a 3g The Simple Life By CHARLES WAGNER Translated From the French by Mary Louise Hendee B Copyright, 1901, by McClure, Phillips & Co. tess CHAPTER VI. SIMPLE NEEDS. HEN we buy a bird of the | fancier, the good man tells us briefly what is necessary for our new pensioner, and the whole thing—hygiene, food and the rest—is comprehended in a dozen words. Likewise, to sum up the necessities of most men, a few concise lines would answer. Their regime is in general of supreme simplicity, and so long as they follow it all is well with them, as with every obedient child of Mother Nature. Let them depart from it, complications arise, health fails, gayety vanishes. Only simple and natural living can keep a body in full vigor. Instead of remembering this basic principle we fall into the strangest aberrations. ‘What material things does a man need to live under the best conditions? A healthful diet, simple clothing, a sanitary dwelling place, air and exer- cise. I am not going to enter into hy- gienic details, compose menus or dis- cuss ‘model tenements and dress re- form. My aim is to point out a direc- tion and tell what advantage would come to each of us from ordering his life in a spirit of simplicity. To know that this spirit does not rule in our society we need but watch the lives of men of all classes. Ask different people of very unlike surroundings this question: What do you need to live? You will see how they respond. Noth- ing is more instructive. For some ab- originals of the Parisian asphalt there is no life possible outside a region bounded by certain boulevards. There one finds the respirable air, the illumi- nating light, normal heat, classic cook- ery, and, in moderation, so many other things without which it would not be worth the while to promenade this round ball. On the various rungs of the bour- geois ladder people reply to the ques- tion, What is necessary to live? by figures varying with the degree of their ambition or education, and by education is oftenest understood the outward customs of life, the style of house, dress, table—an education pre- cisely skin deep. Upward from a cer- tain income, fee or salary life becomes possible; below that it is impossible. We have seen men commit suicide be- cause their means had fallen under a certain minimum. They mfceferred to disappear rather than retrench. Ob- serve that this minimum, the cause of their despair, would have been suffi- cient for others of less exacting needs and enviable to men whose tastes are modest. On lofty mountains vegetation changes with the altitude. There is the region of ordinary flora, that of the forests, that of pastures, that of bare rocks and glaciers. Above a certain zone wheat is no longer found, but the vine still prospers. The oak ceases in the low regions: the pine flourishes at consid- erable heights. Human life, with its needs, reminds one of these phenomena of vegetation. At a certain altitude of fortune the financier thrives, the clubman, the so- ciety woman--ali those, in short, for whom the strictly necessary includes a certain number of domestics and equipages as well as several town and country houses. Further on flourishes the rich upper middle class, with its own standards and life. In other re- gions we find men of ample, moderate or small means and very unlike exi- gencies. Then come the people, arti- sans, day laborers, peasants—in short, the masses—who live dense and serried like the thick, sturdy growths on the summits of the mountains, where the larger vegetation can no longer find nourishment. In all these different re- gions of society men live, and, no mat- ter in which particular regions they flourish, all are alike human beings, bearing the same mark. How strange that among fellows there should be such a prodigious difference in require- ments! And here the analogies of our comparison fail us. Plants and ani- mals of the same families have iden- tical wants. In human life we observe quite the contrary. What conclusion shall we draw from this. if not that with us there is a considerable elastic- ity in the nature