel
and timber within reach. But what ex-
cuse shall be found for the senseless, the
criminal performances of the present
day that proposes to strip Mt. Willard
and Mt. Webster of that forest growth
which allures thousands of wearied cit-
izens every year to gazs upon their
sylvan beauties—and threatens to dry up
the Saco in its crystal springs. Better
for New Hampshire, even on the score
of the pocket, never tosell another cord
of lumber, than to offer to her swarm of
summer visitors the notches shaved as
Sasa as Ethan Crawford’s chin on Sun-
ay.
‘What excuse can be offered for ‘the
reed of the railroads that buy up mil-
ions ot acres in the Adirondacks, and
gend the homes ot the squirrel and the
songster puffing and blazing through the
chimneys of a locomotive; for the mad
waste of Michigan and Maine, where
the golden eggs are eaten up by the
very geese that lav them ; for the brutal
warfare waged against the transcendent
sequoias of California, or that red wood
sufters worse than red men ?
Turn it which way you will. talk of cli-
mate, talk of beauty, talk of mercantile
profit, this war on our forests, all cutting
and no planting, 18 stupid and wicked.
‘We boast of American civilization, we
boast of the natural resources of our
country and the enterprise that deve-
lops them.
We claim to be far ahead of Europe
in the arts that concern
THE GLORY OF A NATION.
Yet we arefar behind some of the
least progres:ive of the Kuropean na-
tions in the noble art of forestry, the art
which watches the woodlands like sheep
or cattle, almost like children —thinning
out, planting, preserving, fencing,—-
using, under reasonable restriction, the
natural increase for every one of the
million uses to which luxury or necessi
ty can turn the tree, yet preserving the
patriarchs of the forest, their sturdy
children, their sapling grandchildren
and descendants, so that without crowd-
ing, without gaps, without untimely
decay, without premature and self-ob-
structive growth, a noble country may
point with pride on hileside aud on
plain, by rivers and in parks to its mag-
nificent and primeval woodlands, fresh
and green asin the days when the
heathen hung his trophies upon their
sacred bolas: stern and somber pinesend-
ing its growth far into heaven, as if eager
to escape from the frivolous earth ; the
slender grace of the waving birch fear-
lessly covering the bleak plain where
its stronger brethern would pine and diz,
like a tender woman visiting the haunts
of poverty that no man dare penetrate ;
the generous beech and chestnut, feed-
ing hundreds of contented citizens who
root among their trunks for their lus.
cious meat ; the rough untutored ash,
thrusting out its uncompromising inde-
pendant growth with a sturdy attrac-
{ion that vies with its more graceful
sisters ; the elm and the oak, insepara.
bly blended and c ntrasted symbols of
strength and beauty ; each and all of
these and a thousand more offering to
the tired wayfarer a velvet carpet for his
weary feet, a verdant shelter for his ex-
hausted brain though the rays of the
once oppressive sun filtered into gentle
radiance
IN DROPS OF LIQUID GOLD;
the air vocal with the melody of count-
less songsters, the ground singing with
the course of unseen brooklets, and the
whole sacred scene lifting the heart of
him who has abandoned the bustle and
fever of city life into unspoken hymn of
praise, as he realizes to the full that
sublime truth of our own forest poet:
The groves were God’s first temples.
And there are men who like to sweep
all this away, in their atrdcious trampling
alike of prudence, of poetry, of pa-
triotism, under the ass’ hoot of instant
profit.
I call upon every sound economist,
every lover of beauty, every wise pa-
triot, whether in public or private, to
arise and defend the nymphs of the for-
est against their heartless invaders. At
this very moment England and Norway
are watching almost with exultation
the waste of our woodlands and eagerly
planting the very trees that are likely to
find the best market here when we have
carried out out clearing up a little far-
ther.
Surely I need not press this advice in
the town of Hingham, the home of the
great Governor who did not fail to find
a place in his message to the common-
wealth for sober, tender and practical
words on the duty of torest preservation.
Every now and then you will see the
boast of some lumber lord of Maine or
Michigan of the millions of logs that
constitute his boom on the rivers. It is
very poor glory ; poor indeed in com-
parison with that of the Duke of Athol,
who successfully planted the bare hills
of Perthshire with 400,000 larches.—
Boston Herald:
Love and Envy.
