in Beilefonte, Pa., Oct. 23, i896. A MEETING. A troth and a grief and a blessing Disguished them and came this way, And one was w promise, and one was a doubt, And one was a rainy day. And they met betimes with this maiden, And the promise it spake and lied, And the doubt it gibbered and hugged itself, And the rainy day—she died. —James Whit-comb Riley. THE FREE COINAGE PLATFORM. Declaration of Principles on Finance and for Better- ment of the General Government Adopted by the Majority of the Democratic National Convention. We, the Democrats of the United States, in national convention assembled, do reaffirm our allegiance to those essential principles of Justice and liberty upon which our institu- tions are founded, and which the Democratic party has advocated from Jefferson’s time to our own, freedom of speech, freedom of the press, freedom of conscience, the preserva- tion of personal rights, the equality of all citizens before the law and the faithful ob- servance of constitutional limitations. FOR THE INTEGRITY OF GOVERNMENT. During all these years the Democratic party has resisted the tendency of selfish in- terests to the centralization of governmental power and steadfastly maintained the in- tegrity of the dual scheme of government es- tablished by the founders of this republic of republics. Under its guidance the great principle of local self-government has found its best expression in the maintenance of the rights of the States and in its assertion of the neccessity of confining the general govern- ment to the exercise of the powers granted by the constitution of the United States. THE FINANCIAL DECLARATION. Recognizing that the money question is paramount to all others at this time, we in- “vite attention to the fact that the federal con- stitution names silver and gold together as the money metals of the United States, and that the first coinage law passed by Congress under the constitution, made the silver dol- lar the monetary unit and admitted gold to free coinage at a ratio based upon the silver dollar unit. We declare that the act of 1873, demonetiz- ing silver without the knowledge or ap- proval of the American people, has resulted in the appreciation of gold and a correspond- ing fall in the prices of commodities produced by the people ; a heavy increase in the bur- den of taxation and of all debts, public and private ; the enrichment of the money-lend- ing class at home and abroad ; the prostra- tion of industry and impoverishment of the 4; people. = GOLD MONOMETALLISM A BRITISH POLICY. We are unalterably opposed to the mono- metallism which has locked fast the pros- perity of an industrial people in the poms of hard times. Gold monometallism is a Brit. ish policy, and its adoption has brought other nations into financial servitude to Lon- don. Itisnot only unAmerican but anti-A mer- ican, and it can be fastened on the United States only by the stifling of that spirit and love of liberty which proclaimed our political independence in 1776 and won it in the war of the revolution. INDEPENDENT FREE COINAGE DEMANDED. We demand the free and unlimited coinage Ea duction in the number of useless offices, the salaries of which drain the substance of the people. FEDERAL INTERFERENCE DENOUNCED. We denounce arbitrary interference by fed- eral authorities in local affairs asa violation of the constitution of the United States and a crime against free institutions, and we espec- ially object to government by injunction as a new and highly dangerous form of oppression, by which federal judges, in contempt of the laws of the states and rights of citizens, be- come at once legislators, judges and execu- tioners ; and we approve the bill passed at the lastsession of the United States senate and now pending in the House, relative to contempts in federal courts and providing for trials by jury in certain cases of contempt. NO DISCRIMINATION TO DEBTORS. No discrimination should be indulged by the government of the United States in favor of any of its debtors. We approve of the re- fusal of the Fifty-third congress to pass the Pacific railroad functions bill, and denounce the effort of the present Republican congress to enact a similar measure. JUST PENSIONS APPROVED. Recognizing