\ Bellefonte, Pa., July 24, 1896. EASY ENOUGH TO BE PLEASANT, It is easy enough to be pleasant While life flows by like a song, But the man worth while is the one who will smile. When everything goes dead wrong. For the test of the heart is trouble, And it always comes with the years, And the smile that is worth the praises of earth Is the smile that shines through tears. It is easy enough to be prudent When nothing tempts you to stray ; When without or within no voice of sin Is luring your soul away. But it is only a negative virtue Until it is tried by fire, And the life is worth the honor of earth I= the one that resistsglesire. By the cynic, the sad, the fallen, Who hath no strength for the strife, The world’s highway is cumbered to-day ; They make up the items of life. But the virtue that conquers passion And the sorrow that hides in a smile, It is these that ave worth the hgmage of earth, For we find them but once in awhile. — Elle Wheeler Wilcox. Ex-Gov. Russell Dies Suddenly. The Famous Executive is Found Dead in His Outing Tent.—Went to Quebec for a Rest—The Brilliant Young Leader of the Bay State Democracy Stricken Down in His Sleep While Enjoying a Few days of Camp Life in the Woods of Quebec, Accompanied by His Brother and a Friend—He Had Seemingly Been Enjoying Good Health and the Announcement of His Death Was Received With Incredulity by His Boston Friends and Business Associates—Life of the Famous Boy Governor. QUEBEC, July I6.—Ex-Governor Russell, of Massachusetts, was found dead this morning in his fishing camp at Adelaide, near Grand Pabos Quebec. He passed through Montreal in the best of health and was on his way to the salmon grounds in Gaspe. Hisdeath is supposed to have heen due to heart disease. Mr. Russell left his family in Boston on Monday for his pleasure trip to Quebec, accempanied hy his brother, Col. E. H. Russell, and Francis Peabody, Jr. At that time he was in perfect physical condi- tion, excepting that he was somewhat fa- tigued after his active work at the Chicago convention. : The tent in which they slept was divided into two compartments, and as the ex-Gov- ernor slept alone, the others did not know that he was dead until late this morning, when they thought it was time to awaken him. His body has been sent to Boston. RUSSELL'S CAREER." William Eustis Russell, ex-Governor of Massachusetts, whose life was so suddenly cut short yesterday, was barely 40 years of age, he having been horn in Cambridge, Mass., in 1857. Few public men could compare with him for the purity of their private lives, and there were none whose prospects for the future were brighter. Had he wished he could have been the can- didate of the sound money Democrats at the recent Chicago convention, but he agreed with Senator Hill, Ex-Gov. Flower and other leaders that silence was the bet- ter policy and confined himself to making a speech protesting against the adoption of the free silver resolution ; a speech that was listened to with respectful attention and was a forceful and at the same time graceful presentation of the subject. EX-GoV. Mr. Russell's paternal ancestors were all staunch Democrats. His grandfather, Charles Russell, was a member of the Gov- ernor’s Council, a position almost equal in dignity to that of the executive office itself. His father is the well-known Boston law- yer—Charles Theodore Russell. On his mother’s side he was of French Huguenot extraction, she being a Ballister of the Le Ballister family, who settled around Mar- blehead, Mass., when exiled from France. Mr. Russell was educated at the public schools at Cambridge till he was 16, when he matriculated at Harvard. Throughout his university career he was a keen athlete; a nose that hore traces of hard usage, a couple of swollen finger joints and other infallible signs bore witness to his devotion to the national game. On the river or at the track he was equally enthusiastic, and no one ever gave the college yell louder or more persistently in a critical juncture than he. Notwithstanding his love of outdoor sports he found time to work for his degree and to become one of the foremost political debaters of the college. Indeed, in his class of "77 there was only one man who could approach him in debate and that was Em- mons Blaine, the leader on the Republican side. After his graduation he entered the Bos- ton University School of Law, where he won the William Beach Lawrence prize for the best essay on ‘‘Foreign Judgments, Their Extraterritorial Force and Effect.’ At the graduation exercises in 1879 he was chosen orator for the class, and received the first “Summa cum Laude’ degree as bachelor of laws ever given by the Univer- sity. In 1880 he was admitted to the bar, and commenced practice in his father’s of- fice. Mr. Russell’s first appearance in politics was a candidate for Alderman in his native town. In this position he gave such gen- eral satisfaction that he was elected Mayor in 1885. Almost immediately after his elec- tion trouble arose between the street car company and their employes. The strike drew near the verge of open hostilities and of danger to life and property ; but young Russell rose to the emergency, and with the courage and tact that has marked his every action since, compelled their adher- ence to legal methods, and finally adjusted | the difficulty to the satisfaction of both par: ties. The incident attracted the attention of the” whole State to the young Mayor of Cambridge, and he was thrice re-elected Mayor. In 1838 he received the Democratic nomi- nation for Governor. In stumping the State his youthful appearance—he was 31— was a handicap to him at first ; but he soon removed the impression by his clear and lucid exposition of facts. Though defeated by Governor Ames, the Republican candi- date, he polled nearly 1,000 more votes than were cast for Mr. Cleveland for Presi- dent. His speeches to prove that revenue is the only just basis in a republic for the imposition of duties on foreign trade, and. condemning the miserable hypocrisy that wages of laboring men depend upon the fattening of some beneficiaries at the cost of the entire population, endeared him to the Democracy of the State, and he was again nominated in 1839—for the old. Bay State elects a Governor every year. This time his opponent was Governor Brackett, and at the end of the campaign, though not 5 x Ftd iln dn SB successful, he had the satisfaction of re- | ducing the plurality of the Republican ean- didate from 29,000 to 6,775. In the next year he turned the tables on Brackett, receiving 141,746 votes to the latter’s 131,896, and was the only Demo- crat elected. His place in an overwhelm- ingly Republican Legislature was no sin- ecure, but he managed so well that he was re-elected for two succeeding terms and re- fused the nomination for a fourth term. Mr. Russell leaves a wife whose maiden name was Margaret Manning Swain, the daughter of a noted minister of Lowell, and an exceedingly beautiful woman, be- sides three children—William Eustis, Jr., now 9 years old ; Richard Manning, 5 years old, and a daughter, Margaret aged 0 In his lifetime he attended Dr. McKen- sie’s Congregational Church in Cambridge, and his home was at No. 174 Brattle street, one of the handsomest parts of the city. Mr. Russell’s memory was prodigious. He would occasionally dictate a speech of two or three columns to a newspaper writer who had asked for a copy in advance and having read over the proof slips would de- liver it without deviating from the priginal text, and without using a single note of manuscript. ¢ He was particularly noted for his direct- ness of speech ; there was no half-way straddle with him upon any vital principle. He used no empty, high sounding words, but said in language that was plain and unmistakable what he believed on every subject of public importance. With him sound money meant the gold standard, and tariff reform meant the abolition of protec- tion. . He hated hypocrisy and worshipped truth. In appearance Mr. Russell was some- what above the medium height—about 5 feet 8 inches. His face, which was smooth- ly shaven, was frank and open, shawing firm though somewhat irregular features. One would have taken him fora larger man than his measurements gave reason to expect, for his athletic exercises had devel- opgd a naturally fine figure. His voice was deep and resonant and after Senator Hill and Mr. Whitney he was one of the most conspicuous figures among the sound money men at the Chicago convention. THE GRIEF-STRICKEN FAMILY. The family of Ex-Governor Russell, in- cluding Mrs. Russell and the three child- ren, William Eustis, Jr., Richard Manning and Margaret, who are spending the sum- mer in a quiet cottage overlooking the bay, were in ignorance of the cloud of sadness overhanging them until a telegram from Colonel H. E. Russell was received an- nouncing the death of Mr. Russell. Ap- parently dazed at first, Mrs. Russell, as the significance of the sad news grew upon