Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, September 25, 1896, Image 6

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Bellefonte, Pa., Sep. 25, 1896.
M’KINLEY, BEWARE.
McKinley, McKinley, beware of the day
When Bryan shall meet thee in Bryan’s own way;
For the people who labor—who toil and who spin
Are hoping and praying that Bryan will win.
He's the friend of the people, the foe of the trust;
He does what is fair, he loves what is just, :
He can point to a record as clean and as clear
As the bright, sparkling fountain beside the wide
mere.
Why, why is McKinley so silent and dumb ?
Why, why, is McKinley's peculiar word, “mum 7°
And why have the trusts and the millionaires all
Decided to stand with McKinley or fall ?
To McKinley at Canton we've nothing to say—
Except that we hope he at Canton will stay.
But for Bryan we'll work and we'll pray and we'll
vote
As the friend of the people who carry the load.
HG.
“A Gentleman” on Labor's Political
Rights.
[The following is clipped from the N. Y.
Journat of Saturday last, and is re-publish-
ed simply to show the opinion that some of
the advocates of MCKINLEY'’S election have
of the honest laboring classes and of the
government from which they secure pro-
tection. We invite the special attention of
every workingman who reads the WATCH-
‘ MAN, to the sentiment expressed.—Ed.]
The person signing himself ‘‘Common-
er,’’ who in your paper of to-day replied to
myself, takes occasion to declare that,
though not himself a mudsill, he is in sym-
pathy with mudsills. This announcement
was scarcely necessary, since no one with
the smallest rudiments of a gentleman
could manifest such extreme disrepect for
the rights and privileges of the better class-
es as he has done in his dull and demagog-
ic lucubration.
Yet, after all, he is but one of the mil-
lions of brainless nobodies who have flat-
tered into the belief that because they pos-
sess the ballot they are capable of intelli-
gently using it without the direction of
their betters. In support of his notion that
those who work with their hands are com-
petent to guide themselves politically he
misquotes the Declaration of Independence
by making it say that ‘‘all men are horn
free and equal.”” What it does say is that
‘‘all men are created equal.”” But what
man of calibre in this day of greater exper-
ience and enlightment will seriously quote
the Declaration of Independence as an au-
thority in polities? Its author, Thomas
Jefferson, had his good points, of course,
but he was simply an echoer of the sky-
scraping nonsense of Rousseau and the oth-
er impracticable French philosophers of the
last century, with their general maxims
about the *‘rights of man,’”’ deduced from a
‘‘golden age’ that never existed and never
will exist. It was Jefferson’s masters in
polities who brought on the hidéous French
revolution,at which mankind still shudders
that destroyed the most luxurious, accom-
plished and elegant society the world has
ever known. The less we of the United
States have to do with the Declaration of
Independence and its ‘principles’ —its
“‘inalienable right,” ‘“‘nature’s laws and
nature’s God’’ and the rest of it—the safer
we shall be. Jefferson was a revolutionist,
and our modern method of dealing with
revolutionists was exemplified in Chicago |
when certain other political philosophers
calling themselver Anarchists were drop- |
ped through the trap.
I shall not condescend to notice in de-
tails the farago of imbecility of which your
‘‘Commoner”’ is guilty. But his closing
paragraph has a bearing on immediate prac-
tical concerns, and therefore is worthy of
my attention. Referring to myself this
complacent ass says :
“I cannot help paying your correspon-
dent a much deserved compliment. His
candor in openly praising the use of money
for corruption purposes is, to say the least,
refreshing. We are, at any rate, not left
in doubt as to his meaning. Idoubt, how-
ever, if his outspoken frankness in this re-
gard will meet with the unqualified ap-
proval of the noble and philanthropic
friend of labor whom he so much admires.’
Permit me to say that I enjoy the honor
of Mr. Mark A. Hanna's personal acquaint-
ance, and thas I doadmire him unreserved-
ly both as a man and a statesntan. Not-
withstanding the rancorous and ill-bred
detraction of which he is the victim through-
out the Republic, I unhesitatingly declare
my conviction that he is the best friend of
labor living to-day. But for his masterly
precautions—and he has the brains as well
as the means, thank God, to include the
entire continent in his grasp—who can
doubt that the drudging masses would have
been stampeded for that intolerable dis-
turber of settled conditions and stimulater
of greed in the lowly, Bryan, of Nebraska ?
