@ Bellefonte, Pa., Oct. 2, 1896. OUR OWN. If I had known in the morning How wearily all the day, The words unkind Would trouble my mind I said when you went away. I had been more careful, darling, Nor given you needless pain; But we vex “our own’ With looks and tone We might never take back again. For though in the quiet evening You may give the kiss of peace, Yet well it might be That never for me The pain of heart should cease. How many go forth in the morning Who never come home at night, And hearts have broken From harsh words spoken, That sorrow can ne'er set right. We have careful thought for the stranger, And smiles for the sometime guest, But oft for “our own The hitter tone, Though we love our own the best. Ah! lips with the curve impatient; Ah! brow with the look of scorn, "Twas a cruel fate We re the night too late To undo the work of morn. — Margaret E. Sangster. An American Girl. She is Very Much Alive as Yet and Is More Than Simply Good Looking—Banished From Mexico Because the Authorities Were Opposed to the Furore She Cre- ated—Worshipped by Her Followers—Credited With Curing All lls and Bringing Good Fortune. Strange stories have been told of late about a young woman in Southern Arizona who is worshipped by Mexicans and In- dians as a saint. She works miracles, heal- ing the sick and curing the crippled and blind of their infirmities. The natives de- scribe her as very beautiful, and say that she does not grow any older. Ever since they have known her, which has been for a number of years, she has remained eX- actly the same in appearance, and she has always possessed supernatural powers. They regard her with awe; being convinced that she is at least in part divine, and their notions as to how and whence she came originally are vague and shadowy. She is called Santa Teresa. Reports have found their way into the newspapers, accusing her of using her influence to incite the Yaquis and other tribes to mischief. Nothing accurate or at all satisfactory has ever been published about this remark- able personage, who spends her time in flitting from place to place along the north- ern border of Mexico. Recently she was heard from as far east as El Paso. She is obliged to keep out of Mexico, because she is practically an exile from that country. The authorities, disapproving of her propa- ganda, kept chasing her from one place to another in the state of Sonora, unti] finally she was obliged to seek refuge across the line. DISCOVERED IN OLD TUBAC. It was in the neighborhood of the old town of Tubac that she was found not long agd by Prof. W. J. McGee, of the United - States Bureau of Ethnology, who succeeded in obtaining an interview with her. Though lacking faith in her saintship, he became much interested, discovering her to be a very charming young lady, about 25 years of age, with dark hair, fine eyes and a graceful figure. ‘The fame of Santa Teresa is spread all over the State of Sonora and beyond,’’ said Prof. McGee. ‘‘In order to understand the influence which she exercises, you ought to know something about the character of the people and the country. Sonora is much like the Judea of the Serip- tures, and you will find Old Testament con- ditions repeated there exactly. The region is arid, and the scattered settlements are situated wherever there is water to support them. Lach village has just as many in- habitants as.the water will maintain. The people are simple, hospitable and polite. Their social organization is patriarchal. The affairs of the settlements are managed by local patriarchs, who, with their fami- lies, own most of the cattle and homses that graze on the plains. Only within the last few years has the Mexican government come to have any control over this territory and its primitive population. ‘The social conditions are entirely simi- lar to those which governed in the days of Abraham. The patriarchy is a hierarchy, the rulership of a settlement descending from father to son. The men take care of the horses and cattle, while the young women tend the sheep and goats, The fa- miliar ‘burro’ of that region is exactly the same animal as the scriptural ass. Just as in Judea of old, the daughter of the house- hold goes in the evening to the well for water, with a jar; butshe carries the jar on her head instead of on her shoulder. The people are ignorant and superstitions—just the sort, indeed,’among whom any religious delusion would readily