ARAN SET RA —— TF PR Ir TTI oy EE NTA py one SE TROT eT Tr 4 | | w . court. Bema Wn Belle onte, Pa., Jan. 22, 1897. About Rosa Bonheur. Scarcely a woman artist of time is of quite so much interest as the French woman, Rosa Boheur, both for her success in art and her peculiarities. She was born in Bordeaux and her father was a drawing teacher. She was a contrary child refusing to study and roaming at will over the fields and through the woods. At 4 she was pos- sessed of a passion for drawing and as high as she could reach the whitewashed walls were covered with crude drawings. Her father moved to Paris when Rosa was very young and their first apartments were above a bathing establishment. There was a school for boys in the building and Rosa attended it with her two little brothers, not at all abashed at there being no other girls to play with. After 1830 times were hard with the Bonheur family and Rosa’s father was out of work. When her mother died an aunt took charge of her, but Rosa pined for her father and he finally took her back. She was apprenticed to a dressmaker, but did not like the, work and would steal away to assist the dressmaker’s husband, who man- ufactured percussion caps. Rosa did not stay long here and as her father was too busy with his studies to look after her she occupied herself in coloring views for the Brissons, friends who painted heraldic de- vices, kaleidoscodic views, ete. Mme. Bonheur says now that she never thinks of her poor little earnings at that time with- out emotion. Then her father sent her to boarding school, where she upset affairs with her rough, boyish ways and was sent away in despatr. She went back to her father’s house, where a room was fitted up as a sort of studio and she amused herself there while he was running about Paris giving drawing lessons. One day he came back and found her at work on her first oil painting from naturc—a bunch of cherries. “That’s fine,”’ said the surprised parent. ‘In fu- ture you must work earnestly.” Affairs grew brighter after that ; some titled pa- trons were, found, and the studio became the rendezvous for a clever company. When Roza Bonheur began to paint in the Louvre she was called the little Huzzar on account of her costume and independent ways. However, the copies she made sold rapidly and the students ceased to laugh at her. She went to the country and became fascinated with the individuality of ani- mals made some studies and received a medal for a salon picture. The studio where Rosa and her father worked was a strange medley of disorder, and the father himself was eccentric. When he received ege, beaten until it is very light and thick. Secure freshly roasted peanuts, shell them and chop very fine. Stir money he would take a handful and toss it among the bewildering accumulation of | stuff in the room. When the day came | that there was no money in the house they | would search the heap and would always | find a dollar or so to live on. Resolved to succeed in her line Rosa Bonheur worked Lard and even frequented the slaughter house of the Roule. Her presence surpised the rough men there and they were dispesed to make things uncom- fortable for her. About this time a drug- gist asked her hand in marriage, but as she naively says : ‘The drug store had no at- tractions for me and so I refused him.”’ She took a studio of her own and worked harder than ever. She hecame engaged upon her famous painting, ‘The Horse Fair,”” and to facil- itate her work adopted masculine attire, securing the permission of the prefect of police. Her appearance, she says, was very boyish. When her ‘Horse Fair”? was exhibited and sold for $8,000 she says she felt like a millionaire. It finally sold for 860,000. She visited Scotland and was charmed with the country. In 1%5% Rosa Bonheur bought the es- tate of By, where she lives to-day. It is in the heart of the forest of IFountaine- bleau, and she paid $10,000 for it, build- | ing her own studio There she has since | lived happily, removed from the world and