Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, November 06, 1903, Image 6

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Bellefonte, Pa., November 6, 1903.
THE ROOTING SWINE,
Snouts to ground from their hour of birth,
See them dig as they go their way
Mortals giving the high gods mirth ;
Clods more coarse than the hillside clay,
Fit alone for the graveworm’s prey,
Drunk with the fumes of a brutish wine,
These but the will of Self obey,
Soulless hordes of the rooting swine.
Such is the average of earth,
Out from their muddy sties they stray,
Reek in dulness and wax in girth,
Buy and barter, and cheat and pay,
Ever among the muckheaps stay,
And still on the husk and carrion dine,
Nuzzling down to the dirt for aye—
Soulless hordes of the rooting swine.
These, indeed, are little worth,
Foot it and ftaunt 1t though they may ;
Naught atones for the spirit’s dearth—
Riches, vanity, nor display.
These shall pass in a slow decay, :
As rotting mackerel stink and shine,
Forgotten, even on Judgment Day,
Soulless hordes of the rooting swine.
ENVOY.
Prince ! Twas a minstrel old and gray,
He struck his harp, and his eyes met mine;
He looked at the crowds and I heard him say :
“Soulless hordes of the rooting swine.”
—Ernest McGaffey in The St. Louis Mirror.
MRS. BASSETT'S SQUASH PIE.
Wal—howdydo, Mis’ Robbins; how're
all your folks today ? This is pretty tryin’
weather for us old folks, but I manage to
get along middlin’ well—for me. I've been
sorb o’ scairt, though, about your ma—she’s
lookin’ real peaked this summer—just the
sort to wilt right down under a hot spell
like this.
You don’t mean to tell me that she’s go-
in’ with you over to the Ta’nton Cattle
Show next week ! I call that dretful resky
—her in such feeble health, too.
Wal—y es—a cattle show is a dretful in-
teresting place, certain sure. We all on
us went over to it last year,butI ain’t been
before since—why I don’t know when—it
must bave been the year that Lyddy fell
down the suller stairs. You see, she was
plannin’ to plant some dahlia roots, an——
Huh—Oh ! who went over! Why, all
our folks, and sister Sally and her folks,an’
Hiram John an’ his folks, and Sarah Bell
Avn—she ain’t got no folks,but it’s all her
own fault, because John Henry Allen,
he—
Oh, yes, it was a family party, sure
enough—Si Bartlett, he fixed up seats for us
in his old milk-wagon, an’ took us over.
Land, I felt as if T was goin’ to school again
in thas old school wagon t’pa used to run.
I sort of expected Hime and Benny to get
to pickin’ at each other, the way they used
to, or to go to throwin’ spit-balls at Sarah
Aun an me, or to put their feet in the din-
ner kittle and spoil the squash pie. And
that would ha’ been a less, sure enough,as
it tarned out, though land knows, I never
thought of such a thing when I put it in.
What! ain’t vou never heard tell about my
squash pie’t I took for dinner over to Cat-
tle!Snow? Mercy me! Why,I thought ev-
erybody in two counties heard of that.
Folks seem to be awful hands for talk now-
adays.
Wal,as I was tellin’ you, Si’s horses they
went along pretty smart, though they ain’t
so bandsome as they might be—not by a
long shot—won’t never he hung for their
looks—though, for that matter, neither
will Si; them Bartletts’ faces always did
look like the edge of the Stater Maine—
wayit’s down on the map. I 8’pose, though
that ain’t neither here nor there, seeing
that the p’int is that we got to Cattle Show
good and early, afore they’d gin out any of
their prizes or Reward o’ Merit cards.
Wal, the men folks all went off’long o’
Si to see about puttin’ the horses np some.
where and so we women folks started right
off't see what lookin’ things some women
will have the face to bring to a fair, and
put on show for all the other women to see
This time, though, there was some real
good-looking things, though some others
on ’em did make you as rick as if you was
goin’round Pint Judy Pint in a schooner.
Wal, the first thing my eye lit onto was a
great blazin’ bedquilt. It was handsome lI
will give in. It must have took sights and
sights of gumption, as well as yaller cloth
to figure that out, and it must ‘a’ made the
stars in the heaven above feel meachin’ to
look down on it. Why, there isn’t one on
‘em could hold a candle to it!
