ANS acre. Bellefonte, Pa., Nov. 27, 1896. Land of the Mahogany. How the Big Trees Look in Their Native Wilds.— The Woodsmen of Honduras.—An Entertaining De- scription of Forest Scenes in Central America, Where Carid Woodchoppers Hunt for Precious Timber. In this British colony, of Honduras’ which was first organized by ma- hogany hunters for the sole purpose of cutting the valuable timber, the mahogany business is still of para- mount importance. Belize owes not only its beginning but its wealth to the early hewers of wood, who nearly two centuries ago brought over slaves and cattle and es- tablished their camps in the jungle. Princ- ly fortunes are yet made in the same line— though not so rapidly in these days of iron ships, as when wood was more largely used in naval architecture. The whole coast- region, bordering what used to be known as the Spanish Main. stretching southward from the borders of Mexico tothe Nicara- gua canal, abounds in precious woods ; and British Honduras is its very heart and cen- tre ; rich beyond computation, not only in mahogany, but in the hardly less valuable rose, ebony, tulip, cedar and sandal woods ; vera, ironwood and pelo de San Juan and caoutchouc, or Castilloa elastica, the Cen- tral American rubber tree. The Govern- ments of Nicarauga and the Republic of Honduras allow anybody to cut the trees on contract—that is by payments of a cer- tain amount stumpage ; but not so in the Queen’s possession ! The ‘‘blarsted British- ers’ have got a grip on this exhaustless source of wealth, which they mean to re- tain until time shall be no more—or as long as a tree shall be left standing. Now- adays all the Belize mahogany lands are in | the hands of afew proprietors, who will | not sell a foot of them, nor admit settlers on any terms. They rent them in small areas to contractors, who bind themselves under heavy penalties to transport all tim- ber cut to the coast and leave not a single log to decay in the wilderness, and to pay to the owners of the soil a bonus on every square foot of timber moved, besides a good round rental. KING OF THE TROPICAL FOREST. Everybody is familiar with mahogany after the cabinetmakers have got done with it; its rich red-brown and varying shades of color, its beauty of gran and wonderful susceptibility of polish, its dura- bility and freedom from warping in all climates ; but I fancy that few of my readers would recognize it in the tree if they saw one growing. The swietenia ma- hogni—hereabouts more commonly known as “‘baywood’’—is a veritable monarch of the vegetable kingdom, more impressive for size and majesty than even the giant se- quoias of California. The latter may some- times attain greater girth of trunk, but never the mammoth spread of branches of | the mahogany, which towering head and shoulders above everything else in the landscape, is truly king of the trop- ical forest. Its pinnate leaves are like those of the ash ; its delicate yellowish- | white flowers grown in close panicles, and its pear-shaped fruit—a hard woody capsule about the size of a man’s fist—has five- celled, many winged seed. The mahogany tree is a long time in reaching maturity, 200 years heing supposed to approximate its prime. In regard to its rapidity of arowth we have all read that ‘‘1t hardly undergoes a perceptible increase of size in the narrow span of man’slife.”” That is no doubt true, after a tree has come to a great size ; but mahogany merchants in Belize tell me that the young trees grow so rapid- ly from the stumps of a clearing as to be large enough themselves for cutting in 25 or 30 years. Of course the trees vary in size in different sections, and in the value of wood, according to the color and beauty of its “curl.” Single logs have sometimes realized upwards of $5,000 for cutting into veneer, the wood being too heavy to be used “‘solid”’ for most purposes. Logs 40 feet long and two feet thick are common here ; some of them wonderfully figured, though generally the wood is plain. It is said that the forests of northern Belize are more dense and the trees more valuable than the softer , swamp-grown wood of the