x . “ CC ———E EE Jaca, Bellefonte, Pa., Feb. 26, 1897. LIFES SCAR. They say the world is round, and yet ) I often think it square, So many little hurts we get From corners here ani there, But one great truth in life I've found, Whil: journeying to the west— The only folks that really wound Are those we love the best. The man you thoroughly despise Can rou=e your wrath ‘ti true ; Annoyance in your heart wiil rise At things mere strangers do; But those are only passing ills, This rule all lives will prove— The rankling wound which aches and thrills Is dealt by hands we love. The choicest garb, the sweetest grace Are oft to strangers shown ; Thejeareless mien, the frowning face Are given to our own. We flatter those we scarcely know ; We please the fleeting guest ; And deal full many a thoughtless blow To those who love us best. . Love docs not grow on every tree, Nor true hearts yearly bloom : Alas for those who only see This truth across a tomb. But, soon or late, the fact grows pliin To all through sorrow’s test— The only folks who give us pain Are those we love the best. — Ella Wheeler Wilco. Extermination of Wild Birds. Smithsonian Institution Calls Attentlon to Their Slaughter.—The Total Extirpation of Scores of Species May Result in Great Damage to the Inter- ests of Mankind—The Balance of Nature Disturbed —Some Recent Cases—Raids on the Breeding Places. The Smithsonian institution sounds a note of alarm. It declares that civilized man is sweeping the wild birds off the face of the earth at such a rate that before long hardly any species of feathered creatures will survive save those which are domes- ticated. The world is being literally de- populated, so far as this great class of ani- mals is concerned. They are being des- troyed everywhere with the utmost ruth- lessness, and numerous genera hitherto plentiful in numbers are being wiped out en bloe, as it were. The next few years must witness the extinction of many species already becoming rare, while during the last quarter of a century scores of other species have been totally extirpated. Thus is threatened a great change in the fauna of the world—u change that is only too apt to be attended by results most damaging to the interests of mankind. Take, for example, that wonderful bird cailed the ‘‘rhen;”’ which represents the ostrich on the American continent already becoming rare, the survivors of this magnificent speeies are Liecing hunted sys- | tematically in Argentina and North Patago- nia for the sake of their feathers. And what do you suppose the long and hand- some feathers are used for ? For millinery ? Not a bit of it. They are employed in the manufacture of feather dusters. Thus it appears that one of the most beautiful creatures placed on the earth by a bene- ficent Creator for the benefit and admira- tion of mankind is to be destroyed forever for the sake of cheapening the production of feather dusters ! The millinery feather market is supplied sehiefly by laying waste the breeding places of binds. are not killed cas but a blow is struck at the future of whole species by attacking them on the grounds | where they reproduce their kind and des- roving them en masse. Where business is concerned, it matters not whether entire feathered tribes are exterminated, leaving a6 a single pair to give hope of perpetna- tion of the famnily. Naturally, the most beautifnl birds are selected for extirpation by such means. Accounts giy of the ravages of ‘bird pluy iL rr aeding sta- tions on the Florida cdast are sickening. Formerly thronged with a happy feathered population, they are now either made desert or else are resorted to by only a few surviving specimens. The islands of the sea will be first to lose their avi-fauna for obvious reasons. The birds in such localities have no place to which they can retreat. The burning of woods incidental to human settlement, to make clearings, deprives them of their food supply, and they starve