Eerie The Simple Life By CHARLES WAGNER Translated From the French by Mary Louise Hendee Copyright, 1901, by McClure, Phillips & Co. i cannot resist citing here a passage from Camille Lemonnier that harmo- nizes with my idea: “Nature has given to the fingers of woman a charming art, which she knows by instinet and which is pecul- iarly her own, as silk to the worm and lacework to the swift and subtle spi- der. She is the poet, the interpreter of her own grace and ingenuousness, the spinner of the mystery in which her wish to please arrays itself. All the talent she expends in her effort to equal man in the other arts is never worth the spirit and conception wrought out through a bit of stuil in her skillful hands. “Well, I wish that this art were more honored than it is. As education should consist in thinking with one’s mind, feeling with one’s heart, expressing the little personalities of the inmost, invis- ible ‘I’—which, on the contrary, are repressed, leveled down, by conformi- ty—I would that the young girl in her novitiate of womanhood, the future mother, might early become the little exponent of this art of the toilet—her own dressmaker, in short—she who one day shall make the dresses of her chil- dren, but with the taste and the gift to improvise, to express herself in that | masterpiece of feminine personality and skill, a gown, without which a wo- : man is no more than a bundle of rags.” The dress you have made for your- self is almost always the most becom- ing, and, however that may be, it is the one that pleases you most. Wom- en of leisure too often forget this; working women also in city and coun- try alike. Since these last are cos- tumed by dressmakers and milliners in very doubtful imitation of the mod- ish world, grace has almost disappear- ed from their dress. And has anything more surely the gift to please than the fresh apparition of a young working girl or a daughter of the fields wearing the costume of her country and beau- tiful from her simplicity alone? These same reflections might be ap- plied to the fashion of decorating and arranging our houses. If there are toi- lets which reveal an entire conception of life, hats that are poems, knots of ribbon that are veritable works of art, so there are interiors which after their manner speak to the mind. Why, un- der pretext of decorating our homes, do we destroy that personal character which always has such value? Why have our sleeping rooms conform to those of hotels, our reception rooms to waiting rooms, by making predomi- nant a uniform type of official beauty? What a pity to go through the houses of a city, the cities of a country, the countries of a vast continent, and encounter .everywhere certain forms identical, inevitable, exasperating by their repetition! How aesthetics would gain by more simplicity! Instead of this luxury in job lots, all these deco- rations, pretentious, but vapid from iteration, we should have an infinite variety: happy improvisations would strike our eyes, the unexpected in a thousand forms would rejoice our hearts, and we should rediscover the secret of impressing on a drapery or a piece of furniture that stamp of hu- man personality which makes certain antiques priceless. Let us pass at last to things simpler still; I mean the little details of house- keeping which many young people of our day find so unpoetical. Their con- tempt for material things, for the hum- ble cares a house demands, arises from a confusion very common, but none the less unfortunate, which comes frem the belief that beauty and poetry ae within some things, while others la k them; that some occupations are d s- tinguished and agreeable, such as cul i- vating letters, playing the harp, and that others are menial and disagrea- able, like blacking shoes, sweeping a1 d watching the pot boil. Childish error! Neither harp nor broom bas anything to do with it. All depends on the hand in which they rest and the spirit that moves it. Poetry is not in things; it is in us. It must be impressed on ob- jects from without, as the sculptor im- presses his dream on the marble. If our life and our occupations remain too often without charm in spite of any outward distinction they may have it is because we have not