and number of needs? Is it well, is it favorable to the de- velopment of the individual and his happiness and to the development and happiness of society, that man should have a multitude of needs and bend his energies to their satisfaction? Let us return for a moment to our comparison “vith inferior beings. Provided that ‘their essential wants are satisfied, they live content. Is this true of men? No. In all classes of society we find dis- content. I leave completely out of the ques- tion those who lack the necessities of life. One cannot with justice count in the number of malcontents those from whom hunger, cold and misery wring complaints. I am considering now that multitude of people who live under con- ditions at least supportable. Whence comes their heartburning? Why is it found not only among those of modest though sufficient means, but also under shades of ever increasing refinement, all along the ascending scale, even to opulence and the summits of social place? They talk of the contented mid- dle classes. Who talk of them? Peo- ole who, judging from without think that as soon as one begins to enjoy | ease be ought to be satisfied. But the . middle classes themselves—do they consider themselves satisfied? Not the least in the world. If there are people at once rich and content, be assured that they are content because they know how to ‘be so, not because they are rich. An animal is satisfied when it has caten; it lies down and sleeps. A man also can lie down and sleep for a time, but it never lasts. When he be- comes accustomed to this contentment he tires of it and demands a greater. Man's appetite is not appeased by food; it increases with eating. This may seem absurd, but it is strictly true. And the fact that those who make the most outcry are almost always those who should find the best reasons for contentment proves unquestionably that happiness is not allied to the num- ber of our needs and the zeal we put into their cultivation. It is for every one’s interest to let this truth sink deep into his mind. If it does not, if he does not by decisive action succeed in limit- ing his needs, he risks a descent, insen- sible and beyond retreat, along the de clivity of desire. He who lives to eat, drink, sleep, dress, take his walk—in short, pamper himself all that he can—Dbe it the court- fer basking in the sun, the drunken laborer, the commoner serving his bel- ly, the woman absorbed in her toilets, the profligate of low estate or high, or simply the ordinary pleasure lover, a “good fellow,” but too obedient to ma- terial needs—that man or woman is on the downward way of desire, and the descent is fatal. Those who follow it obey the same laws as a body on an inclined plane. Dupes of an illusion forever repeated, they think, “Just a few sfeps more, the last, toward the thing down there that we covet: then gain sweeps them on, and the farther they go the less able they are to resist it. Here is the secret of the unrest, the madness, of many of our contempora- ries. Having condemned their will to the service of their appetites, they suf- fer the penalty. They are delivered up to violent passions which devour their flesh, crush their bones, suck their blood and cannot be sated. This is not a lofty moral denunciation. I have been listening to what life says, and have recorded as I heard them some of the truths that resound in every square. Has drunkenness, inventive as it is of new drinks, found the means of quenching thirst? Not at all. It might rather be called the art of making thirst inextinguishable. Frank liber- tinage, does it deaden the sting of the senses? No; it envenoms it, converts natural desire into a morbid obsession and makes it the dominant passion. Let your needs rule you, pamper them, you will see them multiply like insects in the sup. The more you give them the more they demand. He is sense less who seeks for happiness in mate rial prosperity alone. As well under- take to fill the cask of the Danaides. To those who have millions, millions are wanting; to those who have thou- sands, thousands. Others