aw faite, a THE CENTHE REPORTER Editor rt TERMS One year, $1.50, when paid in advance. Those in arrears subject to previous terms, $2.00 per year, ADVERTISEMENTS. 20 cents per line for three fusertions, and 5 cenis per line for each subse quent insei tion. Other rates made made known on application. CENTRE HALL, PA., THURS, Sep. 28 . DEMOCRATIC, COUNTY, TICKET, SHERIFF, CYRUS BRUNGART..........onennuss TREASURER, WM. T. SPEER.....cc.coonmmminsnnmnrnnscnn Bellefonte. REGISTER, A.G: ARCHEY coon irvine RECORDER, J. C. HARPER.........cicniiminsmnmnnn Bellefonte COMMISSIONER, DANIEL HECKMAN, PHILIP H, MEYER........ccouinrennns AUDITOR, wvsnsenens Mill heim Renner Twp ~Harzis Twp JOHN H. BECK W. H. TIBBENS .... CORONER, Dr. W. U. IRWIN... isis Huston Twp Walker Twp College Twp vertising coal at $5.75 per ton. The of 25 cents, to go in effect Oct. 1. the poor if the winter proves severe. Af ——— tight quarters. boss to the Senate, chine at Harrisburg. sues on the stump. At fore many days, and his fate will be sealed when Dewey sees ing lost confidence when the latter misrepresented the facts about the capture of Iloilo. ——————— its opposition al legislation in Congress, where the party has a strong working majority in both branches. Without such prac- tical proof of the party intentions platform declarations will be a waste of words. seb ces f— Another rise in the price of anthra- cite coal is imminent say the local coal merchants and this will have the ef- fect of raising the wholesale price of this coal to a higher place than it has occupied for over five years. There will also, from all indications, be a ma- in a very short time, resolutions increasing shoes largely. One shoe A — Continental Tobacco Companies, ficial to labor, as three factories ab- sorbed by the American Company, $2.50 to $1.25 per day after consolida- tion. a — A BACKDOWN, Chairman Reeder, says the Philadel- phia Record backs out. He will not arrange for a joint debate of the issues of the campaign as suggested by Chair- man Rilling, of the Democratic State Committee, This action of General Reeder Is no doubt discreet ; but the reason he gives for it is evasive to the point of untruth. He says “‘there are no exceptional con- ditions this year that require excep- tional treatment.” Is not the situation with reference to the United Btates Senatorship ex- ceptional ? How about the arbitrary veto of a part of the school appropriation ? When before has & Governor of the State ventured to interfere with the right of the people to amend their Con- stitution in the method provided by law ? The right of the people of Pennayl- vania to govern themselves is in dis pute. But discussion is the last thing desired by the Quay party. nh ——— A AAA To Pall the Teeth of the Trusts, Probably Professor John Graham Brooks, of Harvard University, sug- the most feasible way of dealing with the Trusts. He proposed the adoption of legislation providing for and enforeing— (1) Absolute publicity of methods and accounts. : (2) The removal of every artificial advantage given by the tariff, (3) Prevention of discrimination by rallroads in favor of large shippers, es- » POLITICAL The old gag of citing certain de- linquent corporations into the Dauphin court and threatening them with heavy penalties for failure to report to the proper department of the state gov- ernment is again being worked by the attorney general and the auditor gen- eral. It is not on record that any of- fending corporation was ever made to disgorge on this account, A contribu- tion to the Republican state commit- tee often times induces a state official to wink the other eye and forget that he ever had a memory. But this cita- tion affords lawyer pets of the ma- chine a chance to pocket fees at the expense of the state, The rutabaga at the head of the ag- ricultural is just now working