the just claims of deserving Union soldiers, we heartily indorse the rule of the present commissioner of pensions that no names shall be arbitrarily dropped from the pension roll, and the fact of enlistment and service should be deemed conclusive evi- dence against disease or disability before en- listment. EARLY ADMISSION OF ALL TERRITORIES FAVORED. We favor the admission of the territories of New Mexico and Arizona into the Union as states, and we favor the early admission of all the territories that have the necessary population and resources to entitle them to statehood, and while they remain territories we hold that the officials appointed to admin- ister the government of any territory, to- gether with the District of Columbia and Alaska, should be bona fide residents of the territory or district in which their duties are to be performed. The Democratic party be lieves in home rule, and that all public lands of the United States should be appropriated to the establishment of free homes for Ameri- can citizens. We recommend that the territory of Alaska be granted a delegate in congress, and that the. general land and timber laws of the United States be extended to said territory. SYMPATHY EXTENDED TO CUBAN IESUR- GENTS, We extend our sympathy to the people of Cuba in their heroic struggle for liberty and independence. We are opposed to life tenure in the public service. We favor appointments based upon merits, fixed terms of office, and such admin- istration of the civil service laws as will af- ford equal opportunities to all citizens of as- certained fitness. AGAINST THIRD TERM PRESIDENTS. We declare it to be the unwritten law of his ic, established by custom and us- age of 100 years, and sanctioned by the ex- amples of the greatest and wisest of those who founded and have maintained our gov- ernment, that no man should be eligible for a third term of the presidential office. GOVERNMENT CARE OF THE WATERWAYS. The federal government should care for and improve the Mississippi river and other great waterways of the republic, so as to se- cure for the interior states casy and cheap transportation to tide-water. When any waterway of the republic is of sufficient im- portance to demand aid of the government, such aid should be extended upon a definite plan of the continuous work until permanent of both gold and silver at the present legal ratio of 16 to 1, without waiting for the aid or consent of any other nation. We demand that the standard silver dollar shall be a full legal tender, equally with gold, for all debts public and private, and we favor such legisla- tion as will prevent for the future the demonctization of any kind of legal tender money by private contract. BONDS AND BANK NOTES OPPOSED. improvement is secured. DEMOCRACY’S APPEAL TO THE PEOPLE. Confiding. in the justice of our cause and the necessity of its success at the polls, we submit the foregoing declaration of principles and purposes to the considerate judgment’ of the American people. We invite the support of all citizens who approve them, and who desire to have them made effective through legislation for the relief of the people and the We are opposed to the issuing of interest- bearing bonds of the United States in time | of peace, and condemn the trafficking with | banking syndicates which, in exchange for | bonds and at an enormous profit to them- | selves. supply the federal treasury with gold to maintain the policy of gold monometallism. Congress alone has the power to coin and issue money, and President Jackson declared that this power could not be delegated to cor- porations or individuals. We therefore de- mand that the power to issue notes to circu- late as money be taken from the national banks, and that all paper money shall be is- sued directly by the treasury department, and be redeemable in coin and receivable for all debts, public and private. ‘TARIFF FOR REVENUE EXCLUSIVELY. “We hold that tariff duties should be levied for purposes of revenue, such duties to be so adjusted as to operate equally throughout the country, and not discriminate between class or scetion, and that taxation should be limited by the needs of the government honestly and economically administered. We