Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, July 19, 1895, Image 6

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Bellefonte, Pa., July 19, 1895.
A SIGH FOR REST.
My feet are wearied and my hands are tired,
- My-soul oppressed;
And with desire have 1 long desired
Rest—only rest.
‘Tis hard to toil—when toil is almost vain,
In barren ways.
"Tis hard to sow and never garner grain
In harvest days;
The burden of my days is hard to bear,
3ut God knows best;
And I have prayed—but vain has been my
prayer,
For rest—sweet rest.
*Tis hard to »lant in Spring and never reap
‘the Autumn yield;
Tis hard to till, and when ‘tis tilled, to weep
O’er fruitless field.
And so I cry a weak and human sigh
Forrest-——for rest.
My way has wound across the desert years,
And cares infest
My path, and through the flowing of hot tears
I pine for rest. ’
"T'was always so when still a child I laid
On mother’s breast
My wearied little head—e’en then i prayed,
As now , forrest.
And I am restless still; "twill soon be c'er;
For down the west
Life's sun is setting, and Iisee the shore
Where I shall rest.
—Father Ryan.
A French Hotel In uid Mexico.
Delights of a Restaurant at the Aguas Calicntes
— Local Customs and Cookery.—The Proprie-
tor's Stock of Wines and Water Bottles—His
Revolver Creer the Bed's Head.—A Kitchen
That Looked Like a Thieves Cabin--Bed
Rooms of ¢ Medvvvel Description.
The time-table declared, and the con-
ductor affirmed, that a stop of half an
hour was made a Aguas Calientes, the
Hot Springs of Mexico, for dinner and
I descended from the Pullman and
looked around me at the great cobra-
like trees and the brown fields powdered
with gray dust.
The first figure which halted my eyes
was a goldier, at least I took him to be a
soldier, as he stood in a corner half
asleep and pacifically armed ; his rusty
revolver, and the form of his sword
characterized him as = cavalry man,
but as he was on foot he must have be-
longed to the infantry. Indeed, be |
might have been an assassin waiting for
his prey, but as I was traveling in good
faith I called him a soldier.
Drawn-work and feather-work and
The drink of the country (pulque) were
offered here for sale, and while in ex-
amination of the exquisite center-pieces,
doihes, handkerchiefs: and menu cards,
up rushed a Mexican with dirty face
and torn garmentsand in the sweet lan-
guage of Cervantes informed me that
wy friends in the Pullrarn had sent for
we to come to dinner at a French res-
taurant just within sight of the station,
sefollowing him, I traversed a square or
ranrket place, past odd groups of ven-
ders of strange tropical fruits with
stranger odor. There were also sellers
of oranges, limes, lemons and. bananas,
each sitting under huge umbrellas
which sheltered lhem alike from rain
or sun, and which were evidently essen-
tislly a thing of the country, e° they
could never be shut and consisted" of
tive sticks of wood-like spokes of a wheal
outspread nnd covered with linen, which
hung in sce places in tatters.
A few tram-cars drawn hy two or
three mules harnessed tamdem, were
waiting idly on the tracks for the pas-
sepgers whe were go tardy in making
their appearance. The seats of some
were painted blue, and of others red,
whether an art fantasy of the aborigines
of Aguas Calientes or a matter of first
and second class customers, I never de-
termined.
I found myself finally in front of the
eating house, a long building ‘of no ar-
chitecture whatever, and not higher in
any place than three yards. It was
without windows, and only 8 man of
very ordinary height could, enter. If
one teok it into his head to wear the
high bat, a la mode, he would have to
remove it 1n the open air or entrance
was impossible for him.
Toe familiar faces of my Pullman
car friends greeted me in the dining
room, and a waiter met me who appear-
2d to be in a great hurry to seat mein a
rude-looking chair with a broken,
straw-bottomed seat. The surroundings
were most primitive, the table rested on
two crossed legs, und two badly hung
doors conducted one to the bar, and one
to the kitchen, it being - necessary: to
lower the head in passing through eith-
cr The room was entirely calcimined
in white, with a broad freize of Pompe-
lian blue under which ran narrow bor-
ders of blue and red painting; the
walls were decorated with all kinds of
American advertising cards. As my
chair possessed uneven legs it rocked me
wildly up and down in the intervals of
cating. © I refused almost the" entire
dinner, but accepted two cups of very
good coffee, in which Ijwas glad to note
that the sugar was quite white, and not
like the bits of yellow marble common
to most of Mexico. ?
The proprietor, seeing an advertise-
went of his house in the immediate fu-
ture, was impatient to show it, so in his
company 1 entered the bar or wine cel-
lar first, where I found a goodly stock
of wines. There were some Etruscan-
shreped water bottles , and two bottles
which had once held the Queen brand
of olive were now the depository of the
proprietor’s supply of butter. From his
bar opened the host's bed room, which
was without windows, and drawing
aside tho gay-colored blanket which
hung in the doorway, I peeped in upon
the clean bed with mattress of straw,
linen ‘sheets and pillow case and
coverlet of purple wool, with a heavy
revolver close to the occupant’s head.