Ifa man isso desutute of resources
that he can only hope to get his ‘bread
by deserving it, he merits hanging. A
man ean only become honored in the
community by being dishonest; for
men love not qualities, but the appur-
tenances of power, writes Walter Black-
burn Harte in the New England Maga-
zine. If itis Love one seeks, there is at
least one sure way to secure it--become
a feeder ofswine. The Prodigal Son
had just found a sphere in which he
could be loved, when he became a prey
to the common desire to be popular—a
totally different thing. 1tis not at all
remarkable. although tew people are
conscious of the tacts but we never envy
the deserving ; we may under the stress
of certain emotions admire them, but
we envy only the undeserving. We
seldom envy men’s qualities, anyway,
simply their conditions.
Dangers oF THE SkasoN.— The
sudden changes in weather in the latter
part of winter and early spring are a
source of colds and coughs. This season
isa particularly dangerous one for per-
sons with weak lungs or of delicate con-
stitution. A slight cold 1s likely to be-
come a serious one and the cough that
follows is the one great cause of the
many deaths from consumption in the
early spring. Never neglect a cold or
cough. keep a reliable remedy on hand
and check the first cough, that may lead
to consumption. Assuch a remedy the
medicine called Kemp’s Balsam is
strongly recommended. For every form
of throat and lung’ disorder, including
the la grippe cough, croup and consump-
tion in first stages, it probably has no
equal anywhere. Get a bottle to-day.
Uncle Si—There’s one of them
signs reading : ‘Look Out for Pick:
pockets.”
Aunt Farby—Well, what of it?
Uncle Si—I'm going to hang around
here till I see one of them critters, if I
miss the train.
—Priscilla’s Mother — Priscilla,
vou seem to have dropped your paint
ing, your singing and your piano prac:
tice. ;
——Priscilla—Yes, mamma. What's
the use of it all, now that I’m engaged.”
——Dr, Mary Walker claims that
when Wyoming was a Territory and
women acted as jurors, not a guilty
criminal escaped. It is no use in try-
ing toibribe a woman who has a pub:
lic daty: to perform.
ET CASSIE,
—— 61 don’t like our doctor,” said
Willie. “I went and caught a cold
bad enough to keep me home from
gchool for two weeks, and the mean
old doctcrcured me in less'n two days.”
——————— ST ———
— —“Good-by, dear,” he whispered.
“May I kiss you?”
“Yes,—yes,” she answered, “Dou’t
waste 80 much time in talking.”
——1In the beginning God eaid
Let there be light,” and Edison, moved,
to amend by making it a monopoly.
——
\ half of stock will be taken).
Mrs. Davis Approves.
Richmond Will be the Burial Flace of the Entire
Family.
Ricamoxp, Va., Feb. 17.—Mayor
Ellison has returned from New York,
where he went to see Mrs. Jeflerson
Davis relative to the removal of the
remains of Mr. Davis to Richmond
for reinterment on May 30.
Mra. Davis expressed the desire that
everything pertaining to the removal
be left with the Jefferson Davis Mem
orial Association, of which Mayor El
lison is president.
The rémains are now in the vault of
the Army of Northern Virginia, in
Metairie Cemetery, New Orleans.
GUARANTEED CURE. We author-
ize ovr advertised druggist to sell Dr.
King’s New Discovery tor Consumption
Coughs and Culds, upsn this condition,
If you are afilicted with a Cough, Cold
or any Lung, Throat or Chest trouble,
and will use this remedy as directed,
giving it a fair trial, and experience no
benefit, you may return the bottle and
have your money refunded. We could
not make this offer did we not know
that Dr. King’s New Discovery could
be relied on. It never disappoints. Trial
bottle’s free at Parrish's Drug Store.
Large size 50c’ and $1 00.
——Won't it be music in the galler-
jes to hear the speaker say : “The gen-
tleman from Hawaii and the gentle
man from Gilbert Islands will please
take their seats.”
Making A WorLp Wipe RepUTA-
TION,--Chamberlain Medicine Co., of
Des Moines, is an Towa manufacturing
institution and one in which the resi-
dents of the state look upon with pride.
Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy has be-
come national in reputation and is
known in nearly every household in the
state and throughout the great west. Its
merits are becoming established in all
parts of America. Forsaleby Frank P.
Green.
A movement is on foot by the
chamber of commerce, Denver, Col., to
remove the national capital to that city
20 years hence, preparations to begun
within 10 years.
——To Prevent the Grip or any oth-
er similar epidemic, the blood and the
whole system should be kept in healthy
condition. Ifyou feel worn out or bave
“that tired feeling’’ in the morning, do
not be guilty of neglect. Give imme-
diate attention to yourself. Take Hood’s
Sarsaparilla to give strength, purify the
blood and prevent disease. Hood's Pills
cure liver ills, jaundice, biliousness, sick
headache, constipation-
——A “Stevenson escort club” has
been organized ‘at. Bloomington. Ill,
and will accompany the vice president-
elect to Washington on the occasion of
the inauguration.
People troubled with sick and
nervous headaches will find a most effi-
cacious remedy in Ayer’s Carthartic
Pills. They strengthen the stomach,
stimulate the liver, restore healthy ac-
tion to the digestive organs, and thus
afford speedy and permanent relief,
TAPES,
For the first time a Jackson
has become a member of the United
States supreme court. The new justice
is a distant connection of President
Jackson's tamily.
——1 have been troubled with chron-
ic catarrh for years. Ely’s Cream Balm
is theonly remedy among the many
that I have used that affords me relief.
-—E. H. Willard, Druggist, Joliet, Ill.
—— What's the matter, Freddie ?”
«Bafe of my eyes is leaking, mamma,
and one of my noses don’t go.” —Judy.
RRC
——Some of the new designs in men’s
neck wear make the rainbow appear de-
cidedly dull by comparison.
mr
‘Tourists.
Look Out For Cold Weather,
But ride inside of the Electric Lighted and
Steam Heated Vestibule Apartment trains of
the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway
and you will be as warm, comfortable and
cheerful as in your own library or boudoir
To travel between Chicago, Omaha and Sioux
city, in these luxuriously appointed trains, is
a supreme satisfaction ; and, as the somewhat
ancient sdvertisement used to read, “for furth
er particulars, see small bills.” Small biils
(and large ones, too) will be accepted for pas-
sage and sleeping car tickets. For detailed
information address John R. Pott, District
Passenger Agent, Williamsport. Pa.
Wanted.
Flouring Mills at Reynolds. N. D. ($2,000
bonus); and Maynard, Minn. (Free site and
Jewelry Stores at Buxton and Neche, N. D.
Banks at Ashby, Minn, and Williston
N. D. \
Hotels at Wahpeton and Grafton, N. D
(Stock will be taken); Crystal, N. D. and
Waverly, Minn. (Bonus offered or stock
taken).
General Stores, Creameries, Harness Shops,
Drug Stores, Shoe Shops, Lumber Yards, Tai
or Shops, Hardware Stores, Banks,[Carpenter
Shops, Saw: Mill, Soap Factories, Blacksmith
Shops, Meat Markets, Bakeries, Barber Shops,
Wagon Shops, Furniture Factories, Machine
Shops, &e. needed and solicited by citizens in
new and growing towns in Minnesota, the
Dakotas and Montana. Free sites water pow
er for factories at various places, No charges
whatever for information which may (lead to
the securing of locations by interested par-
ties.
Farmers and stock-raisers wanted to occupy’
the best and cheapest vacant farming and
grazing lands in America. Instances are com-
mon every year inthe Red River Valley and
other localities where land costing $10. an acre
produces $20. to $30. worth of grain. Fines
sheep, cattleand horse country in America
Millions of acres of Government Land still to
be homesteaded convenient to the railway.
Information and publications sent free by |
F. I. Whitney, St. Paul, Minn. 3632.
Tourists,
Are You Going West.
Of Chicago? To points in Illinoise, Iowa
Missouri, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Northern
Michigan, South or North Dakota, Celorada
California, Oregon or Washington. To any
point West, North-West or South-West.