her, seemed to be bearing up well. Ex-Gov- ernor Russell’s brother, Joseph B., arrived about an hour later and was immediately closeted with the widow and children. Motherless Institutions. In most states in this Union women can- not be appointed trustees of public institu- tions, because such trustees must he elec- tors. There have been men who kept house for themselves or had only men servants in their bachelor quarters, and ‘yet neither they, nor their friends ever thought of these houses or flats as homes ; men have kept house but they never have made homes. Women are the home-makers and home keepers. This characteristic of woman is just as important in the state asin the family. Men would think it a grave error if no one but women served on the board of trustees of soldiers’ homes, if only women were physicians in and superintendents of such homes. The writer smiles as she im- agines what a furor would be created if all public institutions should suddenly be taken out of men’s hands and put into women’s. No woman would want such a thing to happen. The writer believes that all public insti- tutions, schools, libraries lunatic asylums, soldiers’ homes, etc., should have women trustees, directors, or whatever the term may be for such officers, but she is a little more radical than many women. However. she cannot see how any woman can cease from making effort to have women trustees on boards of all public institutions where women and children live whether it is .a lunatic asylum or a children’s home. A most pitiable sight is a number of mother- less children, whose father alone is trying to plan for their future. Yet just such a man who knows that some woman must help him out with his family cares, does not seem to think that the principle ap- plies as well to the state. In many states women have besieged leg- islatures until boards of visitors have been appointed. These hoards, however, have neither responsibility nor authority. They visit the institutions ‘when they are ex- pected and must report or make suggestions in writing to the trustees. ~ The trustees need take no,notiee of such report. . They occupy ahout such a position as a formal caller would to the motherless family above mentioned. Such a caller would he sympathetic and interested but her help would be of little value because of the re- lation she bore to the family. The writer doubts if a board of visitors does any good except to accustom men to seeing women about such institutions and to accustom women to serve on such boards. The time is surely coming when women and men will serve together as trustees ; then will all the details of the home be un- derstood by all members of the hoard. Then will woman’s tenderness, her mother heart he felt, then will many unfortunate women and children be happier and health- ier. Then will the state find that the small economics which women practice in the home will be practiced in the state.—Har- riet Taylor Upton. Bryan Stronger than Bland. Representative Russell, of Georgia, a gold Democrat, says: ‘‘The nomination was, by long odds, the best that could have been made on that platform. Those who know Bryan will vote for him because of his personality. “Bland would not have pleased the country like Bryan. Bryan looks like presidential timber. He is one’ of the gen- glest, nicest fellows I ever knew. He will make a model president. Georgia will support the ticket. There will not he 3,000 holters in the state. Cream Peppermints. Pour half a cupful of cold water over two cupfuls of granulated sugar, stir well together, then place on the fire and melt, stirring until the fire is dissolved, hut ne longer. Then boil exactly three minutes. Remove from the fire add three drops of oil of peppermint, and stir with a spoon until it becomes creamy. Then drop on oiled paper. Let it stand for twenty-four hours. Then dip in melted chocolate, if you wish, or they are very nice without the chocolate. a a bss & Fortune’s Foibles. Some Conversational Mistakes of People Made Rich Suddenly—Mrs. Malaprop Up-to-Date. It is said ‘‘that money talks’ in this fin de siecle period, but in the oil country when ‘“‘money talks,’’ it. sometimes makes mistakes. Pennsylvania, where a single lucky strike may transform an adventurer into an Astor, presents examples of the power of gold to buy everything hut that which its possessors most desire. There is probably no spot on earth where people become so suddenly rich or poor as in the oil country. A family may