denounce as disturbing to business the Republican threat to restore the McKinley law, which has been twice condemned by the people in national elections, and which, enacted under the false plea of protection to home industry, proved a prolific breeder of trusts and monopolics, en- riched the few at the expense of the many, restricted trade and deprived the producers of the great American staples, of access to their natural markets. Until the money question is settled, we are opposed to any agitation for further changes in our tariff’ laws, except such as are necessary to meet the deficit in revenue caused by the adverse deci- sion of the supreme court on the income tax. DUTIES OF CONGRESS REGARDING INCOME TAX. But for this decision by the supreme court there would be no deficit in the revenue under the law passed by a Democratic Con- gress in striet pursuance of the uniform deci- sions of that court for nearly 100 years, that court having in that decision sustained con- stitutional objections to its enactment which had previously been over-ruled by the ablest Judges who have ever sat on that bench. We declare that it is the duty of Congress to use all the constitutional power which remains after that decision, or which may come from ifs reversal by the court as it may hereafter be constituted, so that the burdens of tax- ation may be equally and impartially laid to the end that wealth may bear its due propor- tion of the expenses of the government. EFFICIENT PROTECTION “FOR AMERICAN LABOR. We hold that the most efficient way to protect American labor is to prevent the im- portation of foreign pauper labor to compete with it in the home market, and that the value of the home market to our American farmers and artisans is greatly reduced by a vicious monetary system, which depresses the prices of their products below the cost of production, and thus deprives them of the means of purchasing the products of our home manufacturers. STRICTER CONTROL OF RAILROADS DEMAND- ED. The absorption of wealth by the few, the consolidation of our leading railroad systems and the formation of trusts and pools require a stricter control by the federal government of those arteries of commerce. We demand - the enlargement of the powers of the inter- state commerce commission, and such restric- tions and guarantecs in the control of rail- roads as will protect the people from robbery and oppression. GREATER ECONOMY IN GOVERNMENT NEED- ED. We denounce the profligate waste of money wrung from the people by oppressive taxa- tion and the lavish appropriations of recent _ Republican congresses, which have kept tax- es high while the labor that pays them is un- employed and the products of the people’s toil are depressed in price till they no longer repay the cost of production. We demand a return to that simplicity and economy which benefits a democratic government and a re- | restoration of the country’s prosperity. ren SEG——————— Views of the People. Letters Culled from our E. xchanges. ' THE FARMERS AND PROSPERITY. RANDALL, W. VA. Major McKinley has just one song which he sings to the crowds Mark Hanna sends him, and it goes about like this : “What we want is a high protective tariff, which will set all the factories and mills to going, and induce to build new plants and thus give employment to all working people at remunerative wages. This will create a demand for the farmers’ products at en- hanced prices. Then all will go as smooth- ly as a duck swimming on water.’ This reminds me of a county school su- ! perintendent we once had in this county. Every school -he visited he would insist upon all the scholars becoming teachers. In one school there was a boy that always spoke his mind. This boy said :— “That is all very nice, professor, but if we all be- come teachers I want to know where you are going to get scholars for us to teach.’ Then, major, if you are going to startall the factories and build a lot more, and start them all on full time, I want to know where you are going to find people to buy all those goods. Do you not know, major, that the manufactures have twice in the last three years started up all along the line and made every effort to bring about prosperity, but in 3 months time they had glutted the market, and some were com- pelled to close down, and others run on half time? ° But, the major answers: ‘Oh! haven’t got a high protective tariff.” Well, major, you may pile the tariff mountain high, but so long as the farmers cannot make both ends meet there can be no prosperity in this country. The pres- ent gold standard has reduced the price of their products, and so the only place to start prosperity is with the farmers. Raise the price of his products so that he can have a living profit, and then he can af- ford to buy the products of the manufac- turer, and this can be done only by mak- ing more money, and to do this we must have free silver. we DAVID WIEDMAN. A COMMON SENSE VIEW. BEAVER FALLS, PA. By your permission I will present’ what I consider a common sense view of the money problem. We start out by stating that there is not more than half enough money in the United States to supply the demands of the people. Statistics show that there is only about $23 per capita when there should be at least $45 per capita. Where is the money to come from ? O, says one, from a high protective tariff, Suppose that such a tariff as McKinley Sarps. on should go into full operation. In two or three years we would then be de- pendent on ‘the tax derived from im- ported goods for more money. But sup- pose that little or no goods were shipped to this country how then? But conceding that the usual amount of goods would be imported, the little amount of money de- rived from such source when applied to the expense of the government could no more enlarge the volume of money so as to bene- fit the whole people than the little moun- tain stream could swell the volume of wa-. ter in a great river. Suppose we have a law authorizing the free and unlimited coinage of silver at a ratio of 16 to 1. That would insure coin- ing into money the vast amount of silver we have now in the United States. And, of course, it would naturally seek invest- interest. In that way the money would go into circulation and spread all over this land, and times would be good and money plenty. Governor Hastings, in his speech at Can- ton, defied Bryan or anyone else to tell how the free coinage of silver could raise the wages of the laboring man. When there is plenty of money in circulation labor will be in demand at lucrative prices. —The governor says that passing from a gold standard to a silver standard will pre- cipitate an awful panic, worse than the great panic of ’83, when silver was demon- etized. No one proposes to pass from a gold standard to a ‘‘silver basis.” But what we do propose to do is to push silver up on a plane with gold, where the two metals will be of equal purchasing power, and thereby establish a “‘double standard.” A. J. HOPRINS HORSE AND HORSE. PITTSBURG, PA. If you had two horses of your own and and had to have a team to work, would it be policy for you to turn one horse loose to starve and mortgage your property for the use of an other horse to make a team ? Your own dun horse is not strong for the load —else why should he give out when you need him most? Why do we hire Roths- child’s horse at the expense of the people to pull up one hill only to call for him again at the next ?—Our own white horse will pull up as much as Rothschild’s horse. He—the silver horse—is on hand when you want him (and we want him all the time if we but knew it). He will not balk when the gold power raises its jeweled finger and says: ‘‘Stop, we want a panic !”’ The peo- ple will not have to stop business to wait for our neighbors’ dun horse to come and help get the country out of the hole and the pay them their own price for the job. Let us hitch in the silver horse, get out of the rut and then we will stay out. G.I A Why He Will Vote for Bryan. A Tioga county Republican, who seems to understand what he is talking about gives, among others, the following reasons why he intends to vote for BRYAN. Because every Republican platform, State or National, which has ever made any declaration on the money question since I was a voter, has declared for free silver. Because I voted for Gartield ; he was for free silver and was not a repudiator. cause I voted for Blaine; he was for free silver, and instead