The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, August 17, 1893, Image 5

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    P. RB. R EXHIBIT AT THE FAIR,
A Complete Ilastration of the Progress of |
American Railroads,
The World's Fair visitor who finds |
his way into that vast enclosure by |
the Sixty-fourth Street entrance will |
come almost immediately
building as architecturally attractive |
as any of the minor structures in all |
the great White City by the lake,
building classi®al in detail as well as
in general conception, standing in the |
midst of a plateau of green sward with |
walls the tint of old ivory, and gar-
nished with flags that reilect the
brighter hues of the rainbow. While
it is an annex, so to speak, of the great
red and green and gold Transporta-
tion Building across the way, it is an
annex complete in itself, and within
and without exhibits in an exhaustive
manner never before attempted, much
less accomplished, the beginning, pro-
gress, and developement of railroading
by the Standard Railroad of America.
It is, in fact, the Pennsylvania Rail-
road Company's own edifice,
preseiits an interesting and scholarly
showing of that corporation’s history
first charter was granted to a railroad
company in America to construct a
road from Trenton to New Brunswick,
{ and as an indication of the thorugh:
| ness with which these litle matters
| have been looked after, the labeling of
the objects with a descriptive label in
| five languages is especially notewor-
| thy.
In the centre of the building, under
| the dome, upon a platform shaped like
ia Greek cross, are three relief maps
| that are certain to attract no little no-
j tice. They illustrate the changes in
| the methods of crossing the Alleghe-
nies from the year 1832 to the present
| time, and have been prepared with
| such great care as to have won words
of high commendation from scientists,
whose attention has been called to
them. One of these in particular, the
largest of the three, which is twelve
feet long by four feet wide, and which
shows the old portage and the new
portage roads, together with the pres-
ent line of the Pennsylvania Railroad,
including the Horseshoe Curve, Alle-
grippus, and the district of the Johns-
town flood, is especially valuable as
being the first and only relief map
{ ever made of that section. ‘The orig-
inal map, from which the basis of the
present work was obtained, was one
which belonged to the late J. N. Du-
| Barry, vice-president of the company.
{ It was in lead pencil never having
been filled in in ink, and was traced,
so the legend runs, by President J. Ed-
gar Thompson, himself. The other
N. J, to the present time, when it
road penetrating thirteen States, and |
with termini in New York Harbor, at |
the National Capital, in three great
cities of the Ohio Valley, and at five of |
the great lake ports. |
While the building's main facade is |
perhaps the more beautiful of the two
one-hundred-and-forty-foot sides of the |
structure, the rear view will doubtless
prove the more attractive to the stu
dent of railroad progress, in that it]
presents, with its attendant features,
an excellent reproduction of a model
Pennsylvania Railroad station of the |
present day, with signal tower, tracks,
ballast, switches, frogs, overhead foot-
bridge, fences, and gates. The tracks,
in themselves, are as indicative as any-
thing else of the marked development |
in this branch of mechanics in the last |
sixty years, the exhibit showing, in |
juxtaposition with as fine a specimen |
of the standard Pennsylvania rail of |
1892 as has ever been rolled, pieces of |
the Camden and Amboy rail of 1831,
of the rail used on the old Portage road |
over the Alleghenies, and of the very
crude wood and iron rail with which |
the Madison and Indianapolis road |
was originally laid. Some idea of the!
contrast may be had when it is stated |
that whereas the Camden and Amboy |
rail weighed only thirty-five pounds |
to the yard, the standard rail of to-day
of which the examples shown are one |
hundred feet in length, weigh one
hundred pounds to the yard, being |
nearly three times as heavy.
Upon the tracks is another
even more marked. Probably the
most conspicuous, and certainly the
most interesting object in the display |
is the original John Bull train, which
here rests after its thousand-mile jour- |
ney across the continent from New
York. The old engine itself—the old-
est in America—which was construct-
ed by George Stephenson, in England,
and brought to this country in 183]
for use on the Amboy Division of the
Pennsylvania Railroad, stands there |
to-day precisely as it was in 1536, after
having had added to it such improve-
ments as were then suggested to the
minds of the American engineers, Its!
