ers Benoa lc Bellefonte, Pa., April 25,1902. Slow the Child Should be Fed for the First Two Years. In Home and Farm for February 1st, the . subject under consideration was the prepa- ration of milk for feeding infants. For several years milk should form the chief pars of a child’s diet. Daring the second year meats, eggs, bread and butter, fruits and cereals in the form of porridge may be added. The mother mu ; proceed most carefully in this matter, watching the ef- fect of each article upon the stomach and bowels of the child, and, of course, desist- ing at once when the food disagrees. During the second year the child is get- ting its first molars, or chewing teeth, and i6 is not until these appear that the child is in a condition to digest solid food. Af 18 months a child may be given a soft- boiled egg, slightly salted. Crumbled bread added to the egg is relished. The bread should he stale and dry, as fresh, light bread is difficult of digestion. Zwie- back is frequently used for ehildren and by persons of deranged digestion, but it is simply bread twice baked. After bread has been thoroughly baked cooled cut it in slices and place in a pan in the oven until it is a golden brown all through. By this means all the gases are eliminated, and the bread is not ouly very palatable, but most digestible. MEAT FOR LITTLE CHILDREN. In giving meat toa young child scrape a teaspoonful of jucy pulp from a tender piece of 1are beef, add some bread crumbs, and feed the child slowly. Tender chick- en finely winced and moistened with the chicken broth is wholesome. An excellent food for children is made as follows : Put two pounds of lean beef in a granite or porcelain-lined kettle, add a very little salt and four quarts of water. Simmer slowly until the meat is reduced to a pulp, and only a quart of liquid re- mains. Strain through a sieve and then through a hag. When cold remove all fat. Season delicately with salt and serve hot. To vary the flavor, vegetables may be add- ed, such as half a small turnip or carrot, a stalk of celery, a little parsley. This is an excellent occasional substitute for milk, when the child’s appetite for milk fails. Chicken broth made in this way is nour- ishing and appetizing. Porridge for a young child should be carefully prepared and the coarse particles strained ous of it, as they are liable to irri- tate the bowels. It should be given with milk and without sugar. American chil- dren are given a great deal too much sugar. XI6 forms an acid in the stomach, injures the digestive powers and opens the way to rheumatism, which is the affliction of age. Many mothers feed their children cake or sweetened crackers, which are in themsel- ves injurious and have the additional dis- advantage of cultivating a depraved taste and causing the child to 1efuse food that is not sweetened. FRUITS AND MILK DIET. Fruite are good when a child is coosti- pated, but should not be given when milk 48 in the stomach. Early in the morning when the stomach is empty is the hest time. The juice of an orange is whole- someand refreshing, as is also a little of the finely mashed pulp of a ripe, fresh peach. ‘Other fruits should be used with great caution, unless cocked. Apples stewed ur baked with very little sugar and put through the sieve are generally wholesome. Prunes stewed until perfectly tender and treated in the same way are good. Some- 6imes a tablespoonful of prune juice 1s found helpful in cases of constipation. Potatoes are poison to some people, and it is not wise to give potatoes to children until they are two years old. Then the potato should be thoroughly baked, beaten with a fork until light and seasoned with galt, cream, or a little heef or chicken juice. Melted butter is not digestible, and 16 is ‘not wise to put butter on a hot potato to feed to a child. . Children awake early. The little stom- ach is at once clamorouns, and a bottle or cup of warm milk with a little bread, should be given. Two hours after this the «child should be bathed, and then comes its breakfast. with miik, bread and a cereal for variety. At the mid-day dinner the egg, or meat juice, broth, ete., should be given with the stewed fruit. The meal in the middle of the afternoon should be light, milk, bread aud a cereal, and juss ‘before going to bed the child should be given a last meal of milk. It in of great importance that children adhere to the regular hours of meals. Eas- ing hetween meals is a pernicious practice. <Childten should be taught to eat slowly and to masticate their food thoroughly. They should be given a sufficient variety -of dainty, well cooked food, but not such a variety as will stimulate them to