Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, February 05, 1897, Image 6

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    Bllctonte Pa. Feb, 5, 1897.
Woes of Cuba.
Picture of the Sufferings of Pacificos Caused by
Weyler's Order.—Death. Discase, Devastation.—
Colony of Women, Old Men and Children
Living Quer a Slimy Pit of Filth—Horrors the
Coming Warm Weather Will Bring.
As is alreadv well known in the United
States, General Weyler issued an order
some months ago commanding the country
people living in the provinces of Pinar del
Rio, Havana and Matanzas to betake them-
selves and their belongings to the fortified
towns. His object in doing this was to
prevent the pacificos from giving help to
the insurgents and from sheltering them
and the wounded in their huts ; so flying
columns of guerrillas and Spanish soldiers
were sent to burn these huts and to drive
the inhabitants into the suburbs of the cit-
ies. Sufficient time has passed since this
was done to allow one to note the effects of
this order, and I have been studying the
results as they are to be found in the prov-
inces of Havana, Matanzas and Santa Clara
the order having been extended within the
last week to embrace the latter province.
It looks as though General Weyler was
reaping what he had sown and was face to
face with a problem of his own creating,
and, as far as a visitor can judge, the re-
sults of this famous order seem to furnish a
better aHent to those who think the
United States should interfere in behalf of
Cuba than does the fact that men are being
killed here, and that both sides are devas-
tating the island and wrecking property
worth millions of dollars.
ORDER WAS A BOOMERANG.
The order, apart from being unprecedent-
ed in, warfare, proved an exceedingly short-
sighted one, and acted almost immediately
after the manner of a boomer rang. The
able-bodied men of each family who had
remained loyal, or at least neutral, so long
as they were permitted to live undisturbed
on their few acres, were not content to ex-
ist on the charity of a city, and they at
once swarmed over to the insurgent ranks
by the hundreds, and it was only the old
and infirm and the women and children
who went into the towns, where they be-
came a burden on the Spanish residents,
who were already distressed by the lack of
trade and the high prices asked for food.
The order failed also in its original ob-
ject of embarrassing the insurgents, for
they are used to living out of doors and
finding food for themselves, and the de-
struciion of the huts where they had been
made welcome was not a great loss to men
who can construct a shelter from a palm
tree with the aid of the itachete ina few
minutes. So failed to distress |
those again was aimed, bat
ft suffering to
absolutely inno-
au i" te
and we
brought swi
those who are,
i his house eve
cent of any intent againse the government
and to the adhereats of the government ¢
well. .
SUFFERING THEN BEGAN.
It is easy to imu what happened
when hundieds of people—in some towns
thousands—were herded together on the
bare ground, with no food, with ne drain-
are or knowledge of sanitation, with no
covering for their heads but palm leaves,
with no privacy for the women and young
girls, with no thought but as to how they
could get food on the morrow. Itis true
that in the country also these people had
‘no covering for their huts but palm leaves,
but the huts there are made stoutly to en-
dure
When a man built one of them he was
not a shelter tent, and
building ay Lome,
ve placed well apart from one an-
with the free air of the plain or
with room
iw]
other
mountain blowing about them,
for the sun to beat down and drink up the
impurities, and with patches of green
ing arowing in rows over the few
! have seen them like that and
i re ww that no Qisease could have sprung
from the houses built so admirably to ad-
mit the sun and the air. I have also scen
T
black smoke against
while those
columns of
hundreds of them,
wish
1
the
avho had lived in them for years stood hud-
a
sky,
dled together at a distance, watching the
flames run over the dry rafters of their
homes roaring and crackling with delight,
like something human or inhuman, and
blotting the beautiful, sunlit landscape
with great masses of red flames.
VILLAGES OF DREAD DISEASE.
The huts ta which these people live at
present lean one against the other and
there 16 broad roads, no green tobacco
patches separate one from another.
There ave, on the contrary, narrow paths,
two feet across, where dogs and cattle and
human beings tramp through daily addi-
tions of refuse and garbage and filth, and
where the malaria rises at night in a whole
winding sheet of damp mist. The condi-
tion of the people differs in degree ;some are
living the life of gypsies, others are as des-
titute as so many shipwrecked emigrants,
and still others tind it difficult to hold up
their houses and breathe.