spread. Of Santa Teresa I heard a good deal as soon as I ' reached Southern Arizona. I was told that, having been driven out of Mexico, she was making a visit at the Bosque ranch, near Tubac, fifteen miles north of the interna- tional frontier. NOT AN EVERY'DAY OPPORTUNITY. “I bad come into that country for the purpose of studying the Papago Indians, but I heard so much about the saint and her miracles that I turned aside to get a look at her. It isnot every day that one gets a chance to see a real live saint. Faith in her seemed to be more intense among the low-grade Mexicans than among the Indians. At every Mexican settlement I gathered accounts of her wonderful powers And of the holy mystery that surrounded er. g ‘‘They spoke of her always with awe and often with affection, calling her Teresita. She had never been a child, but was born grown-up. Wherever she went good luck came; the fields smiled with a plentiful harvest-and the horses and cattle did not get sick. There was no physical ailment in human beings which she could not cure. “I felt somewhat doubtful as to whether the saint would permit me to see her. It seemed likely that she would be too sacred. However, I made up my mind to, and try so started for the Bosque ranch. As I ap- proached the place there caniera sudden rain storm, which was quite an extraordi- nary event. The effect of rain in that re- gion is remarkable, and I was much inter- ested in observing it. The mountains being almost bare of vegetation, the fallen water immediately forms torrents, which are often dangerous. It so chanced that when the storm came on I found myself at a temporary Papago village in a valley. We heard the roar of a torrent coming down the mountain, and the Indians were all be swept away. But there was no real danger, for the mass of water, pouring out through a gorge, had spread over the wide plain before it reached us, so that it hardly came up to the hubs of my wagon wheels. It was like so much liquid mud, and rushed down the valley about as fast as a horse would trot. Very quickly it was sucked up by the dry soil. A CONGREGATION OF CRIPPLES. “I went on through the mud to the ranch, and it was still raining when I got there. About the place I ohsérved many cripples and sick people. I suppose there must have been thirty or forty of them. Some were on crutches, while others were very aged, and all were abjectly poor. It was indeed a pathetic assemblage. As I rode up with my Indian interpreter, young Senor Bosque, the son of the proprietor, came to welcome me and ask my business, according to Mexican custom. I explained that I wanted to see Santa Teresa. Dur- ing our conversation quite a crowd gather- ed about, anxious to scrutinize the Senor Americano who had come to make a visit to Teresita. Young Bosque said that he would find out, and went back to the house with half a dozen children tagging at his heels. Presently he brought back word that the saint would receive me. “I followed Senor Bosque into the house, and was ushered by him into a room, at the door of which Santa Teresa met me with a frank grasp of the hand. She was self-possessed, graceful, and dignified. There was not the slightest embarrassment in her manner, though circumstances did not help to make our introduction easy. I could speak very little Spanish, while she had small knowledge of English.’ “‘She was surrounded by a little group of maidens whose occupation evidently was to take care of her and see that every wish of hers was anticipated. I have never seen such graceful and perfect ser- vice as they bestowed upon her. Mean- while the people in and about the house had gathered from all sides and were stand- ing in the doorways, eager to see what was going on. Some knelt for convenience in observation, while others stood and held children on their shoulders, so that the doors were actually frames filled with faces. THE SAINT SPOKE FRENCH. ‘After a bit I ascertained that the saint spoke French ; and then we got along better. Whenever the understanding was not perfect, one of the maidens in waiting, who knew some English, acted as inter- preter. What I wanted to know most was what she thought about her own alleged supernatural powers and her so-called miracles, I approached the subject very gradually, but she responded with entire frankness. It was evident that she be- lieved in herself thoroughly. She said that several years ago, while very