&% Bruna Ji T= rT mT Bellefonte, Pa., Dec. 6, 1895. SS —— LIFE. Life is wrought of little things, Little joys with azure wings, Little cares with barbed stings, _ Little moments swarm in showers, Bringing weeds and bringing flowers, Dying in the silent hours. Fall the silent hours away, Clad in white, and clad in gray, On the bosom of each day. Every day its burdens rears, Sorrow, joyance, pleasure, tears, Tribute to the hungry years. And the years sweep out to sea, Bearing you, and bearing me, To the wide eternity. Horrors Aecumulate. nao. Terrible Deaths of the Ferocity of the Turks and Kurds.—The Awful Massacre at Marash— Thousands Were Killed and Hundreds Were Murdered in the Latest Trouble.—~Armenians Capture a Turkish Fort.—The Great Powers Responsible The correspondent of the United Press at Constantinople telegraphs, un- der date of November 27, that a second terrible massacre has occurred at Marash, and that the houses there have been pillaged without regard as to who their occupants might be. It is report- ed that thousands of persons were killed and many hundreds wounded. The American Theological seminary was plundered and burned and two of the students at that institution were shot, one being fatally wounded. The hotels and boarding houses also were plunder- ed. The Christians at Marash and in the vicinity, thousands of whom are destitute, have appealed for aid. A dis- patch received in Constantinople from Aleppo, under recent date says an outbreak is apprehended at Van, and’ reliable telegrams from other sources say that outbreaks continue with the purpose of wiping out the Armenians. It is impossible to rely for aid from Ses- soun, these advices state, the relief works there having ceased. The Kurds are again attacking the people under the believe that they are acting under orders from the government. M. Nelidoff the Russian ambassador to Turkey, bas had an audience with the sultan during which he warned him if serious disturbances should occur at Constantinople the foreign fleets would penetrate the Dardanelles. The sultan admitted to M. Neldoff thst the powers had a right to’ the admission of a second guardshipsto the Bosphorus, but renewed his request that they should not insist upon that right. He urged that the promised reforms were progress ing and that the approach of an era of reform was chown by the appointment of six inspecting judges, of whom three were Christians. II Despite the assurance of the sultan to the contrary, the arrests of Armenians in Constantinople has been ronewed, though there is no sign of any uprising or resistance to the laws on the part of the Armenians in Constantinople. Thousands of them, however, are re- ported to have been frightened into con- version to Moslemism. LATER. —The United Press represen- tative in Constantinople telegraphs un- der yesterday’s date that news has been received from Zeitum that on November 13 a force of 15,000 Armenians, under a Russo-Amenian leader captured the fort ‘occupied by Turkish troops. In the at- tack upon the fort dynamite was used by the Armenians with great effect. Twenty thousand Turish troops are said to be advancing upon Zeitun from all sides, it being the intention, it is under- stood, to raze that place to the ground. Rumers are in circulation in Constan- tinople that a dreadful massacre occured at Aintab on November 17. The gov- ernment has prohibited ail telegraphic communication with that place, so it is impossible to get any information in re- ard to the reported massacre. Torture in Armenia. * Kurd- An Eyc-Witness Describes Scenes in a ish-Ruled District. The Armenian relief association has received a letter from a corre- spondent who traveled 600 miles on horseback through the devas- tated Armenian districts. The Hocks valley, in Van, is described as con- taining 80 villages, with a total of 1,000 families, of which 600 are Chris- tians. The valley is occupied by 50 Kurdish boys (feudal chiefs) and 20 aghas (petty lords), and a horde of re- tainers. The Armenians are worse than slaves, for they are denied &ven the ordinary rights of humanity. The correspondent continues : “We were the first Europeans to arrive at Spargord, west of Hoks. The signs of joy manifested at our coming were un- mistakable. Some even shed tears at seeing us. The poor, half-naked child- ren danced about us in glee. Women