known how to put anything into them. The height of art is to make the inert live and to tame the savage. I would have our young girls apply themselves to the develop- ment of the truly feminine art of giv- ing a soul to things which have none. The triumph of woman’s charm is in hat work. Only a woman knows how to put into a home that indefinable some- thing whose virtue has made the poet say, “The house top rejoices and is glad.” They say there are no such things as fairies or that there are fairies no longer, but they know not what they say. The original of the fairies sung by poets was found and is still among those amiable mortals who knead bread with energy, mend rents with cheerfulness, nurse the sick with smiles, put witchery into a ribbon and genius into a stew, It is indisputable that the culture of ‘the fine arts has something refining about it ‘and that our thoughts and acts are in the end impregnated with that which strikes our eyes. But the exercise of the arts and the contempla- tion of their products are restricted privileges. It is not given to every one 0 possess, to comprehend or to create fine things. Yet there is a kind of ministering beauty which may make its way everywhere—the beauty which springs from the hands of our wives and daughters. Without it what is the most richly decorated heuse? A dead dwelling place. With it the bar- est home has life and brightness. Among the forces capable of trans- forming the will and increasing happi- ness there is perhaps none in more universal use than this beauty. It knows how to shape itself by means of the crudest tools in the midst of the greatest difficulties. When the dwelling is cramped, the purse limited, the table modest, a woman who has the gift finds a way to make order, fitness and convenience reign in her house. She puts care and art into everything she undertakes. To do well what one has to do is not in her eyes the privilege of the rich, but the right of all. That is her aim, and she knows how to give her home a dignity and an attractiveness that the dwellings of princes, if everything is left to mer- cenaries, cannot possess. Thus understood life quickly shows itself rich in hidden beavties, in at- tractions and satisfactions close at hand. To be oneself, to realize in one’s natural place the kind of beauty which is fitting there—this is the ideal: How the mission of woman broadens and deepens in significance when it is sum- med up in this: To put a soul into the inanimate and to give to this gracious spirit of things those subtle and win- some outward manifestations to which the most brutish of human beings is sensible! Is not this better than to covet what one has not and to give oneself up to longings for a poor im- itation of others’ finery? CHAPTER XII. AND SIMPLICITY IN THE INTER- COURSE OF MEN. T would perhaps be difficult to find a more convincing example than pride to show that the obstacles to a better, stronger, serener life are rather in us than in circumstances. The diversity and, more than that, the contrasts in social conditions give rise inevitably to all sorts of conflicts. Yet, in spite of this, how greatly would social relations be simplified if we put another spirit into mapping out our plan of outward necessities! Be well persuaded that it is not primarily dif- ferences of class and occupation, dif- ferences in the outward manifesta- tions of their destinies, which embroil men. If such were the case, we should find an idyllic peace reigning among colleagues and all those whose inter- ests and lot are virtually equivalent. On the contrary, as every one knows, the most violent shocks come when equal meets equal, and there is no war worse than civil war. But that which above all things else hinders men from good understanding is pride. It makes a man a hedgehog, wounding every one he touches. Let us speak first of the pride of the great. What offends me in this rich man passing in his carriage is not his equi- page, his dress or the number and splen- dor of his retinue. It is his contempt. That he possesses a great fortune does not disturb me, unless I am badly dis- posed. But that he splashes me with mud, drives over my body, shows by his whole attitude that I count for nothing in his