Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, February 22, 1895, Image 6

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    Bellefonte, Pa., Feb. 22, 1895.
THE SONG OF THE TOOTH.
(With Apologies to Tom Hood.)
By A. 8.7.
With nerves all tattered and toru,
With weary and aching head,
The patient sat in the dentist’s chair,
Sighing, “'Ah, would I were dead.”
Scrape, scrape, scrape ;
Don’t mind me a bit, forsooth !
I am paying a nice high price for this fun,
So haye a goud time with my tooth.
Drill, drill, drill.
The “dear” little wheel moves fast ;
Drill, drill, drill,
Till it reaches the nerve at last,
“Stop, can't you, a minute,” I say;
“Are you boring a 10 foot well ?”
Oh, Dante, had you lived in our day,
There would be a new torment in Hell.
Hammer and poke and press.
Till the brain begins to swim;
Hammer and press and poke,
Till at last the filling is in.
“And when shall I call again ?
Wednesday at nine, you say?
Oh, no! You did not hurt at all,
Well, I'll be here on time, sir, Good day.”
—New York Commercial Advertiser.
rm ——————
Timber Nearly Cut Off.
The Pine and Hemlock Forests of Jefferson
County Almost Exhausted— Approaching Close
of a Groat Industry.
In all of Western Pennsylvania there
has not been a section so thoroughly de-
nuded of timber as the Toby valley, in
Jefferson county. In ayear or two
there will not be a mill in operation be-
tween Brockwayville and Brandy Camp
in which region 10 ycars ago there were
many big plants at work. Now noth-
ing remains but crumbling mill sites,
where skeleton dead timbers stand
amid a growth of blackberry
briars.
The first lumbermen here found vir-
gin forests of pine, the quality of which
was never excelled anywhere. Then
countless thousands of acres of dense
hemlock which surrounded the pine
tracts were thought to have been waste
of nature’s forces, and no value was at-
tached to this boundless resource, which
was destined in after years to play co
important a part in the industrial field.
At first the lumberman was a fastidious
operstor, and would cut and manufac-
ture the forest giants which would yield
pine lumber. Only the first few logs
were taken and the balance left to de-
cay where it fell. Years afterward,
when all the pine had been stripped
from the forests, thousands of dollars
were realized hy gathering up these re-
jected pine tops and manufacturing
them into shingles.
Gradually lumbering operations were
enlarged as the demand grew for the
product. The only available markets
were Pittsburg and the lower river
towns and cities. The lumbermen soon
became less particular, and the logs
were cut upinto the tree tops. Several
grades of lumber were sorted out of the
product and sold according to quality.
The logs were cut and hauled to the
mills in the winter, where they were
sawed up in the summer time and
piled along the creek bank to be rafted
into the creek. and run out on the
spring and fall freshets.
Winter was as busy as any other sea-
son of the year, as it was then the lum-
bermen depended upon getting their
logs to the mills. The logs were gener-
ally hauled in on sleds or trailed in on
slides. A slide was made by placing
two logs continuously together with a
center strip. The insides of the logs
where then hewed out, making a
trough. The logs were rolled into the
slide. If the slide led down an incline
the fogs would run themselves, but if
on the level a team was hitched to the
rear log and along trail shoved in.
More often the logs were hauled on
sleds, and this required a large number
of teams, To get this motive power
agents were seni out early in the fall,
and the farming country scoured for
miles around. Hundreds of teams came
annually from the farming sections of
Jefferson, Clarion, Armstrong and In-
diana counties, while it was no uncom-
mon thing for farmers to drive from
points in New York State to the Toby
valley to get employment tor them-
selves and their teams during the win-
ter.
One large lumber firm in Elk county
used to send agents up into Erie and
Crawford counties to engage teams for
the winter’s haul. Every farmer could
get employment at good wages for him-
self and team at a time when farmers
generally have nothing to do.
But this is all changed now in this
section. It took 30 years to use up the
pine timber in Toby valley, but the
hemlock was stripped in about one-
third that time. A few woodsmen em-
ployed a limited number of teams in
this section this winter, but it is about
the last hauling of this kind in this im-
mediate vicinity. Toward the last this
method was considered too slow, and
train roads and lccomotives were used.
Many miles of railroad have been built
in the lumber woods about here, the
most of which are now abandoned.
These roads displaced a big amount of
team work, and consequently stopped an
important factor for disbursing money
throughout the country. Later on, too,
the lumber operators began adopting
company stores, having learned this
important lesson from the coal opera-
tors who have come in. Before that
the woodsmen was paid his wages, gen-
erally in a lump when the employer
settled up his contract, and for a time
thereafter money was flush. This made
easy times, ‘which have now given way,
in many cases, to the modern corpora-
tion methods whe ever a plant of any
consequence is in operation.