surrounded by her beloved animals. In 1865 she was busy painting when her maid | | | | rushed in crying, ‘Mademoiselle! The empress | The empress is coming I” The artist just had time to throw a skirt on over her woolen trousers and exchange her long blue blouse for a velvet jacket, when the empress’entered, bearing the decora- tion of the Legion of Honor, which she be- stowed on the artist, who was afterward invited to breakfast at Fountainebleau, where she was most kindly treated by the At present Mme. Bonheur lives very simply, getting up with the dawn and go- ing to bed at dark. She walks or drives, paints, smokes cigarettes and reads. Her favorite books are the Bible and works on hunting, history and travel. Before she commences a picture she studies the sub- ject exhaustively, prefacing this with con- scientitious studies from nature, looking for the exact sky and surroundings which will suit her subject. Not till she has found them does she touch a brush to her canvas. The Indian Famine. Out of a population of 2,000,000 in the district of Jabalpur, in India, 90,000 are said to have perished from famine, and ru- mors of revolt against the government are rife. It is probable India will always have the recurrence of famine. The climate is such that the country from time to time is subject to terrible destroying droughts, during which crops and cattle alike perish. The failure of food follows, and death reaps a wide harvest. But the climate is not alone in the responsibility for the failure of the crops and the consequent suffering. The peculiar religious doctrines of the peo- ple make long pilgrimages popular, and everything is neglected by little armies of the faithful, who waste their time and their accumulated means to visit some religious spot. The veneration with which many things are regarded prevents the introduc- tion of sanitary measures, which could be remedied, prevail in many parts of India, inviting epidemic and aiding famine. The British government is doing what it can to construct irrigating canals, establish better systems of cultivation, and better hygienic practices, but the innovations in a country where religion and caste prejudices are so inflexible are received largely with distrust and with opposition. If revolt | shall follow the famine, the Lorror will on- ly be increased by the bloodshed -to ensue, | to say nothing of the evil results of the neg- | lect of crops that need every encourage- ment in this extremity. The British can- | not make favorable weather, but they | could ameliorate the condition of the un- | fortunates if British advice and inethods were more closely followed.—Pittsburg | Times. ——Look out for colds at this season. Keep yourself well and strong by taking Hood’s Sarsaparilla, the great tonic and blood purifier. | appearatico, Made of Peanuts. Many Palatable Things Nutritious and Dainty.— Soups, Sandwiches and Desserts That Can Be Constructed with the Simple Groundnut as Foundation—The Doctors Have Indorsed the Peanut. The nutritious and extremely palatable peanut, which has been a decidedly popular feature of the country circus and the country fair for so many years, is now re- ceiving an honored place among the nut family, regardless of the fact that it is dug from the ground like the potato instead of being gathered from a tree. Doctors have found that the peanut is ‘‘an article of food rich in albumen, of which it contains 50 per cent, with 10 per cent of fat and nitrogenous extractive matters.” And these little ground nuts, as they were form- erly called, are recommended as a valuable article of food, in the form of soups, pur- ees and mush. The Chinese koil peanuts and roll them fine, mold them into a dough and bake. The contriving housewife has already dis- covered that peanuts can be used to great advantage in many ways, of which here are a few : Finely chopped peanuts eaten in mitk in place of the rolled mush so much used, make a dish very higly thought of, and one very acceptable for the belated shopper or to be eaten