Translated From the French by Mary Louise Hendee Copyright, 1801, by McClure, Phillips & Co. This pitiful truth nowhere appears ! with more force than in the relations between masters and servants as we have made them. Our social errors, our want of simplicity and kindness, all fall back upon the heads of our chil- dren. There are certainly few people of the middle classes who understand that it is better to part with many thousands of dollars than to lead their children to lose respect for servants, who represent in our households the humble, yet nothing is truer. Main- tain as strictly as you will conventions and distances, that demarcation of so- cial frontiers which permits each one to remain in his place and to observe the law of differences—that is a good thing, I am persuaded—but on condi- tion of never forgetting that those who serve us are men and women like our- selves. You require of your domestics certain formulas of speech and certain attitudes, outward evidence of the re- spect they owe you. Do you also teach your children and use yourselves man- ners toward your servants which show them that you respect their dignity as individuals as you desire them to re- spect you? Here we have continually in our homes an excellent ground for experiment in the practice of that mu- tual respect which is one of the essen- tial conditions of social sanity. I fear we profit by it too little. We do not fail to exact respect, but we fail to give it. So it is most frequently the case that we get only hypoqgrisy and thjs supplementary result, all unexpected— the cultivation of pride in our children. These two factors combined heap up great difficulties for that future which we ought to be safeguarding. I am right, then, in saying that the day when by your own practices you have brought about the lessening of respect in your children you have suffered a sensible loss. Why should I not say it? It seems to me that the .greater part of us labor for this loss. On all sides, in almost every social rank, I notice that a pretty bad spirit is fostered in children, a spir- it of reciprocal contempt. who have calloused hands and working clothes are disdained; there it is all who do not wear blue jeans. Children educated in this spirit make sad fellow citizens. There is in all this the want of that simplicity which makes it pos- sible for men of good intentions, of however diverse social standing, to col- laborate without any friction arising from the conventional distance that separates them. Here those | ummmomal Tabric of a man. Once de- tached from the vigorous stock which produced them, the wind of their restless ambition drives them over the earth like dead leaves that will in the end be heaped up to ferment and rot together. Nature does not proceed by leaps and bounds, but by an evolution slow and certain. In preparing a career for our children let us imitate her. Let us not confound progress and advancement with those violent exercises called somersaults; let us not so bring up our children that they will come to despise work and the aspirations and simple spirit of their fathers; let us not expose them to the temptation of being ashamed of our poverty if they them- selves come to fortune. A society is indeed diseased when the sons of peas- ants begin to feel disgust for the fields, when the sons of sailors desert the sea, when the daughters of workingmen, in the hope of being taken for heiresses, prefer to walk the streets alone rather than beside their honest parents. A so- clety is healthy, on the contrary, when each of its members applies himself to doing very nearly what his parents have done before him, but doing it better, and, looking to future elevation, is content first to fulfill conscientious- ly more modest duties. Education should make independent men. If you wish to train your chil- dren for liberty, bring them up simply and do not for a moment fear that in 80 doing you are putting obstacles in the way of their happiness. It will be quite the contrary. The more costly toys a child has, the more feasts and curious entertainments, the less is he amused. In this there is a sure sign. Let us be temperate in our methods of enter- taining youth, and especially let us not thoughtlessly create for them artificial needs. Food, dress, nursery, amuse- ments—let all these be as natural and simple as possible. With the idea of making life pleasant for their children some parents bring them up in habits of gormandizing and idleness, accus- tom them to sensations not meant for their age, multiply their parties and entertainments. Sorry gifts these! In place of