Le v Bellefonte, Pa., Aug. 3, 1894. sas m—— PATIENCE. Bepagent ! Easy words to speak hile plenty fills the cup of life, While health brings roses to the cheek, And far removed are care and strife. Falling so glibly from the tongue Of those—I often think of this— Whom suffering has never wrung, Who scarcely know what patience is. Be patient! when the suiferer lies Prostrate beneath some fell disease, And longs, through torturing agonies, Only for one short hour of ease. Be patient! when the weary brain Is racked with thought and anxious care, And troubles in an endless train Seem almost more than it can bear. To feel the torture of delay The agony of hope deferred ; To labor still from dey to day, The prize unwcn, the prayer unheard. And still to hope and strive and wait The due reward of fortune’s kiss— This is to almost conquer fate, This is to learn what patience is. Despair not! though the clouds are dark And storm and danger veil the sky : Let fate and courage guide thy bark, The storm will pass ; the port is nigh. Be patient! and the tide will turn, Shadows will flee before the sun, These are the hopes that live and burn To light us till our work is done. —All the Year Round. A ———————————SA—— Printing the New Stamps. Government Presses Are Turning them out by the Ream.— Processes of Production.--Devices for Gumming and Perforating. How the Inks Are Prepared—A Saving to Uncle Sam of $50,- 000 a Year—Forty Million Sheets of 100 Siamps Each Required Annually. T am the first newspaper man to whom has been granted the privilege of witness- ing the processes by which Uncle Sam is beginning to print his own postage stamps at the Bureau of Engraving and Printing. The wheels have started and before many days the machines will be turning the parallelograms of red, blue and green paper at a rate to supply the Post Office Department with the requir- ed forty million sheets per annum. Each sheet, as furnished to the govern- ment, will consist of 100 stamps. The printing is done on queer-looking presses, each of which produces 1,600 stamps a minute, or about 100,000 an hour. Each press has an endless chair that carries four plates, on which the designs of the stamps are engraved. On each plate 400 stamps are represented. The sheets printed from these - plates are intended to be cut into quarters event- ullly, in which shape they will be sold by the Post Office Department. Each plate is carried by the endless chain first under an ink roller, from which it receives a coating of ink of the proper color. Then it passes beneath a pad of canvas, which oscillates so as to rub the ink in. Next it pauses for a moment under the hands of a man who polishes the plate. Finally, a sheet of white paper is laid upon the plate, both pass under a roller, and the sheet comes out on the other side 400 printed pos- tage stamps. The plates revolve in a circle, as it were. More accurately speaking, they move around the four sides of a square in a horizontal plane. Whila one is be- ing inked, another is being rubbed by the canvas, another iz being polished and the fourth is passing under the printing roller. The circuit takes about a minute, during which four sheets of 400 stamps each are printed. The most important part of the work, requiring the greatest skill, is the pol- ishing, 1t is done with the bare hands, no other method being equally efficient. The object is to leave exactly enough ink for a good impression and no more. One girl lays the white paper sheets upon the plates, while another young woman removes them as fast as they are printed and stacks them up in a pile. This process gives theresults of hand- press work. Half a dozen presses working together each turning out 100,000 an hour, can produce a good many millionsin a day. Three hands are required for each press —the printer, who does the polishing, and two girls. The printer must ac- count for every sheet of blank paper that he receives. The sheets are count- ed in the wetting division before they are delivered to him. After they are printed they are counted before they are sent to the examining division, where they are