To Mr. Hanna first. and after him to the
patriotic men of wealth who have gener-
ously opened their purses to his order, the
reputable, conservative and well-to-do peo-
ple of the United States, the elite of the
nation, owe their rescue from that appal-
ling calamity. William McKinley will be
elected, and as the representative of the
property-owning, intellectual and socially
well-placed elements, and with such an
adviser as Mark Hanna always near him,
there is no danger that he will ever pander
to the passions or supposed interests of the
mob. :
This mindless ‘‘Commoner’’ marvels at
my “frankness’’ in justifying what he terms
corruption. I éannot see that my written
words are franker than the action of the
better classes generally in supplying money
to be used for the political guidance of the
lower orders of society. It is a time for
candor. Property is threatened, and, there-
fore, the peace of the nation challenged—
for I suppose that not even your ‘Com-
moner’’ is such a simpletion as to believe !
that we should submit to being deprived
of our place and privileges by the mere ma-
jority vote of the proletariat. Surely every
man capable of reflection, and who is not
inflamed with a desire to despoil his more
prosperous neighbors, will admit that it is
far better to purchase the mob than to fight
it and spill its blood—that it is wiser and
more merciful to apply gentle coercion to
the ignorant voter than to have recourse to
the military arm. It may come to that if
the Bryans are permitted to go freely up
and down the land preaching the wicked
idiocy of free silver coinage and rousing
the insensate crowd to attack the vested
rights of their superiors.
I repeat that the workingman who at a
crisis such as this listens to demagogues
and ranting newspapers rather than to his
employer richly deserves to be discharged.
In closing, allow me to say that I scarce-
ly expected a newspaper of the Journal’s
sympathies to giveto print my views, so
{
different and, I may add, so much more
judicious and temperate than its own. I
appreciate the courtesy, but value it chief-
ly because of the good which I am certain
must result from my plain truth telling.
Ihave all due respect for the merits of the
‘American workingman,’’ be he mechanic,
laborer or farmer, hut his merits are not
mental. Inieality he is no more capable
of deciding questions of finance and other-
wise governing the country than the horses
of New York are of conducting the Street
Department of this great metropolis. I
am, sir, yours respectfully,
A GENTLEMAN.
Portugal.
Those who desire information upon the
subject of gold monometallism would do
well to look up the financial history of Por-
tugal, Turkey, Egypt, Denmark and Bra-
zil. The masses of the people in these
countries are simply in a pitiable condition.
During the first part of the present century
Portugal, despite the Napoleonic vars,
contained a prosperous, thrifty population.
They were out of debt. But things are
different now. It was only a short time
ago that the King had to pawn the crown
jewels in London for money to meet the ex-
penses of the court. Portugal’s national
debt is $750,000,000, having been consoli-
dated through the Rothschilds in 1893 on
the hasis of the gold standard. All taxes
go directly to London, while it takes the
entire wine crop of the country to pay the
interest on the debt. . Below will be found
an article on Portugal taken from the
Twentieth Century that contains just the
sort of information that the people are
seeking :
Portugal is a land of marvelous beauty.
Its people are among the most progressive
of the race. The history of the land is
like some absorbing romance, so filled as it
is with wonderful deeds and glorious
ackievements. There is something strange-
ly pathetic in the present condition of the
Portugese when their past and their capaci-
ties are remembered. The masses of the
people toil and starve. The products of
the country are eaten up by taxes while the
fruits and wines and cereals go abroad in a
steady stream. Portugal is like some full-
blooded strong-sleeper, secretly bled at
night by a leech to awake at morn weak
and unrefreshed by that which should be a
source of power and growth.
The leech of this land is the gold stand-
ard. Portugal’s National debt is about
$750,000,000, payable in gold in accord-
ance with the refunding laws of October 30,
1893. The principal holder of the debt is
the house of Rothschild, acting as a trustee
for British investors. The original debt
dates from 1850 and the national bond is-
sues were on a silver basis. About twenty
three years ago Portugal was placed on a
gold basis at a meeting of the National
creditors held in the Bank of England.
That is, the expenditures of the country,
necessitating heavy taxation and the reve-
nue being inadequate, a proposition was
made to the government to advance a new
loan, to reduce the interest and to accept a
grant of the internal taxes provided all the
bonds were made redeemable in gold.
Bankruptcy stared the land in the face,
and in order to obtain the new loan the
court acceded to these terms. It was soon
found, however, that the reduction in in-
terest amounted to nothing, because it was
payable in gold. For many years revenue
of the kingdom measured in gold have
been far below the expenses of government.
It has at times been almost an impossibility
to sell the national products for a price
that would realize a sum sufficient to ‘pay
interest in gold. In January, 1892, the
King of Portugal was forced to relinquish
a fifth of his civil list to cut down expenses
and avert a revolution. His pawning of
the crown jewels in London attracted
world-wide attention a year or more ago.