Send for a new map of the Chicagn, Milwau-
kee & St. Paul Railway system which is geo.
graphically correct. It, with an appendix giv-
ing va'uable information will be mailed free.
Call on or address: John R. Post, District Pas-
senger Agent, Williamsport, Pa.
Sixty Million Bushel of Wheat—A Bush-
el for Every Inhabitant of the United
States. The Kausas Crop of ’92.
Never in the histo y of Kansas has that
state had such bountiful crops as this year.
The farmers cannot get enough hands to har-
| vest the crop. and the Santa Fe Railroad has
made special rates from kansas City and oth-
er Missouri River towns, to induce harvest
hands to go into the state. The wheat crop of
the state will be sixty to sixty-five million
bushels and the quality is high. The grass
crop is made, and is a very large one; the
early potatoes, rye, barley and oat crops are
made, and all large. The weather has been
propitious for corn, and it is the cleanest, best
looking corn to be found in the country to-
day. Cheap rates will be made from Chicago,
St Louis and all points on the Santa Fe east
of the Missour1 River, to all Kansas point, on
August 30 and September 27, and these excur-
sions will give a chance for eastern farmers to
see what the great Sunflower State can do. A
good map of Kansas will be mailed free upox
application to Jno. J Byrne, 723 Monadnock
Block, chicago, Ill, together with reliable
statistics and information about Kansas lands.
38 4 3m .
Abraham Lincoln:
When leaving his home at Springfield, Ill,
to beinaugurated President of the United
States, made a farewell address to his old
friends and neighbors, in which he said
“neighbors give your boys a chance.”
The words come with as much force to-day
as they did thirty years ago.
How give them this chance?
Up in the northwest is a great empire wait-
ing for young and sturdy fellows to come and
develope it and “grow up with the country.”
all over this broad land are the young fellows,
the boys that Lincoln referred to, seeking to
better their condition and get on in life.
Here is the chance!
The country referred to lies along the
Northern Pacific R. R. Here you can find
pretty much anything you want. In Minneso-
ta, and in the Red River Valley of North Dako-
ta, the finest of prairie lands fitted for wheat
and grain, or as well for diversified farming.
N Western North Dakota, and Montana, are
stock ranges limitless in extent, clothed with
the most nutritious of grasses.
If fruit farming region is wanted there is
the whole state « f Washington to select from
As for scenic delights the Northern Pacific
Railroad passes through a country unparallel-
ed. In crossing the Rocky, Bitter Root and
Cascade mountains, the greatest mountain
scenery to be seen in the United States from
car windows is found. The wonderful Bad
Lands, wonderful in graceful form and glow-
ing color, are a poem. Lake Pend d'Orielle
and Ceeur d'Alene, are alone worthy of a trans-
continental trip, while they are the fisher-
man’s Ultima Thule. The ride along Clark’s
Fork of the Columbia River is a daylight
dream. To cap the climax this is the only
way ‘o reach the far famed Yellowstone Park.
To reach and see all this the Northern Pa-
cific Railroad furnish trains and service of
unsurpassed excellence. The most approved
and comfortaly » Palace Sleeping cars: the
best ining earsthat #0 be made; Pullman
Tourist cars go A for goth first and second
class passengers; easy riding Day coaches,
with Bangs. Express, and Postal cars all
drawn by powerful Baldwin Locomotives
makes a train fit for Toyaly itself,
Those seeking tor new homes should take
this train and go and spy out the land ahead.
To be brepars write to CHAS. 8. FEE, G.
P. & T. A. St. Paul, Minn.
New Advertisements.
New Advertisements.
Railway Guide.
JE C. MILLER
PRACTICAL ACCOUNTANT.
REAL ESTATE AND COLLECTION
AGENCY.
Rentsor Sells property of all kinds. Does a
general collection business, opens or closes
books for firms or indi iduals.
Special attention given to collection rents
and business accounts.
If you have any real estate for sale or rent o1
wish to rent or buy property, call and see me
al room 13, Criders Exchange, Allegheny
street, Bellefonte, Pa. 37-13-1y
UST ARRIVED.
A complete line of Ladies
Union Suits
FROM 50 CENTS UP
A beautiful assortment of
trimming furs, Childrens
coats from $1.25 up.