prayed where they stood and reverently made the sign of the cross. In these high valleys the crops are very scanty, and do not atall times suffice the people for winter use, so that itis has been the custom of many of them to disperse dur- ing the winter and earn what they _could in the cities on the southern plains, in Persia and in the Caucasus. Bat for three years the government bas not allowed them to leave their villages. In the meantime the enormous sums de- , manded for taxes have been made larger and have been collected by such meth- ods of torture as would tax the western mind to imagine. “The demand money for taxes must be paid, the only alternative being death, or what is worse, imprisonment. This part of Armenia was never in a worse condition. In the city a very thin veneer of better things is to be seen ; but in all the outlaying districts, tbe villainous process of exterminating the Christian is going on at a frightful rate. A long, cold, winter, now al- most here, will increase the suffering a hundred fold, and the prospect is too horrible to contemplate.” RE SRR, ——*I am cured since taking Hood’s Sarsaparilla,” is what many thousands are saying. It gives renewed vitality and vigor. Affairs at Herpoot. Many Hundrd®'s of Armenians May Yet Starve to Death.—But Few Can Leave the Place— And When They Do Succeed They Are Sent Back, Being Regarded by the Turkish Govern- ment Merely as Serfs —Mussulmans Killed in a Riot. LonpoN, December 1.—The represen- tative at Constantinople of the United Press, telegraphing under yesterday’s date. pictures a pitible condition of af- fairs at Harpoot, where the American mission buildings were burned at the time of the recent massacre there. Ad- vices from Harpoot show that there is great danger of hundreds of the poorer classes of Armenians starving to death. The people are now in a condition of apathy and many of them, it is believ- ed, would welcome death rather than to await the slow process of starvation. Some, however, who have little money of their own, or who have been secretly assisted by comgaratively well to do compatriots, are fleeing to small places in the interior, where they hope to bet- ter their miserable condition. They run the risk of being massacred enroute as the government will not furnish them the slightest protection. Those Armenians who have fled to Constantinople, thinking that in the capital they would be more or less un- der the protection of the representatives of the various powers, have found their hopes dashed to the ground. Perhaps if they were allowed to remain they might find the protection they seek. At any rate it is pretty certain that they would be saved from cold bloooded massacre. But the government in the case of the refugees is enforcing the principle of serfdom, that every subject 1s bound to the soil and every day large numbers of Armenians arearrested. At night they are shipped in batches to the places where they were born, with the warning that it will be better to remain there. 8 WasHINGTON, December 1.—The ‘Turkich legation received from the sub- lime porte the following telegram under to-day’s date. “The Armenian rioters of Zile at Sarvis closed their shops and fired on the Mussulmans, killing one of them. Then an affray occurred during which four Mussulmans, of whom two were soldiers and five Armenians were killed. ! The necessary measures were taken for |! the restoration of order. “The Armenian revolutionists at- tacked the district of Enderin, burned the palace of the governor and plunder- ed the neighboring Mussulman villages. Troops were sent out for the repression of these disorders.” + Important to Pensioners. Owing to the fact that many mag- istrates before whom pension vouchers are executed have been in the habit. of forwarding such vouchers to the pen- First Sight of a Railway Train. A country boy who was brought up in a remote region of Scotland had oc- casion to accompany his father to a vil- lage near which a branch line of railway passes. The morning after his arrival, when sauntering in the garden behind the house in which they were staying, he beheld with wondering eyes a train go by. For a moment he stood staring at it with astonishment and then, run- ning into the house, he said : “Fayth- er, fayther, come oot ! There's a smiddy ran off wi’ a row o’ houses, and’ its awa’ doon by the back o’ th& town.” AUNT RACHAEL’S HOREHOUND AND ELEcAMPANE.