interior of British Honduras. The mahog- any tree attains its greatest dimensions in the limestone. regions of Mexico, logs squared to 48 inches being often obtained, while three feet is a common size. HOW THE WORLD LEARNED. The discovery of the value of mahogany in ship building has been credited to Sir Walter Raleigh—that inoffensive gentle- man to whose doors so many things have been laid for which he was not responsible. The story goes that in the year 1597, when Sir Walter was in Trinidad, his ship needed repairing, and the first big tree that came handy was used for the purpose. The Caribs called the tree by some strange name, which the Spaniards interpreted after their fashion, and which we of the English tongue pronounce mahogany ; and its wood proved to be so durable—the only ~ kind that can resist the terido worm—that its fortune was made then and there. How- ever, owing to the difficulties of obtaining it more than a century elapsed before it came into general use. Mahogany is in- debted to another accident for its popular- ity as a cabinet wood. The celebrated Dr. | Gibbons had a brother in the New World who made him a present of a mahogany log for a curiosity. The learned doctor thought to inorease the value of his curio by having it converted into a ‘‘settle’’ to stand in his hall, and he employed Wolloston, the Court cabinetmaker, to do the work. Wolloston saw at once the beauty and val- ue of the wood, and did his work with such skill that a furor was created in Eng- land for mahogany furniture ; and to this day the imports of mahogany to Britian alone average 50,000 tons per annum. Its dark-colored bark, which has a faint, aro- matic smell and an astringent, bitter taste, is also largely employed as a fedrifuge, and as a substitute for Peruvian bark. In the countries where it grows the natives use its seeds, ground to oil, for a cosmetic, to make the skin soft and shiny, as the Az- tecs did in early times. CARIB WOODMEN. Like everything else that is worth hav- ing in this tiresome world, mahogany is not easily obtained. Few people realize the labor and difficulties that intervene be- tween the great trees growing in its native forests and the beautiful piece of furniture that adorns the home of wealth. Far in the depths of the almost impenetrable jun- gle now stands, perhaps hundreds of years old, environed with enormous buttresses of roots extending upward 15 or 20 feet around its trunk fitting props to sustain the mon- arch through the storms of centuries. As a rule, the mahogany contractor enters in- to his agreement with the owners of the territory he intends to efplore, near the close of the wet season—say during the | | Christmas holidays. His cutters secured, { who are usually Caribs or half breed In- dians, he pays them six months wages in advance, half in cash and half in ‘‘goods’’— the latter meaning provisions and needed outfit, much as our western miners used to be furnished with ‘‘grub-stake,”’ It is un- necessary to add that the cash generally melts away like dew before the morning sun, in drinking and gambling ; hence the wisdom of paying part of the men’s wages in necessary commodities. From 30 to 50 men is the average number of men in each camp, and they are divided into companies of ten, each company having its own ‘‘cap- tain.”” The most important and best-paid man of all, is the ‘hunter,”’ an experienced woodsman, who leads the way into the wilderness and finds the trees for the rest to cut. They follow up the rivers in the trackless forests, beset by dangers on every hand, alligators and boas, savage animals and the deadly creeping things that infest the jungle ; and when they find a favora- ble spot begins operations by establishing their camp upon the edge of the river. A big watla (thatched hut) is built for the laborers, and a smaller one, set high on stilts to protect it from prowling creatures, in which to store the bacon, salt fish, and other supplies brought from civilization. | Hammocks are hung in the watla for beds, | any convenient logs serve well for tables | and chairs, and the cook makes an excellent range by filling a