be liv- ing from hand to mouth one day and the next find a stream of liquid wealth flowing into their treasury. Such conditions are favorable for codfish aristocracy. Persons of no education, culture or reflnement move from hovels to palaces, they seek to buy social position. Although few, their conversation abounds with striking illus- trations of the ridiculous. Mrs. Malaprop lives over again in the woman, who tries to move in a new sphere bounded by a golden circle. Trying to ap- pear used to the new conditions her posi- tion is ludicrous. One woman of newly made fortune declared her intention to give her little girl ‘‘all the educations there are,’’ to have her hair ‘‘manicured,” and to give her an ‘‘epidemiz’’ in case she should get sick. The following dialogue occurred in a mushroom oil town. ‘Mrs. Struckile, you spend a great deal of your time in Paris, don’t you?”’ ‘Yes, we do, and I was just telling the girls that we would soon be Parasites. Another oil country woman received an invitation with R. S. V. P. in the corner. She hesitated a good while as to the mean- ing of the mysterious letters, but finally exclaimed : ‘‘Rich Supper, Veal Pie.” The sons of fortunate fishers for oil must always attend an Eastern college. A proud mother of such a son was asked by a neigh- bor as to what business the boy expected to take up when through college. “Well, I don’t know exactly, but I’ve heard tell that there is a good deal of mon- ey in bankruptey and I think we will set him up in that.” ‘The newly made rich are somewhat shy of books and literature, but even their sim- ple questions are sometimes amusing. An oil country book store was the scene of this dialogue : ‘‘ ‘The Last Days of Pompeii.” What did he die of, miss ?”’ ‘Of an eruption, I believe,”” the girl clerk replied. The ‘‘unearned increment’”’ accumulates a heap of trouble. It is said that money is a universal provider of everything but hap- piness, and a universal passport to every- thing but heaven. An immense fortune is an elephant of unusual size and whiteness on the hands of one who has always known where every dollar came from and where every one should go. A struggle for exis- tence becomes a plunge for position. One multi-millionaire of the petrolenm district was fettered with a wife who could neither read nor write. A true philanthropist ex- claimed : “God help the rich, the poor can beg.” Some oil men imagined that their sudden wealth could buy anything. They had yet to learn that ‘‘E’en dollars hide their sordid faces when they meet anointed eyes.’ In the palmy days gone by when Oil Creek flowed: past Titusville, literally a stream of oil, & single venture lifted a far- mer from poverty to opulence. He straight- way took his daughter to a fashionable fin- ishing school to have her ‘‘eddicated.” After examining the girl in the rudiments Madame found her in a state of original ignorance, and moreover, she lacked capa- city. She explained the matter to the doting father as delicately as possible. He listened loftily to her delicately worded ex- planation and then bluntly blurted out : ‘Well, why can’t you take her ?”’ “I fear she lacks capacity,’’ said Ma- dame. ¢¢ ‘Capacity.’ Why woman buy her one. My name’s Brown, I'm Brown, the oil prince.”’ A celebrated singer once sang in an oil town. The seats sold for twice the price of seats in the Metropolitan opera house. The great singer sang sweetly that night. At the end of the evening the richest and roughest producer in town went up to the sweet singer and told her how much he had enjoyed her ‘‘dirge.”’ An oil man, made immensely wealthy by the touch of the oleaginous Midas, thought a trip to Paris an indispensable adjunct to his travels. On his return, he was always the centre of an admirin group, while he descanted upon the beau- ties of Paris. ‘And did you go to all those places ?”’ asked an open mouthed listener. Yes,” replies the oil king, “I went to every single place, but one and I found it simply impossible to get there. On a great many cabs I saw the sign ‘Complet,’ and at last I felt that I must go there. - But every cab marked “‘Complet’ was always full and the more I tried to get there, the harder it became, so I gave it up.” No class of people is more sensitive to any possible allusion to the source of their wealth than those who have acquired it suddenly. Especially true is this of oil men. Even more so than the Chicago meat man, who objected to having his Ii- brary bound in calf. The story is told of an oil man entering a barber shop for a hair cut. After the barber had applied the shears he asked : ‘‘Any oil on your hair, sir?’ ‘Look here, young man, you had better not be casting up my busin to me, if you know when you are well off.” rn The future student of genealogy will tind it a difficult task to trace a genealogi- cal line in some oil country families. Very shortly after a gusher’s flow, the family he- gins to cast around for a more aristocratic name. Rogers becomes Roget, as ‘a result of an increase of ducats. The hard sound of ‘‘g’” in Vettinger ‘becomes: the softened ‘Yj’ under the gentle influence of green- backs. It is nota long step from Delton to Deltonay, but a tony one. Fallamater with the accent on the antepenult becomes Pallomater, with the accent on the last syl- able. The hypen is introduced to give tone to the name. Plain Miss Jones on her mar- riage to the oil king, by a remarkable but simple metamorphosis, becomes Mrs. Jones- Smith. Others of the Smith connection are content to substitute a ‘‘y’’ for the ‘i’ in their name, so that they now sign Smyth. The Browns satisfy their sense of change by adding an ‘“‘e’’ to their name. It was either the later Brownes or the later Smyths who, wishing to increase their sparse knowledge of the stars, put an “‘oblipatory’’ on their roof. The oil district has examples of such people. They are ill fitted for their new wealth. There are fine, cultured people in the oil regions, but as a rule, they have ac- quired their wealth gradually. The nouv- eaux riches are the most glaring features of a newly developed territory. . —CROMBIE ALLEN. The Habit of Thought. There is scarcely anything in life which may not be viewed in both sunlight and shadow ; from the pettiest affairs of an or- dinary day up to the most profound phil- osophy, which is either optimistic or pessi- mistic. To one man a beautiful day, that thrills the world with joy, only suggests the thought that somewhere rain is needed; to the other the same reflection occurs only asa consolation for the disappointment caused by a storm. Every event that hap- pens, every person we meet, every hook we read, every task we perform, every truth we discover, has a pleasant and a less pleasant side, and the choices are continu- ally before us as to which we will empha- size. Mr. O. S. Marden, in his architect of Fate, says : ‘If one loves beauty, and looks for it, he will see it everywhere. If there is music in his soul, he will hear it everywhere—every object in nature will sing to him. Two men who” live in the same house, and do the same work, may not live in the same world. Although they are under the same roof, one may see only deformity and ugliness ; to him the world is out of joint, everything is cross-grained and out of sorts. The other is surrounded with beauty and harmony ; everybody is kind to him ; nobody wishes him harm. These men see the same objects, but they do not look through the same glasses ; one looks through a smoked g'ass which drapes the whole world in mourning ; the other looks through rose-colored lenses, which tint everything with loveliness and touch it with beauty. * ® * Give me the man who, like Emerson, sees longevity in his cause and who believes there is a remedy for every wrong, a satis- faction for every longing soul ; the man who believes the best of everybody, and who sees beauty and loveliness where oth- erssee ugliness. Give me the man who be- lieves in the ° ultimate triumph of truth over error, of hatmony over discord, of love over hate, of purity over vice, of light over darkness, of life over death. Such men are the true nation builders.” The Philadelphia Ledger believes that the habit of happy thought is not to be ob- tained hy any selfish desire for happiness, no matter how fully such desires may he fulfilled ; it is something quite indepen- dent of riches or fame, or power of pleas- ure. They may accompany it, but can never produce it. Bryon uttered a truth when he said : ‘‘All who would win joy must share it ; happiness was born a twin.”” The sunny nature is hoth cause and. effect ; those who scatter seeds of joy in other hearts will reap a harvest in their own, and the chief delight of that harvest will consist in feeding the multitude.