LADIES WOOL HOSE
at 18 cents, better ones for
more money,
ALWAYS PLENTY OF BARGAINS AT
CASH BAZAAR,
No. 9, Spring Street,
ellefonte, Pa.
37 43 1y
ENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD
AND BRANCHES.
Dee. 18th, 1892.
VIA TYRONE—WESTWARD.
Leave Belleionte, 5.35 a. m.. arrive at Tyrone
6.52 a. m., at Alterna, 7.40 a. m., at Pitts-
burg, 12.10 p. m.
Leave Rellefonie, 10.28 a. m., arrive at Tyrone
11.558 rr at Al‘oona, 1.45 p. m., at Pitts
Lop Bk os
sve Bellefonte, 5.15 p. m., arrive at Tyrone
6.33, at Altoona at 125, af Pittsburg at 11.20
VIA TYRONE—EASTWARD.
Leave Bellefonte, 5.35 a.m. arrive at Tyrone
Co # Jleiburg 10.30 a. m., at Philadel-
p. m.
i Beilerooce 108 a. my arrive at Tyrone
55 a. m., at Harrisburg, 3. a
Philadelphia, 6.50 . m. £: 339 Puit,8
Yeare Lisle Sonis gals p.- m., arrive at Tyron
6.33 at Harrisburg at 10.20 p. m. ,
delphia, 4.25 a. n.. bem, ab Dilla
VIA LOCK HAVEN—NORTHWARD.
Leave Bellefonte, 9.32 a. m., arrive at Lock
Haven, 10.37 a. m.
Leave Bellefonte, 4.30 p. m., arrive at Lock Ha
ven, 6.25 p. m., at Renovo, 9. p. m.
Leave Bellefonte at 8.45 p. m, arrive at Lock
Haven at 9.50 p. m.
VIA LOCK HAVEN—EASTWARD.
Leave Bellefonte, 9.32 a. m., arrive at Loek Ha-
ven, 10.37, leave Williamsport, 12.30 p. m:
at Harris urg, 3.30 p. m., at Philadelphia at
.50 p. m.
Leave Bellefonte, 4.30 A m.: arrive at Loek Ha-
ven, 5.25. p. m.; Williamsport, 6.45 p. m.,
Harrisburg, 10.056 p. m.
Leave Bellefonte, 8.45 p. m., arrive at Lock Ha
ven, 10.10 p.m., leave Williamsport, 12.26
a. m., leave Harrisburg,3.45 a. m., arrive at
Philadelphia at 6.50 a. m.
VIA LEWISBURG.
Leave Bellefonte at 6.20 a. m., arrive at Lewis
burg at 9.00 a. m., Harrisburg, 11.40-a. m.
Philadelphia, 3.00 p. m.
Leave Bellefonte, 2.15 p. m., arrive at Lewis-
burg, 1.47, at Harrisburg, 7.05 p. m., Phila.
delphia at 10.55 p. m.
BALD EAGLE VALLEY.
Te SUN.
During 1893 The Sun will be of surpassing
excellence and will print more rews and more
pure literature than ever before in its history.
THE SUNDAY SUN
is the greatest Sunday Newspaper in the
world.
Price 5 cents a copy
...By mail, $2 a yea
Daily, by mail, ..... y ;
+. $6 a year
Daily and Sunday, by Maly, rescibreaneried $3 a yeal
Address THE SUN,
38 2-8m New York.
Insurance.
J C. WEAVER, GENERAL INSURANCE
Agent, Bellefonte, Pa. Policies written
in Standard Cash Compgnies at lowest rates.
Indemnity against Fire, Lightning, Torna
does, Cyclone, and wind storm. Office between
Reynolds’ Bank and Garman’s Hotel.
3412 1y
GE L. POTTER & CO.,
GENERAL INSURANCE AGENTS,
Represent the best companies, and write poli:
cies in Mutual and Stock Companies at reason
able rates. Office in Furst’s building, opp. the
Court House. 22 5
Druggist.
DP: JAS. A. THOMPSON & CO.
[APOTHECARIES,
ALLEGHENY ST., BELLEFONTE, PA.
