* Dewan. Bellefonte, Pa., December 20, 190l. ee PEACE ON EARTH. “What means this glory round our feet,” The Magi mused, “more bright than morn ¥ And voices chanted clear and sweet, “To-day the Prince of Peace is born !”’ “What means this star,” the shepherds said, “That brightens thro’ the rocky glen?’ And angels answering, overhead, Said, ‘Peace on earth good will to men !”’ All round about our feet shall shine A light like that the wise men saw, If we our loving wills incline To that sweet Life which is the Law, So shall we learn to understand The simple faith of shepherds, then, And kindly clasping hand in hand, Sing, “Peace on earth, good will to men !”’ BETH'S CHRISTMAS PLAN. The children of the little stone school house never forgot the morning when Bob- bie first come to school. Miss Gray was just ready to tell them their Friday morn- ing story, and the room was very still. Suddenly, down the dusty country road came the rattle of little wheels, and the sound of a ¢hild’s sweet, shrill voice shout- ing, ‘‘Get up there—whoa!”’ A moment later the big boy who worked for Dr. Green came in. In his arms was a tiny boy, with a queer, misshapen back and a white,drawn little face, out of which looke : the biggest and darkest of hazel eyes. Tom placed the little fellow on a low seat near Miss Gray, and said slowly : “We couldn’t get him to stay at home any longer, Miss Gray. He’s my brother Bob, and he gets lonesome at home all day with mother gone to work. He's never walked a step in all his life. He'll be real good and quiet, Bob will—won’t you, Beh 27? Bob did not answer. His quick eyes had seen something in the face of the teach- er, which warmed his little lonely heart and told him. more plainly than words, that he was welcome. Miss Gray's face was all that Bob saw at first, but afrer a while he became conscious of a pair of grave brown eyes fixed upon him. The owner of the eyes smiled at him, and held up for him to see a large apple, smooth and rosy from much polish- ing on her ruffled blue-and-white check apron. Bob liked her at once. He felt gure that she would not laugh at his back. When, at recess, she shvly gave him the apple and said she would bring him ove “every single morning’’ he was completely won. After that first day nothing could keep Bob from school. The children grew ac- customed to the patient. pale little face and the beautiful, tired eyes. But Beth never forgot to bring the apple, and surely never before did apples receive such polishing. One morning—a clear. cold, crisp oue, which Beth called ‘‘Christmasy’’—Miss Gray, with the dearest and deepest of dimples coming and going in her smooth cheeks, said : ‘Children, I have the nicest plan in my head !”’ That night Beth, bending laboriously over the table in the cheery sitting room at home, wrote a letter to her sister Agnes, who was a nurse in one of the city hos- pitals. Here it is : ” DEAR AGNES: Miss Gray does make the loveliest plans right out of her own head. wish I could. What do you spose we are go- ing to have a Christmas Tree all our own in the school house. And the best of it is we are going to earn our money all buy ourself each one of us a dollar and as much more as we can. There is 15 of us not counting Bob- bie he cant earn cause he is lame and has something the matter with the Chord in his Back. But he is going to string all the pop- korn. I like Bob, heis awful poor some- times he hasent only bred thout any butter for his lunch, and sometimes he cries cause the akes in his Chord are so bad. Miss Gray says we must really earn our dollar ourself not ask our father or mother for it. Mamma says I can make butter all myself and sell it 80 I am going to I guess. Tke old eat is weil she is osleep on the Dickshunary so I cant look up the words and I may make some misstakes. She purs so loud I cant hardly write. So, Good-bye. From your loveing sister : BETH. P. S.