ill, she had seen the Virgin Mary in a vision, and from her had received the mysterious potency. Having recovered her health, she determined to devote the rest of her life to helping mankind. She began with aiding the sick and afflicted in the or- dinary way, but found that her touch did good, and so got in the habit of curing by that means. “The cure never failed if the patient had sufficient faith. In some cases, especially chronic disorders, she annointed. No par- ticular ceremony was employed in annoint- ing ; she merely moistened the tip of her part.affected, at the same time uttering a blessing and prayer. “So far as I could make out, she was not spoiled to any great extent by the homage she received. She explained that she re- garded herself merely as a medium of su- pernatural power. She is a good Roman Catholic, and I was much impressed with the refinement and goodness of feeling which she exhibited in speaking of the manner in which she had been persecuted and driven from place to place by the Mexican authorities. she read a great deal and was fond of the sciences, most of all, astronomy. = Her fa- vorite astronomical authors were Flamma- rion in French and Newcomb in English. When I informed her that Prof. Newcomb was my father-in-law, she was much inter- ested. It was only with much difficulty that I succeeded in persuading her to give me one of her photographs. She said that she did not want to give away her photo- graphs, because, if they got around, people would be worshipping them, and she did not want to be regarded as a goddess. MUCH BETTER OFF UNMARRIED. “I went away from the Bosque ranch most favorably impressed with Santa Ter- esa. Her full name Teresa Urrea, she was born in the State of Ssnaloa, in West- ern Mexico. She is a virgin saint, and I imagine most unlikely to marry. Her present condition is vastly more desirable than what it would be as the wife of any Mexican. Everybody is eager to have her as a guest, and she can get whatever she wants for the asking. The stories told to the effect that she has incited the Yaquis and other tribes to mischief are entirely without foundation. She was driveu out of Mexico chiefly - because the authorities in that country are prejudiced against saints. Mexico has very rigid anti-Catho- lic laws. A few years ago there was a big upset and all the property of the church was confiscated. Convents and monas- teries are no longer permitted ; religious processions are prohibited and the priests are not allowed to wear their clerical gowns on the streets. ‘Charming as she undoubtedly is, my own opinion is that she does a good deal of harm. When she comes toa settlement, she interferes with the normal course of events ; the laborers stop work and as long as she remains, are more interested in her than their families and every-day duties. “They neglect their crops and cattle. Their notion that she brings them good fortune is the purest imagination ; every village is poorer after her visit. It is not what is given to her, for she is not influ- enced by cupidity and does not accept ‘much. But the people cease their labors, and it is further to be considered that she is followed everywhere by a retinue of sick and crippled wretches, who have to be fed. As for her healing powers, the presence of of so many crippled and sick about her tell their own stories. True, she showed me crutches and various offerings left behind by cured patients ; but it isa fact long un- derstood that imagination has great influ- ence over the body. It is to this that faith cures, ancient and modern, are attribu- table.”’ SENE BACHE ——The Presbyterian Synod of Penn- | sylvania will hold its annual meeting in | Over two hun- | dred ministers and elders will be in-attend- Bellefonte, October 15-21. ance. This synod covers all of Pennsyl- vania and West Virginia and comprises twenty-four presbyteries. ——A Tyrone sign that can be seen from the branch train reads: ‘We buy your bones and pay the highest market price.”” | 30-37-1y much frightened, thinking that they would The Tyvelifth Annual Convention of the \ W. C. T. U. A Profitable Session—Many Delegates Present— Committees Report—Encouraging Outlook. The twelfth annual convention of the Woman’s Christian Temperance Union of Centre county convened in Bellefonte on last Thursday morning. The president, Mrs. John P. Harris, was in the chair. Out of thirty delegates there were twenty- six