Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, February 10, 1899, Image 6

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speak.
Denon tan.
Bellefonte, Pa., Feb. 10, 1899.
MAJ. W. H. HASTINGS TRAVELS IN
THE HOLY LAND.
An Entertaining Story of the Holy Cities—Jaffa the
Port to Which Hiram Dragged the Cedars of Leb-
anon for the Temple at dJerusalem— Jerusalem
the Ancient—Travels by Boal and Rail Interwoven
in a Clever Tale.
It is a chronological coincidence, to
which I attach no special importance, that
Dr. John V. Shoemaker, of Philadel-
phia, William II. of the Iron Fist
and I were in Jerusalem at the
same time. Our ship coming from Beirut
anchored about two miles from shore, and,
in a bouncing boat, in a whirlwind of
shouting and malediction of the Arab boat-
men, in a heavy swell, I landed at Jaffa.
A scribe of the Grand Vizier scribbled
something on my Zeskere, my Masonic
Passport, and I was free to roam in Phil-
istia.
I noticed the wharf was encumbered
with huge stacks of barrels and cases of
beer, and mountains of sausage from Frank-
fort and Nuremberg and Mortadella from
Bologna. The zephirs had wafted us their
unsavory odors way out on the Jonah sea,
hours before we cast anchor off Jaffa. The
Emperor of Germany was expected in five
days.
All the inhabitants of Jaffa had left their
work, and, sleeves and trousers rolled up,
come out to meet us!
In the garden of Hotel Hardegg, under
orange and lemon trees, I discovered Dr.
Shoemaker discussing biblical history with
a bald-headed Bishop from Barcelona.
From a narghileh on an adjacent table they
were absorbing, hAubble-bubble the nicotine
fumes, a Spanish-American pipe of peace.
Golden, luscious, savory, tempting, ap-
petising oranges, as big as a base hall, were
gracefully pendant in the intertwined foli-
age overhead. Pretty little birds, scarcely
hidden by the leaves, with their heads un-
der their wing were sleeping the siesta.
The heat, was excessive, 98° in the shade
of Prophet Simon’s Tannery. Dust was
dancing in the sunny air, settling on every-
thing. You could plant greens in it on
your eye-brows. Only frequent libations
of water (with nothing in it) avoided
asphyxia.
Dr. Shoemaker was saying to the Bishop
(from Barcelona) ‘I have always consider-
ed that tall story of the Prophet Jonah and
the Whale as essentially veracious, and
viewed in the light of science, it was only
a trial trip in primitive navigation, when
time was young."
“Who knows that the whale had not
other passengers aboard, stowaways so to
The whale was doing the coasting
trade from Smyrna to Alexandria and when
it rounded up at Jaffa it rang the bell to the
flukes, fins and flippers and spouted out:
*‘Back her, stop her,
Any passengers here for Joppa?’’
**Jonah like all the old prophets, im-
pecunious fishermen and carpenters, was
chronically hard up, and could not, proba-
bly, pay his fare,and so the whale’s bouncer
bounced him, spouted him out in a way
which wastoo quick and sudden to be ele-
gant. Man has not much to brag about in
navigation. The flukes, fins and flippers
represent oars, paddle wheels and screws,
and the tail an unfailing, unhingeable rud-
der. And as for submersible ships has not
the whale taught us the first lessons? By
its shape has it not furnished us the model
for all ships?’’
The flexible tube of the narghileh had
slipped from the little Bishop’s lips, and
his shovel hat, in the dust and grime of
which he had traced geometrical figures,
had slipped from his lap to the green car-
peted earth. The doctor’sdisquisition had
sent him over the border, into the land of
Nod. No wonder! The doctor was talk-
ing a hybrid Latin and Penna. Dutch,
and the somnolent effect of his rythmic
periods was heightened by the recurrence
of such words as hollygesock and pumper-
nickel, pronounced with the genuine York
Co. accent.
Our landlord, a Wurtemberg German,
who got to Palestine via Pennsylvania, in
that historic exodus from Bethlehem (Pa.)
to the Land of Promise, to await the com-
_ing of the Messiah, interrupted the doctor,
waked the Bishop and presented us each
with a book, of his writing. It consisted
of a compilation of a verse from the Bible,
for each day of the year, with under each
verse an advertisement and a picture of his
pills, the motive power of which he said
was biblical tannin, a depurative for both
soul and body. A glance at the book con-
vinced me that the condition of his soul
was a troubled one.