—I asked Mamma how to spell Chord so I am sure that is right anyway. Never before were the pennies and nick- les and dimes so eagerly sought and so carefully saved in that little country town. The fifteen boys and girls worked morning and night to earn those precious dollars. Miss Gray smiled encouragement upon their efforts, and the elders helped in such small ways as were allowable. And so it came about that two weeks before Christ- mas the children were ready to count their wealth. They waited impatiently for Bob, who was late that morning. When Tom at last ariived he wasalone and said that Bob was ill. He didn’t know when he would be well enough to come to school again. so he had sent a little money for the Christ-- mas tree. He couldu’t bear not to earn anything for it himself. So he had sat on the ground and helped Tom pick up apples one day in the fall. . Tom bad paid him a cent for every dozen. He had earned only ten cents, for the work had tired his back. “"Twasn’t worth sending, but he had been 80 anxious—"’ & “Bob worked harder for his money than any of the rest of us, Tom,’' said Miss Grav, «ently, and something bright shone in her eyes as she took the ten dingy little pennies. When the money was all counted there was just twenty-one dollars and seventeen cents in the little box on the desk. How they all shouted ! For a week Bob was gone from his place. Every morning Beth stopped at the deso- late little house in the hollow and left two big red apples. Every night, when she went home, she counted the apples stand- ing in a rosy row on the window sill. Thursday night there were ten. Poor little Bob was too sick to eat them. She wrote a long letter to Agnes that evening, and told her all about Bob and his pennies and the apples, and how Miss Gray was going to Norton the next week to buy presents for the tree. The next morning Miss Gray told the children a Christmas story. It was about a little cripple whose name was Tiny Tim. It was such a sad little story, and remind- ed Beth so much of Bob that she could not get it out of her head and missed five words of her spelling lesson. At night, when she went to see Bobbie, she found him better. His little face shone with pleasure when she told him about the money. Bat it grew sad again when he told Beth that Dr. Green said he could not go to school again for months. ‘“He says,’’ said the little fellow, wist- fully, ‘‘that if Icould only go to a big hos- pital and take treatment my back could be made well. He is quite sure. But it would take lots and lots of money—more than mamma and Tom could earn in weeks. Why, Beth, there isn’t even enough to pay the doctor, and mamma cried all night ‘most, ’caunse I could hear her.” Beth went home very slowly. She was so sober at supper that papa acked her if the old cat was dead, or if burglars had stolen the money for the tree. But Beth shook her little brown head. “‘I’'m think- ing out something inside of me,’”’ was all she would say. The result of her ‘‘thinking out’ was another letter to Agnes. It was very short, and Webster would not have approved of the spelling : DEAR AGNES : How much money would it cost to send Bobbie Raymond to your hos- pital and keep him there till he gets well? The Doctor is sure he could get well there. Pleeze anser write off. ETH P.S.—I baven’t time to spell write morning. The answer came Monday night. day morning Beth went to school early. She found Miss Gray alone. ‘‘Miss Gray,’’ she said. ‘‘I—have a—a— plan. Are you too busy ? ’Cause it won't keep very long, I’m afraid.” Miss Gray smiled down into the troubled dark eyes. “I'm ready to hear it now. Beth,’ she said. ‘‘Is it a Christmas plan ?”’ *“Yes,’”’ said Beth slowly, *‘it’s a Christ- mas plan, but it isn’t a nice one like the ones you make, Miss Gray. It’s—it’sabout Bobbie. You see, he can’t get well here, and he could be all cured if he could go to a hospital—Dr. Green says he is most sure he could be. Now, Agnes says if some one would just put Bobbie on the train at Nor- ton she would meet him in New York and take him to her hospital and take care of him all herself. And, Miss Gray, do you kuow, it wouldn’t cost anything only just for his ride on the cars—here’s the letter,” and she held out Agnes’s letter. Miss Gray read it through carefully. ‘‘Fifteen dollars,”’ she said; ‘‘fifteen dol- lars, and perbaps a little extra.’’ : Then she looked at Beth. Beth’s eyes were fixed upon a box on the desk—ua little box in which were just twenty-one dollars and seventeen cents. Suddenly she beut and kissed the sober little face. ‘‘It’sa lovely plan, Beth, dear—much nicer than any of mine—and I’m quite sure we can manage it.” How did Miss Gray guess the plan? When Beth came to think it all over, af- terwaid, she didn’t quite know. But, then, Miss Giay always did know things, some way. Such lifting and lowering of eyebrows, such shaking and nodding of heads as there was after Miss Gray bad told the children all about Beth’s plan. The lessons were not well learned. But Miss Gray smiled to herself. She knew that another lesson was being learned, slowly but surely—the old, old, beautiful lesson of self-denial. The next morning, when she said quiet- ly, ‘Well, children, what have you decid- ed?’ such a shout as arose from fifteen eager little throats, ‘‘Send Bob to New York I”? “‘Send Bobbie to the hospital !” All the fifteen went with Miss Gray to tell Bob and Bob’s mocher all about it. Bobh’s face when he heard the good news, and Mrs. Raymond’s tears and thanks when she understood, were ‘worth all the Christ- mas trees in the Adirondacks,’’ Beth said. ‘It’s the very best Christmas present a fellow ever had,’’ said Bob. ‘‘Old Santa himself couldn’t have thought of sucha jolly one.” “We're playing we are Santa Claus,” said Beth, softly, but twenty-eight ears heard her, and fourteen joyous voices shouted, ‘‘Yes, yes, Bob, we’re playing Santa Claus, this year!” There was a Christmas tree in the little stone school house the next year, and Bob- bie, well and strong, with cheeks as hard and rosy as one of Beth’s apples, helped earn the money for it. But though it was a beautiful tree, with fruits and candies and nuts and pretty gifts for all, Beth told Mies Gray in confidence, afterward : “It’s been just lovely, Miss Gray. but there never could be a happier Christmas than the one when we sent Bobbie to the hospital !”? Miss Gray smiled. ‘‘I think so too, Beth,” she said.—By Alice E. Allen, in the Christian Advocate. "this Tues- very Business Notice. Castoria CASTORIA FOR INFANTS AND CHILDREN. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the CHAS. H. FLETCHER. Signature of In Use For Over 30 Years. New Advertisements. Te DOUBT THIS. IS TO DISBELIEVE THE EVIDENCE OF YOUR OWN SENSES. 3 It's Bellefonte proof for Bellefonte people. It's local endorsement for local reader. It will stand the most rigid investigation. Mr. A. B. Steel, of the Armor says: “I have never had a bad back since I used Doan’s Kidney Pills in 1896 I procured them at that time from F. Potts Green's drug store and used them, but I have never had any occasion to use them since. I was fo bad with lumbago or soreness across my kidneys that I had to lay off work. I was hurt at a barn rais- ing some years ago by a Jeary timber swinging and striking me in the back. After that whenever I took cold it always affected my kidneys. This was the case for many years but Doan’s Kidney Pills finished all that suffering. [I can speak as highly of this valuable preparation now as I did then.” For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-Milburn Co. Buffalo, N. Y., sole agents for the U. 8. Re- member the name Doan's and take no substitute. New Advertisements. {QHERIPF'S SAL ES. By virtue of a writ of Levari Facias issued out of the Court of Common Pleas of Centre Co., Pa., and to me directed, there will be exposed to pub- lic sale, at the Court House, in the borough of Bellefonte, Pa., SATURDAY, DECEMBER 21st, 1901, at 10:30 o'clock a. m., the following described real estate : All those certain messnages, tenements, min- ing and mineral rights sitnate in Centre county, Pennsylvania, bounded and described as follows: TRACT NO. 1, Situate in Spring township, Centre county aforesaid, bounded on the east by lands of Robert Valentine