In Jarauco, in the Havana province, a
town of only 2,000 inhabitants, the deaths
from smallpox have averaged seven a day
for the last month. While Frederic Rem-
ington and I were there, six victims of
small pox were carried past us up the
hill to the burying ground, in the space of
13 hours. There were Spanish soldiers as
well as pacificos among these, for the Span-
ish officers either know or care nothing for
the health of their men.
CHURCH MADE INTO A FORT.
There is no attempt made to police these
military camps, and in Jarauco, the filth
covered the streets and the plaza ankle
deep and even filled the corners of the
church, which has been turned into a fort,
and has hammocks swung from the altars
The huts of the pacificos, with from four to
six people in each, were jammed together
in rows a quarter of a mile long, and with-
in ten feet and parallel with the cavalry
barracks, where 60 men and horses had
lived for a month. Next to the stables
were barracks. No one was vaccinated, no
one was clean, and all of them were living
on half rations. -
Jarauco was a little worse than the other
towns, b#t I have found that the condition | should have some wejght in helping to
of the people is about the same everywhere.
Around every town, and then
forts outside the towns,
[ might add in parenthesis, rising in |
around the | ' FR :
: hound fhe proper business it is to determine.
vou will sce from |
|
100 to 500 of these palm huts, with people |
crouched about them, covered with rags,
with no chance to obtain work, and with
nothing to eat.
In the city of Matanzas the huts have
been built upon a hill, and so far sieither
smallpox nor yellow fever has made head-
way there, bub there is nothing for these
people to eat, either, and while I was there
three babies died from plain, old-fashioned
starvation, and from ne other cause. The |
woverninent report for the year just ended
gives the number of deaths in hospitals of
Matanzas as 320 for the year, which is an
| sit on the rotten planks, listless and sil
average of a little over one death a day.
As a matter of fact, in the nulitary hospi-
tal alone, the soldiers during several
months of last year died at the rate of 16 a
day. It seems hard that Spain should hold
Cuba at such a sacrifice of her own people.
LIVING ON THE WATER FRONT.
In Cardenas, one of the principal seaport
towns of the island, I found the pacificos
huts at the back of the town, and
lodged also in abandoned ware-houses along
the water front. The condition of these
latter was so pitiable that it is difficult to
describe it correctly and hope to believed.
These ware-houses are built on wecoden
piles, about 30 feet from the water's edge.
They were originally nearly as large in ex-
tent as Madison Square garden, Dut the
half of the roof of one has fallen in, carry-
ing the flooring with it, and the adobe
walls and one side of the sloping roof and
the high wooden piles on which half of the
floor once rested are all that remain.
Some time ago an unusual high tide swept
in under these warchouses and left pools
of water 100 yards long and as wide, and it
has remained there undisturbed. This
poo! is now covered a half inch thick with
green slime. Blue and yellow gases have
covered it in spots, and a damp fungus has
spread over the wooden posts and up the
sides of the walls.
Over this sewerage are now living 300
women and children and a few men. The
floor beneath them has rotted away and the
planks have broken and fallen into the
pools, leaving big gaps through which rise
day and night stenches and poisonous ex-
halations from the pool below. The peo-
ple above it are not ignorant of the situa-
tion. They know they are living over a
death trap, but there is no other place for
for them to go. “
WERE DRIVEN TO THE DEATH TRAD.
Bands of guerillas and flying columns
have driven them in like sheep to this city,
and, with no money and with no chance to
obtain work, they have taken shelter in
the only place left open them. With
planks and blankets and bits of old sheet
iron, they have, for the sake of decency,
put up barriers across these abandoned
warehouses, and there they are now sitting
on the floor or stretched on heaps of rags,
gaunt and hollow-eyed. Out side in the
angles of the fallen walls and among the
refuse of the fallen warehouses they have
built fireplaces, and with the few pots and
kettles they use in common, they cook
what food the children ean find or beg.
One gentleman of Cardenas - told me
that hundreds of these people called at
y day for a bit of food. All|
the old lumber that once lay around the
place has heen al for firewood, and now |
they are reduced to dragging the swamps |
for sticks, which are as hard as ash and
covered with mud and water. Old ne-
groes and little white children, and some of |
them as beautiful, in spite of their rags, as |
any children T ever saw, act as the provid-
ers for this helpless colony. They beg the |
food and gather the st ticks and do the vook- |
ing.