—Made of grape juice, rock candy, crystal and the horehound herb, is a simple and effective remedy for coughs, colds, hoarseness and sore throat—highly. recommended for con- sumptives. This is no patent medicine mixture, but it is pure horehound, ele- campane root, rock candy and grape juice, combined with other medicines much used by consumptives, public speakers and singers. Sold by drug- gists. Price twenty-five cents and sev- enty-five cents. RIS ——The Japanese, having fought to a successful finish their war with the Chinese, now propose to engage in in- dustrial war with the great commercial nationalities of the world. They are sending some of thier brightest men abroad as Consular agents with a view to the establishment of steam communi- cation with other countries where trade is likely to follow the flag. A line of steamers is projected to ply between our Puget Sound ports and Japanese ports. The agents of Japanese factories propose to sell us watches and clocks, buttons and bicycles, matches and other small wooden ware and knicknacks at prices which defy high tariff barriers. The cheap labor and wonderful productive gkill of the Japanese make this indus- trial invasion not only a possibility but a probability. How are we to meet the attack of a nation that offers us a pack- age of 50 cigarettes, nicely boxed and labeled, for one cent ? —— “Oh! stay the maiden said, and rest Thy weary head upon this breast,” **I can’t” said he, “I must climb the hills The summer is past, I now sell pills, Not the pills of old-fashioned make 'That caused a dreadful stomach ache— But wee little things, that you e’en can smile, As they gently remove their enemy—bile Who use them once, thereafter are zeal- ots, In praise of “Pierce's Pleasant Pellets.” They regulate the bowels, and cure sick headache, the result of constipation or biliousness, without disturbing the diet or constipation of the patient. Sugar-coated—a child can take them. sion agent tor payment enclosed in envelopes which do not have the prop- | er amount of postage thereon, thus putting the pension agents to the troub- ! le and expense of paying the over-due postage before such packages can be delivered, it has become necessary for the pension department to adopt a stringent rule for the correction of such abuses. Pension agents have therefore been instructed by the department at Washington to hereafter refuse pay- ment of such deficient postage and al low all such packages to go to the dead letter office. Speaking upon this sub- ject Captain Skinner, the pension agent | at Pittsburg, says, “This abuse has grown to such proportions that I have been obliged to pay as much as three dollars in one month on account of such deficient postage. The fanlt is not with the pensioners who mail their own vouchers becauee a single letter stamp is always sufficient for the trans- mission of a single voucher, but with certain magistrates and claim agents who are in the habit of transmitting each quarter a large package of vouch- ers with a single postage stamp there- on, evidently expecting that the pen- sion agent will pay the deficient post- age rather than delay payment to the pensioners. We bave sought to correct these petty abuses by saving the envelopes and returning them to the sender thereof, but this course has had little effect in stopping what might properly be called *‘a system of petty swindling,” because we are 1b- formed that many of these magistrates collect 2c. for postage from every pen sioner whose voucher they execute and then fail to use such stamps for the purpose intended. In view, there- fore, of this recent order from the pen- sion bureau at Washington I trust that all pensioners and magistrates in the district may pay close attention to this matter of postage in the future. If they do not they may expect great delay in tranemission of checks, be- cause all such packages deficient in postage will surely go to the dead let- ter office.” Strange News From Kentucky. The famous ‘‘dead man’s whirlpool” and Salt river were perfectly dry up to the morning of the earthquake. They are now everflowing with cool, clear water, which seems to bubble up from a thousand different springs in the river bed. The natives, with scarcely a single exceptiun, think that all this means that the world will surely come to an end at a very early date. Not one of them can be found who will go within 100 yards of the river. People from all over the state are comming dai- ly to witness the strange sights. THE TRIALS OF LIFE.