over- time in attempting to prove that the Quay machine and the Stone admin- istration loves the man with the hoe, The tremendous inroads that Farmer Creasy is making on the farmer vote has thoroughly alarmed the machine, which has been ignoring farmers for state candidates for years and which has denuded the agricultural depart- ment of attaches devoted to their in- terests and filled their places with town henchmen who know far more about stuffing ballot boxes and rough- ing primaries than they do of sub-soil ploughing or the rotation of crops. Governor Stone has his ear to the ground. He has heard the rumbling of the storm of the people's wrath, That is clear. He is quoted BAY- ing that he will concur in the will of the people in the selection of judges and that he will un no cireum- stances attempt force an approval of his selections by making premat selections before the people have are their attitude is an NOTES, der to Such a change of cation that the at last been heard leaders are beginni stand that they cannot ns they please. Since the inauguration of the present governor he hi \ contempt for the desire who were buncoed by his tions that he was no man's that he would execute the lesgly and impartially. A been brought about by the protests of many county conventions and the criticisr who have a right to spenl who occupy public The editor of the Phil voice of the | Ways ao stump stations piece of Dave recognized as says: “Despit contrary, the extra session of the provided Matthew ticket is ‘put through’ by majority, and towards which are being shaped. As elections now conducted under the Bake law, only the nec needs with a e all signs ge Stanley named to be complied that with the machine of the so-called insu county of Allegheny caused and the Brow ticket cut many thousand must be borne in mind there is to be no factional Philadelphia, and therefore chinery here can be re only to make up any d but also to swell the amount required Thus, a Republican authority mit peaters and ballot thieves phia are to be used agals gang to roll up the regulat tain of fraud, and that is why all bills for the prote ballot were strangled in the last lature There no fe introduced in the last ing to the safeguard of the balio were put to sleep save tw tional amendment resol providing for personal voters In the cities and the viding for the introductic ing machines which are operation in some of the the state of New York. a ernor Stone ruthlessly the Quay outfit afraid tions and why has it : fused to mend the rotten Baker jaw? The reason is obvi be read by a blind man it the loopholes in this law the wuld not manufacture their bogus majorities to overcome the honest vote of the country. The electionz in Philadel phia, Pittsburg and Lancaster have be- come shameful farces, and no longer record the will of the people, State Chairman Heeder has assessed all the employes of the state govern- ment 3 per cent of thelr salaries and directed them to hand over to thelr respective chiefs. No guilty man will escape the frying pan. It will be either pay or get out. This is the same Reeder who, while fattening on an income of £20,000 per year from salary and fées as secretary of the commonweaith, re- fused to put up a dollar when asked to chip into the Republican fund. But Reeder was not then fingering the campaign boodle. As Mayor Warwick would remark, “Things are different now." Now, if Mark Hanna only bad au election system akin to the Baker bal- lot law there would be no need to send Telldy Roosevelt, Postmaster General Smith and a host of Republican stump screamers ‘nto Ohio to save McKinley. The ballot thieves and the corporation bosses who “assist” their slaves to mark their baidots could do the sav y in the tron H were wer than ie Eigia killed of honest ohstinat ballot 1 may Ww cities ¢ Senator Penrose