Lumbering about Brockawayville is
no longer the leading industry, and its
decline is severely felt. There are other
resources in the community which will
be developed in time, but they will be
operated under closer and modern
methods. Nothing will ever afford such
a wide range of employment or distri-
bute money 80 generally as the lumber-
ing industry. The free and indepen-
dent methods are a thing of the past,
and the community will have to adopt
iteelf to new conditions.
~——Read the WATCHMAN.
Big Meeting of Women.
It Will be the Greatest Gathering Ever Held. —
The Triennial of the Woman's National Coun.
cil Opens a Fourteen Days Convention at
Washington To-Day—All Lines of Female Ef-
fort from Politics to Religion Will be Repre-
sented and Discussed—Organizations Aggrega
ting Millions of Members Included in the Coun
cil.
On Monday, Washington will wit-
ness the beginning of the greatest gath-
ering of representative women ever
held in the United States. The sec-
ond triennial of the Woman's National
Council is the name of the convocation,
and it includes all the national organi-
zations of a feminine character.
There will be female ministers of the
gospel, politicians, lawyers, physicians,
authors, editors, educators, dress-re-
formers, social-purists, Prohibitionists,
missionaries, church workers, stenog-
raphers, publishers, and many other
classes.
Religious effort will have its repre-
sentation Free Baptist Woman’s Mis-
gionary eociety ; the Woman's Cen-
tenary Association of the Universalist
church ; The Woman’s Foreign Mis-
sionary Union of Friends, and the Na-
tional Council of Jewish Women ; poli
tics, the National Woman's Suffrage
association, and the Woman's Repub-
lican Aesociation of the United States;
patriotism, in the National Associa-
tion of the Loyal Women of American
Liberty and the Woman's Relief Corps;
social life, in Wimodaughsis, Sorosis
and the National Christian League for
the Promotion of Social Purity; Pro-
hibition, in the Woman’s Christian
Temperance Union. Other bodies
composing the council are the Illinois
Industrial School for Girls ; ational
charter ; The National Woman's Re-
lief Society ; The Young Ladies Na-
tional Improvement Association, the
Universal Peace Union, the Interna-
tional Kindergarten Union, and the
National Association of Women Sten-
ographers. These 18 organizations
have a membership estimated at be-
tween 4,000,000 and 5,000,000 women.
The president of the National one is
Mrs. Mary Wright Sewall, of Indian-
apolis, who has declined re-election,
and wants Mrs. Rachel Foster Avery,
the corresponding secretary, to be se-
.lected as her successor. The other of-
ficers are Frances E. Bagley, vice pres-
ident ; Lillian M. N. Stevens, treas-
urer, and Isabella Charles Davis, re-
cording secretary. Every organization
in the national council is eligible to
membership in the International Coun-
cil of Women, which has the following
officers: Tne Countess of Aberdeen,
president ; Mrs. May Wright Sewall®
United States, vice president-at large ;
Madame Marie Martiv, France, record-
ing secretary ; Mrs. Eva McLaren,
England, corresponding secretary ;
Baroness Alexandera Grippenberg,
Finland, treasurer.
The meeting of the council will last
14 days. Religious services in conec-
tion with the council were held Sunday
afternoon at Metzerott Music hall.
Stanley's Star is Set.
African Explorer Destroyed Himself by Letting
His Head Swell.
Men who knew Henry M. Stanley
when he was a newspaper man will
not says Press and Printer, be sur-
prised at the early ‘passing’ of the
African explorer. He has now almost
entirely dropped from public notice.
Among a number ot New York’s lead-
ing publishers who were discussing
the matter the other day it was stated
that Stanley was] now living in the
small suburbs of London. He has a
small house there, but even the neigh-
bors scarcely know who he is. Not
long ago one of this book-talking
group said an article from Stanley
came to New York, and it actually
went begging for a publisher, This
seems very strange, when one consid-
era that it is only three years ago
when one of the Scribners hastily
packed his valise and went to Cairo,
in Egypt, to head off other publishers
and secure the American rights to
Stanley's book. He received a fabu-
loue sum for it, sold the English, In-
dian, Australian, Canadian, German
and French rights separately, and
made a small fortune out of the book.
Then he came here and lectured and
added thousands of dollars to his re-
sources. Now those who arein a po-
sition to know question whether he
could draw a paying house at moder-
ate prices. Much has undoubtedly
been due to his desire to be offensive,
a fact which seems very strange to
hundreds who once knew him. He
tried to show that he lacked cordiality.
One never knew whether he was really
gratified by an honor shown him or
whether he was bored by it. It was a
very bad case of what Boston wants to
call megalomania, and may be vulgarly
translated “big head.” Stanley imag-
ined that he had not only hewed out
himself a niche in the Temple of Time,
but that he had ascended the pedestal,
and that the season of obeisance and
pilgrimage had begun tor him. Now
with much of his work discredited, and
his name besmirched with stories of
cannibalism and other horrors, he be-
gins to find that even a Stanley in all
his panoply fills but a small place in
this bustling and ever investigating
universe.
Little Authors and Big.