counted again. Spoiled sheet are counted as carefully as perfect ones, because they represent money. If lost or stolen, they could be used. On each sheet appears the special mark of the printer who turned it out. An allowance of 1} per cent. is made to him for spoilage. If he exceeds the al- lowance he must pay for the extra loss at the actual cost of paper, ink and la- bor represented. This rule does not yet apply for the presses are hardly adjust- ed, and hundreds of sheets have been spoiled in experiments. If a sheet is lost, it must be traced back to the last person who handled it and that individual will be required to pay face value for the stamps represent- ed. If the person responsiblecannot be found, the division which last handled the sheet must pay. No loophole is left for the loss of a single one cent stamp. After being examined, the sheets are counted again and are put be- tween straw boards under a hydraulic press to make them lie flat. Thus they are counted more easily and can be made up into smaller bundles. After undergoing this process they are counted once more and are sent downstairs to be gummed and perfora- ted. For these purposes the Bureau of Engraving has purchased entirely new machinery, and the means employed are more than ordinarily interesting. The method of gumming in particular is a novelty, being wholly different from that utalizad hitherto in such work. It is much more rapid and efficient, and before long will doubtless supersede the old plan, which is even now applied to the gumming of cigarette stamps for the internal revenue. The paste is applied to the cigarette stamp by hand with brushes. As fast as they are gummed they are laid sheet by sheet on slatted frames, which are piled in stacks. The stacksare wheeled on trucks into a room, where they are placed in front of electric fans, so that the cool air may dry them. Hot air would accomplish the purpose more quickly, but it would be hard on the work-woman. For this reason the slower process is adopted. ~The new method, to be applied to the postage stamps, will be an immense Improve- ment in every way. The machines for this purpose have just been set up. There are two of them, exactly alike, and one will do for description. imagine a wooden box nearly 60 feet long, 4 feet high and3 feet wide. From end to end runs what might be taken for the skeleton of a trough. This skeleton projects from the box for a few feet at either extremi- ty. The box is traversed by two end- less chains, running side by side two feet apart. Into one end the sheets of printed stamps are fed one by one. As itis fed into the machine each sheet passes under a roller like the roll- er of a printing press, to which a gum made of dextrine is slowly supplied. The sheet takes up a coat of this mucil- age on its lower side and is carried on by the endless chain through the long box. The box is a hot-air box, being heated by steam pipes. At the other end of it the sheets are delivered at the rate of eighteen a minute. Just one minute is required for a sheet to pass through the box and it 1s delivered per- fectly dry. The gummed sheets thus delivered are passed over to a long table where girls pick them up in pairs, and plac- ing the gummed sides together, put them between layers of straw boards, Arranged in this way they are placed under a steam press to flatten the mu- cilage baving caused them to curl some- what. On coming out of the press they are counted again, and now they go to the perforating machines that make the pin-holes by which itis rendered easy to tear the stamps apart. The perforating machine is an ar- rangement of little wheels revolving parallel to each other and just far enough apart to make the perforations as one sees them in a sheet of finished stamps fresh brought at the Post Office. After the perforations have been made across the sheet one way by one ma- chine, the sheet must pass through a second machine for a cross perforations. In the middle of each machine is a knife which cuts the sheet in two, so that the sheet of 400 comes out of machine No. 1 in two sheets of 200 each, and these