Wal, as I was a-sayin’, I was lookin’ at
, that bedquilt and tryin’ to take the pat-
tern of it off so’t I could make one like it
for our best bédroom; when upstepped Hit-
ty, and punched me in the side, a good,
strong punch, and says she : ‘*Ma, docome
over here an’ look at these squash pies a-
seftin’ up for prizes, Land,”” says she
“why, I wouldn’t send such pies as them
out to feed the hogs with. They'd say:
‘‘Give us a squash, and we could do better
than that ourselves.” Wal, with that I
wen$ over to see them pies, though I did
hate to leave that star bedquilt—and, law-
sy me—they was a sickly lookin’ set. Wal,
says I, Hetty May, I do presoom to say
that that pie I brought over for our dinuer
is enough sight better-lookin’ than any of
these, if your pa has kicked the kittle
round all the way from ’Sonet here. With
that, ‘up stepped a dapper-lookin’ feller
that was walkin’ round sort of lookin’ out
for things. ‘‘Excunse me, marm,’’ says he,
takin’ off his hat with a great flourish of
trumpets, ‘‘but I overhearn what you just
said, and if you got any bhetter-lookin’ pie
than these ’ere long with you, you’d bet-
tet bring it in.’’ says he, ‘‘for the judges
are just gittin’ round to set on these pies.’’
**I bought that pie for our dinner, says I
and I don’t know as ’twounld improve it
any to be set on by several men. It was
all I could do to keep pa from trompin’ all
over it as we come along this morning.
The young feller laffed and said he guess-
ed they wouldn't hurt it any, but I felt
sort er dubersome; Hetty May, though—
she kept a-nudgin’ me and a-sayin’, *‘Do
ma, do! Oh, say. ma, do’’—till finally,
ruther than be drove clean out of my sev-
enteen senses, I give in. Wal—all right,
sez I. You run and git it, Hetty, May, an
’f ¢’aint all stove to flinders a-flouncin’
around in that kittle, you can bring it to
this man, and with that I walked off, real
unconcerned, to look at the pickles and
jells. I wa’nt goin’ to have that feller
think I was set up any by puttin’ my
squash pie in Ta’nton Cattle Show.
Bimeby, Hetty May came runnin’ up to
me all nerved up. ‘‘It's in, ma, it’s in
sez she, ‘an’ it ain’t spoiled a mite, an’ it
looks real han'sorhe.”’ Wal—sez I, cool
as a cowcumber—I guess it looks full as
well as these Ta’nton pies. Let's go
an’ look at the garden sass. Over by the
cabbage-heads we run across the rest o’ the
\
folks an’ I ain’t the one to say there was
anythin’ cur’us in that. Then we went
around and saw all the rest of the things,
and the men folks got so sorter intrust-
ed in some horseracin’ that it was along
quite late when we got round to go an’ eat
our vittles. On our way to the wagon Si
sorter hung back with the women folks,
and sez he : ‘I’m in hopes you’ve brought
one of them squash pies of yourn, Hepsey;
I’ve got a hole in me big as a woodchuck,
an’ seems to me one of them would taste
real good.”” I was goin’ to sort of pass it
off, but Hetty May spoke right up: ‘Ma
put it in the show,’ sezshe. I could ’a’
slapped her with a good will. Wal, you
ought to have heard the howdydo—all the
men folks turned round and pitched in—
they was a good rod ahead, hnt trust men
folks for hearin’ when you’re talkin’ about
vittles an’ sich. Land, you’d have thought
I was goin’ to starve ’em to death and that
I hadn’t brought a single other thing to
eat but that pie.
Wal—the upshot on it was that I finally
give in and’ promised to go back and take
my pie out, providin’ them judges hadn’t
set on it and make it more squash 'n it set
out to be. .So back we all trailed—Hetty
May hated to like a dog, but I made her,
for I felt as if she got us into all this fuss
—1I leadin’ off an’ the men folks taggin’ on
behind, to see that I didn’t back out when
I got there. I wanted to stop a minute
when we got to that blazin’ star quilt, but
the men folks wouldn’s hear of it; you'd ’a’
thought they was about to starve right in
their tracks. An’ so we got to the row o’
pies an’ there, right in the middle of ’em
all, set my pie, marked full and plain
‘Mrs. Hepsey Basset, ’Sonet, First prize.”
You could ’a’ knocked me down with a
feather, I was that beat, and Hetty May,
she looked for all the world as if she'd
been made a queen, or President of our
Sewing Circle. Even Sam yelled out:
‘Bully for you, ma! Bully for you,” and
I could see that all the folks was impressed.