The great complaint in Portugal is ruin-
ously low prices. For instance, the olive
crop sells for next to nothing in the Lon-
don market, and the wages of agricultural
labor are barely enough to afford the farm
laborer sustenance. Money is very scarce.
i The deficiency in the revenue adds yearly
to the national debt. which is over $150 a
head for the population. Itis a very in-
teresting fact that the Portugese were
greatly interested in the monetary confer-
ence at Brussels, and the delegates from
their country were pledged to vote with
the representatives of United States on all
questions. This was due to our position
in Europe as an advocate of bimetallism,
and it was accordingly a great shock to
Portugal when our minister George Wil-
liam Caruth, declared that it was the poli-
cy of the United States to maintain the
gold standard. Premier Ribeiro expressed
his amazement at this, and said his country
would never have heen represented at the
Brussels conference but for its understand-
ing that the United States was for silver
coinage at a 16 to 1 ratio. The Cleveland
administration thus deliberately discredited
the United States in the eyes of the debtor
nations of Europe. Our national position
as the leading and only powerful and only
influential and wealthy debtor nation of
the world has caused most debtor countries
to abide by our policy on the financial
question. It is well known that Portugal
attached great importance to the interna-
tional conference which Mr. Cleveland re-
fused to call. The charge was openly
made in the Portugese courts that the Unit-
ed States had betrayed the debtor nations
into the hands of Great Britain. So much
for the part played by the Cleveland ad-
ministration in foreign affairs.
To-day, as we pointed out before, Portu-
gal is practically bankrupt. Her people
pay annual tribute in gold to foreign fi-
nanciers. The people are well nigh des-
perate. Revolution has been once or twice
barely averted. Industry languishes. The
agricultural population is in the lowest
depths of penury. In the cities the wages
of labor are lower than anywhere outside
of Turkey and Egypt. The blessing of a
gold standard has brought one of the proud-
est nations in Europe to beggary.
A Sympathetic Youth.
“Papa,” said George, “I'm so sorry
sometimes about all the trouble I give
mamma.’’
‘She hasn’t complained.”
‘No, she’s very patient. But she often
sends me off to the shops for things, and
they are a good way off, and I know she
gets cross waiting when she’s in a hurry.”
‘Not often, I fancy.”
‘‘Oh, she’s nearly always ina hurry.
She gets everything all ready for baking
and finds at the last minute she hasn’t any
baking powder, or she gets a pudding ail
mixed and finds she hasn’t any nutmeg or
something, and then she’s in an awful
stew, ‘cause the oven is all ready and may-
be company coming, and I can’t run a very
long distance, you know, and I feel awfully
sorry for poor mamma.’
* Humph ! Well, what can we do about
it ?
“I was thinking you might get me
a bhicycle.”’—Boston Traveler.
——Read the WATCHMAN.
Boomerang Arguments.
The gold advocates before they get
through with this campaign may make the
discovery that they have blundered in try-
ing to prove too much. They tell us in one
breath that the owners of silver mines will
make millions by taking fifty-cents’ worth
of silver to the mint and having it coined
into hundred cents ; and in the next breath
they declare that workingmen’s wages will
be paid in a fifty-cent dollar if silver wins
in its fight with its yellow rival. It is not
for us to explain how a silver dollar can at
one and the same time be worth one hun-
dred cents and _fifty-cents. Itis our gold
friends who will have to make this plain.
While they are engaged in trying to per-
suade the wage earner that a dollar which,
when it leaves the mint, is only worth fifty-
cents, is only fifty when it gets into his
hands, they are at the same time using
another argument which may prove a
boomerang. They are sending out from
their headquarters in Washington a ‘“‘fin-
nancial calendar’ which is intended to
prove that the United States would cease
to be in good company if it did not adhere
to the gold stardard.
A glance at the dates contained in this
calendar greatly strengthens the belief that
there has been a wérld-wide conspiracy on
the part of the money lenders to demonetize
silver for their own individual profit. Here
are some facts gleaned from it :
+‘1871—Germany adopted a gold stand-
ard.
1873—Holland suspended silver coin-
age.
1873—Denmark adopted a gold stand-
ard.
¢1873—Germany demonetized silver coin-
age. :
¢1873—Norway adopted a gold standard.
¢1873—Sweden adopted a gold standard.
‘1874—Latin Union (France, Italy, Bel-
gium, Greece and Switzerland) limited
their silver coinage.
‘‘1875—Suspension of silver coinage in
Italy.
*‘1875—Switzerland declined to coin her
quota of silver under the Latin Union.
*‘1875—Suspension of silver coinage on
account of Dutch colonies.
*‘1876—France suspends the coinage of
silver.
‘‘1877—Finland adopted the gold stand-
ard.
¢‘1878—Spain suspended the free coinage
of silver. .
*‘1878—The Latin Union (France, Italy,
Belgium, Greece and Switzerland) sus-
pended the coinage of silver, except sub-
sidiary coins.
_ '‘1879—Austria-Hungary suspended free
coinage of silver.
‘‘1885—Egypt adopted a gold standard.
‘1890—Roumania adopted a gold stand-
ard.
*‘1891—Tunis adopted a gold standard.
¢‘1892— Austria-Hungary adopted a gold
standard.
‘1893—Mints of India closed in the free
coinage of silver.
¢‘1893—Russia decided to coin 100,000,-
000 gold rubles.
¢1895-—Chili adopted a gold standard.