et al ; on the south by lands of Charles McCafferty, John Musser etal; on the west by lands of John Musser, the heirs of Reuben Valentine et al ; and on the north by lands of Wm. F. Reynolds and sundry town lots in Bellefonte borough, composed of parts of five tracts warranted in the names of Wm. Moore, Thomas Ball, Wm. Sharon Jr., James Harris and Hugh Turner, and more specifically deseribed, according to a survey made thereof by J. M. Bell, Civil Engineer, on June 25th, A. D. 1886; as fol- lows : Beginning at stones, northwesterly corner of said tract ; thence along land now or formerly of James Harris’ heirs, and crossing the Centre & Kishocoquillas turnpike, south thirty-five de- grees, east, twenty and one-half perches to a stake ; thence crossing the creek and the Belle- fonte, Nittany & Lemont railroad south forty and one-half degrees, west, thirty-five perches to a stake thence south thirty-five degrees east, twenty-two and one-half perches to a stone; thence south thirteen degrees west, thirty-six and four-tenth perches to a stone near a white pine ; xouth sixty-three degrees east, eleven erches to stones ; thence south three and one- 1alf degrees west thirty perches to stones; thence south thirteen and one-half degrees east, twenty- six perches to a white pine ; thence south fifty- two and cne-half degrees east, thirty-one and one half perches toa white pine ; thence south thirty three degrees east, twenty perches to a stake thence, recrossing the Bellefonte, Nittany & Lemont railroad, north fifty-five degrees east, New Advertisements. PURPART NO. 5. Also all the machinery, en- gine houses, wells and ore washing plant connect- ed with the Logan Bank of the late Centre Iron Company property, situate in Spring township, Centre county, on the property of Reuben Valen- tine, bounded on the north, south, east and west by lands of said Reuben Valentine: containing five acres, more or less. PURPART NO. 6. Also all the iron ore, and mine, within, upon or underlying forty seven tracts or parcels of land situate in the townships of Spring, Benner, Walker, College, Boggs and Union in Centre county, Pennsylvania, composed in whole or part of the tracts: warranted in the fol lowing names: One thereot in the name of Michael Hahn, containing 180 acres; one other thereof in the name of Uriah Woolman, contain- ing 298 acres; one other thereof in the name of James Harris, containing 312 acres and 140 erches; one other thereof in the name of James arris, containing 159 acres and 120 perches; one other thereof in the name of James Bertram, con- taining 192 acres and 16 perches; one other there- of in the name of Hugh Turner, containing 20 acres; one other thereof in the name of Ann Pat- ton, containing 407 acres and 40 perches, two oth- ers thereof in the names of Samuel Miles and James Harris, containing respectively 266 acres; one other thereof in the name of Robert Means, containing 265 acres; one other thereof in the name of John Talbot, containing 400 acres; one other thereof in the name of John MecComing, containing 413 acres and ‘73 perches; one other thereof in the name of Eleanor Johnston. contain- ing 421 acres and 123 perches; one other thereof in the name of James Johnson, containing 433 acres; one cther thereof in the name of Thomas John- son, containing 433 acres; one other thereofin the name of John Smith, containing 361 acres; one other thereof inthe name of John MeKissick or MecKisson, containing 187 acres and 100 perches; one other thereof in the name of William Carlisle, containing 130 acres; one other thereof in the name of Sam’l. Phipps, containing 233 acres 153 perches; one other thereof in the name of Jane Black, containing 400 acres: one other thereof in the name of William Wilson, containing 300 acres; one other thereof in the name of Rudolph Mul- holland, containing 100 acres; one other thereofin | 46-46-3t New Advertisements. Seized, taken in execution, and to be sold as the property of The Valentine Iron Company, de- fendant, and Robert Valentine and The American Bonding & Trust Company of Baltimore City, terre tenants. TerMs oF Sare.