—What shall Ido? I am su debilitated with this malarial fever that I cannot attend to my ordinary duties. Well. do as others bave—try Aunt Rachael’s Malarial Bit- ters ; they are unexcelled and will act favorably on all the functions of your system, and restore them to vigorous ac- tion. They are simply Speer's Wine, with such herbs and roots as physicians use daily in their practice for the cure of malaria. : —Loccomotives use a third of the coal mined in England. | Great Reduction in Time to California Once more North-Western Line has reduced the time of its trans-continental trains, and the journey from Chicago to California via this popular route is now made in the mar- velously short time of three days. Palace Drawing-Room Sleeping cars leave Chicago daily, and run through to San Francisco and Los Angeles without change, and all meals en route are served in dining cars. Daily Tourisy Sleeping car service is also maintained by this line between Chicago and San Francisco and Los Angeles, completely equipped berths in upholstered Tourist Sleepers being furnish- ed at a cost of only $5.00 each from Chicago to the Pacific coast. Through traias leave Chi- cago for California at 6.00 p. m. and 10.45p. m, daily, after arrival of trains of connecting, lines from the East and South. - For detailed information concerning rates routes, ete., apply to ticket agen ts of conneec- ting lines or address : H. A. Gross, G.E. P., 423 Broadway, New York. T. P. Vaille, S, E. P, 11280uth Fourth street Philadelphia, Pa. Prospectus. Cres TR AMERICAN AGENCY FOR —PATENTS CAVEATS DESIGN PATENTS, TRADE MARKS, COPYRIGHTS, Ete. For information and free Handbook write to MUNN & CO., 361 Broapway, NEw York. Oldest bureau for securing patents in Amer- Ica. Every patent taken out by us is brought before the public by a notice given free of eharge in the ......SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN...... Largest eirculation of 522 scientific paper in the world. Splendidly i}lustrated. No intel- ligent man should be without it. Weekly $3.00 a year; $1.60 six months. Address MUNN & €O., Publishers, 40 48 1y 361 Broadway, New York City. Daniel Irvin's Sons, CASH HARDWARE. Jrvays 50 POUND LARD CANS 35 AND 40 ——Georgia negroes have $13,000,00 in property. | DANIEL IRVIN'S SONS. ' 40 14 BELLEFONTE, PA. Prospectus. New Advertisements. ue PHILADELPHIA PRESS. FOR 1896. The Press is the greatest famil newspaper in the State of Pennsyl- vania. It has been a leader in this section and is now stronger than ever before. It covers the State of Pennsylvania the southern part of New Jersey and the whole of Delaware, county by county, city by city, and town by town. Its news from BELLEFONTE. is especially full and complete. Its staff of reporters and correspon- dents is large and efficient and its news servic is consequently most thorough and reliable. he Press is the greatest want med- iu® in Philadelphia and such adver- tising is published at minimum rates. The subscription price of The Press is: Daily, six dollars per year: Daily and Sunday, eight dollars per year; Weekly, one dollar per year 40-45 3t ARPER'S MAGAZINE 1~ 1896. Briseis, a new novel by William Black, writ- ten with sll the author’s well-known charm of manner, will begin in the December Number 1895.and continue until May. A new nove ‘| dressmaker. by George du Maurier, entitled The Martain, will also begin during the year. Itis not too much to say that no novel has ever been await- ed with such great expectation as the suc- cessor to Trilby. The Personal Recollections of Joan of Arc will continue and will relate the Som, of the failure and martyrdom of the Maid of Orleans. Other important fiction of the year will be a novelette by Mark Twain, under the title, Tom Sawyer, Detective ; a humorous three part tale called Two Mormons from Mudalels, by Langdon Elwyn Mitchell ; and short stories by Octave Thanet, Richard Harding Davis, Mary E. Wilkins, Julian Ralph, Brander Matthews, Owen Wister, and other well-known writers. Prof. Woodrow Wilson will contribute six papers on George Washington and his times, with iliustrations by