hole in the ground with | { | stones. They eat cazada bread, made from the grated root of the yucca, from which ; the poisinous juice has been squeezed, and the terminal buds of the cabbage palm, which taste very much like our cauliflower | and is a delicate morsel when not mixed | with rancid greasy bacon, as one usually | finds it hereabouts. The forest abounds in | wild fruits and edible seeds; and as for | meat, they are plenty of monkeys and huge | lizzard-like iguanus, wild hogs, small red deer, tapirs rabbits armadillos, turkeys and | parrots, not to mention larger game. ! HIUNTING FOR Trees. ! While the camp is being made the ‘‘hun- ter”? is off exploring. The precious swiet- enia mahogni does not grow in clumps and | groves like our pine and walnut, but each | monarch stands alone in solitary state, amid a dense growth of other huge trees, its trunk concealed by a wild tangle of vines, orchids, and underbrush, requiring the closest attention of the experienced woodsman to detect it. Ina tropical wil- derness, where the trees are so thick that gne can hardly force his way between them, the whole hung with an impenetrable mass | of verdure as with a curtain, their mingled | tops a solid wall which makes eternal twi- light below, and every. trunk twined round ! and round with creepers—it is not an easy matter to distinguish species. The hunter climbs the tallest tree that he can find com- | paratively clear, and from its top his prac- | ticed eyes detect the foliage of the coveted | mahogany. He then counts the trees in| line, notes carefully the direction, distance and every land mark, slides down from ! his leafy conservatory and proceeds to cut i and blaze a trail to his “find.”” This done, { he marks the trees with his machete and returns to camp. Each man in a company | is assigned his particular work—some to i fell the trees, others to cut truck-roads | through the jungle, others to collect and haul the wood and water, etc. The cutters | turn out from camp as ‘soon as it is light i enough to see—which in the tall dense woods means a much later hour than in the regions where the sun has a better chance to show himself ; and generally by noon tree cutting for the day is finished. All work is done by the task system, which is said to be the only way of handling native la- bor ; that is, one man’s ‘‘stent’ is to cut two trees, from 8 to 10 feet in circumfer- ence ; two men are given three large trees to bring down or four men are detailed to lay low some forest giant, perhaps 25 feet in circumference. “BARBCUES" To the tenderfoot that scems a task im- possible of accomplishment. Owing to its enormous huttresses the trunk cannot be cut near the ground, so the ax-men are obliged to rig up a platform, 10, 15, 20, or as many feet high as the buttress extends. These plat- forms are called ‘‘barbecues,’” though how that word applies nobody knows but an Englishman who prides himself on correct | use of the language can say. The ‘‘barbe- | cue'’ is made of slim poles, one on each side of the tree, on supports, and two other | poles laid across them ; also one on each side of the tree. The axman mounts this platform with one foot on each pole, two men to a tree, on opposite sides, and rapidly fell the tree. It isa marvel how men can stand on these slender poles and chop down enormous trees ; but they do it, and quickly, too. Itis an incred- ably short time the stately monarch of of centuries totters and falls, crashing its way through the crowd of smaller trees. | The trunks and branches are then squared, and are ready for transportation. In fell- ing a valuable tree every precaution is taken against breaking or splitting it and thus spoiling the lumber. This manner of cutting on a platform seems very wasteful, as it leaves in the stump an average of 400 ! feet of the best part of the tree, so far as beauty of grain is concerned—to say noth- ing of the gnarled and twisted roots, which bear the same proportionate additional value that our walnut roots do to the rest of the tree ; but no better way has yet been devised. Three hundred trees are consid- ered a good season’s