a free man you are making a slave. Gorged with luxury, he tires of it in time, and yet when for one rea- son or another his pleasures fail him he will be miserable, and you with him, and, what is worse, perhaps in some capital encounter of life you will be ready—you and he together—to sac- , rifice manly dignity. truth and duty ~ from sheer sloth. If the spirit of caste causes the loss : of respect, partisanship, of whatever sort, is quite as productive of it. In certain quarters children are brought up in such fashion that they respect but ome country--their own; one sys- ents and masters; one religion—that which they have been taught. Does any one suppose that ig this way men can be shaped who shall respect coun- try, religion and law? Is this a proper respect—this respect which does not extend beyond what touches and be- longs to ourselves? Strange blindness of cliques and coteries, which arro- gate to themselves with so much in- genuous complacence the title of schools of respect, and which, out- side themselves, respect nothing. In reality they teach, “Country, religion, law—we are all these!” Such teaching fosters fanaticism, and if fanaticism is not the sole antisocial ferment it is sure- ly one of the worst and most energetic. If simplicity of heart is an essential condition of respect, simplicity of life is its best school. Whatever be the state of your fortune, avoid everything which could make your children think themselves more or better than others. Though your wealth would permit you to dress them richly, remember the evil you might do in exciting their vanity. Preserve them from the evil of be- ‘Heving that to be elegantly dressed suffices for distinction, and, above all, do not carelessly increase by their clothes and their habits of life the distance which already separates them from other children. Dress them sim- ply. And if, on the contrary, it should be necessary for you to economize to give your children the pleasure of fine clothes, I would that I might dispose you to reserve your spirit of sacrifice for a better cause. You risk seeing it 1lly recompensed. You dissipate your money when it would much better avail to save it for serious needs, and Jou prepare for yourself, later on, a harvest of ingratitude. How danger: Se it is to accustom your sons and daughters to a style of living beyond your means and theirs! In the first place, it is very bad for your purse. In the second place, it develops a con: temptuous spirit in the very bosom of the family. If you dress your children like little lords and give them to under- stand that they are superior to you, ds it astonishing if they end by dis- daining you? You will have nourished at your table the declassed—a product which costs dear and is worthless. Any fashion of instructing children whose most evident result is to lead them to despise their parents and the customs and activities among which they have grown up is a calamity. It is effective for nothing but to produce a legion of malcontents, with hearts totally estranged from their origin, their race, their natural interests—ev- erything, in short, that makes the fun- Let us bring up our children simply— I had almost said rudely. Let us en- tice them to exercise that gives them endurance, even to privations. Let them belong to those who are better trained to fatigue and the earth for a Er OF BOTT Te oe th Ye bed than to the comforts of the table and couches of luxury. So we shall make men of them, independent and stanch, who may be counted on, who will not sell themselves for pottage and who will have withal the faculty of being happy. A too easy life brings with it a sort of lassitude in vital energy. One be- comes blase, disillusioned, an old young man, past being diverted. How many young people are in this state! Upon them have been deposited, like a sort of mold, the traces of our decrepitude, our skepticism, our vices and the bad habits they have contracted in our company. What reflections upon our- selves these youths weary of life force us to make! What announcements are graven on their brows! These shadows say to us by contrast that happiness lies in a life true, ac- tive, spontaneous, ungalled by the yoke of the passions, of unnatural needs, of unhealthy stimulus, keeping intact the physical faculty of enjoying the light of day and the air we breathe and in the heart the capacity to thrill with the love of all that is generous, simple and fine. : The artificial life engenders artificial thought and a speech little sure of it- self. Normal habits, deep impressions, the ordinary contact with reality, bring frankness with