of being a repudiator, he was the best and brightest and most patri- otic American in public life in my time and if there had been any repudiation or nation- al dishonor in free silver, Blaine would have been the first to discover it and warn- ed us against it. I voted for Harrison, he was elected on a platform which denounced Grover Cleveland for debasing and demon- etizing silver and I do not believe the men who have been the candidates and states- men of the Republican party ever advocat- ed free silver, because they were too thick- headed to see that it meant repudiation until Grover Cleveland told them so. I will not by my vote say thatthe Blaines, the Logans or the Garfield’s ever advocated a doctrine that would harm in the slightest degree even the humblest American. On the contrary these men had more brains, more statesmanship and more patriotism in their little fingers, than there is in the plutocrats who controlled the St. Louis convention, and are now steering the Re- Po ois party along the same path that ed Grover Cleveland to a political grave yard. : Because every man and every newspaper that tried to harm the pensioner has gone over to McKinley. Because like Bill Sin- gerly and Aleck McClure whé advocated free trade and declared the tariff a crime and protection a frand are supporting Mec- Kinley and these men do not go into pol- itics for their health and contribute their money for a mere sentiment. ment on reasonable security and at a low | Be- WHY GOLD FAVORS THE Its Value is Constantly Appreciating.—To the Det- { riment of the Producer.—Small Farmers of Eng- land Wiped Out.—That Must be the Final Result Here.—What the True Interests of the Republic Demand. RICH. Degrees of wealth cannot be regulated by law. Wealth must be left, as nature in- tended it, as the reward of industry and frugality. But there certainly should; be no laws especially favoring "the wealthy classes. Such a law, however, most cer- tainly exists in the act of 1873 establishing thesingle gold standard. It favors the rich to the detriment of the producing classes because it fastens upon us a grow- ing or appreciating measure of values, Every successive nation which adopts the gold standard increases the world’s demand for that metal and by so much enhances its relative value. Every year, as the com- merce of the world increases, the value of gold augments. The dollar is ever becom- ing larger and larger. The rich find it greatly to their advantage, but it hears heavily upon the industrial classes. Enterprise requires that men should borrow. No one can engage actively in any business by which employment is giv- en to others and the community benefited ! without being a borrower. Every success- ful man hus at one time been largely in debt. The gold standard discriminates against this useful class—the active, enter- ' prising, producing class—the backbone of the nation. It does this because, in addi- tion to the interest paid, under an appre- ciating standard the debt is ever growing { larger. An advantage is thus by law plac- ! ed in the hands of the money lenders and | the great financiers, to the detriment of all i other classes. i Under this advantage the rich grow richer ! with wonderful rapidity and the active, | producing classes, of course, have to stand | the burden. It was under the operation of ; the gold standard in England that the class "of small farmers was entirely wiped out and the lands came into the possession: of a class of wealthy capitalist holders, the for- | mer owners becoming mere tenants on the { lands they once were the proprietors of. In the same way people in this country { will increasingly become tenants and so depart the farther from the ideal condition of a republic. { Witha stable money standard, or, if if must vary at all, a depreciating rather than “an appreciating one, this advantage to ~ wealth ceases to exist, and the ninety and nine average citizens prosper far more in the aggregate than the one does under the present system. The true interests of the republic de- mands not that wealth be equalized, but that all be given a more equal chance. This the repeal of the act of 1873 and the ‘ re-enactment of the coinage laws as they existed prior to that