are divided into four sheets of 100 each by the second perforating machine. It is an old though not well-authen- ticated story that when the British Gov- ernment wished to discover a way to tear stamps apart readily it offered $50,- 000 for an acceptable suggestion. A poverty-stricken but ingenious English- man proffered the notion of perforating the stamp sheets and received the for- tune. The stamps are now done and only remain to be gone over, inspected counted and tagged in packages of 100 sheets before being sent out. Hach package of 100 sheets holds 100,000 stamps, of course. But stay ! There are one or two more preliminaries yet. After receiving the perforations, the sheets of one hundred are put under a press to remove the “purrs” around the little holes. Other- wise these would greatly increase the thickness of a package. Then they are counted and are placed in steel-clad vaults, from which they are drawn as the Post office department may want them. The Bureau of Engraving has not yet begun to furnish stamps to the government, but it is already to do so. In response to orders received from the Post Office Department it will put the stamps up in packages, address them to Postmasters who require them and de- liver them at the Post Officein Wash- ington for mailing, The Post Office Department now has an agency at the Bureau of Engraving When a Postmaster wants stamps he makes out a requisition upon the de- partment. The latter will communi- cate with its agent in the bureau, who will draw upon the bureau every day for as many stamps as he requires to fill the orders thus transmitted to him. All this business used to be done in New York city, whera the stamp agent re- ceived the stamps from the American Bank Note company in bulk, his busi- ness being to put them up in packages and send them off by mail. The inks used for printing the stamps are mannfactured at the Bureau of En- graving. The materials are bought in the shape of dry colors and linseed oil. The colors come in the shape of powders The only stamps turned out thus far are two-cent red and the one cent blue. For the former carmine is employed and for the latter ultramarine. Both colors are ‘‘toned” by the admixture of other ingredients--the carmine with paris white and white lead. Pure carmine would be very costly. Ultramarine is not very expensive, but it is too ‘‘strong,’” in the printer’s phrase—that is to say, too dark. It used to be the costliest of colors, being made from the precious lapis lazuli. But in recent years chemists, having analyzed the lapis lazuli, have produced in the laboratory a successful imitation of the color stuff. For making the ink the color powder is combined with lin- seed oil and ground between rollers. Each printer receives every mor:ing his allowance of ink, and sharp account is kept of every bit used. Uncle Sam will save about $50,000 a year by printing his own postage stamps Congress has given to the Bureau of Engraving $163 000 for this purpose for this fiscal year beginning July 1. Out of this appropriation some machinery must be bought. The expense used to be $208,000 per annum. Of course the government had nearly all of the re- quired plant ready at hand. About fifty new people have had to be engaged to do the extra work. The plates used by the American Bank Note Com- pany for printing the stamps were the property of the government. The Post Office Department has made recently five hundred sets of facsimile stamps for distribution among members of Congress and high officials. Each set includes specimens of all of the issues from the earliest to the latest. They are printed on thin cardboard, being in- tended for curiosities and not for the payment of postage. —RENE BACHE, in the Phila. Times. — Cardinal Gibbons celebrated last Monday his 60th birthday. He has been at Cape May, N. J., where Le has been recreating for two weeks. The cardinal was born in Baltimore, July 23, 1834. After spending some time in Ireland with his father he returned to Maryland, and in 1857 was graduated from St. Charles’ college. The late Archbishop Henrick ordained him a priest at St. Mary’s seminary, June 30, 1866. August 16, 1868, he was conse- crated bishop and vicar apostolic of North Carolina. He was transferred to Richmond October 20, 1872. May 20, 1877, he was appointed coadjutor, with the right ot succession to Archbishop Bailey. October 8, 1877, he succeeded to the see of Baltimore. June 7, 1886, he was created cardinal. A Goop REASON] FOR LIVING.