weight, with its somewhat cumber- |
some tender, is only thirty-two thous- |
and one hundred pounds, as against |
one hundred tons, the weight of the |
ordivary standard passenger locomo-
tive of to-day, and beside the modern |
machine, of course, it looks very much
like a toy. The passenger coaches, |
glistening with a fresh coat of green |
paint, are so low that a tall man can-
not stand upright within them; their |
brakes are worked by means of handles |
similar to those on the horse-cars of |
the present time, and the only method
of lighting them is by » tallow dip in |
each end of each car. As example of |
the magnitude to which the railroad |
cars of to-day have attained, no better
choice could have been made than the
selection for exhibit, side by side with |
{
contrast |
this tiny passenger train, of the two |
tremendous vehicles on which the
mammoth Krupp guns were whirled
from Baltimore to the Exposition; the
manner in which the guns were car-
ried being shown by means of full
size models, made of staff, of the stand-
ard sixteen-inch and ten-inch guns,
such as are now used by the United
Btates War Department.
This policy of contrast, which is so
apparent without the building, is car-
ried throughout the entire display,
and the interior, with its relief maps,
charts, models, lay figures, photo-
graphs, and relics, gives a better idea
of the wonderful growth of the great-
est railroad system of the country than
could possibly be had in any other
way. The walls of the great marble-
floored hall, into which the visitor
may enter from either the front or the
rear, are li with handsome mahog-
arranged as to form a colonnade on
each side, are surrounded by folding
frames for the display of thous:nds of
exhibits that could be shown to ad-
vantage in no other way.
In arranging the display the small
two relief maps, or models which form
two arms of the cross, show the Horse-
! shoe Curve and Plane Neo. 1, with ca-
and locomotive,
The rest of the floor space between
sstals and platforms upon which are
| models relating particularly to the de-
veloped syste m of tr: ansportation of to-
day. On one side, for instance, a
wautiful reproduction in miniature of
{ the double-decked ferry-boat “Wash-
| ington,” one of the fleet plying be-
| tween Jersey City and New York. In
is
and has
turning out a piece of
| work as nearly perfect in every detail
On gala
days it is proposed to decorate this lit-
| tle vessel with bunting, and arrange-
| ments have been made to light the in-
| terior with eleetric lights precisely
the boat from which it is copled is
lighted. The method of handling
| freight cars in New York Harbor
shown here in ths same way by means
models of a tug-boat and float.
| Towards the other end of the building
‘are lay figures in uniform of the sev-
| eral classes of employes of the compa-
as
is
An object of considerable interest to
many is a prospective map, thirty-
Penn-
on the
i morning of Columbian Day, October
1892.
With regard to the arrangement
the exhibits in the and
of
Cases, the
been exercised to carry out the funda-
mental ideas of grouping and contrast,
One corner has, therefore, been given
up to those features which have espe-
er is devoted to engineering and main-
tenance of way, a third relates partic-
ularly to the relief department of the |
company, and in the remaining quar-
ter of the spacious room are general
relics.
A feature of much interest to the
visitor is the Bureau of Information,
{ which will be maintained in the build-
{ing. Experienced employes will be
placed in charge, who will not only
answer questions concerning the exhi-
bits, but will give information relative
| to train schedules in current use, and
| other matters of interest to the travel-
er.
Complete as this exhibit of the
{ Pennsylvania Railroad Company
| would seem, it is lacking in one or two
| essentials; bat this lack is made up,
the visitor will find, when the General
Transportation Building comes in for
inspection. There the company has
| deemed best to exhibit its finished
products of 1882, in the shape of cars,
turned out at its own Altoona shops,
and accordingly shows three speci-
mens of most excellent workmanship
—a standard passenger coach, a stand-
products are transported, a standard
track-inspection car, and a trz:k-indi-
cator car which shows graphically the
condition of the track, such as is used
annually Ly the company’s officers in
making a tour of the lines- prior to
awarding prizes for the best pieces of
road-bed, &c. Altogether the exhibit
reflects abundant eredit upon the com-
pany in general, and in particular up-
on Mr. Theodore N. Ely, Chief of Mo-
tive Power, who conceived the general
scheme, and Mr, J. Elfreth Watkins,
who, with years of service as a eivil
engineer in the employ of the compa~
ny, and & subsequent experience of
seven years as curator of the transpor-
tation section of the Smithsonian In-
stitution, has so successfully carried it
into execution.