The large majority of contemporary
authors of international fame are small
men physically, Kipling, Barrie,
Jerome, Howells, Stockton, Stedman,
Mark Twain, Bret Harte, Boyesen, Sal-
tus are none of them above the medium
height and several of them are actually
diminutive. Marion Crawford and
Conan Doyle are tall, athletic looking
men, but they are the exceptions that
prove the rule.—The Evening Post.
Suicide at Twelve.
CincINNATI, Feb. 15.—Charles An-
derson, aged 12 years, was so worried
over failing to pass the examinations at
night and died to-day.
Miles and Miles of Names.
A Petition that Contains 1,121.200 Signatures,—
Prepared by the W. C. T. U. To Be Present-
ed to President Cleveland This Month. After
Which it Will be Started on & Voyage Around
the World.
Grover Cleveland, says the New York
Times, will shortly have at least one
claim to pre-eminence over all the rulers
of the world ancient or modern. On
February 15 he will have presented to
him the largest petition known in all
history. The list of written names is
six miles long, and 1f all those who have
given it their sanction were added it
would be six times six miles long.
“There is a women at the beginning
of all great things,” says Lamartine.
Certainly there is a women at the begin-
ning, middle and end of this, for it is
the famous polygot temperance petition
of the World’s Woman’s Christian
Temperence Union. And, whatever
President Cleveland and the rest of mas-
culine humanity may think of its object
it is indisputably great, for if the names
which it contains were to be written one
after the other, end to end, in ordinary
writing, the line would reach from New
York to Washington and back again.
Nor is this record-breaking roll of
names an evanescent feminine notion—
not if years of. hard, patient work pre-
vent its being such. For it is now al-
most a dozen years since Mies Frances
E. Willard first started to collect 2,-
000,000 names of the women of every
land, asking the rulers of the earth to
“strip away the sanctions of the State
from the drink traffic and opium trade
and to bring about the total prohibition
of these brain poisons.” Men who
knew the Qifficulties in the way of such
an undertaking laughed at her visionary
idea. But she only said: ‘‘Agitate,
educate, organize,” and went at it, ham-
mer and tongs. The same sanguine en-
thusiasm that blinded her and her wom-
en helpers to the difficulties also carried
them through—just as in the case of the
million-dollar ~ Temperance Temple
which these :ame women have built in
Chicago.
Hitherto the largest petition ever
framed, and the only one approaching
this in the number of its signatures, has
been that of the British Chartists in
1841, asking for the repeal of the corn
laws ; this had nearly 1,000,000 names,
and it carried its point. ~~ Miss Willard
and her co-workers started out to get 2,-
000,000 names in actual signatures to
their petition, and the work has now
been practically accomplished. Indeed,
from one point of view, it has been
more than triply accomplished. For,
while the actual signatures thus far
mounted on canvas number 1,121,200,
the official indorsements of various so-
cieties raise the total to over 6,000,000
persons who have set the stamp of their
approval upon this remarkable docu-
ment.
The miles on miles of written names
and addresses appended to this utterance
have been mounted on white muslin by
Mrs. Rebecca (. Shuman, of the Evan-
ston, (I1l.) Women’s Christian Temper-
ance Union. The enormity of the task
which Mrs. Shuman has undertaken
may be imagined from the fact that the
aggregate of time she has already spent
at it amounts to about two years of
steady work. The labor of sending out
the blank petitions for signatures was
attended to by the late Mrs Mary A.
Woodbridge, of Chicago, and that of
gathering them in after they were sign-
ed has fallen to Miss Alice E. Briggs,
at the Woman’s Temple, Chicago.
From her the documents, of all sorts,
lengths and languages, are turned over
to Mrs. Shuman in quantities that
might be most adequately measured in
bushels. Next, they must be sorted,
trimmed and prepared for mounting as
compactly as possible on interminable
webs of white muslin, one-half yard in
width, one edge of which is bound with
red and the other with blue tape.
The names are necessarily mounted
somewhat irregularly, but they average
four columns abreast, making, in reality
a quadruple petition, with about 1:00
names to the yard in each column. Mrs.
Shuman has now mounted 1928 yards,
or over one mile of canvas-—making five
miles of names written solidly, one un-
der the other—771,2000 in all. This is
exclusive of about 850,000 names that
came from Great Britain already
mounted, making the total of 1,121,200
actual names on the document that will
be submitted to President Cleveland.
A daughter of the late Jay Gould
who left $62,000,000, mainly stolen, to
be divided among his children, is to
marry a French nobleman, the Count
Jean de Castellane, but it isonly an
honorary title, as a nobleman in France
these days doesn’t amount to anything
more than the commonalty. He is de-
scribed as an ‘‘agreeable little French-
man,” and receives a settlement of $2,-
000,000 from his wife on the day of the
marriage, which shows little French no-
blemen are at a premium in New York
millionaire circles. Two previous en-
gagements of the lady, one with an ac-
tor of shape and talent, had been pre-
viously announced, but were broken off.
The head of the Gould family would
not countenance the letting down of
family pretensions involved in marry-
ing a member of one of Frohman’s
stock companies. It was recently an-
nounced she was engaged to Prince Bat-
tenberg, a brother of Queen Victoria's
son-in-law. In Europe the lady at-
tracted much attention, and why not,
with a $15,000,000 bank account. The
“little Frenchman’’ has drawn a prize.
In answer to a correspondent in
reference to the throwing of rice on a
wedding occasion, it is a relic of an-
cient Rome, signifying a desire that
plenty should always be the lot of the
newly married pair. In this country
the custom only remains as one of the
superstitions that it is luck to do so.
The custom of throwing old slippers is
considered by many to be a relic of the
marriage by capture, when a man used
to carry off his bride by force and vio-
lence. The custom is attributed to
the giving up of the authority of the
parent over the bride and its transfer
to the husband. In the Scripture ac-
cording to an excellent authority, ‘the
receiving of a shoe was an evidence
and a symbol of asserting or accepting
dominion or ownership, the giving
the school that he took Paris green last | back of a shoe the eymbol of rejecting
or resigning it.”
In the Best.
Kentuckians are always proud of their
State in whatever department of human
labor they may hold place. x long
ago a widow went tosee a marble cut-
ter to get a tombstone for her late hus-
band. She selected a plain one from
his stock, and gave him an inscription
to put on it. ;
tCan’t do that, ma’am,’”” he said po-
litely, when he had read it.
“Why not ?”’ she asked in surprise.
“I’m paying fou it.”
“Yes'm, but I can’t put that on. I
stretch my conscience a good many
times in what I put on a tombstone, but
I ain’t going to tell a plain lie when I
know it.”
The widow was greatly shocked and
insisted on his explaining what he
meant.
“Well, ma’am,’”’ he said, ‘“you’ve got
here ‘gone to a better land,’ and that
ain’t so, ma’am. There ain’t any better
land that Kentucky.””—Detroit Free
Press.
SA
The New Texas Senator.
Horace Chilton, the new Texas sen-
ator, was born in Smith County, Tex.,
December 29, 1853. His father was
killed in battle during the civil war.
After the wer young Chilton entered a
printer’s office as ‘‘devil,”’ worked up to
the case, and finally started a small
newspaper, from the proceeds of which
he supported his mother and educated
his sister. He is the first native-born
Texan to sit as a Senator in the United
States.
———All the logging camps will start
up in Washington and British Columbia
within a few days. There are only 47,-
000,000 feet of logs on hand in Wash-
ington, hardly enough for a month’s
run. Prices are already stiffening, and
dealers are elated over the prospects of
upward tendencies of prices and in in-
creased demand.
——O0. W. O. Hardman, Sheriff of
Tyler Co., W. Va., appreciates a good
thing and does not hesitate to say so.
He was almost prostrated with a cold
when he procured a bottle of Chamber-
lain’s Cough Remedy. He says: “It
gave me prompt relief. I find 1t to be
an invaluable remedy for coughs and
colds.” For sale by F. P. Green.
——Tommy Suburb—“I wonder
why these new Queen Ann honses has
front and back porches just alike ?”’
Bobby Broadmeadow —*‘I guess that’s
to fool the chickens, an’ make ’em think
they’re on the front lawn when they’re
in the back yard.”
——Immigrants and returning voy-
agers find in Ayer’s Sarsaparilla a cure
for eruptions, boils, pimples, eczema,
etc., whether resulting from sea-diet
and life on ship-board, or from any oth-
er cause. Its value as a tonic and alter-
ative medicine cannnot be overestimated.
——There is one editor of a daily
paper in New York who is supposed to
draw a salary of $50,000.
——The great value of Hood’s Sarsa-
parilla as a remedy for catarrh is vouch-
ed for by thousands of people whom it
has cured.
Tourists.
It Is the Leader.
The new map time table or ‘folder’ (as it is
cago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway Co., gives
the time of trains to and from Chicago and all
for persons that are contemplating a trip West
It will be sent free to any address upon appli,
cation to Jxo-R.Porr, District Passenger Agen-
Williamsport, Pa. Write for one of them.
known in railroad parlance) issued by the Chi- §
the principal eities in the West; contain anew |
geographically correct map of the United |
States, as well as some valuable information |
Miscellaneous Advs.
Railway Guide.
ET AN EDUCATION.—Educa-
tion and fortune go hand in hand.
Get an education at the Central State Normal
School, Lock Haven, Pa. First-class accom-
modations and low rates. State aid to stu-
dents. For illustrated catalogue address
JAMES ELDON, Ph. D., Principal.
39-45-1y Lock Haven, Pa.
Pn CAVEATS, TRADE
MARKS, COPYRIGHTS.
CAN I OBTAIN A PATENT?