present. Mrs. Mattern, of Mileshurg, delivered the principal address of the morn- ing. Her subject was ‘‘Equal Rights,” which was handled in a very pleasant and convincing manner. The old hoard of officers were re-elected for the ensuing year as follows : president, Mrs. John P. Harris; vice president, Mrs. James Harris; secretary, Mrs. Eliza N. Thomas; treasurer, Mrs. Isaac Mitchell, all of Bellefonte. \ At the afternoon session Mrs. Gainsford led the devotional exercjses and the presi- dent, Mrs. John P. Harris, presided. Mrs. Isaac Mitchell, the treasurer, reported a balance of $32.11 in the treasury. Mrs. James Harris read the report on resolutions which follows: WHEREAS, There is a growing disregard for the sanctity of the Sabbath—and a man- fest indifference on the part of professed christian people, therefore, Resolved, We the W. C. T. U. of Centre county in convention assembled, believing the Sabbath rest and observance of vital im- portance to the moral and physical well-being of this State and Nation—would ask from those in authority a regular enforcement of those laws which have been enacted for its preservation, and WHEREAS, We desire to secure a more wide-spread adherance to our principles, not only among the so-called drinking class, but in society and among christian men and women. Therefore, Resolved, That we call upon all members of the W. C. T. U. of our country to use every earnest endeavor to accomplish this end by circulation of literature. Personal efforts add to our membership and missionary work among those who are indifferent. And, WHEREAS, The cigarette habit is growing among our boys, we therefore try to arouse more interest on this subject especially among the parents and guardians of children. Resolved, That we buckle on our armor, and bring our country up to where it once stood. Thanks of the W. C. T. U. of Centre county to editors who have kindly given space in their columns for temperance matter. Thanks to county commissioners for court house and to friends who have entertained. Also, orchestra, prohibition quartette, to the young ladies who have sung and those who have assisted in any way. Also to the ush- ers. Mrs. JAMES HARRIS, MRs. REESE, Mes. BAIR, Mgrs. MATTERN, Mgrs. WAY, Committee. Mrs. Way's paper on ‘‘Conviction on Equal Rights” was a strong appeal to woman to brace up and do their duty. Miss Clara Valentine reported on evan- gelistic and jail work and Mrs. W. T. Twitmire on scientific temperance institu- tions. She prefaced her report with por- tions of an excellent sermon Rev. J. W. Rue preached in the Methodist church two weeks ago, giving some of the facts of the liquor traffic, which he claimed was the chief cause of the scarcity of money. Mrs. Twit- mire’s talk was an eye opener to those who pay no attention to the amount of money 2 mer ) | that is spent for beer and liquor. finger with oil of any kind and rubbed the | Mrs. Gainsford seconded by Mrs. Anna M. Holvey, Superintendent of State Press Work, reported on the work done through the press. Miss Mary Owen, who is one of the best informed women of the town, made. a excellent address on the general She told me that | subject of temperance and suffrage. Hos- | pital, railroad, Sunday observance and all | the different departments were ably repre- sented, after which the convention ad- journed until the evening meeting. THE EVENING SESSION. The evening session was held in the Court House and was a general meeting well attended A quartette consisting of C. C. Shuey, W. H. Musser, George L. Smith and L. T. Eddy sung several very appropriate songs and the duet by Illa Twitmire and Aurora Moore added much to the pleasure of the evening. The speaker of the evening was Mrs. Anna M. Holvey State Superintendent of press work. She is a clear, logical, well informed talker and all who heard her were very much pleased. Autumn Arbor Day. Dr. Shaeffer, superintendent of public instruction, has issued a proclama- tion designating Friday, October 23, as autumn Arbor day, and earnestly urging directors, superintendents, teachers and pupils to observe the day with appropriate exercises, both by the planting trees and the dissemination of information on the growth and care of trees and their value to present and future generations. Losses by Fire. During June the fires in the United States and Canada caused a loss of $6,000,- 000, of which amount the million and allied industries contributed $320,000. The total loss by fire for the first half of 1896 is $64,000,000, against $67,000,000 in 1895 and $62,000,000 in 1894. v I have been called an anarchist be- cause I have opposed the trusts and syndi- cates which would manage this country. I am glad to have the Sysvsition of these men. Iam glad that if I am elected there is not a trust or syndicate that can come to me and say, We put yg there, now pay us back.”