lack a twen- they have a chicken in the pot they ask for a goose; when they have the goose they wish it were a turkey, and 50 on. We shall never learn how fatal this tendency is. There are too many humble people who wish to imitate the great, too many poor workingmen who ape the well to do middle classes, too many shopgirls who play at being Ia- dies, too many clerks who act the club- man or sportsman, and among those in easy circumstances and the rich are too many people who forget that what they possess could serve a better pur- pose than procuring pleasure for them- selves, only to find in the end that one never has enough. Our needs, in place of the servants that they should be, have become a turbulent and seditious crowd, a legion of tyrants in miniature, A man enslaved to his needs may best be compared to a bear with a ring in its nose, that is led about and made tc dance at will. The likeness is not flat- tering, but you will grant that it is true. It is in the train of their own needs that so many of those men are dragged along who rant for liberty, progress and I don’t know what else. They. cannot take a step without ask- ing themselves if it might not irritate their masters. How many men and womernr have gone on and on, even to dishonesty, for the sole reason that they had too many needs and could not resign themselves to simple living! There are many guests in the cham- bers of Mazas who could give us much light on the subject of too exigen: needs. Let me tell you the story of an ex- cellent man whom I knew. He ten- derly loved his wife and children, and they all lived together, in France, in comfort and plenty, but with little of the luxury the wife coveted. Always short of money, though with a little management he might have been at ease, he ended by exiling himself to a distant colony, leaving his wife and children in the mother country. I don’t know how the poor man can feel off there, but his family has a finer apartment, more beautiful toilets and what passes for an equipage. At pres- ent they are perfectly contented, but we will halt.” But the velocity they. mt et et eee et. ty franc piece or a hundred sous. When soon they will be used to this luxury— rudimentary after all. Then madam will find, her furniture common and her equipage mean. If this man loves his wife, and that cannot be doubted, he will migrate to the moon if there is hope of a larger stipend. In other rises the roles are reversed and the wife and children are sacrificed to the ravenons needs of the head of the family, whom an irregular life, play and countless other costly follies have robbed of all dignity. Between his ap- petites and his role of father he has decided for the former, and he slowly drifts toward the most abject egoism. This forgetfulness of all responsibil ity, this gradual benumbing of noble feeling, is not alone to be found among pleasure seekers of the upper classes— the people also are infected. I know more than one little household which ought to be happy. where the mother has only pain and heartache day and night, the children are barefoot, and there is great ado for bread. Why? Because too much money is needed by the father. To speak only of the ex- penditure for alcohol, everybody knows the proportions that has reached in the last twenty years. The sums swallow- ed up in this gulf are fabulous—twice the indemnity of the war of 1870. How many legitimate needs could have been satisfied with that which has been thrown away on these artificial ones! The reign of wants is by no means the reign of brotherhood. The more things a man desires for himself, the less he can do for his neighbor, and even for those attached to him by ties of blood. The destruction of happiness, inde- pendence, moral fineness, even of the sentiment of common interests—such ig the result of the reign of needs. A multitude of other unfortunate things might be added, of which not the least is the disturbance of the public wel- fare. When society has too great needs it is absorbed with the present, sacrifices to it the conquests of the past, immolates to it the future. After us the deluge! 