-- “She lives to love and loves to live, She loves to live because shelives to love.” Many think it is a sin to be sick ; be- ing so, one cannot bestow their affec- tions on others as the Creator intended ; being so, it certainly is a duty to cure yourself. Most women, these days, need an invigorating tonic. Worn- out teachers, “shop girls,” dressmakers, milliners, and those subject to tiresome labor, have found a boon in Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription. It is 8 soothing and strengthening nervine, inducing re- freshing sleep relieves despondency and restores to use all the appetites and af- fections of one’s nature. Itis sold, by druggists, under & guarantee from its raakers that it will, in every case, give satisfaction, or price ($1.00) will be promptly refunded. ES TT ——American Girl—Oh yes. My home was in California, but I went to school in Boston. Interested Foreigner Ach so | Did you go home at nights ? TTT ——My boy was taken with a disease resembling bloody flux. The first thing I thought of was Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera and Diarrhea Remedy. Two doses settled the matter and cured him sound and well. I heartily recommend this remedy to all persons suffering from a like complaint. I will answer any inquiries regarding it when stamp is enclosed. I refer to any county offi- cial as to my reliability. Wm. Roach, J. P., Primroy, Campbell Co., Tenn. For sale by F. P. Green. A ———————— ——Russian peasants never touc food or drink without making the sign of the cross. TE ArrER BREAKFAST.—-To0 purify, vit- alize and enrich the blood, and give nerve, bodily and digestive strength, take Hood's Sarsaparilla. Continue the medicine after every meal for a month or two and you will feel “like a new man.” The merit of Hood’s Sarsapa- parilla is proven by its thousands of wonderful cures. Why don’t you try it? Hood’s Pills cure constipation. They are the best after dianer pill and family cathartic, TRE BRSASOTIR —— About 40,000,000 feet of timber are annually made into matches in this country: . TE SCI TS ——Blood purifiers, though gradual, are radical in their effect. Ayer’s Sarsa- parila is intended as a medicine only and not a stimulant, excitant, or bev- erage. Immediate results may not al- ways follow its use ; but after a reasona- ble time, permanent benefit is certain to be realized. Tourists. Low Rates to Colorado. On June 23d and 24th The North-Western Line will sell excursion tickets to Denver, Pueblo and Colorado Springs and return at exceedingly low rates; tickets good for return passage until August 25th, inclusive. Solid Vestibuled Trains, Palace Sleeping Cars and Superb Dining Cars through between Chicago and Denver daily, via the Chicago and North- western Railroad. For] detailed information apply to agents of connecting lines, or address W. A. Thrall, General Passenger and Ticket Agent, Chicago. Cottolene. rose WHO HAVE A GOOD DIGESTION have little sympathy for the dyspeptic. They can eat every- thing that comes along. While — — they can eat rich food without fear of the dyspeptic’s sad ex- periences, they nevertheless greatly appreciate a delicate flavor in their pastry. —COTTOLENE—— when used as a shortening, always produces the finest flav- ored pastry, which is entirely free from the many objections which the use of lard always produces. Test its value by one trial. ° Refuse all substitutes. ——— Send three cents in stamps to N. K. Fairbank & Co., Chicago, for handsome Cottolene Cook Book, containing six hundred receipts, prepared by nine emi- nent authorities on cooking. Cottolene is sold by all grocers. Made only by N. K. FAIRBANK & CO. CH1caGo, ILL, and 138 N. Delaware Ave., Phila. 39-21-4t:nr Sechler & Co. Miscellaneous Advs. S ECHLER & CO.