at bedtime when a light lun- cheon is required. Peanuts rolled fine and added to the bread stuffing for ducks greatly improve it. There are several ways of using peanuts for sandwiches. One way is to roll the meats very fine and stir them thickly in mayonnaise dressing and spread between thin slices of bread. Another method is to roll or pound the shelled or skinned pea- nuts and spread them thickly upon thin slices of buttered bread. Sprinkle lightly with salt before putting the slices together. Still another filling is made by salting the powdered nut meats and mixing them with enough Philadelphia cream cheese to hold them together. Spread this on squares of thin bread or crackers. These sandwiches are particularly nice to serve with lettuce salad. A peanut paste served on bread is made thus: For an ¢gg beat a tablespoonful of butter to a cream and into it stir a table- spoonful of sugar and the yolk of an chopped nuts with the other ingredients un- til you have a thick paste that will spread. Slice bread into very thin slices and cut. them into some fancy form, such as rounds California. Personally-Conducted Tour via Pennsylvania Raii- road. At 8:13 A.M. Wednesday, January 27th, a special train of Pullman composite, din- ing, sleeping, compartment, and observa- tiop cars will leave the handsome Jersey | City depot.of the Pennsylvania railroad, bound for San Diego, California, and con- | veying the first of the Pennsylvania rail- road company’s personally-conducted tours to the Pacific coast. : This train will be the finest that ever. crossed the continent, and the tour it carries ; is one of the most elaborate and complete ever conceived for trans-continental and pleasure travel. In charge of an affable and experienced tourist agent, asssisted by a highly-accomplished chaperon, this party, without fear of missing train connections, and without any of these petty annoyances incident to individual traveling, crosses the American continent with as much comfort and ease as it would spend a week at the Waldorf, stopping, too, at St. Louis, Kan- sas City, Las Vegas Hot Springs and Santa Fe, and visiting their principal points of interest. A bath room, barber shop, and an upright piano will be found on the train, and every other convenience and luxury of a first class hostlery. The great object of this touris to escape the insalubrious climate of the East and to sojourn for a time amid the transcendent beauties of California, breathe its invigora- ting air and bask beneath its matchless sky. A grander attraction could not he offered, nor a more perfect method of reach- ing it. , Five weeks will be allowed in this ‘‘Par- adise of the Pacific, during which tourists will visit Los Angeles, Passadena, ‘‘Ye Al- pine Tavern,’’ Santa Barbara, San Bernar- dino, Mt. Hamilton, and the garden spot of the earth, Del Monte. Returning, tourists will stop at Salt Lake City, Glenwood Springs, Colorado Springs Manitou, Denver and Chicago. Two days will be spent visiting the famous and sub- lime freaks of nature in the Manitou re- Fgion. Tickets for this tour, including railroad transportation, Pullman accommodations (one double berth), meals en route, car- riage drives, and hotel accommodations go- ing and returning, and transportation in California, will besold at rate@f $310.00 from all stations on the Pennsylvania rail- road system east of Pittsburg. Apply to ticket agents, tourist agent at 1196 Broadway, New York, or Geo. W. Boyd. assistant general passenger agent, Broad street station, Philadelphia. triangles or diamonds, and spread them thickly with the nut paste. Beat the white of the egg very stiff, and add to it a. tea- spoonful of powdered sugar. Pile this mer- ingue upon the spread bread and scatter a few finely chopped peanuts over the top. | Heat a shovel, fillit with hot coals and hold | it over the meringues long enough to very | lightly color them. These sweet sandwich- | es are nice to serve with chocolate or cof- | fee in the cvening. They may also be | served for a dessert. In