work for one camp, each tree yielding 2000 feet of timber, on a modest estimate of the average. BRINGING IN MAHOGANY. When the morning’s stent is completed, the men are “free for the rest of the day to hunt, fish, sleep or gamble, to search on their own accounts for Indian rubber sar- saparilla and other marketable: products of the woods, or to make canoes, paddles, bowls, ete., from the mahogany stumps for their own use or to sell when they return to the haunts of man. The logs are hauled to the camp at night, so as to avoid the in- tense heat of the day. When the place is not too remote, oxen do this part of the work. Mr. G. E. Bailey, who visited a mahogany camp in course of his recent visit to Belize, describes th2 bringing in of the mahogany : ‘The scene by torchlight, as huge two-wheeled carts toil over the worst roads in the world, is indescribably pic- turesque. The gloom, the flashes of torches, the oaths and cries of drivers, the shrieks of grease-hungry wheels, the bawling of the oxen, chattering monkeys, scolding parrots and macaws, the scream of the distant p u- ther, the gleam of savage eyes, the dusky, naked bodies appearing and disappearing, it looks like a dream of Dante and sounds like pandemonium broken loose.”’ FACTS AND FIGURES. To Mr. Bailey I am indebted for the fol- lowing figures : The ‘‘hunter’’ receives for his service $60 to $100 per month, the ‘‘cap- tains’’ each from $14 to $20 per month, and the laborers $12 per month, including ra- tions. Trees have sometimes yielded as: high as three logs, worth $10,000 in Boston ; but the general run is from two to five logs per tree, each 10 to 18 feet long, and from 20 to 24 inches wide when hewed. —R The cost averages from: $30 to $10 per thousand feet. In addition isan export duty of $8. Transportation costs $14 the ton to New Orleans, while to distant Lon- don it is only $8 the ton. In former times the logs were rafted down to sea with all the excitement of logging in our pineries and with much loss of valuable timber in the surf. There are many places where no other method of transit is practicable, though on some of the rivers of Central America mahogany sloops and steamers go up a hundred miles or more. When the hewn logs have reached the port somehow and the woodmen hate secured the pay for heir month’s toil a happy season of corous-: al begins, to be kept up until duty again calls them to the wilderness. And mean- while the product of the former season’s work has gone to decorate our palace steamers and Pullman cars and the homes of the wealthy the world over. FANNIE WARD. —— Subscriber for the WATcHyaN. New Advertisements. ANTED — SEVERAL FAITHFUL men or women to travel for responsible es- tablished house in Pennsylvania. Salary $780- payable 815 weekly and expenses. Position per, ananent. Reference. Enclose self-addressed stamped envelope. The National, Star Building, Chicago. 41-39-4m. Iii rroNey ALIVE. TO THE GOOD OF ITS PROPLE 10 RE SO, When yon know a good thing tell it. It will not lessen its goodness, But will do good to others. If you've been cured, tell it. There's more misery just like it. Waiting to find out how. There are lots of lame backs in Bellefonte. It's a bust place and backs are used. There's urinary troubles to a large extent. Ever notice how many people over forty complain ? Seven out of ten, say colds affect their kid- neys. - The kidneys are the cause ; not the colds, Keep them in shape and life is life. You ean do it easily and pleasantly. No nanseating disturbances. No eftect except on the kidneys. But that effect is quick and permanent. Doan’s Kidney Pills do perfect work. Bellefonte is full of their praises. Mr. Geo. Gross of Water street states :—*‘I have had kidney and bladder trouble for ten years. About that time I hurt the lower part of my back and while [am not certain that was the a of my complaint, I do know that it has been grow- ing worse and worse year after year. Talk about suffering. If you want backache and stitches and Shaty shooting pains that I believe would cause death if protracted, just get a good dose of kidney complaint. And if that was