to death. The famous Labrador duck used to be conimon enough in the markets of the United States, migrating in winter as far South as New England. In summer it was plentiful along the Labrador coast and about the meuth of the St. Lawrence river. Like the elder duck, to which it was allied, it bred on rocky islets, where it was safe from foxes and other carnivorous quadrupeds. But sportsmen visited the isléts annually and destroyed the breeding birds whole- sale. They had no asylum to turn to, the shore of the mainland being infested with four-footed enemies, and the result was inevitable. The last known bird of this species was killed in 1852. There are now thirty-eight stuffed specimens in various museums. A pair of them now in the National Museum was’ ‘shot by Daniel Webster. The bird fauna of the West Indies is rapidly disappearing. Among the species already extinct are three kinds of petrels— birds which roam the seas and usually breed in the mountainous interiors of is- lands. One of the petrels alluded to was formerly common in Jamaica, where it was popularly known as the Blue Mountain duck. A weasel-like animal called the mongoose was imported into Jamaica for the purpese of killing rats, which attacked the crops. The rats took to the trees, the mongoose being unable to climb, while the latter devoted its attention to poultry and wild birds that build their nests on the ground. It soon exterminated the Blue Mountain duck, and its agency will goa long way toward finishing up the birds of | Jamaica. A species of macaw, of the ordinary macaw of Mexico, used to be plentiful in Cuba. Not a specimen has been seen for thirty-five years, though it is believed that a few still exist in swamps in the interior. Several species of handsome parrots, were formerly numerous in Dom- inica, Santa Lucia and Martinigue ; they were of large size, brilliant plumage, and quite different from any other parrots. Though very rare a few survivors live to this day in inaccessible parts of the islands. There is a kind of heath-hen which exists to this day on the Island of Martha’s Vine- yard, off the coast of Massachusetts, though found nowhere else. But for the protec- tion of game laws it would have hecome extinct long ago. t. Though » This means that the creatures lly and here and there, | about half the size : larly from a loss of their native bird fauna. Im A ood many species of the land birds are | = . 1 already extinet, and more are doomed to disappear within the next few years. This result is due in part to the occupation of | the tillable soil by farmers and of the hill- | sides by cattle. But the entrance of civili- | zation is invariably accompanied by the in- troduction of animals hostile to the native birds, such as the cat, the dogand the hog. i Hogs destroy immense numbers of young ground birds and their eggs. Thus the whole zoological balance of nature is upset and the indiginous fauna succmmibs. The mongoose has been imported into the Sand- wich Islands, as well as the California quail and the English sparrow. The spar- row, which has become a scrt of parasite on man, drives out the native birds and consumes their food supply. Perhaps the most notable bird of the Sandwich Islands was the *‘mamo,’”’ which has been extinet for only a few years. It was hunted yery persistently by the Ha- waiians for the sake of two little tufts of yellow feathers on its wings. These feath- ers were used exclusively in the manufac- ture of cloaks worn by the kings of those islands. One such cloak, the original esti- mated value of which was $1,000,000, is now preserved, sadly moth-eaten, in the National Museum. The rapid destruction of the avi-fauna of New Zealand is especially distressing to naturalists. The entire fauna of those islands is peculiar and stamps New Zea- land as being certainly one of the most ancient parts of the world. When the country was first discovered by the whites, there was not a