'T'o raze the forests in order to get gold; to squander your pat- rimony in youth, destroying in a day the fruit of long years; to wari your house by burning your furniture; to burden the future with debts for the sake of present pleasure; to live by ex- pedients and sow for the morrow trou. ble, sickness, ruin, envy and hate—the enumeration of all the misdeeds of this fatal regime has no end. On the other hand, if we hold to sim- ple needs we avoid all these evils and replace them by measureless good. That temperance and sobriety are the best guardians of health is an old sto- ry. They spare him who observes them many a misery that saddens existence. They insure him health, love of action, mental poise. Whether it be a ques- tion of food, dress or dwelling, simplic- ity of taste is also a source of inde- pendence and safety. The more sim- ply you live the more secure is your fu- ture. You are less at the mercy of surprises and reverses. An illness or a period of idleness does not suffice to dispossess vou; a change of position, even considerable, does not put you to confusion. Having simple needs, you find it less painful to accustom yourself to the hazards of fortune. You remain a man, though you lose your office or your income, because the foundation on which your life rests is not your table, your cellar, your horses, Your goods and chattels or your money. In adversity you will not act like a nursling deprived of its bottle and ratile. Stronger, better armed for the struggle, presenting. like those with shaven heads. less advantage to the hands of your enemy, you will also be of more profit to your neighbor. I'or you will not rouse his jealousy, his base desires or his censure by your luxury, your prodigality or the spec- tacle of a sycophant's life, and. less absorbed in your own comfort, you will find the means of working for that of others. CHAPTER VII. SIMPLE PLEASURES. O you find life amusing in these days? For my part, on the whole, it seems rather de- pressing, and I fear that my opinion is not altogether personal, As I observe the lives of my contempo- raries and listen to their talk I find myself unhappily confirmed in the opinion that they do not get much pleasure out of things. And certainly it is not from lack of trying. But it must be acknowledged that their suc- cess is meager. Where can the fault be? Some accuse politics or business, others social problems or militarism. We meet only an embarrassment of choice when we start to unstring the chaplet of our carking cares. Sup- pose we set out in pursuit of pleasure. There is too much pepper in our soup to make it palatable. Our arms are filled with a multitude of embarrass- ments, any one of which would be enough to spoil our temper. From morning till night, wherever we go, the people we meet are hurried, wor- ried, preoccupied. Some have spilt their good blood in thé miserable con- flicts of petty politics; others are dis. heartened by the meanness and Jeal- ousy they have encountered in the world of literature or art. Commercial competition troubles the sleep of not a few. The crowded curricula of study and the exigencies of their open. ing careers spoil life for young men, The working classes suffer the conse- quences of a ceaseless struggle. It ig becoming disagreeable to govern be. cause authority is diminishing; te teach, because respect is vanishing. Wherever one turns there is matter for discontent, * (To be Continued.) DE — Few men can be intensely interested in anything without letting their neighbors know is. Ivan the Terrible. Some of the reasons why Ivan, czar of Russia, was called “the Terrible” have been retold by K. Waliszewski in his book. P’ersons who displeased him he would saw asunder by the constant rubbing of a rope around their waists or sprinkle alternately with ice cold and boiling water. Ie marked his sense of a bad jest by deluging the perpetrator with boiling soup and then running him through with a knife. He rebuked an unmannerly envoy by summoning a carpenter and ordering him to nail the