—William Jennings Bryan. NOT A CASE OF SYMPATHY—“Do you know your confounded dog barks all night ?”’ “Yes I suppose he does. But. don’t “worry about him. He makes up for it by sleeping all day.’’—Cleveland Plain Dealer. { ——That if forbearance is attended with | profit, there is no reason why every news- paper should not retire wealthy. Pd The Electric Current. ““What'is electricity ? That is a question no man can yet fully answer. Ina great electric station you may see a huge engine “turning over” two big copper wheels. They are doing no work, and require lit- tle steam. The day darkens ; lights are turned on through the city. A man at the switchboard ‘‘throws in’’ the switches, bringing the two dynamos into circuit, and connecting them with the cop- per conductors through the streets, and presently the two wheels require all the power the 2500 horse-power engine can sup- ply, and are lighting 25,000 electric lamps. But the wheels turn at the same speed ; you cannot sec or feel any difference. The men who make the dynamos and the men who operate them know how to produce electricity, but Mr. Edison himself, stand- ing by an Edison dynamo, could onlystell you the ‘‘how’’ and not the ‘‘why.” Yet for thousands of years this great power has been in the universe, waiting for nine- teenth-century men literally to find it out. The dis-coverer, the inventor, only un- covers or comes to the force already in the universe for the service of man. The nine- teenth century, in a person of a Kelvin, an Edison, a Tesla, or a man yet unknown, may answer the question, or it may be left unanswered to the twentieth. We know electricity from its effects and through its relations with other forces. It is a force, having an effect on matter. No force can be made. We do not make elec- tricity ; we only convert other force into it. Electricity is produced by and produces ‘magnetism. It produces and is produced by heat, mechanical force, chemical force. When thus produced, an insulated body can be ‘‘charged’’ with it or electrified. The force is then in suspended animation as static (stand-still or passive) electricity. When a less electrified body is brought near, the force leaps free, and the electrified body is discharged with a shock or spark. Or, thus produced, the force can be trans- mitted, as dynamic (force-full or active) electricity, along the lines of conductors. This is the electric current. When a man is packed in a crowd, if he moves or is moved, he must push his next neighbor, and he will push that particular next neighbor who moves easiest or makes the least resitance. All forces act in this “line of least resistance.’”” Silver, copper, etc., are of ‘low resitance’’ to elec- tric force, and are good ‘‘conductors’’ of electricity ; paraffine, rubber, glass, mica, are of ‘‘high resistance,”” will not conduct, and are ‘“‘insulators.” Yet every conduc- tor resists somewhat—there is some ‘‘loss’’ or ‘‘drop,”’ the electricity turning into heat : every insulator conducts somewhat —there is seme. ‘leakage’ or current. Force must always do work : no force can be lost. If the man in the crowd, as he is pushed and pulled, puts his hands on the man in front of him, and he on the next, to the edge of the crowd, and the last man grips a pump-handle, the push and pull at the centre, thus passed on will work the pump. This is how work is If the men are close together in a ring, and one shoves forward, the shove will be passed all around the ring till the first man’s shove hits himself in the back. The men would not move round, but the force would. This is like the electric ‘‘circuit.”’ Place a rubber band around a finger, and begin to twist it, The twist seems to run round the ring, starting in one direction, coming back in another ‘‘positive’’ and ‘‘negative’’ current, though its direction is really the same. The twist- ing force represents a dynamo ; if you twist one way continuously, it is like the contin- uous direct current ; if you twist to and fro, it is like the alternating current, first in one direction, then in the other. If you stretch the rubber band, and put two pins through it on either side, the pins will ro- tate like motors and in opposite directions. tricity. What we know of electricity, asan art, can best be learned by tracing our knowledge from its beginnings.