single mammal on the is- land, large or small. The birds were most- ly without the power of flight. One of the most remarkable was the ‘‘weka’’—a sort of rail, striped and with long fluffy feath- ers. The so-called ‘kiwi’ included eight species—remnants of one of the most an- cient of all classes of birds, their nearest relatives being now fossilized. The kiwi is otherwise known as the ‘‘apteryx ;”’ it lives in burrows, and lays only one large egg, being nocturnal in its habits. Cats and hogs have nearly wiped out the kiwis and the wekas. Incidentally, the aceli- birds and rabbits. To get rid of the destrue- tive rabbits they have imported ferrets and stoats, which gobble up the flightless birds. There is a peculiar parrot in New Zea- Jand which is becoming very rare. Though fruits were its natural diet, it took to at- tacking sheep a few years ago, using its powerful beak to bite into the flesh of the living animals until the kidneys were reached and devoured. The sheep-herders certainly had a good excuse for endeavor- ing to exterminate it. In the islands about Madagascar there were formerly several species of little parroquets with long tails to-day they are nearly or quite extinet On the same islands were two species of large { mud hens, one white and the other purple, belonging to the family of raiis ; they ave i extinet likewise. The Pallus cormorant, !Lugest of all known cormorants, used to be found on Bering Island, in the North | Pacific. It has disappeared, and only four specimens exist in museums. The Caracara eagle, which bred on the island of Guada- | loupe, 0if the coast of California, is gone. ! Only a few living specimens of the Cali- i fornia condor, the largest bird of light in the world, remain. This gigantic vulture has been nearly exterminated hy poison through eating the carcasses of animals poi- | | soned with strychnine by sheep herders for | the purpose of destroying wolves and bears. The National Museum has recently se- cured a specimen of an Australian pagrot in a rather queer fashion. It is called the it became extinet about the middle of the present century. was owned by a man who took it to New Mexico fifty years ago. Recently he be- came hard up and sold it for & big price to i Dr. W. IL. Ralph, a millionaire of Utica, | N. ¥. Dr. Holph presenied it to the museum. The authorities of that institu- tion say that there is a great opportunity immortal by sending natural history col- lectors to islands in world which are fast losing their indigen- ous fauna. Collections thus made stand as enduring monuments for centuries to come. only parrots native to the United States, are near to final extinction. vessward to Texas Southern Florida and the Indian tory. The species has been wiped out in a most ruthless and wanton manner. These little birds sleep inside of hollow stumps, hanging by their beaks, which are stuck into crevices. A while ago the so-called “passenger pigeon’ flew by millions in the Ohio Valley as far east as Massachusetts. Now only a few of them are left. They have been shot by wholesale, and while shooting from traps. Before the white man came there was a large and clumsy bird on the Island of Mauritius called the ‘‘dodo.” It was re- lated to the family of pigeons. Being in- capable of flight and good to eat, the species was destroyed wholesale by sailors, and the eggs and the young were caten by hogs. So it disappeared and not a single specimen remains in any museum to tell its melan- choly story. Mauritius had also a small but peeuliar owl and a big parrot, a large heron with short wings and a big tail all of which are now extinct, as well as a good many other birds which are now known only by the stories of early voyagers and the bones found in caves on the island. Far to the eastward of Mauritius, on Rod- riguez Island, dwelt a near relative of the dodo called the ‘‘solitaire.”” It became extinct about the heginning of the eigh- teenth century. Of