not enough for any ordinary man to put up with frequent urination with a burning or scalding sensation accompany- ing it was added to torment the existence out of me. It seemed as if I never would get rid of it and I don’t believe I ever would if I had not got a box of Doan’s Kidney Pills at Green’s drug store. The old Quaker remedy cured me, at least I have had no return of my old complaint and I hope I never will. I ean recommend Doan’s Kidney Pills and take great pleasure in doing so for 1 know if other men try them, afflicted like I was, they will obtain the same results.” For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Sent by mail on receipt of price by Foster-Milburn Co. Buftulo, N. Y., sole agents for the United States. 41-7 Drrurnia MEDICINE. THAT NEVER FAILS TO CURE, It will cure Croup in three (3) doses, and is a preventive for Diphtheria, Croup, Ete. Also cures all forms of Sore Mouth and Sore Gums, CAN BE PURCHASED AT JOHNNNIE ROUNDTREE'S GROCERY STORE, Water Street, BELLEFONTE. MANUFACTURED BY DIPHTHERIA MEDICINE COMPANY CENTRE HALL, PA. THE 41-42-3m* | Castoria. IS Aw TT Oo 1A C C A & T og RR I A C 4A 5 To nl KX C A 58 T 0 B71 A C A BB 7. 0 R 1 3 CC Castoria is Dr. Samuel Pitcher’s preserip- tion for Infants and Children. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. It is a harmless substitute for Paregoric, Drops, Soothing Syrups, and Cas- tor Oil. It is Pleasant. Its guarantee ix thirty years’ ise by Millions of Mothers. Castoria is the Children’s Panacea— the Mother's Friend. CASTORIA _ FOR INFANTS AND CHILDREN. Do not be imposed upon, but insist upon hav- ing Castoria, and see that the fac- simile signature of ison tho wrapper. We shall protect ourselves and the public at all hazards. THE CENTAUR Co., %7 Murray St., N. Y. CHAS. H. FLETCHER. 41-15-1m i ed by the author. AND GLAD | 41-47 INluminating Oil. Prospectus. ue US MAGAZINE IX 1897. Frerton: Tue Martian, the new novel by Du | Maurier, the eagerly expected successor to “Tril- by" begun in October Number, 1806, with illus- trations from the author's drawings. A new nov- el by Frank R. Stockton—developing a Twentieth and characteristically illustrated. A Pair or Pa- TieNT Lovers, William Dean Howells. Other strik- ing noveletts by American authors. Short stories by Mark Twain, Thomas Nelson Page, Richard Harding Davis, Owen Wister, John Kendrick Bangs, Ruth MecEnery Stuart, Octave Thanet, Mary E, Wilkins and other popular writers. . * i Science : Story of the Progress of Science during the Nineteenth Century, a series of papers by Dr. Henry Smith Williams, med contribu- tions on special subjects by expert scientists. Articles on the relations of curions psychological manifestations to physiology by Dr. Awdrew Wil- son, AMERICAN FEATURES: ToE MEXtco or To-Day, a series by Charles F. Lummis, splendidly illustrat- ed—the result of a recent visit to Mexico under- taken for HARPER'S MAGAZINE. Mexico is pre-eminently a silver-producing country, and its monetary operations rest entirely on a silver basis. Owing to the keen discussion of certain economic problems in connection with issues of urgent importance in American politics, these papers, will command general attention. AMERI- cAN Historicar Pavers by Woodrow Wilson, John Bach MacMaster, and James Barnes. The true story of SHERIDAN's Rink by Gen. G. A. Forsyth. Continuation of Howell's PERSONAL REMINISCENCES of eminent literary Americans. Areica AND THE East: Wurre Man's ArRica, a fully illustrated series of papers by Poultney Bige- low, the result of personal observations during a recent trip to Africa, covering the whole field of European exploration of that country. Illustrat- ed articles by Stephen Bonsal, on the transforma- tions going on in EASTERN SiBERIA, recently visit- Hu~NGARTAN SKETCHES, written and drawn by F. Hopkinson Smith. The}full story of the recent Coronation of the Czar, by Richard Harding Davis, illustrated by R. Caton Woodville, who was commissioned by Queen Victoria to | Century Renaissance—full of humorous situations i paint a picture of the ceremony. Newspapers are not to copy this advertisement with- aut the express order of Harper & Brothers. HARPER'S MAGAZINE | For oNE YEAR £4.00. | Postage Free 1g all subscribers in the United States, | Canada, and Merico. ! Address HARPER & BROTHERS, P. O. Box 94, N. XY. City. E ARPER’S WEEKLY IN 1897. With the end of 1806 HARPER'S WEEKLY will have lived forty years. In that time it has par- ticipated with all the zeal and power at its com- mand in the great political events of the most in- teresting and important period in the history of the country, and it has spread before its readers | the accomplishments of science, arts and letters | for the instruction of the human mind and the | amelioration of human conditions and of manners. | What the WEEKLY has been in its spirit and | purpose, as these have been manifested principal- ly in its editorial pages, it will continue to be. It is impassible to announce with precision all | that the WEEKLY will contain during the year | 1897. It were as easy to announce what is about to happen in the worrp, what trinmphs for coon GOVERNMENT are to be won, what apvances of the PROPLE are to be made, what is to be the outcome | of the continuous struggle between the spirits of war and peAcE, what is to happen in the rar East, what is to be the state or Evrore twelve ! months hence, what NEW MARVELS OF SC ‘Eoare ! to be revealed, or what are to be the ACHIEVEMENTS | OF ARTS AND LETTERS, for the WEEKLY is to he a pictorial record of all this. f Cartoons will continue to be a feature. Serian Stortes. A New England story hy Moss uw E. Wilkins, will begin in Jannary. A tale of a Geeek uprising against the Turks, by Mr. I. F. Benson, the anthor of “Dode,” will follow. A sequel to “The House-Boat on the Styx,” bv Mr. John Keadrick Bangs, illustrated by Peter Newell More Snort Stories will appear in the WEEK- | LY than it has heen possible to publish during | 1896. os Depavrvests: Mir. Wo D. Howell's “Life aud | Letters’ have been among the most charming features of periodical literature: Mr. E. S. Mar- | tin, and others will “contribute observations on what is going on in “This Busy World; “Ama- teur Sport” will remain the most important de- | partment of its kind in the country The WEEKLY will continue to present to its | readers the world’s news MOST INTERESTING TO Americans, to make important advances in both the literary and artistic features, and to retain for itself the leading place in the illustrated jonrnal- ism of the world. - | Newspapers are wot to copy this adverlisement aweith- ant the express order of Harper & Brothers. HARPER'S WEEKLY £4.00. Postage Free to all subscribers in the United States, Canada, and Mexico, Address HARPER & BROTHERS. P. O. Box 939, N. Y. City. For oNE YEAR - - - - 41-47 ARPER’S BAZAR IN 1897 The BAZAR, a thoroughly up-to-date periodical for women, will enter upon its Thirticth Volume in 1897. : : As a Fashion journal it is unsurpassed, and is an indispensable requisite for every well-dressed woman. Katharine De Forest writes a weekly | letter on current fashions from Paris. In New York Fasuwons, and in the fortnightly pattern- | sheet supplement, ladies find full details, direc- tions, and diagrams for gowns, wraps, and chil- | dren’s clothing. Sendoz, Bauwde, and Chappuis draw and engrave the newest and finest Parisian designs every week. The serials for 1897 will be: Tur Rep Briar | NetcuporHooD, by Maria Louise Pool ; and FATHER | QUINNALLION, by Octave Thanet. Short stories will be constantly presented hv brilliant writers, among whom are Mary FE. Wilkins, Harriet Pres- cott Spofford, Marion Harland, Ruth NeEaery, Stuart, Viola Roschoro, and Margaret Sutton Briscoe. } Waav Women are Doixe in various parts of the | Union will form a series of special interest. ! Other interesting features are The OQut-door Woman, devoted to healthful sports and pastimes; Musie, a weekly critical summary of music in New York ; Amateur Theatricals, Embroideru and Needlework, Ceremony and Etiquette, Good House- keeping, “Waar Gires ARE Doing,” “Current Social Events,” and Personals gleaned from original sources, Women axp Mex. Colonel T. W. Hiceixsox will regularly continue his valuable essays, Axswers To Correspoxpents. 