this case a little | | bit of currant jelly or a preserved cherry | put into the centre of each piece adds to its i : | Peanut meringue shells are nice to serve | with plain ice cream. Beat the whites of | four eggs very light and stir in three quar- ters of a pound of powdered sugar, a table- spoonful of flour and a cup of finely chopped peanuts. Drop the mixture hy spoonful upon buttered papers and bake in a rather cool oven. Place a shell on each side of a large spoonful of ice cream and put a 1i¥tle whipped cream over the top in serving. Another dessert is peanut croquettes. | Put a gill of milk and half a pint of bread crumbs in a sancepan and stir over the tire until there is a smooth mass. Add half a cup of finely chopped peanuts which have | had a tablespoonfal of sherry poured over | them. Stir in the well beaten yolks of 2 eggs and remove from the fire at once. | When the mixture becomes cold, form it | into balls and roll them in ege and cracker | dust. Fry them a delicate brown in hot | lard. Drain on brown paper at the mouth | of the oven so they will keep hot, and serve them with a caramel sauce. For salted peanuts, shell and skin the peanuts and to a cup of nuts stir in a table- | spoonful of melted butter or oil and a ta- | blespoonful of salt. Let them stand one | hour ; then drain and place them on a | bright pan and put in a moderate oven. | Cook until they are a nice brown, stirring | them frequently so that they will brown evenly. | Peanut soup is made like a dried pea | soup. Soak 14 pints of nut meats over- night in 2 quarts of water. In the morn- ing add three quarts of water, a bay leaf, a stalk of celery, a blade of mace and a slice of onion. Boil this slowly for four or five hours, stirring frequently to prevent burn- ing. Rub through a sieve and return to the fire. When again hot, add a cup of cream. Let the soup boil up once, and it is ready to serve. Serve croutons of bread with this soup. To make asalad with peanuts soak a cup of the nut meats in olive oil, drain them and mix with two cups of finely cut celery and a dozen pitted olives. Mix them with a mayonnaise dressing and serve on lettuce leaves. This is a nice salad to serve with duck. To make peanut jumbles weigh a scant half pound of butter, add a half pound of powdered sugar and stir them to a cream. Add two beaten eggs and a little nutmeg. Take one cup of finely rolled peanuts and stir them in with three quarters of a pound of flour. Break off pieces of the dough and roll them in sugar on the molding board | with the hand and form themTinto rings on a buttered pan, leaving a space between them to spread. Put 4 half peanuts on each ring and bake them in a moderate oven to a very delicate brown. Peanut wafers are delicious. To make them stir to a cream half a cup of butter and a cup of sugar. Dissolve a scant half | teaspoonful of soda in half a cup of milk and add it to the creamed mixture, and then stir in 2 cups of flour and beat the mixture vigorously. Turn a baking pan upside down, wipe it very clean, butter it and spread the, wafer mixture over it, us- | ing a knife to make the mixture smooth | and quite thin. Sprinkle the top thickly with finely rolled peanuts and bake the wafers in a moderate oven until browned. As soon as the tin is taken from the oven cut the cake into squares and place them on a molding board to cool. Put these wa- fers into a tin box to keep crisp.—New York Sun. | | ‘Merely a Hint. He—“Nature abhors a vacuum.” She—‘“Yes, bit hature probably never sat up all night hoping, every time she yawned, that he would take the hint.”’ Then he grabbed his hat and went. No Earthly Use. no friends ?”’ Beggar (sobbing )—‘‘No leddy ; I hain’t | got nuthin’ but relatives. 