all birds recently extinet none is more interesting than the ‘‘gare fowl,” or ‘‘great auk.” The last two living specimens were seen and taken on a rocky islet off the southwestern point of Ireland. A single egg of a great auk was sold not long ago at | auction for $1,500. And yet, sixty years Iago, birds of this species were found on I'unk Island, off the Newfoundland coast, in countless numbers. People from the mainland used to go over to the island in | summer and kill them by myriads, to eat | and for their feathers. They were so fat i that they served as fuel. Ships used to | land there and get boatloads of the auks by the simple process of placing a plank between the boat and the shore and driving the helpless creatures over it. The Smith- sonian institution has practically a corner on their bones. A while ago it sent an agent to Funk Island for the purpose and he brought back nearly a barrelful of auk boues. If you wanta skeleton, you will have to send to Washington for it, and it will cost you about $600.—-Philadelphia Times. The Sandwich Islands are suffering simi- | matization maniacs have introduced foreign | Nestor parrot heeause of its gray head, and . The specimen referred to | just now for rich men to make their names | various parts of the would | The well known Carolina parroguets, the | Formerly | they ranged all over the eastern part of this country, as far north as New York as | At present the few | survivors are coufined to remote parts of | Terri- | they lasted were commonly utilized for | What Modern Journalism Has Come to It is doubtful if, in any other line of business, there has been a greater stride | than the past decade has witnessed in the | making of newspapers. The scope of news comprehended in the average daily paper, the accuracy and detail with which matters of public interest are presented for readers and the amazing dispatch with which news | is gathered from all points of the globe and | again disseminated are among the perjplex- ing questions that often present themselves to the minds of readers, as they pore over the almost magazines that are to-day called enterprising dailies. In this latter class one paper, published in the western part of the State, seems pre- eminent. It is the Pittsburg Dispatch. Com- ing to Bellefonte at 9:28 every morning, having traversed one hundred and sixty- five miles of railroad en route, it is a daily budget of all that is fresh and readable in news of the world. The Dispatch has ample facilities for fully covering all important events at all times. Its staff of Cuban correspondents is larger than that of any other paper in Western Pennsylvania, if not in the State. Able writers are stationed at Madrid and Ha- vana, and with Sylvester Scovel and Steph- en Crane in the field with the insurgents, its readers will be the first to secure all the news concerning the struggle for the inde- pendence of the Pearl of the Antilles. The special London and Continental cable ser- vice has been strengthened, the Washing- ton staff increased, and all other important news seats the country over connected with the home office by leased wires. All this means that the Pittsburg Dispatch, for 1897, will be progressive and up-to-date. Besides its elaborate special cable and leased the wire service, the Dispatch carries the full Associated Press service, and the complete reports of all local Western Penn- sylvania, Ohio and West Virginia news. Its special Wall street letter, and elaborate and correct market reports, are a marked feature, this department alone making the Dispatch a necessity to the business man, the financier and the farmer. | | A Tour to Balmy Florida via Pennsyl- | vania Railroad. | | When the North is at its worst Florida is lat its best. When lakes and rivers are ice- bound here and a drifting snow fills our | streets the violets are blooming there and the air is laden with the sweet perfume of budding spring. When