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FOR ONE YEAR Address 41-47 O0———AND———0 {BURN CROWN ACME OIL. 0——GIVES THE BEST LIGHT IN THE WORLD.—0 AND IS ABSOLUTELY SAFE. 0 EISERETE IME ANOKLEY OF SLIGHT EEE \ SE i No 1/No 5 No 3 ! Daily, New Advertisements. ey OUR HAMS, BREAKFAST BACON AND Driep BEEF. THEY ARE VERY FINE. SECHLER & CO. Saddlery. 000 $5,000 $5,000 ——WORTH OF HARNESS, HARNESS, HARNESS, SADDLES | and FOR SUMMER, BRIDLES —NEW HARNESS FOR SUMMER,- FLY-NETS FOR SUMMER, DUSTERS FOR SUMMER, WHIPS FOR SUMMER, All combined in an immense Stock of Fine Saddlery. irgene NOW IS THE TIME FOR BARGAINS...... — Erin) have Dropped f Fi ¢ THI. LARGEST STOCK OF HORSE COLLARS IN THE COUNTY. JAMES SCHOFIELD, 53-37 BELL FONTE, PA. : | Travelers Guide. (shan RAILROAD OF PENNA. | Condensed Time Table. READ DOWN Reap vr. I Nov. 16th, 1806, Tog No 6/'No 4'No2 | | . mn. Arp. mp. m.ja. m, | 20! ! EFONTE. [10 15] 6 1010 10 | 7 34 7 oY igh L110 02) 5 57) 9 56 | 7 41) 8 05) 4 0 Zion fo 51] 9 50 | 7 46) 8 13] 4 08.HECLA PARK..| 9 { 7 48 8 15] 4 10l...... Dun kles...... | 9 3 | 752181941 ublersburg...| 9 0 7 56) 8 23] 4 18 ..Snydertown.....| ¢ 7 58 8 25] 4 Wi....... Nittany. 9 & % 8 00 8 27 4 22 Huston 9] | 8 02] 8 20] 4 2 Lamar. Jd 93 9 29 | 8 04 8 31} 4 26]. ntondale....| 9 33 926 | 8 09] 8 36| 4 31. Krider's Siding.| 9 28 9 21! 8 16] 8 42 4 36]. Mackeyville....| 9 23) 5 18] 915 | 8 23 8 48) 4 42|...Cedar Spring...; 9 17° 5 12) 9 09 | 8.25 8 50] 4 A alona....... 9 15, 5 11; 9 07 | 8 30} 8 55 4 55 ...MILL HALL... $0 10/5 05.19 9 oo ceTersey SI oes i ¥30; T5455 10 05 10 20/Arr. Dont L1vel 400! 47 | #10 20x11 30] Lve ; WMS PORT Hoe 2 ol #6 55 | 505 7 10). PHILA. .i 18 35%11 30 J { | Atlantic Ci ol { 1 6 45 NEW YORK J F430 ! | (Via Tamaqua.) I NEW YORK | - (Via Phila.) i Lve.|a. 25 9 3.........NEW YORK......... Pp. niin. m.iAvr, m. |p. m. | +Week Days. 36.00 P, M. Sundays. | $10.10 A. M. Sunday. PuiLapereiia SLeeping Car attached to East- | bound train from Williamsport at 11.30 P. M, and | West-bound from Philadelphiaat 11.30 P. M. i J. W. GEPHART. General Superintendent. Bx CREEK RAILROAD. N.Y. C. £ H. R. BR. R, Co., Lessee. Condensed Time Table, 5 i 1: 93 1 ¢ 112 8 53; 12 8 49! 12 . $45 12 ew Millport.. 8 39; 12 Olanta.... 8 33) 11 Mitchells. 8 16; 11 40 Clearfield Junc. 8 08 11 31|o.... CLEARFIELD. 5 ori 21 Clearfield June. 7 48) 11 12] .Woodland Ja 7 42! 11 05) Bigler. 4 652 653 7 37} 10 58 .Wallaceton.. 4 657 669 7 98! 10 50.......Morrisdale Mines....!| 7 06] 7 07 7200 10 41 Mungo ri 715 715 SST ICI * Loi ian AY 140] 70 7 30) 10 1 anf PIILIPSBUG iy) 655) 6 73 "7 18] 10 36/Ar...... . Munson Tv TT 12 os .Winburne 4 T8n 722 6G 48 PEALE. T40 742 626] 9 llintown. 757 801 616] 9 NOW SHOE. 8 04) 808 518 8 SECH CREE 8 48) 8 505 83 wee Mill Hall... 901 910 4 58] 825 LOCK HAVEN. 007 417 4 47| 8 15].........Youngdale 916, 92 4 35 8 0 JERSEY SHORE JUNC.| 9 29| 9 40 4 30| 7 55|....JERSEY SHORE...... 0300 945 +4 00 7 .WILLIAMSPORT.....| 10 05] 10 20 vm gawlly == 020 Avia w rw “ro. | a.m. |+Phila, & Reading R. Ril A.M. | p.m. 2 40 .... WMSPORT.....Lv{}10 20/*11 30 8 35|¥] .PHILA.. Ap| 505 710 “+4 30 ~IlV.mN. ¥. via Tam. Ar] 600] #7 30iLv...N. Y. via Phila..Arb7 25; 19 30 AM. | ALM P. M. | A. M, *Daily. tWeek-days. 23.00 p. M. Sunday. 110-55 A. M. Sunday. “b'" New York passengers travel- ing via Philadelphia on 10.20 A. Mm. train {from Williamsport, will change cars at Columbus Ave., Philadelphia. ConNEcTioNs.—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 & 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, I ’ Philadelphia, Pa. Travelers Guide. Prrisivan RAILROAD AND BRANCHES. Schedule in eftect Nov. 16th, 1806. VIA TYRONE—WESTWARD, Leave Bellefonte, 9.53 a. m., arrive at Tyrone 11.10 a. m., at Altoona, 1.00 p. m., at Pittsburg, 6.05 p. m. Leave Bellefonte 1.05 p. m., arrive at Tyrone, 2.15 p. m., at Altoona, 2.55 p. mn., at Pittsburg, 6.50 p.m. Leave Bellefonte, 4.44 p. m., wrive at Tyrone, 6.00, at Altoona, 7.40, at Pittsburg at 11.30. VIA TYRONE—EASTWARD. Leave Bellefonte, 9.53 a. m., arrive at Tyrone 11.10, at Harrisburg, 2.40 