At table-d’ hote there were Turkish
Pachas, Colonels and Effendis who had
abandoned Stamboul and the Golden Horn,
and left their harems in charge of their
eunuch, to go to Jerusalem to aid in re-
ceiving the German Emperor, the friend of
Abdul Hamid, the butcherer of the Ar-
menians. There were also Greek and
Russian popes, English and American
clergymen, stiff-lipped, high stomached
English, and Jews going to El Kods, to
kiss the walls of the Temple and die on
Zion's Hill. A Babel of languages pre-
vailed.
Dr. Shoemaker and I occupied adjoining
rooms furnished with biblical simplicity,
with, instead of a number over the door,
the name of one of the Tribes of Israel.
I wooed Morpheus under the protection
of ‘‘Benjamin,’’ the doctor’s cell was la-
belled “Dan.’” The little, round, ruddy,
porcine-like Bishop's room was designated
by “Gilead.”
Was it the fleas of Israel that disturbed
my neighbors in Dan and Gilead, or the
arid expectation of seeing on the morrow
the storied glories of the city of the Mac
cabees? To non so. Whatever it was, the
Bishop snored like a rhinoceros with rhin-
itis, and the Dr. moaned, sighed, laughed
and cried, like a madman, the whole live
long night.
The little Bishop, from Barcelona, struck
all the cords of the gamut from the wail of
a puling baby jackal to the thunders of
Sinai.
The oranges and lemons fell from the
trees. Fezzed, bare-legged, robe-de-cham-
hered Pachas gathered in the corridors, to
listen, tremble, wonder and devise means
to conjure the danger. Hardegg, our boni-
face, said that all great manifestations of
God were ushered in with astonishing
noises, and had coffee prepared expecting
the coming of the Messiah.
The sun rose. The snoring ceased. The
crowd dispersed. Limpid eyed, smiling,
unctuous the little Bishop appeared next
morning, and, making the sign of the cross
as he entered the dining room he called
for brandy and coffee!
About two years ago, coming from
Lussinpiccolo to Fiume, almost at the en-
trance to the port, our ship was run into
by another steamer ten times as big as ours,
cutting us in two and drowning two-thirds
of the passengers and crew. I saved a lady
with whom I was conversing, by swimming
to the dock. Since then I am a light
sleeper.
Jaffa is the city of orange groves and the
home of the ancient Phoenicians. It was
here that Hiram King, of Tyre, stored cedar
wood from Mount Lebanon, for the build-
ing of the Temple. The port which has
been an important one from the remotes
periods of the history of Asia Minor, is
rich in the traditions of all ages Egyptian,
Greek, Roman, Saracen, and is especially
so in relation to the time of the Crusaders.
It is the port of entry for the regions ly-
ing between ‘‘Dan and Beersheba.’
But I’m not writing a guide-book; those
headachy treatises can be had anywhere
and are dull reading. This is simply a
record of three weeks in Palestine.
The antiquity of Jaffa, according to
Pliny, extends back to before the flood.
Here it was where Noah entered the Ark
and the animals, following him ‘“‘marched
in two by two.” Noah is buried here.
True I had been shown the tomb of Noah
et Kerah Nuh, near Damascus, a tomb 130
feet long. But the old original ‘‘Salt’’ is
entitled, like Columbus, to many places of
sepulcher. Saint Peter resuscitated Tabitha
at Jaffa, and here occurred the manifesta-
tion of God, the story of which is epitomized
in the command from Heaven, ‘‘Arise
Peter, kill and eat.”’
Jaffa was getting its face washed and its
best dress on. A chaos of poles, lags, ban-
ners, garlands and evergreens encumbered
the streets; houses and unsightly, time-
begrimed walls were receiving a coat of
white wash, and streets were being cleaned
which had not been washed since the de-
luge, nor swept since Godfrey de Bouillon
landed with his Crusaders. Triumphal
arches were being erected where the timber
for Solomon’s Temple had been hewed,
mortised and tenoned.
I do not claim as much credit for finding
Dr. John V. Shoemaker, as Stanley is en-
titled to for finding Dr. Livingstone. But
I found Dr. Shoemaker among the Philis-
tines and badly in need of a good, sym-
pathetic friend to advise counsel and restrain
him. I had not seen Dr. Shoemaker for
almost four years. What a change relent-
less time had wrought!