overeat- ing. ‘AFTER THE THIRD YEAR. After the third year is reached the diet is gradually increased, both in amount and ‘variety. The meats should for some years ‘be limited to beef, mutton, chicken or baked hen and turkey. Sausage, pork, hog meat of every king, should never he given to children, with the exception of breakfast bacon, a little®of which is gener- ally considered wholesome. Delicately made soups are always relished by children -and are nourishing. Fiesh vegetables, in their season, such as asparagus, peas, beans, onions, cooked until thoronghly tender and well chewed are good. Custards, rice pnd- dings, bread puddings, sponge cake, gin gerbread and stewed fruits form excelient «desserts for children. It is wise to accustom a child to eat a variety of vod, bus this cannot be done by command or force. Tact and kindness are best. When a notional enild 1efuses food which he has not tasted. it is of little use 60 try harsh measures, which will likely confirm him in a lasting detestation of the food in question; gentle measures are best. Let the table be a place for meiry talk. Do not allow a child to be teased or pun- ished while easting. It is most injurious. A light heart promotes digestion. I ————— Wen a Wife in a Shell Game. Harry Hartman, of Findlay, Obio, has ‘come East to claim as a Wide a young woman whom he has never seen. Hart- man is a produce dealer in Rawson. Last September he wrote his name on an egg, which he packed and sent to a New York commission house. From there the crate was sent to Boston and then to Charles- town, Mass., where it fell into the hands of a grocer. The dozen in which this was contained was purchased by Miss Leora Barnhast, who keeps house for her father in a very respectable part of the city. She gaw the hame on the egg, and thereupon wrote a letter to its owner and an answer followed. A correspondence was begun in earnest, and the engagement was the re- sult. —Cincinnati Commercial-Tribune. Bishop Hurst Iil. John Fletcher Hurst, Methodist Episco- pal bishop of Maryland, and chancellor of the American university, is very.ill at his home, on Connecticut avenue, Washing- ton, and grave fears as to the outcome are expressed by the attending physicians. Those of his sons who are in this country have been sent for. His oldest son, Carl Bailev Hurst, is consul-general in Vienna. The bishop’s daughter, Miss Helen Hurst, is with him. Bishop Hurst suffered an apopletic stroke while attending an international conference in London. The seizure occurred imme- diately after he heard of the shooting of President McKinley, to whom he was de- voutly attached. He has never entirely recovered, and the gradual failure of his mental faculties has been apparent since that time. The bishop is in his sixty-ninth year. Bishop Hurst is considered one of the most scholarly men of the time. He has written many theological and literary works. The bishop has twice married. His second marriage occurred about ten years ago, his bride being Miss Root, of Baffalo. A separation followed, and Mrs. Hust is new in Paris with her young son. This domestic trouble had a wearing effect on the venerable divine. Money in =n Silk Skirt. Mis. Emma Scott, an aged woman who for years had lived alone in a small house at Cannonsville, near Unadilia, N. Y..died suddenly last week. Miss Corrine Web- ster, of Port Tobacco, Md., was her only companion. Miss Wehster had noticed the old lady faint on the street in Unadilia and had as- sisted her to her home, in Canvonsville where she did much to make Mrs. Scott comfortable, and made fiequent calls. The old lady appeared grateful and asked Miss Webster to accept a silk skirt. She did so, and after Mrs. Scott's death decided to rip it up and use the material. While ripping the goods apart she came upon bauk bills that had been quilted in- to the goods to the amount of $5,000. Mis. Scott was without relatives and was sup- posed to he extremely poor. Miss Webster is the daughter of a farmer in Charles conn- ty, Maryland, a few miles from Port To- bacco. Seats in the New York Stock Ex- change are selling for $65,000, being nearly 20 per cent. helow the record price of a few months back. By such little and compar- atively unnoticed facts does the wiser por- tion of the community perceive that ‘‘good times’’ (that is to say, unbridled specula- tion) cannot last forever ; but all that is lost on the lambs, this spring’s lot and other springs’ lots. A NEARLY FATAL RUNAWAY-—Started a horrible ulcer on the leg of J. B. Orner, Franklin Grove, Ill., which kefied doctors and all remedies for four vears. Then Bucklen’s Arnica Salve cared him. Just as good for boils, burns, bruises, cuts, corns, scalds, skin eruptions and piles. 