Inside the old women and young others |
ent,
staring ahead at nothing:
LIKE THE HORRORS OF JOiINSTOWN.
keeps on growing.’
lican appropriations are something awful : |
vor here to be-soldiers, and who are dying
y the dozens before they have learned to
pull the comb off a bunch of cartridges, are
going to die by the hundreds ; and women
and children who are innocent of any of-
fense will die, too, and there will he a
quarantine against Cuba, and no vessel can
come into her ports or leave them. All
this is going to happen, I am led to be-
lieve ; not from what I saw in any one vil-
lage, but in hundreds of villages.
It will not do to put it aside hy saying
that ‘““‘war is war,’”’ and that ‘‘all war is
cruel,”’ or to ask,
keeper ?”’
of peaceful non-combatants
houses burned over them, and they them-
selves left destitute in order that a rebel
army might be starved into submission.
In other wars men have fought with men,
and women have suffered indirectly be-
cause the men were killed, but in this war
it is the women, herded together in the
towns like cattle who are going to die,
while the men, camped in the fields and
the mountains, will ioe —Richard Harding
Davis in Piss Pos
To Florida via Pennsylvania Railroad.
The midwinter exodus has begun. The
discomforts and dangers of wet weather are
here, but to the southward, from a cloud-
less sky, beams a beautiful sun upon a
blooming land.
The next Pennsylvania railroad tour to
Jacksonville, allowing two weeks in Flori-
da‘ will Ieaye New York and Philadelphia
February 9th.
Excursion tickets including railway trans-
portation, Pullman accommodations (one
berth), and meals en route in both direc-
tions while traveling on the special train,
will be sold at the following rates: New
York, $50.00; Philadelphia, $48.00 ;
Canandaigua $52 .86 ; Erie $54.85 ; Pitts-
burg, $5 53.00, and at proportionate rates
from other points.
For tickets, itineraries, and other in-
formation apply to ticket agents, tourist
agent at 1196 Broadway, New York, or to
Geo. W. Boyd, assistant general agent,
Broad street station, Philadelphia.
Blew Him to Pieces.
A Nitro-Glycerine Storeroom Explodes with Futal Re-
sults.
Iidward Denniston, of Grove City, Shar-
cn, met an awful death last Saturday. He
went into the storeroom, where a quantity
of nitro-glycerine is kept, and a short time
afterward a terrible explosion occurred.
His body was blown to atoms. One of
| his legs was found several hundred yards
from the place of explosion.
was wrecked.
Deficit vs. Revenue,
remarks that “the treasury
’
The Tribune
“Am I my brothers’ !
In no other war have thousands :
had their |
The building |
Yes, these Repub- |
Aontists.
four weeks on the seeond. ssengers 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, 8.00 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.
I
For detailed itineraries and other information,
apply at ticket agencies, or address Thos. E.
Watt, Pass. agent western distriet, 360 Fifth Ave-
nue, Pittsburg, Pa. 41-18-31
; =
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
vear, and move out in the spring. First-class
farming land in South Dalkota, along the lines of
Chieago, Milwankee & 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. F. Hunter, immigration agent for South Da-
kota, 205 Dearborn street, Chicago, TH.
New Advertisements.
og = RINE TALKS.
EVERYBODY KNOWS HIM. EVERY-
| popy BELIEVES HIM IN BELLE.
FONTE
$515,000,000 at the last session and proba- |
bly over $530,000,000 at the present one.
3
Ax von lean back in your chair with
Your fect on the fender and perase
And not a dollar of additional revenue
provided. No wonder the deficit ‘keeps’
on growing.” —New York World.
His Fit.
rs of the Johnstown |
|
I saw the surviv
flood, when the horror of that disaster was |
plainly in their eyes ; but destitute as they |
were of home and food and clothing, they | ¢
were in better plight than those fever-strick- |
ea,starving pacificos, who have sinned in no |
way, who have en no aid wo the rebels,
: v . aa
i but whose only crime is that they lived in |
the country instead of in the towns, and |
who are to suffer because General Weyler,
{finding he cannot hold the country as he
can the towns, lays it waste, and treais |
those who lived there with less con- |
sideration than the sultan of Morocco shows |
to the murderers in his jail at Tangiers.
Had these people been guilty of the most |
unnatural erimes, their. punishment could
not have heen more severe or their end |
more certain.