—From ‘‘Electricity by R. R. Bowker, in Harper's Magazine for October. Hop Pillows. Hop pillows are fréquently of great com- fort to a nervous person and will often soothe a headache. Itis well to have one or two of these pillows at hand in case of need. Linen covers worked with some appropriate motto or a spray of the graceful hops in wash silk are attractive in appear- ance and can always be freshened by be- ing washed. ——The crowd that greeted Bryan at Philadelphia exceeded those that went to ‘hear Blaine when he went to that icity. This statement being made in the Philadelphia goldite papers after mak- and wormwood to the writers. afflicted with hydrophobia. morning lay.’ ”’ Plain Dealer dress her ? ence. ey Herald. TlHuminating Oil. AX FORE 0 done at a distance by the force of electricity | direction, like | These are simple analogies of applied elec- | | | | CONFIRMED BY BISMARCK. Text of the Culberson Letter Published in a Hamburg Paper is Authentic. Friedrichsruh, Sept. 26.—A letter was sent to Prince Bismarck to-day, asking him as to the authenticity of the text of his re- cent letter on the subject of bimetallism, addressed to Governor Culberson, of Texas. The correspondent was met by Count Von Rantzan, Prince Bismarck’s son-in-law, who took the message to the ex-Chancellor, re- turning in a few minutes with the answer that the text of his letter, as published in the Hamburger Nachrichten, was authentic. A Smile. Nothing on earth can smile but man! Gems may flash reflected light, but what is a diamond flash compared with an eye- flash and a mirth-flash? Flowers cannot smile ; this is a charm that even they can- not claim. It is the prerogative of man ; it is the color which love wears and cheer- fulness, and joy—these three. It is a light in the windows of the face, by which the heart signifies it is at home and waiting. A face that cannot smile is like a bud that cannot blossom and dries up on the stalks. Laughter is day, and sobriety is night, and a smile is the twilight that hovers gently between both—more bewitching than eith- er. H. W. BEECHER. po The best churning temperature is 62 de- grees in summer and 64 degrees in winter. If you feed much cotton seed in winter you can go to 68 or 70 degrees and it will do no harm; The lower the better. ° ——A druggist in Maine has advertised in his town paper for 48 years without a break, and has retired rich. . ——1Wall street coffers open $20,000,- 000 on tap to elect McKinley. *oe — Potatoes in Greenland never grow larger than a marble. New Advertisements. ANTED — SEVERAL FAITHFUL men or women to travel for responsible established house in Pennsylvania. Salary £780 payable $15 weekly and expenses. manent. Reference. Enclose self-addressed stamped envelope. The National, Star Building, Chicago. . 41-39-4m. J SvpsTiea7e THIS. AND ITS IN BELLEFONTE, NOT IN SAN FRANCISCO. ANY CITIZEN CAN VERIFY THIS. ‘Honesty is the best policy.” That old adage has always been a character- istic of the article endorsed by Mr. Jared Harper, the Allegheny street grocery man. Not only has honesty been the mainstay of the claims made for the old Quaker remedy but it is the bulwark of the testimonials pub- lished in its behalf when you know that a citizen, perhaps a neighbor pref- aces his statement with a tribute like that which follows, the testimony not only is interesting, remarkably strong but it carries with it that irresistible influence that sweeps away every ves- tige of inereduality. What do our readers think of this? “I have so much confidence in Doan’s Kidney Pills that after I get my first box at Green's Pharmacy I went back and bought six more.” What more can the greatest scoffer at proprietary medicines in Bellefonte want. Read the rest of Mr. Harper's testimony. “Besides running this grocery I have to look after three estates. his con- stant strain has told on me and as time passed by I find that my health is not what it was at one time. Iam troub- led with kidney complaint. It shows itself in backache, headaches and _ scanty yet frequent urination. While I am not laid up I suffer a great deal. Now I do not claim that Doan’s Kid- ney Pills have cured me—for they have not—but I received so much benefit from one box I determined to continue their use. I believe from the progress made that I will eventu- ally eradicate every vestige of troub- les for my appetite has improved and I can rest comfortably at night.” ne Toan’s Kidney Pills are for sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Mailed by Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo N. Y., sole agents for the U. 8. 