soyz a doa) has been made with the Republican state chair man of Ohio by which Pennsyivania and Obdo are to swap stump speakers in the campaign, whieh goes tc prove that he boss is really slarmes at the uprising of the farmers and inde. pendents of the Keystone siote und that in order to preserve his Wide and tallow imported talkers must Invade onr fair domain to distract the voters’ attention from the diseased pork {4 the bottom of the barrel, But all the im- ported talkers fo the veso 0 hiemise phere would not save them this time. To Rulse $20,000 000, A meeting of the twentieth century commission of the Central Pennsylva- nia Methodist conference was held Thursday in Grace church, Harris- ‘burg, at which plans for raising a goodly portion of the $20,000,000 to be contributed by Methodists over the world for general purposes as a twen- tieth century offering will be further Cl ot BOODLERS, TRIALS OFF A Political J udge Comes in Handy For the Machine. M—————— How Quay, Penrose and Stone, Masquerad- ing as Friends of Organized Labor, Are Backing Judge Paxson, Labor's Arch En- emy, For [Interstate Commerce Commis- sioner, (Bpecial Correspondence.) Philadelphia, Sept. 25.—It required no political Wiggins to forecast Chalr- man Reeder's rejection of Chairman Rillings’ general challenge for palaver between the stump orators of both par- ties of living campaign issues, freemen of the state to act as judges. Reeder's ridiculous and Fallstaffian retreat has raised a broad grin on the falr face of the ancient commonwealth The independent papers have nailed him to the cross for a coward. They have javalined him and his party being afraid to meet honest discussion The barricaded dusky wary struggling for d liberties as the Americ yught for theirs George 111, and into whom the Quayites have selves behin Luzon, whe God inherits colonists fors of their an agains ik ¢ ol rifles and tattooed the muzzles Mark Hanna's Springfield dollar mark and un pro- to do ism decried Jefferson speakable by Lincoln, Hanna's prietorship of a presi with the election of perior court and Pennsylvania. Their armor is so weak and flimsy, their cause that no wonder it Is General Reeder slinks like Washington and the fnued has ried ana treasurer of 80 indefensible, his own kennel, The Quay machine has secured a ma- terial vantage, however, within the week, It has succeeded in warding off the trials of the indicted boodlers who were their in in caught redhanded gents in the last legislature to defame themselves by voting for Quay for tor and for the McCarrell bill, he thought necessary to save the frowning 0 hh were court r ‘would plat- wilness he Key- to keep POLITICAL COMES IN States d JUDGE istrict «1 some little in- of the law and d be construed is ge by Quay, thus filling The Dau court is function and asset of the dominant machine, since its J tion extends over distinctive questions and particularly questions tion ud the vacancy. arising lot law vacancy fessional pol {an for some years had been of the st county committee, To the sh political judg sey el * unaes had the publican executive mitten Dauphin county long after he had qualified for a judge And this po- litical judge was a handy thing for the machine to have in these boodle cases. He and the amiable district attorney conveniently found that the stuffed docket was too crowded with petty of- such as hen roost robbing, as- sauit and battery, crap playing, for- nifieation and bastardy and corner lounging, to try these boodle cases, which aim at the very vitals of popu- lar government and in which the peo- ple of the whole state are intensely concerned. In order thus to save the Republican eampaign from embarrass ment by reviving at this time the crowning scandal of the last legislia~ ture the Dauphin court has postponed these boodle cases un*il the January term of