School Appropriation,
Centre Hall school board will re-
‘ eoive the sum of $602,156, appropriation
accruing from the state, being set
aside for that purpose. The taxables
upon which the amount is based is
numbered at 186,
est details have not been neglected,
“How to make
T
contains id to 15% per
the best prepared
*fored for sale In Centre
Centre County, during the past three years, whic
two hundred tons this year
MeCalmont & Co's. Champion #2.
This is a complete fertilizer
clover and timothy,
Ground Bone, Mureate of Potash,
to meet the wauiso! buyers
Nitrate of Boda,
we deal.
before purchasing.
July 13, 18983.
Marriage Licenses
The following iparriage licenses
were granted the past week:
Rufus Cupper,'of Tyrone, and Ber-
tha Overhime, of Lock Haven.
William Wise
of Woodward.
J.B Auman and Ada
man, of Potters Mills.
Joseph Cresshak, of Clearfield,
Lizzie Fergok, of Snow Ehoe,
and Phoebe Orndorf,
Jane Koons.
and
fp
Miss Mary Kreisher, of
Roads attended the Ref.
favored us with a call.
Buflulo
pie-
X
nic and
Had light sprinkle of rain this mor-
ning with a clouded sky indicating
more,
Addresses at the Ref. reunion
terday were delivered by C. M.
Prof. Bauman, and Rev
tp
$e
Bower,
esq. Noll
La Grippe
During ti
the past season it was a noticeable fi
Dr.
had a
baat escaped all of the
e prey valence of the Lrippe
#
Ws
that those who
King's
speedy recovery,
troublesome after effect
This remedy seems to have a peculiar
power in effecting rapid cures not only
in cases of La Grippe, but in all dis-
eases of Throat, Chest and Lungs, and
has cured cases of Asthma Hay
Fever of long standing. and
be convineed., It won't
Free Trial Bottles J.
Drug Store.
Ui
3
not only
dep nded
New Discovery,
& of the malady.
Ii
and
Try
disappoint
¥
is
Ty
at D. Murray's
yp -
DOLLARS A WEEK FOR
LIFE.
-
THREE
i$
BRAINY
BING OUT
HEREIS A SNAP ¥
THE LATEST TH
In order to Intros
turist into New |
cided 10 present an
jist for the! t treat Ei ghth
Atirsotion for the v
Oct. 1. They
ment 10 pay thro
offered below
How To So
cote She
All that is HECEMATY ia 10 teks
per an 4 make all the words you «
jetters In th Lheree wy 14s, Wor
| Expositson,” aid se fd the i to as
six mo ithe sutseription 10 either
A ist or The Ladies i
Oo the choloest [Hlastrated pos
The sen
have
sly &
ga
of the largest jist w
week for} ad, $1006 in gold: Dre
0 5th, PH 0: 6th, Twket to Worl
ten days expenses. pianos, orga
genin’gold and sliver watches, »iive
diamond rings, snd AG
makiog aliogether the
ever offered by any publi
list of former prize-winoers
Riis. Foreign or obsolets words
2. Letters cantwl appear oflener UU
pear in tue words World's Colas
sition” iba! je ihe word “ riddis
eould not be used, booagse
ele
“
Names of wefan
and places bar ted § Nocharge for pmokiog or
| shipping but all prize winners will be expected
to help us to extend our cirenistion. 5 All
lists containing over 190 correct words will re
ceive a special reward.
Jupaex «The following well-known gentle
men have consented to act as j «dges and will we
that the prizes are fairly swarded.- Commodore
Calenty, (Proprietor Caicnil’'s Line of Steamer)
Peterborough, and Mr. W. Robestson, President
Times Printing Company , Peterborough.
ly (oo commission) to men, women,
girls, Write for particulars
letters, Address, AcoRIY
a td). Peterborough , Canada
boys and
Register all mon.
ere Pus. Co,
World's Fair Philanthropists,
Moms. Boddie Bros. wealthy Chicago gentle
men, having the interest «Ff their ety at heart,
and desiring to disprove the falsity of the state.
ment that only in boarding houses can be found
moderate priced scrommodations during the
World's Fair, refmosie hed and furnished at great
expense one of thar famons absolutely fire-proo!
business structares, cated corner of Franklin
and Jackson streets, within short walking dis
tance of the Union Depots, Theatres, Post Offices,
Board of Trade, Bieam, Elevated, Cable R sds
and Steamboats to the World's Pair, furnish.