250 at F. Potts Green’s drug store. Tourists. $33.00 to California Oregon and Wash- ington. Chicago & Northwestern Ry. from Chicago- daily,March and April, only $6.00 for berth in tour- ist car. Personally conducted excursions Tues- days and Thursdays from Chicago and Wednes- days from New England. Illustrated pamphlet sent on receipt of two cent stamp by 8. A. Hutchi- son, Manager, 212 Clark street, Chicago. 10-8 Lower Rate Excursion to Californian, During the coming summer frequent oppor- tunities will be offered by the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway to visit Calitornia at the lowest round trip rates ever offered, with choice of routes from Chicago via Kansas City, Omaha or St. Paul, or going and returning via different routes. Electric lighted trains. Route of the Pioneer Limited. Famous train of the world. Write for full information to F. A. Miller, general passenger, agent Chicago. The Indian and the Northwest. A handsomely illustrated book just issued, and containing 115 pages of interesting historical data relating to the settlement of the great North- west, with fine hali-tone engravings of Black Hawk, Sitting Bull, Red Cloud and other noted chiefs; Custer’s battleground and ten colored map pl. ies dating back to 1600. A careful review of the hook impresses one that it is a valued con- tribution to the history of these early pioneers, and a copy should be in every library. Price, 25 cents per copy. Mailed postage prepaid upon receipt of this amount by W. B. Kniskern, 22 Fifth avenue, Chicago, Ill. 8-6t A New Departure. The Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway has recently put in service on its Pioneer Limited trains the largest aud handsomest dining car ever built. [It is 82 feet in length from tip to tip, and its body is 6 inches wider and higher than the usual dining car. It seats 36 people com- fortably in movable chairs, and has a kitchen large enough to permit the working of six cooks which witn six waiters and a conductor make up the crew. The dining cars heretofore in service did not provide sufficient space to properly care for the large number of patrons of the Pioneer, so that iv became necessary to have a larger car. Plumbing etc. seresnesinns seeessenes {oosE 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 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. A Valuable Piece of Paper. Henry C. Frick, the steel magnate, has deposited at the banking house of J. P. Morgan & Co. what ie probably one of the most valuable pieces of paper in existence. It is a certificate for 100,000 shares of pre- ferred stock in the United States Steel Cor- poration, holding Mr. Frick’s dividends of $700,000 annually. It is stated that the deposit was made for the purpose of exchanging two-fifths of the preferred stock it represents into $4,- 000,000 worth of bonds of the proposed new issue. The balance in the deal—$6,- 000,000—will be paid to Mr. Frick in the shape of a new preferred stock certificate. 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. ‘ Medical. A LASTING EFFECT. THIS EVIDENCE SHOULD PROVE EVERY CLAIM IN BELLEFONTE. Relief from the pains and aches of a bad back is always welcome to every backache sufferer in Bellefonte, but to cure a lame weak or aching back is what is wanted. Cure it so it will stay cured. It can be done. Here's the strongest evi- dence to prove it. Mr. James Rine, west High street, em- ployed in the planing mill says: “I can speak as highly now of Doan’s Kidney Pills as I did years ago and my case is pretty good evidence that the cures made y t hem are not temporary. I have not had any of the severe pains in my back since I nsed ‘Doan’s Kidney Pills while before I could not put on my shoes and could hardly drag myself around. Though I have had slight touches of backache it never amounted to much. 1 have com- mended Doan’s Kidney Pills to hundreds of people and I know of those who have had the greatest relief from suffering by using them I can say they are reliable and permanent in their effects. For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y., sole agents for the U. 8. Remember the name—Doan's—and take no substitute. New Advertisements. QHERIFP'S SALES. By virtue of writs of Fieri Facias—Venditioni Exponas Levari Facias and Levari Facias sur Me- chanics Lien issued out of the Court of Common Pleas of Centre Co.,Pa., and to me directed, there exposed to Pablic Sale, at the Court House, in the borough of Bellefonte, Pa., MONDAY, APRIL 28th, 1902, at 1 P. M. All that certain lot of ground situate in the Boro of Bellefonte, at a point at the