Howard Pyle. Poultney Bigelow’s history of The German Struggle for Liberty, illustrated by R. Caton Woodville, will be continued through the winter. Two papers on St. Clair's defeat and Mad Anthony Wayne's victory, by Theodore Roosevelt, wit graphic illustrations will be printed during the year. A noteworthy feature of the Magazine during 1896 will be a series of articles by Casper W. Whitney, describing his trip of 2600 miles on snow-shoes and with dog-sledge trains into the unexplored Barren Grounds of British North America in pursuit of wood bison and musk- oxen. Mr Whitney's series will have the add- ed interest of being illustrated from photo- graphs taken by himself. The volumes of the Magazine begin with the numbers for June and December of each year. When no time is mentioned, subscriptions will begin with the number current at the time of receipt of order. ; Remittances should be nied by post-office Money Order or Draft, to avoidehance of loss. Newspapers are not to copy this advertisement | without the express order of Harper & Brothers. HARPER'S PERIODICALS. HARPER'S MAGAZINE - one year - $100 HARPER'S WEEKLY - » - HARPER'S BAZAR - ‘ - HARPER'S ROUNDTABLE © - Postage Free to all subscribers in the United States, Canada, and Mexico. Address HARPER » BROTHERS, 40-46 P. 0. Box 959, N. Y. City. ARPER'S WEEKLY IN 1896 Harper's Weekly is a journal for the whole county. It deals with the events of the world that are important to Americians. In carrying out this policy, in 1895, Julian Ralph visited China and Japan, and journeyed through the West ; Richard Harding Davis took a trip through the Caribean Sea : the evo- lutions of the new navy were described and il- lustrated by Rufus I. Zogbaum; Frederic Rem- ington presented studiesol Army and Frontier life ; Poultney Bigelow attended the opening of the Kiel Canal. In 1896 like attention will be given to every notable happening. The chief events in art, literature, and music and the drama will be artistically presented. W. D, Howell's in the new department, Life and Letters, will discuss in his interesting way books and the social questions of the time. E. 8. Martin's sprightly gossip of the Busy World will be continued. The progress of the Transportation Commis- sion around the World will be followed, and Casper W. Whitney will conduct the depart- ment of Amateur Sport. In 1896 will occur a Presidential election. In its editorials and through its political cartoons the Weekly will continue to be an independent advocate of good government and sound money. Infictionthe Weekly will be especially strong. It will publish the only nove! of the year b W. D. Howells, and a stirring serial of a Scote feud, by S. R. Crockett. The short stories se- lected are of unusual excellence and interest. In every respect Harper's Weekly will main- tain its leading place in the illustrated journal- ism of the world. ’ The volumes of the eekly begin with the first number for January of each year. When no time is mentioned, subscriptions will begin with the num ber current at the time of receipt of order. Remittances should be made by post-office Money Order or Draft, to avoid chance of loss. Newspapers are not $0 copy this advertisement without the express order of Harper & Brothers. " HARPER'S PERIODICALS. HARPER'S MAGAZINE - one year - $100 HARPER'S WEEKLY ’ - 400 HARPER'S BAZAR - te - 400 HARPER'S ROUND TABLE te - 200 Postage Free to all subscribers in the United States, Canada, and Mexico. Address HARPER & BROTHERS, 40 46 P. O. Box 959 N. Y. City. ARPER’'S BAZAR IN 1396 The twenty-ninth year of Harper's Bazar, beginning in January, 1896, finds it maintain: ing its deserved reputation both as a Fashion Journal and a weekly periodical for home reading. Every week the Bazar presents beautiful toilettes for various occasions, Sandoz, Baude, and Chapuis illustrate and engrave the newest designs from the finest models in Paris and Berlin. New York Fashions epitomizes cur- rent styles in New York. A fortnightly pattern- sheet supplement with diagrams and direc- tions enables women to cut and make their own gowns, and is of great value to the pro-. fessional modiste as well as to the amateur Children's Clothing receives constant attention. Fashions for Men are de. scribed in full detail by a man-about-lown. Our Paris Letter, by Katharine De Forest, is a sprightly