newly throughout! 50 rooms, superh parlors, elo.
vators, electric lights exhaust fans to keep cool |
entire building, named this property The Great
Western Hotel, and invite the public to take
their choles of roots for $1.00 per day. children 5
to 1160y cents. Elegant restanrant and dining
rooms where fine meals are served at 5) cents, or
& Ia carte el very moderate prices,
There would less heard or known of extor-
tion and Imposition cotinected with the W rid
Pair were there more public spirited, fair minded
men in Ch as are the owners and proprietors
of The Great Western Hotel, Our readers sonia
write as early 6s possible to secure
thay are being taken up rapidly ~8t. Pao Pal Daily
a J!
©. A.SNOW & CO.
Orr, PATENT OFFICE, WASHINGTON, D. ©.
two blades of grass
*hosphate is the trade uame adopted for
Acidulated Dissolved Bouth Caroline Rock now
Juarantoe
ch is the
Dissolved South Caroline Ro k ever of.
Wea sold over two bandred tons of this
It has been usd on
cent, avellable Phosphoric Acid, wh
County
results,
h has given the most satisfac Hoty
sell more than
outlook is, that we wil
00 Ammoniated Bone Super Phos. st im
Just three yours and has
ier complete fertilisers
A crop of grass,
ars per ton. Dr. ¥
We sold fifty tous lest year. or
¢, Buffalo Honest Phosphate,
Land Plaster, and Agricultural Salt in quantities
farmers in this respect, with the full
Belleviog this to be the fact, we in
BELLEFO. VrE, PA
so
New Buggies, Wagons, &o.,
AT A BARGAIN.
The undersigned has on hand at his
shops at Yeagertown a very large stock
of Buggies, Carriages, Wagons, &e.,
which he will sell at low prices and
easy terms in order to make room.
All made of first-class material and
equal to the best. Call and see my
stock. 1 ean suit everybody. Bug-
gies and Wagons made to order in the
best style. Repairing of all kinds
promptly attended to.
junl-Sm H. PHILIPS.
I wish tosay to
eof Jerseys, th
have sa fine thoro
bred Jersey Be
He has all the points of a
f his kind; has a splendid switch,
GRY nest head and neck. quile
and sure getter
»
JERSEY BULL,
W. SMITH,
Centre Hall, Pa,
UTORS NOTICE =LETTERS.
the ostate of Lyd
riwp., having been
would a ¥ request
thetoselves indebted to the
pRyment, and those
* 10 present them
TESTA
w2ller
and w
« Exec
T urbotyil
UU Tr
lie, Pa
ANTED ~BALESMEN, TO SELL OUR
and hardy nursery stock
eties tooffer both in fruits and
’ $ i controlled only by ua. We phy
OF ®aiary. give oxcliusive territory and
Write us ai ouoe and sec ioe
MAY BROTHERS
Namserymon
Rochester,
tire obs
N
Y
EXPLOSIVES,
POWDER,
FUSE AND
POWDER. —The
quality of Dynamite in use is nam-
ed the Atlas Powder, for blasting
rocks and blowing out stumps,
POWDER.—The Judson
powder is of medium strength be-
very best
tween black powder and dynamite.
of blasting, rifle and sporting pow-
der has always been considered the
best in the market and it is as good
in quality to<day as it ever was,
ARTRIDGES. —Fizxed ammunition
for hunters and sportsmen.
C
trade with the above High Class
Explosives at the very lowest pri-
We guarantee the lowest pri-
oes for the best goods in this line
ever offered for sale in this com-
munity.
FUSE.—Cotton, hemp, tape and rub-
ber fuses for use in dry and wet
rock.
PLATINUM FUSES
AND
ELECTRIC BLASTING APPARATUS.
ROCK DRILLS.—Roek Drills opera-
ted by hand, steam or compressed
air with boilers, air compressors
and engines for operating the same,
ORDERS FOR ANY of the above
articles placed in our hands will
receive prompt attention at the
very lowest prices,
McCALMONT & CO,
22Junly BELLEFONTE, PA.
00s,
Mr. Thomas Batte, editor of the
(/raphic, Texarkana, Arkansas, has
{ found what he believes to be the best
remedy in existence for the flux. His
experience is well worth remembering.