intersection of Allegheny street as laid out and Curtin street, thence by extension of Allegheny street north 200 feet, thence by a line parallel io said Curtin street east 200ft.to-the extension of Decatur Alley.thence by suid Decatur Alley south 200 feet to Curtin street, thence by said Curtin street 200 feet to the place of begianing, Containing 4444 4-9 superficial square yards, ‘I'nereon erected a large stone dwelling house, stable and other out buildings, ALSO All that certain messuage tenement and tract of land situate in College township, Centre county;’ Pa., bounded and described as 1ollows to wit :— On the north by land of Robert Valentine, on the east by land of Willian Crust, on the south by land of Weister Estate, and on the west by land of Weister Estate, Containing 200 acres more or less, Thereon erected a two story dwelling house, ! bank barn, wagon shed and other out buildings. ALSO, All that certain messuage tenement and tract of’ land situate in Benner township, Centre county, Pennsylvania, bounded and described as follows to wit :—0Oun the north by land of W. Fred Rey- nolds and turnpike, on the east by land of Robert Valentine and William Crust, on the south by land of R. Valentine and Weister Estate, and on the west by land of Mrs. Ellen Garbrick, Contain- ing 170 acres more or less, Thereon erected a two story stone honse, bank barn, wagon shed and other out buildings. ALSO All that certain messuage tenement and tract of land situate in Benner township, Centre county, Pennsylvania, bounded and deseribed as follows to wit: —On the north by lands of Adam Wagner, W. Fred Reynolds, John Kaufman and turnpike, on the east by lands of Solomon Poorman, H. K. Hoy, R. Valentine, on the south by lands of Wil- liam Crust, Ezra Smith, Mrs. Satterfield and Shugert, and on the west by iand of R, Valentine aad samuel Fravel, Containing 198 acres more or eas, Thereon erected a two story stone dwelling honse, bank barn, wagon shed and other out- buildings. : ALSO All that certain messuage tenement and tract of land sitnate in Benner township, Centre county, Pennsylvania, bounded and described a follows to wit :—On the north by land of William Crust, on the east by land of Lewis Rearick and Henry Zimmerman, on the south by land of Weister Es- tate and on the west by land of Robert Valentine, Containing 80 acres more or less, ALSO All that certain messuage tenement and tract of land situate io Spring township, Centre county, Pennsylvania, bounded and described ax follows to wit:— On the north by land of Loeb May and Loeb and John Rishel, on the east by land of Jacob Valentine and W. J. Dale, on the south by land of 8. H. Williams and Mrs. Satterfield, and on the west by land of Robert Valentine and Hoy, containing 250 acres more or less, I'hereon "erected a two story dwelling house, bank barn, wagon shed and other out buildings. Also a tenement house and ont buildingx. ALSO All that certain messuage tenement and tract of land situate in Benner township, Centré county, Pennsylvania, bounded and described as follows to wit :—On the north by land of R. Valentine on the ex~t by land of R. Valentine, on the south by land of Weister Estate and on the west by land of R. Valentine, Containing about 3acres, ? Thereon erected a dwelling house, slable and out buildings, ALSO All that certain messuage, tenement and tract of land situate in Benner township, Centre connty, Pennsylvania, bounded and described as follows to wit:—0Un the north by land of Robert Valen- tine, cn the east by land of Robert Valentine and on the south by lands of Robert Valentine and on the west by land ot R. Valentine, Containing about 2 acres, T'hereon erected a two story dwelling house, stable, cement mill, 2 lime kilns and out build- ings. New Advertisements. Fine Groceries Travelers Guide. All that certain piece of land situate in Sprin township, Centre county, Pennsylvania, bound: and described as follows. to wit :—Oun the north by land of Robert Valentine, on the east by land of A.G. Morris, on the south by 5th Avenue and on the west by land of Benjamin Shaffer, Containing one acre more or less, Thereon erected a two story dweiling house. ALSO I All that certain piece of land situate ih Sprin township, Centre county, Pennsylvania, bounde and described as follows to wit :—On the north by land of Thomas Shoemaker, on the east by land of A. G. Morris, on the south by land of R. Valen- tine, and on the west by land of John P. Harris, Samuel Robertson, Shugert Estate, William Ran- kin, Thomas Rhoads and B. Shaffer, Containing 5 acres more or less, Seized, taken in execution, and to be sold as the property of Robert Valentine: ALSO All that certain messuage, tract or piece of land situate in the Township of Benner, County of Cen- tre, and State of Pennsylvania, bounded and de- scribed us follows : Beginning at a stone corner on the bank of Spring Creek, thence north one and one half degrees west along the bank of said creek five and 5-10 perches to stones, thence along" land of, or formerly of, Henry Brockerhoff, now deceased, north 40 degrees east 11 perches to stones, thence north 78 degrees east 14 perches to stones, thence south 37 degrees eat 13.8 perches to stones, thence south 48 degrees west 15.8 perches to a post, thence along ands of, or for- merly of, Daniel Klinger, north 75 degrees west 18 perches to the place of beginning, Containing 2 acres and 84 perches neat measure, being the same premises which Henry Brockerhoft and M. C. his wife hy their indenture dated the 1ith day of July A. D.1872and recorded in the office for the recording of deeds &c in and for the said County of Centre in deed book “H” No. 2, page 288 &e, did grant and confirm unto aforesaid Louis Haas and to his heirs and assigns forever, as in and by the said inpart recited indenture, relation being thereunto had more fully and at large ap- pears, having Thereon erected a dwelling house, barn, brew- ery, beer vault and other out buildings. "Seized, taken in execution, and to be sold as the roperty of Catharine Haas, Executrix &e of Louis he Naat ' All those two certain tracts or lots of ground, situate in the Boro of Centre Hall, Centre county, Pa., bounded and described as follows, the first tract or lot of ground, bounded and described as follows, On the east by Penn Avenue, on the south by lot of Geo. S. Clements part of the first part hereto, on the west by Logan Alley, on the north by lot of Mary M, Allison known as lot No. 53 on the plan of said Boro, containing forty perches, being the same lot of ground which Mary M. Alli- son by her deed bearing date March 29th, 1893 and recorded in the office for recorting of leeds in and for Centre county in Deed Book 68 page 149 conveyed to said Geo’ 8, Clements. The other tract or lot of ground bounded and described as follows, On the west by Hoffer street on the north by Ridge street, on the east by Logan ‘alley and on the south by Grove alley, Containing one acre of ground. 2 Seized, taken in execution and to be sold as the property of George 8. Clements and Anna Clem- ents. ALSO . All that certain lot or piece of land and teuve- ment situate in Boalsburg, Harris township, Cen- tre county, Pennsylvania, bounded and described as follows to wit: —On the north by Main street, on the west by Mrs. Henderson, on the sonth by an alles, on the east by W. A. Murray, Contain- ing one fourth of an acre more or less, Thereon erected a dwelling house and out buildings. 5 Seized, taken in execution and to be sold as the property of Sarah Hasson and James Hasson. AL30O All that certain lot of ground situate in the Township of Spring, County of Centre and State of Pennsylvania, bounded and dexcribed as follows; beginaing ata point in the road leading fro: Phoenix mill to Roopsburg 450 feet west of lot of Mrs. Apt, and at southeast corner of lot of Reu- ben Miller, thence north 200 feet, thence west- wardly 59 feet to line of lot of Mary Shearer,thence by same sonthwardly 200 feet to the Roopsburg road aforesaid, thence by same eastwardly 50 feet to the place of beginning, said lot fronting 50 feet on the Roopsburg road and extending back there- from 200 feet, Thereon erected a stable, Seized, taken in execution and to be sold as the property of Sarah A. Gehret. ALSO A certain one story frame church building cas- ed with brick 2nd looated at Snow Shes Iniersec- tion, Boggs townshi ‘entre county, Pennsylva- nia, on i or Ds of ground bounded and de- scribed as follows to wit: Beginning at a pine in the public road leading from Unionville to Miles- burg at a corner of land of P. B. Crider, formerly M. Wagner's estate, and James H. Davidson Grantor hereto; thence along public road in a westerly direction 52 feet; thence ina: northerly direction 60 feet; thence in a easterly direction 45 feet to the dividing line of P. B. Crider and Grantor hereto; thence in a southerly direction along said line 60 feet to the place of beginning it being the same lot of ground which James H. Davidson and Viola M. his wife by their deed dat- ed January 6th, 1 98 and recorded in Centre coun- ty in Deed book Volume 75 page 56 granted and conveyed to the Calvary United Evangelical ig of Snow Shoe Intersection; the said build- ing fronting on the main road leading from Unionville to Milesburg 32 feet in width and 40 ft and 3 inches in depth