Beworvahi; atm Bellefonte, Pa., July 19, 1901. EES, ‘COMMON THINGS. Of the sunset west ; A bird, slow drifting, lonely overhead, Far from its waiting nest; A trickle! of blue water where rough grasses part, Bright with its mirrored sky— Tall reeds a-sway, when fitful breezes start— Still—when the breeze goes by ; A boat through twilight sea mist, coming in from sea, To where the watchers be ; A footpath, worn white by homeward feet, To some poor cottage door ; Ah, God, what makes those common things so sweet That heart can bear no more | Sweet with all joy, and pain, of all the years; So sweet, the eyes that look can only look through tears. —Madeline Bridges. THE SECRET OF NORMAN BROWN’'S SUCCESS. This being a true story, it needs but lit- tle space for the telling, and, being true, it. also is strange ; for, though the tale itself is exceedingly plain, the achievement was a bit marvelous. To tell it aright, one should reverse the common order of narra- tion and begin at the close, discovering for the reader the climax before the initial mo- tif and its process be exposed. When it is stated that Norman Brown, erstwhile familiar with poverty and ob- scurity, found himself, at the age of eight and twenty, the husband of President Parker’s daughter and manager of the western division of the Consolidated Mer- cantile Co., the reader has the denoue- ment. When it is stated that Norman Brown early conceived the idea that there was a great mass of human happenings, on the one hand, which he did not care to hear about and on the other hand a vast ar- ray of facts and processes which he did not care to know and remember, the reader has the motif and is nearing the solution. What this idea of Norman Brown achiev- ed in him, and its outward tendency and meaning, makes some sort of exposition of himself and his course of conduct necessary. To state the truth, he was not by congeni- tal favor a Solomon ; he bad only a strong body and a clean mind. Ina mental way he was a good housekeeper ; he refused to allow his brain to be cluttered with dirt and useless trash. In the text-book season of his life, he progressed only as far as the first year in high school, then poverty compelled him to go to work. Real education followed. This particular scion of the Brown fami- ly began in a position of very humble ser- vice with the Planet Mercantile Company, (now merged in the Consolidated Mercan- tile), for he knew very little, and was pit- iably callow. That he was callow and knew so little galled him, and casting about for a remedy, he stumbled on the notion that almost nothing of real value could be got from the reading of daily newspapers. In the beginning much of his leisure had gone that way. He stopped the waste ; that was the secret. A half dozen young fellows boarded in the house where Norman broke bread and slept. At the end of any given month, each young man’s room, excepting Nor- man’s, might easily have been carpeted and the walls covered with the newspapers brought into their rooms during the month had not the landlady, in the cause of clean- liness, lugged the papers out once a week. Most of the young men purchased two papers every day, some of them three. and Sundays—ye gods ! At table, where there was much talk and little said, Norman noted that the minds of the young men were in a kind of hazy smear; there seemed no definiteness of thought or rug- ged grip of ideas in them. The faculty of memory, too, in these newspaper fiends seemed dull and impaired. Ere long Norman concluded that memory in the American people, as a whole, was being very gradually impaired by the daily and hourly reading of matter which they neither tried nor wished to remember. He said as much, and was laughed to scorn. Nevertheless. he saw the clearest possible evidence of this catastrophe every- where. There was a daily and hourly for- getting of that which was read. How could it be otherwise? Remembering was habit, he perceived ; forgetting was also habit, and the latter habit was a physical necessity with the constant newspaper reader. The spring of the casket of mem- ory, the lid being constantly opened that undesirable things might escape, became weakened, until almost nothing would abide in the precious chest. That was his conception of