old Boreas howls around our northern homes and the frost king rules, the mocking bird is singing in | Ilorida’s graceful palms and the whole { land is melodious with happy song. The | elegant special trains of the Pennsylvania I railroad Jacksonville tours are fitting intro- | ductions to this delightful land. The next tour, allowing two weeks in Florida, leaves New York and Philadelphia under personal escort February 23rd. Round trip tickets, | including Pullman accommodations and meals on the special train, will be sold at the following rates: From New York, $50.00 ; Philadelphia. $48.00 ; Canandai- {zua, S32 Erie, $51.85; Pittsburgh, 833.00, and at proportionate rates from other points. : For tickets and itineraries apply to tick- | et azents, tourist agent, 1166 Broadway, New York, or to Geo. WW. Boyd, assistant eeneral passenger agent, Broad street sta- tion, Philadelphia. 12-G-22t. rll err eres Buried inOne Grave. Mr. and Mrs. John Jacoby, of near Leb- anon, were interred in one grave in the Union cemetery at Myerstown on last Fri- day. Burial ceremonies were conducted hy Meyerstown Lodge, No. 353, Independent Crder of Odd Fellows, of which Mr. Jaco- by was a member. Mrs. Jacoby died nearly & week ago and her husband expired several days later, his death being due to excessive grief. The services were conducted in the Reformed church by the pastor, the Rev. Albert H. Gonser, assisted by the Rev. Dr. F. J. , Schantz, pastor of the Frienden’s Luth- eran Church. Over 400 people partook of the funeral dinner. —— Doctor—How is your brother, Miss Cynthia? Aunt Cynthia—IHe’s worse this morning, . deetor—-a lot worse. Doctor—Did you give him that medicine as I direeted—a teaspoonful every hour? Aunt Cynthia—No, doctor. TI just gave him the whole bottle at once. He wanted i to hurry up and get well, 30's to go to the | pantomime to-night. ther that one day David brought home word that a heavy tax had been put upon tobacco. His father was just filling his pipe when the sad news was brought. If we have to give it up,” said the old man, “we might as well begin now,” and so saying he knocked the weed out of his pipe, put it into his pocket and never smoked again. Artie—Darling, you have no idea | how anxions I was while you were coming down the rope ladder. I was so afraid you had not fastened it securely above. Susic—You need’t have been alarmed, dear. Papa tied the knot for me. —1It is always safe to make a small boy a present of a new knife. Why ? Because he has always just lost the old one. Conductor—‘‘We are nearly to the end of the route. What street do you want to get off at?’ Disheveled Person— CO lasy street.’ To cure a cough or cold in onc day take Krumrine’s Compound Syrup of Tar. If it fails to cure money refunded. 25¢ts. Hon. William L. Wilson, postmas- ter general, has been elected president of Washington and Lee university. ——Hood’s Sarsaparilla is known to be an honest medicine, and it actually cures when all others fail. Take it now. 0——GIVES THE BEST 39-27-1y It is told of David Livingstone’s fa- IMMuminating Qil. Imm HE BOOKLET ON “LIGHT == o———AND { BURN CROWN ACME OIL, . i en Dr. Johnson in the Penitentiary. PHILADELPIiIA, Feb. 19.—Dr. Thomas L. Johnston, of Duncannon, who was yes- terday sentenced to twenty years solitary confinement in the Eastern peniteniary by Judge Lyons at New Bloomfield, after he- ing convicted of the murder in the second degree for the killing of Druggist George S. Henry at Duncannon, last September, was to-day taken to the penitentiary by the sheriff and two deputy sheriffs of Perry county. The party boarded a Pennsylva- nia train at Newport this morning. Johnstown was not handcuffed, and when the train reached the Broad street station this afternoon the sheriff took his prisoner into the restaurant in the station and the deputies had luncheon. When they had finished the prisoner was taken to the pen- itentiary. Tourists. Pennsylvania Railroad Company. Personally Conducted Tours—Matchless Feature. in Every CALIFORNIA. Three tours to 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 four weeks on the second. 