with a square church tower and entrance on the southeast corner of said church building 15x15 feet fronting on said public road, Seized, taken in execution and to be sold as the property of George W. Heiney, William E. Eckert and Svivester M. Summers trustees of the Cal- vary United Evangelical church of Snow Shoe In- tersection in Boggs Twp., and Thomas Murray, William C. Eckert, Sylvester M. Summers, Henry Smoyer, David Deitz and Rev. George W. Heiney building committee of the Calvary United Evan- gelieal church at Snow S810e Intersection, owner, or reputed owners. ALSO All that certain lot or piece of ground situate in the Village of State College, County of Centre and State of Pennsylvaria, bounded and described as follows : Beginning at a post at corner of lot of W. F. Strouse, thence along lot of said Strouse south 4034 degrees east 193 feet to post, thence along land of Wm. Foster south 4914 degrees west 50 ft to post, thence along lot of W. Homan north 40%4 degrees west 193 feet to post on Public street, thence along said street north 49); degrees east 50 feet to place of beginning, Coutaining 9650 square feet net measure, 3 Thereon erected a two story frame dxelling house and out buildings. i Seized, taken in execution, and to be so d as the property of B. F. Roup. ALSO All that certain messuage, tenement and tract of land situate in Boggs Township, Centre coun- ty, Penuva., bounded and described as follows: On the north by land of Mary Baney, on the west by land of McCoy, on the south by land of ‘McCoy and on the east by land of Robert Spicer—contain- ing six acres more or less. Thereon erected a log house and other out-buildings. Bernd, taken in execution and tobe sold as the. property of Mollie Hassard and William Hassard. ALSO All that certain lot or p'ece of grcund situate in the Borough of Philipsburg, County of Centre and State of Pennsylvania, bounded and described as follows: On the north or nearly so by Eleventh street, on the south or nearly so by an alley, on the east or nearly so by alot owned by Mrs. &, Hale and Mary A. Atherton, on the west or nearly so by Pine street, said lot or piece of ground be- ing 50 feet in width fronting on Eleventh street and extending of that width in depth ninety feet to an alley aforesaid ALSO \ All that certain lot or piece of groun Borough of Philipsburg, Centre county, Penns 1- uania, bounded and described as follows to wit: Beginning at a post 90 feet from the east corner of Pine and Tenth street, thence in a southerly di- rection 40 feet to lot of Wm. P. Duncan, thence in SECHLER & CO. o . FINE GROCERIES | BUSH HOUSE RLOCK. If you are looking for Seasonable Goods —We have them. Not sometime—hus all the time—Every day in the year. Don’t spend your strength during this extreme weather in a fruitless search for what you need, but come straight to us and get the goods promptly. Finest CanirorNta and imported ORANGES. +..30, 40, 50, 60 per doz. Lemons, finest Mediteranean juicy Pru. nein rraisen 30 and 40cts. per doz. Bananas, the finest fruit we can buy. Fresn Biscuits, Cakes and Crackers. Sweet, Mild Cured Hams, Breakfast Bacon and ‘Dried Beef. CANNED MEATS, Salmon and Sardines. Orives, an excellent bargain at.........c cuueeenss 25cts. Tare OiLg, home made and imported. Pickies, sweet and sour, in bulk and various sizes and styles of packages. Pure Extracts, Ginger Ale and Root Beer. \ New Cueesk now coming to us in elegant shape. CereAL Preparations. We carry a fine line of the most popular ones. Puge Ciper ViNgasr, the kind you can depend on. If you have any difficulty in getting suited in a fine Table Syrup come to us and you can get what you want. Our store is always open until 8 o’clock p. m., and on Saturday until 10 ‘o'clock. SECHLER & CO. GROCERS. 42-1 BELLEFONTE, PA. Travelers Guide. ree STANDARD OF THE SOUTHWEST 0 —0 { il SYSTEM 0 —0 VIA TWO GATEWAYS Either SF. LOUIS or KANSAS CITY, the Frisco System affords excellent Pullman and free Reclining Chair Car service to MEXICO, TEXAS, and all destinations in Missouri, Kansas, Ar- kansas, Oklahoma, Indian Teritory, New Mexico, Arizona, and California. OAKLAHOMA AND INDIAN TERRITORY Can be reached by way of MEMPHIS and the Frisco System, without change by those who prerer that gateway. Harvey Cafe Cars and Dining Halls slong the line add materially to the comfort of your journey. For Rates of Fare, Map Folders and Free De- seriptive Literature. Address 0. M. CONLEY, Or SIDNEY VAN DUSEN, General Agent. Traveling Pass. Agt. 47-6 706 Park Building, Pittsburg, Pa. (CENTRAL RAILROAD OF PENNA.