He says: ‘Last summer I had a very
severe attack of flux. 1 tried almost
every known remedy, none giving re
lief. Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera
and Diarrhoea Remedy was recom
mended to me, I purchased a bottle
and received almost ‘immediate relief,
I continued to use the medicine and
was entirely cured. I take pleasure in
recommending this remedy to any
person suffering with such a disease,
as in my opinion it is the best medi.
cine in existence.” 25 and 50 cent
bottles for sale by J. D. Murray, Drug-
gist,
MINISTRATOR'S
aS>Y Addl inisirations pon the ciate i ARs
Eligabwth Burkholder of ie” ander
fully EI 10 the
gine ben Suse
SE ri
Fon nf macros atl
We ae Li
Si eg,
ATTORNEYS.
{ JOHN KLINE
Bt Law
LEFONTE, PA.
Office on second floor of Furst's building north
of Court House, Can be cousulted in German
snd English, ‘aus’
A uornet
J. H'ORVIS, CC. M. BOWER,
(Bvis, BOWER & ORVIS,
Atiorneys at La
BEL 1 EFONTE, PA.
Office in Crider's Exchange bullding on second
floor. ‘ansh
E. L, ORVIS.
D F. FORTNEY,
Attorney at Law,
BELLEFONTE, PA.
Office in Conrad Building, janug2
{ LEMANT DALE
Alton ey at Law,
BELLEFONTE,
Office N. W, corner Diamond, two
First Nationa! Bank
hs from
jank7
RUNKLE,
Attorney - -ai-La
BEL i ¥ YONTE,
W,4
-.
All
Special attention given to collections,
floor Crider Excha ge.
FPA.
Jice
C.P. Hewes,
’. L. BrawoLen,
[Fa NGLER & HEWES,
Attorne sal law,
‘LLEFONTE, PA.
Bpacial attention to collections. Practice
all the courts. Consultation in
English.
3
German and |
jan?
BANKS.
VTY BARKING CO.,
BELLEFONTE, PA.
Discount notes. i
J. D. Buvert, Cashier,
C ENTRE COUN
Receive deposita,
Janu®l
HOTELS.
JRVIN HOUSE,
8. Woods Caldwell Pop
LOCK
Good sample
rietor,
AVES
OOS ¢
ja
4
«PA.
Terms reasonable,
floor
'H HOUSE
‘WL fetor
BELLE FONTE
Special attention given 10 country trad
Daggett, Pr
FA
spre
MAN HOURE,
Opponite Court House,
BELLEFONTE, PA.
New building. new furniture throughout, sean
heat, electric bells and all modern improvements, |
Good table and modernie charges.
N EW GAR
§ HOTEL,
D. H. Rubi, Proprietor,
SPRING MILLS
1 trains,
SPRING PF MILLE
« PA.
Free bus to and from al
NEW BROCE ERHOFF HOURE,
x 4. M. Neubaner Proprietor
BELLEFONTE, PA. |
Free bus to and from all trains. Good sample |
romps on first Soor. Special rales 10 witnesses |
nd jurors
LYANIA BTATE COLLEG
rE PENNE
LOCATED IN
FUL AND HEALTHFUL BEPOTS IN THE
ALLBGHERNY REGION, UNDENOMINA-
TIONAL: OPEN TO BOTH SEXES;
TUITION FREE: BOARD AND
OTHER EXPENSES VERY
LOW KEW BUILDINS
AXD EQUIPMENT.
LEADING DEPARTS TMENTS OF STUDY.
AGRICULTURE (Three Courses.) and AGRI |
CULTURAL CHEMISTRY; with constant il
instrations on the Faris and in the Labors |
wry.
BOTANY and HORTICULTURE: theoreti. |
onl and practioal. Students taught original |
study with the microscope.
C EAM ISTRY with an usususily
thorough course in the Laboratory, 3
(CIVIL ENGINEERING } These |
« KLE “TRICAL ENGINE ERING; Sooure |
{ME HHNICAL ENGINEERING Jes are
scoompanied with very exiensive practiosd
exercises in the Field, the Bhop, and the
Labaratory
HISTORY: Ancient and Modern, with origi
pal investigation
INDUSTRIAL ART AND DESIGN.