42-1-3t Reduced Rates to Washington on Ac- count of the Inauguration via Penn- sylvania Railroad. For the benefit of those who desire to | i | i | | | | | | | | ! attend the ceremonies incident to the in- | auguration of President-clect McKinley, | the Pennsylvania railroad company will : sell excursion tickets to Washington March 1st, 2nd, 3rd and 4th, valid to return from March 4th to 8th, at the following rates : From: Pittsburg, $10.00; Altoona, $9.80 ;' Harrisburg, $5.06, and from all other sta- tions on the Pennsylvania system at 1e- duced rates. This inauguration will be a most inter- esting event, and will undoubtedly attract a large number of people from every scc- tion of the country. The magnificent facilities of the Penn- sylvania railroa.{ make this line the fa- | vorite route to the national capital at all times, and its enormous equipment and i splendid terminal advantages at Washing- ton make it especially popular on such oc- casions. 42-1-8¢. ——The eremation of sixteen, inmates of an orphan asylum in Texas, early Satur- day morning, when the institution in which they were cared for was destroyed by fire, is another fearful and,impressive warning. Doubtless the managers of the institution did all that was in their power to save their charges after the fire was discovered, and they did save more than 200, but it is evident the house was a tinder box and the means of escape inadequate to the occa- sion. The expediency of keeping large bodies of children in an institution were tragedies of this sort are always possible is very doubtful. There is no excuse for the institution unless the effort to find homes for humanity’s waifs and strays fails. ‘Tourists. Letters from Farmers. In South and North Dakota, relating their own personal experience in those states, have been published in pamphlet form by the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul railway, and as these letters are extremely interesting, and the pamphlet is finely illustrated, one copy wiil be gent to any ad- dress, on receipt of a two-cent postage stamp. Ap- ply to John R. Pott, District Passenger Agent, 486 William Street, Williamsport Pa. 42-1-3t Pennsylvania I Railroad Company. Personally Conducted Tours—Matchless Feature. in Every CALIFORNIA. Three toursto CALIFORNIA and the PACIFIC COAST will leave Harrisburg, Altoona, and Pitts- burg January 27, February 24, and March 27, 1897. Five weeks in California on the first tour, and Tourists. four weeks on the second. Passengers on the third tour may return on regular trains within nine months. Stop will be made at New Orleans for Mardi-Gras festivities on the second tour. Rates from all points on the Penna. R. R. Sys- tem; First tour, $310.00; second tour, $350.00; third tour, $210,00. From Pittsburg, $5.00 less for ' each tour. FLORIDA. Jacksonville tours, allowing two weeks in Flori- da, will leave New York and Philadelphia January 26, February 9 and 23, and March 9, 1897. Rate, covering expenses en route in both directions, $53.00 from Pittsburg, and proportionate rates from other points. For detailed itineraries and other information, apply at ticket agencies, or address Thos. E. Watt, Pass. agent western district, 360 Fifth Ave- nue, Pittsburg, Pa. 41-48-3m The Crop Outlook in South Dakota for 1897. It requires but a small amount of rain-fall in South Dakota to mature the crop. During 1896 South Dakota had, up to September 30th, three and seven-tenth inches more of rain-fall than for any of the previous sixteen years. Since Septem- ber 30th .there has been added at least three or four inches to the excess, making a gain of near- ly eight inches more than the average. Early in November there were heavy rains, depositing over two inches, and since then there have been heavy snows, and about a foot of snow covered the ground on November 25th. Dakota farmers have abundance of hay and great supplies of oats, barley and corn. Wheat has advanced about sev- enty cents a bushel in local market, and prospects for further advance are good. The ground will come out in the spring better soaked than ever before. The prospect for better prices next year is good. There are thousands of people in the east who could do no better than go to South Da- kota now and buy their seed and feed for next year, and move out in the spring. First-class farming land in South Dakota, along the lines of Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul railway, can now be bought at from £10 to §15 an acre. The cream- ery industay and stock-raising in South Dakota will greatly increase during 1897. For further in- formation address W. E. Powell, General immi- gration agent, 410 Old Colony building, Chicago, or H. I. Hunter, immigration agent for South Da- kota, 205 Dearborn street, Chicago, I11. 