weekly recital of fashion, gossip, and social doings in Paris, given by a clever wo- man in an entertaining way. Both the serials for 1896 are the work of American women. Mrs Gerald, by Maria Louise Pool, isa striking story of New England life. Mary E. Wilkins, in Jerome, a Poor Man discusses the always interesting problems of the relations between labor and capital. Short stories will be written by the best authors. Special Departments. Music, The Outdoor Woman, Personals,What We Are Doing, Wom- en and Men, report and discuss themes of immediate interest. Answers to Correspondents. Questions re- ceive the personal attention of the editor, and are answered at the earliest practicable date after their receipt. The volumes of the Bazar begin with the first number for January of each year. When no time is mentioned, subscriptions will begin with the number current at the time of receipt of order. Remittances should be made by post office Money Order or Draft, to avoid chance of loss. Newspapers are not to copy this advertisement without the express order of Harpers & Brothers, HARPER'S PERIODICALS. HARPER'S MAGAZINE . one year - $100 HARPER'S WEEKLY - “ -« 400 HARPER'S BAZAR - “ - 400 HARPER'S ROUND TABLE th - 200 Postage Free to all subscribers in the United States, Canada, and Mexico. Address HARPER & BROTHERS, 40-46 P. 0. Box 959, N. Y. City. The home of Morris W. Cowdrick, on east Linn street, Bellefonte, is offered for sale cheap. A fine 3 story brick ‘house, on a lot 75x 200, new frame stable, brick ice house and other out buildings. The house is in excellent repair, has all modern improvements, bath, het and cold water on two floors, furnace in cellar and a large cistern. Write or call on . .M.W.COWDRICK 40.43- tf CK, Bellefonte, Pa. Tee ACCIDENTS OF LIFE, Write to T. 8S. QUIN- CEY, Drawer 156, Chica- go, Secretary of the Star THE AccipET Company, for STAR ACCIDENT information regarding Ac- cident Insurance. Men. COMPANY. tion this paper. By so doing you can save mem- bership fee. Has paid over $600,000.00 tor ac- cidental injuries. Be Your Own Agent. NO MEDICAL EXAMINATION REQUIRED 40 47 8m YOW AND POULTRY FOOD.— The American Poultry Food, isthe best prepared ground grain food thatcan be had for feeding chickens. Ground Oyster Shells, Meat Scraps, Ground Bone, Crushed Flint and concentrated Poul- try Food to make hens lay. Cotton Seed Meal $1.25 per 10) lbs. $22.50 per ton of 2000 Ibs. Linseed Meal $1.25 per 10) Ibs. $22.50 per ton of 2000 Ibs. One pound of cotton seed meal or one pound of linseed meal is equal in nutrition for feed- ing cows or other stock to two pngus of corn meal. The feeding of either should be used with a mixture of bran. : Quaker Chop at 1 cent per pound in bags of 90 10100 lbs. The above teeds, quality considered, are the cheapest or most valuable for the money of any cow feed now in use in this vicinity. 40-45-3m McCALMONT & CO. fj leas AND SLEDS.— BOYS FLEXIBLE FLYERS. —The most desirable boys sleds in the market are the Plepels Flyers of which we have a large stock. PORTLAND CUTTERS AND SWELLED BODIED SLEIGHS.—A large stock ofthe best make and finest finish. We invite a rigid in- spection. BOB-SLEDS—for farmers and other use. LOG-SLEDS,—for lumberman’s use and one horse sleds for merchants and others. RUNNERS for use on spring wagons and other vehicles. ROBES and Horse blankets in great variety WHIPS,—We sell a fakir's dollars worth for eighty-five cents. SNOW SHOVELS.—AIll steel and wooden shovels, steel tipped. ¢ 40 45 3m McCALMONT & CO. Railway Guide. ENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD AND BRANCHES. May 20th, 1895. VIA TYRONE—WESTWARD, Leave Bellefonte, 5.26 a. m.. arrive at Tyrone. 6.40a. m., at Altocna, 7.40 a. m., at” Pitte- burg, 12.10 p. m. Leave Bellefonte, 10.09 a. m., arrive at T: Tone, 11.25 a. m.. at Altoona, 1.45 p. m., af Pitta- ; DRtg; 050 pm Lesve Bellefonte, 5.15 p. m., arrive at Tyrone, 6.33, at Altoona at 7.40, at Pittsburg at 11.30. VIA TYRONE—EASTWARD, Leave Bellefonte, 5.26 a. m.,arrive at one 6.40, at H burg, 9.30 a. m., at Philadel phia, 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 Bellefonte, 9.28 a. m., arrive at Locs Haven, 10.30 a. m. Leave Bellefonte, 4.50 p. m., arrive at Lock Ha ven, 5.49 P m. . : Leave Bellefonte at 8.41 Pp. m., arrive at Lock Haven at 9.40 p. m. VIA LOCK HAVEN—EASTWARD. Leave