year will very greatly accomplish. To illustrate the operation of the appre- ciating standard and the advantage it works to the money lender, suppose ten years ago twomen to own $500 apiece. The one lends his money, the other invests in prop- erty. The latter buys a house and lot for $1,000, pays down the $500 he owns and borrows the remainder from his friend up- | i on a mortgage on his property. The mon- | ey standard doubles and the $500 debt be- | comes as large as $1,000 was at the time | the loan was made. When it falls due, it takes the entire property to pay the debt. The money lender then has everything, the borrower nothing. This is an experience which every day some one suffers. Every mortgage to-day requires the entire proper- ty to satisfy it, because the debt has dou- bled, not in the number of the dollars, but in the relative value of each dollar. | | | | If the money standard would remain | stationary where it is, it would not be so i bad, but we have no guarantee whatever that it will not again double, and nothing will tend so much to give it another up- ward hoost as the success of the gold ticket | at the polls next month. We cannot see how it is possible for gold not to further | appreciate if its advocates triumph. If it does, it is inevitable that the hard times will be prolonged and intensified, failures in business will multiply, labor will in- rea Ark THE NEW FALL AND WINTE @* AND Montgomery & Co. R GOODS NOW IN THE ENTIRE STOCK IS UP TO DATE. Lower prices for better goods will be our keynote. Boy’s suits were never so Boy’s Reefers in all qualities. pretty nor School pants in profusion. We now have the handsomest line of made up Clothing ever shown by us—com- prising blacks, blue, worsteds and cheviots. Fancy plaids and stripes in Scotch goods, and a superb line of Overcoats for dress and storm. serviceable, and there is also a fine line of / All the latest styles in hats, leading blocks in derby and soft. Guyer, Dunlap, Knox, Miller, ~ Everything up to date. Youngs and all the 41-22-tf Full line of cloths to make to your measure. MONTGOMERY & CO. BELLEFONTE, PA. INMuminating Oil. AS: rossi 0—GIVES THE BEST LI 30-37-1y TESTER THE BOOKLET ON “LIGHT ==g=====— { BURN CROWN ACME OIL, O————AND——0 f GHT IN THE WORLD, ed) AND IS ABSOLUTELY SAFE. SU i | | | creasingly be left unemployed, great pover- ty will ensue, and when men grow desper- ate from hunger riot and disorder will threaten the peace of the country. Meanwhile the syndicate which is put- ting up millions to carry its purposes in the Present campaign will be recouping itself from the people’s treasury with profits ad- equate to the risks it has taken. Can any good citizens so disregard the true interests of the republics to cast his vote for the perpetuation of the gold stand- ard ?—Detroit Zribune. The Postoflice Monopoly. “I just hope we will have a change of ad- ministration,’ she said, as she handed her letter to the postoffice clerk to be weighed. “Dont you agree with its position on finance ?*’ “I dont know anything about that, but I do know that the government is a mean old thing.” “In what respect ?’’ “In keeping prices up so. It's got a monopoly and its taking every advantage of it. Everything you can think of, from bicycles to cotton thread has heen on the bargain counter, except postage stamps.” — Woshington Star. Sand Burics an Oyster Fortune. Engineer Sandford, of the State Shell Fish Commission, reports that this year’s oyster crop on the public oyster beds off Bridgeport and Stratford has been ruined by the drift of sand during the recent storm. The beds cover 3700 acres. They haveat times heen worked by as many as 700 fishermen and last Autumn’s catch of oysters upon them was worth $250,000. —What you want when you are ailing is a medicine that will cure You. Try Hood’s Sarsaparilla and be convinced of ifs merit. ——Read the WATCHMAN. New Advertisements. ANTED — SEVERAL FAITHFUL men or women to travel for responsible established house in Pennsylvania. Salary $780 payable $15 weekly and expenses. Position per- manent. Reference. Enclose self-addressed stamped envelope. The National, Star Building, Chicago. 