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. rronfoa. 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, 853.00 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 distriet, 360 Fifth Ave- nue, Pittsburg, Pa. 41-48-3m New Advertisements. A BRANT HOUSE ECHO. THE PROPRIETOR OF THE WELL KNOWN HOSTLERY VENTURES AN OPINION. Mr. H. (. Yeager is the popular host of the Bryant House hostlery, the cor- ner of Allegheny and Bishop streets. Complaining of his back one day to Mr. Cunningham, he of local and for- eign pavement fame, “mine host” was advised to try the old Quaker remedy. He took the contractors advice and procured his first box of Doan’s Kid- ney Pills at Green's Pharmacy. This is What he has to say sbout it. “My kidneys have been faulty for years. 1 o have read a great deal about how the organs work, what ix good for them and what is bad for them. Experience is n great teacher and I have had my are, A friend advised me to try Doan’s Kidney Pills. I gota box. It helped me «o much that I got a see- ond and I am still using them. Itis rather a diffienlt job to cure a man who=e blood is saturated with uric acid, who has rheumatism and uri- nary disorder dune to weak kidneys and hladder and who has become a | chronic victim. Still in spite of it all | Doan’s Kidney Pills have helped me, | I am much better in every way and it | x is quite possible if I persist in the treatment as I intend doing Tomay i eventually be enred. If I continue to progress as 1 have in the past that will i the ultimate end, F-caf=recom- mend Doan’s Kidney Pills for kidney trouble.” ° poan’s Kidney Pills are for sale hy all dealers. Price 50 cents, or mailed by Foster-Miiburn Co., Buthalo, N. Y., | sole agents for the United States, | 41-7 | READY TO-DAY i Po vvivana i COLONY and | COMMONWEALTH Se BY ont SYDNER GEORGE FISHER. One Volume. 12mo. Red Buckram, to match his “Making of Pennsylvania,” or Maroon Cloth. Gilt top. Uncut edges. List, $1.50. PRICE IN OUR STORE, $1.10 By Mail, Postpaid, $1.21. A handy, attractive volume about the size of an ordinary novel, giving in full the social and politi- to the year 1800, with additional chapters on the part taken by Pennsylvania in the Ci growth and effects of the Pie school system and the development of Philadelphia in the pres- ent century. dt is a general history of the State, as a whole, with full” accounts of the romantic of and Indian Wars, and the fierce struggles of polit- of the movement th { depended on the position taken by the Keystone State. . HENRY T. COATS & CO. Publishers A 4:2-6-3t Ov Oat-meal and flakes are always fresh and sound, you can depend on them. SECHLER & CO. 0 y J LIGHT IN THE WORLD.——0 AND IS ABSOLUTELY SAFE. ’ For Sale by The Atlantic Refining Company. ——— cal history of the State from the beginning down | Passengers on the | 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. 42-1-8¢. -—=Subseribe for the WATCHMAN. HERIFF’S SALE. By virtue of a writ of Fieri I'acias, issued cut of the Court of Common Pleas of Centre county, Pa., and to me directed, there will be exposed at pub- lic sale, at the court house, in the borough of Bellefonte, Pa., on SATURDAY, MARCH 6th, 1897. at 10 o'clock, a. m., the following described real estate to wit: All that certain lot of ground situate in the bor- ough of Bellefonte, Centre county, Penna. Bounded and described as follows: On the north by Howard street, on the east by borough prop: erty occupied by Hook and Ladder company, and alley, and on the south by residence of Dr. Hibler and on the west by Allegheny street. Thereon erected a two story stone house and other out- building. Seized, taken in execution, and to be sold as the property of J. C. Curtin and Eliza 1. Curtin. TerMs :—No deed will be acknowledged until