eyes because .I am not rich, like himself—this is what dis- turbs me, and righteously. He heaps suffering upon me needlessly. He hu- miliates and insults me gratuitously. It is not what is vulgar within me, but what is noblest, that asserts itself in the face of this offensive pride. Do not accuse me of envy. I feel none. It is my manhood that is wounded. We need not search far to illustrate these ideas. Every man of any ac- quaintance with life has had numerous experiences which will justify our dictum in his eyes. PRIDE dominates to such a degree that men are quoted like values in the stock market. The esteem in which a man of his strong box. Here “society” is made up of big fortunes, the middle class of medium fortunes. Then come people who have little, then those who have nothing. All intercourse is regu- lated by this principle. tively rich man who has shown his ed in turn by the contempt of his su- periors in fortune. So the madness of comparison rages from the summit to the base. to perfection for the nurture of the worst feeling. Yet it is not wealth, but the spirit of the wealthy, that must be arraigned. Many rich men are free from this gross conception—especially is this true of those who from father to son are accustomed to ease—yet they some- times forget that there is a certain del- icacy in not making contrasts too marked. Suppose there is no wrong in enjoying a large superfluity, is it indispensable to display it, to wound the eyes of those who lack necessities, to fAaunt one’s magnificence at the doors of poverty? Good taste and a sort of modesty always hinder a well man from talking of his fine appetite, hi% sound sleep, his exuberance of spir- its, in the presence of one dying of In certain communities devoted to | material interests the pride of wealth | is held is proportionate to the contents | And the rela- | disdain for those less opulent is crush- | Such an atmosphere is ready | | consumption. Many of the rich do not exercise this tact and so are greatly wanting in pity and discretion. Are they not unreasonable to complain of envy after having done everything to provoke it? But the greatest lack is that want of discernment which leads men to ground { their pride in their fortune. To begin with, it is a childish confusion of thought to ronsider wealth as a person- al quality. It would be hard to find a more ingenuous fashion of deceiving oneself as to the relative value of the container and the thing contained. I have no wish to dwell on this question. It is too painful. And yet one cannot resist saying to those concerned: “Take care; do not confound what you possess with what you are. Go learn to know the underside of worldly splendor, that you may feel its moral misery and its puerility.”” The traps pride sets for us are too ridiculous. We should distrust association with a thing that makes us hateful to our neighbors and robs us of clearness of vision. He who yields to the pride of riches forgets this other point, the most im- portant of all, that possession is a pub- lic trust. Without doubt individual wealth is as legitimate as individual existence and liberty. These things are inseparable, and it is a dream pregnant with dangers that offers bat- tle to such fundamentals of life. But the individual touches society at every point, and all he does should be done with the whole in view. Possession, then, is less a privilege of which to be proud than a charge whose gravity should be felt. As there is au appren. .ticeship, often very difficult to serve, for the exercise of every social office, so this profession we call wealth demands an apprenticeship. To know how to be rich is an art, and one of the least easy of arts to master. Most people, rich and poor alike, imagine that in opulence one has nothing to do but to take life easy. That is why so few men know how to be rich. In the hands of too many wealth, according to the genial and redoubtable comparison of Luther, is like a harp in the hoofs of an ass. They have no idea of the man. ner of its use. So when we encounter a man at once rich and simple—that is to say, who considers his wealth as a means of ful- filling his mission in the world—we should offer him our homage, for he is surely mark