them. Falsehood is the vice of a slave, the refuge of the cow- ardly and weak. He who is free and strong is unflinching in speech. We should encourage in our children the hardihood to speak frankly. What do we ordinarily do? We trample on natural disposition, level it down to the uniformity which for the crowd is synonymous with good form. To think with one’s own mind, feel with one’s own heart, express one’s own person- ality—how unconventional, how rustic! Oh, the atrocity of an education which consists in the perpetual muzzling of the only thing that gives any of us his reason for being! Of how many soul murders do we become guilty! Some are struck down with bludgeons, others gently smothered with pillows! Every- thing conspires against independence of character. When we are little, people wish us to be dolls or graven images; when we grow up they approve of us on condition that we are like all the rest of the world—automatons; when you have seen one of them you’ve seen them all. So the lack of originality and initiative is upon us, and platitude and monotony are the distinctions of today. Truth can free us from this bondage. Let our children be taught to be themselves, to ring clear, with- out crack or muffle. Make loyalty a need to them, and in their gravest fail- ures, if only they acknowledge them, account it Yor merit that they have not covered their sin. To frankness let us add ingenuous- ness in our solicitude as educators. Let us have for this comrade of childhood— a trifle uncivilized, it is true, but so gracious and friendly—all possible re- gard. We must not frighten it away. When it has once fled it so rarely cemes back! Ingenuousness is not sim- ply the sister of truth, the guardian of the individual qualities of each of us; it is besides a great informing and edu- cating force. I see among us too many practical people, so called, who go about armed with terrifying spectacles and huge shears to ferret out naive things and clip their wings. They up- root ingenuousness from life, from thought, from education, and pursue it even to the region of dreams. Under pretext of making men of their chil- dren they prevent their being children at all; as if before the ripe fruit of au- tumn, flowers did not have to be, and perfumes, and songs of birds, and all the fairy springtime. I ask indulgence for everything naive and simple—not alone for the innocent conceits that flutter round the curly heads of children, but also for the leg- end, the folk song, the tales of the world of marvel and mystery. The sense of the marvelous is in the child the first form of that sense of the in- finite without which a man is like a bird deprived of wings. Let us not wean the child from it, but let us guard in him the faculty of rising above what is earthy, so that he may appre- ciate later on those pure and moving symbols of vanished ages wherein hu- man truth has found forms of expression that our arid logic will never replace. CHAPTER XIV. CONCLUSION. THINK I have said enough of the spirit and manifestations of the simple life to make it evident that there is here a whole forgotten world of strength and beauty. He can make conquest of it who has sufficient energy to detach himself from the fa- tal rubbish that trammels our days. It will not take him long to perceive that in renouncing some surface satis- factions and childish ambitions he in- creases his faculty of happiness and his possibilities of right judgment. These results concern as much the private as the public life. It is incon- testable that in striving against the fe- verish will to shine, in ceasing to make the satisfaction of our desires the end of our activity, in returning to modest tastes, to the true life, we shall labor for the unity of the family. Another spirit will breathe in our homes, creat- ing new customs and an atmosphere more favorable to the education of chil- dren. Little by little our boys and girls will feel the enticement of ideals at once higher and more realizable, and transformation of the home will in time. exercise its influence on public spirit. As the solidity of a wall depends upon the grain of the stones and the consistence of the cement which binds them together, so also the energy of public life depends upon the individual value of men and their power of cohe- sion. The great desideratum of our time is the culture of the component parts of society, of the individual man. Everything in the present social or- ganism leads us back to this element. In neglecting it we expose ourselves to the loss of the benefits of progress, even to making our most persistent ef- forts turn