A huge felt sombrero trimmed with sil-
ver hung upon the wall, while a square,
wooden table held a wooden candlestick
some broken bits of looking glass and a
bowl full of clean water with which to
wash.
The kitchen at first impression seem-
ed like a thieves’ cavern and one
glanced anxiously about him into dark
corners until he grew accustomed to the
universal dimness. The entrance was
made by a broken stone step and a door
so low as to render stooping always
necessary. In a dark, left corner a
dog’s head cut in two had been made
into two tubs, into whose dirty contents
the dishes as they were brought from
the hotel table were plunged by a native
woman who was more broad than long,
and who wore her hair precisely like a |
Chinaman’s coiled around her head.
When dried the dishes were placed
upon an ancient bench, which in point
of antiquity probably antedated the
Aztees. A great brazier of brick,
shaped like a butcher’s block with an
arc in front, cast into the darkness the
cheerful red gleams of its charcoal fire,
but it seemed to me that the cook was
certainly fatter than any of the dishes
that he served and would, of himself,
have proved an excellent meal for a
whole regiment of soldiers. Opposite
to this charcoal furnace a small square
door issued upon 8 terrace overlooking
the patio, or courtyard, where several of
a species of long-haired, wooly pigs, pec-
uliar to Mexico, Were quietly sleeping,
geeming to me in their placid exposition
of themselves 8 very trede-mark and
provision store.
Viewed from the terrace inward, a
most prominent object in the kitchen
was an American stove, old and musty,
which stood in a corner in complete re-
pose as ifit would say, “I am ashamed
to give my civilized services in such a
land,” while the smoked walls were
hung with bacon and haunches of ham,
whose odor testified to their age.
A dark windowless laundry also un-
closed upon this entrance ; it was full of
soiled linen and servants were heating
irons by bringing in small braziers
alive with charcoal fires. Putting my
head through a round hole in the wall,
I found half of my body in the laundry
and half in tbe restaurant, and leaving
the pigs in silent guard of the dirty
patio, I returned to the eating room,
where a porter was awaiting-me with a
great mass of iron keys, each a foot
in length, and weighing, at the least,
two pouuds apiece. At first sight they
seemed to be the keys of St. Peter with
which to enter Paradise, but instead
they unclosed the bed rooms, all of
which were upon the outside of the
house, with ddors opening upon the
street, I began to understand - why so
many boys loitered about the hotel, or,
according to the keys which I saw, each
guest ‘would be obliged of necessity to
employ a key bearer.
The best, or company, room bore over
the door the figure 13, but as there
was no system of numbering the keys it
required several moments before the
right one could be found, but fAnally
with a flourish, as if at the taking of a
fort ress—for although cocoanut oil is
very cheap in this "country, the lock in
question had evidently never felt any—
the huge key grated harshly, as if the
operation of turning hurt its nerves, and
1 stepped iato a little bed room, whose
walls bore the same species of Pompiilan
decoration as the restaurant, with one
modification in the form of a narrow
black wainscot. The floor was com-
posed of red bricks, the ceiling of great
beams of wood, with a small space, five
inches wide, from one beam to another,
which the industrious spiders were
speedily covering with a silvery lace
work. There was no carpet or bell,
and the furniture consisted of a single
iron bed, painted red, with mattress of
corn husks, a small chair of straw and
a round table, which had known the
varied uses of toilet, reading, writing
and smoking for a small, burnt piece
of cigarette, probably a remnant of the
occupant, laid upon the edge ; also a
very heavy. round iron candlestick and
an ancient piece of soap of the color of
old butter.
About a yard above the table a nail
was driven into tue wall, and upon this
rested a half-burned tallow candle, a
unique chandelier, ;indeed, compared
with the inventions of Edison, and pos-
gibly the result of some course in a Mex-
ican college of economies.
Tho single bed did service for two
when occasion demanded, which occa-
sion was very rare. There was a little,
long, round bolster upon it of incredible
hardness, which might well have served
as a battering-ram for the old Romans,
two yellowish-white sheets with blue
lines down the centre, but scrupulously
clean, and a blanket of scrape, of bright
stripes, which somehow reminded me of
a crouched zebra.
The room resembled a dungeon ‘more
than anything else, for there were no
windows, and when the guest extin-
guished his candle he was surrounded
by the blackness of darkness. The key
opened solely from the outside, but was!
useless upon the inside, huge bolts and
chains taking its ptace. No door fitted
tightly, and through, the many fissures
trooped an army of insects and bugs,
but indeed if it were not for them, the
traveler would not have to go to the
Polar North in search of a night twenty-
four hours long or longer. \
A strong wind would give the door-
an ague, but that being a malady quite
common to doors in this country, it
would probably pass unnoticed. Upon:
asking for a guest’s mirror, the porter
informed me: that it was only to be
found in the water in which he washed.
No. 13 was a fair sample of all of mins
host’s guest chambers.