it. Besides, he averred, of what possible value to a young man who had success to achieve could be a daily brain-diet of scandals, suicides, robberies, and human errors? Somehow it seemed to him that knowledge of human success and its processes must be more serviceable as a stimulent to achievement than an unend- ing account of human blundering. So he ceased to read daily newspapers, and form- ulated a different scheme of procedure. He subscribed for a weekly newspaper, an issue made up once each week from the files of a great metropolitan daily, and con- taining the important news of the world in a concentrated form. It occupied him less than two hours once a week to go through this paper. Noting such happenings as seemed important, he tried to remember them, often jotting them down in a blank book for future reference. This course left all the remainder of his leisure free for reading that which seemed worth ' his while. He began reading books of history and travel, writings oun economics, the highest class fiction, weekly and monthly period- icals (especially all articles in the latter which were scientific or dealt with busi- ness questions and industrial processes), and he went more often to lectures than to the vaudeville. All the while he made a determined effort to remember what seemed most useful and important in lectures and his reading. He made many notes in his blank books, and the act itself served to fasten knowledge in his mind. Frequently in thé evening, instead of reading, he would sit for an hour or two persistently recalling the items of importance imbedded in soine book or article, which he had read months before. Thus his memory grew strong with use, and to exercise it became a delight. His life was not by any means a dry a=zd prosaic one. He knew the thrill of mental conquest.; he went dail voyage of discovery ; his was the exhiler- ating life of the explorer. One thing he followed most persistently during those humble years was to acquire all sorts of information that immediately or remotely affected the Mercantile Planet Company, often going far out of his way in order to study a process or interest that ona promised at some future time to clash, or connect itself, with the institution in personal power and confidence, the courage and resource that spring from knowledge. His fellows noticed it, his employers dis- covered it. He came to be looked upon as a young man of extraordinary natural en- dowments, but this: was only true in part. His scheme of ignoring that which must of necessity be forgotten, and gripping fast to that which should be remembered, made him seem remarkable. He was without question a phenomenon, but a perfectly sane and natural one. Inevitably he be- gan to ascend the ladder of preferment. If was found that he conld decide on ques- tions wisely and with what seemed a mar- velous facility. The speed of his conclu- sions and the accuracy of his decisions stamped him a markedly valuable man. His trained memory and wide range of in- formation were at the bottom of it all. He decided swiftly and well becanse he knew things. A man is worth just as much as he knows, and no more. He can decide and execute safely only within the limit of his knowledge. Norman Brown now receives, 80 report says, an enormous salary. Why? Because he is enormously efficient. Pri- marily, it is because he had the good sense to let senseless things alone and seek the valuable, to ignore the memory-numbing drench of recounted follies pouring from the daily press, and to give his time and energies te the harvesting of rememberable facts. His success, bei purely natural, bas nothing really wonderful about it, save that. To stick assiduously to common sense in the Jace of folly is always remarkable—Alvin Milton Kerr in Conkey’s Home Journal. Hugh Crop Damage. Estimates Place the Loss to Farmers at Hundreds of Millions. A dearth of rain is costing Western farm- ers many millions of dollars. Kansas is shrivelling up in the brighting fierceness of the too ardent sun. Missouri farmers are on their knees, praying for rain, and in the Red River valley and in the North- west spots are too dry and others are too wet. Nebraska is a garden spot, promising abundant crops. Iowa and Illinois are in good shape, and in