court. This is another case of Quay “winking the other eye” at a political judge. HERE, LABORING MAN, LIST. Governor Stone has justly aroused the wrath and indignation of organized labor throughout the state by person- ally visiting Washington and adding his squeak and “me too” to the power- ful appeals of Senator Penrose and Quay to Presidgnt McKinley to name ex-Chief Justice Paxson as a mem- ber of the Interstate commerce com- mission. Two years ago a similar attempt failed through the protests of the la- bor organizations and by Senator Cul- lom, of Illinois, the father of the law creating the commission, threatening to defeat Paxson's confirmation by the senate should the president nominate him, The presidential nerve then failed, ‘although he and Hanna had solemnly obligated themselves in the campaign of 1896 to thus appoint Pax. son in return for boodle and votes the great eastern railroad corporations gave McKinley and Hanna. Paxson’s utter subserviency to any- thing and to everything in the core poration flesh pot line while he adorn- od the supreme bench of Pennaylva- nia and his hatred of and antipathy to the right of the common people, and particularly of organized labor, mark. ed him as a useful man for the rail roads to use as an entering wedge for the prostitution of the interstate com- merce commission to thelr own sel fish end. Every honest man in the state had given three cheers when Paxson laid aside his ermine to accept one of the receiverships of the Reading rallroad. He had earned the hatred ¢ oom " pdicial gown to the rescue of Carnegie fn the great strike at Homestead, 4 Here we have the great triumvirate Quay, Penrose and Stone—thus urg- | Ing Paxson, the arch and dangerous | enemy of labor, for a powerful federal post, and who notoriously seeks it, that he may serve his corporation masters and help neutralize this beneficent law { which the people only secured from congress by taking the corporations by the throat, If the laboring searching for a substantial reason for jabbing the Quay ticket at the coming election protection, FUSION 18 THE REAL THING. The horse play of Senator Snyder, Auditor General McCauley and Larry Eyre, the Republican ringsters of Ches- ter county, who are stretching out thelr arms to high Heaven to save them, to bolster up a straight goods Democratic ticket in that county, in order to erip- ple “fusion,” by screaming that Colonel Guffey and State Chairman Rilling are It declined legs. to say propped up on its week, some half dozen of a false breed of Democrats who are willing to do work exchange for being permitted to retain minor jobs under the McKinley ministration. Their pretended ! nation at the consummation | sion” between the { dependents is so bald that classed as { paign. They have been Three Tallors of Tooley { meetin’ In convention and that “we the &c." of “fu- it can Btreet by et, planting { varnished Guffey and mean to it on a platform with eulogles of ryan, although the Quay ticket and against Br fall they i to find | name their decoy duck ticket, as the law prevents them from masquer- | ading as Democrats, and which don't intend to vote themselves, In the meantime both Colonel Guf- fey i Rilling came for- 2 these ex-Democrats and a blow between in Chester,” win ily » fev this In- Yote deed are st for and qd and § Ouay “The fi Colonel the eyes Bays The Dem- des i) office their jobs by orders of the Quay ma- heartily endorse the ate Chairman Rill- rman Cavanaugh the duty of all in Chester county and » to form fusion with all elo- re working for the Quay machin THE WATCHWORD. Guffey and Can tes Reilly when ted state ocratic ig practical fenbhle efforts of tor pite the ¥ holders protect out the 1 sty or iS most ot " HARMONY Ce 1 Creasy throw the iS tone! they ¥ iF discord in the found. There loud on the air and promising horizon