So I turned around sort o’ majestic-like,
an’ I sez with a grain o’ sarcasm : Wal, I
guess you won’t get that pie for your din-
ner this time, after all your traipsin’.
They didn’t say nothin’, but the men folks
turned round pretty sudden an’ travelled
off towards the sheds. I sorter waited a
minute just to see how my name looked
with “First Prize'’ tacked on to it,
an’ just then up stepped that same young
feller, smilin’ as a basket o’ chips, an’ sez
he: ‘‘The judges didn’t seem to spile
your pie very much, did they ? Of course
they had to take one piece out to sample
| ed
Wal—sez I—I don’t know as they did.
and I don’s know as they did not. I can’t
reely blame ’em for takin’ a small piece
out for a sample, though if they was my
men folks they wouldun’t have stopped off
short of the whole thing. Why—they’re
out there now, mad as hornets to think
they can’t have that piefordinner. You'd
think they couldn’ relish any other vittles
at all. At that he sorter laffed, and look-
ed at Hetty May, an’ then walked off and
talked to another man that was standin’
near by. I took Hetty May by the arm
and walked her across to the bedquilts, for
she’s real sharp at takin’ patterns. Hetty
May is. We hadn’t been there morn’n
two minutes when I feltsomebody a-touch-
in’ my arm, an’ land sakes if there wa’n’t
that same spruce young feller again—
smiliner than ever—ef so could be—an’
with my pie in his hand. He made a. reg-
ular dancin’-scbool bow an’ stuck out that
pie towards me, an’ sez lie: ‘‘It seems a
great pity that nobody should enjoy this
delicious pie,’’ sez he, ‘‘an’ if you’re in a
great hurry to go, why I guess we can |
oblige you by lettin’ yon take your pie
just a little early.” ‘‘An’ then he made
another great bow, snd handed me over a
spick-and-span new two-dollar hill, an’ sez
he : “I’m real proud to present the prize
to you, Mrs. Bassett.”’
As first I scarcely sensed it, but then I
grabbed Hetty May by the arm an’ march-
ed her off to where our folks was. I wish-
ed afterwards I'd a-asked the young feller
to'come too—he ‘was so polite--but I was
so flustered I didn’t think.
Wal—at any rate, there sot the men
around the wagon, gloomy as anything,
gittin’ ready to eat the haked heans and
vittels the other women had brought.
You'd orter seen Sam laff: ‘‘Wal—if it
don’t take ma,’’ hesez. ‘‘First—she takes
the prize, and then she make: 'em give her
the pie back for dinner. That is the
beateree !'’ :
It ain’t hort it any, sez [—an’ I guess it
wasn’t, by the way those men fell to on it
an’ cleaned up every crumb.
Then Si tackled up, and we started for
home, but not before all of us women folks
had heen down to the village an’ laid out
that whole two-dollar bill on good yaller
caliker. An’ Hetty May an’ me, we pieced
a bedquilt this winter that was as far be-
yond that Ta’nton one as that was ahead
of the stars in the firmament above, as
Seripter says. You step right up to the
north chamber an’ take a look at 1t; but
don’t mention it around, for it’s to be in
Hetty May’s =ettin’ out—trossooo, they
call it—when she marries that Ta’nton fel-
ler—comes Thanksgivin’, an’ I ain’t only
just told two or three to the sewin’ circle,
an’ Deacon Blodgett’s wifean’ A’nt Sophie
Pierce, an’ one or two others.
It's a dead secret. . Step right this way.
—Winifred Arnold, in Everybody's Maga-
zine.
Something to Remember.
A sure, swift and easily procured anti-
dote to poisoning by carbolic acid is said to
be common cider vineger. This drug has
heretofore heen supposed to have no known
antidote.
ful of cider vinegar, diluted with an equal
amount of water, followed in a few min-
utes. by a second dose, is a sure antidote,
to be employed while waiting for medical
aid. Every poison sold should have its
antidote plainly printed on the label of
each bottle beneath the familiar skull and
cross-bones. Quick emetics are the first
remedies to be administered when poisons
are taken, but in an emergency, especially
when life is at stake, memory and even
common sense fails one. and though we
may recall that various things, taken with
copins draughts of water, are given with
certain kinds of poison, the danger of ad-
ministering the wrong one overwhelms one
with fear, bust if we conld read on the fatal
bottle what to do at once life and, at the
least, much suffering might be spared.