purchase money is paid in full. Sheriff's Office +W. M. CRONISTER, Bellefonte, Pa., Feb. 4th, 1897. Sheriff. Sarees SALE. By virtue of writ of Fieri Facias, issued out of the Court of Common Pleas of Centre county, Pa., and to me directed, there will be ex- hosed at public sale, at the court house, in the orough of Bellefonte, Pa., on SATURDAY, MARCH 6th, 1897. at 10 o'clock, a. m., the following described real estate, to wit : ; All that certain messuage tenement and lot of ground situate lying and being in Point Lookout, Rush township, Centre county, Pa, bounded and described as follows to wit: Beginning at point on the west line of publie alley which said point is the common corner of this lot and lot owned hy Mrs. Annie Seibert, thence along the line of the Seibert lot and in a westerly direction a distance of two hundred and sixteen feet to the bank of Moshannon creek : thence down the course of the same by its several courses and distances a dis- tance of three hundred and nincteen feet to the corner of lot of Caleb Long : thenee in an easterly direction along the line of Caleb Long a distance of two hundred and eighty-seven feet to the line of said public alley ; thence in a southerly diree- tion along the line of said alley a distance of fifty- | sevygm and one half feet to the corner of lot of Mrs, Annie Seibert and the place of beginning, being lot No. 3 in Jettrey Hayes addition to Point Look- ont. Having creeted thereon a two story frame dwelling house with a one story addition and the | necessa, | ry out-buildings, Ete. Seized, taken in execution, and to be sold as the property of Richard C. Duanean, Adm'r,, Ete. Terms :—No deed will be acknowledged until | purchase money is paid in full. Sheriff's Office W. M. CRONISTER, Bellefonte, Pa,. Feb. 9th, 1807. Sheriff. Saddlery. $5,600 2 5,000 oo” —— WORTH OF | HARNESS, TUARNESS, HARNESS | SADDLES, BRIDLES, Civil War, the | ly settlement of the province under William | Penn, the massacres and horrors of the French |! ical parties in the Revolution, when the success | for the liberty of all the Colonies | PHILADELPHIA, PA. | ' PLAIN HAENESS, FINE HARNESS, BLANKETS, WHIPS, Ete. All combined in an immense Stock of Fine Saddlery. ( To-day Prices have Dropped THE LARGEST STOCK OF HORSE COLLARS IN THE COUNTY. JAMES SCHOFIELD, 33-37 BELL FONTE, PA. Travelers Guide. { ERIRAL RAILROAD OF PENNA. Condensed Time Table. READ DOWN READ UP. 7 | Nov. With, 180. {7p pr No 1|No 5 No 3 No 6 No 4No2 | I : 1 } Lm. p.m. pon, Lye. Av. pom. p.m. ao. TT 20147 45/13 45 BELLEFONTE. [10 15 6 10/10 10 7 347 3903 av).. vi L110 0g] 5 57) 9 56 7 41, 8 03] 4 03 Zion. oo 56 9 50 7 46] 8 13] 4 CLA PARK. 9¢ 0 45 7 48) 815) 4 .. pun kles...... | 0 9 43 752 8100 4 Hublersburg...| 9 39 7 56) 8 23] 4 18] ...Snydertown.....| 9 35 7 58] 8 Yb] 4 : Nittany. i 9% 9 8 S 4 2 Jdluston {0 5 Ss 02 8 4: 9: 20 8 4 26 8S Of 4: 21 8 4 915 8: 4 4 09 8 4 ..Salona, 915 5 07 8: 4 ILL HALL... 9 10,5 01 EY Jersey Shore... { 430] 7b 9 30) Lvei 4 00| +7 Arr.| 2 40) ¥6 55 ol 8 35%11 30 10 05] 10 20 Arr. 110 201%11 30 Lye WMs' PORT 5 05) 7 10). . | 6 45! . ) | | (Via Tamaqua.) i 7 25 19 30........NEW YORK.........| | 87 3) (Via Phila.) { | p. m.ia. mArr. Lve.ia. m.lp. m. *Daily. Week Days. 26.00 P. M. Sundays. 110.10 A. M. Sunday. PricapeLrina Steepina Car attached to East- bound train from Willinmsport at 11.30 P. M, and West-hound from Philadelphia at 11.30 P. M. J. W. GEPHART. General Superintendent. Travelers Guide. Proieviann RAILROAD AND BRANCHES, Schedule in eftect Nov. 16th, 1806. VIA TYRONE—WESTWARD. Leave Bellefonte, 9.53 a. m., arrive at Tyrone 11.10 a. m., at Altoona, 1.00 p. m., at Pittshurg, 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, 6.50 p.m. Leave Bellefonte, 4.44 p. m., wurive at Tyrone, 6.00, at Altoona, 7.40, at Pittsburg at 11.50. VIA TYRONE—FASTWARD. 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 ITAVEN—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—FEASTWARD. * 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 Lei . 