[: ‘Condensed Time Table. ENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD AND BRANCHES. Schedule in eftect Nov 24th, 1901. IA TYRONE—WESTWARD. Vv Leave Bellefonte, 9.53 a. m., arrive at Tyrone 11.05 a. m., at Altoona, 1.00 p- m., at Pittaburg 5.50 p. m. Leave Bellefonte 1.05 p. m., arrive at Tyrone, 2.20 P- m., at Altoona, 3.10 p. m., at Pittsburg, 6.56 Pp. m. Leave Bellefonte, 4.44 p. m., arrive at one 6.00, at Altoona, 6.560, at Pittsburg at Ph ; VIA TYRONE—EASTWARD, Leave Bellefonte, 9.53 a. m., arrive at Tyrone, 11.05, at Harrisburg, 2.40 p. m., at Philadel- phis, 5.47. p. m. Leave Bellefonte, 1.05 p. m., arrive at Tyrone, 2.20 a. m., at Harrisburg, 6.45 p. m., at Phila- Le delrnia, 10.20 p. m. ave efonte, 4.44 p. m., arri t 6.00 at Harrisburg, ar 16.00 Pp. Five 5 Tyee, VIA LOCK HAVEN—NORTHWARD, aa 9.32 a. m,, arrive at Lock Haven ’ ve Bellefonte, 1.05 p. m.. arrive at k Lesson 2 3) arrive at Buffalo, 7.40 oe *Havey n at 8.16 p. m. ” ven, at 9.15 p. m. P-1., arrives Lock Ha VIA LOCK HAVEN—EASTWARD. Leave Bellefonte, 9.32 a. m., arrive at Lock Haven 10.30, leave Williamsport, 12.40 Pp. m., arrive at Harrisburg, 3.15 p. m., at Philadelphia at 6.23 p. m. Leave Bellefonte, 1.05 Pp. m., arrive 210 p. m.. arrive at Williams = L ot Haren arrisburg, 5.00 p. m., Philadephia 7.32 p.m Leave Bellefonte, 8.16 Pp. m., arrive , m., at - me b (m. save Woah oe Ee as, arrisbu i Philadelphia at T.22 0, 1, > T AITive at VIA LEWISBURG. Leave Bellefonte, at 6,40 a. m., arrive at Lewis- Durg, at 9.05 a. m. Montandon, 9.15, Harris 1 urg, 11.30 a. m., Philadelphia, 3.17 p. m. . eave Bellefonte, 2.15 p, m., arrive at Lewisbur; dz, at Harrisburg, 6.50'p. m., Philadelphia ai TYRONE AND CLEARFIELD, R. R. NORTHWARD, : SOUTHWARD, i).4] 1 " 3 | Nov. 24th, 1901 1 g i) 35 8 4 | P.M.| P.M. | A. M. | 650] 325 820 1%} 5 § 3 321 826 a He a 5a 5 5 2 11 12{5 42 11 09|5 37 711] 346 8 42|.. 11 02 715] 350] 847 10 5¢ 2 22 724] 359 8657 10 51 pn 7.30] 406 905]... 10 44/3 2 734] 410 9 09]. 10 38(3 10 736 412 911 10 als - 7388 414] 9 12... 10,3803 05 748 424) 921 10 233 po striae]: einuie} nseess «Osceola June..|.........| 10 20/4 3 a 1 25 9 46].. oynton 7 54] 10 14 3 158 4 31 9 33|...... Steiners.....| 7 50 10 13 445 200 45 3 fis w Philipsburg... ] » 10 12/4 40 weGraham.,..... 4 5 1 4 50| 9 50|.....Blue Ball.....| 7 37 » ot ® sr 4 56{ 9 56... Wallaceton ... 732] 9 56(4 24 5 02) 10 02...... ~Bigler...... 7 26( 9 50/4 17 8 308 10 08 .720{ 9 43/4 10 202 19 717 9 40/4 06 8 86] 518 ! » 2 5 : " 8 4s 8 2 1 Clearfield... 705 9 253 go 35. $ 0 32... Riverview.... | 6 55| 9 21 3 40 35 38! 10 3J...Sus. Brid ©... 649] 9 15/3 84 3 if 1 pi wCuryensy le..| 645 9 10{3 30 sesees ustic. 6 | 6 09| 10 58... Stronach HH BL 6 15 11 04/... Grampia; 630[.........[8 03 P.M.| P.M. | A, M. |AT. P.M. | AM, P.M x. op. vi ve pop pape train leaves Curwens- learfield 4:51; Philipsb 5:30; Osceola 5:39, vi Y 3 5. Th i train stops at all ie RATyRone al 6:5 This BALD EAGLE VALLEY BRANCH. WESTWARD. EASTWARD. 3 i : Nov. 2ith, 1901 ¢ § i 5 = Be Be i ils PM.| P. M. | A. M. ArT. Lv. am. 800 220! 11 05 ......"Tyrone.......| 8 10| 12 95|7 06 £54 214 10 59 ..East Tyrone...| 8 16] 12 31/7 06 £50 2 10} 10 55 ...... ... Vail.........| 8 20| 12 35/7 10 i 06 1 8 24! 12 39/7 14 FA 8 39) 12 £3] 2 535] 156) 10 41}... annah......| g 35] 12 = 628 150| 10 35..Port Matilda... 8 42] 12 alr 5 521 141]|1028..... Martha......| 849 1 617 39 512 1 36] 10 20' J .Julian....... 8 68 1 08|7 48 508 1 28( 10 11|.....Unionville...| 9 07 1 15/7 87 1 22} 10 04/Snow Shoe Int.| 9 15 1 22(8 05 4 63| 1 14| 10 01/...Mileshurg.. ... 918 1 24/8 08 444! 105 9 53|....Bellefon ...| 932 1085/8 16 432 12 55 9 41|.....Milesburg 941 1 24/8 28 +L. 12 48| 9 34|...... Curtin.. 949) 1 34/8 36 20) iresee 9 30..Mount Eagl 9 63) 1 38(8 40 iu 12 38| 9 24/......Howard.. 9 59 1 43(8 46 102 1011 15s oa ..Beec E 3 51 1... Mill Hall...... 10 22 2 ole od 349) 12 10] 8 55/...Lock Haven..| 10 30] 2 10l9 15 P.M.| P. M. | A, M. |Lv. Arr. Am. |p om. (Pom. LEWISBURG & TYRONE RAILROAD. EASTWARD. Nov. Zith 1901. WESTWARD. MAIL. | EXP. MAIL.| EXP. ee oa Stations. : P. M. « M. [LV 215 6 40|........... EL "a" 2 21] 6 45). 4 06 224) 648). 4 03 2 27 6 51. 4 00 234 657 3 54 ‘2:88 702 3 50 243 706 3 46 248) 7 10|. 3 42 2.55 717. 3 35 3 02 722, 3 30 310 7 28). 323 317 7 35. 805! 317 325 743]. 767 308 3 32] T 50. 750] 3 02 3 % 7 58), 743] 255 ; 8 00]. 7 40| 2 51 3 = : = . 731 242 2. 2 3 % ieee I TT I RM ra IE A 4 06! 8 26], 3 - 2 4 4 13] 8 3a: 702 216 415 8 35. 650 214 419! 8 40]. 6 55] 210 4 21] 8 45]. 6 50, 2 05 4 31) 8 53l, 6 42] 187 435 858... iehl..... 6.38 153 4 42| 9 05. .Lewisburg...........| 630 145 450" 9 15].......... Moutandon..........