41-7 L- Position per- | Travelers Guide. ENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD AND BRANCHES. May 18th, 1896. TYRONE AND CLEARFIELD, R. R. NORTHWARD. i SOUTHWARD. < : 2 1 & 24 3 | | & Bg SIZE! = ivay, 13,190. | B KEI E E{%E] 2 (3% = = ! | #2 & | i . | — P.M.{ P. M. | A. 1. Lv. Ar.) A. 3. | A. ML [P.M 720 315 8 9... Tyrone...... | 635 11 206 12 736 321 8 26/...E. Tyrone 6 29 11 14/6 06 7:38) 393 395. Wyrone Bil... 11 14{6 04 741, 326 8 31). Vai 751 336 842 755 340] 847 804 3400 857 811° 3 55 9 05 816! 359 909 818 401] 911 819, 402 913. 827 408 9 21). seeiee 411 9 28. } 831 416] 931 D503 8 35 419] 935. 4 58 8 36/ 423 942 14 57 18 4 28] 9 47]. 0914 52 8 46] 433] 9 52 04/4 46 8 52| 439 9 58... Wallaceton - 5161 9 58/4 39 857 444 oanbigler....., 511f 9 534 32 9 03] 450 .Woodland....| 5 06] 9 47.4 27 906 453 Mineral Sp...| 505 9 44/4 24 9 10 457 ..Barrett,..... 501) 9 40/4 20 915 502 ..Leonard.....| 456; 9 354 15 9 19) 5 06 «...Clearfield.....| 4 52] 9 314 00 924 511 ... Riverview.....| 4 58] 9 26/4 03 930 517 ...Sus. Bridge...| 4 43] 9 20i3 56 9 35) 522 .Curwensville .. 9 153 51 .{ 11 02!.....Stronach «3 25 11 06|....Grampian..... 3 21 P.M.| P. M. | A. M. AT. Lv. a. a | Am leo. BALD EAGLE VALLEY BRANCH. WESTWARD. EASTWARD. 2] 2 | Nes =z 2 | May 18,-1896. 5 Biz Bu ~ = = = & % » = = Ee uN = - = PMP. MM IAM (Arr. Lv.Ja. mp. M. P.M. 617 240/11 10, sesses Tyrone.. ... 8 10! 12 357 25 611) 2 34| 11 04 ..East Tyrone...| 8 16/ 12 41/7 31 607 230 1 0.......Vailk........] 8 20 12 45i7 55 6 03] 2 26/ 10 56... Bald Eagle....| 8 24] 12 49/7 39 5587] 220{10 4v.........Dix.........| 8 30] 12 55{7 45 5.54 217 10 46........Fowler......| 8 33 12 58/7 48 552! 215] 10 44'.....Hannah......[ 8 35] 1 00/7 50 5 44! 207] 10 36'..Port Matilda...| 8 42| 1 07/7 57 536f 200; 10 28 secres Martha...... 849| 1148 4 52% 1853 1092... Julian.......] 358 122813 519) 144 10 11] roc Unionville...| 9 07] 1 30/8 22 512] 137) 10 04/Snow Shoe Int.| 9 15 1 37/8 30 5 09] 133] 10 01|...Milesburg.....| .9 18] 1 408 33 501! 124 9 53]....Bellefont 928 1498 41 449] 112 9 41....Milesbur 9 41) 2 02/8 53 441] 104 934). i 9 49! 2119 01 437 100 953] 2159 05 4 31] 12 54 9 500 221911 4 22 12 45 10 08; 2 30/9 20 4 19! 12 42 1011] 2 339 23 “4 08] 12 31 10 22] 2 449 34 4 06] 12 29| 8 59....Flemington...| 10 24| 2 46/9 36 4 02) 12 25 8 55|...Lock Haven..| 10 30 2 50,9 40 PM.IP. M. | A.M. [Lv. Arr. a.m | Po ML PML LEWISBURG & TYRONE RAILROAD. EASTWARD. May 18th, 1896. WESTWARD. MAIL. | EXP. EXP. | MAIL. STATIONS. P.M |A NM Ar.| a. nm P. I. 215 ...Bellefonte..... 855 415 22 8 50] 4 10 2 8 47 07 2 8 44 03 2: 8 ¢ i 3 58 2 3 8 32 3 2 4 8 3 43 2 823 344 2 55 8 161 3 37 3 0 8 000 331 3 802 323 3 Rising Spring. 7 55 17 3 «ZBTrhY...... 7 45] 08 3 3: ...Coburn. 7 38, 02 3 3 ....J0gleby..,.. 7 31} 56 3 Paddy Mountain 72% 235 3 4¢ .Cherry Run. 7 18 45 3 bi ...Lindale... 714 41 3 54 Pardee. ... Tori Ay 4 .Glen Iron.. 6 58! 25 4 .Milmont ... 650 218 4 Swengle... 647 216 42 ...Barber.... 6421 212 427 . Miflinburg. 637 207 4 35 ..Vicksburg.. 628 158 4 3¢ ~Biehl...... 623 153 44 ; Lewisburg.. 615 145 4 5: lsseeenns MODtandon..........| 540 135 P. M. | A. M. [Ar Lviamiprm LEWISBURG & TYRONE RAILROAT. WESTWARD. UPPER END. EASTWARD. iz! 21 5.2 Mame] EOE | £18 | | E — i | P. M. Lye. 4 5 5 5 4 05 o~ 5 eae 3 59 Marengo......| 10 46] 5 ¢ aad 3 55] 8 35|....Loveville. ...[ 10 51] 5 3 ies 349) 8 29/.Furnace Road.| 10 58! 5 Seid 3 46] 8 26/....Dungarvin...| 11 ut 5 ratais 338 8 18 Warrior's Mark| 11 10; 5? steder 3 29| 8 09]...Pennington...| 11 20, 6 eeeet 318) 7 58........Stover.......| 11 32{ 6 i 340 750i... Tyrone....| 11 40] 620... m. | a.m |Lve. Ara. wm | poo | BELLEFONTE & SNOW SHOE BRANCH. Time Table in effect on and after May 18, 1896. Leave Snow Shoe, except Sunday........... 3 51 p. m. Arrive in Bellefonte......... sreesriaens 5 46 p, m. Leave Bellefonte, except Sunday. 