The warning bell of the engine
caused me to seek my Pullman, and
with a last look at the muffled figures
surrounding the station, the throng of
clamoring sellers and the patient don-
keys waiting to be loaded with freight,
the train swept out from Aguas Cal-
ientes, away from the low, flat houses
and the walled street under the deep,
blue sky and over the flelds of dusty
cactus, on towards Encarnacion and its
famous bridge.
STRONG AND HEARTY.—Hannah,
Pa., June 25, 1895. We have used sev-
eral bottles of Hood's Sarsaparilla in our
family and think it an excellent medi-
cine for cleansing the blood. My broth-
er who suffered with scrofula has been
made strong ne hearty by Hood's Sar-
saparilla. W.°F. Fink.
Hood's pills cure indigestion.
Coming Eminence.
“I hear your brother Teddy 1s gettin’
up in politics.”
“Yep. He don’t do no work no more
at all”
——A man laughs when he is
amused ; & woman laughs when she
thinks people think she ought to.
Six Killed in a Cyclone.
A Jersey Hamlet is Practically Wiped Out of
Enistence.—New York Also Visited. —The
Town of Wood Haven, on Long Island, Badly
Devastated.—The Storm was the Fiercest
Known in Northeast New Jersey for Years
and the Destruction it Has Caused is Very
Great. Trees Were Torn Up by the Roots,
Large Buildings Unroofed and Many Lifted
Entirely from their Foundations.
A cyclone swept across Hackensack
N. J., July 13, leaving death and deso-
lation in its path. At least five per-
sons are known to have been killed,
scores were injured and a large num.
ber of buildings were demolished. The
storm first appeared at Cherry Hill,
which was practically swept away,
sixty houses being unroofed and a
dozen more totally destroyed. The
railroad station, on the New York and
New Jersey Railroad, was lifted from
its site and thrown across the track
and wrecked.
THE KILLED AND INJURED.
The cyclone made a clean path
by ecores, many of them through
the centre of the place. At
the present time it is known that five
were killed, and the injured are num-
bered, fatally. The dead are Conrad
Friedman, three unknown Polish la-
borers and the Ahrens child.
The storm came from the northwest,
Leaded by great banks of clouds and a
stirring breeze. The atmosphere was
warm for a time and then cold, and
after a second rush of warmth came
the cyclone, carrying death and des-
truction in its course. The storm cen-
tre was about 200 feet in width and
the strip over which it passed ie a
maes of ruine. Not a building in ite
path was spared, and those that were
not completely demolished were un-
roofed or moved from their founda-
tions. Great masses of wreckage were
carried through the air by the gale {ad-
ding to the destruction.
LONG ISLAND STORM-SWEPT.
NEw York, July 13.—The first
cyclone in many years struck New
York Saturday and resulted fatally in
one instance, besides wrecking a large
amount of valuable property.
The cyclone struck the upper end of
East New York, known as Cypress
Hill, at halfpast 4 o'clock, continued
| on its way to the lower plaine district,
and from there traveled to Wood
Haven, Long Island. One life was lost
and the damage to property was great.
A number of people were badly hurt.
The cloud was first aeen going over
Cypress Hill Cemétery. It was funnel
shaped and hung very low to the
ground. At the upper end was a red
spot that appeared more like an in-.
cundescent light than anything else.
The cyclone swept over the cemetery,
wrecking handsome and costly mona:
ments. It tore down trees for two
hundred feet, and then turned into
Jamaica avenue at Crescent street, up
Jamacia avenue for half a mile. Trees
were torn down, and telephone, tele:
graph and trolley wires demolished.
The Christian ‘Endeavors.
Perhaps not since the time of the cru-
sades have so many persons assembled
for a religious purpose as were recent-
ly in Boston under the banners of
the Society of Christian Endeavor. The
resemblance of the Endeavors and the
crusaders is not wholly fanciful. The
motive of the gathering of each body
was religious; but the effects of the
gathering of the crusaders were more
potential upon political and sociology
than upon church life, and it is quite4=
likely that the influence of the Endeav-
ors may be as distinctly discernible as a
‘force making for righteousness’ in the
government of cities and of states and in
purification of social life as in its work
of augmentation of the membership of
churches.
There is something inspiring to the
social and political reformer in contem-
plation of 50,000 delegates to an Kn-
deavor convention. If the delegates
number 50,000, what is the number of
the constituency that they represent ?
It is u majestic conception that some
hundreds of thousands of young people,
soon to be voters, soon to be parents and
educators of a still younger generation,
are pledged in endeavor, not merely “to
save souls,”” but to make the work of
soul-saving the beginning of a work of
soul progression, of travel toward a con-
dition in which
\ Sweeter manners, purer laws
Than yet have had force on earth shall
be every-day rules of action. The glory
of the Endeavor movement is that it is
not sectarian, not even ecclesiastical, but.
simply spiritual and moral. The En-
deavors are net of the kind of young
folk that delight in isolation or that talk
orly on dogmatic points. They are
abreast with the times, they are students
of sociology, they are part of the life of
the world. The Kndeavors are to the
churches what the real “new woman’ is
to society, a ‘force not less cleanly nor
less modest than that which it supplants,
but more acute, more liberal, more ef-
fective.