The Cost of Running Trains.
A recent investigation into the question
of the relative cost of running trains at
high speeds, as compared with low speeds,
says the Scientific American, has developed
the fact that an increase in speed from 32
to 48 miles per hour, or 50 per cent., ac-
companied by a decrease in the number of
oars per train from seven to four, has re-
sulted in an increase in absolute coal con-
sumption of 12 per cent., or about 90 per
cent. when figured on the basis of the num-
ber of cars, which, of cuurse, represents
the earning capacity.
It is claimed thata balf-teacup- |
A Remarkable Memory.
‘For abnormal development of the me-
mory commend me to the suburban rail-
road conductor,” said a resident of Ash-
bourne. ‘‘I bave heard of many instances
of the remarkable memory these men have
for faces, but I never believed all the tales
that were told to me until I came home
from a trip abroad the other day, after
having been gone for over three months. I
sailed from New York in the afternoon,and
coming into the city on my usual train
that morning I discovered that I had no
ticket. I usually buy them in dollar lots,
and my supply was exhausted. Strangely
enough, I had no change in my pocket,
and I offered the conductor a $10 bill. He
recognized me as a regular rider, and said
that if that was the smallest I bad I could
square him on the next trip; that he
couldn’t make the ehange. Well, I sailed
that afternoon and just got back a week
ago. On my first trip into the city I hand-
ed the conductor a ticket, and instead of
passing on he stopped, knit his brows,
sized me up and said: ‘‘Don’t you owe
me a ticket ?’ I protested that I didn’t,
and told him I had been abroad for sev-
eral months; hut he insisted, and finally
the memory of the occurrence came back
to me, and I made good. Those conductors
are certainly wonders.”’— Philadelphia
Record. 5
Son’s Act Costs $20,000.
The will of Edward Seidel, of Fort
Wayne, Ind., whose estate is valued at
$225,000, has been filed for probate. It
puts all the property in the name of the
youngest son, Otto, his father’s favorite, as
trustee. 3
The father gave Otto a deed to property
worth $20,000. The deed was in an en-
velope with the will. In the presence of
all the heirs Otto for the first time read the
deed, but, fearing it would be a basis of
family trouble. he tore it up, saying he
would share equally with the rest. The
act cost him just $20,000.
Thanksgiving Day November 26.
id
President Roosevelt issued his Thanks.
giving Day proclamation on Saturday, Oc-
tober 31. He designated Thursday, No-
vember, 26th, as the day of thankegiv-
ing.
A RUNAWAY BICYCLE.—Terminated
with an ugly cut on the leg of J. B. Orner,
Franklin Grove, Ill. It developed a stub-
born ulcer unyielding to doctors and reme-
dies for four years. Then Bucklen’s Arni-
ca Salve cured. It’s just as good for Burns,
Secalds, Skin Eruptions and Piles. 250, at
Green’s Pharmacy Drug Store.
Hard Hospital Fave.
Twenty-four men and five giils, employ-
ed at the Municipal hospital in Philadel-
phia, are on strike for pure and nourishing
food. . The force at the hospital is crippled,
and physicians are acting as ambulance
drivers. The strikers include waitresses,
laundry girls, ward maids, yardmen, gate-
men and drivers. They claim that Emma
Gilliams, the matron, furnishes them with
tainted meat, half cooked sausage and hard
potatoes.
——VIN-TE-Na, a specific for Blood Dis-
eases, for Sluggish Tired Feeling, Scrofulal
Chronic Catarrh, Pimples, or any form of
Skin Disease. Take VIN-TE-NA it acts
ike magic in restoring New Blood to the
ystem. If not benefited your money re-
unded. Ali druggists.
Business Notice.
CASTORIA
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have Always Bought
Bears the Signature of
CHAS. H. FLETCHER.
Medical.
Prone WE KNOW.
THEY ARE BELLEFONTE PEOPLE, AND
WHAT THEY SAY IS OF LOCAL INTEREST,
When an incident like the following oc.
curs right here at home, it is bound to
carry weight with our readers. So many
strange occurrences go the rounds of the
press; are published as facts, that people
come skeptical. On one subject skeptic-
ism is rapidly disappearing. This is due
to the actual experience of our citizens
and their public utterances regarding
them. The doubter must doubt no more
in the face of such evidence as this. The
public statement of a reputable citizen liv-
ing right here at home, one whom you can
see every day, leaves no ground for the
skeptic to stand on.