We made ready to leave the city of Dor-
cas by the first train, the kara-vapor, as thé
Turks call it, to Jerusalem. TI.eaving the
world-famed orange and lemon gardens of
Jaffa we plunged into a sea of dust. The
plain of Sharon, which has been so stained
by the blood of centuries, whatever its
renown may be from a military point of
view, was but little removed from a parched,
desolate desert, and it taxed the imagina-
tion to realize that this waste had once heen
the fair valley of Sharon as described by
Josephus and sung by Solomon. Roses of
Sharon! no indeed. They exist only in
imaginative writings, as do the Lotus of
Egypt.
Our little locomotive, a Baldwin,
from Philadelphia, a globetrotter, which
had gotten to Palestine via Panama,
cantered across the plain, shied around
the curves and snorted up the grades
composing the foot hills of the mount-
ains .of Judea. Then on we trotted
through the arid valleysand dry river beds,
past enormous detached rocks, of the glacier
period, and chasms, the dried out withered
carcass of an exhausted earth to Lydda,
Ramleh, Bittir, then Jerusalem.
An occasional picture, truly biblical,
worthy of being limned were a Bedowin
encampment, with little fires glowing in
dark recesses; camel drivers preparing their
meal; and three fair Arab Rebeccas, with
their water jars on their heads, selling wa-
ter at the stations to passengers who cared
to drink.’
On the way Dr. Shoemaker, was seated
beside a Turkish pacha, who with his scarlet
fez on the back of his head was sleeping.
The doctor waked the pacha and asked him
if the Sultan ate salt on his water melon?
The pacha with a look as withering as the
khamsin (sirocco) not deigning to reply
changed his seat to the other side of the
box-car.
The tripe-colored conductor who was
much impressed with the doctor’s natty
check suit, white shoes, white cork hat,
areen veil, green umbrella and green
monocle, pointed out to him the dry bed
of the Terebinth torrent, where the strip-
ling David selected the five stones with
which he crushed the cranium of the big
hulk Goliath. The little Bishop was is
compiling a collection of ‘‘last words’’ says
Goliath’s were: ‘Such a thing never en-
tered my head before.”’
* My friend Dr. Bliss of the Palestine Ex-
ploration Society showed us Samson’s cave,
where that master of calisthenics practised
in secret the manipulation of the jaw-
bone of an ass, with which all my (Bible)
readers are familiar.
To be continued.
Didn’t Know It.
Papa—TI hear yon werea bad girl to-day,
and had to be spanked.
Small daughter—Mamma is awful strict.
If I'd a known she used to be a school
teacher, I'd a told you not to marry
her.
ROBBED THE GRAVE—A startling inci-
dent, of which Mr. John Oliver, of Phiia-
delphia was the subject, is narrated by
him as follows: ‘‘I was in a dreadful con-
dition. My skin was almost yellow, eyes
sunken, tongue coated, pain continually in
back and sides, no appetite—gradually
growing weaker day by day. Three phy-
sicians had given me up. Fortunately a
friend advised trying ‘Electric Bitters ;’
and tomy great joy and surprise, the first
bottle made a decided improvement. I
continued their use for three weeks, and
am now a well man. I know they saved
my life and robbed the grave of another
victim.”” No one should fail to try them.
Only 50cts. per bottle at F. Potts Green’s
drug store.
Business Notice.
Castoria
Bears the signature of Cuas. H. FLETCHER.
In use for more than thirty years, and
The Kind You have Always Bought
What Do the Children Drink ?
Don’t give them tea or coffee. Have you tried
the new food drink called GRAIN-O? It is de-
licious and nourishing and takes the place of cof-
fee. The more GRAIN-O you give the children
the more health you distribute through their sys-
tems. GRAIN-O is made of pure grains, and
when properly prepared tastes like the choice
grades of coffee but costs about 14 as much. All
grocers se!l it. 15c. and 25c.
43-50-17 :
Tourists.
It Beats the Band.
The newest and most inspiring piece of Sheet
Music, arranged for piano, is “The Pioneer Limit-
ed March” composed by Capt. Frederick Phin-
ney, Bandmaster United States band, published
by S. Brainard’s Sons Co., Chicago, Ill; distributed
only by the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul railway.
Enclose fifty (30) cents and address, Geo. H.
Heafford, general passenger agent, 555 Old Colony
building, Chicago, Ill. 44-6-2¢
A Lamplight Companion.
Between now and Spring time there will be
many opportunities of an evening to read up on
the different portions of the Great Northwest.
To this end the Chicago, Milwaukee & $t. Paul
Railway Co., has printed for free distribution to
Eastern farmers a number of illustrated instruc-
tive pamphlets regarding the various States trav-
ersed by its lines.
In sending your address to W. E. Powell,
General Immigration Agent, Old Colony Building,
Chleago, 111, please say if your preference is for
information about Wisconsin, Iowa, Minnesota,
Northern Michigan or North Dakota.
No charge for pamphiet or for replying to all
inquiries about any section of the Great West.
44-3-6w
Fast Mail Trains.
The new fast mail train established on the Chi-
cago, Burlington & Quincy railroad for the pur-
pose of shortening the mail time between New
York and San Francisco, made its initial run out
of Chicago on January 2nd. The average schedule
speed of this train is 55 miles an hour, excluding
stops, and frequently 70 miles an hour is made.
The 560 miles between Chicago and Council Bluffs
will be covered every day in ten and a half hours.
The fast mail service on this line was inaugurated
in 1884, and the Burlington has held the govern-
ment contract ever since. Hereafter two Bur-
lington trains will leave Chicago daily, devoted
exclusively to United States mail, the increased
service being necessary on occount of our new
interests in the Pacific.
—
Medical.
H OW IT SPREAD.
PEOPLE ARE TALKING ALL OVER BELLE-
FONTE. THIS REPORT COMES FROM
HALF-MOON HILL.
How it spreads. :
Can't keep a ‘‘good shings down.
Ever notice how good things are imitated?
Better the article, more imitators,
Fortunately the people have a safeguard.
Praise can’t be imitated. 3
And true praise takes root and spreads.
Claim is one thing, proof another.
Claim is what the manufacturer says.
Proof is what the people say.
Bellefonte people say.
Doan’s Kidney Pills cure sick kidneys.
Cure all kidney ills. i *
Hundreds of citizens testify to this.
Here is a case in point.
Mr. Teorge Cox, residing on what is
known as Halfmoon Hill, says: “I
can conscientiously recommend
Doan’s Kidney Pills judging from
what they did for me. Ihad suffered
intensely from pains in my back and
lameness across my kidneys. - State-
ments in the papers about Doan’s Kid-
ney Pills which were highly recom-
mended attracted my attention and 1
called on F. Potts Green, the druggist,
and got a box. They did me a great
deal of good although I did not take
them regularly as 1 should, for the
moment the pain ceased and ! felt bet-
ter I stopped taking them They
gave me the greatest relief and I can
give them the credit for saving me
much suffering.”
Doan’s Kidney Pills for sale by all
dealers, Price 50 cents. Mailed by
Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
Sole agents for the U. 8.
Remember the name Doan’s and
take no substitute. 44-6
Medical.
p= ———
SOCIETY WOMEN
Medical.
Travelers Guide.
and, in fact, nearly all women who undergo a nervous strain, are compelled to
regretfully watch the growing pallor of the cheeks, the coming wrinkles and
thinness that become more distressing every day.
Every woman knows that ill-health is a fatal enemy to beauty and that
good health gives tothe plainest face an enduring attractiveness.
Pure
blood and strong nerves—these are the secret of health and beauty.
Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People build up and purify the blood and
strengthen the nerves. To the young girl they are invaluable, to the mother
they are a necessity, to the woman approaching fifty they are the best remedy
that science has devised for this erisis of her life.
Mrs, Jacob Weaver, of Bushnell, Ill., is fifty-six
years old. She says: ‘I suffered for five or six
years with the trouble that comes to women at
this time of life. I was much weakened, was un-
able, much of the time, to do my own work, and
suffered beyond my power to describe. .l was
down-hearted and melancholy. Nothing seemed
to do me any good.
Then I made up my mind to
try Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People.
I bought the first bok. in March, 1897, and was
benefited from the start.
A box and a half cured
me completely, and I am now rugged and strong.”
— Bushnell (Ill.) Record.
The genuine package always bears the full name. -At all druggists or sent
postage on receipt of price 50c. per box by the Dr. Williams Medicine Co.,
Schenectady, N, Y.
New Advertisements.
Restaurant.
CTIVE SOLICITORS WANTED EV-
ERYWHERE for “The Story of the Phil-
jonifes® by Murat Halstead, commissioned by
the Government as Official Historian to the War
Department. The book was written in army
camps at San Francisco, on the Pacific with Gen-
eral Merritt, in the hospitals at Honolulu, in Hong
Kong, in the American trenches at Manila, in the
Jpsdigent camps with Aguinaldo, on the deck of
the Olympia with Dewey, and in the roar of bat
tle at the fall of Manila. Bonanza for agents.