Delletste, pas 2 10.8 arrive at Lock Ha- ven, eave 8 12.35 p. m; arrive at Harrisburg, 3.20 2 Thin 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- Yen, aI Pa Joave Yamenort, 12.25 a, m., arrive urg,3.22 a. m., arrive at Philadelphia at 6.52 oe : . VIA LEWISBURG. Leaye Bellefonte at 6.20 a. m., arrive at Lewis urg at 9.00 a. m., Harrisburg, 11.30 a. m. Philadelphia, 3.00 p. m. Leave Bellefonte, 2.16 p. m., arrive at Lewis- burg, 4.47, at H: burg, 7.10 p. m., Phila delphia at 11.15 p. m. BALD EAGLE VALLEY. Central Railroad Guide. ENTRAL RAILROAD OF... PENNSYLVANIA. Condensed Time Table. READ Down i REap.Up. Ty INDY. 18, Teas ar No. 5, No3 No.1 |No. 2|No.4 No.6 . m.|p. m./a. m.|Lv. Ar.|a..m!p.m./ p.m. bh 30(13 33/17 40,BELLEFO’T 10 10| 6 10/10 07 744) 3 47 7 54.......Nigh.......| 9 56 5 57| 9 62 7 50 3 53! 8 00+ se ZiOD.......| 9 50] 5 51] 9 47 7 55 3 58) 8 06..Hecla Park..| 9 45/ 5 46| 9 42 7 57) 400 807... ...[ 9 43] 5 44/ 9 40 801404 811 | 9.39] 5 40, 9 37 8 05| 4 08) 8 15. Snydertown... 9 35 5 | 9 33 8 07 4 10] 8 17]. .rl 938) 5 35] 9 30 8090 412/819 31 5 83] 9 28 S11/414 821... 29, 5 81/ 9 25 813 417 8 23. 26/ 5 29 9 23 819! 4 22| 8 28 21] 524) 9 17 8 25 4 28) 8 34.Mackeyville.! 9 15] 5 18/ 9 11 8 32 4 34 8 40 Cedar Springs’ 9 00, 5 12] 9 04 831 136] 842'..... Salona... 907 511/903 8 40! 4 43 8 47/MILL HALL $9 01/45 05/48 57 P.M. | A.M. (Lv, Ar A.M. | P.M. +857 9 01(....MILL HALL....| 800 505 9 24 9 29. Jersey Shore Junc.| 7 40| 4 35 10 00, 10 05 WILLIAMSPORT. 17 05 14 00 P. 0. | A. M. AT. = Lvia. wie wm P. M. | AM. | | A.M. P.M. #11 15/10 30 Lv. WIL'MSP'T. Ar) 655 2 4 P. M. | { 7 11] 5 08jAr....PHILA.....Lvi*11 30! 8 35 i, 845 N. York, via Tamgq. i 19 30," 7 25/.N. York, via Phila. 3 7 30 t 4 30 | |(Foot of Liberty St.)| i 925 7 00)....Atlantic City.....| 930 6 30 AMP M| P M.| A.M. * Daily, + Week Days 26.00 p. m. Sundey 1 10.10 a. m. Sunday. Philadelphia - SLeeriNé Car attached to Philadelphia and Reading R. R. train passing Williamsport; East bound at 11.15 p. m. West bound at 655 a.m. Pullman Parlor Carson Day trains between Williamsport and Phila: delphia. J. W. GEPHART, 110.55 A. M. Sunday. ConNEcTIONS.—At Williamsport with Phila. delphia and Reading R. R. .t Jersey Shore June. with the Fall Brook Ry. At Mill Hall with Central R. R. of Penna. At Philipsbur with Pennsylvania Railroad. At Clearfiel with Buffalo, Rochester & Pittsburg Railway. At Mahaffey and Patton with Cambria & Clear- field. Division of Pennsylvania Railroad At Yanadey with Pennsylvania & Northwestern Rail : F. E. HERRIMAN, Gen'l Pass'r Agent, i | ' A. G. PALMER, General Superintendent. EECH CREEK RAILROAD, N.Y. C. & H. R. R. R. Co, Lessee. Condensed Time Table. Reap Ur. | Reap Down. | | | Exp. | Mail. NOV. 17th, 1895. | Exp. | Mail. Wal hn No. 37/No. 33 No. 30! No. 36 | | | BN... Iswiaw AY...PATTON....1.v it 3 30 2 . 3 52 0 2 F500 115 9 00 5m 442 8 50 - 830 4 62 8 43) 11 58/Ar....Kerrmoor....L.v| 5 87, 4 58 8 38 New Millport....| 542 5 03 8 32 ~ . 548; 500 8 25 555 515 8 > 1 615, 534 750 1111 ELD... 62 5 —— Ar ov Se 7 45| 11 00...Clearfield Junc..| 6 35| 6 19 7 37| 10 51].......Woodland.. .....| 6 45| 6 29 7 31] 10 44..........Bigler..........| 6 52| 6 34 7 23] 10 39,....... Wallaceton.......[ 6 87) 6 40 7 15] 10 29|..Moirisdale Mines. 7 06! 6 48 707) 10 22|Lv.....Munson.....Ar| 7 15/ 6 67 Lv Ar 6 35 9 55..PHILIPSBURG...| 740 727 7 27| 10 40(...PHIL1PSBURG...| 6 85 6 35 |. Ar Wy an 7 05) 10 17 727 "7 00 6 40/ 9 52 740; 725 6 20] 9 28|.. 7567 T44 618) 920 8 04 752 518) 824 849 8 44 5 05) 8 09 9 01; 857 4 58| 8 02 907) 903 4 47! 7 53;Youngdale (Wayne) 9 16{ 912 4 85| 7 40/Jersey Shore Junc.| 9 29) 9 24 14 00] 17 05\.Lv W'MSPORT Ar.| 10 05| 10 00 P.M. [AM jaw rN M. | A.M. (Phila.& Reading RR| A. m. M. 40; *6 55|.Ar W’MSPORT Lv. $10 30,*11 15 8 351 30 Lv..PHILAD'A..Ary 508) 711 +4 30 Lv.NY via Tam/Ar| 6 45 A #7 30|Lv.N Y via Phil&.Ar| 7 25] 19 30 HM InN Lz P.M. | A.M. *Dally, ~~ Week-days. / 6.00 p. M. Sunday Superintendent, Philadelphia, Pa. WESTWARD, 5 EASTWARD. E § May 20, 5 uv x i 1895. F P.M. A.M. | A. M. |AXT. Lv.|A M p.u| pu 6 33) 11 25| 6 40/..Tyrone....| 8 103'34| 7 25 627 11 19] 6 34/.. ne..| 8 16/3 40| 731 6 23| 11 15 6 30|...... ail.....| 820/344 735 6 19/ 11 11) 6 26/Bald -Eagie| 8 24/3 48| 7 39 6 13| 11 05 6 20!......Dix...... 830354) 745 6 10| 11 02 6 17|... Fowler...| 833(3 57 7 48 6 08| 11 00/ 6 15|.. Hannah...