£'1893—Costa Rica adopted a gold stand-
ard.
‘1878, 1888, 1892—Three international
conference held to try to re-establish the
use of silver were unsuccessful.”
It will be noticed that the most of the
silver demonetization was accomplished
within the short space of six years. We
submit that a metal which had” performed
the monetary function for hundreds of years
could scarcely have become unfit for that
purpose in the short space of half a decade
through the operation of natural causes.
From the very showing of this circular
spread broadcast by the enemies of silver,
one would be led to believe the statement of
the friends of the white metal that it was
demonetized as the, result of a conspiracy
which had its headquarters in London, and
which had active and unscrupulous agents
in every civilized land in the world.— Irish
World.
Height of Englishmen and Americans.
A careful inquiry into the average height
of different nations has elicited the follow-
ing facts : The English professional classes,
who head the list as the tallest of adult
males, attain the high average of 5 feet 9.14
inches. Next on the list come the males
of all classes in the United States, and a
minute fraction behind them come the
English of all classes. Hence we may con-
clude that, taken right through, the Eng-
lish and American races are approximately |
of the same height. Most European na-
tions average for the adult male 5 feet 6
inches ; but the Austrians, Spaniards and
Portuguese just fall short of this standard.
Should Keep Clear of Politics.
President George B. Roberts, of the
Penn’a. railroad will, it is said, issue in a
few days a circular requesting the hot-
headed subordinate officers to keep clear of
politics. Mr. Roberts knows that political
animosities do not die out very soon, and
when a big railway system incurs the
enmity of a party composed of the greater
part of the population of the United States
its traffic is likely to suffer asa result of :
that unwise course. Mr. Roberts is run-
ning the road for money and not for politics,
and he is about t@call a halt on the course
that is being pursued by some of the minor
officials who are rabid politicians.
Armenia’s Awfal Plight.
A lady whose name is not given, and who
has just returned to London from Armenia, |
asserts that the foreign consuls and mis-
sionaries there estimate that fully 1,000,-
000 deaths have occurred in that country
as the result of the massacres and from star-
vation. The present condition of Armenia,
she declares, is worse than it was during
the massacres. Thousands of the inhabit-
ants are starving to death.
~—The best is what you want when
youare in need of a medicine. That is
why yeu should insist upon Hood’s Sarsa-
parilla.
— —.
INIuminating Oil.
Uprising of the Yaqui Indians.
The Yaquis were early Christianized, in
the ordinary Spanish-mission sense, and”
they have been handled by priests adverse-
ly to various liberal governments in Mexi-
co—notably in French time. They possess
lands rich and fertile on the Yaqui river.
They have never been able to adjust their
titles to modern Mexican political law, and
have in consequence to fight the covetous-
ness of the people who are within the law.
The Mexican troops have been sent against
them on many occasions, have fought pitch-
ed battles, and have been soundly thrashed 3
they have stormed adobe forts, captured
kings—notably Cajami, who was killed
while trying to escape, which has a Sinister
meaning in Mexico—but they have never
| subdued the Yaquis.
i _ When the tides of battle ran against the
Indians, they retreated before the troops up
the Yaqui river to the desolate Sierra
Madre, and from there could not be dis-
lodged. When their lands were occupied,
they sallied down and drove off the Mexi-
cans in turn. They are a splendid people
physically, industrious agriculturtsts, and
when not at war form the best laborers in
Sonora state. They work in the mines,
and in Apache days were hired to convey
silver trains to the settlements, which they
always did honestly, while they most suc-
cessfully beat off the Apache raiders.
They were the laborers who built the
Sonora Railroad, and with the money they
earned they bought Winchester rifles, so
that they were well armed in their encoun-
ters with the Mexican troops. They are
fanatical and superstitious in their religion,
and so consumed with hate toward the
Mexican government that I doubt if peace
can ever be made with them.
The Mexicans should be tired of trying
to subdue them, it would seem, and the
only solution of the problem is to conclude
fair treaties with them and let Sonora en-
joy peace—a thing that state has never
known, what with Yaquis, Apaches, Ceris,
and bandits both red and white.— Harper's
Weekly.
————————————————
Tours to the South via Pennsylvania
: Railroad.
Two very attractive early autumn tours
are offered by the Pennsylvania railroad,
leaving New York and Philadelphia Sep-
tember 29th and October 13th.
After the experience of the past few years
it is hardly necessary to say that these
outings are planned with the utmost
care. Suffice it is to say that all arrange
ments are so adjusted as to afford the best
possible means of visiting each place to the
best advantage.
The tours each cover a period of ten days,
and include the battlefield of Gettysburg,
picturesque Blue Mountain, Luray Caverns,
Basic City, the Natural Bridge, Grottoes
of the Shenandoah, the cities of Richmond
and Washington, and Mt. Vernon.
The round-trip rate, including all neces-
sary expenses, is $55 from New York, $53
from Philadelphia, and proportionate rates
from other points.