—No deed will be acknowledged until purchase money is paid in full. CYRUS BRUNGART, 46-47 Sheriff, XECUTOR’S NOTICE.—Letters testa- mentary on the estate of Jacob Dunkle deceased, late of Walker township, having been granted to the undersigned he requests all per- sons knowing themselves indebted to said estate to make immediate paymentand those having claims against the same to present them duly authenticated for settlement, D. A. DEITRICH, 46-46-6t Hublersburg, Pa. ANTED.—Several persons of charac- ter and good reputation in each State (one in this county required) to represent and advertise old established wealthy business house of solid financial standing. Salary $18 weekly with expenses additional, all payable in cas each Wednesday direct from head offices, Horse and earriage furnished, when necessary. Refer- ences. Enclose self-addressed envelope. MANAGER, 316 CAXTON BUILDING, 46-36-16t Chicago. OTICE. — Notice is hereby given that the Court of Common Pleas of Centre county has appointed E. R. Chambers, Auditor to distribute the funds now in court paid in by David Rothrock, administrator, ete., of Henry Roth- rock, deceased, to and among those legally en- titled to receive the same. And that he will be in his law office in Bellefonte, No. 5 east High street, on December 27th, 1901, at ten o’clock a. m. for the duties of his said appointment. All persons interested will please notice and attend. E. R. CHAMBERS. eighteen perches to a stake; thence south thirty- nine degrees east, thirty-four and two-tenths perches to a stake ; thence, recrossing the creek, porth fifty-five and one-half degrees east, four and two-tenth perches to a stake ; thence. norin fitty degrees west, nine perches to a stake on the easterly bank of said creek : thence, recrossing the turnpike road, north forty-one and one-half degrees east, two hundred and thirty-six perches to a stake in the middle of the old Lewistown pike; thence south sixty-four and three-fourth degrees west, one hundred and fifty-nine and nine-tenth rehes to a stake ; thence north fifteen and one- Bait degrees west, one hundred and forty and seven-tenth perches to stones; thence along lands of Friends’ Cemetery the three following courses and distances, to wit. south, seventy- six and one-half degrees west, thirty-six and three-tenths perches to a stake ; south, eighty- four and one-fourth degrees west; fourteen and seven-tenths perches to a stake ; and north thir- teen and os degrees west, thirteen perches to a stake ; and thence leaving the Cemetery lot, south seventy-six and one-half degrees west, seventy-five and four-tenths perches to the place of beginning; containing one hundred and seven- ty-two acres (172 A) and eighty-two (82 pr.) per- ches ; having thereon erected a large, modein, improved, hot-blast coke furnace, together with all engines and machinery necessary to operate the same, with brick engine and casting houses, boiler house, oil, ware and stock houses, a large frame f undry and machine shop, a large frame rolling and puddling mill, with six puddling fur- naces equipped, a large two-story stone mansion house, 8 30| 12 45|7 20 535 1 56 i 7 2 528) 150 7 32 521 141 | 1 017 39 512 1 3¢ 1 08[7 48 503 128 ..| 907 1 15|7 87 4 56] 1 22| 10 04/Snow Shoe Int.| 9 15) 1 22|8 05 4 53| 1 14 10 01/...Milesburg.. ... 918| 1 24/8 08 4441 105 9 53|....Bellefonte....| 932 1 05/8 16 432) 12 55 9 41|....Milesburg...| 941) 1 24/8 28 4 25 12 48| 9 34|......Curtin........ 9 49! 1 34/8 36 4120]... nee 9 30|..Mount Eagle..| 9 53 1 38/8 40 4 14| 12 38) 9 24/......Howard..... 9 59 1 43(8 44 405| 12 29! 9 15|.....Eagleville...| 10 08] 1 51/8 53 402 12 26 9 12|.Beech Creek...| 10 11| 1 548 53 3 51| 12 16| 9 01|.....Mill Hall......| 10 22| 2 049 09 349) 12 10/ 8 55/...Lock Haven.| 10 30] 2 10{9 15 P.M.