For a prompt answer and an honest opinion,
write to Munn & Co., who have had nearly
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 catalogue
of mechanical and scientific books sent free.
Patents taken through Munn & Co., receive
special notice in the Scientific American, and
thus are brought widely before the public
without cost to the inventor. This splendid
paren) issued weekly, elegantly illustrated, has
y far the largest circulation of any scientific
work in the world. $3 a year. Sample copies
sent free.
Building Edition, monthly, $2.50 a year. Sin-
gle copies, 25 cents. Every number contains
beautiful plates, in colors, and Phoiigienhs of
new houses, with plans, enabling builders
to show the latest designs and secure con-
tracts. Address
MUNN & CO.,
361 Broadway.
40-3-6m New York.
Hh: ve YOU READ
THE
PHILADEPHIA LINES
THIS MORNING ?
THE TIMES is the most extensively circu-
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treating public issues. In the broadest
and best sense a family and general news-
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THE TIMES aims to have the largest circu-
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unsurpassed in all the essentials of a great
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sending their address.
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SUNDAY EDITION, twenty-four large,
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Address all letters to
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40-1.1t. Philadelphia.
Central Railroad Guide.
ENTRAL RAILROAD OF...
PENNSYLVANIA.
Condensed Time Table.
Reap Down Reap Up.
ep leh, 15, 1505 [Poymer
No. 5| No3 No.1 No. 2|No.4 Nos
p.m.|p. m.|a. m. Lv. Ar.la. .m|p.m.|p.m.
8 15/14 05/+7 06|BELLEFO'T| 9 25| 6 50{10 47
8 28| 410'7 3%... Nigh......| 9 12| 6 38{10 32
8 33| 4 25 7 18l.. ....Zi0D...ncrnr 9 07| 6 31|10 27
8 38| 4 30| 7 21|..Hecla Park..| 9 02] 6 28{10 22'
8 44| 4 37 7 27 HUBLERS'6/ 8 57] 6 21(10 17
848 441 7 31/.8n dertown..| 8 53| 6 17/10 13
8 51, 4 44| 7 33.....Nittany:...| 8 51| 6 14/10 10
8 53| 4 46] 7 35 ...Huston..... 8 49] 6 12/10 08
8 55 4 49| 7 37|...LAMAR ....| 8 47| 6 0910 05
8 58 4 53] 7 40! Clintondale.. 8 44 6 07/10 03
904 459 7 Treas 8 39) 6 01) 957
9 10; 5 06] 7 50|.Mackeyville.| 8 34| 5 55| 9 51
9 17| 5 13| 7 55/Cedar Springs 8 29| 5 48| 9 44
919) 514/ 7 57|......Salona..... 8 27| 5 46 9 43
9 25 5 20| 8 05 MILL HALLS 20/15 40/19 3%
p. m.|p. m.|a. m.|Ar: Lyv.\a.m.|p. m.{p. m.
P.M. | A. M. |Lv. Ar. A. M. | P. M.
+ 9 37/111 20|....MILL HALL.....| 813 5 4&
10 05) 11 45|.. Jersey Shore June.| 7 45| 5 10
10 45| 12 25|.WILLIAMSPORT.| 17 05| 14 35
P. M. | P. M. |Ar. Le. A. M. | P. ML
P. M.| P.M. | A.M. | P. M.
#11 15) 13 35|Lv..WEL’MSP'T.. Ar} 6 55 2 40
7 12} 10 12/Ar.....PHILA.....L»
N. York, via Tam
19 30] 3 20|.N. York, tia Phila. 7 30} 4 30
A. M. | A. Mm. (Foot of Iuiberty St. Pp wm. | A. M1.
* Daily, + Week Days 26.00 p. Mm. Sunday
1 10.10 a. m. Sunday.
Philadelphiaand New York SiLeeriNe Cars
attached to Beech Creek R. R. train passing
Mill Hall, East bound at 9.37 p. m. West
*11 30| 835 |
i
ENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD
AND BRANCHES.
Nov. 26th, 1894.
VIA TYRONE—WESTWARD.
Leave Bellefonte, 5.24 a. m.. arrive at Tyrone,
6.40 a. m., at Altoena, 7.40 a. m., at Pitts-
burg, 12.10 p. m.
Leave Bellefonte, 10.34 a. m., arrive at Tyrone,
11.528, m.. at Altoona, 1.45 p. m., at Pitte-
burg, 6.50 p: m
Lesve Bellefonte, 5.14 p. m., arrive at Tyrone,
6.35, at Altoona at 7.40, at Pittsburg at 11.30.
VIA TYRONE—EASTWARD,
Leave Bellefonte, 5.24 a. m.,arrive ut Tyrone
6.40, at Harrisburg. 9.30 a. m., at Philadel
phia, 12.17 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 o. m.
Leave Bellefonte, 5.14 p. m., arrive at Tyrone,
6.35 at Harrisburg at 10.20 p. m.
VIA LOCK HAVEN—NORTHWARD.
Leave Bellefonte, 9.33 a. m., arrive at Loc:
Haven, 10.35 a. m.
Leave Bellefonte, 4.52 p. m., arrive at Lock Ha
ven, 5.49 PB 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, 12.40 p. m:,
arrive at Harrisburg, 3.30 p. m., at Philadel:
phia at 6.50 p. m.
Leave Bellefonte, 4.52 p. m.: arrive at Lock Ha-
ven, 5.49. p. m.; Williamsport, 7.00 p. m.,
Harrisburg, 10.00 p. m.
Leave Bellefonte, 8.43 p. m., arrive at Lock Ha-
ven, 9.40 p. Is i93ze Willanser, 12.25
. m., arrive Harrisburg,3.22 a. m., arri 1
Philadelphia at 6.52 ry sie:
VIA LEWISBURG.
Leave Bellefonte at 6.20 8. m., arrive at Lewls-
burg at 9.00 a. m., Harrisburg, 11.30 a. m.
Phi, posionis 3.00 p. m.
Leave Bellefonte, 2.16 Pp. m,, arrive at Lewis.
burg, 1.47, at Harrisburg, 7.05 p. m., Phils
delphia at 11.15 p. m.
BALD EAGLE VALLEY.
WESTWARD. EASTWARD,
Ze | 3 | Nov.es, | BE [Mg
B 5 : 1894. FES
P.M.| A. M. | A. M. |ATT. Lv. A. M. |p.u.| p, M.
6 35| 11 52| 6 40|...Tyrone.. 8 10/3 34 Ps
6 29| 11 46 6 34|.E.Tyrone.| 8 163 40| 7 31
6 25( 11 42| 6 30|...... all...... 820/13 44] 7 35
6 21| 11 38] 6 26/Bald Eagle| 8 24/3 48 7 39
6.151 11.32 © 20|...... Dix... 8303 54 745
6 12{ 11 29| 6 17|... Fowler 8 33|3 57| T 48
6 10 11 27| 6 15|.. Hannah...| 8 35/3 59| 7 50
6 02| 11 19| 6 08|Pt. Matilda. 8 4%|4 06] 7 57
5 54| 11 11) 6 Ol|...Martha...., 8 49/4 13| 8 04
5 46| 11 03| 5 53|....Julian..... 8 69/4 22/ 813
5 37| 10 54| 5 44|.Unionville.| 9 08j4 81| 8 22
5 30| 10 47| 5 37|...8.8. Int...| 9 17/4 39] 8 30
5 27| 10 44| 5 34| Milesburg | 9 21|4 42| 8 383
5 14| 10 34| 5 24|.Bellefonte.| 9 33|4 52| 8 43
502 10 24| 5 14|.Milesburg.| 9 4615 02| 8 53
4 b4| 10 16{ 5 07|....Curtin....| 9 55(5 10 9 01
4 50| 10 12] 5 03|..Mt. Eagle..| 10 005 14] 9 05
4 44] 10 06/ 4 57|...Howard...| 10 06,5 20| 9 11
4 35 9 57 4 48|.Eagleville.| 10 15/5 29| 9 20
4 32] 954] 4 45|Bch. Creek.| 10 18/5 32| 9 23
421) 943 4 35/.Mill Hall...| 10 29}5 43| 9 34
419) 941] 4 33|Flemin’ton.| 10 31|5 45| 9 36
415 937 4 30|Lck. Haven| 10 35|5 49| 9 40
P.M. A MA M A.M. [A.M] P. NM.
TYRONE & CLEARFIELD.
fog SOUTHWARD,
Nn Nov. 26, og
i B = : 1894. 5
pu! pM | A M. (Lv. Ara. mA M [P. B
7 30] 315| 8 20|...Tyrone....| 6 35| 11 47/6 12
736) 321) 8 26/.E. Tyrone. 6 29| 11 41/6 0&
7 38) 323 8 28|.Tyrone 8.|........ 11 39/6 04
742 326] 831... Vail...... 6 25| 11 366 01
7 51] 3 36| 8 42|.Vanseoyoc.| 6 18] 11 29/5 54
7 55 3 40| 8 47|.Gardner 6 15| 11 26/5 50
8 04] 349) 8 57|Mt.Plessant| 6 o7| 11 18/5 41
8 11| 355 9 05 ..Summit...] 6 00 17 1156 34
8 16| 3 59 9 10/Sand. Ridge 5 54| 11 05/56 27
8 18] 4 01| 9 13}... Retort..... 551} 11 02/5 23
8 15! 4 02| 9 15|.Powelton 5 49. 11 00/5 21
8 271 408 9 23...0sceola 5 39] 10 505 10
wed) 4 1H 0 30|Osceoim Ju.| ......|reeinee 5 06
831 416, 9 33|..Boynten...| 5 35 10 46/5 03
835 419] 9 37|..Steiners...| 5 31| 10 42/4 58
886 423 944 Phjljtebi's 5 30] 10 41/4 57
841) 429 9 49|..Graham...|| 5 26 10 36/4 52
846 4 33] 9 55|.Blue Ball..| 5 21| 10 31/4 46
8 52| 4 39| 10 02{Wallaceton.| 5 16] 10 25/4 39
8 57| 4 44] 10 08|....Bigler..... , 511} 10 20{4 33
9 03] 4 50| 10 14|.Woodland..| 5 06] 10 14/4 27
9 06) 4 53| 10 17|Mineral Sp| 5 05 10'11|4 24
9 10 4 57| 10 21|...Barrett....| 5 01] 10 07/4 20
9 15/ 5 01} 10 25|..Leonard...| 4 56| 10 03/4 16
9 19 5 06] 10 32|..Clearfield..| 4 52| 9 58/4 09
9 24{ 5 11} 10 38|..Riverview.| 4 58 534 02
9 30] 5 17] 10 45/Sus. Bridge| 4 43) 9 47/3 56
9 35] 5 22] 10 50|Curwensv’e| 4 39 9 422 51
prt 10 56|....Rustie... 13 35
11 06 ..Stronach. 13 25
a 11 10,.Grampian. 13 21
P.M. iA, mM, . (P.M.