Brimful of original pictures taken by government
photographers on the spot. Large book. Low
rices. ig profits. Freight paid. Credit given.
rop all trashy unofficial war books. “Outfit free.
Address, F. T. Barber, Sec’y., Star Insurance
Bldg., Chicago. 43-42-4m.
Prospectus.
ATENTS.
TRADE MARKS, DESIGNS,
COPYRIGHTS, Ete.
——50 YEARS’ EXPERIENCE
Anyone sending a sketéh and description may
quickly ascertain our opinion free whether an
invention is probably patentable. Communica-
tions strictly confidential. Oldest agency for
securing patents.
Patents taken through Munn & Co., receive
special notice in the
0——SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN 0
A handsomely illustrated weekly. Largest circu-
lation of any scientific journal. Terms, $3 a year; |
four months, $1. Sold by ah Jewsasslers.
CO.
361 Broadway, New York City.
Branch office 625 F. St., Washington, D. C
42-49 .
NEWS AND OPINIONS
—OF—
NATIONAL IMPORTANCE
—THE SUN——
ALONE
CONTAINS BOTH.
Daily, by mail, - - - - -
Daily and Sunday, by mail, - -
$6 a year.
$8 a year
——THE SUNDAY SUN
is the greatest Sunday Newspaper in the world.
Price 5c. a copy. By mail, $2 a year.
44-1 Address THE SUN, New York.
McCalmont & Co.
TV cCALMONT & CO.
BELLEFONTE, PA.
Sell, for ts Sold HO,
————THE BEST FERTILIZERS,——
LINSEED MEAL, COTTON SEED MEAL
FEED and BRAN.
———DAIRY FIXTURES,
Seeds, Tools and everything for the farm.
—AND BUYS FARM PRODUCTS.—
McCALMONT & CO.
43-47-3m.
Buggies, Wagons, Etc.
Y OU CAN BELIEVE IT.
McQUISTION SAYS ITS SO.
You'll be glad if, you do and
sorry if you dont take advan-
tage ot the special bargains he
is offering now in
shaves BUGGIES, WAGONS, ETC.
preps ratory to reducing his
stock to make room for his
winter stock of Sleds, Sleighs,
&c. Among others he has
5 second hand Buggies,
2.4 ** Spring Wagons
that will almost be given away.
Don’t fail to remember this,
8S. A. McQUISTION & CO.
43-97 BELLEFONTE, PA.
O YOU GET
HUNGRY?
Of course you do. Every body
does. But every body does not
know that the place to- satisfy that
hunger when in Bellefonte is at
Anderson’s Restaurant, opposite the
Bush House, where good, clean,
tasty meals can be had at all hours.
Oysters and Game in season.
DO YOU
PLAY POOL?
If you do, you will find excellent
Pool and Billard tables, in connec-
tion with the Restaurant.
DO YOU USE
BOTTLED BEER?
If you do, Anderson is the man to
supply you. He is the only licensed
wholesale dealer in the town, and
supplies only the best and purest
brands. Will fill orders from out of
town, promptly and carefully, either
by the keg or in bottles. Address
JOHN ANDERSON,
43-48-6m Bellefonte, Pa.
Spouting.
POUTING ! 'SPOUTIN G ! SPOUTING!
SPOUTING ! SPOUTING !
W. H. MILLER,
Allegheny St. - - BELLEFONTE, PA,
Repairs Spouting and supplies New
Spouting at prices that will astonish
you. His workmen are all skilled
mechanics and any of his work carries
5 2 guarantee of satisfaction with it.
/ Travelers Guide.
LTOONA & PHILIPSBURG CON-
NECTING RAILROAD.
Condensed Time Table in effect November
27th, 1898.
EASTWARD—WEEK DAYS,
A. M.|A. M.|A. M.| P. M.|P. M.|P. M.
Ramey.....cce uu. 700 | 740] 900100 410 6 10
Houtzdale . J T14 | 758 914 114] 4 24] 6 24
Osceola Mills...| 7 33 | 8 38| 9 33| 1 33| 4 43| 6 43
Philipsburg...... 747 (8569471 47| 4 57| 6 57
: A.M. Mo M.A. M.|P. M.[P. M.|P. M.
WESTWARD—WEEK DAYS.
; : A.M. A. MY. ML{P. M.|P. M.|P. M. |
Philipsburg...... 8 00 {11 00{ 3 00| 5 10| 6 10| 8 10
Osceola Mills...
8 15 [11 15-3 15) 5 25| 6 26] 8 25
Houtzdale ........