The proceedings of the convention of
Endeavorers were of interest to a larg-
er number of people than those of any
political convention that ever gzsembled,
and it is with full approciation of the-
high services of many conventions of
liticians that we add, it is quite possi-
le that the proceedings of the Endeav-
orers may be fraught with more momen-
tous results than those cf any party con-
vention. The proceedings that influ-
ence the moral character necessarily
figve future influence upon political
ife.
ScALLOPED ToMATOES.—Peel and cut
in slices one-fourth inch thick : pack in
a pudding dish in alternate layers with
a forcemeat made of bread crumbs, but-
ter, salt, pepper and a little white sugar;
spread thickly on each layer of tomatoes,
and when the dish is nearly full put
tomatoes uppermost, a good bit of but.
ter on each slice. Dust with pepper and
a little sugar. oirew with dry- bread
crumbs and bake covered half an hour.
Remove the lid then and bake brown.
Ounce PuppiNGg —Six eggs, six ap-
ples chopped fine, six ounces of cur-
rants, six ounces of sugar, a little salt
and nutmeg. Boil for two hours and
serve with wine or lemon sauce.
Japan Wents to Fight Russia.
Significant Movements of Troops and Purchase
of Arms.
Lo~NDoN, July 13.—All advices from
Yokohama concur in the statement
against Russia for her interference in
the settlement of the Chinese-Japanese
war and are confident that they can
punish her.
As the Japanese troops return from
the Liao Tung Peninsula, they are hur-
riedly sent north, where they will be
ready instantly on the receipt of orders
to land in Korea. In another month
Japan will be ready for a war with
Russia.
According to the Statist, American
sellers of silver should not rely upon
the demand for that metal, arising from
the issue of the Chinese loan on the
19th. It adds that it is probable that
when the proceeds are handed to Japan,
most of the money will remain in 8u-
rope to liquidate Japan’s indebtedness
to buy arms, and to otherwise prepare
anew for war.
London financiers ridicule the cable
dispatches from China announcing that
Germany and England will be allowed
to issue the second loan of $80,000,000.
One hundred and ten million dollars
must still be raised by China, says the
Economist, and if Russia and France
do not continue to help her, the pros-
pect will not be bright.
RUSSIA ASKS JAPAN TO ANSWER.
St. PETERSBURG, July 13.—Prince
Lobanoff Rostovski, the Russian Minis-
ter of Foreign Affairs, on Thursday re-
Tne Nishi Tokujuiro, the Japanese
inister to Russla, to state within what
period the Japanese would evacuate the
Liano-Tung Peninsula. The Minister
replied that Japan would retain the ter-
ritory in question until full payment of
the war indemnity and compensation for
the renouncing of Liano-Tung had been
made by he Chinese Government.
Prince Lo noff refused to accept this
answer, and at once instructed the Rus-
sian Ambassador at Tokyo to ask the
Government to name a date for the with-
drawal of all the troops from the Chi-
nese mainland.
New Eagle Officers at Snow Shoe.
The following are the officers of Com-
mendable Castle, No. 280 of Snow Shoe,
Pa., forthe ensuing six months’ term :
Bait chief, Jas. Russell; noble chief,
Sam Shank ; vice chief, John A. Mayes;
high priest, P. J. Haynes; venerable
hermit, T. L. Millard; master of rec-
ords, J. I. Yarnell; clerk of exchequer
Ju: I. Yarnell ; keeper of exchequer, J.
D. Brown; sir herald, H. Carver;
worthy bard, J. D. Brown; worthy
chamberlain, M. W. Shank ; ensign, D.
R. Thomas; esquire, T. T. Heston;
first guardsman, Chas. Watson ; second
guardesman, A. C. Heaton ; trustee, Jas.
Russell.
The following are the officers of Belle-
fonte Castle, No. 357 of Bellefonte, for
the ensuing six month’s term :
Past chief, John M. Strayer; noble
chief, C. C. Bell; vice chief, Li. D. Get-
tig ; high priest, Wm. P. Kubn ; ven-
erable hermit, T. C. Bell; master of
records, H. W. Bickle; clerk of exche-
quer, A. Lukenbach ; keeper of exche-
quer, W. H. Taylor ; sir herald, James
Schofield ; worthy bard, A. Lukenbach;
worthy chamberlain, A. V. Hamilton ;
ensign, Charles A. Hazel ; esquire, Chas.
Bartley ; first guardsman, W. H. Ott;
second guardsman, Jacob Cole ; trus-
tees, H. K. Hoy, Elmer Straub, Geo.
Taylor; representative to the Grand
Castle, Milton R. Johnston.
Slept Wrong Way.
Mamma—You must be very careful.
The doctor says your system is all upset.
Little Dot—I guess itis. My foot’s
asleep. * Folks must be awfully upset
w’en they goes to sleep at the wrong
end.
.
——BAKED SpANIsH ONIONS.— Peel
four spanish onions, put them in cold
water with a small lump of soda, place
on the fire and let them come to the
boil; and then simmer them gently for
half an hour; drain thoroughly, and
put them in a baking dish with a little
butter and bake till brown.