41-48-2t. New Advertisements. oJ 2 RINE TALKS. EVERYBODY KNOWS HIM. EVERY- BODY BELIEVES HIM IN BELLE- FONTE. As you lean back in your chair with your feet on the fender and peruse your evening paper, you must be amazed at the columns devoted to advertising patent medicines, the schemos®@niployed to bring the reme- dies before the readers notice and the ingenuity displayed in wording testi- monials =o as to make them conform to the advertised claims. The tongue runs glibly over half a column of intro- ductory matter and then as a rule, winds np with the gist of some testi- monial received from a sufferer of some malady. Read them carefully and notice this. Chicago and St. Louis examples do duty in New York. Cali- fornia residents flit before Maine citi- zens in regular succession like the connected scenes in a Panorama, Is it not hard to indorse an act perform- ed in some far away hamlet even if em- bellished with all the adjectives that the Anglo-Saxon language can fur- nish. Reverse the case and read the testimony of Mr. %, Rhine of 2nd Thompson St. The impression left is convincing, conclusive. Says he :— “My trouble in the back started from a slight strain. It developed into a urinary ditticulty, the most marked being an excessive desire to urinate, particularly at night. My back hurt to stoop, to straighten up and if I made any awkward or unthought of move. I always got a reminder in the shape of a sharp, piercing twinge. I got a box of Doan’s Kidney Pills for it at Green's Pharmacy. They cured me. Iam pleased at the result, for one year of it isas long as any man cares to stand of Kidney complaint.” Doan’s Kidney Pills for sale by all dealers, price 50 cents per box. Mail- ed by Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y., sole agents for the United States. 41-7 Ov Oat-meal and flakes are always fresh and sound, you can depend on them. SECHLER & CO. INuminating Oil. I= | Two Weeks in Florida. To see Florida is a pleasure ; to visit it is a vprivelege; but to spend a fort- night within its borders is an epoch. There is a great satisfaction in wit- nessing the ripening of tropical fruits in their own native land, and a peculiar joy in wrestling with old ocean’s waves when lakes and rivers at home are all icebound. One appreciates the wonders of modern in- vention and railroad development upon leaving the neighborhood of good skating one day and finding himself in the vicinity of good bathing the next. Yet this dan be done, and the man who prefers hunting or fishing will will take his accoutrements along with him, for Florida extends a cor- dial invitation to all sportsmen. Whoever would exchange for two weeks the uncertain climate of the North for the delightful and Spring-like sunshine of Florida should take the personally-conduc- ted Jacksonville tour of the Pennsylvania railroad which leaves New York by special train January 26th. Excursion tickets for this tour, including railway transportation, Pullman accommodations (one berth), and meals en route in both directions while traveling on the special train, will be sold at the following rates : New York, $50.00 ; Philadelphia, $48.00, and at proportionate rates from other points. For tickets, itineraries, and other infor- mation apply to ticket agent at 1196 Broad- way, New York, or to Geo. W. Boyd, assis- tant general passenger agent, Broad street station, Philadelphia. 