Mrs. F. Davis, of Logan street, says:
“Doan’s Kidney Pills did more to-
wards freeing me from terrible pains in
my back than any other medicine ever
did. I had taken so many kinds and so
many reseribvjons without any percepti-
ble gain that I was unprepared for the im-
provement I received from taking Doan’s
Kidney Pills. 1 read statements about
Bellefonte people who had been cured by
their use and I got them at F. Potts
Green’s drug store. After taking them I
felt so well that I walked down town with
my husband something I had not done for
two years. I highly recommend Doan’s
Kidney Pills to others suffering from their
back and kidneys. I have more confidence
in them than in any physician's preserip-
tion.”
For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents.
Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y., sole
agents for the United States.
emember the name Doans and take
no substitute.
Fer FINE BANANAS, ORANGES,
Pine Apples and Lemons,
come to us.
SECHLER & CO.
BELLEFONTE, PA
UGGIES FOR SALE.—We have a
nice lot of
NEW BUGGIES
~—AND—
FOUR SECOND-HAND ONES
which we wish to dispose of. Prices to suit the
times. Call and see them.
8. A. McQUISTION, CO.
48-29-tf Bellefonte, Pa.
Jewelry.
Saddlery.
Travelers Guide.
HERE TO GET.
The Latest Novelties,
DIAMONDS,
WATCHES,
STERLING SILVERWARE,
CLOCKS,
JEWELRY,
POCKET BOOKS,
UMBRELLAS.
SILVER TOILET WARE,
An abundant Stock at Moderate Prices.
smn [ (3 | re
F. C. RICHARD’S SONS,
41-46 High St. BELLEFONTE PA
College Hardware Co.
HARDWARE,
STOVES,
TINWARE
AT...
STATE COLLEGE.
WE are prepared to furnish our
patrons with a full line of
Hardware, Stoves, and Tin-
ware.
OUR Hardware consists of an as-
sortment of Tools, Cutlery,
Garden Tools, Shovels,
Rakes, Wire Screenings,
Poultry Netting, Locks and
all kinds of Builder’s Hard-
ware.
STOVES.—We have just received a
full line of the Prizer Rang-
es. We consider these stoves
of the best make. For style
they are unsurpassed, in
weight they are the heaviest.
The flues are large, with
well regulated dampers mak-
ing them one of the best
working stoves in the market.
Everything that is modern is
found in these stoves. We
ask you to come and see
them for yourselves. The
prices are the lowest, consid-
ering quality, etc.
TINNING.—Our inning. is up to
date. We are prepared to do
all kinds of work in this line.
For spouting and roofing we
use none but the best mater-
ials and the best workmen.
PAINTS, OILS, GLASS. — We
have also a full line of paints,
oils, varnishes and glass at
the lowest prices.
WE ask the public to come and see
our stock. We will be pleas-
ed to quote prices at any
time. It is our desireto deal
fair, as we wish to continue
in business.
COLLEGE HARDWARE CO.
State College, Pa
wn TRAN
WwW HAT SHOULD YOU DCO—
DO YOU ASK?
the answer is easy. and
your duty is plain.....
-——BUY YOUR—
HARNESS, NETS,
DUSTERS, WHIPS, PADS, COLLARS,
AXEL GREASE
and everything you
want at
SCHOGFIELD?’S.
SCHOFIELD has the largest stock of
everything in his line, in the town or
county.
CALL AND EXAMINE AND GET
PRICES.
Building Business on Cheap John
Goods is an impossibility—that’s why
we believe it is to your best interest
to buy from us. Over thirty-two years
in business ought to convince you
a Sx goods and prices have been
right.
After July 1st we will Break the Record
on Collar Pads.
JAMES SCHOFIELD,
Spring street,
BELLEFONTE, PA.
Restaurant.
47-37
ny RESTAURANT.
I have purchased the restaurant
of Jas. I. McClure, on Bishop
street. It will be my effort and
pleasure to serve you to the best
of my ability. You will find my
restaurant
CLEAN,
FRESH and
TIDY.
Meals furnished at all hours.
Fruits and delicacies to order.
Gam.e in season.
COME IN AND TRY IT.
47-28-3m CHAS. A. HAZEL.
7
rTm—
Plumbing etc.
$00000080 sensensesttetensatnrtnasancnnsaentnitne
(luoose
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.
Travelers Guide.
(CENTRAL RAILROAD OF PENNA.
Condensed Time Table.