—Phila- Ledger. A Hot Bath Will'Bring Sleep. Suppose a person be tired out hy over- work of any kind, to feel nervous, irritable and worn, to be absolutely certain that ‘bed means only tossing for hours in an un- happy wakefulness. Turn on the hot water in the bathroom and soak in the hot bath until the drowsy feeling comes, which will be within three minutes ; rub yourself briskly with a coarse Turkish tow- el until the body is perfectly dry and then go to bed. You will sleep the sleep of the just, and rise in the morning, wondering how you could have felt so badly the night before. The bath has saved many a one from a sleepless night, if not from a severe headache the next day.—Dr. Cyrus Edson in Ladies Home Journal. A NEW LEASE oN LIFE.—The aged and weak have declared after using Speer’s Port wines that they felt as though they had a new lease of life hy having their sys- tems renovated by this pure strengthening wine made by Alfred Speer, of Passaic, N. J. The iron in the soil in which the vine grows gives the Blood making qualities to the wine. For sale by druggists. ——Teacher.—‘“Where were you yester- day ?”’ Pupil (whimpering).—*‘It was all Billy Tompkin’s fault ; he hipnertized me an’ made me go fishin’ with him.’’—7%id-Bits. ——Don’t you know that Hood’s Sarsa- parilla will overcome that tired feeling and give you renewed vigor and vitality ? Tourists. Harvest Excursions. In order to give everyone an opportunity to see the grand crops in the Western states and enable the intending settler to secure a home, the Chica- ‘go, Milwaukee & St. Paul R’y has arranged to run a series of harvest excursions to South and North Dakota, and to other states in the West, North- west and Southwest on the following ‘dates : July 21, August 4 and 28, September 1, 15 29 and Octo- ber 6 and 20, at the low rate of tivo dollars more than oNE FARE for the round trip. Tickets will be good for return on any Tuesday or Friday within twenty-one days from date of sale. For rates, time of trains and further details apply to any coupon ticket agent in.the East of Sotith, or ad- dress John R. Pott, District Passenger agent, | Williamsportt Pa. 41-28-3t. Tours in Beautiful Acadia. One Night at Sea to a Foreign Land by the Tourists’ Favorite Line. The Plant Steamship Line—the Tourists’ Favor- ite Route from Boston to the Maritime Provinces —takes pleasure in announcing the inauguration of its summer schedule of sailings. Beginning June 23rd the SS. “Halifax” and SS. “Olivette” will leave the north side of Lewis wharf, 20 Atlan- tic Avenue, Boston, every Tuesday and Saturday at 12 noon. The SS. “Halifax” sails to Halifax, N. 8., Hawkesbury, C. B., and Charlottetown, P. E.I. The 88S. ““Olivette” sails direct to Halifax, both ships making connection at the ports named for all points reached by rail and water lines in ‘the Maritime Provinces, and providing for tour- ists every comfort and luxury possible to modern travel. The Plant Steamship Company has compiled a book of tours, covering the principal and interest- ing routes of travel in the land of the Acadians. These tours are designed to afford the patrons of this line the greatest possible variety and pleas- ure, and are so arranged that monotony and re- traveling are avoided. Tourist and ticket agents of all railway.and steamship lines in the principal cities will be pleased to give any desired information about the Plant Steamship Line and a postal ecard request- ing Tour Books and Folders is all that is nee- essary to secure these valuable guides to enjoy- able travel in a de ghtful summer land. “Acadia and THereabouts,” issued by the Plant Steamship Company, and one of the handsomest and most interesting souvenir books of tourist literature ever issued, will be mailed to any ad- dress on receipt of ten cents in stamps. Address B. F. Blake, Assistant General Passenger Agent, 207 Washington street; Boston, Mass. Ne. New Advertisements. Travelers Guide. WH SAYS SO? EVERYBODY WHO HAS USED THEM, AND SOME OF THEM ARE BELLEFONTE PEOPLE. Who told you so? Neighbor So-and-so. Oh, well, that's all right. Testimony differs doesn’t it? The more some people say The less faith we have. . But the right man’s word Is taken at once. That’s the difference. People want Bellefonte reference. Particularly in matters of health. We tell you Doan’s Kidney Pills cure, But we are the makers of them, “Who says =0'’ counts here doesn’t it? Bellefonte people say so. And we give you their addresses. Perhaps you may know them. Active lives bring on kidney troubles. An example of this is Mrs. P. F. (Keichline) the wife of the well- known insurance agent of Water street. She say : *‘My husband obtained a hox of 'Doan’s Kidney Pills for me at F. Potts Green's drug store. We Tangs if they were up to representation they wonld just suit my case. I have suffered with my kidneys for a long time, They are responsible for all my backaehe and other annoying and dis- tressing complications. I had a very severe at- tack of LaGrippe and it left me in rather poor health. My back commenced to ache after that and I am inclined to think that my i were weakened. I found Doan's Kidney Pills very SSnofiniel I can endorse all the claims made for hem. 0% 416 10 1915 03 4 19} 10 15/4 58 4 23) 10 14/4 57 4 28] 10 09,4 52 4 33] 10 044 46 4 39 9 584 30 44 1004... Bi 9 5314 32. 