I found the hospital for this colony be-
hind three blankets, which had been hung |
across a corner of the ware house. A young
woman and a man were lying side by side,
the girl on a cot and the man on the floor. |
The others sat within a few feet of them, |
on the other side of the blankets, apparent- |
ly lost to all sense of their danger, and too |
dejected and hopeless to even raise their
eyes when I gave them money. A fat little
doctor was caring for the sick woman, and |
he pointed through the cracks in the floor |
at the green slime below us and shrugged
his shoulders.
—r
FROM FATAL YELLOW JACK.
I asked him what ailed his patients, and
he said it was yellow fever, and pointed
again at the slime which moved and hub-
bled in the hot sun. Ie showed babies
with the skin drawn so tightly over their
little®odies that the bones showed through
as plainly as the fingers under a glove.
They were covered with red sores, and
they protested as loudly as they could
against the treatment the world is giving
them, clinching their fists and sobbing
with pain when the sore places came in |
contacy with their mothers’ arms.
A planter who had at one time employed
a large number of these people, and who
was moving about among them, said that
500 had died in Cardenas since the order
to leave the fields had been issued. Anoth-
er gentleman told me that in the huts at
the back of the town there had bee:
cases of smallpox in one week, of which 17
had resulted in death.
I was taught in the days of “‘old journ-
alism’’ that reporters were meant to
describe things they saw and not to write
editorials, but to leave the drawing of con-
clusions to others ; nor do I understand
that it is any part of a reporter’s work to
discuss the political aspect of things, and
direct senators and congressmen and other
men older than himself on points of inter-
national law, or to write ‘lopen letters’ to
General Weyler from the safe distance of |
New York, or to attack the president of
the United Sta ites from the greater distance |
of Madrid. I do not know that the presi-
dent shauld interfere in the affairs of Cuba,
but I do know that President Cleveland
has better sources of information on the
question than any other man can possibly |
have who studies it in the United States.
But, whatever may be the international |
difiiculties of this matter now, this is
what is likely to happen later, and it
25
decide the question with those whose
WHAT WILL NEXT HAPPEN.
Thousands of human beings are now
herded together around the seaport towns
of Cuba, who cannot he fed, who have no
knowledge of cleanliness or sanitation, who
have no doctors to care for them, and who |
cannot care for themselves. Many of them
are dying of sickness, and some of starva- |
tion, and this is the healthy season. In,
March and April the rains will come and
the fever will thrive and spread, and
cholera, yellow fever and smallpox will
turn Cuba into one huge plague spot ; and |
the farmers’ sons whom Spain has sent |
Prowler i
caused by a fit.
Mis. Charity-—Ah, poor man ! What kind
of a fit?
Prowler Knight—Counterfeit.
Emperor William, of Germany, is
‘now 318 years of age and can be considered
| youthful
no longer. His subjects have
patiently borne with his follies thus far be-
cause of his youth, but they are now he-
ginning to look for some evidence of the
i wisdom that years should bring.
Catarrh can be successfully treated
only by purifying the blood, and the one
true blood purifier is Hood's Sarsaparilia.
‘Fourists.
Lands in Central Wisconsin,
Are us desirable in the market.
The lands particalarly in the central and northern
part of Wisconsin, are being rapidly taken up by
nal settlers.
The most saleable
now as any
the timber and meadow
lands now ranging in price from $6.00 to 812.00 per
are
i aere. A few months hence Sar value will be
greatly increased.
For a home or for investrnent no lnckier
chance in the West has ever before been offered.
Now is the time toinvest. No better farming
land exists anywhere, No greater results can be
obtained anywhere,
and churches abound everywhere,
Nearby markets for all farm products. Wisconsin
ix one of the banner states of the West,
For further information wddress or call upon
W. E. Powell, General Immigration Agent, 410
Old Colony Building, Chicago, Ills.
42-3-3t
Sehools
Pennsylv. ania Railrond Company.
Personally Conducted Tours—Matclless
Feature.
in Every
CALIFORNIA.