——* GROCERS—BUSH HOUSE BLOCK. HEAD QUARTERS FOR— FINE GROCERIES, TEAS, SPICES AND FRUITS IN TEAS we have Oolongs, Gun-Pow- der, Imperial, Young Hyson, Japan English Breakfast, and our Fine Blend. ed Tea is something that will please any one who appreciates a cup of Royal Tea. IN SPICES, Cinnamon, Cloves, Al spice, Nutmeg, Mace, Ginger, Cayenn Pepper, Mustard all strictly pure goods. IN COFFEES AND CHOCCLATE, Mocha—genuine, Java—Old Govern ment, Rio—Finest Brazilian. All ex cellent quality and always fresh roasted. Baker's Premium Chocolate and Break: fast Cocoa, Van Houten's Cocoa, Wil: bur's Chocolate, and German Sweet Chocolate. IN COOKING EXTRACTS we keep a line of Joseph Burnett & Co's, (Bos ton) goods, they are the finest we can find, also a line of Knight's extracts. BEANS, California Limas, New York Marrow and Pea Beans, dried Green Peas. RICE New Crop Carolina Head Rice. DOMESTIC CANNED FRUITS AND VEGETABLES, ToMATOES Cottage, Home and Worthington Brands —CoRN Persian and Mountain Brands, —CorN Granules, Lima Beans and Succotash, Dew Drop brand. GREEN Pras, Early Junes, Scottish chief and Cecelia brands. PINE APPLE sliced and . grated, Strawberries and White Cher- ries, Dew Drop brand. Boston Baked Beans. CALIFORNIA CANNED FRUITS, Yellow Crawford, Lemon Cling, and White. Heath Peaches, White Cherria and Apricots. IMPORTED VEGETABLES AN1 FRUITS, #rench Peas and Mush- rooms, Preserved Cherries, Straw- berries, Brandy Cherries and Crosse Blackwell's Jams all in glass. MISCELLANEOUS, Pure Maple Syrup, Honey strained and in combs, Plum Pudding, Armour’s Corned Beef Potted Tongue and Ham, Condensed milk, Dunham's Shred Cocoa nut. Rich Mild Cream Cheese, Small Family Cheese, Bradford County Dairy But- ter. Buckwheat Flour, Corn Flour, Gluten Flour, Vienna Flour. Fine Confectioners and Cut Loaf Sucurs Extra Fine New Crop New Or .eans Syrups, Pure White Sugar Table Syrup, Pure Cider Vinegar. NUTS, Princess Paper Shell, Califor nia and * Bordan Almonds, Assorted Nuts, English Walnuts, Pecans extra large, Cream Nuts, Fresh Roasted Peanuts, Cocoa Nuts extra quality. IN CONFECTIONARY, we haw Fine Mixtures, Cream Chocolates, Roast Almonds, Cream Dates, Ros and Vanilla, Jordon Almonds, Frencl Glace Fruits, Fine Chocolate Caramels, Chocolate Marsh Mallows, } Cocoa Nut bon bons, Chocolate Madridos, Lozenges, Clear Toys, and a large assortment of fine goods in this line all carefully se- lected. ” FRANCO AMERICAN SOUPS, French Bouillon, Consomme, Ox Tail, Mock Turtle, Mulligatawny, and Terrapin. OLIVE OIL, 8S. Rea § Cos} Pint, Pints and Quarts. The finest ana lysts in the World pronounces it pure. PICKLES IN GLASS, Crasse §& Blackwell’s Chow Chow, Gherkins, Mixed, White Onions, Cauliflower, Picalilli, and Walnuts. CEREAL GOODS. Oat Meal, Rolled Oat, Cracked Wheat, Pearl Barley, Breakfast and Dinner Hominy, Ma- caront and Vermacceli. MEATS. Fine Sugar Cured Hams, Breakfast Bacon and Dried Beef, White Rose Lard. GREEN FRUITS, Florida Oranges, Messina Lemons, White Almeria Grapes, Catawba Grapes, and Jersey Cranberries. CURED FRUITS. Evaporated Cali- fornia Pared and unpared Peaches, and Apricots. RAISINS, Imperial Cluster, Fine Lay- ers, Ondaras, Valencias, Sultana and California Seedless and Loose Mus catels. FISH. New Mackerel very fine, Qodfish boneless and evaporated, SALMCY Magnolia, Astoria and Glacier brand Hoeg’s Spiced Salmon, Shrimps, Lcb sters, Crab Meats and Spiced Oysters Sardines, French }s, and }s Boneless. SECHLER & CO. 38-1 BELLEFONTE, PA, Pres CAVEATS, TRADE MARKS, COPYRIGH (8. CAN I OBTAIN A PATENT? For a prompt answer and an honest opinion write to MUNN & CO., who have had pearly fifty years’ experience In the patent business. Communications strictly confidential. A Hand- book of Information concerning Patents and how to obtain them sent free. Also a catalo- ue of mechanical and scientific books sent ree. Patents taken through Munn & Cc. receive special notice in the Scientific American, ana thus are brought widely before the public without cost to the inventor: This splendid aper, issued weekly, elegantly illustrated, as by far