Rzap pown READ vp.
Nov. 24th, 1902. —
No 1|No 5|No 3 No 6/No 4/No 2
a. m.|p. m.|p. m.|Lve, Ar.|p. m.(p. m.|a. m.
17 00 T 45 153 40| BELLEFONTE. % 25 Ps 15
7 11} 6 56] 2 51|........Nigh... | 912 5 02| 9 22
7 16| 7 01] 2 56]. «| 906 456/ 9 16
7 23| 7 07] 3 03 «| 900] 4 50 9 1C
7 25 7 09] 3 05|...... DunKkles...... 8 58) 4 48| 9 07
7 29| 7 13| 3 09|...Hublersburg...| 8 54| ¢ 44| 9 03
7383 717 313 =Snpderiows. 8 50| 4 40| 8 59
7 35] 7 19/ 3 15|...... .Nittany........ 8 47) 4 37| 8 56
737] 721] 8 17|.......Huston.......| 8 44| 4 34| 8 53
7 41) 7 25] 3 21{.......Lamar......... 841) 431] 8 60
7 43! 7 27| 3 23|.....Clintondale....| 8 38| 4 28| 8 47
7 47| 7 31] 3 27(..Krider's Siding.| 8 33| 4 23| 8 43
7 51{ 7 35| 8 31|...Mackeyville....| 8 28| 4 18| 8 38
7 57| 7 41 3 37|...Cedar Spring...| 8 22 4 12| 8 32
8 0°! 7 44] 3 40|.........8alona....... 8 20( 4 10| 8 3v
8 05] 7 50| 3 45|..MILL HALL...t8 15/14 05/8 25
(Beech Creek E.
1 » 3 1 ispiemey Shores 822 740
, ’ ve| 250 10
112 20] 11 30|Lve § WMs'PORT | 47) 250 7
(Phila. & Reading Ry.)
730] 6 50|......... nese PHILA civeeesssens 18 86| 11 80
10 40{ 9 02|.........NEW YORK........ .
(Via Phila.)
p. m.la. m.|Arr. Lve. la.
1Week Days |
Ar ..NEW YORK... Lv
| (Via Tamaqua)
*Daily. +Week Days.
PHILADELPHIA SiEEriNe 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. 8|tNo. 3 STATIONS. No. [No.4
P.M. | A.M. (A.M. Lv Ar. A.M | P.M. [pa
4 15| 19 30/6 30|....Bellefonte..... 8 50] 2 40/6 40
4 21) 10 37/6 35 8 40/ 2 25/6 30
4 25 10 426 38 8 37 22206 27
4 28) 10 47|6 43 885 2176 23
4 33( 10 51(6 46 831 210(g 21
4 36| 10 56/6 50 828 2 06lg 18
4 40( 11 02|6 55 riarly....... 824 200/614
4 43] 11 05|7 00|......Waddles.....| 820 1 556 10
4 46 11 08/7 08|....Lambourn....| 8 18 1 52g o7
4 55) 11 20(7 12|....Krumrine.....| 807 1875 52
“B00, 11 85|7 25|.tate_ College. 800 1 30/21%
SB OB| 11 2217 27 ren SLTTIDIE re | 1 40| 1 34|2°08
5 10, 7 81/.;.Bloomsdorf... 740 . 18 28
5 18] Iz 35/Pine Grove Cro.| 7 35
H. F. THOMAS, Supt.
ENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD AND
BRANCHES,
Schedule in eftect May 24th, 1903.
VIA TYRONE—WESTWARD.
Leave Bellefonte, 9.53 a. m., arrive at Tyrone
11.05 a. m., at Altoona, 1.00 p. m., at Pittsburg
5.45 p. m.
Leave Bellefonte 1.05 p. m., arrive at Tyrone, 2.10
p. m., at Altoona, 3.10 p. m., at Pittsburg, 6.55
p. m.
Leave Bellefonte, 4.44 p. m., arrive at Tyrone,
6.00, at Altoona, 6.55, at Pittsburg at 10.45,
VIA TYRONE—EASTWARD.
Leave Bellefonte, 9.53 a. m., arrive at rone
11.05, at Harrisburg, 2.40 p. m., at Prone:
phia, 5.47. p. m.
Leal BB 1.05 p. m., arrive at
Tyrone
2.10 a. m., at Harrisburg, 6.35 p. m. ila
delphia, 10.20 p. m. 5 bn, aéibnila
Leave
ellefonte, 4.44 p. m., arrive
6.00 at Harrisburg, at 10:00 p.m. 5, Tyzone,
VIA LOCK HAVEN—NORTHWARD.