Three tours to CALIFORNIA #nd 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
imprisonment was |
your evening paper, vou must be
amazed at the colimns devoted to
| advertising patent medicines, the
i schemes employed to bring the reme-
| fics before the readers notice and the
| ingenuity displayed in wording testi-
! monials so as to make them conform
| to the advertised claims. The tongne
| runs glibly over half a column of intro-
|
|
ductory matter and then as a rule,
winds up with the gist of some te tis
2r of
fully
Louis
Cali-
Maine citi-
like the
monial received from a sutle
some malady. Read them ea
and notice this, Chicago and St,
naples do duty in New York.
fornix residents fit before
“ens in regular snecession
connected scenes in a Panorama, Is
it not hard to indorse an act perform-
ed in some far away hamleteven it em-
bellished with all'the adjectives that
the Anglo-Saxon languaze ean fur-
| nish. Reverse the case and read the
! testimony of Mr. Jas, Rhine of 2nd
Thompson St. The impression leftis
convine ing, conclusive,
“My troabie in the back
! a slight strain, It developed into n
urinary difficulty, the most marked
heing an excessive desire to urinate,
particularly at night. My back hurt
to stoop, to straighten ap 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. [am 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 hy all
dealers, price 50 cents per box. Mail-
ed by Foster-Milburn Co., Bufirlo, N.
Y., sole agents for the United States,
sts arted from
41-7
Ov Oat-meal and flakes are cheays fresh
and sound, you can depend on them.
SECHLER & CO.
TEETER IE BOOKLEL OF “LIGHTS
41-48-2t. |
Tour to California via
Railroad.
Pennsylvania
The next California tour of the Pennsyl-
vania railroad will leave New York and
Philadelphia by special train of Pullman
palace cars February 24th, visiting the
great Mammoth Cave and stopping at New
Orleans during the Mardi Gras carnival.
Four weeks will be allowed on the Pacific
coast, and two days will be spent on the
return trip at Colorado Springs and the
Garden of the Gods. Stops will also be
made at Salt Lake City, Denver, and
Omaha. This is one of the mest delightful
and complete tours ever planned.
Tickets, including railroad transporta-
tion, Pullman accommodations (one double
berth ), meals enroute, carriage drives, and
hotel accommodations going and return,
and transportation in California, will be
sold at rate of $350 from all stations on the
Pennsylvania railroad system cast of Pitts-
burg.
Apply to ticket agents, tourist agent,
1196 Broadway, New York, or Geo. W.
Boyd, assistant general passenger agent,
Broad street station, Philadelphia.
42-5-3%
Reduced Rates to Washington on Ac-
count of the Inauguration via Penn-
sylvania Railroad.
For the benefit of those who desire to
attend the ceremonies incident to the in-
auguration of President-elect 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 re-
duced rates.
This inauguration will be a most inter-
esting event, and will undoubtedly attract
a large number of people from every sec-
tion of the country.
The magnificent facilities of the Penn-
sylvania railroad make this line the fa-
vorite route to the national capital at all
times, and its enormous equipment and
splendid terminal advantages at Washing-
ton make it especially popular on such oc-
casions. 42-1-8t.
A Clingstone.
He—*‘As our engagement is cancelled, of
course you will return that diamond ring ?’’
She—*‘‘Mr. Styles, you said I was a
peach the day when you gave me this ring.
Well, if I am, I am a peach of the cling-
stone variety. Therefore, I11 keep the
diamond.”’—Boston Transcript.
What Caused Her wee.
“I am expressibly sorry, Mr. Smithers,”
she said, ‘‘to learn that when you called
the other day Tiger bit you.”
“Oh, that’s all right,’’ he
forced effort to he cheerful.
‘No, it isn't,”’ she sobbed, ‘‘the dear lit-
tle fellow has been ill ever since
go-Tiines Herald.
said with a
will he the
the Presidents
Major McKinley
third Methodist among
of the United States. There have been
eight Protestant Episcopalians and six
Presbyterians at the White House. The
Civilian Catholics say there are 240,-
1 000,000 Catholics in the world.
|
Saddlery.
$3,000
{53,000
|e
—— WORTH OF
HAR NESS, HARNI
SADDLES,
BRIDLES,
PLAIN HARNESS,
FINE ITARNESS,
BLANKETS,
. WHIPS, Ete.
All combined in an iinmense Stock of Fine
Saddlery.
FOR BARGAINS
cree NOW IS THE TIME
To-day P ) ices
have Dropped
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
N0-uT-1y AND IS ABSOLUTELY SAFE,
For Sale La The Atlantic Refining Lo
Prospectus.
To W. J. BRYAN’S BOOK. :
All who are interested in furthering the sale of HON, W. J.
respond immediately with the publishers,
An Account of his campaign tour
His biography, written by his wife.
. I1is most important speeches.
The results of the campaign of 1896.