41-39-4m. HME 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 ENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD AND BRANCHES. May 18th, 1896. ee TYRONE AND CLEARFIELD, R. R. 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 oft. This is Moth- e's mistake. The children cannot help it, and sweet, clean, dry, beds can be the resting place of every child when it is as that the cage ~~ 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 isa condition, not a habit, and should have the same prompt attention you would give to the marked symptoms of any disease. Une 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 for it, 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 ne control of the urine while sleeping, in spite of all the doctors and I Sone 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 Quaker Remedy, she could not go to Sabbath School. "Now I am thank- tul 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., Buattalo, N. Y. Sole Agents for the U. 8. ° NORTHWARD. | SOUTHWARD, : ol . | . : | ow Z 3 B1:0| 5 | May, 15,1805. | 5 | z g Be a A -.. - + 2 a A » H . 5 = £74 | 1 BF t i i im P.M.| P.M. | A, wm. |Lv. Ar. Am. | A.M (py. 730] 315 8 20 6 35| 11 20/6 12 736] 321 8 26]. 6 29| 11 14/6 06 1 38 S23 Sos... Tyrone 8... 11 14/6 04 741 32 8 31... 6 25) 11 09/6 01 751 336) 842... 6 18 11 02{5 53 755 340 8 47]. 6 15| 10 59(5 50 8 od 349 8 57|... 6 07( 10 51/5 41 811! 355 9 05 6 00 10 44/5 34 816! 359 9 0g].. 5 54 10 3815 27 818 401 911 5 514 10 35/5 23 819 402 913 5 49{ 10 33/5 21 827 408 9 21 5 39 10 23/5 10 2vesss | 411] 9 28 evessesfansennnn5 06 831 416 9 31].. 5 35| 10 19(5 03 835 419] 935 5 31] 10 15(4 58 8 36/ 423 9 42(..Philipsburg...| 5 30 10 14/4 57 841i 4 28] 9 47|.....Graham...... 5 26) 10 09|4 52 8 46) 4 33] 9 52..... Blue Ball.....| 5 21] 10 04/4 46 8 521 439 9 58/...Wallaceton ... 516] 9 58/4 39 857 44410 04........ Bigler ...... 511 9 5314 32 903 450 10 10|.....Woodland....| 506] 9 474 27 9 06| 4 53 10 13... Mineral Sp 505 9 44/4 24 910 4571017... .. Barrett...... 501 9404 20 915 502 10 22|...... Leonard.....| 4 56 9 35/4 15 9190 506/10 28/....Clearfield.....| 4 52 9 31/4 00 9 24 511 10 34|... Riverview.....| 4 58 9 26/4 03 9 301 5 17| 10 41|...Sus. Bridge...| 4 43| 9 20/3 56 935 5 22| 10 46|..Curwensville ..| 4 39] 9 153 51 ressealedrersene 10 52/...... Rustic aves «3 35 . 11 02|....Stronach 13 25 sreene]e -| 11 06|....Grampian..... .|3 21 PM.IP. M. | A. M. |AT. Lv.la wl a wm low, BALD EAGLE VA9LEY BRANCH. WESTWARD. EASTWARD, 4 & = I) g 2 “ 8 = May 18, 1896. 5 = be Be Be = = Be [5 Ml » » ” = = = - P.M.| P. M. | A. M. |ArT, Lv. am. |» om. pm, 617] 240] 11 10....... Tyrone..,..... 8 10[ 12 35/7 25 611) 234 11 04! East Tyrone...| 8 16] 12 41/7 31 6 07] 2 30] 11 60’ i 12 45/7 35 6 03] 2 26 12 49|7 39 557 220 12 55|7 45 554 217 12 58|7 48 552 215 1 00(7 50 54 207 1 07(7 57 536] 200 1 14/8 04 528) 153 1 22/8 13 519] 14 1 30/8 22 512 137 1 37/8 30 500 133 . 1 40{8 33 501" 124 . 1 49/8 41 449] 112 941). 2 02(8 53 441) 104 934 2 11{9 01 ‘437 100] 9 3 2159 05 431) 12 54) 9 24/......Howard...... 9 2219 11 4221245 915 agleville....| 10 08 2 309 20 4 19! 12 42/ 9 12{..Beech Creek...| 10 11 2 2200 23 408 12 31 9 01 Mill Hall......| 10 22| 2 449 34 406 12 29) 8 59 lemington...| 10 24] 2 469 36 402) 12 25] 8 55 ock Haven..| 10 30] 2 50(9 40 P.M.|P. M. | A. M. [Lv Arr. A. wip wm fh LEWISBURG & TYRONE RAILROAD. EASTWARD. May 18th, 1896. WESTWARD. MAIL. | EXP. EXP. | MAIL. SraTIONS, P. M. | A. M. |Lv. Ar. P. M. 215 20]... -Bellefonte........... 415 Ae. erre. ..Axemann.... 410 224 628 Pleasant Gap.. 4 07 227 631 Peru 403 2 Dale Summi 3 58 ..Lemont.. 3 53 ..Oak Hall 3 48 2 Linden Hall 3 44 2 Greg 337 E Centre Hall i 331 3 ...Penn’s Cave. 21 323 3 Rising Spring....... 585 317 1 392 ~herhy...... 7 45,3 08 | 3 32] .Coburn 738 302 3 38 «.Ingleby............| 731] 2356 | 341 addy Mountain...... 721 253 | 3 49 Cherry Run... T18 245 | 382 .Lindale.. Tid 24 | 35 Pardee... 707 234 | 4 07 ilen Iron 6 58) 225 | 415 Milmont 650 218 | 417 Swengle 647 216 4 22 Barber.. 642 212 427 iflinburg. 6 37 207 4 35 cksburg 628 158 439 iehl...... 623 153 4 47 ewisburg.. 615 145 455 ..Montandon.......... 540 135 P.M. mt Lv. a spa LEWISBURG & TYRONE RAILROAD. WESTWARD. UPPER END. EASTWARD, = dg | eT < [5 | | 21% |mwrsmn 83 IE |B 1E | 1 I P. M. | A.M. |Ar. A.M. [P.M vere. 4 40 . 