~——DEALERS IN——
PURE { DRUGS, { MEDICINES
TOILET { ARTICLES
and every thing kept in a first class'Drug
Store
8714 6m
WESTWARD. EASTWARD.
5 5 |B
E THE Dec.19, | » |3%
: B B 1892. £2 § bs
P.M.|'A. M1. | A.M, JATE, Lv.iA Mm !'pa|p ou
6 33| 11 55| 6 52|...Tyrone....] 8 10{3 10] 726
6 27| 11 48) 6 45|.E.Tyrone.| 8 17|3 17} 7 83
6 23| 11 43] 6 42|.ceees Bilson 8 2013 20| 736
6 19| 11 38] 6 38/Bald Eagle] 8 25/3 24| 7 89
6'13( 11 32] ‘6 32!...... Dix......; 8 30/3 30| 7 45
6 10 11 29| 6 80|... Fowler... 8 323 83| 7 48
6 0x| 11 26| 6 28|..Hannah...| 8 36/3 37| 7 62
6 01] 11 17| 6 21{Pt. Matilda.| 8 43(3 44| 7 59 |
5 54| 11 09; 6 13{...Martha....| 8 51(3 52| 8 (7
5 45! 11 00| 6 05|....Julian..... 859/401 816
5 3h| 10 51| 5 65/.Unionville.] 9 10|4 10] 8 25
5 28] 10 43] 5 48]..8.S. Int...| 9 18/4 17| 8 32
5 25| 10 38) 5 4b| .Milesburg | 9 22|4 20| 8 35
5 15) 10 28| 5 35|.Bellefonte.| 9 32{4 30| 8 46
5 05) 10 18] 5 25|.Milesburg.| 9 47{4 40| 9 00
4 57) 10 c9| 5 18|....Curtin....| 9 56/4 46] 9 OT
4 50| 10 02| 5 14|..Mt. Eagle..| 10 02{4 50| 9 15
4 44) 9 54| 5 07|...Howard...| 10 09/4 57{ 9 22
435] 945 4 59|.Eagleville.| 10 17/5 05 9 30
4 33| 9 42{ 4 56/Bch. Creek.| 10 20(5 08 9 33
4 21| 9 31] 4 46/.Mill Hall...| 10 31|5 19| 9 44
418 9 29| 4 43|Flemin’ton.| 10 34|5 22| 9 47
4 15] 9 25| 4 40|Lck. Haven| 10 37|5 25| 9 50
P.M.[A. M.|A M. A. M. [A.M.|P. NM.
TYRONE & CLEARFIELD.
NORTHWARD. SOUTHWARD,
BB " BE |B
CHR] = Dec. 19, Ho
§ HE B 1892. E B ® F
n|p um |A Mm |Ly. Ar. a. Mm. | A. Mm. (P.M
30, 3 15| 8 20(..Tyrone....| 6 46] 11 45/6 12
37! 3 22| 8 25|.E. Tyrone. 6 39| 11 38/6 (5
430 3.26] 8 “1... Vail...... 6 34| 11 34/6 00
£5] 8 36] 8 41|.Vanscoyoc.| 6 26| 11 25(5 52
00{ 3 40| 8 45|.Gardners..| 6 24 11 21|6 50
07] 3 49| 8 :!5Mt.Pleasant| 6 16] 11 12(5 43
15 3 56| 9 05|..Summit...| 6 09] 11 05/6 33
19| 3 59 9 10{Sand.Ridge| 6 05| 10 58/5 27
21] 401] 9 12]... Retort..... 6 03| 10 545 25
24 4 02| 9 15/..Powelton 6 01] 10 52|5 23
30, 4 08! 9 24|...Osceola,..| 5 52| 10 40(5 11
41| 4 15/ 2 33|.. Boynton. 5 45) 10 33/5 (3
45| 418] 9 37(..Stniners...| 5 43| 10 30(4 58
47 422[ 939 Philipshi'g 5 41] 10 27/4 65
51 4 26] 9 43|..Graham...| 5 37| 10 21/4 49
57) 4 32| 9 49|.Blue Ball..| 5 33| 10 174 44
03] 4 39| 9 55/Wallaceton.| 5 28] 10 10/4 39
10| 4 47| 10 02|.,..Bigler..... 5 22| 10 024 30
17] 4 52| 10 (7.Woodland. 517 9 54(123
24| 4 58| 10 13|...Barrett. 512) 9 471415
28! 5 02] 10 17|..Leonard...{ 5 09| 9 43{4 12
35 5 08] 10 21|.Clearfield..| 5 04] 9 36/4 07
40, 5 11| 10 28{..Riverview.| 5 00|' ‘9 B2(2 2
47| 5 16{ 10 33Sus. Bridge| 4 54| 9 243 56
55 5 25( 10 38/Curwensv’e| 4 50{ 9 20(2 50
M.|P. M. | AJM. A.M. | A. MPM.