9 58 a. m. Arrive in Snow Shoe a (ores RAILROAD OF PENNA. -Condensed Time Table. E=—=TUE BOOKLET ON “LIGHl ———— 0——AND——0 Travelers Guide. Ropes fo LR : 0 % x T T May 18, 1896. 7 7 ing such extravagant assertions that the sil- No 1i¥c 580 3 No GR £560 ver cause is dying out must have been gall i? : Pee troy EECH CREEK RAILROAD. : : SN a. m.'p. m.|p. m.Lve. Ar.|p. m./p. m.ja. m. Tok N.Y. C. & H. R. R. R. Co., Lessee. tr 20} 30 5 ne LEFONTE. by pri Bn So v : ; i | 7 44] 8 57 Nigh...........| 9 49! 5 57( 9 56 ——A Niles, Mich., special tells the Condensed Time Table. 7 41] 7-50] 4 03 9 43 5 3 9 50 following : Charles Carroll, a 17-year old | "Reap Uv, READ DOW. 7 i 7 2 1% OS 2 = 2 = EL boy is dying from cigarette smoking. For| exp Tuam. | May 1mth, 15%. | EXP 7520 § 01) 4 14 ifublersburg..| 9 32 5 40 9 30 two years he has smoked three to five pack- | No.37/No. 33 156) 8 05/ 4 18)...Snydertown.....| 9 28, 5 7. 9 33 ages a day. The poison Has caused his skin : = ’ os 2 0 4 205 ittany........ 9 25| $ = $ % : ie . M. | P.M. AM | PoM 9 seers ot 533] 94 to take on a greenish hue he acts like one 185 i +330] 802 811 $ 2 {33192 1 34]... Westover... ......... 352| 804 813 1520 926 “9 25 \( 8 09] 8 19 4 524921 I ea, | 50 30 3 EERE FH She’s hi gr ig ope. Ls 535 4521 gos sd "850 511] 907 joying y eve oh. | —g=g 541) 468| 830 840f 4 48 53{+5 05/19 01 She says : ‘Every day at sunrise a neigh-| g 33 546) 503 | 5555307 Tn boring rooster rouses us with his early | 8 32 652 509 1005 9 56Arr Vive a 8 25 558 515 “1 wM®poRT }Lve| 4 0 172 ra 615 534 +10 20*11 30(Lve § " ° Arr. 2 40] *6 55 “Early morning lay ? What’s the matter — 5081 7 10L.....cc000 PHILA..... ol 18 35 *11 30 ith th ike 2" level 755 6 25 i: 45 ween Atlantic Cit, oe | with the hens—on a sprike ?’’—Cleveland 5 610 cas [El NEW YORK........| 4 30, 1% 638 01 | ol 1090)... NEW TORK Lar ao 2 37 6 45 6 29 seesnceeedVIDW TUNA civeiinn 1 i “ : Via Phila. | | : 1 a Pathe td wy a 2 ho p. m.[a. m.|Arr. ¢ ) Lve.'a. m.p. m. dau r how do you expect to keep an g y Dp! P 7 ¥ z oe o = *Daily. Week Days. 26.00 P. M. Sundays. Harduppe—That need make no differ- 23% Lf rg SURREAL Ri d to East : > ' * 2 AR & ed to East- You seem to be doing that pretty To 717 700 | bound train from Williamsport at 11.30 P. M, and well, now, and I will not be very exacting.’ oo 722 703 West-bound from Philadelphia at 11.30 P. M. i rmrrrm——— es 740 725 , J. W. GEPHART. “Were you ever in love?” 5 2 3 7 4) 2 4 : - General Superintendent. “No I married young.”’—New York | 518 8 $45 8 i J3ELLEFONTE SENTRAL RAIL- 5 505 8 3 ( J, : - : 2% 3 ” 2 2 5 2 Schedule to take effect Monday, Sept. 7th, 1896. 4 35] 800 9 29 9 18 | WESTWARD EASTWARD - 30( 7 56 2 2 9 20 read down read up 00] 17 05 HRs) WaT] . TTR, P.M. Is Ly. Aran len NS No. 7|tNo.1| STATIONS. ling 2|tNo. ote r. or. | a. ot. |+Phila, & Reading R. R..| a. ut. | P. wm. R- 3 40( *6 55|Ar.... W'MSPORT......Lv{110 20(*11 30 | .m.| A. m0. | A. >t. |Lv. Ar,| AU M. P. M. [P.M. 8 35(*11 30|L .PHILA.. Apl 508 710421 10 30] 630 RSs see) 8B a5 } 10 6 40 : = goo [ 4 26! 10 371] 6 37|..... Coleville...... 8 02(6 30 30 47 nl Tv. RY via Phila Arb 7 25] 10 0 4 30) 10 42] 0 40/7. Morris. .C) 8 57) 12 586 25 A OIE 1 dnd aa aes *Daily. tWeek-days. 26.00 p. Mm. Sunday. 110-55 | 4 42 10 56 3|...,.Fillmore....., 8 28 12 46/6 12 A.M. nbs “bh” New York passengers travel- | 4 47| 11 02 00;...... Briarly.......| 8 24] 12 41/6 07 ing via Philadelphia on 10.20 A. wm. train from | 4 52| 11 03 3 Waddles......| 8 20| 12 37,6 03 Niiamsio, will change cars at Columbus Ave., | 4 54| 11 08 1 2 se] AHERN : 5 3 in “ riladelphia. 5 03] 11 20 ....Krumrine..... 55 46 esame . : 3 23....Univ." Inn.... 02 5 43 ‘ Coxnecrions.—At Williamsport with Philadel- i Lr 1 = 3 = a Cob. On 3 00 12 20/5 40 pols and Reading R. R. At Jersey Shore with | sem emer mr ee sen . all Brook Railway. At Mill Hall with Central | 5 13] 11 24) 7.33)... rubles.......| 7 47) 12 245 27 At Philipsburg with | 5 20 | 7 40|..Bloomsdorf...| 7 40 [6 20 { BURN CROWN ACME OIL, } 0———GIVES THE BEST LIGHT IN THE WORLD.——0 AND IS ABSOLUTELY SAFE. Railroad of Pennsylvania. Pennsylvania Railroad and Altoona & Diilipen ie 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, Philadelphia, Pa. Morning trains from Montandon, Lewisburg, Williamsport, Lock Haven and Tyrone connect with train No. 7 for State College. Afternoon trains from Montandon, Lewisburg, Tyrone 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. + Daily, except Sunday. F. H. THOMAS Supt.,