Each tour will be in charge of one of the
company’s tourists agents. He will be as-
sisted by an experienced lady as chaperone,
whose especial charge will be ladies un-
accompanied by male escort.
Special trains of parlor cars are provided
for the exclusive use of each party, in
which the entire round trip from New
York is made.
For detailed itinenary apply to ticket
agent or-to tourist agent, 1196 Broadway,
New York, or Room 411, Broad street sta-
, tion, Philadelphia.
|
Department of Dentistry at the U., of
Penna.
The alumni and friends of the depart-
ment of dentistry will learn with satisfac-
partment are rapidly being completed, and
tion that the plans for the new building |
which is to be the future home of the de- |
‘there is good reason to expect that within
its construction.
intersection of Locust and Thirty-third
streets, in close relation to Franklin Field.
The plans which were finally decided upon
and accepted by the board of trustees are
the result of much study and careful prepa-
ration. As a preliminary step, and with
the end in view of securing a satisfactory
building, a committee of the dental faculty
was sent, in January of the present year, |
to make a study of the architectural and |
educational features of the principal den-
tal schools of this country. Eleven of
the most prominent colleges were visited
and carefully studied with the result that
a mass of valuable data was obtained and
much of it utilized with suitable modifi
cations, In meeting the needs of our own
dental department.
The central motive of the undertaking
was that, as a dental educational plant, it
should be the best of its kind. This in-
volved the development and expansion of
educational system of the department of
dentistry along lines which would place it
definitely upon a Univeristy plane, and the
erection of a building which in its con-
struction and appointments would ade-
quately provide for the educational plan
| projected.
The Noisy Point.
Mother—Children ! Children !
make such a frightful noise.
Mattie—We’re playing tram car, mamma,
i! “Yes, I know, dear ; but it isn’t neces-
sary to make such a terrible noise.”
i “Yes, it is, mamma. We've got to
i where Hattie insists on payin’ the fare,
and sodo I.”
Don’t
| ——Mrs. Warren, of Sharptown, Md.,
: who believed in the predictions of the New
York ‘‘Ascensionists’’ that the world was
{coming to an end last Wednesday, gave
{away all her money and personal property.
| Now she is trying, without much success,
to get it back, and her generosity may be |
aired in court.
ah
A= FOR
«
~T==""""=THE BOOKLET ON “LIGHT =m
O——AND——0
{BURN CROWN ACME OIL }
0——~GIVES THE BEST LIGHT IN THE WORLD.——0
30-87-1y
AND IS ABSOLUTELY SAFE.
J
afew weeks ground will be broken for |
The plot of ground upon which the new |
building is to be erected is located at the |
A Silhowette Party.
_~8ome Fun for an Evening Spent Indoors.
~ As one of the latest fads is collecting sil-
houettes, not only those of past and gone
forefathers but one’s friends of the present
generation, there is no more successful way
of entertaining a few people informally
than in making these shadow pictures. The
idea is as yet unhackneyed, but_as every
one is interested in his or her physiognomy,
it is destined to havea great vogue.
The hostess purchases a dozen or more
large sheets of thin paper, black on one side
and white on the other, and as many sheets
of plain white cardboard.
A sheet of black paper is fastened to the
wall with the whiteside out. A candle is
lighted and set upon a table that is set im-
mediately opposite the paper, and about
two feet distant from it. The guest is seat-
ed between the candle and the wall, so that
a strongly and sharply defined shadow of
her profile falls upon the paper. Some one
with a steady hand then steps forward and
traces this shadow with a pencil, the guest
sitting motionless meanwhile. When traced
it is cut out with scissors, turned over and
stuck on the card board, with, of course,
the black face of the paper up.
In this way an exact profile is caught,
and the silhouettes, although much larger
than the tiny ones cut at sight in our grand-
father’s time, are more faithfully lifelike.
Each guest is given their own counterfeit
presentment, and a great deal of fun fol-
lows in exchanging shadow pictures, most
of them declaring that they are not as black
as they are painted.
An Irishman having feet of different
sizes, ordered his boots to be made accord-
ingly. His directions were obeyed, but, as
he tried the smallest boot on his largest
foot, he exclaimed petulantly, ‘“‘Confound
that fellow ! I ordered him to make one
larger than the other and instead of that
he has made one smaller than the other.”
A poor Irishman offered an old saucepan
for sale. His children gathered around
him and inquired why he parted with it.
‘Ah me honeys,” he answered, ‘I would
not be afther parting with it but for a
little money to buy something to put it
in.
—A druggist in Maine has advertised
in his town paper for 48 years without a
break, and has retired rich.
New Advertisements.
Ho¥E SECRETS.
BELLEFONTE MOTHERS KEEP THEM;
BUT, WITH A LITTLE LIGHT, THERE
NEED BE NONE.