| 8 35/3 59] 7 50 6 00( 10 52| 6 08|Pt. Matilda.| 8 42/4 06] 7 57 562 10 44| 6 01|..,Martha....| 8 49/4 13| 8 o4 5 44] 10 36| 5 63|....Julian....| 8 58/4 22| 813 6 35| 10 27| 5 44{.Unionville. 9 07/4 81| 8 22 528 10 20| 5 37|...8.8. Int...| 9 15/4 39] 8 30 5 25| 10 17| 5 34 .Milesburg | 9 18/4 42| 8 33 5 15| 10 09| 5 26|.Bellefonte.| 9 28/4 50| 8 41 502 957 514 .Milesburg.| 941!502| 8 53 464 949) 507...Curtin....| 949/510 9 01 450) 945 5 03|..Mt. Eagle..| 9535614 9 05 444) 939 457... Howard...| 959/520 911 4 35| 930 4 48|.Eagleville.| 10 08/5 29 9 20 432) 927 4 45/Bch. Creek.| 10 11/5 32| 9 28 421) 916 435 .Mill Hall...| 10 22/5 43| g 34 419) 9 14/ 4 33|Flemin’ton.| 10 24/5 45 9 36 415] 910 4 30 Lck. Haven| 10 30/6 49) 9 40 P.M. A. M.A M. lie A. M. |[P.M.| P, M. TYRONE & CLEARFIELD. nr SOUTHWARD, = g o May 20, © i £ B 1895. = Poripa A MILY. An Aw aw PM 730, 315 820|..Tyrone...| 635 11 20/6 12 736 821 826.E. Tyrone. 6 20/11 14/6 06 . 7 38 3 23] 8 28/..Tyrone 8.|......... 11 12{6 04 741 326 8831....Vail... 6 25 11 09/6 01 761] 336 842.Vanscoyoc.| 6 18| 11 02/5 54 765 340 8 47|.Gardner...| 6 15| 10 59/6 50 8 04) 349| 8 57/Mt.Pleasant| 6 07| 10 51/5 41 811 355 9 05|..Summit..., 8 00| 10 44/5 34 8 16) 8 59) 9 09/Sand.Ridge 5 54 10 38/5 27 8 13 401) 9 11\.. Retort... 5 51, 10 355 23 818| 402 9 13|.Powelton..., 5 49' 10 33/5 21 827) 408 921 ..Osceola... 3910 23/6 10 vas 2 11} 0 98l0scecin Ju! lo 5 06 831) 416 9 31|.Boynton...| 5 35/10 19/5 03 835 410 035 Stoiners.. 531/10 15/4 58 8 36| 423 942 Philiabn'g 5 30| 10 14/4 57 841 429 947(..Graham...| 5 26| 10 09]4 52 846 4 3s| 9 62. Blue Bali.| 6 21/10 14/4 46 8 52 439, 958 Wallaceton.| 516] 9 58/4 39 8 &1 4 44| 10 04!....Bigler..... 511! 9 53(4 83 9 03| 4 50 10 10|.Woodland..| 506, 9 47/4 27 9.06 4 53| 10 13 Mineral Sp| 5 05 9 44/4 24 9 10, 457/10 17)... Barrett... 501] 9 40/4 20 916 5 oL| 10 22... Leonard...| 4 561" 9 35/4 16 919 506 10 28. Clearfield. 4 5% 9 31/4 09 924 511) 10 34|. Riverview. 458 9 26/4 02 930 5 I 10 41/Sus. Bridge| 4 43] 9 20/3 66 9 35) 5 22| 10 46/Curwensv’e| 4 33] 9 15/2 5] ii {oeeseeess| 10 521... .Rustie.... ceennnnns]enrnnnel|8 35 PEE | .| 11 02!.. Stronach. (3 25 arouse 11 06 .Grampian..|. 321 P.M. o M. T&WmIia.D (P.M. BELLEFONTE & SNOW SHOE BRANCH. Time Table in effect on and after May 20, i895. Leave Snow Shoe, except Sunday......3 Arrive in Bellefonte,.................. sere Leave Bellefonte, except Sunday. Arrive in Snow Shoe LEWISBURG & TYRONE RAILROAD. Schedule in effect May 19th, 1825. WESTWARD. EASTWARD. 1 | 103 | 14] 112 mit STATIONS. i P. M. | A. M. A. M. | P. M. 168 5 40)....... Montandon........ 910, 465 208 6 15|......Lewisburg........| 900! 4 47 2 i 6 23............Biehli.........| 852 4 89 222 6728... .| 847] 486 2 81 6 37 838 497 243 6 50 825 415 261 668 811 401 311 718 7567 848 3 30| 7 38|. 738] 330 347 756 i 721 s 4 401 809. 708 301 407 816. 700 254 413 823. 652 247 418 828). [ 641) 242 422 832. 643 287 427 887). 638 2388 4387 84%. 628 223 445) 885. 62 216 P. M. | AM] . . M.[P, HM. LEWISBURG & TYRONE RAIROAD. WESTWARD. Upper End. EASTWARD 2 = Nov. 28, E 2 M i 1894. N | & ga A. M. | P. M. A. M. | P. M. 10 00) 4 60|....Scotia..... 9 20! 4 40|...... 10 19] 5 07|..Fairbrook., 9 03] 4 23 10 33; 5 19/Pa.Furnace| 851] 4 11 10 40; 5 25|...Hostler...| 8 45| 4 05|. 10 46; 5 31|...Marengo..| 8 59| 3 59|. 10 1 6 85(.Loveville..| 8 35 3 55 10 58! 5 41) FurnaceRd| 8 29| 3 49 11 02] 5 4%{Dungarvin.| 8 26| 38 46 11 10{ 5 52..W. “ark... 818 338 11 20| 6 01|{Pennington| 8 09| 3 29 © 12/..Stover.....| 758 318 6 20}... Tyron 760 810 . To take effectMay 20, 1895. EASTWARD. WESTWARD No T 1No No. IS t No.8 No. 2 Stations. | 1 [No.7 tx P.M.| P. M.| A. M. |AT. Lv.|am. a. um |p. wu 6 45] 3 25 8 45|.Bellefonte.|6 30| 10 30] 4 55 6 38/3 19| 8 40|..Coleville...[¢ 37! 10 37] 5 00 6 35 3 16| 8 37|....Morris. f|6 40| 10 42 5 03 6 82 3 13| 8 35/.Whitmer.f|6 44| 10 47| 5 06 6 27| 3 08) 8 31. Hunters...|6 50{ 10 53] 5 11 6 24 3 06/ 8 28{..Fillmore.f{6 53 10 566| 6 15 619 301] 824 i f{7 00 11 02] 6 20 615 258) 8 20(..Waddle...|7 05| 11 05 5 25 614 252 8 18(Scotia Cr.f[7 08] 11 08|. 5 27 6 2 40( 8 07/Krumrine..f|T 17 11 20| 5 37 5 69 285| 8 04|...Struble.f|7 20| 11 24| 5 40 6 67 2382 8 )2|Univ. Inn.f[7 28] 11 28 5 43 555 230 8 00 StateColl’ge|7 30| 11 30 5 45 “f" stop on flag. t 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.