Mr. Bryan has announced his intention of de
catize of himetallism. There are alr
B. CONKLEY CO
41-51-1t 211-351 Dearborn
Fee
The work will contain
wdy indications of an enormous sale.
MPAN ¥ Dubliner
Qt
.
BRYAN'S NEW BOOK should cor-
A review of the political situation.
voting one-half of all royalties to furthering the
Address
Rravelars Guide.
Condensed Time Table.
=e AD DOWN
16th, 1896. | >
No 1 No 5 No 3 No 6 No 4 No 2
| {
Nov.
Purmnaperrnra Sceering Car attached to East-
bound train from Williamsport at 11.30 P. M, and
West-hound from Phil Aa at 11.30 P. M.
J. W. GEPHART.
General Superintendent.
(ENTRAL RAILROAD OF PENNA..
$5,000 |
HARNESS, |
e.””—Chica- | =
Travelers Guide.
NNSYLVANIA RAILROAD
BRANCHES
Schedule in effect Nov. 16th, 1896.
AND
P=
VIA TYRONE—WESTWARD.
Leave Bellefonte, 9.53 a. m., arrive at Tyrone
Ido» a. m., at Altoona, 1. 00 p- m., at Pittsburg,
3.05 p. nn
Leave Re ionte 1.05 p. m., arrive at Tyrone, 2.15
p- . ., at Altoona, 2.55 p. m., at Pittsburg, 6.50
p-
Leave A elntote, 4. 44 p. m., arrive at Tyrone,
6.00, at Altoon: 1, 7.40, at Pittsburg at 11.30,
VIA TYRONE—EASTWARD.
Leave Bellefonte, 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.,
2.15 a. m., at Harrishurg, 7
delphia, 5. 7 Pm.
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 Hav en,
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, 9.23 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
_arrive at Tyrone,
.00 p. m., at Phila-
p. m.
Leave Bellefonte, 1.42 p. m., arrive at Lock Haven
2.43 p. m,, arrive at Williamspor t, 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, 3.22a. 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.
Philadel hia, 3.00 p-m..
Leave Bellefonte, 2.15 p. m., arrive at Lewisburg,
4, 47, at ¢ Harrisburg, 7 .30p. m. pH at
Tym ONE AND CLE. ARFIELD, R. T
NORTHWARD. I BOUTHWARD.
% % Z : | 21
BLT 5 Logi
El 5E| £5 |Nov. 16th, 1896. 1 | 58 |
giBay = | B|?oiF
£) 4 2
. A. M. ir. M.
11 20/6 10
11 14/6 04
11 14/6 02
| 10 35 521
2 103
4 08 5 39; 10 2
411
416] 9 5
419 9 5
423 9 .Philipshurg...l 3¢
428) 9 .Graham., 5
433 9 Blue Ball 5
4 39 i allaceton 5 4
4 44 Sigler......l 5 g
4 500 10 19 Woodland. 5 4g
4 53 10 13i... Mineral Sp... 5035 ¢
4 57 10 17... ... Barrett 5 «
5 02: 10 221,..... Leonard. 4 ¢
5060 10 2 Clearfield 4 52; 9 314 04
511 1084, Biverview,,...] 458 9 26, 4 03
i Sus. Bridee...| 4 43] 9 20.3 56
vn
urwensville ..
.. Rustie,
Sirona Hy
Nov. 160, 1896.1
MAIL
36 ..
Port Matilda...
et pd pd pd pd pd ed 12 LO LE BS ES LS LD
5 . Martha..
5
D AU nionville.,
4 04 Snow Shoe Int.
4 10 01 ...Milesburg.. ...
4 9. .. Bellefonte
4: 0 Mileshurg
4: y= bi
4 9: agle... 2
4 0 Howard. 95 2
4 9 zleville 8 2
4 : 9 Beech Creek. | 101 a
3! 214 Mill Hall......{ 10/22] 2
5 dl eeeecdl 8 emington.. Ly JO 241
3 431210 8 551. Lock Haven. {2030 2
P.M. P.M. AM Pv. Aria nirwm,
LEWISBURG & TYRONE RAILROAD.
EASTWARD, Nov. 1th, 1896, WESTWARD.
MAIL. | EXP. | MAIL!
STATIONS,
r. ML
Bellefonte...
Axemann,
ant Gap.
Pera.
“Dale Summit.
Lemont...
A
a
24 .
5 5
2 :
3 7
3 .