4 50, 10 10;..... Woodlan 9 47/4 27 | 453 10 13... Mineral Sp...| 505 9 444 24 4501017... ... Barrett,...... 501 9404 20 502 10 22 ..... Leonard....| 456 935415 5 06 10 28 ....Clearfield.....| 452 9 3114 09 511) 10 34... Riverview.....| 4 58) 9 264 03 5 171 10 41'...Sus. Bridge...| 4 43] 9 20.3 56 5 22| 10 46,..Curwensville.| 439 9 153 51 cee 10 52 Rustic rorserveluce 35 ...| 11 02 .....Stronach, 2 | 11 06 ....Grampian... ries P.M.I P.M. ! A.M. |Ar. Lv am la, BALD EAGLE VALLEY BRANCH. WESTWARD. EASTWARD, Bl.z! | Z | ¢ Bi = | 2 ! May 18, 1806. | & os & ge pe] < & IF wi 2 2 = wn |= = Roi How P.M.| P. M. 7.f A.M. | P. M. |P.M. 617] 240 8 10] 12 35/7 25 611 234 8 16] 12 417 31 6 071 2 30 8 20) 12 45/7 35 6 03 226 8 24) 12 497 3 557 220 8 30, 12 557 4 554 217 833 12 5 552 215 35] 100 544! 2] | 1 5 36] 2 00] 1 528 153 12 519] 14 |....Unionville... 1 5 12! 1 37) 10 04 Snow Shoe Int.| 915] 1 3 5 090 133] 10 01... Milesburg.....| 918} 1 5011-124 9 53...Bellefonte....] 928 1 449 112 9 41]....Mileshurg..| 9 41] 2 441} 104 9 34....Curtin........ 949 2 437 100 9 30..Mount Eagle..| 9 53 2 431] 12 54] 9 24 Howard........| 9 59 ° 4 22 12 # 5.....Eagleville....| 10 08] 2 419 2..Beech Creek...| 10 11] 2 4 os! Mill Hall......| 10 22 2 4 06! .Flemington...| 10 24] 2 g 4 02 5 ...Lock Haven.| 10 30, 2 509 40 P.M.| P. M. | A. M. |Lv. Arr. a. x | Poa [Poa LEWISBURG & TYRONE RAILROAD. EASTWARD. May 18th, 1896. WESTWARD. MAIL. | EXP. | | EXP. | MAIL. STATIONS. P.M. | A.M Ly, Ar.ja. Mm (P.M 15, 6.20.......... Bellefonte........... 55] 41a ~Axemann. : 50{ 4 10 Pleasant Gap. 47 407 ai «Peru... 4 403% Dale Summit, ...Ingleby.. Paddy Mountain. ...Cherry Run.. «...Lindale.... Se IIIT ~1=1 9000 0 WL WLLL W 3 Tn dn bn nn 00 LO 80 80 50 00 88 58 22 8 ND IO 1 19 1D I BO 1D KD = os > ny 2 Cres 4 7 ———_ RRR RW IK RNR 30388 3808S © > 7: 8 8 8 Z 2 15, 8 2 6 50 18 17) 8 G 47 16 22, 81 6 42 12 27] 8 3: 637 207 35 8 Vicksburg. 6 28 5% 39! 8 57 ....Biehl.. 623 153 470 900, .Lewisbu 615 145 55 9 10. M 5 40 35 P. M. | A. M. {Ar Jamin LEWISBURG & TYRONE RAILROAT. WESTWARD. UPPER END. EASTWARD. 2 | I yi lz | May, 18, 1806. | % | El = E | po ol P.M. |A. mM |Ar. Lve.| a. m1. 4 40 Scoti 10 00 4 23 10 19 417 10 26| 4 11 8 51{Penn. Furnace] 10 33 405 845 10 40, 359 839... 10 46, 355 83a... 10 51; 3 491 8 29(. Furnace Road.| 10 58 3 46] 8 26....Dungarvin...| 11 01 3 38! 8 18 Warrior's Mark] 11 10! 329 8 1 11 20, 318) 7 ssl... Stover... 152 qual 310| 7 50...... Tyrone...... 1140 620... P. M. Ara. a | poor | BELLEFONTE & SNOW SHOE BRANCH. Time Table in effect on and after May 18, 1896. Leave Snow Shoe, except Sunda Sm. Arrive in Bellefonte........... , mm. Leave Bellefonte, except Sut .m. Arrive in Snow Shoe....... 11 49 a. m. (Eye RAILROAD OF PENNA. Condensed Time Table. | Reap vp. No No alxo 2, | — READ DOWN | No 1'No No 3 May 18, 1896, a. m. p. m.|p. m,|Lve. Ar. p.m. |p. m.ja. m. +7 20 br 30 ¥ 45 BELLEFONTE. [10 04) 6 10(10 10 734 744 357.....Nigh.........| 9 49] 5 57| 9 56 741 750] 4 03 2. | 5 51f 9 50 7 46; 7 55| 4 08. HECLA PAR 15 46 748 757 410 5 7 52 8 01] 4 14/...Hublersburg 7 56 8 05] 4 18 7 58] 9 07] 4 20]... 8 00] 8 09] 4 22 8 02) 8 11] 4 24 304 813) 4 26 8 09) 8 19 4 31 8 16| 8 25| 4 37 823 832) 4 43 8 25! 8 34| 4 45 8 30] 8 40] 4 50 9 3 9 Xi reser Jersey Shore.........| 430] T 55 10 9 55|ArT. ) wwarw vel 4 00| +7 25 +10 20/%11 30 Tre pW Ms’PORT ye 2 40| *6 55 508 710 PHILA, «| 18 35/*11 30 tlantic Ci wel 6 45 «NEW YORK..........| 14 30 (Via Tamaqua.) 7 25; 19 30|.......NEW YORK......... 27 30 (Via Phila.) | p. m.ja. m.[Arr. Lve.[a. m.[p. m. *Daily. tWeek Days. £6.00 P. M. Sundays. 110.10 A. M. Sunday. PHILADELPHIA SLEEPING Car attached to East- bound train from Williamsport at 11.30 P. M, and West-hound from Philadelphia at 11.30 P. M. J. W. GEPHART. General Superintendent. New Advertisements. eee Roasted Coffees, Rio, Java, Fresh Roasted. SECHLER & CO. Santos and Mocha. a