How carefully Mother guards the Se-
crets of her Boys and Girls. At night
as she carefully tucks the bed clothes
round them she chides and warns
them that Mother will be angry if they
repeat last night's offense, softly say-
ing to herself it’s only a habit, but I
must break them ofit. This is Moth-
er's mistake. The children cannot
help it, and sweet, clean, dry, beds can
be the resting place of every child
when it is understood that thé cause
is not a habit, but a weakness that can
be cured. Active life of the little ones
tends to weakening the Kidneys, and
weak Kidneys means inability to re-
tain urine. This is a condition, not a
habit, and should have the same
prompt attention you would give to
the marked symptoms of any disease.
One of Doan’s Kidney Pills taken twice
a day and at bed time will strenghten
the kidneys of a child, and in a short
time there will be no cause to scold,
for the so-called habit will disappear
promptly.
Here's a grateful Mother that adds
her indorsement to our words.
Mrs. W. E. Bryerton 101 Fourth St.
says :—“My daughter 8 years old had
at the age of four, a severe attack of
measles, When she recovered, she
was left with weak kidneys and the
trouble developed into a urinary diffi-
culty. We doctored forgt, but made
little or no headway. Last fall, she
with other children, had the typhoid
fever. It aggravated it and she com-
plained of her back aching and contin-
ually feeling tired. She had little or
no control of the urine while sleeping,
in spite of all the doctors and I could
do. It struck me if Doan’s Kidney
Pills were good for this distressing
complaint in adults, they should be
for children, and I procured a box.
They improved her condition from the
start and finally did more for her than
all I ever did as well as the doctor.
The trouble is gone. Before using the
Old Guile; Remedy, she could not go
to Sabbath School. Now Iam thank-
ful to say she can_go anywhere.”
Doan’s Kidney Pills are for sale by
all dealers, Price 50 cents per box,
six boxes for $2.50, mailed to any ad-
dress on receipt of price, by Foster-
Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. Sole Agents
S
Travelers Guide.
PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD AND
BRANCHES.
May 18th, 1896.
TYRONE AND CLEARFIELD, R. R.
NORTHWARD. | BOUTHWARD,
& = 5 % | 3
z 5 E | May, 18, 1806. | & | Ze 5
E AS = E | a 8 | ®
= = = = |
v i | |
P.M.| P. M. | A. M. .M. | |
730 315 820. 5 35 I
736, 321 826 29
738 323 82s...Tyrone 8...
741 32%; 331]. 25
7 51) 336] 842. 618
755 340| 847 615
8 04) 349 8 57]. 6.07
811; 355 905 6 00
8 16! 3 59 9 09]. 5 54
818 401 911 5 51
819) 402 913. 5 49 2
8 27| 408 921 539 10
ri) 411 9 28. verernnfevnnennd [5 00
8 31 416 931 351 10 19,5 03
835 419 935 31] 10 154 58
8 36/ 423 942. 30 10 144 57
8 41) 428 947 26| 10 09/4 52
8 46 433 9 52 5 21] 10 04/4 46
8 52| 439] 9 58]... 516| 9 58/4 39
8 57| 4441.10 04... 511f 9531432
9 03] 4 50| 10 10| 506] 9474 27
906, 453 10 13... Mineral Sp...| 505 9 44/4 24
910 4571017... Barrett...... 501 9404 20
9 15 502] 10 22'..... Leonard 456 9350415
9 19/506! 10 28!.....Clearfield.....| 4 52| 9 31/4 09
9 24 5 11 10 34!... Riverview.....| 4 58 9 26/4 03
9 30] 517 10 41|...Sus. Bridge...| 4 43] 9 20,3 56
9 35] 5 22) 10 46(..Curwensville..| 4 39! 9 15/3 51
325
eeeisenal 21
A.M. Ar. Lv. a.m la mipm
BALD EAGLE VALLEY BRANCH.
WESTWARD. EASTWARD.
gle Z| 2
85 5 (May1s, 1806. | 2 | EB | E
gE | * EEE
= = | 8B |B
P.M.| P. M. | A, M. (ATT. Lv. a mp oo Pw.
617 24011110 ...... Tyrone.......| 8 Tol 12 357 25
6111 234 11 04. East Tyrone...| 8 16 12 417 31
607 230 1100......Vail.......| 8 20] 12 45/7 35
6 03) 2 26] 10 56!...Bald Eagle....| 8 24/ 12 49/7 39
5 57 220] 10 49’ Dix........[ 830/ 12 537 45
554 217 8 33! 12 58/7 48
552 215 8 35 1 00/7 50
544 207 8 42 1 077 57
536] 200 849] 1 14/8 04
528 153 8 58) 122813
519 144 ni | 907) 1308 22
5 12| 1 37] 10 04/Snow Shoe Int.| 915 1 378 30
5 09| 133] 10 01|...Milesburg.. ... 918! 1 40/8 33
501 121 953 ....Bellefonte....| 9 28/ 1 498 4]
449] 112 9 41)....Milesburg..| 941] 2 02/8 53
441 104 934....Curtin........ 949 2119 01
4371 100/ 9 30\..Mount Eagle...| 953 2159 05
431) 12 54 9 24!......Howard.....| 950 221/911.