spite of the drouth damage in Kansas and the Northwest, rail- road men are preparing for the greatest crop movement in recent years. Crop reports received by the St. Paul road for seven states in the Northwest show that wheat, corn, barley, rye and all kinds of grain will yield an abundant harvest, largely exceeding last year’s. Crop experts in the Chicago Board of Trade refrain from attempting to estimate the monetary loss on crops at this time, yet, from the estimate made, Kansas alone will lose something like $100,000,000, and a 25,000,000 bushels shortage of wheat in the two Dakotas and Minnesota means a loss to farmers there of between $15,000,- 000 and $20,000,000, to say nothing of the loss on otker crops, due to lack of or too much rain. CROPS IN KANSAS. The farmers of Kansas are just complet- ing wheat harvest, which will yield a total of seventy million bushels, about the same as last year’s yield. Since the middle of April there has not been a general rain in Kansas. Local showers have fallen in sec- tions of the state, and in these localities the prospects warrant an estimate of one- third of a normal corn crop. In two-thirds of the state the corn crop will be a total failure. Some of it may be cut up for for- age, but there will be no corn on the stalk. The hay crop will be a failure. The fruit crop will be short, while all vege- table crops will be almost a total failure. The normal sorn crop of Kansas is 200,- 000,000 bushels. At this time it does not seem possible that the farmers will raise 50,000,000 bushels. Those who are in a position to know, say that the farmers of Kansas will lose hy reason of the protract- ed drought more than $100,000,000. This estimate includes losses on corn, oats, hay, fruit and vegetable crops. The present drought is the most disastrous in the entire history of the state, or since 1860. has been some danger to all crops by dry weather and hot winds. How great the loss will be cannot be accurately estimated until harvest. Corn in Southern Minnesota and South Dakota is backward because of rain, but there is little alarm. Along the Minne- sota border wheat was severely scorched ten days ago. Rain came and stopped the damage. North of a line from St. Paul to the Missouri river there has been too much rain. If every condition be favorable this territory may yet raise a good crop, ex- cept in the Red River valley, where ex- perts in the field place the damage al- ready done at forty per cent. Without further sethack there are indications that the yield of wheat will be about 175,000,- 000 busliels for the rest of the season, a loss of twelve per cent, on estimates of a month ago. Never in the history of Nebraska has there been such promise of an abundant corn and wheat barvest. The winter wheat crop is now in shock in almost every portion of the State, and the yield promis- es to surpass by millions of bushels any previous harvest gathered in Nebraska. The present estimate is for 65,000,000 bushels, the production a year ago only reached 42,000,000. Spring wheat is also making an excel- lent showing, and cutting will begin in a few days. The only localities in Nebraska which have suffered from drought are the tier of counties along the Kansas line, where oats and potatoes have failed to ma- ture. A Bold Robbery. The Great Northern Flyer Held up at Wagner. Montana. The Great Northern Trans-Continental train No. 3, leaving St. Paul Tuesday morning at 9 o'clock was held up at Wag- ner, Mont., 196 miles east of Great Falls, Wednesday evening, by three masked men who blew open the express car and wreck- ed the through safe with dynamite,securing, it is said $83,000. The robbery, in day- light, was one of the boldest that has ever occurred in the west. Upot receipt of the news of the holdup of the Great Northern flyer near Wagner, a reward of $5,000 in gold for the appre- heusion of the robbers was at once posted by the Great Northern officials. The large amount of the reward offered is tak- en as evidence thatthe booty was heavy, but the exact amount taken has not been given out. There is as yet no clue to the robbers. ——Subseribe for the WATCHMAN. which he was employed. He began to! experience, after a time, a keen sense of | In the Dakotas and Minnesota there: How to Avoid