man’s hat on his head. There were ilso wholesale orgies, as at the punish- nent of Novgorod, when he had a hun- dred persons roasted over a slow fire by a new and ingenious process and then run down on sledges into the river to be drowned. At Moscow the czar had a disappontient. There was to be a great execution of 300 victims who had already been tortured to the last extremity. and loral sibijects had been summoned to the fooctim, “To Ivan's astonishment {! ci square was empty. The instrmuents of torture that stood ready—the stoves and red- hot pinchers and iron claws and nee- dles, the cords. the great coppers full of boiling water—had failed to attract this time. : “But there had been too much of this sort of thing lately. and the execution- ers were growing too long armed. Ev- ery man sought to hide deeper than his neighbor. The czar had to send re- assuring messages all over the town. ‘Come along! Don’t be afraid! Nobody will be hurt!” At last out of cellars and garrets the necessary spectators were tempted forth, and forthwith Ivan, inexhaustible and quite un- abashed, began a lengthy speech. Could he do less than punish the trai- tors? But he had promised to be mer- ciful, and he would keep his word! Out of the 300 who had been sentenced 180 should have their lives!” Torture and execution were, however, in the case of Ivan very much more than the mere instruments of barbaric justice. They were his recreation and delight. As a boy his amusement was to throw. dogs down from the top of one of the castle terraces and watch their dying agonies. As a man he used to go the round of the torture chambers after dinner. One of his first crimes was the execution of his earliest friend, Feodor Vorontsov. One of his last was the murder of his own son. According to Waliszewski, it was the recognized thing in Russia for the up- per dog to make things as uncomforta- ble for the under dog as knouts and slow fires could make them. So “the Terrible” only talked of his subjects in the language they could most readi- ly understand. Ivan was by no means unpopular with the people. In many ways he was an enlightened and pro- gressive monarch. He took the first steps toward the founding of Russia's great eastern empire. He made more or less successful attempts toward po- litical and legal reform, and he had & certain gift of leadership and instinct of statesmanship which he used to the best advantage. Personally he was a coward, as was shown at the siege of Kasan, when he kept diligently to his devotions in spite of the repeated en: treaties of his men to come out and help them. I ——_————————— Business Notice. CASTORIA For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bonglit Bears the Signature of CHAS. H. FLETCHER. Medical. A UNIQUE RECORD. Nor ANOTHER LIKE IT IN OUR BROAD REPUBLIC. 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NO ASSESSMENTS.—— Do not fail to give us a call before insuring your Life or Property as we are in position to write large lines at any time. Office in Crider’s Stone Building, BELLEFONTE, PA. 43-18-1y THE PREFERRED ACCIDENT INSURANCE (0. Benefits : $5,000 death by accident, 5,000 loss of both feet, 5,000 loss of both hands, 5,000 loss of one hand and one foot, 2,500 loss of either hand, 2,500 loss of either foot, 630 loss of one eye, 25 per week, total disability; (limit 52 weeks.) 10 per week, partial disability; (limit 26 weeks. . PREMIUM $12 PER YEAR, + payable quarterly if desired. r THE $5,000 TRAVEL POLICY Eee Larger or smaller amounts in pro- portion. Any person, male or female engaged in a preferred occupation, in- clnding house-keeping, over eigh- teen years of age of good moral and physical condition may insure under this policy. 