the largest circulation of any scien- tific work in the world. $3 a year. Sample goles sent free. * Building Edition, monthly, $2.50 a year. Single copies, 25 cents. Every number con- tains beautiful plates, in colors, ;and photo. raphs of new houses, with plans, enabling Boi ders to show the latest designs and secure contracts. Address MUNN & CO., 38-49-1y 361 Broadway, New York. gp 2,000.00— SA YEAR 49 FOR THE INDUSTRIOUS. If you want work that is pleasant and profit- able, send us your address immediately. We teach men and women how to earn from $5.00 per day to $3,000 per year without having had previous experience, and furnish the employ- ment at which ‘they can make that amount. Nothing difficult to learn or that requires much time. The work is easy, healthy, and honor able, and can be done Bring daytime or even- ings, right in your own locality, wherever you live. Theresult of a few hours’ work often equals a week's wages. We have taught thousands of both sexes and all ages, and many have laid foundations that will surely bring them riches. Some of the smartest men in this country owe their success in life to the start given .them while in our employ years ago. You, reader, may do as well; try it. You cannot fail. No capital necessary. We fit you out with something that is new, solid, and sure. A book brimful of advice is free to all. Help yourself by writing for it to-day—not to- morrow. E. C. ALLEN & CO, Box 420. 38-46-1y Augusta, Maine. Central Railroad Guide. { ZRIBAL RAILROAD OF... PENNSYLVANIA. Condensed Time Table. | Reap Up. {READ Down No.4No.2| FEET 318% [xg ino. 3 P. M. | A. ML IAT. Lv. A.M. | P.M. 8 I 9 45/...BELLEFONTE.... + 7 00/1} 5 25 7 581 9 33i............ Nigh... — T13] 538 7 81 0960. ee DOD | 72 545 TH 9 19|...Heecla Furnance...| 7 26] 5 51 7 39, 9 14 ..HUBLERSBURG.., 733 5 58 7 34 9 09.....Snydertown......| 738 602 732) 9 07] rer NIttaNY...cn.| 7 41 605 729 9 04]. Huston.... 74 608 726) 901]. LAMAR 1 147 6 7 24| 8 59|.......Clintondale...... 750 614 7 19, 8 54/. Krider's Siding... T7565, 6 19 7 14) 8 49/......Mackeyville......, 8 00| 6 24 709 8 44|...Cedar Springs... 803 629 7 07 2 rerresDA0NR..rreneeeset S07 6 8B] +7 00/1 8 35)....MILL HALL 815 6 40 P.M. | A. M. |Lv. A.M. |{P. M. P.M. | A. M. |AT. Lv. A M|P M 506 8 28)....MILL HALL......[T 9 591 6 47 430 7 55/..JERSEY SHORE...| 10 30{ 7 25 +4 00 7 20. WILLIAMSPORT..| 11 0) 8 00 PM. | ALM. | Lv. Ara wm Pom NOON | P. M. P. M.| A.M | 12 42 *6 55|Ar..WIL’MSP'T.. Lv|f12 i 15 18 35/*11 30|Lv......PHILA...... Ar 8271) 7 12 4 00 Ix York, via Thing. 9 10] 9 30 | 17 30/.N. York, via Phila.| 10 55 © 30 A. ot. |p. a. |(Foot of Liberty St.) » . | #Daily, 1Daily except Sundays 16.00 p. Mm. Sundays ©10:10 A. a. Sundays. Nore.—Philadelphia & Reading “Cannon Ball” leaves Williamsport Daily except Sun- days at 8:35 p. mM. arriving at Philadelphia at 10:10 p. m. Pullman Buflet Car attached to this train. Sleeping car Run between Williamsport and Philadelphia on traias Nos 2 and 3. BERTH $1.50. CONNECTIONS. At Mill Hall with Beech Creek Railroad, at Bellefonte with Bellefonte Central Railroad and Pennsylvania Railroad (Bald Eagle Valley and Lewisburg and Tyrone Branches.) Bellefonte, Pa. J. W. GEPHART. General Superintendent. EECH CREEK RAILROAD, N.Y. C. & H. BR. R. R. Co., Lessee. Condensed Time Table. Railway Guide. ENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD AND BRANCHES. May 17th, 1894. VIA TYRONE—WESTWARD. Leave Bellefonte, 5.32 a. m.. arrive at Tyrone, 6.50 a. m., at Altocna, 7.40 a. m., at Pitte- burg, 12.10 p. m. Leave Rellefonte, 10.34 a. m., arrive at Tyrone, 11.52, m. at Al‘oons, 1.45 p. m., at Pitts- ourg, 6.50 p: m Lesve Bellefonte, 5.12 p. m., arrive at Tyrone, 6.35, at Altoona at 7.40, at Pittsburg at 11.30. VIA TYRONE—EASTWARD. Leave Bellefonte, 5.32 a. m., arrive ut Tyrone 6.£0, at Harrisburg. 