| 540 1 38 P.M. | A. MAY. : Lv. a.m. | pom. LEWISBURG & TYRONE RAILROAD. EASTWARD, UPPER END. WESTWARD. ~ | 5 © @ MN XM (Nov. 21th, 1901 = | 5 : P. M. | A. M. |AT. ve 4 05 918i... Scotia........ 3 61] 9 03|....Fairbrook.... 3 45] 857..... Musser...... 3 391 8 51/Penn. Furnace 3 31 845... ostler..... wee] 3 29) 8 36)....Marengo...... mene] lend ian ....Loveville. ... eciora 3 24 8 87|.Furnace Road. 5 os 3 19; 8 26|....Dungarvin... 5 3 12| 8 18 Warrior's Mark 5 3 05| 8 09!..Pennington... 5 2 56 7 68|.......8tover....... 5 . . 2 £0; 7 50]... 'yrone...... 11 54 6 05|...... P. M. | A, m. |Lve. Ar. Am. | pom. BELLEFONTE & SNOW SHOE BRANCH. Time Table in effect on and after Nov 24. 1901. an easterly direction 98 feet along line of Wm. P. Duncan’s lot to an alley, thence in a northerly di- rection along said alley 40 feet to another lot of said Mrs. Sophia Hale, thence along said lot of Mrs. Sophia Hale 94 feet to the place of beginning. Seized, taken in execution to be sold as the property of E. P. Sweeney. ALSO All that certain tract or piece of land situate in the Township of Burnside, Centre county, Penn- sylvania, being a portion of a tract of land in the warrantee name of Walter Stewart fronting along the west branch of the Susquehanna River, Con- taining 12 acres more or less, and generally known as the Hale Mulholland Beach. ALSO All that messuage piece or tract of land situate in the Township of Burnside, County of Centre and State of Pennsylvania, bounded and describ- ed as follows : Being a portion of a tract of land in the warrantee na : e of Walter Stewart bounded ou the north by lands of R. C. Hale Estate on the east by a portion of said traci owned by Martin Veihdorfer, on the south by tract No. 3. as in the roceedings in partition more fully set out and Pore part of the Ann Stesart tract, and on the west by portion of said tract in the name of Wal- ter Stewart, Containing 40 acres more or less. Seized, taken in execution and to be sold as tiie property of Godfrey Fisher. Terms oF Sare.—No deed will be acknowledged until purchase money is paid in full. CYRUS BRUNGART, 45-156 Sheriff. in the READ pown y READ vp. June 17th, 1901. No 1{No 5{No 3| |No 6/No 4|No 2 a.m. 21 m. |p. m.|Lve. Ar.|p. m.|p. m.|a. m. 17 10/6 40 17 40| BELLEFONTE. | 9 15] 5 10| 9 40 7 22 652] 2 52........ Nigh....... wel 9 02) 4 57] 9 27 7 28| 6 58| 2 58].......... 0N.....e. | 8 56 & 51] 9 21 7 33) 7 03 3 03[..HECLA PARK..| 8 51| 4 46| 9 16 7 35 7 05) 3 05]..... . Dunkles......| 8 49| 4 44| 9 14 7 39( 7 09| 3 09/...Hublersburg...| 8 45! 4 40| 9 10 7 43| 7 13| 3 13|...Snydertown.....| 8 41| 4 36| 9 06 7 7 16| 3 16 8 38| 4 33( 9 03 T 48| 719) 3 18 ae 8 35 4 30 9 00 7 61 7 22| 3 21|.......Lamar.......| 8 32| 4 27| 8 57 7 53| 7 25| 8 23|.....Clintondale....| 8 29| 4 24| 8 54 7 57) 7 29| 3 27|..Krider’s Siding.| 8 25| 4 19| 8 49 8 02] 7 34] 38 32|...Mackeyville....| 8 19] 4 13| 8 43 8 08| 7 40| 3 38|...Cedar Spring...| 8 12 4 07, 8 37 8 10] 7 42| 3 40|.........Salona.......| 8 10| 4 of 8 35 8 15| 7 47| 3 45/...MILL HALL...|18 0514 00/18 30 (Beech Creek R. | 11 1 2 is Shipley Shore oe 3 25 an 56 IT. ) ve 50 25 {12 34%11 30 fe } Ws PORT ¢ grr.| 2 30] *6 56 Phila. & Reading Ry. 8:20] 100]|............ PHILA oll eeeeie 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. *Daily. {Week Days. 26.00 P. M. Sundays. 110.55 A. M. Sunday. PrmuapeLraiA SLEEpiNG CAR attached to East- bound train from lliamopert at 11.30 P. M, and West-bound from Philadelphia at 11.36. J. W. GEPHART. General Superintendent. Mix | Mix | . Stations. | Mix | Mix t 963 Lv... ellefonte. T.] 9 32] 5 20 5.55/ 10 01].. ...Milesbur, 9 18 5 05 6 05] 10 04.. .Snow Shoe In 9 15| 4 56 16 15/£10 14|..........School House {8 55/4 33 6 19/10 18/.. .|f8 b0|f4 27 as .| 730,315 P. M.l A. M. A. M.|P. M. “P' stop on signal. Week : J. B. HUTCHINSON. ee Jays only WOOD. General Manager.” General P BELLEFONTE Roy TAL RAIL- Schedule to take effect Monday, Apr. 3rd, 1899. WESTWARD EASTWARD read down read up #No. 5/+No. 3 Stations. len, oliNo. 4 po. | A [a |Lyv, Am lpm 4 15| 19 30{6 30|.... Bellefon 8°50] 2 40 6 10 4 21) 10 37/6 35/..... Coleville 8 40 2 25/6 30 4 25| 10 42{6 38|...... Mons 8 87) 2 22ig 97 4 28] 10 47/6 43|...... Whitme: 886 2176 23 4 33| 10 51/6 46/.Hunter's Par! 8 811 2 10(g 23 4 36 10 56/6 50...,.Fillmore 8 28) 2 06ig 18 4 40| 11 02/6 56|...... Briarly. 824! 2 00/g 14 4 43( 11 06/7 00/...... Waddle; 8 20| 1 55/6 10 4 45| 11 08|7 03|.... Lambon 8 18 1 582lg o7 4 85| 11 207 12|....Krumrine.....| 8 07 1 37|5 52 “5 00| 11 35 7 25, .State College... 8 00| I 30/318 “BCB| IT ZA 7 27| oor DUTUDIOB er | 7 48) 1 345738 5 10 7 31{...Bloomsdorf...| 7 40 5 20 5 18] lz 35/Pine Grove Cro.| 7 35| | F. H. THOMAS, Su
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers