THE} BEEEEFONTE} CENTRAL,. If you come to State College you never should To come on the houseboat that runs on a rail. But before you begin, for your relatives’ sake, You had best make your will, and farewell leav Of all you hold dear on this desolate strand, For when you embark you know not where you The track is laid down in a myriad of curves. The man who designed them most truly deserve An inventor’s patent, for elsewhere you'll not f In all of creation crooks of similar kind. The ballast most used is just common clay; And the rails spiked to ties half rotted away The grades of the road are what they should be If marked at the office they’d at least get a C. The train is made up on the vest!buled style With coach, box-car, and flat-car, and once in a' A stock car is hitched on for ornaments sake, Or, on extra occasions to more passage room m« The engine, the height of mechanical art, Though of ancient design and worn out in part Still answers the purpose, and moves o’er the n At a more rapid rate than the swiftest of snails The fare to Bellefonte was once fifty cents, But last year a class contest made extia expensi For this thriving railway; and so to get even The fare was increased till it’s now fifty-seven. The property shares are never at par They’ve been far below since Naughty- Two smashed the car. But this'railroad still forms the principal way Of reaching State College and getting away; And so of this trunk line we say with a will With all of its faults we shall on it still.