worthy. He has sur- mounted obstacles, borne trials and tri- umphed in temptations, both gross and subtle. He does not fail to discrimi- nate between the contents of his pock- etbook and the contents of his head or heart, and he does not estimate his fellow men in figures. His exceptional position, instead of exalting him, makes him humble, for he is very sen- sible of how far he falls short of reach- ing the level of his duty. He has re- mained a man. That says it all. He is accessible, helpful and far from making of his wealth a barrier to sep- arate him from other men; he makes it a means for coming nearer and nearer to them. Although the profession of riches has Leen so dishonored by the selfish and the proud, such a man as this always makes his worth felt by every one not devoid of a sense of jus- tice. Each of us who comes in contact with him and sees him live is forced to look within and ask himself the ques- tion, “What would become of me in such a situation—should I keep this modesty, this naturalness, this upright. ness which uses its own as though it belonged to others?” So long as there is a human society in the world. so long as there are bitterly conflicting inter: ests, so long as envy and egoism exist on the earth, nothing will be worthier of honor than wealth permeated by the spirit of simplicity. And it will do more than make itself forgiven; it will make itself beloved. More dangerous than pride inspired by wealth is that inspired by power, and I mean by the word every preroga- tive that one man has over another, be it unlimited or restricted. 1 see no means of preventing the existence in the world of men of unequal authority. Every organism supposes a hierarchy of powers; we shall never escape from that law. But I fear that if the love of power is se widespread the spirit of power is almost impossible to find. From wrong understanding and mis- use of it those who keep even a frac- tion of authority almost everywhere succeed in compromising it. Power exercises a great influence over him who holds it. A head must | be very well balanced not to be dis- | turbed by it. The sort of dementia which took possession of the Roman emperors in the time of their world- wide rule is a universal malady whose symptoms belong to all times. In ev. | ery man there sleeps a tyrant, await ing only a favorable occasion for wak- ing. Now, the tyrant is the worst en emy of authority, because he furnishes us its intolerable caricature, whence come a multitude of social complica: tions, collisions and hatreds. Every man who says to those dependent on | him, “Do this because it is my will and pleasure,” does ill. There is within each one of us semething that invites us to resist personal power, and this something is very respectable, for at bottom we are equal, and there is no one whe has the right to exact obedi- ence from me because he is he and I am I. If he does so his command de- grades me, and I have no right to suf- fer myself to be degraded. One must have lived in schools, in workshops, in the army, in government offices, he must have closely followed the relations between masters and servants, have observed a little every- where where the supremacy -of man exercises itself over man, to form any idea of the injury done by those who use power arrogantly. Of every free soul they- make a slave soul, which is to say the soul of a rebel. And it ap- pears that this result, with its social disaster, is most certain when he who commands is least removed from the station of Lizz who obeys. The most implacable tyrant is the tyrant himself under authority. Foremen and over- seers put. more violence into their deal- ings than superintendents and employ- ers. The corporal is generally harsher than the colonel. In certain families where madam has not much more ed- ucation than her maid the relations be- tween them are those of the convict and his warder. And woe everywhere to him who falls into the hands of a subaitern drunk with his authority! We forget that the first duty of him who exercises power is humility. Haughtiness is not authority. It is not we who are the law; the law is over our heads. We only interpret it, but to make it valid in the eyes of others we must first be subject to