LADIES" COURSE IN UTERATURE and
SCIENCE: Two yeas Ample facilities for |
Music, vooa!l and instramenial,
LANGUAGE and LITERATURE: Latin |
(optional, ) French, German and English (re. |
quired.) one or more continued through the
entire course,
MATHEMA ATICE and ASTRONOMY; pure
and Applied
MBCHANIC ARTS: combining shop work
with study, three yean' course, New bulld-
ing and equipment,
MENTAL, MORAL and POLITICAL BCI
ENCE; Coniston} law snd History
Politioal Econom
MILITARY SCIE} (CE: instruction theoreti:
cal and practical, incinding each arm ofthe
servioe.
18. PREPARATORY DEPARTMENT; Two
fully graded and th h.
Fall tern opens Sept. 14, 1882, Examinations
for admission. June 16, and Sept. 13. Commence
metit week June 1210. LJ80t, For Catalogue or
other information, ad
GRO. W, NE ERTON, LL.D. Prest,
Rate College, Centre Oo. Ps
WORK FOR US
& few days, and you will be startied at the unex.
pected success that will reward your efforts. We
DE have the best business to offer an sgent
at can be found on the face of this earth.
$45.00 profit on $75.00 worth of business iv
pet easily and honorably made by and paid to
reds of men, women, boys, and girls in our
Dn You can make money {aster at work for
us thik Jou have any Mea of. The business is 80
easy to , and instructions s ®0 pple and pisin,
that ail succeed from the ose who take
hold of the business ror yo advantage that
arises from the sound tehutation of one of the
oldest, most sucoessful, largest publishing
homees in America. Sours Tor Li the profits
that the business so readily and somely Yickts.
more
All beginners succeed Srandly
Footbag a Those who
it find exactly as we to
room for a few more TE
them to be n at once, If you are al
Jloted, bug ve a few spare momen
A en write us at onoe
partir ter stun mall an direon,
0. 400, Augusta,
iL
full and |
12
The success of Mrs, Annie M. Beam,
of McKeesport, Pennsylvania, in the
treatment of diarrhoea in her children
will undoubtedly be of interest to
many mothers. She says: “I spent
several weeks in Johnstown, Pa., after
the great flood, on account of my hus
band being employed there. We had
Several children with us, two of whom
took the diarrhoea very badly. I got
some of Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera
and Diarrhoea Remedy from Rev. Mr,
C It cured both of them. 1
knew of several other cases where it
w | was equally successful. I think itean-
not be excelled and cheerfully recom-
mend It." and 4 cont bottles for
Druggist.
8D oe 9
Pe do
oD
A%e
PENNSYLVANIA
Philadelphia & Erie R. R. Division
and Northern Central Railway.
Time Table, 1n effect May 21, 1593,
TEAINE LEAVE MOKTANDOW, EASTWARD,
9188. m~Train 14. (Daily ewerpt Bends
For sunbury , Willkestmrre, Rime Posiyilie
Harrisburg and intermediate Saath arriving
| at Philadeiphin at 3200p. #4 , Sow 80 p
| m., Baltimore, 3.109 m. Wed inchos 4.009, m=,
connecting st Philadeiphie (x all og shore
nolnts., 1 yrongh PRssGTIEeY senrhey be {ikon
varre, P hiladeiphi ia and Baltimore, VFarier ours
to Philadel phils.
1385p, m~Train #5 (Dally cost Punts? )
slope
00s. m
129 a Train
| his, and pas-coger coaches Wo Phlinfciphis snd
| 1056 pm. New York 3.008. m
New York ad 7.10 a,
m
Intermediate siations arriving 8
| For Bunbury, Harrishnrg snd Twa eV
| tions, srriy ng at Fhiladelos sm o.08p New
York. hp m., Baltimore 8489. 13 , Wem
(nest 815 p.m. Parlor esr throne Ge ainda.
i Baltimore.
| _G01lp m~Train 12. (Defy
| For Wilkesbarre, Mazieten, Poerilie ¥
| and intermediate points arriving at Puil Ceiyp 5
itimore I8, 2
w., ¥ sshington 4.108. m. Passenger conshes
Wilkesbarre and Philadelphia,
B02p. m~Train 6 (Dally) Fer BPuwbwry,
Harrisburg and all inte TIM diste "allen, Arriy-
ion Harrisburg te
Philadelphia Ph
sr andisturbed until
4. (Daily) For Sunbury
iphis at 6008, 1a, New York, 4.90 &. a,
nore, 630 8. mm, Washington, 7.95, a =
al seeping cars to Philadelphia snd
iia and Baltimore,
WERT HARD,
6378. m—~Traln 3
apdaigus and inter
Bullalo sud N
For Erie and Can
“mations, Rox hester
with through Pullman
4 pawen a fr coches 0
(Dail
2 pint
Niagara Fall
JIE RI
Erie snd Roo
i Trai
Hate sation
p.m ~Train Daily except Bunday.
ve Kane, Cai vy daigrs and intermediate stations
Book uf Nisgara Falls, with
throug Kane and Kochess
ter, an .