| P. M. | A. Mm. |Lv. Arr. a.m. | pom. (pow. the name of Chas. Wilson, containing 182 acres and 29 perches; one other thereof in the name of John Dunwoody, containing 329 acres; one other thereof in the name of James Long, containing 433 acres and 153 perches; one other thereof in the name of Joshua Deal, containing 433 acres and 153 perches; one other thereof in the name of John Irwin, containing 225 acres and 124 perches; one other thereof in the name of Samuel Miles, con- taining 366 acres and 130 pevches; one other thereof in the name of Daniel Hartong, contain ing 419 acres and 57 perches; one other thereof in the name of Casper Kuhns, containing 453 acres; four others thereof in the names of Samuel Miles, John Dunlap, James Harris and Samuel Milliken, respectively containing 700 acres; three others thereof in the names of William Fulton, James Harris and Nathaniel Johnston, containing re- spectively 200 hundred acres; one other thereof in he name of Lindsay Coats, containing 315 acres ; one other thereof in the name of George Evans Jr., containing 200 acres ; one other thereof in the name of William Sharon Jr., containing 176 acres and 43 perches; three others thereof in the names of Peter Graybill,Joseph Hopkin and Evan Miles, respectively containing 550 acres; one other there- of in the name of Samuel Miles Jr., containing 368 acres; one other thereof in the name of Geo. Fry, containing 162 acres and 84 perches; one oth- er thereof in the name of Thomas Bell, contain- ing 160 acres; one other thereof in the name of William A. Thomas, cottaining 246 acres and 152 erches; one other thereof in the name of John iy containing 140 acres and one other there: of in the name of Hugh Turner, containing 40 acres, (Excepting and reserving out of the Michael Hahn tract one fifth of the ore underly- ing a part thereof granted to William Riddle; out of the Eleanor Johnston tract, the ore underlying 128 acres granted to J. Y. Dale; out of the John Dunwoody tract, 191 acres anderiying tract grant- ed to John Hoover; out of the William Fulton, James Harris and Nathaniel Johnston tracts. one fourth of 100 acres thereof; out of the William Sharon tract, one fourth of 100 acres, and ont of the Wm. A. Thomas tract 50 acres granted to David Harter; and also excepting all ove underlying any tracts conveyed by Jacob D. Valentine at al., or any of their ancestors by deeds recorded prior to August 2nd, 1886. Together with the right and privilege of free ingress, egress and regress on the surface of the respective tracts to search for; find, dig, deposit, clean,burn, take and carry away all such iron ore or mine, with all the rights and privileges necessary for the full, quiet and absolute enjoyment of the same, subject, however to the payment to the respéctive owners of said surface their heirs and assigns, of $60.00 for each and every acre permanently occupied in the ex- ercise of said right. All shafts or holes excavated in seaching for ore to be re-filled at the expense of the parties making such search.) TOGETHER WITH the engine houses, der- ricks, boilers, engines, pumps washers, charcoal beds, forge tools, fixtures, sidings, railway cars, carts, wagons, scales, platform scales, incline planes, dwelling houses, stables, cabins, artesian wells, machinery erected on any of the foregoin lands or mineral rights, therein contained or use: in connection therewith : and also together with all improvements and machinery which have been made to or placed upon the surface of any of the above mentioned forty-seven tracts upon which the said ore rights are conveyed, either by Edmund Blanchard or William M. Stewart, the Valentine Ore Land Association or the Centre Iron Company, since August 2nd, 1886, or prior thereto, by the grantors of said ‘Blanchard and ewart. THE FOREGOING being the same property which The Fidelity Insurance, Trust & Safe Deposit Company, by its deed bearing date the twenty-sixth day of February A. D. one thousand eight hundred and ninety-one, and recorded in Centre county in Deed k Vol. 61, e 356, ranted and conveyed to the said The Valentine ron Company, as by reference thereto will more fully and at large appear. ALSO TOGETHER WITH all the corporate rights, franchises, immunities and privileges of the said