42-1-3¢ ——1It looks very much as if Major Mec- Kinley in taking John Sherman out of the senate to make room for Mark Hanna has precipitated a bitter conflict in his own state, which may land Hanna high and dry. He is about the most objectionable personality in the Republican party to-day, because his reputation and political methods rest solely on hoodle and arrogance. Gov- ernor Bushnell, instead of appointing Hanna to the Sherman vacancy, will call an extra session of the legislature and be himself a candidate. As the legislature is a Foraker institution; body and breeches, both McKinley and Hanna will have to come down handsomely and arrange other mortgages, or the Cleveland boodler will never sit among the conscript fathers. We believe it was President Cleveland who ob- served that a mortgaged president must necessarily have rough sledding.— Post. New Advertisements. Tv 8, PAILS, WASH RUBBERS, BROOMS, BRUSHES, BASKETS. SECHLER & CO. Saddlery. 5.000 $5,000 $5,000 ——WORTH OF—— HARNESS, HARNESS, HARNESS SADDLES, BRIDLES, PLAIN HARNESS, FINE HARNESS, RLANKETS, WHIPS, Ete. All combined in an immense Stock of Fine Saddlery. have Dropped { To-day Prices } THE LARGEST STOCK OF HORSE COLLARS IN THE COUNTY. JAMES SCHOFIELD, 33-37 BELLVONTE, PA. o——AND 0 {BURN CROWN ACME OIL}. 0——GIVES THE BEST LIGHT IN THE WORLD.——0 39-37-1y AND IS ABSOLUTELY SAFE. For Saie by The Atlantic Refining Company. He W. J. BRYAN’S BOOK. All who are interested in furthering the sale of respond immediately with the publishers. An Account of his campaign tour Prospectus. HON. W. J. BRYAN'S NEW BOOK should cor- The work will contain His biography, written by his wife. His most important speeches. The results of the campaign of 1896. A review of the political situation. Mr. Bryan has announced his intention of devoting one-half of all royalties to furthering the Mrs. Wellment—‘‘Poor fellow ! have you | cause of bimetallism. There are already indications of an enormous sale. Address | W. B. CONKEY COMPANY, Publishers, 41-51-1t 541-551 Dearborn Berens CHICAGO, i ‘Travelers Guide. {caTEAL RAILROAD OF PENNA. Condensed Time Table. Travelers Guide. ENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD AND BRANCHES, Schedule in eftect Nov. 16th, 1896. VIA TYRONE—WESTWARD. Leave Bellefonte, 9.53 a. m., arrive at Tyrone EL a. m., at Altoona, 1.00 p. m., at Pittsburg, .05 p. m. Leave Bellefonte 1.05 p. m., arrive at Tyrone, 2.15 p. m., at Altoona, 2.55 p. m., at Pittsburg, 6.50 p.m. Leave Bellefonte, 4.44 p. m., arrive 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. m., 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. Leaye 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 Ir m., Harrisburg, 7.10 p. m., Philadelphia 15p. 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, 2.22 a. m., arrive at Philadelphia at 6.52 a. m. ; VIA LEWISBURG. Leave Bellefonte, at 6.20 a. m., arrive at Lewis- urg, 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, Ih at Harrisburg, 7.10 p. m., Philadelphia at RONE AND CLEARFIE ID RR NORTHWARD, | SOUTHWARD, @ w { @ on “ & ol Le I] 2 n 5 [Nov. loth, 1806. 5 | 23 Ee Hl AEl = F{=E:3 wd ul | | ® = | BM. P.M. [A.M [Luv Ar.ja. M [a.m |P.3. R20, 315 820... Pyrone...... 6 35) 11 20,6 10 792 391 8 2). Tyrone....| 629 11 14/6 04 7 28; 323 6 02 731 32 05 57 T 411 336 215 52 745 340 5 48 754 349 539 8 01 355 5 32 8 06 3 59 5 25 8 08 401 55 21 809 402 519 8 171 4 08 5 08 411 sceola June.. 5 04 4 16 Boynton... 5 3 5 01 4 19] Steiners.. ...| 5 31! 10 15/4 57 4 23 hilipsburg... 5 30] 10 14{4 56 8 4 28 .Graham...... 5 26) 10 0914 51 8: 4 33 Blue Ball... 5 21] 10 04(4 46 8 439] ¢ .Wallaceton ...| 5 16] 9 58/4 39 8 4 44 10 04 .......Bigler ...... 511 9 53/4 33 8 j 4 50) 10 101... Woodland..... 5 06] 9 47/4 2T 8! 4 53 10 . Mineral Sp...| 505 9 44/4 24 9 4 57 10 .. Barrett 9 40/4 20 905 592 102 .Leonard 9 354 15 9.00] 506 10 281... 9 31/14 09 914 511 1934s... 9 26/4 03 9200 517] 10 41]... 9 20:3 56 9 25 3 22! 10 46! 9 153 51 ; 10 52 13 35 , 11 02 i3 ay . '11 06!....Grampian '3 91 I . | AW, AY, BALD EAGLE VALLEY BRANCI WESTWARD. 1. EASTWARD. | w 8 S o | & = < |= 2 20 FI 8 EF Rial t E 2 1z w IA] joo gd P.M. | | A.M A. M. | P.M. P.M. 6 3 11 10 8 101 12 30/7 15 5 0 11 04 8 16) 12 36[7 21 5 5] 11 00. 