32
348) Bias 25
34 Paddy Mount 25
349 Cherry Run. 2
3 52! Lindale. 2
3 Hj Pardee.. 2
| ur) 2 8
415 2
4 i Swengle. 2
4 220 .. Barber 2
4 27| MifHinbu 2
4 35) Nickshurg, 1:
4 39] ..Biehl... 15
4 47] i 1
4 55 1:
=
2.
Lv.ia nm
LEWISBURG & TYRONE RAILROAD.
EASTWARD.
P. M.
UPPER END. WESTWARD.
73 TTY]
{ Z| 2 [Nov. rome; 2 | 5
ls 1 = IES I B
| ~ | m= = | ~
Lve.| A. m. |r. M. |
{10 00] 4 50l......
uirhrook....| 10 19 5 071
Musser......: 10 26| 5 I:
51 Penn. Furnace| 10 331 5
j-.-...Hostler.... | 10/40! 5
Marengo.. 1046 5:
crise ..Loveville. ...| 10 51] 5 :
34 Furnace Road.| 10 58) 5
it .Dungarvin...i 11 01} 5
3 23 818 Warrior's Mark| 11 10, 5
314.8 09 ..Penning gton...| 11 20, 6
3 03 d ..Stover, 131 32] 6 18
2 55! 5 Tyrone......| 11 40} 6 ¢
|v. Mla Lv e. Aran lr a
"BE LLEFONTE & & NOW s SHOE BR!
Time Table in effect on and after
Nov. 16th, 1895.
Leave Snow Shoe,. .11 20a, m. and 3 15 p. m.
Arrive in Bellefonte. 142p. m. . m.
Leave Bellefonte. 7 0048. m.
re in | Snow 8
a. IM. |p. NLL |p. li, Lye Ar ip. M.|p. m.[a. m. SEE
#720 47 or 35 HELLEPONTE [10 15.6 1010 10 ELLEFONTE CENTRAL RAIL.
EE st 7-59] 3 2 b 9 56 ROAD.
T41 805 4 9 50
7 8 s 40 LL. 15 | Schedule to take effect Monday, Nov. 16th, 1896.
7 8 41 Dun kles.. WESTWARD [ EASTWARD
752) 8 in FE read down read up
7 SZ 5 nydertov . Se Ferrer Ee
" : { Nol : STATIONS. | [fo
¥ { 4 2 | No. 3tNo. 1 li No. 2 No. 4
8 4: Huston . | a7 Li
8 4 Lamar, ; ie Te ne
. ra) A. mA a (LY, Ar,ia mip m, bh M.
4 26)....Clintond: AH i 420 10 300 6 30|.... Bellefonte 8450 2106 40
1 - a on, 42 1037 637 Coleville $40, 2
i a 4 300 10 421 6 40'...... Mortis Sa) 1;
by mee 4331047 644. 'hi 4 835 1
: Sal : 4 38) 10 53 6 50. be ark. 831) 1
! : hE 4 4110 56 6 53/...,.Fillmore.....| 828 1:
930] 9 45) Jersey Shore, ol 4 45! 71 03} 7 00)... Briavly.......[ s24 1:
10 05] 10 20{A , ‘ 4 481 11 05 7 05 Waddles.....| 8 20 1
$10 201*11 olive J WM PORT i Arr} © 4 50 11 08 7 03'.... Lambourn, | 8 18) 1
505 710... PHILA, Lt 5.00 1120717 Krnmrine. | 8 07] 1
| fo Annie On 5 Fo TT 7 22 Univ, “Tan S03 102 5 43
A Tan a) 5 03) 1135 7 2 tate Collego.| 8 00 1.005 40
ani a. ae ase RET
aol. NEW YORK. gm agg | B10 TT 247 2 Strubles... Ta eon 50
| | (Via Phila.) yj & | 5 17: 7 34...Bloomsdorf...| 7 40
p. mua. mA Lve. a. m.!p. m. 5 20 7 37/Pine Grove Cro.. 7 37
*Daily. Week Days. 26.00 P. M. S avs. Morning trains from Montandon, Lewisburg,
y y fi 10 ” M.S s i ; rn Williamsport, Lock Haven and Tyrone connect
F100 A, 2, Sunday, with train No. 3 for State College. Afternoon trains
from Montandon, Lewishurg, Tyrone and No. 5}
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. H. THOMAS Supt.,