——Nodd—My baby looks lovely
when heis asleep. You ought to see
him.
Todd— When shall I call.
Nodd—Any time during the day.
—H. B. Gurler thinks that for milk-
ers women are superior to men, be-
cause they are naturally more kind and
have more sympathy with the cow
than men have.
——Requiescat in Pace—Over the
grave of the Cannibal King they in-
scribed with trenchant pen this epitaph :
«Write me down as one who loved his
fellowmen.”’
——Sappeigh—I have been married
over ten years and my wife has never
uttered a cross word to me.
Happeigh—Gad, old fellow! I had
no idea you married a deaf mute.
——The morality of an action de-
pends upon the motive from which we
act.
——Thers is no'merit without eleva-
tion, and no elevation without some
merit.
——Idleness is the stupidity of the
body, and stupidity is the idleness of
the mind.
—— Sorrow is a kind of rust of soul
which every new idea contributes in its
passage to scour away.
—
——Spesking of queer sensations, did
you ever shake hands with a man who
bad two fingers off ?
——Kaneas has twenty women hold-
ing office as county superintendent of
public instruction.
——You can see a man every day
and then not know much about him.
‘Will Build Coke Ovens at Hastings.
JorNsTowN, July 14.—It has just
been announced that the Philadelphia
company which is opening 8 new coal
mine at Hastings, this county, will
erect 1,000 coke ovens. It is proposed
to equip the wine with electric light
and machinery driven by electric
power.
INsaNITY AMONG WoMEN.—The
large increase in mental trouble amon
women is directly traceable to a diseas
state of their peculiar and delicate or-
ganism. Much of this is brought about
by carelessness late hours, thin shoes,
tight corsets, over-work, anxiety and
sometimes by excesses. When her
delicate mechanism is disabled or de-
ranged nothing equals Dr. Pierce’s Fav-
ig Prescription in restoring it to or-
er.
A SE ETAT.
——The whole population of the
United States could be concentrated in
Texas without bringing up the density
of her population to that of Massachu-
setts. In factif an area equal to that of
Indiana were cut off from Texas the
State would still hold the entire popula-
tion of the United States without
crowding us as the people of Massachu-
setts are crowded. Delaware would
have more than room for us all could
the whole population be crowded as are
the inhabitants of New York city.
——"And now, how will you have
your hair cut ?’’ said the voluble barber.
“Off,”” answered the crusty customer.
And the barber cut on.
Tourists.
“The Crack Train of the World.”
A prominent New York merchant and im-
porter of leather goods said in our hearing the
other day, “I have traveled all over Europe
and America, and I consider the train which
leaves Chicago every day at 6:30 p. m. for St.
Paul and Minneapolis, via the Chicago, Mil-
waukee & St. Paul Railway, “The Crack Train
of the World.”
In which statement thousands of others
heartily concur.
Central Railroad Guide.
STITT IRIS ——re a = py
Cy RAILROAD OF...
’ PENNSYLVANIA.
Condensed ‘Time Table.
Reap Down |
TIIDD May. 15, 1895.10 = T
No.5 No3 {No. 1| {No. 2 No.4 No.6
i | | |
Reav Ue.
.m.[p. m.ja. m. Lv. Ar.]a. .m p.m.{p.m.
8 15,13 33'+7 40 BELLEFO'T 10 20/6 10,10 47
8 29, 3 47) '7 51.......Nigh....... 10 07) 5.57/10 32
8 35 3 53! 8 00! 110 01| 5751/10 27
8 40 3 58 8 05 1'9 561 5 4610 22
8 42 4 00| 8 07|....Dunkles....| 9 54 5 44/10 20
8 46, 4 04/ 8 11{HUBLERS'G| 9 50! 5 40/10 17
8 50, 4 08] 8 15/.Snydertown.. 9 46 5 37/10 13
8 52, 4 10| 8*17.....Nittany....| 9 44 5 35/10 10
8 54 4 12| 8 19'.....Huston.. | 8
8 56 4 14| 8 21|...LAMAR 531,
8 58 4 17| 8 23 .Clintondale..; 9 37| 5 29
9 04; 4 22] 8 28/Krider'sS'n’g; 9 32{ 5 24; 9 57
9 10. 4 28 8 34 .Mackeyville. 9 26' 5 18] 9 51
9 17. 4 34} 8 40/Cedar Springs’ 9 20' 5 12 9 44
919 1 36| 8 42.......Salona.....' 9 18] 5 11| 9 43
9 25 4 43) 8 50 MILL HALL 19 1215 05/19 37
M. | A. M. Lv. Arla. Mm |p. M.
9 37} 49 12|....MILL HALL.....| 513 505
10 05] 9 40..Jersey Shore Junc.| 7 45 435
10 45! 10 12 .WILLIAMSPORT..| 7 05; +4 00
P. M. | A. M. AT. Lva MPM
r.M. | AN | | A.M.
bd} 15/110 30 Lv. WIL’MSP'T..Ari 655 240
lp. M.|
7121 5 0%Ar...PHILA.... Lvi*11 30. 8 35
Y
6 45/N. York, via Tama.| |
19 30, 7 25 .N. York, via Phila.iZ 7 36:1 4 30
i | (Foot of Liberty St.)|
9 25! 7 00 ....Atlantic City....[ 9 30] 6 30
a.m Mm ie. m.la.m
Railway Guide.