BELLEFONTE & SNOW SHOE BRANCH.
Time Table in effect on and after
Nov. 26, 1894
Leave Snow Shoe, except Sunday......3 00>». m .
Avxrive in Bellefonte,.................. wd 44 p.m.
Leave Bellefonte, except Sunday....8 57 a. m.
Arrive in Snow Shoe........cceeeereneienns 10 23 a.m.
LEWISBURG & TYRONE RAILROAD,
Schedule in effect November 26th, i894.
best paint that it is possible to put
on wood.
Send us a postal card and get our
book oun paints and color-card, free;
it will probably save you a good
many dollars.
NATIONAL LEAD CO., New York.
Pittsburg Branch,
German National Bank Building, Pittsburg.
39-15-1tn r
with the Fall Brook Ry. At Mill Hall with
Central R. R. of Penna. At Philipsburg
with Pennsylvania Railroad. At Clearfield
with Buffalo, Rochester & Pittsburg Railway.
At Mahaffey and Patton with Cambria & Clear-
field. Division of Pennsylvania Railroad At
Vshailey with Pennsylvania & Northwestern
Railroa |
F. E. HERRIMAN,
A. G. PALMER,
Superintendent,
Gen'l Pass’r Agent.
Philadelphia, Pa.
New Advertisements. bound at 8.13 a. m. WESTWARD. EASTWARD.
J. W. GEPHART, 111 | 103 114 | 112
General Superintendent. STATIONS.
PB. M. | A. M. M. | PM.
ARM FOR SALE.—A most ex- 1.68 5 40 10{ 4 5¢
eellent farm of 178 acres well located, EECH CREEK RAILROAD, 208 6 15].. 00 447
good buildings, plenty of water. well fenced N.Y. C. & H. R. R. R. Co., Lessee. | «creesssfiocnsunn a
and within a tew rods of railroad station, can rere 217] 6 23 8 4 89
be purchased at a bargain by sopipiE to Condensed Time Table. 222 628 8 4 35
JOHN P. HARRIS. 231 637 8 4 27
39-46 tf. 1st Nat. Bank Bellefonte. z 2:48) 6 50 8 415
Reap Ue. Reap Down. 2 51] 6 58.. 817 407
HE ART AMATEUR. Exp. |Mail.| FEB 4th, 1895. | Exp.|Mail. [| 31% 718). 7567 348
om 1 18 18) 10
Best ands Largest Practical Art Magazine 3 55 i rin
7 ne No. 37 No. 33 401] 8 09|.......Centre Hal 7 06] 301
(The only Art Periodical awarded a medal 407 816 ...Gregg...... 700] 254
at the World's Fair.) ip 413) 823 den Hall. 652] 247
Tnvaluable all who wish to make their living by 418! 828 6 47, 242
art or to make their homes beautiful. 492 832 643 287
i 427 837|...... 638 283
FOR 10c, we will send to any one mention-10c. i
ing this publication a specimen copy, with su- ay : = * -Plessens 9a * g 2% 2 %
perb color plates (for copying or framing) and rwiany. AND »
8 ros of ie i {Eu rt se
price, 35¢). Or 25¢. we will send also
Painting for Beginners” (90 pages). LEWISBURG & TYRONE RAIROAD.
MONTAGUE MARKS, 23 Union Square, N. Y. | 8 58] 11 37 WESTWARD. Upper End. EASTWARD
39-19-1y. 8 38} 11 18 rfield June....
Ar 8 8 Nov. 26, 8 8
: $ 30 11 10|....OLEARFIELD....| 8 35({6 9 iE ¥ 21%
Paints. 3 ed i 838/16 45 £ £ £
Ar Lv A.M. | P.M. A.M. |» OM.