5 FREDERICK K. FOSTER, 49.9 Agent, Bellefonte, Pa. MAST AST ASTANA TATA AN — wr rE — Travelers Guide. N EW YORK TRAL R. R. operating Pittsburg, Johnstown, Ebensburg & Eastern R. R. g oI TTTSBURG CEN- Trains leave Philipsburg 5:32,7:10 11:00 a, m. 2:30, 4:52 and 8:10 p.m. for Osceola, Houtzdale, Rumy and Fernwood (16 miles). Returning leave Travelers Guid. PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD AND BRANCHES. Schedule in eftect Nov. 27th 1904. VIA TYRONE—WESTWARD. Leave Bellefonte, 9.53 a. m., arrive at Tyrone 11.05 a. m., at Altoona, 1.00 P. m., at Pittsburg, 5.50 p. m. Leave Bellefonte 1.05 Pp. m., arrive at Tyrone, 2.10 Pp. m., at Altoona, 3.10 p, m., at Pittsburg, 6.56 p. m. Leave Bellefonte, 4.44 p. m., arrive at Tyrone, 6.00, at Altoona, 7.05, at Pittsburg at 10.50. VIA TYRONE—EASTWARD, Leave Bellefonte, 9.53 a. m., arrive at Tyrone, 11.05, a. m. at Harrisburg, 2.40 p. m., at Phil- adelphia, 5.47, p. m, Leave Bellefonte, 1.05 p. m., arrive at Tyrone, 2.10 p. m., at Harrisburg, 6.35 Pp. m., at Phila- delphia, 10.47 p. m, Leste Bellefonte, gun m., arrive at Tyrone, : . M, at Harrisburg, at 10. . m. ila- delphindz3a. m. © ot 10:00 p. m. Phils VIA LOCK HAVEN—WESTWARD., Leave Bellefonte, 1.25 p. m., arrive at Lock Haven 2.10 p. m., arrive at Buffalo, 7.40 Pp. m, VIA LOCK HAVEN—EASTWARD. Leave Bellefonte, 9.32 a, m., arrive at Lock Haven 10.30, 3 Fi leave Williamsport, 12.35 P m., ar- arrisburg, 3.20 p. m. i i ; + is ap rg, 3.20 p. m., at Phi adelphia eave Bellefonte, 1.25 p. m., arrive at Lock 200 2. lav Pilhamepon: at 2.53 Saves arrisburg, 5, . m, i ia : Tish z 8 5.00 p.m, Philadelphis Leave Bellefonte, 8.16 P. m., arrive at Lock Ha. Tom, 2 Pn A leave Williamsport, 1.35 s. oo; arrishurg, 4.15a. m. i Philadelphia at 7.17 a. = BT siive at VIA LEWISBURG. Leave Bellefonte, at 6.40 & m., arrive at Lewis- burg, at 9.05 'a. m. Montandon, 9.15, Harr:s- bare, 11.30 a. m., Philadelphia, 3.17 p. m. leave ; Ratoni Joys m., arrive at Lewisburg, .25, p. m. arrisbu . m, . phia 8110.47 p. m. 5% 8:30 5/3, Pitflace! Lor full information, time tables, &e. ticket agent, or address Thos. E, ea tl on ger Agent Western Distri N' i Bitton istrict, No.360 Fifth Avenue, re TYRONE AND CLEARFIELD, R. R, TRORTRWARD Teen : YORTavauD, | SOUTHWRD, 8.84 BF. g | 58 | 3 | Nov. 2oth 908] 5 . i L H| Sn] = B.jAEt 3 a 2 B oF Te | {rem ce P.M.| P. M. | A. M. {LV Ar. P.M. ja. um a $80 S05 800... Tyrone......| 90 11 50" ’ 5 401 806 Tyrone.....|d 9 14 11 14s 2 3 x 8 08i..... yrone 8.1... 11 12 5 97 01 4 05 8:11)... --. Vail, 9 10| 11 095 24 7 11{f 4 16/f 8 22 -..Vanscoyoe, f 9 08/11 02 514 JiNE4 20:68 27). arduer...... £9 00/10 59|5 17 iu i : > { 8 37|...Mt. Pleasant, f 8 52(f10 51 5 06 1% I's 8 45.....Summit,... f 8 45/10 44(4 gg : 8 49(.Sandy Ridge..| 8 39 10 38 4 55 7 86|f 4 42/f 8 51 f 8 36/f10 35 7 388/f 4 44/f 8 52 £8 34/10 30|3 0 748 452 902 al sed 10 254 39 7a { 3 > ts eens wenn 10 20(4 37 I 991....Bovnton...... f 8 15/10 16 431 58f 5 04/f 9 13..." Steiners., .., f 8 15/10 12/4 27 3 02 . 510 923 «Philiosburg...| 813 10 10 425 5 % 8 i f9eor «unGraham...... f 8 08/f10 03/4 17 iL 5 19 982... Blue Ball.....|f 8 03 9 58/4 12 Su 3 2 9 38... Wallaceton .. | 1 57) 9 52|4 05 3% 32 948]... igler £750 9 45/3 57 7) 9 52)....Woo land....|f 7 43| 9 38 8 50 830/f 5 39|f 9 55... Mineral Sp...| ....If9 3413 45 8 34/f 5 43I10 00!.. Barrett......|f 7 35/f 9 30(3 41 8 35/f 5 47/f10 05)" Leonard... won lf 92513 36 845 5 54 10 15 .Clearfield.....| 725 9 20]3 3( 8 50|f 6 01(f10 23 -. Riverview.....| 7 16/f 9 09/8 1¢ § SOI 8 071110 28) Sus, Bridger |f ....|f § ogls 1g 00] 6 14] 10 35 ~Curwensville ..| 7 05 9 00(8 1¢ 9 06/f 6 19/f10 50]... ustie........ f 6 50(f 3 50/3 0n 9 14/f 6 25/f10 57 «.Stronach......|f ¢ 44 f 8 44/2 p4 9 20 6 30| 11 05 -.Grampian.....| 6 40] 8 40 2 Eg PM.I P.M. | A wm Ar, Lv.ie.m | am P.M, ON SuxpAYSs- -a train leaves Tyrone at 8:00 making all the regular stops Hy to Gratien : arriving there at 11:05. Returning it leaves Gram. Dish at 2:50 p. m., and arrives in Tyrone at 5:35 ee erations _ et —— BALD KAGLE VALLEY BRANCH. WESTWRD. EASTWRD., a | gE Nov. 29th, 1903 | EE it qx PM./P M. | A.M, A Lv. a uM, | ®, 6°00 210 1105 or] Bisel... .| 10 59. 8 16 706 850 2 00| 10 55 8 20 7 10 546 1 56 1051 8 24 714 6 40..........| 10 45 8 3C 7 20 5 37.........| 10 43 8 33 7 23 535 1 46] 10 41 8 35 7°25 528 140] 1035 8 42 7 32 521 ....| 1028 8 49 7 39 612) 128] 10 20 868 1 00/7 48 503 1292 1011 9 07 7 57 456 117] 10 04 915 8 05 453 114] 10 01 918 8 08 444] 1 05 353. 