it ourselves. To command and to obey in the society of men are, after all, but two forms of the same virtue—voluntary servitude. If you are not obeyed, it is generally because you have not yourself obeyed first. The secret of moral ascendency rests with those who rule with simplicity, They soften by the spirit the harshness of the fact. Their authority is not in shoulder straps, titles or disciplinary measures. They make use of neither ferule nor threats, yet they achieve ev- erything. Why? Because we feel that they are themselves ready for every- thing. That which confers upon a man the right to demand of another the sac- rifice of his time, his money, his pas- sions, even his life, is not only that he is resolved upon all these sacrifices himself, but that he has made them in advance. In the command of a man animated by this spirit of renunciation there is a mysterious force which com- municates itself to him who is to obey and helps him do his duty. In all the provinces of human activi- ty there are chiefs who inspire, strengthen, magnetize their soldiers; under their direction the troops do prodigies. With them one feels himself capable of any effort, ready to go ‘through fire, as the saying has it, and if he goes it is with enthusiasm. But the pride of the exalted is not the only pride; there is also the pride of the humble—this arrogance of under- lings, fit pendant to that of the great. The root of these two prides is the same. It is not alone that lofty and imperious being, the man who says, “I am the law,” that provokes insur- rection by his very attitude; it is also that pigheaded subaltern who will not admit that there is anything beyond his knowledge. There are really many people who find all superiority irritating. For them every piece of advice is an offense, ev- ery criticism an imposition, every order an outrage on their liberty. They would not know how to submit to rule. To respect anything or anybody would seem to them a mental aberration. They say to people after their fashion, “Beyond us there is nothing.” To the family of the proud belong also those ditlicult and supersensitive peo- ple who in humble life find that their superiors never do them fitting honor, whom the best and most kindly do not succeed in satisfying and who go about their duties with the air of a martyr. At bottom these disaffected minds have too much misplaced self respect. They do not know how to fill their place sim- ply, but complicate their life and that of others by unreasonable demands and morbid suspicions. (To be Continued.) Business Notice. CASTORIA For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of CHAS. H. FLETCHER. Medical. Collecting Rents. **Sir,”” said the seedy man, addresing a prosperous-looking passer-by, ‘‘would you kindly favora worthy but unfortunate fel- lowman with a few pence?’’ *‘What is your occupation?’ asked the other, as he pus his hand in his pocket. ‘‘Sir,”’ replied the victim of hard lack, as he held up a tattered coat sleeve and smiled grimly, ‘I've been collecting rents for some time past.’’—Tit-Bits. —"'Good evening,’’ said Borem when she came down to him. “I really mnst apologize for coming so late,but the cars’’'— ‘Oh,’ she interrupted coldly, *‘I don’t mind late comers. It's the late stayers that bother me.” Insurance. WILLIAM BURNSIDE. Successor to CHARLES SMITH. FIRE INSURANCE. Temple Court, 48-37 Bellefonte, Pa. E. GOSS, Suceessor to Joux C. MiLLer. FIRE, LIFE, ACCIDENT INSURANCE. Represents some of the Best Stock Companies. 2nd Floor, Bush Arcade, BELLEFONTE, PA. 49-46-6m : ib JOHN F. GRAY & SON, (Successors to Grant Hoover.) FIRE, LIFE, AND ACCIDENT INSURANCE. This Agency reoresents the largest Fire Insurance Companies in the World. ——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 VAY A VAT NAT AV AV A q Tue PREFERRED ACCIDENT INSURANCE CoO. THE $5,000 TRAVEL POLICY 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. Larger or smaller amounts in pro- portion. . Any person, male or female engaged in a preferred occupation, in- cluding house-keeping, over eigh- teen years of age of good moral and physical condition may insure under this policy. FREDERICK K. FOSTER, 49.9 Agent, Bellefonte, Pa. NAST AAT AVA VAST LS AS IZ IS