BELLEFONTE & SNOW SHOE BRANCH. |
Time Table in effect on and after
Dec. 19, 1892.
Leave Snow Shoe, except Sunday.
a. m
. Mm.
Leave Bellefonte, except Sunday x m.
p.m
LEWISBURG & TYRONE RAILROAD.
Schedule in effect December 18th, 1842.
Lee CONSTIPATION.
Ayer's Pills,
For Dyspepsia
Ayer’s Pills,
For Biliousness
Ayer's Pills,
For Sick Headache
Ayer's Pills,
For Liver Complaint
Ayer’s Pills,
For Jaundice
Ayers Pills,
For Loss of Appetite
Ayer’s Pills,
For Rheumatism
Ayer’s Pil's,
For Colds
Ayer's Pills,
For Fevers
Ayer's Pills,
Prepared by Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass.
Sold by all Druggists,
37-20 EVERY DOSE EFFECTIVE
Miscellaneous Adv'Ss,
HE PENN [RON ROOFING &
CORRUGATING CO., Limited.
SHEET IRON & STEEL MANUFACTURERS
in all its branches for BUILDING PURPOSE.
INTERIOR & EXTERIOR. Circulars and
prices upon application. G. M. RHULE, Ag't.
36 10 tf. ~~ Philipsburg, Ps
HE WILLER MANUFACTUR-
ING CO.
Sole Manufaé¢turers of
THE WILLER SLIDING BLINDS,
THE WILLER FOLDING BLINDS,
REGULAR INSIDE FOLDING BLINDS,
WILLER SLIDING WINDOW SCREENS.
And custom made SCREEN DOORS for
fine residences.
STAIR WORK in all its branches ready to
ut up in any part of the country, Write
or catalogue. GEO. M.RHULE, Ag't
3610 tf. Philipsburg, Pa.
ANTED.—Wide-awake workers
everywhere for Suepp's Puoro-
araApHS of the World ;” the greatest. book on
earth ; costing $100,000 ; retail at $3,25, cash
or installments ; mammoth illustrated eircu-
lars and terms fred; daily output over 1500
volumes,
SHEPP'S PHOTOGRAPHS
OF THE WORLD
Agents wild with success. Mr. Thos. 1. Mar-
tin, Centreville, Texas, cleared §7.1i. days.
Miss Rose Adams, Wooster, ., $23 in 40 min-
utes ; Rev. J. Howard Madison, Lyons, N.Y,
$101 in 8 hours ; a bonanza ; magnificent outfit
only $1.00, Books on credit. Freight paid.
Ad. Globe Bible Pubiishing Co., 723 Chesthut
St., Phila, Pa.or 358 Dearborn St; Chicago
HL 37-38-6m
HECK-WEIGHMAN'S RE
PORTS, ruled and numbered up to 150
with name of mine and date line printed in
full, on extra heavy paper, furnished in any
uanity on to days’ notice by the.
y WATCHMAN JOB ROOMS.
Electric Belts.
REE
Trial. Why suffer from the bad effects of the La Grippe, Lame Back, Kidney and Liver
disease, Rheumatism, Indigestion, Dyspepsia, any
you in health,
ELECTRIC BELT to any one on trial, free.
Electric Trussess and Box Batteries. Costs nothing. to try
them. Can be regulated to suit, and guaranteed to last for years.
to shock. Free Medical advice.