to our own hurt. If in the midst of means continually more and more perfected the workman diminish- es in value, of what use are these fine tools at his disposal? By their very excellence to make more evident the faults of him who uses them without discernment or without conscience. The wheelwork of the great modern machine is infinitely delicate. Care- lessness, incompetence or corruption may produce here disturbances of far greater gravity than would have threatened the more or less rudimen- tary organism of the society of the past. There is need, then, of looking to the quality of the individual called upon to contribute in any measure to the workings of this mechanism. This individual should -be at once solid and pliable, inspired with the central law of life to be oneself and fraternal. Ey- erything within us and without us be- comes simplified and unified under the influence of this law, which is the same for everybody and by which each one should guide his actions, for our essential interests are not opposing; they are identical. In cultivating the spirit of simplicity we should arrive, then, at giving to public life a stronger cohesion. The phenomena of decomposition and destruction that we see there may all be attributed to the same cause—lack of solidity and cohesion. It will never be possible to say how contrary to so- cial good are the trifling interests of caste, of coterie, of church, the bitter strife for personal welfare, and, by a fatal consequence, how destructive these things are of individual happi- ness. A society in which each member is preoccupied with his own well being is organized disorder. This is all that we learn from the irreconcilable con- flicts of our uncompromising egoism. We too much resemble those people who claim the rights of family only to gain advantage from them, not to do honor to the connection. On all rounds of the social ladder we are forever put- ting forth claims. We all take the ground that we are creditors; no one recognizes the fact that he is a debtor, and our dealings with our fellows con- gist in inviting them, in tones some- times amiable, sometimes arrogant, to discharge their indebtedness to us. No good thing is attained in this spirit. For, in fact, it is the spirit of privilege, thateternal enemy of universal law, that obstacle to brotherly understanding, which is ever presenting itself anew. In a lecture delivered in 1882 M. Re- nan said that a nation is “a spiritual family,” and he added, “The essential of a nation is that all the indiviauals should have many things in common, and also that all should have forgotten much.” It is important to know what to.forget and what to remember, not only in the past, but also in our daily life. Our memories are lumbered with the things that divide us; the things which unite us slip away. Each of us keeps at the most luminous point of his souvenirs a lively sense of his second- ary quality, his part of agriculturist, day laborer, man of letters, public offi- cer, proletary, bourgeois, or political or religious sectarian, but his essential quality, which is to be a son of his country and a man, is relegated to the shade. Scarcely dces he keep even a theoretic notion of it. So that what oc- cupies us and determines our actions is precisely the thing that separates us from others, and there is hardly place for that spirit of unity which is as the soul of a people. So, too, do we foster bad feeling in our brothers. Men animated by a spirit of particularism, exclusiveness and pride are continually clashing. They cannot meet without rousing afresh the sentiment of division and rivalry. And so there slowly heaps up in their remembrance a stock of reciprocal ill will, of mistrust, of ran- cor. All this is bad feeling with its consequences. : It must be rooted out of our midst. Remember, forget! This we should say to ourselves every morning, in all our relations and affairs. Remember the essential, forget the accessory! How much better should we discharge our duties as citizens if high and low were nourished from this spirit! How easy to cultivate pleasant. remem- brances in the mind of one’s neighbor by sowing it with kind deeds and re- fraining from procedures of which in spite of himself he is forced to say, with hatred in his heart, “Never in the world will I forget!” The spirit of simplicity is a great magician. It softens asperities, bridges chasms, draws together hands and hearts. The forms which it takes in the world are infinite in number, but never does it seem to us more admira- ble than when it shows itself across the fatal barrier of position, interest or prejudice, overcoming the greatest obstacles, permitting those whom ev- erything seems to separate to under- stand one another, esteem one another, love one another. This is the true so- cial cement that goes into the building of a people. y THE END. Japanese Gathering Forces. - ST. PETERSBURG, April 1.