4 22 1245 9 15|.....Eagleville....| 10 08] 2 30|9 20
419 1242) 91 eech Creek...| 10 11] 2 339 23
408 1231) 901 fill Hall...... 10 22) 2 44/9 34
4 06! 12 29| 8 59 emington...| 10 24| 2 46/9 36
4 02) 12 25 8 55|...Lock Haven..| 10 30] 2 50,9 40
P.M.|P. M. | A. m1. |Lv., Arr. A. a. | Pa. [Pom
LEWISBURG & TYRONE RAILROAD.
EASTWARD. May 18th, 1896. WESTWARD.
MAIL. | EXP, i. EXP. | MAIL.
| SraTIONS.
P.M. | A.M. Ar. a.m | poo
215° 6 855 415
2 Mri, 8 50! 4 10
2 24) 8 471 407
2 27 844 403
2 34) 837] 358
2 38] 832 353
2 43, 8 28) 348
2 43! 823 344
2 53 TO... 816| 337
3 02 800 331
3 10] DS 02 323
3 17] ws | 7.550 317
325 7: 745 30s
333] 7: 738 302
338 7 73] 26
ody 7 721 253
349) 757 718 245
3 52 801 714 241
359 808 v07] 234
407 817 658 225
4 15 8 25! 650 218
417 821 647 216
422 833 642 212
427 838 637 207
4 35 847 628 158
439 85 623 153
447 90 Lewisburg. 615 145
455 91 | Montandon..........| 5 40, 135
P. M. | A. M. {Ar Lv. A.M |p. Mm.
LEWISBURG & TYRONE RAILROAD.
WESTWARD.
UPPER END. EASTWARD.
= |e 2
5 | May, 18, 1806. |
= : =
2)
A.M. [Ar Lve
20, Seotia.......
9 0: rirbrook....
8 57} Musser......
8 51; .
8 45.......Hostler......
8 39|... .Marengo......
8 3
8 29/.
8 26/....Dungarvin...
8 18| Warrior's Mark
8 09!..Pennington...
7 58........Stover..
7 50...... Tyrone......
N| Ara. nm lpoa
BELLEFONTE & SNOW SHOE BRANCH.
Time Table in effect on and after
May 18, 1896.
Leave Snow Shoe, except Sunday...........3 51 p. m.
ATrive In Bellofonte.......cooesrresores we 546 p. m.
Leave Bellefonte, except Sunday. - 9580. m.
Arrive in Snow Shee.............cccceeenis- 11 49 a. m.
(ESTRAL RAILROAD OF PENNA.
for the U. 8. Condensed Time Table.
|
READ DOWN {| Reap vr.
Travelers Guide. a f0av 15, 1506. met
No 1/No 5 No 3 Xe 6 No 4 No 2
{ ! i }
H CREEK ILROAD.
Eee Y ¢ REP BALI Lcscee a. m. p. m.[p. m, Lve. ALD. NL Pp. La. mh.
ete Thy De vy A ERNE 17 20] BELL 5.10 0416 10/10 10
. i , § te N | 9 49] 5 57 9 56
Condensed Time Table. oy 5 51 oe
7 46] 7 55( 4 08]. CLA P/ «| 938 546 9 45
Dyn ue Roy lL 7 i 7 57| 4 10|...... Dun kles.....| 9 36 5 44] 9 43
May 17th, 189¢. MAIL. | 7 52| 8 01] 4 14|...Hublersburg...| 9 32| 5 40 9 39
No.36 | 7 56| 8 05( 4 18]...Snydertown..... 928 537 93
7 58] 9 07] 4 20|....... Nittany........| 9 25| 5 35{ 9 33
P.M. 8 00] 8 09 4 22/. Huston 923 533 931
3 30 | 8 02] 8 11] 4 24. Lamar. 192115319 2
352 | 8 04] 8 13] 4 26|..... Clintondale....| 9 19, 5 29| 9 26
215 | 809 819 431. Krider's Siding. | 9 14 524921
4 42 | 8 16] 8 25/ 4 37|...Mackeyville....| 9 08 5 18] 9 15
8 23| 8 32| 4 43...Cedar Spring...| 9 01, 5 12, 9 09
‘ 452] 825 834 445......... Salona.......| 8 59! 5 11] 9 07
541] 458 | 830i 840 450... MILL HALL... 18 53/t5 05/9 01
2 2 % on i 30 a Jersey Shore. 7 30] - 5
5 S|Arr. ) ” uve 00| +7 25
558 515 | +10 go/#11 30 oe) WMs'PORT hn 2 40] *G 55
Sls Saif sel 710... PHILA. | +8 35 *11 30
6 95 {045 . Atlantic Cit | |
610 645 hs ey YOR | 14 30,
; Ar...Clearfield Junc....Lv| ¢ «(Via 1amaqua. i
Neely RIB ca thf lm
7 31] 11 03. ..Bigler, 652] 634 (Via Phila.) |
7 23] 10 58/.. sic Vallaceton 6 57 640 | P- M.A. m.lArr Lve.la. m.)p. m
7 15! 10 501...... orrisdale Mines....| 7 06 6 48 :
PO 10 RIE Marsh Ar] 713] 657 *Daily. tWeek Days. 6.00 P. M. Sundays.