Dally) For Lock Haven and
RTIOT Car
wm. -Trein
WYO Ei
mn
d
except Bundes)
6 a3 iA simile
Wil a
a La
THROUGH TRAINS
STANDOR FROM
UT.
int Lindel
rrisharg
Daily
3 7am
Washing.
keslmrre
3 : 8%
from
CoBChies
Teil | leaves New
in. Washington
« Wilkesbars
arriving a
oman
umore
we r COR es s from Yai
LEWISBURG ARD TY
Daily Exoept Way.
Wes
FM 3
tward,
MAM
5 $0 Mos
2 15) Lowi #
i & Biehl
SENEESEK
€
6
i
€
¢
6
Ben rot
ZijPaddy Mountstn
siCoburn
dijerty
ShiRising Spring
2{Penn Cave
We Centre Hall
16 Gre
238i Linden Hall
§ 2810ak Hall
324 Lemont
87 Dale Eummit
471 PF) eraaul GP
HAxermany
55 Bellefonte
trains eave Lew ist
»:
TATST alu oF OF OF OF OF % ©
-
XEES
FR me on OF OE of wt
57
0
4
Aad
Reh Anh
urg for Montan
» 40and ¥ } m
rie swat Arg at 9 xs
ands Spm
or addres
ave, Pitts
J. R. WOOD
Gen’l Pee'ger Agt.
Xam
Nam. 02 p mil
rates, aps, elo,
Thos E Watt, P. A.W
bun
EB M PREVOST,
General Manager
DR. THEEL,
a8 North Fourth St.
below Gomes, Phi inate,
« Bed. ook oases In ¢ we ID dare
Potvon, Brrietures, i
cers, Pimples. Early Decay,
of Youthful errors cured sler every
one vise hae Milod. § Yessy
Hoetal sud 26 years’ et
perenne Ee erperimpent, se Teliure
Method entinely mew snd harmless,
" Fever falls Send 10 ote is Bon,
stars Sor book © Tred. the evposure of guecks, thelr Tefal
besks snd ale etatemmente Sryuta vist testimoninis snd home
rare pin Taoes ise 1 4 to vous snd oid. Heurs:
Pails. Troon $5 3 te Wael and Set evenings,
€ te 20. Sundays, § 11 @w or sak win Rh
evering
HENCH & DROMGOLD’S
SAW MILLWENGINES
A wonderin] improvement in Friction Feeds nnd
Glg«Back. ack motion of Carriage three times
se fast ms any other in the market Frivtion
Cluteoh Peed, cnasing all the foad gearing 10 stand
#till while backing ; great saving In power apd
wear. Write for circulars and prices; furnished
free upon application, Also Spring Teeth Har.
row, _— Rakes, 0 Cultivators, Corn I
ellers, vic ion thie paper,
HENGH Ha DROMBOLD, Manfrs., YORK, PA.
Ointment.
A certain cure for Chronic Sore Eyes,
Totter, Salt Rheum, Scald Head, Old
Chronie Sores, Fever Sores, Eczema,
Itch, Prairie Scratches, Sore Nipples
and Piles. It is cooling snd soothing.
Hundreds of cases have been cured by
it after all other treatment had failod
It is put up in 25 and 50 cent bozos.
Bucklen's Arnien Salve,
The best salve in the world for Cuts,
Bruises, Sores, Salt Rheum, Fever
Sores, Tetter, Chapped Hauds, Chil
blains, Corns, and all Skin Eruptions,
and positively cures Plies, or no pay
required. Tt is guaranteed to give per-
feet satisfaction, or money refunded.
Price 25 cents por box. For sale by J.
D. Marray.
Write for Samaples-- Name Your price.
In Price, Faldo, Fit and Fiuish
EB we BEAT THE WORLD |
BE cree sro or ravens