Sunstrokc. Several Practical Suggestions for One's Conduct in Summer. . Now that the mercury is rising steadily towards the top of the thermometer too much care cannot be exercised in the avoid- ance of sunstroke. The first thing for the feeble and the anaemic to remember is that they needa tonic. Just what that tonic is may best be told by the family doctor. Due regulation—also under medical ad- vice—of the excretory organs is another most important consideration. Select your diet with regard to the ab- sence of heating properties. Take daily sponge baths. sive exertion. Sleep eight hours daily. Use an umbrel- la when walking in the sun. Have your outer garments of material as light as possible and your underwear of gauze or linen mesh, which will facilitate perspiration. Avoid stimulants. . The Red Cross Book gives these symp- toms of sunstroke : Headache, dizziness, faintness, ‘‘seeing double,”’ nausea, weak- ness of the knees, labored, noisy breathing, groaning, sometimes delirium and convaul- sions, pulse full, strong and rapid, face red and skin intensely hot to the touch, the latter always a marked symptom. Treatment : Take the patient to a cool place, strip, sprinkle with iced water (com- mon garden sprinkler is the best thing to use.) Also rub body with ice simultaneous- ly. If pulse grows weak give stimulants. Avoid the use of whisky. When tempera- ture falls to 101 degrees discontinue sprink- ling. Put patient to bed. Cover lightly; use ice bag for head. If temperature rises again it may be necessary to repeat the treatment. During convalescence keep the patient in a cool room and give a light or stimulating and easily digested diet. Dr. Cyrus Edson approves of these treat- ments, and adds that if the heart action is bad and faintness comes on aromatic spirits of ammonia—a half teaspoonful in a wine glass of water—should be given. Three or four doses within two hours should be the extreme amount given. Antipyretics giv- en to reduce fever are useless in sunstroke, and harmful in most cases. ““To relieve the victim of sunstroke as quickly as possible is the imperative neces- sity,’’ says Dr. George F. Shrady. ‘They should be removed to the shade, the gar- ments should be loosened, and cold water dashed on head and neck. Lumps of ice wrapped in cloths are sometimes useful as local applications, and often mild stimula- tion to maintain proper heat power is in- dicated. Further than this it is not safe to go without medica! advice as to particular requirements. Even before all this is done a call for the physician may bring further assistance in time to be available.” Avoid exces- Brown’s Tardy Funeral. Unburied, He Was a Source of Profit to Suiviving Friends. The recent decease of John Howard Brown, the barber, has occasioned a scan- dalous rumor in Lodge alley. John was one of the old time residents of the alley, and the news of his death was received with grief striken interest all along the thorough- fare. Several enthusiastic friends imme- diately began taking up collections of money to defray the expenses of John’s funeral. Bill Jones, the whitewasher, was one of the most active subscription agents, though others strove to rival him. After John Howard Brown had been dead three days and Bill Jones collecting cash for the same time, the undertaker summoned Bill and said: “‘Say you've got to bury this man. won't keep any longer.”’ ‘Ah, putsome ice on him,’ said Bill promptly. ‘“‘Iain’t half through collect- ing.” . On the subsequent day Bill visited the establishment of a well known Ninth ward statesman. On the occasion of an earlier visit the statesman had subscribed toward the funeral fund and thrown in $2 for flow- ers. Bill requested an additional subscrip- tion of $2 because the flowers bad wilted. This incident together with the remark of the statesman, led to the organization of an investigating committee. The commit- tee tackled Bill and declared that they had suspicions about the money Bill had col- lected. Several of the rival collectors were on the committee. *‘What you all talkin’ erbout ?’’ demand- ed Bill indignantly. ‘‘Didn’t John Brown will me his barber shop an’ didn’t I have to pay de rent ?"’ It was not until yesterday that John Howard Brown was consigned to earth. Last night ‘“‘Blinky’’ Stroup said : ‘‘Well they finally buried the barber. His funer- al cost more’n Garfield’s.”’ He Fell Fifteen Stories. Joseph Lewis, a water department clerk the last passenger in the elevator, was just about to alight at the fifteenth floor of the Park Row building in New York on Wednesday, when the car shot down- ward. At the hottom of the shaft cushion. When the elevator struck this it compressed the air in an instant, and then shot up fully two stories before set- tling down for good and all. Neither Lewis nor the elevator man was hurt in. the common acceptance of the word, but the nervous system of each had a bad five seconds of it while the car was dropping. , Lewis said : ‘‘You will never know how it feels to drop fifteen stories on an ele- vator until you try it. I felt as light as a feather, and the floors were whizzing past like pickets on a fence. Then we struck the air cushion and started up again. We went up two floors and then sank back. ¢‘T felt then as if I had been going up and down all day. I could not realize I was unhurt when the door was opened and we stepped out. There is nothing to say after you fall fifteen stories. -—Papa (severely)—*'Did you mamma if you could have that apple ?”’ Five-year-old—"'‘Yes, papa.’ Papa—"*‘Be careful now. I'll ask mam- ma, and if she says youdidn’t ask her I'll whip you for telling a story. Did you ask mamma?’ Five-year-old—‘‘Papa I asked her. pause.) She said I couldn’t have it.” ask (A SHE DIDN'T WEAR A MASK.—Bat her beauty was completely hidden by sores, blotches and pimples till she used Buck- len’s Arnica Salve. Then they vanished as will all eruptions, fever sores, boils, ulcers, and felons from its use. Infallible for outs, corns, burns, scalds and piles. Cure guaranteed. 25¢. at Green's. is an air |: Indian Land Opening. Fifty Thousand Applicants For 13,000 Farming Tracts—Are to be Drawn by Lottery. Following out the proclamation of Presi- dent McKinley opening up to settlement by the whites the 13,000 farms in the Kiowa-Comanche county, the first regis- tration of home seekers was made at El Reno, O. T., and at Lawton, at 9 o’clock Wednesday morning. Hundreds were lined before the registration booths when darkness came, and Thursday and Friday the registrations continued ‘until all who went had been given an opportunity to file their names. The drawing by lottery will begin on July 29th, and until then none of the filty thousand applicants will know whether or not he has been lucky enough to receive a homestead. The lottery scheme robbed the opening of the picturesque run and the exciting times incident to the great opening of the Cherokee strip ten years ago. Compared with that event this affair was tame in the extreme. Although there were per- haps 20,000 people in town, practically no disorder prevailed. As a rule the homeseekers are well pro- vided with money and provisions,and aside from the long wait in the boiling sun be- fore the registration booths, no serious in- convenience has been experienced. Tuesday night hundreds of people slept in the streets to maintain their places which began forming Tuesday, at the six registration booths at El Reno. Many had waited on the border of the new country for two years or more, and the Tuesday night of their long vigil was the most trying they had experienced. The line was made up of the hale, the lame, and the brawny frontierman, sprawled out io the dust. The crowd before each booth elected a captain and each man and woman in line was given a number which each pinned conspicuously on his or her cloth- ing. As the hour of 9 o'clock neared, inter- lopers tried to push in and break the nu- merical order of the line organization. This instantly raised bad blood, but trouble was prevented by the early announcement that the line organization would be respected by the government officials. Applicants were admitted to the booths four at a time and the flling proceeded rap- idly all day. It DAZZLES THE WORLD.