SERIOUS. SOME BELLEFONTE PEOPLE FAlu TO : REALIZE THE SERIOUSNESS. The constant aching of a bad back, The weariness, the tired feeling, The pains and aches of kidney ills Are serious—if neglected. Dangerous urinary troubles follow. A Bellefonte citizen shows you how to avoid them. Frank P. Davis, molder, of 246 E. Logan St., says: ‘I used to suffer very much with a weakness of the back and severe pains through my loins. It kept me in constant misery and I seemed to be un- able to find any relief, until I got Doan’s Kidney Pills at F. Poits Green's drug store and used them. They reached the spot and in a short time my strength re- turned. TI have never had any irouble of the kind since and am glad to recom- mend Doan’s Kidney Pills not oniy be- canse they helped me out because I know of others who have also found re- lief in the same way, and I have yet to hear of a ease in which this remedy has failed to give satisfaction.” For sale by all dealers, Price 50 cents. Foster Milburn Co., Buffalo, New York, sole agents for the United States. Remember the name—Doan’s—and take no other. 50-10 ILES Acure guaranteed if you use 3 RUDYS PILE SUPPOSITORY JD. Matt. Thompson, Supt. Graded Schools, J Statesville, N, C., writes: “I can say they do fall you claim for them.” Dr, 8. M. Devore, i Raven Rock, W. Va, writes: “They give uni- § versal satisfaction.” Dr. H. D, McGill, Clarks- fg burg, Tenn. writes: “In a practice of 23 years §I have found no remedy to equal yours.” Price, 50 cents. Samples Free, old by Druggists, and in Bellefonte by C. M. Parrish i Fre n PTR MARTIN RUDY, Lancaster, Pa, EE —— _- oS Travelers Guide. ENTRAL RAILROAD OF PENNA. Condensed Time Table effective Nov. 28, 1904. Read pown | Reap op. aa Stations No 1{No 5/No 3 No 6/No 4/No 2 8 m.|p. m.|p. m.|Lve, P.M. |p. m.|&. m. #7 10 Ts 40/12 30 BELLEFONTE. | 9 20 5 10 9 40 721 651) 2 41...... ~Nigh.. Adeiveds 9 07) 457] 9 27 T 26; 6 56] 2 46|.......... OD eeevesis 901 451] 9 21 7 33 7 03} 2 53/..HECLA PARK..| 8 55 4 15/8 15 7 35:7 05] 2 55|...... Dun kles...... 8 53| 4 42 9 13 739] 7 09] 2 59/...Hublersburg...| 8 49} 4 338| 9 09 T43| 714 § 03| «Sn sdetiown | 8.46| 4 34] 9 05 7 45] 7 16] 3 05|....... Nittany. 8 44| 4 31] 9 02 7 47] 7 19] 3 07|........Huston 8 42] 4 28/ 9 00 7 51 7 23] 3 11|........Lamar.. .| 8 39| 4 25| 8 57 7 53| 7 25{ 3 13|.....Clintondale....| 8 36] 4 22 8 54 7 57 7 29] 3 17. Krider's Siding.| 8 32{ 4 18] 8 51 8 01 7 33| 3 21|..Mackeyville....| 8 28] 4 13 8 46 8 07 7 39| 3 27|...Cedar Spring... 8 22 4 07) 8 40 8 10 7 42] 3 30|......... Salona....... 8 20 4058 3 8 15| 7 47] 3 35|..MILL HALL...{8 15/14 00/48 33 (N.Y. Central & Hudson River K. RB) 3 { i} 2 3 3 Si plersey Shore 8 16] 7 50 , 3 ve 2 40| +7 20 12 29| 11 30 Tove } WMs PORT ; grr! 2 25 '6 50 (Phila. & Reading Ry.) 7.30] 6 80............. PHILA....l.... 18 26; 1i 30 10 40] 9 02|........NEW YORK......... | +4 30] 7 30 (Via Phila.) "| | p. m.ia. m.jArr. : Lve.'a. m.|p. m | | Week Days } | 10. 40 {Ar ..NEW YORK... Lv, 4 00 i ! (Via Tamaqua) i i J. W. GEPHART, General Superintendent. CE ——— Travelers Guide. PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD ‘AND BRANCHES. Schedule in effect Nov. 27th 1904. VIA TYRONE—WESTWARD. Leave Bellefonte, 9.53 a. m., arrive at Tyrone 1.95 a. m,, at Altoona, 1.00 p. m., at Pittsburg, 5.50 p. m. Leave Bellefonte 1.05 p. m., arrive at Tyrone, 2.10 Pp. m., at Altoona, $10 p. m., at Pittsburg, 6.56 p. m. Leave Bellefonte, 4.44 Pp. m., arrive at Tyrone 6.00, at Altoona, 7.05, at Pittsburg at or : 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 p. m., at Phila. delphia, 10.47 p. m. Leaves Bellefonte 14). m., arrive at " . m, at Harrisbur: 0. delphia 4.23a. m 5% 0 pm, VIA LOCK HAVEN—WESTWARD. Leave Bellefonte, 1.25 p. m., arrive at Lock Haven 2.10 p. B, arrive at Buffalo, 7.40 Pp. m. LOCK HAVEN—EASTWARD. Leave Bellefonte, 9.32 a, m., arrive at Lock Haven 10.30, a. m, leave Williamsport, 12.35 p. m., ar- rive at Harrisburg, 3.20 Pp. m., at Philadelphia at 6.23 p. m. Leave Bellefonte, 1.25 B m., arrive at Lock Haven ilhamsport, at 2.53 2.10 p m., leave p.m. Bie Harrisburg, 5.00 Pp. m., Philadelphia P. m.. arrive at Lock Ha- .832 p. m Leave Bellefonte, 8.16 ven, 9.15 p. m., leave Williamsport, 1.35 a m., arrive at Harrisburg, 4, rriy i Philadelphia at 7.17 a. m5, ~~ Mr ATTIve at VIA LEWISBURG. Leave Bellefonte, at 6.40 a, 8s. arrive at Lewis burs, at 9.05 a. m. Montandon, 9.15, Harris- L arg, 11.30 a. m., Bhiladelphia, 3.17 p. m. sare § leloute, 2.40 bi m., arrive at er : piia a 3 are sburg, 6.50 p. m., Philadel. or fall information, time tab] ticket agent, or address Thos. B, Ware’ Sal On estern District, No.360 Fifth Avenue, Tone, hila- TYRONE AND CLEARFIELD, R. R, NORTHWARD, SOUTHWRD, - 1 1[.4] 4] 1.1] : Pe : af i Nov, 29th,1903 on aa 2 | BRIE 1 I PM.I P. M. | A. M. [LuV Ar. P.M. A. M on .