T
ENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD
AND BRANCHES.
May 20th, 1895.
VIA TYBONE—WESTWAED.
Leave Bellefonte, 5.26 a. m.. arrive at Tyrone,
6.40 a. m., at Altoona, 7.40 a. m., at Pitte-
burg, 12.10 p. m.
Leave Bellefonte, 10.09 a. m., arrive at Tyrone,
11.52 a. m.. at Altoona, 1.45 p. m., at Pitts-
beth 6.50 p: m.
Lesve Bellefonte, 5.15 p. m., arrive at Tyrone,
6.33, at Altoona at 7.40, at Pittsburg at 11.30.
VIA TYRONE—EASTWAED.
Leave Bellefonte, 5.26 a. m., arrive at Tyrone
6.40, at Harrisburg, 9.30 a. m., at Philadel
phisa, 12.17 p. m.
Leave Bellefonte 10.09 a. m., arrive at Tyrone,
11.25 a. m., at Harrisburg, 2.40 p. m., at
Philadelphia, 5.47 p. m.
Leave Bellefonte, 5.15 p. m., arrive at Tyrone,
6.33 at Harrisburg at 10.20 p. m.
VIA LOCK HAVEN—NORTHWARD.
Leave Beliefonte, 9.28 a. m., arrive at Lock
Haven, 10.30 a. m.
Leave Bellefonte, 4.50 p. m., arrive at Lock Ha
ven, 5.49 Lr m. :
Leave Bellefonte at 8.41 p. m., arrive at Lock
Haven at 9.40 p. m.
VIA LOCK HAVEN—EASTWARD.
Leave Bellefonte, 9.28 a. m., arrive at Lock Ha-
ven, 10.30, leave Williamsport, 12.35 P m;,
arrive at Harrisburg, 3.20 p. m., at Philadel-
phia at 6.23 p. m.
Leave Bellefonte, 4.50 p. m.: arrive at Lock Ha:
ven, 5.49. p. m.; arrive 6.45 Williamsport,
leave 7.00 p. m., Harrisburg, 10.00 p. m.
Leave Bellefonte, 8.41 p. m., arrive at Lock Ha-
ven, 9.40 p. m., leave Williamsport, 12.25
a. m., arrive Harrisburg,3.22 a. m., arrive at
Philadelphia at 6.52 a. m.
VIA LEWISBURG.
Leave Bellefonte at 6.20 8. m., arrive.at Lewis:
burg at 9.00 a. m., Harrisburg, 11.30 a. m.
Phi oleipnis, 3.00 p. m.
Leave Bellefonte, 2.16 p. m., arrive ‘at Lewis-
burg, 4.47, at Harrisburg, 7.10 p. m., Phila
delphia at 11.15 p. m.
BALD EAGLE VALLEY.
WESTWARD. EASTWARD.
5B = 5. B
2 Ee | 3 May 20, > jay 5
gE §= | B 1895. g §= §
P.M.| A, M. [a o. (Arr. © Lv. A. M. [p.m.| p. mM.
6 33) 11 25 6 40|..Tyrone...| 8103 34 7 25
6 27, 11 19; 6 34|.E.Tyrone.| 8 16/3 40| 7 31
6 23! 11 15{ 6 30!...... ail... 820/13 44| 735
6 19| 11 11] 6 26/Bald Eagle] 8 24/3 48] 7 39
6 13| 11 05] 6 20|......Dix...... 8 30(8 54| 7 45
6 10; 11 02] 6 17|... Fowler...| 8 33|3 57| 7 48
6 08) 11 00! 6 15... Hannah... 8 35/3 59| 7 50
8 00| 10 52| 6 08/Pt. Matilda.| 8 42/4 06] 7 67
5 52) 10 44; 6 0l|..Martha....| 8 49|4 13| 8 04
5 44 10 36| 5 53!...Julian..... 8 58/4 22| 813
535 10 27| 5 44.Unionville.; 9 07/4 31| 8 22
5 28] 10 20; 537 ..8.8.Int...| 9 15/4 39] 8 30
5 25 10 17; 5 34 .Mileshurg | 9 18/4 42| 8 33
5 15| 10 09 5 26 .Bellefonte.| 9 28/4 50, 8 41
502] 9 57 5 14 .Milesburg.| 9 41!5 02| 8 53
454 949 507..Curtin...| 949/510 901
4 50| 9 45! 5 03.Mt. Eagle..| 9 53/514] 9 05
444 939] 457|..Howard..{ 959/520] 911
435 930 418. Eagleville. 10 085 29 9 20
432] 927 4 45 Beh. Creek.| 10 11{5 32! 9 23
421 916 435. MillHall.| 10225 43 9 34
419| 9 14] 4 33/Flemin’ton.| 10 24|5 45| 9 36
415] 9 10, 4 30 Leck. Haven| 10 30/5 49| 9 40
P.M. A. M.A M.| A. M. [A.M.| P. M.