—No discovery in medicine has ever created one quarter of the excitement that has been caused by Dr. King’s New Discovery for consump- tion. It’s severest tests have been on hope- less victims of consumption, pneumonia, pleurisy and bronchitis, thousands of whom it has restored to perfect health. For coughs, colds, asthma, croup, hoarseness and whooping cough it is the quickest, surest cure in the world. It is sold by F. P. Green,who guarantees satisfaction or re- funds money. Large bottles 50c. and $1.00. Trial bottles free. ‘Tourists. Excursion to California. Account of Epworth League meeting at San Francisco in July. Excursion tickets will be on sale from points in Pennsylvania, from July 4th to 12th, good to return until August 31st, low rates of fare have been named for the round trip, and if desired tickets may be had returning via Portland, Yellowstone Park and St. Paul, at small additional cost. For full particulars call on or address, W. S. Howell, general eastern passenger agent, 381 Broadway, New York, or John R. Pott, district passenger agent, Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul railway, 810 Park building, Pittsburg, Pa. 3t Special Train to San Francisco via Chicago & Northwestern R’y, to leave Chicago Tuesday, July 9th, 11:59 p. m. Stops will be made at Denver, Colorado Springs, Glenwood Springs and Salt Lake, passing enroute the finest scenery in the Rocky and Sierra Nevada Mountains. Party will be limited in number and under per- sonal direction of Tourist department, Chicago & Northwestern R’y. Only $50 round trip, with choice of routes returniag. Send stamp for itin- erary and map of San Francisco to A. Q. Tallant, 507 Smithfield street, Pittsburg, Pa. Business Notice. Castoria CASTORIA FOR INFANTS AND CHILDREN. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of In Use For Over 30 Years. CHAS. H. FLETCHER. EE EE SCE Rn, New Advertisements. 7 fae TWICE. IT WILL AMPLY REPAY RESIDENTS OF BELLEFONTE TO FOLLOW THIS CITIZEN'S ADVICE. Did ever the old adage ‘‘Think twice and act once” appear as much to the point? Can it be driven home more effectively ? The majority of our read- ers have seen the opinions of and ex- perience with Doan’s Kidney Pills ex- ressed in our Bellefonte papers by Br. Geo. Gross of Water street. Over two years from the date the opinions first appeared in the Bellefonte news- papers he was again interviewed and gave the following for publication : “In the summer of 1896 I used Doan’s Kidney Pills for backache, procuring them from the Bush block drug store. Accompanying the pains in my back . was an annoyance from the kidney secretions. Doan’s Kidney Pills cured me after I had been troubled for years. I thought I was never going to have backache again, but two years after- wards I went fishing, got soaked through and this ended in steering my back I again resorted to my ol cure, Doan’s Kidney Pills and they did me good immediately, although in the meantime I had taken other remedies but without obtaining relief. I, can as conscientiously recommend Doan’s Rider Pills now as I did for- merly for back or kidney trouble.” For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-Milburn Co. Buffalo, N. Y., sold agents for the U. 8. Re- member the name Doan’s and take no substitute. SEE He hE Re a BT Se Plumbing etc. Travelers Guide. sesvases tsesessasanasnas ssesssata saat onsnesinane esessenssannastsnanes enssrosssnsnsnsans a {HoosE YOUR PLUMBER as you chose your doctor—for ef- fectiveness of work rather than for lowness of price. Judge of our ability as you judged of his—by the work i already done. Many very particular people have judged us in : this way, and have chosen us as their plumbers. R. J. SCHAD & BRO. No. 6 N. Allegheny St., BELLEFONTE, PA. 42-43-6t Harness Oil. ENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD AND BRANCHES. Schedule in eftect May 26th, 1901. 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 Pp. m., at Altoona, 3.10 p. m., 8% Pittsburg, 6.56 p.m. Leave Bellefonte, 4.44 p. m., arrive at Tyrone, 6.00, at Altoona, 7.35, 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- p. m. Leave Bellefont eave efonte, 1.05 p. m., arrive at Tyrone 2.15 a. m., at Harrisburg, 6.45 p. m., at Poti L deiphis, Jo Pp. m. eave Bellefonte, 4.44 p. m., arri t 6.00 at Harrisburg, at 10.0 ra. 9:26 Tyrone, VIA LOCK HAVEN—NORTHWARD. Leave Bellefonte, 9.32 a. m., arrive at Lock Haven, 10.30 a. m. Leave Bellefonte, 1.20 p. m., arrive at Lock Haven (a2 ps Srrivest Buffalo, 7.40 p. m. V! efonte, at 8.31 p. m. i - I oi Al P , arrive at Lock Ha _VIA LOCK