Leave Bellefonte, 9.32 a. m., arrive at Lock Haven
Letv Detiotonté, 1 05 i
eave efonte, 1.05 p. m., arrive at Lock Haven
bona pli aor est Belial SAvpm
eh ® B44 P. m., arrive at Lock Ha
VIA LOCK HAVEN—EASTWARD.
Leave Bellefonte, 9.32a. 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
Pp. m.
Leave Bellefonte, 1.05 p. m., arrive at Lock Haven
21 ._m.. leave Williamsport, at 2.53, p. m.,
arrisbarg, 5.00 p. m., Philadelphia 7.32
p.m
Leave Bellefonte, 8.16 P. m., arrive at Lock Ha-
Yom, 2B B J Jeave Williamsport, 1.35 >
hy, Iris! .15 a.
Philadelphia at 7.224. ms, | &TTIve at
VIA LEWISBURG.
Leave Bellefonte, at 6.40 a. m., arrive at L
pug, at 9.05 a. m. Montandon, 9.15, Home
LeglUTE: 1130 a. m., Philadelphis, 3.17 p. m.
aye] RNiotonie 0 bn, arrive at Lewisburg,
1.50, D a) 25 a AFTis urg, 6.45 p. m., Philadel-
TYRONE AND CLEARFIELD, R. R.
NORTHWARD. SOUTHWARD.
i oS
Po - :
» S | Feb. 8th, 1903 i 1 z
115 aik
E)
P.M. P. M, | A. M. Pella N, poat.
, ML P.M,
5 395 x 8 55| 11 20(5 50
6580 ...... 8 28 Sty 1 Miss
701) 335 831 "5 11 alo o2
711] 346] 842. 8 38 11 02/3 59
115 3 50| 847 8 85| 10 59/5 29
724) 359 857. 8 27| 10 51
730] 406 905 8 20 10 443 34
734 410] 909 8 14| 10 38/5 10
786 412) 911 811) 10 35
738 414 912 8 09| 10 Fh
7 4 424 921 7 59 15%
Ts orm 10 20|4 52
: 58, 437 930 .Steiners.....| 7 50 5 1 i -
3 ge 3 40/ 9 40 - Philipsburg 7 48] 10 12/4 40
3% 45| 9 45... Graham 7 42| 10 07/4 35
$ 4 60/9 50|.....Blue Ball.....| 7 37 10 02/4 30
17 4 56/ 9 56|,,.Wallaceton .. | 7 82] 9 56/4 24
8 22 5 02] 10 02|...... Figler es 726 9 50j4 17
3 28| 5 08 10 08|....Woodland....| 7 20 9 43/4 10
3 5 10 10 11}, Mineral Sp...| 717 9 40 4 06
Es 10151... Barrett...... 7 13| 9 36/4 61
3 5 18) 10 20|...... Leonard.....| 709 9 32[3 56
45| 5 25| 10 26,...Clearfield.....| 7 05 9 28/3 50
3 » 5 32| 10 32|.,, Riverview....| 6 55 9 21/3 40
3 ge 3 3 10 34|...8us. Bridge...| 649] 9 15 3 34
309.2 10 44|, Curwensville..| 6 45 9 10{3 30
So 511 10 50,...... Rustic., 6 30] 9 02(3 15
2 5 59| 10 58|....Stronach 6 34| 8 55/3 09
: 05 11 04)....Grampian..... 6 20| 8 50/3 05
WM.| P.M. | A. M. [Ar, Lv.|ep um | am Ip.
ON SuxDAYS- -a train leaves T: Tone at
1 8: . mM.
making all the regular stops hiaan to Lib
arriving there at 11:04, Returning it leaves Gram-
Dion & 6:20 p. m., and arrives in Tyrone at 8:55
BALD BAGLE VALLEY BRANCH.
WESTWARD.
EASTWARD,
g i Feb. th, 1903 i g
iE
P.M.| P. M ;
\M.| P. M. A.M. [ P.M, P.M.