TYRONE & CLEARFIELD.
SOFIHWARD. | Cd
wim Loa
fA. XC] S | May2o, Le] ©
§IEE| ¢ | 1895. i Bs"
{} | | . ? ?
P.ML| P. M. | A.M. Lv. Ar. a. Mm. | A.M. [P.M
730 315 8 20|..Tyrone...| 6 35) 11 20,6 12
736] 321 8 2. E. Tyrone.| 6 29! 11 14/6 06
7 asl wos] soslifyrimentl, | 11 12/6 04
7 41 320 831...Vail... 6 25 11 09{6 01
7 51 3 36, 8 42.Vanscoyoc., 6 18 11 02/5 64
7 65 3 40| 8 47|.Gardner...| 615, 10 59/5 50
8 04 349 867 Mt.Pleasant, 6 07) 10 51|6 41
811 356 9 05..Summit...| 6 00] 10 44/56 34
8 16, 3 59! 9 09/Sand.Ridge 5 54| 10 38/6 27
8 18! 401 9 11|.. Retort... 551, 10 855 23
8 13! 402 9 13|.Powelton..| 5 49' 10 235 21
827 408 921..0sceola.... 539) 10 23/6 10
crane } 411: 9 2%80sceola Jul ...l..... 506
8 31, 4 16; 9 31,..Boynton...| 5 85 10 19/6 08
8 35 419 9 35..Steiners...| 5 31] 10 15/4 58
8 36! 4 23 9 42 Philipsbu’g| 5 30 10 14/4 57
841 429 47'...Graham...| 5 26 10 09/4 52
8 46 4 33| 2!.Blue Ball.! 521 10 144 46
8 52, 439; allaceton.| 5 16; 9 58/4 89
8 67) 4 44] Bigler..... 511, 9 534 88
9 03; 4 50] land..| 508 9 47/427
9 06, 4 53 dineral Sp. 5 05] 9 44/4 24
9 10, 4 57 Barrett... 501, 9 40/4 20
9 15 3 01) 10 22 ..Leonard...| 4 56! 0 35/416
9 19! 506] 10 28 .Clearfield..| 4 52 9 31/4 09
9 24) 5 11j 10 34|..Riverview.| 4 58 9 26/4 02
9 30; 5 17, 10 41 Sus. Bridge 4 43] 9 20:3 56
9 35] 5 22 10 46'Curwensv’e| 4 39/ 9 15/2 51
a ee} 10 521... .RUSEIO.... [sco oeresferees .|3 35
11 02 ..Stronach. 325
..| 11 06 Grampian 3 21
P.M.| P.M. | A M P.M.
* Daily, t+ Week Days 36.00 p. m. Sunday
1 10.10 8. m. Sunday.
Philadelphia and New York SLEEPING CARS
attached to Beech Creek R. R. train passing
Mill Hall, East bourd at 9.37 p. m. West
bound at 8.13 a.m. Pullman Parlor Cars on
Day trains between Williamsport and Phila.
delphia.
J. W. GEPHART,
General Superintendent.
.
EECH CREEK RAILROAD,
N.Y. C. & H. R. R. R. Co, Lessee.
Condensed Time Table.
Reap Up. {Reap Dow.
Exp. Mail.| MAY 12th, 1895. | Exp. | Mail.
No. 30 No. 36
a EE
PATTON....Lv 3 50
Westover. 412
— —
4 25! 12 50 .. 435
9 00} 12 15! 5 05
8 50 12 05).. 515
"5 43/11 58/Ar. or. 4 22
8 38; 11 53|.....New Millport | B27
8 32| 11 4G|..........0lanta.... | 533
8 25 11 37|........Mitchells. | 39
8 05] 11 18/...Clearfield Junc.... 57
re
755 11 10]..CLEARFIELD...| © 35 {8 (8
RN a a
7 45) 11 01} 6 45! 6 57
7 35! 10 53 oodland 653) 709
7 30 10 47 ..Bigler gas)...
7 23 10 42 Wallacet 703° 723
7 15 10 32(..Morrisdale M 112 183
7 07) 10 22|Liv...... Munson. ... 720 740
| Lv mn i ;
¢ 40! 9 55...PHILIPSBURG... 745 805
723 10 40... PHILIPSEURG 700! 7230
gr om 0
7 05 10 17 Ar. 722 740
6 40] 9 53... 7 45 5 05
ni nn
520 8 26..BEECH CREEK... 859 24
S505) sul... Mill Hall.......| 912 931
4 58) 8 07|... LOCK HAVEN... 918 043
447 7 58 Youngdale (Wayne)! 9 27| 9 52
4 35! 7 45|Jersey Shore Junc. 9 40 10 05
+4 00, #7 05/.Lv W'MSPORT Ar,| 10 12/ 10 45
P.M. | A.M. ! _ hawmiew
P.M. | A.M. Phila.& Reading RR| A. mu. | p. M.