10.30 &. m., aft Philadel- phia, 1.256 p.m. Leave Belletonte 10.34 a. m., arrive at Tyrone, 11.52 a. m., at Harrisburg, 3.20 p. m., at Philadelphia, 6.50 p. m. Leave Bellefonte, 5.12 p. m., arrive at XY ions, 6.35 at Harrisburg at 10.20 p. m., at Phila- delphia, 4.25 a. m.. VIA LOCK HAVEN—NORTHWARD. Leave Bellefonte, 9.33 a. m., arrive at Lock Haven, 10.35 a. m. Leave Bellefonte, 4.28 p. m., arrive at Lock Ha ven, 5.25 p. m., at Renovo, 9. p. m. Leave Bellefonte at 8.43 p. m., arrive at Lock Haven at 9.40 p. m. VIA LOCK HAVEN—EASTWARD. Leave Bellefonte, 9.33 a. m., arrive at Lock Ha- ven, 10.35, leave Williamsport, 12.30 p. m:, arrive at Harrisburg, 3.30 p. m., at Philadel: phia at 6.50 p. m. Leave Bellefonte, sah m.: arrive at Lock Ha- ven, 5.25. p. m.; Williamsport, 6.39 p. m., Harrisburg, 10.00 p. m. Leave Bellefonte, 8.43 p. m., arrive at Lock Ha- ven, 9.40 p. m., leave Williamsport, 12.27 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, 11.30 a. m. Philadelphia, 3.00 p. m. Leaye Bellefonte, 2.15 p. m., arrive at Lewis- burg, 1.47, at Harrisburg, 7.05 p. m., Phila- delphia at 11.15 p. m. BALD EAGLE VALLEY. WESTWARD, 5 EASTWARD. M 5 3g 5 Nov. 20, 5 8 © g B= B 1893. F LE P.M. A.M. | A. M. [AIT Lv. A. Mm. [p.a.| p. M. 635 1152) 6 bt Tyrone....| 8 103 10 7's ° 2 i i 3 3h {yione 816i316/ 7381 2 6 40]. all... 8 20(3 20 5 5 2 u 2 6 36|Bald Eagle| 8 24/3 24 3 > 320 6 30|...... ix... 8 30 8 12 11 55) 6 27 Fowlerr.| 8333 38] + 6 10 11 27, 6 25... Hannah... 8 353 85] 7 50 6 02( 11 19| 6 17|Pt. Matilda.| 8 42(3 42) 7 57 5 54 11 11] 6 09|..Martha....| 8 493 49| 8 04 5 46) 11 03| 6 01|....Julian..... 859/358 813 537) 10 54 5 52.Unionville.| 9 084 07| 8 22 580 10 47| 5 45|..S.8. Int...| 9 17/4 15] 8 30 52110 44 5 42 Milesburg | 9 21/418 833 512 10 34 5 32|.Bellefonte.| 9 334 28| 8 43 5 02| 10 24| 5 22|.Milesburg.| 9 46/4 38 8 53 4 54) 10 16| 5 14|....Curtin....| 9 53|4 48] 9 01 4 50, 10 12| 5 10|..Mt. Eagle..| 10 004 50, 9 05 4 44) 10 06/ 5 04|...Howard...| 10 06/4 57| 9 11 435 957 4 55.Eagleville.| 10 15/5 05| 9 20 132 954 452 Bch, Creek. 1018(508| 9 23 421 943 4 41|.Mill Hall...| 10 295 19| 9 34 419] 941 4 39 Flemin’ton.| 10 315 21| 9 39 415 937 4 35 Leck. Haven| 10 35/5 25| 9 4. PM. A M.A Mm. A.M. [Am] Pp. MO TYRONE & CLEARFIELD. NORTHWARD. 5 5 | SOUTHWARD, E wi Hyg B Nov. 20, o - EEX | E 1893. ELIF Bi2| * 4 — | ss P.M. P. M. | A. M. Lv. Ar.[a. nm | A.M P.M 730 315 820|..Tyrone..... 6 45| 11 47/6 12 736 321 8 26/.E. Tyrone. 6 39 11 41/6 06 751 326 831... ail...... 6 34| 11 366 01 7 55, 3 36 8 42/.Vanscoyoc., 6 27| 11 29/5 64 8 04| 3 40/ 8 47|.Gardner...| 6 24| 11 26/5 50 811) 349 8 87/Mt.Pleasant, 6 16| 11 185 41 8 16/ 355 9 05...Summit... 6 09|1J 11/5 34 818, 359 9 10/Sand.Ridge| 6 03] 11 05/5 27 819 401 9 13|.. Retort... 6 00| 11 02/5 23 8 27| 402] 9 15\..Powelton...| 5 58 11 005 21 835 408 9 23|..0sceola..| 5 48 10 50,5 10 836 416] 9 33|.. Boynton... 5 44| 10 46/5 03 8 41 419] 9 37|..Steiners...| 5 40| 10 42/4 58 8 46 423 9 44|Philipsbu’g| 5 39) 10 41|4 57 852 429 949. Graham..| 534) 10 364 52 857 433 955. Blue Ball.| 529 1031445 9 03| 4 39| 10 02| Wallaceton:| 5 23| 10 25/4 39 9 06 4 44] 10 08....Bigler..... 5 18| 10 20/4 83 9 14 450 10 14 Woodland. 5 12| 10 14/4 27 9 19! 4 57 10 21|...Barrett....| 5 05 10 074 20 9 24/ 501 10 25. Leonard...| 5 01] 10 03/4 16 9 30| 506 10 32|.Clearfield..| 456 9 58/4 08 9 35 511) 10 38..Riverview.| 4 51) 9 53/4 02 9 47| 517 10 45/Sus. Bridge| 4 45 9 47(3 56 9 55 522 10 5(|Curwensv'e| 4 40, 9 42/2 51 P.M.| P. M. | A. M. A. M. | A. M. |P.M. BELLEFONTE & SNOW SHOE BRANCH. Time Table in effect on and after Nov. 20, 1893. Leave Snow Shoe, except Sunday......3 Arrive in Bellefonte, Leave Bellefonte, except Sunday..... Arrive in Snow Shoe........ccceevsserenne LEWISBURG & TYRONE RAILROAD. Schedule in effect November 20th, 1893. Central R. R. of Penna. At Munson with stages for Kylertown. At Philipsburg with Tyrone and Clearfield Division of Penna. R. R. At Clearfield with Buffalo, Rochester and Pittsburg Ry. At Gazzam, with stages, for Ansonville and Berwinsdale. At Mahaffey with Cambriaand Clearfield Division of Penna. R. R. and with Penna.and Northwestern R. R, Sleeping car between Williamsport and Philadelphia on trains No. 33 and 86 Berth, 81.50. F. E. HERRIMAN, | A G. PALMER, Gen'l Pass'r Agent. Superintendent, Philadelphia, Pa. - WESTWARD. EASTWARD. Reap Up. | Reap Down. | 111] 103 14 | 112 = SraTIONS. Exp. |Mail.