Electricity will eure you and keep
prove this, I will send DR. JUDD’S
$6, $10, and $15, if satisfied. Also,
bined, and produces sufficient Electricit,
Give waist measure, price and full particulars.
Agents Wanted. s
3T131yar
kind of weakness, or other disease, when
(Headache relieved in one minute.) Te
Prices, $3,
A Belt and Battery com-
Write to-day.
Address DR. JUDD, Detroit, Mich.
WESTWARD. EASTWARD.
111 103 114 112
STATIONS.
P.M. | AM A. M.| P.M.
2 00 5 40{.......Montandon. 9 10{ 456
2 08) 6 15|.......Lewisburg. 4471
3]. 9
2 22| 6 28]. 4 35
231] 637]. 4
2 4 6 50|. 416
2 51| 6 58 407
311 718 348
330] 738 3 30
3 47| 7 55|.. 314
4 01 8 09 301
4 (7| 816]. % bd
413] 8 23]. 2 47
4 18) '8 28|. 2482
422) 832 2 31
4 27| 8 37]. 233
4 37| 8 47|......Pleasant Gap...... 22
4.45) 8:43) .cuiien Bellefonte......... 2156
P, M. | A. M. P. M.
LEWISBURG & TYRONE RATROAD.
WESTWARD. Upper End. EASTWARD
2 2 Nov. 16, 2 2
¥ K 1891. H ®
ga & | 8
Alp om A.M. | P.M.
4 50|....Scotia..... 9 21| 4 40|......
5 05|..Fairbrook.| 9 09| 4 25|......
5 15|Pa. Furnace| 8 56| 4 15)......
5 21|...Hostler...| 8 50| 4 08]......
5 26...Marengo..| 8 43] 4 (1].....
5 8¢|.Loveville..| 8 37| 3 55.
5 39| FurnaceRd| 8 31 38 49...
5 43|Dungarvin.| 8 27 3 46{.....
5 53|..W.Mark...| 8 19] 3 88[......
6 03|Pennington| 8 10| 3 30|......
11 32| 6 15|..Stover..... 7.58 3 181...
11 40| 6 25|...Tyrone....| 7 50{ 3 10|......
ELLEFONTE CENTRAL
RAILROAD.
To take effect April 4, 1892.
EASTWARD. WESTWARD.
Ac.| Ex. | Mail. STaTIONE Ac.| Ex | Mail
ru. P.M! A. MAT. Lv.iAm.l A mip Mm.
6 35 3:50 9 03|.Bellefonte.|3 30| 10 30| 4 40
6 28) 3 44 8 E9|..Coleville...[6 37| 10 35| 4 46
625 341] 8 56]....Morris....|6 40! 10 38] 4 48
6 22) 338] 8 52|.Whitmer...|6 44| 10 43] 4 51
6 19{, 3 36] 8 49|... Linns.....|6 47] 10 46| 454
6 17| 3 33] 8 47|. Hunters...|6 50] 10 49] 4 66
6 14] 3 31] '8 44|..Fillmore...|6 53| 10 52] 5 00
6 11] © 28] ' 8 40{....Sellers....|6 657| 10 66 5 03
6 09( 38 26| 8 38|....Brialy..... 7 00 10 58| 6 06
605 323] 8 35|.Waddle...|7 05] 11 01] 5 10
6 02) 320] 8 30|Mattern Ju|7 08 11 03} ' 5 12
551) 3.08 8 18|.Krumrine.|7 21] 11 13| 5 24
548, 3 05 8 14)...Struble... 7 24 11 17| 627
545 300 8 10/StateColl'ge 7 30] 11 20 5 80
On the Red Bank branch trains will run as
follows :
GOING EAST WILL LEAVE
Red Bank at 8 00 a. m
and 5 35 p m
Stormstown at 8 05 5 40
Mattern at 8 12 b 43
Graysdale at 8 17 5 46
Mattern Ju. at 8 20 5 50
(GOING WEST WILL LEAVE :
Mattern Ju. 7 14a m. and 513 m
Graysdale 7 19 5.16
Mattern T 24 5 20
Stormstown 7 29 5 23
Red Bank 7 356 5 86
Taos. A. SEoEmAkER, Bupt d