2 40; *6 55.Ar W'MSPORT Ly. {10 30,*11 15
8 35/+11 30/Lv..PHILAD'A. .Ar| 508 7°
4 30, |Lv.N Y via Tam..Ar| © 45|
| 27 30 Lv.N Y via Phila.Ar| 7 25| 19 30
AM [P.M | p.m. | AM.
*Daily. tWeek-days. 126.00 p. M. Sunday
$10.55 A. M. Sunday. - \
TurouGH PULLMAN Burrer SLEEPING CAR
between Clearfield, & Philadelphia daily, ex-
cept Sunday on trains Nos. 36 and 33.
Through coach to New York, and through
Pullman Buffet Parlor cars to Philadelphia on
train leaving Williamsport 10.30. -
Coxnecrions.—At Williamsport with Phila-
delphia and Reading R. R. At Jersey Shore
June. 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
Mahatey with Pennsylvania & Northwestern
Rail
rom F. E. HERRIMAN,
Gen'l Pass'r Agent,
A. G. PALMER,
Philadelphia, Pa.
Superintendent.
_BELLEVONTE 4 SNOW SHOE BRANCH.
"Time Table in effect on and after
May 20, 1895.
Leave Snow Shoe, except Sunday......3 00 p. m.
Arrive in Bellefonte,..........cc..crenceeee: 443 p.m.
Leave Bellefonte, except Sunday
in Snow Shoe...................
LEWISBURG & TYRONE RAILROAD.
Schedule in effect May 19th, 1895.
WESTWARD. EASTWABD.
11 | 103 | : 114 | 112
ns STATIONS.
P. M. | A. u. | . A.M | PM
158 5 | rie Montandon........ 9 10! 45%
208 6 ew Ln 900 441
2 7 82... Biehl. cn...c.i Bo2l 4 50
2 22| 6 25| Jicksburg.......| 8 47| 4 35
231 6 37) Mitflinburg. 838 427
2 43| 650 ..Millmont... 825 415
251 658 817] 407
311] 718 757] 848
3 20] 7 38 7.38) 330
9: 785 721) 318
01, 8 09]. 7 06] 301
407) 816. 700 254
413% 8 23 652) 247
418 8 28 647 242
4 22 832 643 287
421 837 il ast ass
4 37| 8 47|......Pleasant Gap....... 628 223
4 45{ 8 55|....... Bellefonte... | 620 216
M.1A MI Amir,
LEWISBURG & TYRONE RATROAD.
WESTWARD. Upper End. EASTWARD
[= . w |
| = B Nov. 26, 2 2
1 & = 1894. » ©
[2 = | E
[aw |p om Am. ru |
ies { 10 060] 4 50,....8cotia...... 9'20| 4 40...
re [1019 5 07|..Fairbrook. 9 03| 4 23f......
irae | 10 33] 5 19/|Pa.Furnace| 8 51| 4 11...
| 10 40| 5 25... Hostler...| 8 45| 4 05...
ee 10 46] 5 31... Marengo. 839 3 59)...
Sa 10 51{ 5 35|.Loveville.. 8 35] 3 55...
a | 10 68 5 41 FurnaceRd| 8 29 3 49/.....
ns | 1101) 5 44{Dungarvin.| 8 26 3 46/.....
wo 11 70 352..W. ark. 81s 33s.
LZ 1200 6 01 Pennington 8 09 329)...
a | 11 32| © 12l..Stover..| 758 318i...
.| 11 40, 6 20/..Tyrone....| 750 3 10|......
porrenis CENTRAL RAIL-
ROAD.
To take effectMay 20, 1895.
EASTWARD. WESTWARD.
No! 7 No|snn »| + No.
3 it Noslitio.s Stations. | 1 jan iu
P.M.| P. M.| A. M. |AT. Lv.jan.| A, um. |p. HM.
6 45! 3 25 8 45|.Bellefonte.|6 30] 10 30| 4 55
638 319 8 40|..Coleville...l 37! 10 37| 5 00°
6 35) 3 16| 8 37(...Morris. f[6 40| 10 42] 5 03
6 32/ 313 8 35.Whitmer.f|6 44| 10 47| 5 06
6 27, 3 08] 8 31|..Hunters...|6 50| 10 563] 5 11
624 306 8 28..Fillmore.f|653 10 56 5 15
619 301 8 24|..Brialy.. f|7 00| 11 02] & 20
615 2 58) 820 ..Waddle...|7 05) 11 05] 525
6 12| 252] 8 18/Scotia Or.f|7 08] 11 08] 5 27
6 02| 2 40, 8 07|Krumrine.f|7 17| 11 20; 5 37
559 2 35| 8 04|....Struble.fiT 20 11 24| 5 40
567 232 802 Univ. Inn.f7 28) 11 28) 6 43
555 230 8 00,StateColI'ge 7 30| 11 30 545
“f" stop on flag. f 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.