11 34| 3 34| 5 44| 6 58 8 44
11 47| 3 47{ 5 57| 7 10| 8 57
SUNDAY TRAINS.
A. M
CoNNEcTIONS.—At Phili
with all Beech Creek railroad trains for and from
Bellefonte, Lock Haven, Williamsport, Reading,
Philadelphia and New York ; Lawrenceville, Corn-
burg’ (Union Station)
ing, Watkins, Geneva, and Lyons ; Clearfield, Ma-
haftey and Patton ; Curwensville, DuBois, Punx-
saizWney, Ridgway, Bradford, Buffalo and Roch-
ester. :
At Osceola for Houtzdale and Ramsey with P.
R. R. train leaving Tyrone at 7.20, > m.
: G. M. H. GOOD, ‘Gen. Supt
CerTaaL RAILROAD OF PENNA.
Condensed Time Table.
READ DOWN READ UP.
7 7 | Nov. 21st, 1898.
No 1|No 5{No 3 No 6/No 4|No 2
a.m. re . m, Lve. Ar.|p. m.|p. m.[a. m.
$7 10 prt 40 BELLEFONTE. |10 17| 5 10| 9 40
7 22| 8 02| 2 62|.......Nigh........... 10 04| 4 57| 9 27
7 28| 8 08| 2 58].. 9 59 4 51] 9 21
7 33| 8 13| 3 03 9 54| 4 46] 9 16
7 35| 8 15| 3 05|...... Dun kles...... 952 444 914
7 39| 8 19] 3 09...Hublersburg...| 9 49| 4 40| 9 10
7 43| 8.23| 3 13, + SnYASTIOWL. 9 46) 4 36/ 9 06
7 46| 8 26| 3 16/....... ittany........| 9 44| 4 33| 9 03
7 48| 8 29| 3 18|.......Huston.......| 9 42| 4 30| 9 00
7 61| 8 32| 3 21{.......Lamar......... 9 40| 4 27| 8 BT
7 53| 8 35| 3 23|....Clintondale....| 9 38| 4 24] 8 54
7 57| 8 39| 3 27|. Krider's Siding.| 9 34| 4 19] 8 49
8 02| 8 44| 3 32|...Mackeyville....| 9 30 4 13| 8 43
8 08| 8 50| 3 38 9 24 4.07 8 37
8 10] 8 52| 3 4 22 dol 83s
8 15] 8 57| 3 4 ..[19 17(14 00/18 30
+ (Beech Creek R. R.) |
uo sol. a Jersey Shore... a 395 75
12 20{ 10 25/Arr. y Lve| 2 56| +7 21
H2 34/%11 30 for. } Ws PORT i 2 30| *6 55
(Phila. & Reading Ry.)
8 29 7 09]iieuns PHILA Gaiden 18 36 *11 26
10 40| 19 30|......... NEW YORK......... +4 30| 29 00
(Via Phila.) .
p. m.[a. m.|Arr. Lve.la. m.|p. m.
*Dauily. {Week Days. 26.00 P. M. Sundays.
110.55 A. M. Sunday.
PumapeLpiA Steering CAR attached to East-
bound train from Williamsport at 11.30 P. M, and
West-bound from Philadelphia at 11.36.
J. W. GEPHART.
General Superintendent.
ENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD AND
BRANCHES.
Schedule in effect Nov. 20th, 1898.
VIA TYRONE—WESTWARD.
Leave Bellefonte, 9.53 a. m., arrive at Tyrone
11.10 a. m., at Altoona, 1.00 p. m., at Pittsburg,
5.50 p. m.
Leave Bellefonte 1.05 p. m., arrive at Tyrone, 2.15
p. m., at Altoona, 3.10 p. m., at Pittsburg, 6.55
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, 5.47. p. m.
Leave B
2.15 a. m., at Harrisburg, 6.45 p. m., at Phila-
delphia, 10.20 p. m. 2 pr
Leave Bellefonte, 4.44 p. m., arrive at Tyrone,
6.20 at Harrisburg, at 10.00. p. m.
VIA LOCK HAVEN—NORTHWARD.
Leave Bellefonte, 9.32 a. m., arrive at Lock Haven,
10.30 a. m.
Leave Bellefonte, 1.42 p. m., arrive at Lock Haven
-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, 9.32 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
£0 mm, Harrisburg, 6.55 p. m., Philadelphia
Leave Bellefonte, 8.31 p. m., arrive at Lock Ha-
ven, 9.30 p. m., leave Williamsport, 12.50 a.
m., arrive at Harrisburg, 3.40 a. m., arrive at
Philadelphia at 6.52 a. m. 2
VIA LEWISBURG.