p. m., at Philadel- phia, 11.15. p. m. Leave Bellefonte, 1.05 p. m., arrive at Tyrone, 2.15 a. m., at Harrisburg, 7.00 p. m., at Phila- delphia, 5.47 p. m. Leave Bellefonte, 4.44 p. m., arrive at Tyrone, 6.00 at Harrisburg, at 10.20 p. m. : VIA LOCK HAVEN—NORTHWARD. Leave Bellefonte, 9.28 a. in., arrive at Lock Haven, 10.30 a. m. Leave Bellefonte, 1.42 p. m., arrive at Lock Haven 2.43 p. m., arrive at Williamsport, 3.50 p. m. Leave Bellefonte, at 8.31 p. m., arrive at Lock Ha- ven, at 9.30 p. m. VIA LOCK HAVEN—EASTWARD. Leave Bellefonte, 9.28 a. m., arrive at Lock Haven 10.30, leave Williamsport, 12.40 p. m., arrive at Harrisburg, 3.20 p. m., at Philadelphia at 6.23 p. m. Leave Bellefonte, 1.42 p. m.. arrive at Lock Haven 2.43 p. m., arrive at Williamsport, 3.50, leave 4.00 p. m., Harrisburg, 7.10 p. m., Philadelphia 11.15 p. m. . Leave Bellefonte, 8.31 .p. m., arrive at Lock Ha- ven, 9.30 p. m., leave Williamsport, 12.25 a. m., arrive at Harrisburg, 3.22 a. m., arrive at Philadelphia at 6.52 a..m. VIA LEWISBURG. Leave Bellefonte, at 6.30 a. m., arrive at Lewis- burg, at 9.15 a. m., Harrisburg, 11.30 a. m., Philadelphia, 3.00 p. m.. Leave Bellefonte, 2.15 p. m., arrive at Lewisburg, 1 at Harrisburg, 7.10 p. m., Philadelphia at TYRONE AND CLEARFIELD, R. R. NORTHWARD. | SOUTHWARD. : . i | | z % ed ; g | a % = #1 3 2122] 5 iNov. sth, 19. : 2 iB Ei3s] = 1 E17 = a @ Z Hl i Foie P.M.) P. M. | A. M. A.M. | A. M. |P.M. 720 315 8 6 35) 11 20/6 1( 72 321} 8 629 11 14/6 04 728 323 8 veeeeeeel 11 THE 02 731 32 8 6 25| 11 095 57 74 336 8 6 18( 11 02/5 52 745 340 8 6 15 10 59/5 48 TH 349 8 6 07] 10 51|5 39. 801 355 9 6 00| 10 44/5 32 806. 359 9 5 b4| 10 385 25 808 401 9 5 51) 10 355 21 809 402 9 5 49| 10 33|5 19 817 408 9 5 39] 10 235 08 i 9 28|..0sceola Junec.. .........[.... seen 04 5 35 10 1915 01 2 5 311 10 154 57 261 5 30| 10 14/4 56 3 | 526] 10 09/4 51 8 36] 433 9 52...Blue Ball...| 521| 10 04/4 46 8 42] 4 39! 9 58...Wallaceton .... 516 9 58/4 39 847 444 10 044.......Bigler.... 9 53/4 32 8 53 4 50| 10 10(.....Woodland....| 0 47|4 271 8 56. 4 53 10 13]... Mineral Sp...] 505 9 44{4 24 900 45711017... ... Barrett 9 4014 20 905 592 10 22... 9 3514 15 9 09 506 10 28/..... 9.3114 09 914 51110 34... 9 26/4 03 920 517 10 411... 9 20.3 56 9 25! 522 10 46} 9153 51 ! | 10 52! ves coreeneald 11 02! or : . 11 06... Grampian... |... .i PML ALM AT. Lyv.l a.m ‘BALD EAGLE VALLEY BRANCH. WESTWARD, EASTWARD. 1 2 1 2! | | & | % 5 “ Nov. 16th, 1896.f = | & = a i213 l5 ja 1m y 8 1 7 P.M.| P. M. | A. M. ATT P.M, |P.M. 600 215 11 10 12 30,7 15 554 200 11 12 56/7 21 5500 205 11 2 40/7 25 5460 2 01-10 4417 20 5 40 vee) 10, re sctrenis 8 J S07 35 5 10 46 8 52/7 38 5: 5lf 10 8 12 54|7 40 5 45! 10 8 1 oo 7 5 39] 10 8 1 06/7 5 5 31] 10 8 1148 03 5 0: 23] 10 9 1 23/8 12 4 16 10 04 Snow Shoe Int.; 915 1 3008 20 i 4 5 13; 10 01/...Milesburg.. ... 918 1338 23 1 4 05 9 53|....Bellefonte....| 9 28] 1 4218 31 4 3: 9 410.LN | 1550s 43 42 0 34. | 2048 51 4 9 30! 2 08'8 55 4 | 9 24 9) 2 1419 01 4 05 9 15 ....Eagleville....| 10 08] 2 23|9 10 4 0 I 9 12..Beech Creek...[ 10 11] 2 26|9 13 3511216, 90 Mill Hall......| 10 22] 2 379 24 3 ol .Flemingto! 2 399 26 3 ...Lock Haven..| 10 30] 2 43/9 30 P.M. am Lv, Arr) a pou. poy LEWISBURG & TYRONE RAILROAD. EASTWARD, Nov. 16th, 1896. WESTWARD. MAIL. | EXP. | . | MAIL| EXP. STATIONS, ! P. plan {mw 2 Jom 415 2 .; 855 410 2 .| 852 407 2 847) 403 2 8 421 3 58 2 48! 837 3453 2 4 833 348 2 48 8 28] 3 44 235 1 S21] 337 so 7 S15 331 B10) © $07, 323 31% 7 801, 317 3% 1 752i 308 Bie 7 7 34] 3 02 33 7 7 38) 2 56 Sel 7 734 2p 349 8 728 245 3521 8 q 19] 2 41 380 8 712] 234 407 82 702 225 4 15| 8 6-53] 218 417) 8: : y 650 216 4 22 R ..Barber... 645 212 427 8 Mifflinburg 638 207 435 8! Vicksburg. 629 158 439] 200... Biehl... 624 153 447 9 i 615 145 4 55 0 2 . 540 138 M.A M. AT. Lv. Am. | P.M. LEWISBURG & TYRONE RAILROAD. UPPER END. EASTWARD, WESTWARD. % Nov. 16th, 1896. X =» = i 2 = Lve.la. Mm. |p. M. ! Ci Scotia........| 10 00! 4 § ..Fairbrook....| 10 19, 5 . ...Musser......| 10 26! 5 8 51 Penn. Furnace: 10 33] 5 es Hostler. ... | 10 40, 5 ..Marengo......| 10 46, 5 ....l.oveville. ...| 10 51] 5