9 32 8 16 43212 55] 941 9 41 8 28 425) 12 48 9 34 9 49 8 36 420......| 930 983] .....[8 40 414) 12 38) 9 24 959 1 47/8 46 408. 9 15 10 08 ......I8 55 402] 12 26| 9 12|.. 10 11] 1 55/8 68 851] 12 16| 9 01]... 10 22| 2 05/9 03 345 12 10| 8 55/...Lock Haven. | 10 30[ 2 10/9 15 P.M./P. M. | A, M. |Lv. Arr. A.M. |p. uM. pm, On Sundays there is one train each way on the B. E.’ It runs on the same schedule as the as 5 [rain easing Tyrone at 8:10 a. m., week hy n e afternoo Sand n train leaving Lock esr eben LEWISBURG & TYRONE RAILROAD. EAST WARD. Nov. 29th 1903. WESTWARD Fernwood 6:30, 8:45 a. m. 1:00, 3:40, 5:50 p, m.,, | MAIL| Exp MAIL.| EXP. arriving Philipsburg 7:25, 9:45 a. m. 2:00, 4: Stations. and 6:45 p. m. P.M. | A. Mm. |Ly. Ar. a.m |p um Connections. —With N. Y. C. & H.R. R. R. and | 290 6 40/....".....Bellefonte -| 900 430 Penna. R. R. at Philipsburg and Penna, R. R. | 205 6 45/.. 8 65| 416 at Osceola, Houtzdale and Ramey. 2 gs 4 862 413 C. T. Hr, J. O. Rep, 231 - 849) 410 Gen. Passg’r Agt. Superintendent 2 5 6 57l.. 843 404 Philipsburg. 702... 839 40 22! T06 8 85| 3 56 = : Li — 230, 710. 881 352 236 717 82 345 (ENTRAL RAILROAD OF PENNA.| %1 32. ji 3m Condensed Time Table effective Nov. 28, 1904. 2 a J 3 > 3 o% : ge 310, 7 50|.. 7 50] 3 10 READ DOWN | Reap pp. 316 7 58.. 743 3 03 oa Stations | 14 $00. 740 259 No 1/No 5|No 3 No §/No 4|No 2 330 812 2 220 8 m.|p. m Lve, A 5 ar 818 18 2a .{P. M. |p. m,|Lve, I./p. mM. ip. m.|a. m 9 3¢ + 10/6 40 Fs 30 BELLEFONTE. "3 3 Bos] 3 46) 8 26)... 709 298 7 21( 6 51| 2 41|....... Nigh 354 833... 702 220 7 28| 6 56] 2 46 921 366 835... 659 214 7 33] 7 08] 2 53 915| 40L 840... 655 210 7 35 7 05] 2 55 913 406) 8 45!... 6 60] 2 08 739] 7 09] 2 59 909| 414 853. 6 421 200 743| 714] 3 03 9 05 419 8581. 638 153 7 45] 7 16| 3 05 431/902] 42 905 630 145 747 7 19] 3 07 4 98) 9 00 435 9 15|.......... eens] 5:40] 11°88 7510723 311 495 857 | BM lA wm Ar, A MPM 7 53 725) 3 13 4 22! 8 54 7 a1 7 29| 3 17]. 418 8 51 LEWISBURG & TYRONE RAILROAD. CRU 33] 3 21 4 13] 8 46 807] 739] 3 27] 8 29( 4 07( 8 40 | EASTWARD, UPPER END, WESTWARD, 8 10 7 42| 3 30 aol 8 -] 8 15] 7 47 3 35). 8 15/14 00/48 33 3 | % {wow doibdots] 3 3 > - - fal . A, ’ a (N.Y. Central & Hudson River R. K.) 5 oH g 8 11 45| 8 38|...... w.Jersey Shore........| 3 16] 7 50 : T 12 20] 9 10|Arr. Lve| 2 40 P. M. | A. M. |Ar. Lve.| A. ww. | p. oy el WMs'PORT } re SWE 4059 18).......Scotia.....| 10 C5 "a a : (Phila. # Reading Ry.)'| =~ | 0 | evens 3 = 3 o os Falrbrook.... io 3 4 6 E0ferecriiiins PHILA. ......... 26] 11 80 | ve po oeddusser...... 4 ’ 4 18.26) 11 30 [ovo in 3 51 {Foun Furnace 10 33] 4 10 40/ 9 02f......... NEW YORK........| +4 30{ 7 30 ~~ 334 845... ostler,..... 1041 4 3 (Via Phila. ) | t | wee] 829) 833). Marengo...| 10 49 5 p. m.ia. m.{Arr. Lve.ia. m.!p. m. re MR ANY OVS snr] wwreees] oe | | Week Days 10 57| 5 10. 40] !Ar ...NEW YORK .. Lv! 4 00 10 49) 5 { I (Via Tamaqua) | i 11 26! 5 11 30] 5 J. W. GEPHART. 11 42) » General Superintendent. 54, 6 08 .. Rae. Ll A, | pom, JB ELLEFONTE CENTRAL RAIL- ROAD. Schedule to take effect Monday, Apr. 3rd, 1899. BELLEFONTE & SNOW SHOE BRANCH. Time Table in effect on and after Nov. 29th 1903. — — T" AN¢ aller Nov. 29th 1903. Mix | Mix | Stations. | Mix | Mix essnraane ‘“" ’ stop on signal. Week days onl W. ATTER URY, v3 7 w, R. WOOD. General Manager. General Passenger Agent, Money to Loan. WESTW RD 7 EASTWARD read down | read up tNo.|tNo.g|No- | Sramoms. lpn ohne g | fm Poo. | AM, [AM AM. | PM. py. 00| 19 30(6'30 .| 860 225/39 4 47) 10 37/6 35 8400 210g 15 4 10] 10 42/6 38|. 897 207/g 12 4 15 10 47/6 43/, 8 85 202/03 4 18| 10 51/6 46. 831 185g 05 4 21/ 10 56/6 50|. 828 1 51lg 03 4 25/ 11 02/6 55 824 145550 4 28! 11 05(7 00... 820 140[5 25 40| 11 20/7 12/... 807 1 225 a7 4 45| 11 85/7 25 FE 60 swenStrubles.......| 7 45 510 1581.01 ir Bel lemmas a8 cy 6 7 85 Pine Grove Cro.| 7 ul [5 00 [ H. F. THOMAS, Supt. MeNEY TO LOAN on good security and houses for rent. J. M. KEICHLINE, (5-14-1yr, Ally at Law
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