Phila- which is the weak spot. be- of the thorough organization | there of the ballot thieves by the Re. blican machines, all liscord has dis- amity and nowhere 3 a sign of Democratic phalanx to be is not a single threatening cl Tes Aik and city factional rancor and «¢ BD iving place sunshine The county conventions the other day were harmonious, and the ticket honors divi between the late warring fa The tic state ticket coming under iz brightening every danger to the Quay ing a threaten- “the man” has i been compelled to take the reing in his own hands and play some of those al- masterful and magical political strokes of his which he fa to do last winter, when h ‘prentice boys were fooling legislature trying to elect him United States sen- i gator The Democratic and the tive and finance committees are booked to confer in this city this week, when campaign plans will be mapped out, the question of financing them discussed and a red hot fight or- dered all along the line of hostilities, The Business Men's State League is prepared to meet and formally en- dorse both Superior Court Candidate Reilly and State Treasury Candidate Creasy. The Quay candidate for the intermediate court, Commodore Ad- ams, has such an unsavory reputation as a lawyer of the shyster class, while so much is known of his private life as a sport, that the independents find it impossible to hold him on their po- litical stomachs, even with anchors and guy ropes, while the honesty and claims of Creasy cannot be ignored. The independents want to break into the state treasury and learn the dark gecrets of its vaults, They look upon the state treasury as the machine cit- adel, which it truly is, believing that if it can be captured Quay's grip on powerful moneyed interests can be broken and his opportunities for spec- unlating with its funds prevented, that his downfall and end will be hastened, gince he will be unable to command the money to corrupt and buy the venal, on whom he relics for his sue~ ceanes, AND THE CAT CAME BACE. The joy of the Quay 'prentice boys, Elkin, Durham, Eyre and Penrose, over the demotion of Uncle Bill Andrews from his place as chief of staff was as short as a butterfly’s life. He failed to oblige them by taking himself off to his mines in New Mexico, so as to give them a clear swing at the “old man's" ear, but remained to haunt them and maka their lives miserable by prevent. ing their blunders and schoolboy tac- tics. ' His business just now {4 that of plaiting the hair of the insurgents, and he carries with him a full assortment of combs for that purpose. He and Dave Lane, the owner of the new mayor of Philadelphia, are now devoting them- selves also to “feeling” the insurgent members of the legislature and of- fering them inducements to change Tt tate [tL slal rod gi 10 tions outlook for the { Democra | the wire a winner | 24 he mas ing 1 » is as aspect old legod fed is around the gtate feaders Oxo | GRAIN MABKET, { Mow WHheal.......c....ocussssssssmaissrnnsssss | Wheat ....... L BY® cocorsissrcssmmnnsis - or wows COIN .c0osrinrsve See Po New Onts.. Bariew ... Backwhend,... ee w He ie Eee Ee PRODUCE AT STORES, Potatoes, Hides FRRERRID pins SPRING MILIS GRAIN MARKET. Corrected every Weanesday by Allison Bros, YW HBRE snes srrsrrinssinsissomstsramamssrcnnss ordinig Corn .. Oats... Rye ... Barley LINDEN HALL MARKET. Corrected weekly by J. H, Ross, YWHOAL, PR.ioivnvrsncsimioissomessmnirssmmirnens Wheat, white... Corn oars........ | Bhelled Corn { Rye ... { Oats... Barley New Polatoes . FREER ...ooone coun | Butter i lard... { Ham ...... { Bhoulder ... {| Bacon . | Roller fiour.. mmm —— svc Bale Register, one-horse spring wagon, copper kettle, 2 board, 2 sinks, 2 cook stoves, clock, der vinegar, ele ters Mills; 4 horses, 7 milch cows, 285 head young cattle, wagons, buggy, bipder, Wm. Goheen, Auc't, DMINISTRATORS of Adminisaation on the estale Jucobs, isle of Centre Hall of Centre and state of Pennsylvania, have been granted to Lizzie M. Wm. A { counts | Coen? indebiod to sald estate are | payment, and those having claims or will make known same without delay FIZZIE M. JACOBS, Adm'r CLEMENT DALE. Au'y, Bueiefonte, Pa. A { lam Weaver, late of Gregg township, MINIBSTRATOR'S of WM. M. GROVE, Adm'r { settlement, | mugs mentar iste of Centre Halli Borough, iH maelves indebted 10 the payment, estate to mixdinte cated for settlement i tate of the deteased Valley Bank for colle The notes held will be left in I0n J. B. FLEISHER, WM. A. KERR, the | aug? 6 OR BALE —A you sre desirous class farm al & reasonable price here Bb | dervigned offers al private sale one-fourto miles west of Tu seyvilie, lowhesliip This i» ove of the most desirable farms in valley. is under a high state of cultivation moat entirely jevel, contains no arge bern, ings, wagnn snd implement theds walter, aod all the convesienos © | farm: « uly ou edourth mile 10 schools, and one-fourth miles 30 churches apd yon desire 10 pure ad in an exoslient state of cultivation, fail WW examine this property call spon or asdres N.B. SPANGLER, and ores do BURASL Pumpkin Contest Will close Saturday, Octo 14th. All must bring their pumpkins to o'clock ber contestants the store before 3 on that afternoon. Early Opening Of Fall and Winter Cloth- ing, Season 1809 and 1900, for Men, Boys and Children. Hat Opening For Men, Women Children. Neck Wear For Men, Women and Chil- dren. Gloves For Men, Children. Handkerchiefs For Men, Women Children. Hosiery For Men, Children. Underwear For Men, Boys and Chil- dren, Umbrella and Mack- intosh Opening For Men and Women, a ~ Opening of Fall and Win- ter Woolens, for Clothing made to order by the best cut. ters and tailors. and and Women and Women and 0000000000000002000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 & Co., BELLEFONTE. Philadelphia & Erie R. R. Divisio and Northern Central Railway. Time Table, tn effect May 21 1599, TRAINS LEAVE MONTANDON, EASTWARD 7.82 a. m.~Train 20, Wek days for Sunbury, Harrisburg, seriviog at Philsdeiphis, 11.486. 1m. , New (ork 2.08 p. m., Batis ore 11.56 p. m., Wedh- ington 100 p. m, Parlor car and passenger coach w Fhluseibiiin, $27 8. m~Traln 30. Dally for Bunbu Willkerbarre, Seronton. Hana ‘2 and ay mediate stations, Week days for Fore aton, He | Zleton, andPousville, Philadeiphis. sew York, | Baltimore, Washington, Through wecnger coaches to Philsdelphia, = 185 p. m~Train bs. Weekdays for Bunbury, Wilkesbarre, Beranton, Hazleton, Pottsville, Har risburg and internmedisle stations, arriving at Phila Clohin st 6.28 p m., New York. 9.30 p, m, | Baltimore, 6.00 p. mu , Waabington et 7.15 p.m. | Parlor ear through wo Piiladeiphis, and pan renger coaches to Philadelphia, Baitimore and Wash inglon , BOL p. m~Teain 22. V eckdays for Wilkes barre, Beranton, Hezetop, Pousville, snd dally for Harrisburg and interns sdiste points, arriving st Philisdelphin 10.2 p m., New York 508 a. m Baltimore 946 p.m... Washiogwon 1055 p. m. Pes seuger coaches Wo Philadelphia and Baltimore Bilp m.~Train 6, Weekdays for Sunbury Harrisburg and all intermediate stations, airiv- ing at Philadelphia, 4.30 a. mi, New York at 7.28 & m, Pullman sleeping cers from Harrisburg to Philadelphia and New York Philadelphia pRssengers Can remain in sleeper undémturbed until 7.80 a. m, 208 a. m~Train 4. (Daily) Por Harris S800000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 burg and poinws east and south, arriving st Philadelphis st 6.62 a, m., New York, 9.35 a om week Said, 10.85 a. wm. Bunday, Baltimore, 6.50 &. {m., Washington, 7.45, & m. Pullman sleeping jears to Philadelphia and Washington, sud | passenger conchens UW Philladelph is and Baltimore WESTWARD, | 533s. m~Tmin 3. (Dally) For Erie, Can- | Bucaigus, Rochester, Buffalo, Nisgars Falls, and | intermediate stations, with pesseuger cosches 10 { Ene and Rochester. Week days for DuBois, { Bellefonte, and Pitsburg, On Bundays only {| Pullman sleepers 0 Rochester and Erie { 10.08 a. m.