Leave Bellefonte, at 6.40 a. m., arrive at Lewis-
burg, at 9.05 a. m., Montandon, 9.15, Harris.
burg, 11.30 a. m., Philadelphia, 3.00 p. m.
Leate J Rllefonis, 2.15 p. w, arrive at Lewisburg,
.47, at Harrisburg, 6. . m. i i
14% His fd p. m., Philadelphia at
TYRONE AND CLEARFIELD, R. R.
NORTHWARD. SOUTHWARD,
3 :
: Lo 2 SZ |Nov.20th, 1898. i 2 i =
Af = By Aa oF
A = A i
P.M.| P. M. | A. M. |Lv Ar.| Pp. M. | A. mM. Ie. Y
7 20{ 320 8 20 8 55| 11 20|6 1
726] 326] 8 26. 8 49| 11 14{6 04
7 28| 3 23| 8 28|....Tyrone S.....|......... 11 12{6 02
731 330 831... 8 45( 11 09!5 57
741 3 40| 842. 8 38) 11 02/5 52
745) 3 44| 8 47 8 35| 10 59|5 48
754, 353 857. 8 27| 10 51|5 39
800, 359 905 8 20] 10 44/5 32
8 05| 4 03 9 09. 8 14| 10 38/5 25
806) 405 911 8 11] 10 35|5 21
8 07) 406] 9 12|.. 8 09] 10 33(5 19
815 412 919 7 59) 10 23(5 08
esssrall eevee 9 26|.. eesennene| 10 2015 04
819) 416 929 7 55| 10 17|5 01
823 420 932 7 51{ 10 13|4 57
826) 423 940 7 50( 10 12|4 56
831 429 945 7 46| 10 07/4 51
2% 4 34] 9 50 7 41| 10 02|4 46
8 4 40 7 36] 9 56/4 39
847 445 7 31] 9 50/4 33
8 53| 4 50 7 26| 9 4514 27
8 56) 4 54 7 25, 9 42/4 25
900 458 7 21] 9 39/4 20
9 05 503 aii wel T17 9 35/4 15
9 09) 5 07) 10 26!.....Clearfield..... 7 13| 9 314 09
9 14| 5 12| 10 32... Riverview... | 7 09] 9 26/4 03
9 20 5 18| 10 34|...Sus. Bridge...| 7 04| 9 20/3 56
9 25| 5 37| 10 44|.Curwensville..| 7 00" 9 153 51
5 43| 10 50/...... Rustic........| 6 54......... 3 35
5 51| 10 58|....Stronach......| 6 46|.
5 57| 11 04|....Grampian..... 6 40].. .
P.M.| P.M. | A. M. |AT. Lv. p.m. | Am 'pom.
BALD EAGLE VALLEY BRANCH.
ay EASTWARD,
w
8 i Nov. 20th, 1898. 2 2 | 2
=| 5.1 FE 2B 15
= = = =
P.M.| P. M. | A. M. AIT. Lv.ya mp. um. |P.01.
600] 215 1110...... Tyrone.......| 8 10| 12 30|7 15
5 54| 2 09| 11 04 ..East Tyrone...| 8 16| 12 36/7 21
£50] 260511100......Vall....... 8 20( 12 40(7 25
546, 2 01] 10 56 ...Bald Eagle....| 8 24] 12 44|7 29
540. | 10 49 ........Dix.........| 8 30| 12 50lT 35
537. ..| 10 46 . 8 33] 12 52|7 38
5 35 10 44! g 35| 12 54(7 40
5 28 10 36'..Port Matilda...| 8 42| 1 00|7 47
5 21 10 28 ....., Martha...... 8 49| 1 06(7 54
512 10 20 .......Julian....... 8 58 1 14/8 03
5 03 10. 11}..¢sn Unionville... 9 07/ 1 23(8 12
4 56 10 04/Snow Shoe Int.| 9 15| 1 30|8 20
4 53 10 01}... Milesburg.. ..., 9 18| 1 33(8 23
4 4 9 53|....Bellefonte..... 9 28| 1 42(8 31
4 32 9 41|....Milesburg ...| 9 41| 1 55/8 43
4 25 9 34....... Curtin. ...... 9 49| 2 04(8 5)
4 20 2 08|8 557
414 2 149 01
4 05 s 2 2319 10
4 02 9 12/..Beech Creek...| 10 11| 2 26|9 13
3 51 9 01}..... Mill Hall...... 10 22| 2 37|9 24
3 49 8 59|...Flemington...| 10 24| 2 39/9 26
3 45 8 55|...Lock Haven..| 10 30 2 43|9 30
P.M. A. M. |Lv. Arr. A.M [pom Bm.