10 00! serve 4 23 10 19 eresey 417 10 26 4 1 ; 8 1 8 5.41...... 8 26|....Dungarvin...| 11 01] 5 44/... 8 18/ Warrior's Mark { 552 8 09... corl.....! 7 881....... 6 12/...... ¥ 50]..... 6 001...... a.m. |Lve daa [pow BELLEFONTE & SNOW SHOE BRANCH. Time Table in effect on and after May 18, 1896. Leave Snow Shoe, except Sunday............ 3 Sp. m. Arrive in Bellefonte. . 546 p. m, Leave Bellefonte, ex . 9 58a. m, Arrive in Snow Shoe 149a. m. (CENTRAL RAILROAD OF PENNA. Condensed Time Table. BEECH CREEK RAILROAD. NY.C.&H BRE Co., Lessee. Condensed Time Table. Reap Up, READ DOWN. May 17th, 1896. EXP. [MAIL, No. 30|No. 36 A.M. | Po 3 30 . 3 52 500 415 5 25 4 42 535 4 52 5 41) 4 58 5 461 5 03 552 509 558) 515 5 nu. 6 15 Ss HH 7 55| 11 31|......CLEARFIELD.......| ¢ 25 i i 7 45 11 21Ar...Clearfield Junc....L.v| 6 35] 6 19 737 2 >s «| 645! 6 29 7 31 652] 634 723 6 57] 6 40 715 706 648 To 715] 6 57 6 35 140) 727 72 6 55| 6 35 7 05 717 700 700 722 703 6 40 740] 725 6 20 757 T4 613 804 752 518 8 48 8 42 3 05 901] 853 4 58 907 858 4 47 916] 9 07 4 35 929 918 4 30 930] 920 +4 00 10 05] 9 55 P| AN Lv, An AM [Pow P.M. LA. a. Phila, & Reading R. R.| a. ot. | p. ai 12 40{ *6 55|Ar..... W' MSPORT Lv(+10 20[*11 30 13 35 Lv......PHILA....... Ar] 5 08] 710 iv....N. Y. vin Tam...Ar| 600) .N. Y. via Phila..Arb 7 25| 19 30 iiss *Daily. {Week-days. 26.00 v. Mm. Sunday. 110-55 A. mM. Sunday. “b’ New York passengers travel- ing via Dhindelnbia on 10.20 A, M. train from READ powx READ vp. onl Mavs, 1806; = No 1/No 5/No 3 No oye 4i%on a. hl . m.[p. m. Lve. Arp. mp. m.[a. m 17 20 b 30 5 45 BELLEFONTE. [10 04 6 10{10 10 734 7 44| 3 57 weer. Nighe..........| 9 49] 5 57( 9 56 v.41] 7 50] 4 03l.......... Zion.........| 9 43! 5 51] 9 50 746 7 55 4 08..HECLA PARK..| 9 38) 5 46] 9 45 7 48| 7 57| 4 10|...... Dun kles...... 9 36] 5 44] 9 43 752| 8 01f 4 14/...Hublersburg...| 9 32) 540 9 39 7 56] 8 05] 4 18, «Snpderown is 9 28; 537] 9 35 758 907 49,...... Nittany........ 9250 535] 9 33 8 00| 8 09] 4 22/.......Huston........ 3] 9 31 8 02/ 8 11| 4 24/........Lamar.........| 9 2 9 29 8 04] 8 13] 4 26|.....Clintondale....| 9 19} 5 20] 9 26 8 09( 8 19] 4 31|.Krider's Siding.| 9 14| 5 24| 9 21 8 16] 8 25| 4 37|...Mackeyville....| 9 08] 5 18] 9 15 8 23/ 8 32| 4 43]...Cedar Spring...| 9 01' 512) 9 09 8 25] 8 34] 4 45]......... Salona.......| 8 59] 5 1| 9 07 8 30! 8 40{ 4 50!..MILL HALL. 18 salts 05i19 01 9 30 9 nae AOR 430] 755 10 05] 9 55(Arr. y vel 400] +7 25 +10 20/11 30 Sey WMs'PORT J 2 40| *6 55 508 710... PHILA... ....| 48 35% 30 : Atlantic City... | 6 45 ..NEW YORK..........| +4 30! (Via Tamaqua.) | 7 H 19 sol... NEW YORK civetees | 12730 (Via Phila.) "| pP- m.ia. m.]Arr. Lve.la. m.p. m. *Daily. tWeek Days. 26.00 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-bound from Philadelphia at 11.30 P. M, J. W. GEPHART. General Superintendent. Williamsport, wil change cars at Columbus Ave., Philadelphia. Connrerrons.—At Williamsport with Philadel- hia and Reading R. R. At Jersey Shore with fall Brook Railway. At Mill Hall with Central Railroad of Pennsylvania, At Philipsburg with Pennsylvania Railroad and Altoona & Phil sburg Connecting Railroad. ‘At Clearfield with Buffalg Rochester & Pittsburg Ryilway. 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 |3ELLEFONTE CENTRAL RAIL- ROAD. Schedule to take effect Monday, Sept. 7th, 1896. WESTWARD EASTWARD read down read up NO |tNo.7ltNo.1| Sramoxe. fxg 2/tNo. os P.M.[ A. M. | A. m1. |Lv. Ar,| A. x. | Pp. M. [P.M 4 21) 10 30{ 6 30|....Bellefonte...| 8 45 1 10/6 40 4 26) 8 40| 1 02{6 30 4 30, 8 37 12 58/6 25 4 33 8 35 12 54/6 20 4 38 8 31) 12 49,6 15 4 42 8 28( 12 46/6 12 4 47 24 12 41I(6 07 4 52 i] 8 20) 12 37/6 03 4 54| 11 08| 7 08|....Lambourn....| 8 18| 12 35/6 00 5 03] 11 20/ 7 17/...Krumrine..... 8 07] 12 26/5 46 508 1133) 7 28) UnIV, Inno| B03 Ton 510 11 35 7 30(.8tate College. 8 00] 12 205 40 513; 1124 7 eens rubles.......| 7 a7 1° 245 oF 5 20, | 7 40l...Bloomsdorf...| 7 40| [6 20 Morning trains from Montandon, Lewisburg, Williamsport, Lock Haven and Tyrone connect with train No.7 for State College. Afternoon frains 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, Philadelphia, Pa. + Daily, except Sunday. “. H. THOMAS Supt.,