~Train 21. (Daily) For Lock Haven and weekdays for i | and intermediate stations, { Tyrone, Clearfield, Philipsburg, Pittsburg and i the Ww est, wilh through cars to Tyrone, Ll p.m~Train 15. Weekdays for Kane, Ty- | rone, Clearfield, Philipsburg, Pittsburg, Canan- {daigus sod intermediate sistions Syracuse, | Rochester, Buffalo and Nisgare Falis, with | through ager coaches to Kane and Rocps | ester, and Parlor car to Rochester {| 64D m.—~Train 1. Week dsys for Renovo, Elmira sand intermediate stations. #45 p. m.—Train 13. Dally for Lock Haven, and intermediate stations THROUGH TRAINE FOR MONTANDON FEL Iv | EAST ARD SOUTH. B) | Train 31 leaves New York 12.19 night, Philadels phia 4.30 a m, Baltimore 4.56 a m, Harrisburg 8.008 m, dally, Wilkesharre, 730 a. m. Week _ days arriving at Montandon 10 08s 1m Train 1b leaves Philadelphia 5.40 a m, Washing b 8m, Baltimore, 855 a m, Willkesbarre 8m, week days, srriviog st Montandon 1 pm, with parior car from Philadelpnis and through passenger coaches from Phils {| delphis and Baltimore Trad | leaves New York 555 a m, Phils, 1225 3 i ma; Washington a) 1050 a 1m, Baltimore at 12.00 m, Wilkesbarre 505 pm, arriving ai Montan- Gon al 6.00 pm, week days, with tb rough ps { Benger coaches from Phila. and Baltimore. Train 21 leaves New York L565 p. m. Philadel. : pais $3 pm, weekdays 4.30 p. mm. Bur days, axbingion 5.50 pm, Baltimore 4.55 pm. dei. Iy, Wilkesbarre, 6.00 pm. (week days) arriving st Moutancon $45 pm. Through Parior Car trom Philadelphia, week devs, ard passenger coach from Phiiadeiphia and Washington Tonio 8 loaves New York ai 755 p Fhilage | H2pm, Washington 1040 p mm, Baltimore ALD pm, (daily) arriving at Montenden &l 5.52 & m, with through » 5 sioepiug car from Philsdeiphis and through passenger coaches from Philadelphia and Be timore m LEWISBURG AND TYRONE RAILROAL . Week days, Westward. ££ AM BTATIOYN b #0 Monlandon 6 55 Lewisburg 43 Bie Eastward, {+ 18 Glen Iron 7 0iPaddy Mountsin Soburn 57 Zerby bene Spring il Ia rrrFee > Penn Cave is Centre Hall Zi ibregy Siilinden Hall 850ak Ha 1 #¥ilemont 43 Dale Summit ‘ 52 Plessant Gap 0 5 55 A xemann 10 # 00 Bellefonte 6 Additional trains lesve Lewisburg for Montan- donel 520 a m, %.08 8. m., 945 a m, 1.15 0 and 8.00 p. mm. returning leave Montandon {for Lewisburg a1 7.35 9.50 a. m. 10056 a. m. 5.05, Clpm andsibpm On Sundays trains leave Montandon 9.28 and 10048 m. and 502 p. m., returning leave Lewis burg #30 a. m., 1006 a.m. and 5.04 p. m., J.B. HUTCHINSON, General Manager, BELLEFONTE CENTRAL RAILROAD, To take effect May 25, 1896, EASTWARD WESTWARD Inn 13) = ral PM fan Ar, 6 34 1 100k 45 6 20 1028 40]... 6 16.12 Huis 2 6 10112 bal ¢ asi12 49s 6 0212 468 5 sh 41% 24 BE ala —————— ——— - BORD 50 Ag KD BS AO Bg 10 50 U0 5 OF 50 oh BB i is i ge » CHEERS ESELNBNRFRNRELE STATIONS. 5 5312 378 200 cress 3 PAORSE RA, 5 HONI2 858 1K Beotis Crossing... 5 36112 261s 071....... Krumrine......... 5 8312 2418 04d. cn TUIG. 5 3112 228 Derr 5 20/12 20% ool 8 Morning trains from Montandon, Williamsport Lock Haven and Tyrone ronnect with train No. 7 for Bute College. A flernoon trains from Mon tandon, Lewisburg and Tyrone conpect with v 11 for Bate College. Trains from State College connect with Penna. B. RB. trains ai Bellefonte. Dally except Bunday. FH, THOMAS, Sapt. CENTRAL RAILROAD OF PENNSYLVANIA. Condensed Time Table. ead Dow iL No.1No &No § May 1s, 18%. 55%, No 4No 3 ¥ r Eun & Zz © st 3 gagupg=t s8288% JOO 08 06 00 00 06 OF U8 36 G0 <3 uF af uf 8 a , POLO ODOC OTD DOVES] Shaan 3eevecovsvecovred & eascenuEnugsesys? iL On 0508 00 98 OB BB SE ed Fa shat at at