$0 2 30 8 10| 12 25/7 00
IM 2u 8 16/ 12 31|7 06
5 30:20 8 20{ 12 35/7 10
218 8 24] 12 39(7 14
0 8 30| 12 45|7 20
pl were 8 338] 12 47|7 23
523 180 8 356) 12 49|7 25
sa 1% 8 42| 12 B5(T 32
sh 1a 8 49 1 01|7 39
503 1 28 10 11|.....Unionville... ’ on 1 27 8
4 66/ 1 22/ 10 04|Snow Shoe Int.| 9 15 1 22(8 05
4653 1 14/ 10 01)... Milesburg.....| 9 18| 1 24/8 08
444] 1 05] 9 53]. Bellefonte... 932 1058 16
432] 12 55| 9 41|. Milesburg...| 941] 1 24/8 28
ix 12 48 34 .Curtin.. 949 1 34/8 36
in wares 953 1 88/8 40
ans sas 969 1 43[8 45
; ....| 10 08] 1 518 55
4 02! 12 26| 9 12|.Beech Creek...| 10 11] 1 54/8 58
861) 12 16| 9 o1|.....Mill Hall......| 10 2 04/9 09
3 45| 12 10) 8 55|...Lock Haven..| 10 30 210/19 15
P.M. | P. M, | A, M, |Ly, Arr.[ A.M. | P.M. |P.u.
On Sundays there is one train each w
B.E.V. It runs onthe same schedu eas od
' morning train leaving Tvrone at 8:30 a. m., week
days. And the afte
rs e afternoon train leaving Lock
LEWISBURG & TYRONE RAILROAD.
EASTWARD. Feb. 8th 1903. WESTWARD
MAIL. | EXP. > MAIL.| EXP.
Stations.
P.M. | A.M.
215 640 *9'0| "4'To
221 645]. 8 56 408
2 24) 6 48]. 8 52| 403
2 27) 6 51). 849) 400
2 34 6 57|. 843] 354
238 702 839] 350
2 43 7 06]. 8 35] 346
2 48! 7 10 831 342
2660 TIT 824 335
302 722 8 18] 330
310] 728 811] 323
317 7 35 8 05) 317
3 25 7 48]. 7 67 308
3 32, 7 50|. 780] 302
338) 756 743] 2655
3 41) 8 00]. 7 40 2 51
iho Pia
385 TR
3 8 18..
i ia Pa ik
413 833 702 216
415] 8 35 6590 214
419; 8 40]. 6 55 210
4 24] 8 45|.. 6 50 205
431 853 6 42| 157
4 35| 8 58 6 38] 1353
4 42] 9 05[. 630 145
4 50( 9 15|. 540 13%
P.M. | A.M JA JM. | P.M
LEWISBURG & TYRONE RAILROAD,
EASTWARD, UPPER END, WESTWARD
= 3 5
Q
Z | MH | Feb, 8th, 1903 3 3
| & 2 |=
P. M. | A-M. |Ar. Lve.| A. uw. | p. m0.
ash 4 05{ 9 18,....... Scotia........| 10 €5| 4 20]...
wees 3 50] 9 03|....Fairbrook....| 10 21| 4 36...
8 48| 8 87... ..Musser...... 10 271 4 42...
8 39| 8 51/Penn. Furnace| 10 33| 4 80......
3 34| 8 45|......Hostler......| 10 41| 4 57|....
8 29] 8 36/....Mare heeee| 10 49) 5 07)...
os senel oon fo Loveville, | ....... Lelia
3 24) 8 3?|. Furnace Road.| 10 57/ 5 16
3 19| 8 26|....Dungarvin...| 10 49| 5 25
3 12| 8 18 Warrior's Mark| 11 26| 5 34
«nl 3056 8 09l..Pennington...| 11 30| 5 44
ween 2 56 7 B8l.......Stover.......| 11 42| b 5¢
aeeees 2 50] 7 80..... e......| 11 54! @ 08] .....
P. M. | A. um. |Lve. Ar. a.m, | P.M.
BELLEFONTE & SNOW SHOE BRANCH.
Time Table in effect on and after Feb 8th 1903.
Mix | Mix |
Stations. | Mix | Mix
| 9 32] 5 20
«| 9 18| 5 06
05 | 9 15| 4 56
15 f8 55(f4 33
19 f8 50|f4 27
271 1 .| 7 80( 3 15
P. M.lA. M. A. M.[P. M.
“f" ston on signal, Week days only.
Ww, W. ATTERBURY, ye RB WOOD.
. General Manager. General Passenger Agent.
Money to Loan.
MONEY TO LOAN on good security
and houses for rent.
J. M. KEICHLINE,
45-14-1yr. Att'y at Law