8 20f 12 40/7 25 5 4 10 56 8 24 12 44/7 29 5 .| 10 49 3 ..| 8 30{ 12.507 35 5 10 46 .......Fowler......]. 8 33] 12 52|7 38 5 31 1048 ..... Hannah...... 8 35] 12 54/7 40 5 5] 10 36 ..Port Matilda... 8 42] 1 00|7 47 3: 10/28... Martha......| 849] 1 06/7 54 5 1 10 2 858 1148 03 5 0: 23) 10 11]....Unionville 907) 123iS12 4 16/ 10 04:Snow Shoé Int.| 9 15] 1 30/8 20 45 | 10 01]... Milesburg.. ...| ¢ 1338923 4 4 ( ; 1 42(8 31 4 3 1.558 43 42 2 04/8 51 4 2 088 Hd 41 Howard.. 2 14/9 01 4 Eagleville 2 23i9 10 4 Beech Creeks... 2 2619 13 3 2 37/9 24 3 lemington... 2 3919 26 3 Lock Haven..| 10 ) 2 43/9 30 P. WwW, Arr , In, BURG & TYRONE RAILROAD. EASTWARD. Nov. 16th, 1896. WESTWARD. MAIL. | EXP. | | MAIL| EXP. —_— STATIONS: | me P.M !a wm Ly Ar. A. M 2 150 6 30] Bellefonte 2 63: AXxemann. 2 6 38 Pleasant Gap. 2 6 41 LT 2 3 6 Dale Summit. ye 6 ..Lemont... ..0ak Hall. ..Linden Hall. Grogs... ..Centre Hu Penn's Cave. digi i 1 wit > t Kh ww Ingleby... Paddy Mountain. ..Cherry Run.. 3 2 3 sindale.. 19) 241 3 5b 12) 2 34 4 02! 225 4 53 218 4 50! 2 16 4 45 212 4 38] 207 43 20; 158 4 624i 153 4 47 615 145 4 55 540 133 P.M, Yv ia. MPN, LEWISBURG & TYRONE RAILROAD. EASTWARD. UPPER END. WESTWARD. 9 i Q Q LL ® » x i 141 | = A. M. |Ar. 9 20.. 9 0 8 57 | 8 51|Penn. Furnace 8 45!......Hostler..... 8 39/... .Marengo...... 8 35|....Loverville. ... eveis 3 38) 8 29|.Furnace Road. Toren 3 31 8 26/....Dungarvin... 3 23| 8 18 Warrior's Mark 3 14] 8 (9)...Pennington... 3 031 7 58....... Stover....... iron 2 55 7 50]..... Tyrone...... P. M. | A. nm. |Lve. BELLEFONTE & SNOW SHOE BRANCH. Time Table in effect on and after Nov. 16th, 1896. READ pDOowN | Reap we 9% TT | Nov. ath, 1806. | Ty Lonvs Snow Basel] 20 a. m. and 3 15 p. m. v erin No 6/N rrive in Bellefonte ~-142p.m, * 5p. m. No 1}No 5No 3 Ra 580 N02 | Lonve Bellefonte orm 7 00 me ** 3 oo > m. y Arrive in Snow Shoe 0008. m, ¢“ 252 p.m. a. m. Ye i) . m. | Lve. Ar.|p. mM.|p. In.[a. m. 1 20 % 1513 $5 BRLLEFONTE. [10 15/76 10/10 10 ELLEFONTE CENTRAL RAIL- 7 2 7 59] 3 57)........Nigh. 110 0z| 5 57) 9 56 ROAD. x 41.8 05 4 03y.......... Zion.........| 9 561 5 51; 9 50 7 T 7 46| 8 13] 4 08/_HECLA PARK..| 9 51| 5 46 9 45 | Schedule to take effect Monday, Nov. 16th, 1896. 748) 8 15| 4 10|...... Dun kles......| 9 49| 5 44| 9 43 | WisTwATD CEA 7%2| 8 19] 4 9 45! 5 40| 9 39 yood down read up 7 56) 8 23] 4 Dl NST] mos Tamm, 7 58] 8 25] 4 930 535 033 NO. LNg uliNo 1] STATIONS. Hin, line, q[tNO S00] 8 27] 4 2 q 37 533] 9 31 5| i | | er 3 & Sold as 2 0 5 » 3 2 s oo 5 a 2 2 POL] AL ML Lv. Ar, A.M. | P. M. (P.M. 8 on 8 36] 4 31.1 9 28 5 24] 9 21 | 4 20] 10 {Bellefonte ..., 8 45 2 10{6 40 3 16] 8 430 4 SF Mackayvilie Sf oo 85) 5 1a 043 [1 20) 1097) 9 90). Coleviin...| 840) S004 8 23| 8 48) 4 42) Cedar Spring...| 9 17) 5 12, 9 op | 4 301 10 42 6 dO\..... Wen] 23 1 mes 8 25] 8 50 4 50/.........SalonA,...... 015! 5 91] nop] 1 33] 10.49) Gall. Whitmer. ..} S85 520 8 30] 8 35] 4 55)... MILL HALL... to 10/45 05119 01 4 38 10 53{ 6 50.Hunter's Park.| 831} 1 40/6 15 : ay ah ih a 4 41! 10 56| 6 53|...,.Fillmore......| 8 28 1 36,6 12 9301 9 45... Jersey Shore......... 430] T55|4 450 11 02] 7 00 .Briarly.......| 8 24! 1 306 07 10 05) 10 20(Arr. WMs' PORT | Lve| 4 00| 17251448 1105 7 05| Waddle ~ 8201 1 25:6 03 110 20*11 30{Lve ne fArr.| 2 401 *6 55 { 4 50| 11 08; 7 08|..Lambourn....| 8 18] 1 226 00 son] Taal) -| 18 35%11 30 11 20717). Krumrine...!| 8 07] 10715 46 /l 6 45] ) 4D) (Via Tamaqua.) | 7.25] 19 301.......ce] EW YORK......... | | (Via Phila.) | p. m.ja. m.|Arr. Lve.la. m.[p. m. *Daily. +Week Days. 26.00 P. M. Sundays. “110.10 A. M. Sunday. Partanerenia Speerine Car attached to East- bound train from Williamsport at 11.30 P, M, and West-hbound from Philadelphia at 11.30 P. M. J. W. GEPHART. General Superintendent. AY] ~UDIv, Inne, | 802 1 02,5 7 State College..]| 8 00] 1 J05 40 doves rubles... 7 7) 1 04;5 30 | | omsdorf..., 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 Penna R. R. trains at Bellefonte. + Daily, except Sunday. F. H. THOMAS Supt.,