1M. » Bellefonte, 1.42 p. m., arrive at Lock Haven 43 p. m., arrive at Williamsport, 3.50, leave 4.00/p. m., Harrisburg, 7.10 p. m., Philadelphia 11.15 p. m, Leave Bellefonte, 8.31 p. m., arrive at Lock Ha- ven, 9.30 p. m., leave Williamsport, 12.25 a. m., arrive at Harrisburg, 3.22 a. m., arrive at Philadelphia at 6.52 a. m. : VIA LEWISBURG. Leave Bellefonte, at 6.30 a. m., arrive at Lewis- burg, at 9.15 a. m., Harrisburg, 11.30 a. m., Philadelphia, 3.00 p. m.. Leave Bellefonte, 2.15 p. m., arrive at Lewisburg, in at Harrisburg, 7.10 p. m., Philadelphia at *15 p. m. J. B. HUTCHINSON, J. R. WOOD. General Manage General Passenger Agent. TYRONE AND CLEARFIELD, R. R. NORTHWARD. | SOUTHWARD, 1 { o % ii) § | 21 21. 5 { oot E1281 5 |Nov. 10th, 1896. 2 | 28 | = Sl Rs = ’ | BE | RE | & a E72] | i ! I A.M. |A.M | P.3L Tyrone 6 35 11 20/6 10 Tyrone...... 6 29] 11 146 04 yrone 8.1. 11 14/6 02 cnsegieValleoeris inal 625! 11 0013 57 2(...Vanscoyoc 6 18) 11 025 52 ..... Gardner......| 6 15] 10 59/5 48 ...Mt. Pleasant..; 6 07| 10 51|5 | = 4 03) 9 21]......0sceola. | are 411 ..O=ceola June 8 4 16] 9 31!.. .Boynton......| 825 410 9 3....Steiners, $26 423 9 ..Philipsbur 831 428) ¢ Graham. S36; 433 ¢ .....Blue Ball 8 421 4 39, 9 58;...Wallaceton ...| 8 47) 4 44 10 04 .Bigler . 8521 4¢ rodlanc 8 56, 4 5: Mineral S 900 437 si Barrett 905 502 2 ......Leonard 009 506 3S ....Clearfield 9 14. 511 10 34... Riverview, 20; 5 17, 10 41....Sus. Bridge 5 22 10 46 10 5: Rustic... i LCurwensyville ] | ! | BALD EAGLE VALLEY BRANCH. WESTWARD, ~ EASTWARD, w Nov. 16th, 1895.) EXPREFRS P.M.i DP. WII ww” 17 8 49 06,754 9 20 ..| 8 58 148 63 03) 11]....Unionville...| 907. 1 238 12 SI 01 Snow Shee-int4 9715" 36,3 20 53 oli... Milesbury.. ... 8 3318 un 9 34. 9 30i..1 PU ID LS I 1S LD IS 1S md pk ped pf ped ped pd pd 13 LD LC bm pm a the pe de pe a me OY TTD DE OO oy dor re i 1s 0 24, 05) 1: 0 151, 02 18 2 51) 1: 379 24 40 Flemington... ! 399 26 45 ock Haven. 439 30 P.M. | Arr. i i aL : i A. Me DP, M. IP. LEWISBURG & TYRONE RAILROAD. Nov. 16th, 1596. EASTWARD. WESTWARD. | MAIL| EXP. STATIONS, CfA. MFP. ML 900 415 uinden Hall. rege, ..Centre Hull. ..Penn’s Cave.. ..Rising Spring. Z a i 3 Zerby... or 521 308 4 Coburn. A 44 302 5 8! 2 .. Ingleby. Paddy Mountain. ..Cherry Run, Lindale Pardee. len Iron. Milmont wengle Barbe MifHinburg., Vicksburg... .Biehl.... Lewisbur, ...Moutandon. HEN ed 5S ale] I Jl =-I I~ TX LLRX LLL LETTE TT LL LLL LR LT mT mf mT mT mT mT ~~] <* 9 01! 91 9 2 P.M. A.M. WM a a a pe fe de de LOLOL ILD LC RE ie to 2 ppd td ORAS ORS AT IDL i i ; | | | | | AT. LEWISBURG & TYRONE RAILROAD. UPPER END. EASTWARD. WESTWARD. Nov. 16th, 1896. | Mixed. Mixed. {AT Lve.ja.m. |p. M. | Seotia..,.....] 10 00] 4 3t...... .... Fairbrool | 10 19; Musser... ..| 10 26 Penn. Furnace| 10 33 451... Hostler. 110 40, : Marengo......| 10 46 .Loveville. ...i 10 51] 9. Furnace Road.! 10 58 8 26{....Dungarvin...| 11 01 8 18i Warrior's Mark] 11 10 3 Pennington...| 11 2 oI | P.M. | 4 Lr | BELLEFONTE '% SNOW SHOE BRANCH. Time Table in effect on and after Nov. 16th, 1896, Leave Snow Shoe, Jd1 20a. mand 3 15 p. m, Arrive in Bellefonte....... 1 42p.m. * 5 20p. m. Leave Bellefonte «00a. mm, * 105p.m, Arrive in Snow Shoe 90am. * 252 p.m, Deiteeoyie CEXTRAL RAIL- ROAD. Schedule to take effege” Monday, N . 16th, 1896. E | EASTWARD read up 2 +No. 4fixo WESTWARD read down No tiXo.altNo. 1 STATIONS. ral a.m. acon Ly Ane em 4 200 10 30] 6 30... 5 2106 40 4 26! 10 37 2 00.6 30 4 30) 10 42 556 25 4 33) 10 47 47 6 20 38 10 53 406 15 1 1 1 1366 1306 1256 1926 1 1 1 RENO RLLLL Gos tl th see | .Krunvine.....| Inn eel | Univ. 8 02:5 43 State College..| 8 00,5 40 vi wStrubles, Fan 1 04,6 30 5 17 7 34|...Bloomsdorf...| 7 40! ls 23 5 20 | 7 37iPine Grove Cro.! 7 31] [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 connecet 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., 33.8 3