LEWISBURG & TYRONE RAILROAD.
EASTWARD. Nov. z0th, 1898. WESTWARD.
MAIL. | EXP, MAIL.| EXP,
STATIONS.
P. M. | A, Lv. Ar. A.M. | P.M.
........Bellefonte........... 9 00] 410
‘ 4 06
4 03
RENNER SRR ERS ERE SRE RNREG
CORR BERRRRRPHIIIIIIIIIIR REDD
RAE EERSTE EE NSS RITE AE’
nn 06 8900 89 00 0 0 0 OND DD DIOR
BEAN SRSENREEESIS EE REREEERS
Tm 10 19 BO BO 0 19 BO 10 19 1D G0 60 80 89 CO G0 00 9 GO 00 ve
BEES RENEERIHISIRENEESRE
T ND DO TT = =F J =F =F ~T = ~3 ~J 0 00 00 00 3 GO 00 0 G0 00 0°
150 cecinnae
P. M. | A. M. IAT. A.M. M.
LEWISBURG & TYRONE RAILROAD.
EASTWARD. UPPER END, WESTWARD.
3] 3 313
MH MX |May 30th, 1898.;, ® MH
5 = | E
P.M. | A.M. P. M.
eeeees 430] 9 20 4 55
4 15] 9 03 5 09
4 10, 8 57 514
4 04] 851 519
359 845 5 26
3 54 839 533
2¥here 8 35 5 35
3 49; 8 29|. 541
3 44| 8 26|.. 549
3371 818 5 57
3 30 8 09)... 6 06
3 21) 758 6 17
creek 315 750 6 25
P.M. | A.M. P. M.
BELLEFONTE & SNOW SHOE BRANCH.
Time Table in effect on ano after
May 30th, 1898.
Leave Snow Shoe,........... 11 20 a. m. and 3 15 p. m.
Arrive in Bellefonte....... 1 42p. m. *“ 520 p. m.
Leave Bellefonte...... .700a. m, ‘ 105 p. m.
Arrive in Snow Shoe...... 900a m. “ 2520p. m.
3 For nies ap ot el on i Agent or ad-
ress Thos. E, Watt, Pass. . West. Dist. 360
Fifth Ave. Pittsburg, Pa. 3
J. B. HUTCHINSON,
‘ General Manager.
J. R. WOOD.
General Passenger Agent.
JB ELLEFONTE. CENTRAL RAIL-
ROAD.
Schedule to take effect Monday, Apr. 18th, 1898.
ellefonte, 1.05 p. m., arrive at Tyrone,
<
-
a,
*
WESTWARD EASTWARD
read down . read up
#No. 5|tNo. 3 STATIONS. | 1No. 2]tNo. 4| Ne:
P. M. | A. M. [A.M |Lv. Ar. A.M. | P.M. [PML
4 00{ 19 30/6 30|....Bellefonte...., 8 50] 2 40|6 40
4 06] 10 37/6 35|..... Coleville......| 8 40| 2 25/6 30
4 10| 10 42/6 38|...... Moris.......| 8 37| 2 22/6 27
4 13| 10 47/6 43 8 35 2 17/6 23
4 18| 10 53|6 16 831 210/621°¢
4 21| 10 56(6 50 8 28| 2 06(6 18
4 25! 11 02(6 55 8 24| 2 ¢0(6 14
4 28| 11 05|7 00 8 20 1 556 10
4 30] 11 08|7 03]... 8 18] 1 52/6 07
4 40| 11 2017 12 8 07) 1 37|5 52
4 44| 11 827 22|....Univ, Inn....| 8 T 52(5 46
4 45| 11 35 7 25,..8tate College..| 8 00] 1 305.45
TE 50| 11 24|7 27] vere SUTUDICSumreers 745 1 345 25
4 55 7 31|...Bloomsdorf... 40 5 20
5 00 7 35|Pine Grove Cro.| 7 35 515
Trains from Montandon, Lewisburg, Williams
ort, Lock Haven and Tyrone connect with train
0s. 3 and 5 for State College. Trains from State
College connect with Penn’a. R. R. trains at
Bellefonte. + Daily, except Snnasy;
F. H. THOMAS Supt.»