2 20 11 01|...Clearfield Junc...! 8 45{ 6 55 | ..... 10 00] 4 50 apSictin, 9 20{ 4 40l......
es 5 «| 853] 706 «| 10 19] 5 07|..Fairbrook.| 9 03} 4 23|......
AINT CRACKS.—It often costs | 8o7 8.58... | 10 33| 5 19|Pa.Furnace| 8 51} 4 11|......
more to prepare a house for repaint- 8 02 ! 903 718].... 1040! 5 25|...Hostler..| 8 45; 4 05|......
ing that has been painted in the first place 7 53| 10 33!..Morrisdale Mines. 9 12} 7 30 ...| 10 46| 5 31|...Marengo.. 8 39{ 3 59|.....
with cheap ready-mixed paints, than it would 7 45| 10 25|Lv......Munson.....Ar| 9 20| 7 40 | ......| 10 51] 5 35|..Loveville..| 8 35; 3 55|.....
to have painted it twice with strictly pure Lv Ar ee 10 58/ 5 41| FurnaceRd| 8 29; 3 49.
white lead, ground mn pure linseed oil. 7 15| 9 55/...PHILIPSBURG...| 9 45 8 05 | = 1101) 5 44 Dungarvin.| 8 26 3 46.
8 05! 10 40!...PHILIPSBURG..... 900] 7 15 | = un 10( 5 52. W. ark... 818 3 88...
ve 11 20] 6 01/Pennington| 8 09{ 3 29/......
STRICTLY PURE 1132 <12|..Stover..| 788 3 18...
Then Gd 11 40| 6 20|...Tyrone....| 750) 3 10l......
WHITE LEAD | 650 931 8 23
644) 928 8 31 ELLEFONTE CENTRAL RAIL-
3 8 29 9 24 ROAD.
8 13 9 37
forms, Dermanont ro ir 533] 807]... LOCK HAVEN ..| 11 26] 9 43 To take effect November 26, 1894.
P g 5 24 7 58 Youngdale (Wayne)| 11 33| 9 52 | EASTWARD. WESTWARD
burned or scraped off on ac. 510| 7 45/. JERSEY SHORE. 11 45 10 05
count of scaling or cracking. #1 35 )- “Lv WMSPORT Ar.| 12 25| 10 45 Nols No.8|tNo. 2 No[4no.7| T No.
It is always smooth and clean. 17 05|.Lv T. 2 |" %| Srarions. x 11
To be $ife = etiny strictly RM. | AM ori Reding BR AM. P.M
ure white lead, purchase any P.M. | A.M. a.& Readin P.M. | P.M. | plop m|a um |Ar. Lv.lam| a. or. |p. wm.
o the following brands: a 40| %6 55[.Ar WMSPOR Lv.|t 335*11 15 | 6 45| 2 45 as ‘Bellefonte.|7 00] 10 50] 4 55
8 35(%11 30|Lv..PHILAD'A..Ar| 10 12| 7 12 | ¢ 38| 2 39| 8 40|..Coleville...7 07) 10 67| 5 00
“ARMSTRONG & McKELVY,” (Reading Terminal) 635 236 8 87|..Morris. {|7 10] 11 02| 5 03
“BEYMER-BAUMAN,” +4 30| 27 30|Lv.NEW YORK.Ar| 320 {9 30 | 6 32] 233 835 .Whitmer.f7 14| 11 07| 5 08
“DAVIS CHAMBERS,” A.M. | B.M (Foot of Laberty St.) pn. | A. nr. | 627 228 8 81|..Hunters...7 20) 11 13| 5 11
“FAHNESTOCK.” . = 6 24 2 26| 8 28..Fillmore.f|7 23| 11 16] 5 15
*Daily. {Week-days. 16.00 p. M. Sundays | 6 19| 2 21| 8 24|....Brialy.. f|7 30| 11 22| & 20
For Corors.—Mational Lead Co.'s 410.55 A. M. Sundays. 615 218 8 20|..Waddle...|7 35{ 11 25| 5 25
Pure White Lead Tinting Colors, a TuroveH PuLLMAN Burrer SpreeiNg Car | 6 12] 212) 8 18/Scotia Cr.fi7 38) 11 28) 5 27
one-pound can to a 25-pound keg of between Clearfield, & Philadelphia daily, ex- | 6 02 200| 8 07 Krumrine.f|7 47) 11 40, 5 37
Lead and mix your own paints. cept Sunday. 559 165 8 04]...8truble.f|750( 11 44| 5 40
Saves time and spnoyance in ConNEctIONs.—At Williamsport with Phila- i 1 2 : > Dutv. Joo 17 pt I > : 2
matching shades, and insures the delphia and Reading R. R. At Jersey Shore ge 2
“f" stop on flag. 1 Daily except Sunday.
F. H. THOMAS, Supt.
I you want printing of any de.
scription the
—— WATCHMAN OFFICE—
is the place to have it done.