| Po MI, « M. [pm oo To3 3u 014 11 8 38 8 5 2 Oat. d9 14 11 14|5 29 701] 405 811 50] In oalp £7 7 11{f 4 16/f 8 22 ito oslet og 24 T1sif 4 volt 8 1). It 9 00|f10 sols 17 THIC4 201837. f 8 52/f10 515 06 30/f 4 36|f 8 45 f 8 45(f10 44 734] 440 849 8 39] 10 38s on 736f 4 42/f 8 51 8 36/710 35% oo 738/f 4 44/f 8 53|.. {8 34|£10 38] oo 748 do 9 02 8 24 10 25/4 49 hs er were] 10 2014 37 Joni oo f 8 19(f10 16/4 31 T5815 04 f 8 15/10 124 or Zo S10 8 13 10 10/4 25 308s f 8 08/£10 03|4 17 sul 510 £803 958412 sh sm 757 9 524 05 3% 28 . £7.50 9 45/3 57 Im 23 £743) 9 383 50 9if 9 55 £934 8 34if 5 43lf10 00 £735] 9 30[3 47 8 38(f 5 47/£10 05 £9 253 36 845) 5 541015 795 9 203 a¢ 8 50|f 6 01/f10 23’ 716/f 9 093 3¢ 8 58|f 6 07/10 28/ t £9043 14 900 6 14] 10 35 705] 9 003 1¢ 9 06/f 6 19/110 50|".... f 6 50/f 8 50/3 00 3 laf 8 =sicio a7 .|f 6 44/f 8 44/2 54 : 05|....Grampian.....| 6 40 8 PM. P.M. | A, um [Ar Lv. p.m. a B50 ON SUNDAYS- -a train leaves Tyron e " . IO. making all the regular stops Shon h Prd sriving there at 11:05. Returning it leaves Gram. p an at 2:50 p. m., and arrives in Tyrone at 6:35 ee BALD MAGLE VALLEY BRANCH. rer soe ee : WESTWRD. EASTWRD. . 2 : Nov. 29th, 1903 iz i) 5 P88 i 2x PM.iP M.| A.M, A.M, | P.M. (P.M. : g o 1 8 10] 12 25(7 00 5 8346) a... 7 06 2 820°... 10 $4 8 24/f12.36/7 14 2% 88; "....; 7 20 337 $83 .. 7 23 5 28 HH 15 iT 32 3 3 Mart 849 .... 7 39 31s 128 Juli 8 58 1 00/7 48 3 1 22 «| 9071 1 067 57 17| 10 04Snow Shoe Int.| 9 15] 1 12/8 05 453) 1 14| 10 01|...Milesburg.. «| 918 1 14/8 08 444] 105! 353 Bellefonte. 9 32( 1 25/8 16 4382 1255 941 w.Milesburg ...| 941] 1 328 23 is 12 48 9 34/......Curtin 9 49(f 1 38/8 36 ions 8 40 414 1 47(8 48 405 8 55 i 2 1 55/8 58 345 2109 18 P.M. P.M. P.M. On Sundays there is one train each way on the . E. It runs on the same schedule as the Eoraing iy feaying Tyrone at 8:10 a. m., week * e aftern ; aM oon train leaving Lock LEWISBURG & TYRONE RAILROAD. EAST WARD. Nov. 29th 1903. WESTWARD MAIL. | EXP. : MAIL.| EXP. 4 Stations, A Lv. Ar) a.m. BRR I TAI ITA GAIT RDA DD E23g8s888asssgassak EREEZ2IRNENERNS Ege rgERR ask * © © 0000006060 000000 , SEREESRERE 1d 80 BO 10 19 89 19 10 10 £0 £0 19 0 50 ©0 €0 08 C0 G0 C6 £0 4 vn in Hh oi ta E8B8REEBRER EER RRRSRSS ener + Mn dn £9 00 00 CO CO 08 05 68 50 60 £6 00 KO IO ID 68 10 10 LS 19 BO BS £0 esuesressER Rane as EEREREAERES P, M. P.M LEWISBURG & TYRONE RAILROAD. EASTWARD. UPPER END. WESTWARD. = 5 3 x X | Nov. 19th, 1908 3 3 = 5 BI'E PM. | AM AM |p. Rs 405 918. 10 C5 "a5 3 50 903]. 10 21) 4 36 3 45( 8 57 10 27| 4 42 339 851 10 83) 4 50 334 845 10 41) 4 57 3 29) 8 34. 10 49) 5 07 324 8% i. 1087 576" 3 19| 8 26... 10 49 da: 312 818 11 26/ 5 a4 3 05] 8 09]..P: 1130, 5 «4 tans 2 56] 768... 11 42] b 6¢ vases 2 50f 76506 54 6 05 P. M. | A.M. (Lve, Ar. a.m. | P.M. BELLEFONTE CENTRAL RAIL- ROAD. Schedule to take effect Monday, Apr. 3rd, 1899. BELLEFONTE & SNOW SHOE BRANCH. Time Table in effect on ane after Nov. 20th 1903. Mix | Mi. WESTW RD EASTWARD 5 | a 2 Stations, | Mix | Mix Jes) Sowa read up il 30) 10 Oil ‘1918 $15 tNo.5 No.5? Sramoss. #No, gto { 7010 04. 16) 4.10 pM. | Ao jam (Lv Arf am, LR 0 3 4 00{ 19 30{6 30{ ...Bellefonte...| 8 50 407 10 7i0 35 8 40 P. M.A. M. MP. Mm. i $ “f stoo on al. Week 15 los. ik W, W. A ERBORY, ok days OY WOOD. 4 21| 10 56/6 50|.. 8 28 Manager, = General Agent 4 25 11 02/6 56 8 24 —— i 2% u 087 % wwe Naddles..... 3 x re 40! 11 20/7 12|....Krumrine..... Mon t n ~545| T1087 2 Bate College. 300 ey to Loan, T 5 Tr o7 et Sin 7 © ONEY - : SL uBloomsdort. 06 NEY TO LOAN on goul security pd Bl 7 35 Pine Grove Cro.| Ou) W881 M and houses for rent. Y —_ fa J. M. KEICHLINE, 43-14-1vr. Att'y at Law