HAVEN—EAST Leave Bellefonte, 9.32 a. m., arrive at Lock Haven 10.30, leave Williamsport, 12.40 p. m., arrive at Harrisburg, 3.15 p. m., at Philadelphia at 6.23 pP- m. Leave Bellefonte, 1.20 p. m., arrive at Lock Haven 2 rn i apive at Williamsport, 3.50, leave 4 . Mm. arris a . i . nn ” Ha arg, 6.55 p. m., Philadel Leave Bellefonte, 8.31 p. m.. arrive at Lock Ha- Yen, 290 Db ar eave Williamsport, 1.05 a. ey arrisburg, 3. o Philaaeiping St ona 0: a A1TIVE at 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, 3.17 p. m. Leave ellefonte, 2.15 p. m., arrive at Lewisburg, 4.47, at Harrisburg, 6.55 p. m., Philadelphia at J ERA HARNESS OIL. A good looking horse and poor looking harness is the worst kind of a combination ——EUREKA HARNESS OIL not only makes the harness and the horse look better, but makes the leather soft and pliable, puts it in condition to last—twice as long as it ordinarily would. Sold everywhere in cans—all sizes. Made by STANDARD OIL CO. GIVE YOUR HORSE 4 CHANCE! : 39-37-1y Restaurant. 0 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. Oyster= and Game in season. DO YOU PLAY POOL ? if you do, you will find excellent Pool and Biliard 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, 44-28-6m Bellefonte, Pa Prospectus. TEE NEW YORK WORLD. THRICE-A-WEEK EDITION. Almost a Daily at the price of a Weekly. The presidential campaign is over but the world goes on just the same and it is full of news. To learn this news, just as it is— promptly and impartially—all that you have to do is to look in the columns of the Thrice- a-Week edition of The New York] World which comes to the subscriber 156 times a year. The Thrice-a-Week’s World's diligence as a publisher of first news has given a circula- tion wherever the English language is spok- en—and you want it. ; The Thrice-a-Week World's regular sub- scription price is only $1.00 per year. We of- fer this great newspaper and the Warcumax togethar one year for $1.65. Travelers Guide. (E5TRAL RAILROAD OF PENNA. Condensed Time Table. 10.20 p. m. TYRONE AND CLEARFIELD, R. R. NORTHWARD. SOUTHWARD, i : i %& | 3 [May 26th, 1901 i 2d 5 Be a = | a 5H | "d P.M.| P. M. | A. M. |Lv. .| P.M. | A.M. 720 330 820... oe] 8 58/11 20/6 10 726) 336 826..E. yron 8 49 11 14|6 04 7-08 evens 8 28....Tyrone 8.....|......... 11 12|6 02 731 3 40{ 8 3li..... ..Vail... 45 11 09(5 59 741 351 8 42...Vanscoyoc. 38 11 02|5 52 745 355 8 47|....Gardner...... 8 85| 10 59(5 48 7 54 4 05 8 57|...Mt. Pleasant..| 8 27 10 51|5 39 8 00{ 4 12| 9 05|.....Summit...... 8 20| 10 44/5 32 804 416 9 09.Sandy Ridge..| 8 14| 10 38/5 25 $08 418 911... Retort....... 8 11] 10 85/5 21 807 420 912 8 09] 10 33(5 19 815 430 921 7 59 10 23(5 08 vavena]it ae ee seesennee| 10 205 06 3 1 : 5 7 55| 10 17|5 02 Ian 7 51] 10 13/4 58 Sa 3 7 50| 10 12/4 56 218 ty 7 46] 10 07/4 51 5S 7 41] 10 02/4 46 736) 9 56/4 40 847 .5 14 731 50/4 84 3 = : 2 726] 9 43/4 28 om 725 9 40/4 25 300, £2 721 9 36/4 26 30. 22 717] 932/415 3 [ 713] 9 28/4 09 5 44| 10 32... Riverview.....| 7 09] 9 21l4 03 9 20| 5 50| 10 3J,...8us. Bridge...| 7 04] 9 15/3 56 9 25 6 05 10 44|..Curwensville..| 7 00] 9 10|3 51 6 11 10 50....... Rustie........ 6 54 3 35 6 19| 10 58|....Stronach......| 6 46 327 6 25| 11 04|....Grampian.....| 6 40 3 21 P. M. | A. M. |Ar. Lv.| p.m. . P.M, MoNDAY ONLY :—Express train leaves C : 1 8 urwens- Ye 3 Ln Sd Plearnehd 4:51; Philipsburg 5:31; :39, arriving at 6:35. train stops at all Betionns Mrs Tib BALD EAGLE VALLEY BRANCH. be EASTWARD. 2 2 : May 26th, 1301. 5 = 2 = & a = By Be g | 4 id P.M.| P. M. | A, M. (AIT. Li | V.| A. M. | P. M. |P.M. s Ww 2 L 8 10} 12 15(7 15 Ba 2%, 8 16| 12 21|7 21 BoB 8 20| 12 257 25 B dn 01 8 24| 12 29|7 29 rm 8 30| 12 35|7 35 23 sete 8 33| 12 37|7 38 3s 8 35| 12 39{7 40 gas 1 45 8 42| 12 45|7 47 pal 39 8 49] 12 51|7 54 131 ; 8 58| 12 58|8 03 503] 1 23 10 11|....Unionville...| 9 07| 1 058 12 4 56{ 1 16] 10 04/Snow Shoe Int.| 9 15 1 12/8 20 453] 113 1001 ...Milesburg.. ... 918 1148 23 4 44] 105 9 53|....Bellefonte....| 932] 120 8 31 4 32| 12 55| 9 41 «...Milesburg...| 9 41| 1 31/8 43 4 25| 12 48] 9 34|...... Curtin........ 9 49| 1398 51 4. 20.,.....0n 9 30|..Mount Eagle...| 9 53| 1 43/8 55 414] 12 38) 9 24|......Howard....... 9 69] 1499 01 405 12 29] 9 15....Eagleville....| 10 08| 1 58/9 10 4 02! 12 26| 9 12|..Beech Creek...| 10 11] 2 01]9 13 3 51f 12 16] 9 01}....Mill Hall...... 10 22 2 11(9 24 349 ..ciinne 8 59|...Flemington...| 10 24| 2 13[9 26 3 45 12 10] 8 55|...Lock Haven.| 10 30] 2 17/9 30 P.M.| P. 0. | A, Mm. [Lv, Arr. a.m. | pow. Bom, LEWISBURG & TYRONE RAILROAD. EASTWARD. Nov. 26th 1900. WESTWARD. MAIL. | EXP. MAIL.| EXP. L STATIONS. P. M. | A. Mm. |Liv. Ar. a. Mm. | P.M. 2 15, 6 40|........ 49760 "To 2 21) 645. 8 55| 4 06 2 24| 6 48. 8 52| 403 2 27] 651. 8 49) 4 00 2 34 657. 8 43 354 2 38] 702. 8 39] 38 50 243 706 8 35] 346 2 48| 710). 8§ 31 342 255 TIT 8 24] 335 302 722 all. 8 18] 3 30 3100 728 ..Penn’s Cave 811 323 31 735 ..Rising Spring.. 805 317 325 743 ....Zerby...... 7 57] 308 3 32| 7 50... Coburn 750, 302 3 38] 7 54... ...Ingleby..... 743 2355 3 43) 8 00...... Paddy Mountain 7 40] 2 B1 3 51| 8 08 .........Cherry Run.... 731 242 3 54! 8 12|.. ....Liindale... 7 26) 238 4 01] 8 18].. . 719 231 4 08] 8 26.. 709 223 416) 833 702 216 4 18] 8 35 650 214 4 22| 8 40 6 55) 210 427 845 6 50, 2 05 4 35] 853 6 42| 1 57 4 39| 8 58 6 38) 153 447 905 630 145 455 915 ..| 540] 138 P.M. | AM. Lv. a.m | p.m. LEWISBURG & TYRONE RAILROAD. EASTWARD, UPPER END, WESTWARD, = = = ° << [3 ¥ | ® |Nov.26th, 1900] X | = | = Fis P.M. | A. M. AT. ve.| A. WM. | P. M. eauds: 430, 9 40|.......8cotia........| 10 20, 4 46|...... Reise 4 15] 9 03|....Fairbrook....| 10 36] 5 00|...... sereas 410; 8 57|......Musser......| 10 42] 5 05...... esis 4 04} 8 51 Penn. Furnace| 10 48| 5 1(|...... ‘ele 3 59] 8 45|......Hostler..... | 10 56] 5 15|...... eiiny 3 bs! 8 36|....Marengo......| 11 04{ 5 23|...... eins mwloveville. ..l alo, 8 3?|.Furnace Road.| 11 12] 5 31|.. 8 26|....Dungarvin...| 11 2i| 5 39/.. 8 18 Warrior’s Mark| 11 30; 5 47|. 8 09 5 56 7 68 52 6 07 . 7 56 11 59, 6 15 P.M. | A.M, Am lpm BELLEFONTE & SNOW SHOE BRANCH. READ DOWN Reap up. June 17th, 1901. rel No 1|No 5|No 3, No 6/No 4{No2 a.m. P. m.|p. m.|Lve. Ar.|p. m.|p. m.|a. m., 17 1076 40 Bs 40 BELLEFONTE. | 9 15 5 10] 9 40 7 22 6 52 Nigh...........| 9 02] 4 57| 9 27 T 28] 6 58 8 56, 4 51] 9 21 733 T 03 8 51] 4 46] 9 16 7 83] 7 05] 3 05...... un kles...... 849 444/914 7 39| 7 09] 3 09|...Hublersburg...| 8 45| 4 40| 9 10 7 43] 713] 3 13 ~Soyderown..... 8 41} 4 36| 9 06 7 46| 7 16] 3 16|....... ittany........ 8 38| 4 33| 9 03 7 48| 7 19] 3 18.. ...| 8 35| 4 30 9 00 751 722 3 21)........ ese] 8 32) 4 27] 8 57 7 53] 7 25| 8 23|....Clintondale....| 8 29| 4 24] 8 54 7 57] 7 29| 8 27|..Kridei’s Siding.| 8 25| 4 19| 8 49 8 02| 7 34| 3 82|...Mackeyville....| 8 19 4 13| 8 43 8 08) 7 40| 3 38|...Cedar Spring...| 8 12| 4 07 8 37 810/742 3 “eonSalona;..... 810) 4 os 835 8 15| 7 47] 3 45|...MILL HALL...|t8 054 00/8 30 (Beech Creek ER. | Il 5 2 15 anyerey SnoTe, us 3 25 > 3 : IT. ’ ve 50 f12 34/411 30|Lve f WMS'PORT ¢ {rr | 3 30] %6 56 (Phila. & Reading Ry.) 8:20 709........ «PHILA... ........ 18 36/*11 26 10 40{ 19 30|..ccueune NEW YORK....... «| 14 30] 89 00 (Via Phila.) p. m.a. m.|Arr. Lve.|a. m.|p. m. *Daily. tWeek Days. 26.00 P. M. Sundays. 110.55 A. M. Sunday. PaimLADELPHIA SiEEPING Car attached to East- bound train from Williamsport at 11.30 P. M, and Waest-bound from Philadelphia at 11.36. J. W. GEPHART. General Superintendent. Time Table in effect on and after July 10, 1899. Mix | Mix | Stations. | Mix | Mix 5 45 5 55 | 918] 5 05 6 05 «.| 9 15 4 56 f6 15 ..|f8 55/4 33 f6 19 “s Gum Stump... ...|f8 50|f4 27 7 27] 11 26|Ar....... Snow Shoe........ Lv.| 730] 3 15 P. M.lA. M. A. M.|P. M. “f stop on signal. Week days only. J. B. HUTCHINSON, TS R 00D. General Manager. General P ger Agent. JJ ELLEFONTE CENTRAL RAIL- . ROAD. Schedule to take effect Monday, Apr. 3rd, 1899. ESTWARD EASTWARD read down read up No. 5|tNo. 9% Stations. |¢No. 2[tNo. 4 P. M. | A. 3. |a.L|Lv. Ar a.m |p M (pw, 4.15| 19 30/6 30|.... Bellefonte .... 2 40|6 40 421) 10 37/6 85|..... Coleville......| 8 40| 2 25g 30 4 25| 10 42}6 38 Mortis......| 8 87| 2 22|6 27 4 28] 10 47/6 43|.. 8 35] 2176 23 4 33| 10 51(6 46 8 31. 210/6 21 4 36 10 56/6 50|... 828) 206/618 4 40| 11 02(6 55]. 824) 20006 14 4 43| 11 05/7 00|. 8 20 1656 10 4 45! 11 08(7 03... 8 18| 1 52/6 07 4 55 11 20/7 12!... 1 8 07| 1375 5 BCH IT 24/7 27. Strubles n | TH 5 10, 7 31|...Bloomsdorf...| 7 40 5 20 515 7 35/Pine Grove Cro.| 7 35| F. H. THOMAS Supt GA aE ~