The Valentine Iron Company under and by virtue of its charter of incorporation us grant. ed by the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, under Letters Patent bearing date the twenty-ninth day of January A D. one thousand eight hundred and ninety-one. - Prospectus. LEWISBURG & TYRONE RAILROAD. EASTWARD. Nov. Zi#th 1901. A FREE PATTERN (your own selection) to every sub- seriber. Only 50 cents a year. | McCALL’S 50cts. | A MAGAZINE ¥BaR A LADIES’ MAGAZINE. A gem ; beautiful colored plates ; lat- est fashions; dressmaking economies fancy work ; household hints ; fiction, etc. Subscribe to-day, or send 5c. for latest copy. Lady ‘agent wanted. Send for terms. Stylish, Reliable, Simple, Up-to-date, Economical and Absolutely Perfect- Fitting Paper Patterns. : CT RT LE TORY RI 4 McCALL 10C. BAZAR LAND PATTERNS All Seams Allowed and Perforations show the Basting and Sewing Lines. Only 10 and 15 cents each—none high- er. Ask for them, or by mail trom - THE McCALL CO. 113-115-117 West 31st., New York. ' 46-39-10¢t ? 15C. § Travelers Guide. ENTEAL RAILROAD OF PENNA. Condensed Time Table. WESTWARD. MAIL. | EXP, MAIL.| EXP, TI STATIONS. 215 6 40]. “9°00 "4'To 221 6a. 8 55| 4 06 2 24| 648]. 8 52| 403 2 27 6 51.. 8 49) 4 00 2 34) 6 57... 8 43] 3 54 238 T02.. 8 39! 3 50 243 7 06l.. 8 35 3 46 248 7 10|.. 8 31] 3 42 255 711. 8 24) 335 3021 722. 8 18! 3 30 310 728 811 323 317 73 8 05! 317 325 743 7 57 3 08 332 750 7 50] 3 02 3 38 7 56 743 255 3 41, 800 7 40| 2 51 351 808 731 242 354) 812 7 26 288 401] 818 719] 231 4 06) 8 26 T00 293 4 13) 8 33 702 216 418; 835 650 214 4 22] 8 40 655 210 4 24) 8 15 6 50] 2 05 4 81) 8 53|..........Vicksburg.. 6 42) 1 57 4 30] 8 58.. ..Biehl...... 6 38) 153 4 421 9 05].. .ewisburg...........| 6 30 1 45 4 50{ 9 15|.. Montandon..........| 5 40| 1 38 P.M. | A.M. |Ar. Lv. a. wm |p om LEWISBURG & TYRONE RAILROAD. EASTWARD, UPPER END. WESTWARD. 3 Nov. 26th, 190 MH = Ctr On Ov gongss® 09! Pennington... 7 58 Stover....... BELLEFONTE & SNOW SHOE BRANCH. General Manager. General P ger Agent. READ powN READ UP. ; i : June 17th, 1901. ae ove in effect on ano after Nov 24. 1901. No 1|No 5{No 3 No 6/No 4/No 2 x| Mix Stations. | Mix | Mix © | 546 9 s3Lv... Bellefonte... 082 5 20 5 bb, p: . m.|Lve. Ar. 6 05 Fs 40| BELLEFONTE, 16 15 2 3 onaeNigh.. 6 19 me Gum Stump, 3 03). 7 27) 11 26/Ar.......Snow Shoe........ o Pil P. M.| A. M. 5 309 “f"* stop on signal. Week days only. 313 J. B. HUTCHINSON, 737k woo. 3 18/.. 321 3 23|..... 3 27(. Krider's Siding. 3 32|...Mackeyville.... 0000000 I rT TTT ToT IoTTgP 5538382 s5a8sunn=8 | Ney q IF TTT aT TI =TT DD ARBREREEEEec anand TER eh D Sess ERNEngsRsagsH Ep $ SBg |gegssvssasErEryal 5 00 00 00 00 00 G6 GB 09 00 G6 00 00 80 © © = SoRsEsEgprasazgss 3 i pring... 3 40] 1r...rro. SALONS... 3 45|..MILL HALL... |# (Beech Creek R. n » 3 3 = Jersey Shore pd 3 2 o XM > ve Ha Sal Bo0|Tvg WMS'PORT LAF) 2 80) IT Phila. & Reading Ry.) 8 29 T 09|.. PHILA... .| 18 36[*11 10 40{ 19 30|.........NEW YORK.........| 4 80] 29 00 (Via Phila.) p- m.ja. m, Lyve.|a. m.|p. m. *Daily. tWeek Days. £6.00 P. M. Sundays. 110.55 A. M. Sunday. PuiuapeLraia Steering Car attached to East- bound train from Williamsport at 11.30 P. M, and West-bound from Philadelphia at 11.86, J. W. GEPHART. General Superintendent. BELLEFONTE CENTRAL RAIL- ROAD. Schedule to take effect Monday, Apr. 3rd, 1899. WESTWARD EASTWARD read down read up No. 54No. 3 Stations. ino. 2/No. 4 P. M. on. (A.M. Lv, , Arla. wm | eo 4 15] 19 30(6'30|.... Bellefonte ...| 8 50| 2 f0|o 5; 421 317(6 85|..... Coleville......| 8 2 25(6 30 425 42/6 38/...... Mortis.......| 8 87] 2 22lg 27 4 28 47/6 43|..... Whitmer.....| 8 35| 2 176 23 4 33 51/6 46|.Hunter’s Park.| 8 31] 2 10g 21 4 36 56/6 50|...,.Fillmore......| 8 28] 2 06/g 15 440 02/6 56|...... Briarly......| 8 24/ 2 00lg 14 443 05{7 00...... Waddles.....| 820] 1 55/¢ 10 445 08/7 03(....Lambourn....| 818] 1 52/¢ on 55 2017 12 ake 8 07] 1 5 5 52 - : 00 | ege.| 8 00 Beh ILA oT bo 213] 8s | T4014 510 7 $i Bloomsdort... 7 40 5 20 5 15] 7 35/Pine Grove Cro.| 7 36] | F. H. THOMAS,Supt,