Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, December 04, 1896, Image 6

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    Bellefonte, Pa., Dec. 4, 1896.
WOMAN.
Flowers spring to blossom where she walks
The careful ways of duty ;
Our hard, stiff lines of life with her
Are flowing curves of beauty.
Our homes are cheering for her sake,
Our door-yards brighter blooming,
And all about the social air
[s sweeter for her coming.
Unspoken homilies of peace
Her daily life is preaching :
The still refreshment of the dew
Is her unconscious teaching.
And never tenderer hand than hers
Unknits the brow of ailing ;
Her garments to the sick man’s ear
Have music in their trailing,
Her presence lends its warmth and health
To all who come before it,
If woman lost us Eden, such
As she alone restore it.
—John G. Whittier.
The Boers’ President.
The Personal Appearance of Paul Krnger, the
Nominal President and Virtual Dictator of the
Transvaal Republic.
Opposite the five army tents stood a long
low house, all the rooms of which were on
the ground floor. A veranda ran along the
front, and perhaps six feet of shrubbery
separated the stoop from the sidewalk. It
was a typical farmhouse, such as a prosper-
ous Boer farmer would be inclined t¢ build
and was almost concealed by lofty shade
trees. There was no driveway to the front
door, no sign that the house contained any
but an average citizen of Pretoria. But at
the wicket-gate were two soldiers with
rifles, who challenged us as we attempted to
pass. My friend the legislator said who
he was, and that sufficed, for no- further
questions were asked. The front door was
wide open ; we rang no bell, but walked
into the small and rather feebly lighted
hallway, and looked about us in the hope
of attracting the attention of a servant.
But no servant was to be seen, though we
walked through to. the back of the house
and made as diligent a search as the circum-
stances warranted.
Then we returned to the front door. To
the right of the hall was a reception room,
occupied by a few ladies, who were, I pre-
sume calling upon Mrs. Kruger. To the
left was a corresponding room, but the
door was closed. Gruff voices I could dis-
tinctly hear, and my friend said, in a Te-
“lieved voice, ‘‘He’s there ; it’s all right !”’
I thought, ‘“‘On the contrary, it’s all
wrong.”! For I had no mind to intrude
myself upon Paul Kruger when he was
talking gruffly with his fellow-burghers.
I had also just learned. that the liberated
prisoners had come from jail directly to |
Kruger’s house, and there thanked him for |
his clemency. I felt that this must have
been a hard official day for the aged states-
man, and that he was having at that mo-
ment another of the many political tussels
through which he has had to make his way |
in order to rule with effect amongst people |
like himself. :
My law-making friend knocked at the |
door ; a voice bade us come in, and we en-
tered upon such a scene as carried me back
in spirit to the year 1809, when Andreas
Hofer met his fellow-farmers of Tyrol in
the castle of Innshruck. But that was long
ago, when the first Napoleon was making
Jameson raids over every frontier of Eu-
rope, and hefore Africa was dreamed of as
anything but. a wilderness of blacks and
strange animals.
In an arm-chair beside a round table sat
Paul Kruger. The rest of the room was
occupied by as many swarthy burghers as
could find seats. They wore long beards,
and gave to the assembly asolemnity, not to
say sternness, suggestive of a Russian mon-
astery. My friend led me at once through
the circle of councillors, and said a few
words to the I’resident, who rose, shook
hauds with me, and pointed, with a grunt,
to a chair at his side. He then took his
seat and commenced to puff at a huge pipe.
He smoked some moments in silence, and
I watched with interest the strong features
of his remarkable face. I had made up my
mind that I should not say the first word,
for I knew him to be a man given to silence.
He smoked, and I watched him—we
watched one another, in fact. I felt that I
had interrupted a council of state, and that
I was an object of suspicion, if not ill-will,
to the twenty broad shouldered farmers
whose presence I felt, though I saw only
Kruger.
And, indeed, his is a remarkable face
and form. TI have seen him often since,
during church service, on the street, and
in lis office, but that first impression in
his own simple home will outlive
,all the others. I should like to have
known him in the field, dressed in the
fashion of the prairie—a broad brimmed
hat upon his head, a shirt well opened at
the throat, his rifle across his shoulder.
There he would have shown to advantage
in the elements that gave him birth, and
lifted him tobe the arbiter of his country,
if not of all South Africa. Kruger in a
frock-coat high up under his ears, with a
stove-pipe hat unsuited to his head, with
trousers made without reference to shape,
with a theatrical sash across his breast af-
ter the manner of a St. Patrick’s day pa-
rade—all that is the Kruger which fur-
nishes stuff to ungenerous journalists who
find caricature easier than portrait-paint-
ing. That is the Kruger whom some call
ungraceful, if not ugly. But that is not
the real Kruger. Abraham Lincoln was
not an Apollo, yet many have referred to his
face as lighting up into something akin to
beauty. The first impression I received of
Kruger suggested to me a composite por-
trait made up of Abraham Lincoln and
Oliver Cromwell, with a fragment of John
Bright about the eyes. Kruger has the
eyes of a man never weary of watching, yet
watching so steadily and so unobtrusively
that few suspect how keen his gaze can be.
There is something of the slumbering lion
about those great eyes—something fearless,
yet given to repose. Could we think of
Kruger as an animal, it would be some-
thing suggested both by the lion and the
ox. We know him to be a man of passion-
ate act and word when roused, yet out-
wardly he carries an air of undisturbed se-
renity.
His features, like those of most great
men, are of striking size and form, and,
moreover, harmonious. The mouth is
strikingly like that of Benjamin Franklin
in the well-known portrait by Du Plessis.
It is a mouth that appears set by an act of
will and not by natural disposition. It
parts willingly into a smile, and that smile
lights his whole face into an expression
wholly benevolent. All those who know
Kruger have noticed this feature-—-this
bedutifying effect of his cheery smile. The
photographs of him give only his expression
when ready for an official speech—not his
‘over the minds of their
happy mood when chatting with his famil-
iars. = .
His mouth is not so large as might rea-
sonably have been expected from a man so
famed for persistence ; and, after all, this
inclines me to think that the character of
Kruger has been misunderstood, and that
when his life comes to be written we shall
find in his case, as in that of Benjamin
Franklin, that the secret of his success lay
not in blind obstinacy, but in the over-
coming of obstacles which he felt to be
within his powers.
lin each led long lives of public usefulness,
and have made their names memorable by
the personal ascendency- they exercised
fellow-citizens.
Each of these great men had a career of al-
most unbroken success, and owed it largely
to the spirit of conciliation which lurks in
the corner of each one’s mouth. With a
square jaw and a broader mouth Kruger
could not be to-day what he is. One has
but to look Bismarck full in the face to see
there the reason of his sudden loss of influ-
ence.
Massive oval chin, large flat ears, and
strong nose are notable in Kruger. His
head, however, is small in proportion—
neither deep nor high. His shoulders are
rather high, his chest broad and deep ; he
stands full six feet, and has long legs which
help to make us believe the marvels told of
his running powers.—From White Man’s
Africa, by Poutlney Bigelow in Harper's
Magazine for December.
In spite of our civilization, our science,
our religion and our long accumulation of
experience, there is a great deal of the prod-
igal son about collective humanity. We
dissipate the gifts of nature with a lavish
hand and expend the riches which mother
earth has stored up for us with the care-
lessness of children who do not realize their
value. All through Western Pennsyl-
vania, West Virginia, Ohio and Indiana
there is a wail of remorse now over the
magnificient opportunities of wealth that |
were thrown away by the waste of the vast
store of natural gas, the possibilities of
which dawned upon us a few years ago.
‘When it was suddenly realized that for a
few hundred dollars reservoirs of natural
fuel could be tapped, there uprose in the
minds of men who dwelt in the favored re-
gions visions of an industrial supremacy
that could not be disputed for generations.
Here was light, heat and power almost as
free as the air, no region in the world was |
so blessed, and there was apparently nothing |
And these |
hopes and expectations were fully justified, '
to prevent our rolling in gold.
but in a decade recklessness and folly have
done their work and this rich legacy has |
been practicall y th rown away.
But this is only one, and a recent, ex-
ample of the prodigality of which we have
been guilty and for which we are suffering,
for mother earth has given to us many rich
inheritances and fortunately she has still
many in store for us which have scarcely
been touched. We have been rioting and
repenting from the beginning, have dissi-
pated one great legacy after another and |
are keeping at it, have learned little from
our past experience. and acting like the
foolish youth who, whe
inheritance, thinks that the
thousands will never come to an
When we came here the hills and valleys
of the continent were clothed with forests
parental
the worth of which exceeded that of all the |
It was neccessary |
to remove some of them for purposes of |
old mines of all time.
agriculture, but that could have been done
in a manner to leave enough to have sup-
plied the wants of the inhabitants in the
way of lumber forever. Instead of that
it was destroyed with such recklessness
that in our very youth as a nation we find |
ourselves taxing our ingenuity to find sub-
stitutes for wood and facing the time when |
merchantable timber will be practically ex-
tinct.
In the wasting of the timber we have also |
dried up our springs and streams, subject-
and |
ed ourselves to alternate floods
droughts, and have allowed the rich soil to
be washed from the hiilsides to be carried |
down to block the navigation of our rivers
This has diminished the
and harbors.
productive capacity of our lands, reduced
the natural water supply. and in many
parts of the country produced conditions of
aridity closely approaching those of the de-
sert portions of the earth. With the aid of
the most scientific methods and the wisest
laws, a century will not suffice to repair
the injury.
with the growth of population, we might
have taken all the timber that we needed
for domestic use and for export and still
have left convenient for use everywhere, |
forests that would be worth to us directly
thousands of millions.
*
In the same way we have destroyed the |
fish in our rivers and even in the adjacent '
oceans, and are now feebly trying to re-
store these myriads of denizens of the wa-
ter that came to us practically as a free gift.
Ever since the discovery and use of coal,
by reckless methods of mining and extrav-
agant modes of consumption, we have
wasted the larger part of it. Lven now
with all our boasted improvements we get
but an infinitestimal fraction of the energy
or heat of this fuel.
burg is a standing cvidence of wicked
waste. The black smoke is simply uncou-
sumed fuel.
because of imperfect combustion in the fur-
naces or other devices in which it is at-
tempted to convert its heat and energy for
the uses of man. Who that travels
through the country has not been struck
with the wasteful methods of agriculture.
Even in the best farming communities this
this can be seen. In vast regions the at-
tempt has been made to reap quickly from
the richness of the virgin soil without any
regard to the future. This has reduced
the fertility of millions of acres, which,
with proper care,
their original fertility for all time.
examples of our spendthrift methods will
suggest many others, to the reflecting
mind that tend still morestrongly to prove
that we are a nation of prodigals. We are
crying considerably now over some of this
spilt milk, but there are few evidences
that we have profited much by the lessons
that have been impressed upon us in the
school of experience since it is among the
hardest tasks to convince us of the necessity |
Kruger and Frank- |
n he comes into his |
end.
Without interfering in the
least with legitimate agriculture, with |
mining with commerce or manufactures or |
The heavy pall of
smoke that constantly hangs over Pitts-'
It goes out of the chimneys :
would have retained |
These |
~ ——The Republican press has ceased its
Mr. Bryan. The vote
nothing overwhelming about it. The tabu-
lation of the official returns has been com-
pleted and gives McKinley 272 electoral
votes and Mr. Bryan 175. Mr. Bryan has
more votes than any defeated candidate
since the war, except Mr. Blaine. Greeley
had 42, Hancock 155, Blaine 182, Cleve-
land 168 and Harrison 145.
——~Caller— Is your father at home ?
Little Daughter—What is your name,
please ? :
Caller—Just tell him it is his old friend,
Bill. .
Little: Daughter—Then I guess he ain’t
at home. I heard him tell mamma if any
bills came he wasn’t at home.
Do not take any substitute when
you ask for the one true blood purifier,
Hood’s Sarsaparilla. Insist upon Hood’s
and only Hood’s.
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
manent. Reference. Enclose self-addresse
stamped envelope. The National, Star Building,
Chicago. 41-39-4m.
| A LOCAL SMITHY.
LAYS ASIDE HIS HAMMER AND TONGS TO
DISCUSS WHAT TO HIM WAR A XEW
DISCOVERY.
If this discovery was nnearthed by a
blacksmith in Boston, Buffalo or Brad-
ford we would not ask our readers to
believe it but when the mechanic is in
Bellefonte there is no getting away
from the truth. You can find Mr.
Chas. Shearer at 23 Thomas street
where between the rings on his anvil
he will corroborate personally what ix
here made public. Mr. Shearer says :
—“The trouble in my back started
from a strain I received while shoeing
a horse that was rather hard to handle.
| I have taken a number of kidney rem-
edies and have been treated by a phy-
sician who told me my kidneys were
out of gear but he could do nothing
for me. Besides being troubled with
severe backaches the urine was very
dark and I had severe headaches. 1
know they originated from my kid-
neys for since I used Doan's Kidney
Pifls they have stopped. I saw a num-
ber of accounts of remarkable cures
made by the old Quaker remedy and
although I did not know any of the
people I concluded to try them as a
sort of venture. I sent to the Phar-
macy of F. Potts Green for a box and
commenced to use them. Colds used
to affect me. I have contracted one
since 1 ceased usding them and no-
tice no inconvenience. I have also
done a great deal of horse-shoecing
and other heavy work since but my
back has stood the test all right. |
can heartily recommend Doan’s Kid-
ney Pills,
For sale by all dealers—price 50
cents. Mailed by Foster, Milbarn Co.
Buttalo, N. Y., sole agents forthe U, 8,
41-7.
Pure MEDICINE.
i THAT NEVER FAILS TO CURE.
It will cure Croup in three (3) doses,
and is a preventive tor Diphtheriu,
Croup, Ete. Also cures all forms or
Sore Month and Sore Guns,
CAN BE PURCHASED AT
JOHNNIE ROUNDTREES GROCERY RTORE.
Water Street,
BELLEFONTE.
MANUFACTURED BY
DIPHTHERIA MEDICINE COMPANY
z CENTRE HALL, PA.
41-42-3m* |
Castoria.
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Castoriu is Dr. Samuel Pitchers preserip- |
tion for Infants and Children. It contains
neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic,
It
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Paregoric, Drops, Soothing Syrups, and Cas-
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CASTORIA
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Do not be imposed upon, hut insist apon hav-
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CHAS. H. FLETCHER.
cackle over the ‘‘overwhelming’ defeat of |
shows there was |
and drawn by F. Hopkinson Smith.
| 41-47
sheet supplement, ladies find full details, dire
and the public at all hazards. |
THE CENTAUR Co., |
41-15-1m 7 Murray St, N. Y.
Prospectus.
Heras MAGAZINE
iy 18978 |
Frerioy : Tue Martian, the new novel by Du
Maurier, the eagerly expected successor to “Tril-
by" begun in October Number, 1896, with illus-
trations from the author's drawings. A new nov-
el by Frank R. Stockton—developing a Twentieth
Century Renaissance—full of humorous situations
and characteristically illustrated. A Pair or Pa-
TENT 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 McEnery Stuart, Octave Thanct, Mary E,
Wilkins and other popular writers. :
ScieNce : Story of the Progress of Sciehce during
the Nineteenth Century, a series of papers by Dr.
Henry Smith Williams, i ea contribu-
tions on special subjects by expert scientists.
Articles on the relations of curious psychological
manifestations to physiology by Dr. Andrew Wil-
son.
AmericAN Features: Tue Mexico or To-Day, a
series by Charles F. Lummis, splendidly illustrat-
cd—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, wilf command general attention. AMERI-
cAN Historicar Papers by Woodrow Wilson, John
Bach MacMaster, and James Barnes. The true
story of SHERIDAN'S Ripe by Gen. G. A. Forsyth.
Continuation of Howell's PERSONAL REMINISCENCES
of eminent literary Americans,
ArricA AND THE Fast: WHITE MAN'S AFRICA, 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 FASTERN SIBERIA, recently visit-
ed by the author. HuNGARIAN SKETCHES, written
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
paint a picture of the ceremony.
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HARPER & BROTHERS,
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Address
I I ARPER'S WEEKLY
With the end of 1896 HARPER'S WEEKLY will
have lived forty years. In that time it has par-
ticipated with all the zeal and power at its ¢om-
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teresting and important period in the history of |
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What the WEEKLY has been in its spirit and '
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It is impossible to announce with precision all’!
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1897. It were as easy to announce what is about
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Cartoons will continue to be a feature.
Serial Stories. A New England story by Miss
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F. Beason, the author of “Dode,” will follow. A
sequel to “The House-Boat on the Stvx,”” hv Mr.
John Kendrick Bangs, illustrated by Peter Newell,
More Sport Stories will appear in the WEEK-
LY than it has heen possible to publish during |
1896.
DeparTMENTS : Mr.
Letters” have been among the most charming |
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W. D. Howell's ‘Life and |
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Address
41-47
I} ruvens BAZAR
IN 1297
The BAZAR, a thoroughly up-to-date periodical
for women, will enter upon itz Thirticth Volume
in 1897.
As a Fashion journai it is nnsurpassed, and is
an indispensable requisite for every well-dressed
woman. Katharine De Forest writes a weekly
letter ou current fashions from Paris. In New
York Fasutons, and in the fortnightly patter:
tions, and diagrams for gowns, wraps, and chil- ;
dren's clothing. Sandoz, Roude, and Chapuis
draw and engrave the newest and finest Parisian |
designs every week.
The serials for 1897 will be: Tue Rep Brive |
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QuINNALLION, by Octave Thanet. Short stories will |
be constantly presented by brilliant writers, |
among whom are Mary FE. Wilkins, Harriet Pres-
eott Spofford, Marwan Harland, Ruth NcEnery, |
Stuart, Viola Roschoro. and Margaret Sutton |
Briscoe.
Whar Women are Doin: in various parts of the
Union will form a series of special interest.
Other interesting features are The Out-door |
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keeping, “WHAT GIRLS ARE Doing,” “Current Social
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Women axp Mex. Colonel T. W. Hicaixsox will |
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Arr. The Bazar 1s a notable picture. gallery,
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AN ArLt-Rounp Woman's Paper. —What more ap-
propriate gift can be made to wife, daughter or
sister than a subscription to Harper's Bazar? Se-
cure itas a welcome visitor in your household for
1897.
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P.O. Box 959, N. Y. City.
Address
41-47
"
|
{
Ax FOR=
of taking measures to prevent further
waste. We are still inclined to throw
precaution to the winds in the presence of
plenty and, in our haste to participate in
the bounties of nature, to trample under
foot ten times as much as we can conven- |
iently use, so that the legacy which comes |
to one generation and which if used without
waste would last for a century or perhaps
indefinitely, is dissipated, perhaps, in a
few years.
——~Subseriber for the WATCHMAN.
i O——AND—0
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: BURN CROWN ACME
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AND IS ABSOLUTELY SAFE.
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IN 1897. |
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New Advertisements.
All combined in an
J la OUR HAMg BREAKFAST BACON
AND DRIED EF. THEY ARE VERY
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SECHLER & CO.
Saddlery.
gp3000 $5,000 $5,000
WORTH OF——
HARNESS, HARNESS, HARNESS
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and FOR SUMMER, ——
BRIDLES
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FLY-NETS FOR SUMMER,
DUSTERS FOR SUMMER,
WHIPS FOR SUMMER,
immense Stock of Fine
Saddlery.
vee XOW IS THE TIME FOR BARGAINS...
—;
To-day Prices
7
THE LARGEST STOCK OF HORSE
COLLARS IN
JAM
S3-07
THE COUNTY.
ES SCHOFIELD,
Travelers Guide.
| (CENTRAL RAILROAD OF PENNA.
Condensed Time Table.
READ DOWN . Rrap vr.
r i Nov. lah, 1890. Ie
No 1/No aiNo 3 No 6'No 100 2
! i | | 1 |
a, mp. mp. mo Lve, Arp. m.ip. m.jJa. m.
T2017 45/13 35 BELLEFONTE lo 15! 6 10[10 10
7 34 A DT eeeeecn NIE... TT. 02} 5 57] 9 56
7 41 8 05.4 03]..........20000......... 958, 5 51] 9 50
T4608 13) 4 08 HECLA PARK..| 9 51] 5 46, 9 45
748 815 4 100... Dun kles...... 949) 5 44 9 43
7620 8 19) 4 14/...Hublersburg...! 9 45 5 40| 9 39
7 he) 8 23 4 ..Snydertown.....| 9 41] 5 37| 9 35
7 58 8 25} 4 A ittany. ..| 939] 535 933
S00] 827) 4 Huston 9 37) 533] 9 31
8 02) 8 20] 4 Lamar. yD 35| 531920
S04) 8 31] 4 de Clintondale....| 9 33! 5 29] 9 26
8 09] 8 36] 4 31]. Krider's Siding. | 9 28 5 24 9 21
8 16| 8 42f 4 36/...Mackeyville....| 9 23] 5 18] 9 15
8 23 8 481 4 42{...Cedar Spring...| 9 17) 5 12 9 09
8 25 8 50 4 50 .Salona 9 15! 5 11
8 30} 8 55] 4 55) LL HALL... |
930 8 ol Jersey ST 4 30; 755
10 051 10 20{A1T. ¥ wengaryd, » I Live; 4 00] $7 25
$10 20711 Sole } WMSPORY (4) 2% 0
3050 v0... PHILA... ..| 18 35*11 30
[oo Atlantic City
644 ! EW YORK +4 30
1 (Via Tamaqua.
7.251 yaoi... NEW YORK........| 1 $7 3)
{ (Via {
{po ow.w moArr
Phila.) | |
3 Lve.la. m.lp. m.
tWeek Days
110.10 A.
PHILADELPHIA SLEEPIN
| bound train from Williamsport at 11.30 P. M
i West-bound trom Philadelphia at 11.30 P. M.
(
3 26.00 P. M. Sundays.
M. Sunday.
¢ Car attached to East-
, and
J. W. GEPHART.
weneral Superintendent.
EECH CREEK
N.Y.C. & H.R.
RAILROAD.
R. R. Co., Lessee,
Condensed Time Table,
Reap Or. 7 | mEaD
ALL. | Nov, 16¢h, 1896. _EXP.
. 33 No. 30
ale, AM,
1 45{AT Lv,
1 34 .
936! 110 +5 00
I 905 1235 525
| 85 1225 535
[ 849/12 15 5 41
[845 12 31)... 5 46
+ 839) 12 04)... 5 52
I say 1 sel... A 5 b
| 816; 11 4o|Lv...Clearfield Jun 615
i - es - ——————————————— ri — cee—
| 808 11 31f...... .CLEARFIELD. 6 25
| 7% 711 21 Ar...Clearfield June....Ly| $35] 6 39
i 1 . Woodland 6 45! 6 47
oT Bigler. 6 52] 6353
7 Vallaceton.. 6 57| 659
y Morrisdale M 7060 707
7 Munson 715 715
6 55] 10 16|Lv ILIPRBG YS Aft T30] 7
7 a0] 1 onan) PHILIPSBUG Lf) (35) GG
7 18} 10 36/Ar.. Munson. Tin TI
7 12 10 32 Winburne. 722 122
6 48) 10 12 PEALE... .7401 T42
626] 935 sillintown 7 567 801
616) 9 43 SNOW SHO 804; 808
518] 8 48). EECH CREE 8 48 8 57
305 8 3 «-}ill Hall, ' 901] 910
4 58) R 2 LOCK HAVEN. 907 917
4 47 8 15l.......Youngdale...... 916 927
4 35 8 0|JERSEY SHORE JUN 929 940
4 30] 7 55|....J ERSEY SHORE...... 9 3 9 45
+4 00f $7 25|....WILLIAMSPORT.....| 10 05] 10 20
EMlAnly, _Arfa wm irow
r. M. | A. m. |~Phila, & Reading R. R.[ a.m. | 7. wm.
2 40| *6 55/Ar..... W MSPORT......Lv|}10 20/*11 30
18 35/%11 30 PHILA........A¢| 505 710
+430 N.Y. via Tam..Ar| 600]
#7 30|Lv...N. Y. via Phila..Arb7 25| {9 30
AM AM P.M. | A.M.
*Daily. tWeek-days. 26.00 p. M. Sunday. 110-55
A. Mm. Sunday. “b" New York passengers travel-
ing via Philadelphia on 10.20 A, m. train from
Williamsport, will change cars at Columbus Ave.,
Philadelphia.
CoxNEctioNs.—At Will
Ris and Reading R. R
iamsport with Philadel-
. At Jersey Shore with
all Brook Railway. At Mill Hall with Central
Railroad of Pennsylvan
ia. At Philipsburg with
Pennsylvania Railroad and Altoona & Li
Connecting Railroad. At Clearfield with
Rochester & Pittsburg R
Patton with Cambria
Pennsylvania Railroad.
Pennsylvania & North-W
A. G. PALMER,
Superintendent.
: uffalo
ailway. At Mahaffey and
& Clearfield Division of
At Mahaffey with
estern Railroad.
~ F. E. HERRIMAN,
Gen’'l Passenger Agent,
Philadelphia, Pa.
,
BELLV¥ONTE, PA. | ;
Travelers Guide.
ENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD AND
BRANCHES.
Schedule in eftect Nov. 16th, 1896.
! 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.m., at Pittsburg, €.50
p.m.
Leave Bellefonte, 4.44 p. m., urrive 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
{ 6.00 at Harrisburg, at 10.20 p. m.
{
| VIA LOCK HAVEN—NORTHWARD.
|
i
at Tyrone,
Leave Bellefonte, 9.28 a. m., arrive at Lock Haven,
10.30 a. m.
Leave Bellefonte, 1.42 p. mn., 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.
X 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 Belle onte, 2.15 p. m., arrive at Lewisburg,
4.47, at Harrisburg, 7.10 p. m., Philadelphia at
11°15 p. m.
TYRONE AND CLEARFIELD, R. R.
NORTHWARD, SOUTHWARD,
@ ‘ g 5
4] » !
= 3 Z |Nov. 16th, 1896. 8 ng 5
iat) ® i axis
- od | uN ui
1
P. A.M. | A.M. |P.M.
7 8 6 35| 11 20(6 10
7 8 6 29] 11 14(6 04
7 8 .| 11 14{6 02
Y 8: 25| 11 09|5 57
7 8 18] 11 02/5 52
7 8 15| 10 59/5 48
7 54, 8 07| 10 51(5 39
8 01] 9 00] 10 44|5 32
8 06 9 54! 10 38/5 25
8 08 9 51] 10 355 21
8 09] 4 49| 10 33/5 19
8 17 9 21 39; 10 235 08
weal 4 TH. 9 28)..0800018 JUNC... 00reree]osreenee-)D OF
821 416, 93... Boynton......| 5 35 10 19|5 01
8 25| 4 19 9 35.......Steiners.. ... 5 31| 10 15/4 57
8 26) 4 23 9 420. Philipsburg...| 5 30| 10 14/4 56
8 31 4 28] 9 47|.....Graham 5 26] 10 09/4 51
836] 433 9 5 21 10 04/4 46
8420 439 9 i 516] 9 584 39
847) 444 10 ig | 511] 95343:
8 531 4 50/ 10 10|....Woodland...., 5 06] 9 47/4 27
8 56| 4 53; 10 13]... Mineral Sp...| 505 9 444 24
900 4 57) 10 17]... ...Barreti...... 501 9 40/4 20
905 302 10 22... Leonard..... 4 56) 9 354 15
9.09 506 10 28/.. Clearfield.....| 4 52 9 31/4 09
9 14) 5 11! 10 34}. Riverview...| 4 58] 9 26/4 03
9200 517 10 41. .Sus. Bridge...| 4 43] 9 20/3 56
9 25 5 22 10 46]..Curwensville..| 4 39] 9 153 51
Lo ustie, tlie BI AD
7 jo 3 21
.i 11 06!....Grampian.. 21
P.M. | A.M. AY 5 P.M.
BALD EAGLE VALLEY BRANCH.
| WESTWARD, EASTWARD.
lal 20 ME
: I = # Nov. 16th, 1800. = 8 o
| = = Boi V2 1 5 {=
: » Mom
| w ad | | & | uw
P.M.i P.M. | A.M. ATT. Lv. a mM. P.M. Pu.
600] 215] 11 10......Tyrone......| "8 10] 12 30l7 15
0! 11 (4 ..East Tyrone...| 8 16] 12 36/7 21
H | SiN M........Vail.,......| 820 12 40;7 25
10 56 ... Bald Eagle....| 8 24| 12 44{7 29
10 49 Dix.........| 8 30] 12 50|7 35
8 33| 12 52{7 38
8 35] 12 54/7 40
8 421 1 00|7 47.
8 49| 1 06/7 54
8 58) 1 14(8 03
907] 123812
9 15 1 308 20
918; 1338 23
9 28] 1 42(8 31
9 41] 1 55(8 43
9 49! 2 048 51
9 53; 2 08:8 55
9 59] 2 Mo 01
{ 10 08] 2 23|9 10
9 12\..Beech Creek...| 10 11| 2 26/9 13
901... Mill Hall......| 10 22! 2 37]9 24
& 590...Flemington...| 10 24] 2 39/¢ 26
3 45 12 10 8 53|...Lock Haven.| 10 30| 2 439 30
P.M.| P. M. ia M. {Lv. Arr. A.M. |p. ML [PML
LEWISBURG & TYRONE RAILROAD.
EASTWARD. Nov. 16th, 1896. WESTWARD.
MAIL. | EXP. { MAIL.| EXP.
.. STATIONS,
A.M. Ly. Arla. Mm |p oN.
30 Bellefonte.. 900 415
: Axemann.. 8 65] 410
6 38 easant Gap. 8 52| 407
6 41) Per. 847 403
6 47 ..Dale Summit 8 42 3&8
6 52 ...Lemont.... 837 343
6 561 833 348
7 on 8 28) 3 44
25 707 8 21] 337
3 7 13 815] 331
g 7 20} 807, 32
317 To so an
{ 325 7 a6; 752 308
| 332 TH T4 302
} 338 7500 738) 256
| 341 7 54 734] 25
349; 8 03’ 724 245
| am 8 67] 719 241
! a5y 815) 712 234
| 407 825 702 22
it 415 833 653] 218
| 4170 835 ; 650 216
ji 499 840 ..Barber.... 6.45 212
421 S47 MifHlinburg. 6 38) 207
i 435 856) Vicksburg 6 291 158
| 439 901 Biehl... 624) 153
| 447 915 .Lewishurg 615 145
i 455 92 .... Montwndon..........!| 540, 31 38
| P.M. | A.M. Ar. Lv.) a.m | pom.
LEWISBURG & TYRONE RAILROAT.
EASTWARD. UPPER END. WESTWARD.
% Nov. 16th, 1896. ¥ | X
ws I de
- -
~
| of
268i... Dungarvin...
tA ERR ELTA RDD
18: Warrior's Mark) 11 10} 520 eer..
09}...Pennington...| 11 20} 6 01]......
b Stover.......; 111320 6 19.....
11 40; 6 20|.
rlawlr mn
BELLEFONTE & SNOW SHOE BRANCH.
Time Table in effect on and after
Nov. 1€th, 1806.
Leave Snow Shoe,..........11 20 a. m, und 3 15 p. m.
Arrive in Bellefonte........ 1 42 pom * 520p. m.
Leave Bellefonte... »T000.m * 1053p m.
Arrive in Snow Shoe 900a.m, ‘ 252 p.m.
BELLEFONTE CENTRAL RAIL-
. - ROAD.
Schedule to take effect Monday, Nov. 16th, 1896.
WESTWARD | FASTWARD
read down | read up
NN. 3'$No y Stations. ino. 2lfNo. 4|TNO
— |
P.M.| A. M. | A.M. |Lv. Ar, A. al po ML [PML
4 20] 10 30! 6 30....Bellefonte....! 8 45; 2 10(6 40
4 26| 10 37 37|..... Coleville......| 8 40! 2 00{6 30
4 30) 10 42! 6 40...... Morris.......; 837 1 556 25
4 33] 10 47/ Whitmer. 835 147/620
4 38] 10 53 nter’s Par. 831] 140615
4 41 10 56 8 28) 1 366 12
4 45) 11 02 8 24; 1 30(6 07
4 48] 11 05 8 20 1 256 03
4 50| 11 08 8 18] 1 226 00
500 11 20} 7 17(...Krumrine.....| 8 07| 1 07/6 46
TE ToT Te To ToT
5 03) 11 35| 7 25|.State_College.| 8 00| 1 005 40
ETO TT 28) 7 28) SITUD CE | 7 47 1 04,5 30
5 17| | 7 34/..Bloomsdorf...| 7 40 5 23
5 20; | 7 37|Pine Grove Cro.! 7 37 5 20
Morning trains from Montandon, Lewisburg,
Williamsport, Lock Haven and Tyrone connect
with train No. 3 for State College. Afternoon trains
from Montandon, Lewisburg, Tyrone and No. 53
from Lock Haven connect with train No. 5
for State College. Trains from State College con-
nect with Penn’a R. R. trains at Bellefonte.
+ Daily, except Sunday. F. H.. THOMAS Supt.,