| NOV. 19, 1893. | Exp.|Mail. | *1% 5% A He P , p.| Mail. | 15g "5 40|.......Montandon........ 910 455 | 203 615........ Lewisburg... ..... 9 00] 447 No. 37/No. 33 worse Fair Ground...... hel 2 y g 2 . Voll. .| 852 4389 P.M. | P. M. AM. | P.M. . cksburg. 8 47) 435 530 100 Ar.MAHAFFEY.Lv| +5 30| 12 20 | 231 6 87|.......Mifflinburg, 8 38) 427 990 12 47/.cers rms BOWeT....0couen 540| 230| 243 650... Millmont.. 8 25 4156 9 13| 12 39|....Beil's Landing....| 546 236 | 251 6258 407 9 00| 12 25 Lv... Kerrmoor....Ar| 5 58 2 50 snl 718 8 50| 12 16] -rorere GAZZAM.........| 608 300 2ids 8 44/12 10| r....Kerrmoor...Lv| 6 15| 3 06 330 738 * 330 8 38! 12 03|......New Millport 312 347 755 21] 314 8 32 ...0lanta, » 318 401 809 06) 301 8 25 . Mitchells........ 3 26 4 07 816 00| 254 Bh .CLEAR is 02 3 55 413 823. 52| 247 7 55{'11 15 LEARFIELD, 1 3 55 th Jas 7 242 Ar Lv ; 422 832. 43) 287 7 45| 11 08|....Clearfield Junc....; 712] 404 | 4971 3g 37|... 638 288 Fina ow T2 414] 451 847. Pleasant Gap... 638 233 731 10 7 421] 445 8 33.......Bellefonte.. 620 215 7 25) 10 anal dag 220 ew 7 20! 10 743 437 | > AB 2 7 16, 10 745 441 712/10 Ar 750] 445 LEWISBURG & TYRONE RAIROAD. | Lv Ar WESTWARD. Upper End. EASTWARD 6 50 10 05(...PHILIPSBURG...| 815 510 i 735 10 50|..PHILIPSBURG | 730 +25| | B | B | Novo, | B | B | Ar Lv M M 93. MH M eevee | memset | #mt——ee—— me ® @® . o ® 7100 10 25 754 450 2 2 2 2 7 02{ 10 21 800] 455 |—] 6 58/'1C 17{. 8 04) 5 00 A, M.| P. M. A.M. | P. M. 6 44( 10 01)... 817 515 | wane | 10 00] 4 50... Scotia..... 9 20| 4 40|.. 6 38 955 825 521 .110 19} 5 07|..Fairbrook.| 9 03| 4 23|.. 6 26) 9 40]... 8 40| 5 34 .11033 5 19| Pa. Furnace 851 411). 6 18] 9 33|..... “| 841]. 540} ......| 10 40 5 25|..Hostler...| 845 405 530, 848 Mapes.......... 939 625 ..| 10 46] 5 31 pMatengo. 8 39] 3 59}.eens 521 8 41|..BEECH CREEK... 9 47] 633 {1051 5 35|..Loveville..| 8 35] 3 55..... 506 8 28... Mill Ball.......| 9:9 647 | 10 58! 5 39) FurnaceRd| 8 29 3 49 45) 822..LOCK HAVEN.. 1005 683]... j1t 01 5 41{Dungarvin.| 826 3 46 448 8 13|Youngdale (Wayne) 10 13] 702 ...[ 11 20] > 52... W. "ark..| 8 1s] 338 439] 804)... Oak Grove........ {lo21] 710 ..}11 26! © 91 Pennington| 8 09] 3 29 _4 35 8 .colJersey Shore Junc.| 10 25) ‘7 15} oes) 11 32| © 12|..Stover..... 758 318 430 755.JERSEY SHORE. 1080] 725 | ....|1140{ 6 20{..Tyrone..... 750 3 10 406) 72 wo. Newberry. ......| 10 53] 7 53 | mers nn . ——— 3 02{ 7 23... Misnsns Street...| 1 57) 7 57 > 4 00 17 20|.Lv W'MSPORT Ar.| 11 00; 8 (0 AN aroha di ELLEFONTE CENTRAL RAIL: P.M. A.M. = TT {meow EM. : 40 ¥ 55|.Ar W'MSPORT Lv.[f12 00(#11 15 | To take effect June 18, 1894. 8 35/*11 30|Lv..PHILAD'A...Ar| 8 27| 7 12 | EASTWARD. WESTWARD Lv Ar| *Noly n 1 Se Nol. no =| +4 00{s..orvees N. York, via Tamgq. 940] 9 30 12 | Nos No. 2] STATIONS. 1100.7] 7 No Ly r| | PTO —— ereesns| 17 30|N. Yok, via Phila, 10 85 2980 | | 4 A sr AM |p. (RF ; St. IM OBE, WM. . M. « M. . LUV. AM. A, M. . . AM. |p. M |(Foot of Liberty St.) p. M. [A 635 245 8 43| Betteforts, 3 30°10 30, "4 40 ooo z : Sande 6 28 239] 8 40|..Coleville..6 37) 10 57| 4 45 *Daily. tWeekdays. I 200 5,00 undays A 25) oul 3 wl is..lg 40| 11 02] 4 48 210.10 A. M. Sundays. fo x : 622 233 83 11 07] 451 Nore.—Reading Cannon Ball train leaves | g 17| 998 83 11 18] 4 56 Williamsport at 3.35 ». M and arrives at Phila- | g 14 2 26] s 2 1 16! 5 00 delphia at 10.10 ». M. Through passengers will | g gg © 21 82 11 22! 605 find the Cannon Ball preferable to the 12 |g 5 2 18| 8 20|...Waddle...|7 05 11 25 5 10 o'clock (noon) train. s la. | 602 2 12 8 18 Mattern Ju 7 08) 11 28| 512 Connections. —At Williamsport with Phila- | 5 49! 2 00| 8 07/.Krumrine..7 17 11 40 5 22 delphia and Reading R. R. .t Jersey Shore | 5 a9)| 155 804. .Struble..7 20 11 44| 5 25 with the Fall Brook Ry, for points in New | 5 471 1 52/ 8 02..Univ. Inn.7 24! 11 48] 5 28 York State and the West, At Mill Hall with 5 Hy 150] 8 00 StateColl'ge 7 25! 11 50 5 30 | | | | * On Saturday only. § On Monday only. + Daily except Sunday. F. H. THOMAS, Supt. X: you want printing of any de: scription the — WATCHMAN OFFICE—— is the place to have it done. tr