— rm | : 110.10 A. M. Sunday.
6 35) 10 16|Lv PHILIPSBU'G { AY| 740] 727 >
7 27] 11 01/Ar Lvj 655 635 PHILADELPHIA SLEEPING CAR attached to East-
To A sor Ta 1 Too bound train from Williamsport at 11.30 P. M, and
7 . 10 32 7 22| 7 03 | West-bound from Philadelphia at 11.30 P. M.
6 40] 10 12 740] 725] + J. W. GEPHART.
6 20] 9 50 157 144 General Superintendent.
6 13] 943 804) 752
518] 848 848 84 JIELLEFONTE CENTRAL RAIL-
5 05] 833 901 853 ROAD.
4 58) 825 907 858 C
447 813 Youngdale.. 916] 907 Schedule to take effect Monday, Sept. Tth, 1896.
4 35 8 00/JJERSEY SHORE 9 29] 0 18 | WESTWARD EASTWARD
4 30] 7 55|....JE 930] 920 read gown read up
+4 00] +7 05 005 955 Ng = Ww or Rol
Pon | AM. |T Anew i No. 7/fNo.1 Stations. fino. Zits gt 3
may NEES A —
2 40| *6 55(|Ar.... W'MSPORT....... Lv(110 20/11 30 | P.m//A. Mm. | A. o1. |Lv. Arf A. ml pow (Po.
8 35/¥11 so{Lv........PHILA.......... Ar| 508 7104 10 30( 6 30 iuBgliefante ie 3 - ] 18 4
F480 Lv..N.Y. via Tam..Ar| 600 4(%6/ 10 37 oleville..... 2(6 30
¥ 27 30|Lv..N. Y. via Phila...Ar,b7 25| 9 30 | 4/30] 10 42 oe Morris... 8 317/ 12 58/6 25
AN i P.M. | A a | 4/33] 10 47 6 44|.....Whitmer..... 8 35| 12 54/6 20
LE — 38( 10 53 6 50..Hunter’s Park.| 8 31| 12 49,6 15
*Daily. tWeek-days. 26.00 r. ». Sunday. 110-55 | 4 42| 10 56| 6 53 «.Fillmore...... 8 28] 12 46/6 12
A. Mm. Sunday. “b’” New York passengers travel- | 4 47] 11 02| 7 00/...... Briarly....... 8 24] 12 41/6 07
ing via Philadelphia on 10.20 A. M. train from | 4 52| 11 05] 7 03|...... Waddles.....| 8 20/1 12 376 03
Williamsport, will change cars at Columbus Ave., | 4 54| 11 08) 7 08....Lambourn....[ 8 18| 12 35/6 00
Philadelphia. - 5.03 11 20| 717... Krumrine.....| 8 07| 12 26/5 46
5 i § 508 1133 7 28...Umv. Ton. 802 12 22/5 43
CoxNecTiONs.—At Williamsport with Philadel- = {
7 : ‘ 5 10| 11 35 7 30(.State College..| 8 00| 12 20/5 40
pis and Reading R. R. At Jersey Shore with erm mera {mms ween sm
all Brook Railway. At Mill Hall with Central [5 13| 11 24] 7 os trubles.......| 747/12 245 27
Railroad of Pennsylvania, At Philipsburg with | 5 20, | 7 40|...Bloomsdo 740 {6 20
Pennsylvania Railroad and Altoona & Philipsburg
Connecting Railroad. At Clearfield with Buffalo
Rochester & Pittsburg Railway. At Mahaffey and
Patton with Cambria & Clearfield Division of
Pennsylvania Railroad. At Mahaffey with
Pennsylvania & North-Western Railroad.
A. G. PALMER F. E. HERRIMAN,
Superintendent. Gen’'l Passenger Agent,
Morning trains from Montandon, Lewisburg,
Williamsport, Lock Haven and Tyrone connect
with train No. 7 for State Co ope: Afternoon trains
from Montandon, Lewisburg, yrone and No. 53
from Lock Haven connect with train No. 11
for State College. Trains from State College con-
nect with Penn'a R. R. trains at Bellefonte.
Philadelphia, Pa.
+ Daily, except Sunday. ~~ F. H. THOMAS Supt.,