—1 a. m. There has been no fighting of importance lately. Reconnaissances establish the fact that the Japanese are gathering in heavy force twenty miles south of Sipinghai, evi- dently intending to attack the Rdésian posi- tion at Sipingbai. The Russians are strong- ly fortifying there, and apparently expeot to make a stand. The country between is comparatively olear of Japanese. The Japanese are approaching Kirin, threatening communications in the Ussnary distrios. The number of Chinese bandits is con- stantly augmenting. Chinese continue to report that Field Marshal Oyama has issned proclamations fixing the date for the occupation of Harbin as April 10th, bus this prediction, if actual, is apparently improbable of fulfillment. Business Notice. CASTORIA For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of CHAS. H. FLETCHER. IT -IS SERIOUS. SOME BELLEFONTE PEOPLE FAIL 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. Potts Green's drug store and used them. They reached the spot and in a short time my strength re- turned. I have never had any trouble of the kind since and am glad to recom- mend Doan’s Kidney Pills not oniy be- . cause they helped me but because I know of others who have also found re- lief in the same way, and I have yet to hear of a case 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 tor the United States. Remember the name—Doan’s—and take no other. 50-10 BS Collecting Rents. ‘*Sir,”” said the seedy man, addresinga 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 put his hand in his pocket. ‘‘Sir,”” replied the victim of hard luck, 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 must apologize for coming so late, but the cars’’— ‘Ob, ”’ 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, Successor to Jous C. MILLER. FIRE, LIFE, ACCIDENT INSURANCE. Represents some of the Best Stock Companies. 2nd Floor, Bush Arcade, BELLEFONTE, PA. 49-46-6m OOK! READ JOHN F. GRAY & SON, (Successors to Grant Hoover.) FIRE, LIFE, AND ACCIDENT INSURANCE. This Agency represents the largest Rite ali anes Companies in the orld. 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 VATA VAT ATA AST LST "THE 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. Ee ———————————— Travelers Guide. ENTRAL RAILROAD OF PENNA. Condensed Time Table effective Nov. 28, 1904, 5 | : Nov. 29th, 1903 g i g E P.M, 8 0 [7 00 sg 7 06 250 710 $d T14 831 78 . annabh...... 528) 1 40| 10 35. Port Matilda..| § 39] 15°85 7 59 52 .... 10 28|...... Martha... 8 49) ......|7 39 812 128] 10 20l....... Julian. ....| 858| 1007 83 503 122 1011 «Unionville... 9 07] 1 08/7 87 4 56/ 1 17| 10 04/Snow Shoe Int.| 915 1 12/805 453 1141001 ...Milesburg,. «| 918 1 14/8 08 444) 105 953 Le dg 932 125816 4 32| 12 85] 9 41/..... Milesburg ... 941 1 32/8 28 2 12 48] 9 34|...... rtin.. 9 49(f 1 38/8 86 22 230 958] .... 8 40 2 959] 1 47/8 48 FR 9 15... leville, 10 08 ......[8 65 4 02] 12 26 9 12|.. eek...| 10 11) 1 55/8 58 8 51) 12 16| 9 01}... Mill Hall......| 10 22] 2 05|9 09 3 45| 12 10, 8 55|...Lock Haven. 10 30 2 10{9 15 P.M.|P. M. | A, m, |Lv, Arr. a.m |p M. [p.m oo ———————————————————————————————————— The Simple Life By CHARLES WAGNER Travelers Guide. PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD AND BRANCHES. Schedule in eftect Nov. 27th 1904. Lomre Bell a TYRONE—WESTWARD, ve efonte, 9.53 a. m., arrive at Tyrone 11.05 a. m,, at "Altoona, 1.00 p- m., at Pittsburg, 5.60 p. m. Leave Bellefonte 1.05 p. m., arrive at Tyrone, 2.10 P. m., at Altoona, 3.10 p. m., at Pittsburg, 6.55 Pp. m. Leave Bellefonte, 4.44 P. m., arrive at Tyron 6.00, at Altoona, 7.05, at Pittsburg at 10.60, VIA TYRONE—EASTWARD. Lests Bellefonte, 9.563 5 m., arrive at Tyrone, .05, a. m. at Harris . Mm. - Le adelphia, 5.47. p. m. prura,.abm ave Bellefonte, 1.05 p. m., arrive at Tyrone 2.10 p. m., at Harrisbur 6. 2 dolphin, Msi po. me FD PI, ai Phila Leave J Bellefonte 4.44 p. m., arrive at Tyrone x . mM, a i : my at Sarrisbur , at 10.00 p. m. Phila- VIA LOCK HAVEN—WESTWARD. Leave Bellefonte, 1.25 p, m., arrive at Lock Haven 2.10 p. ms arrive at Buffalo, 7.40 Pp. m. LOCK HAVEN—EASTWARD. Leave Bellefonte, 9.32 a. m., amb Lock Haven 10.30, a. m. leave Williamsport, 12.35 p. m., ar- rive at Harrisburg, 3.20 p. m., at Philadelphia La at 2p m., ave efonte, 1.25 p. m., arrive at L 2.10 p m., leave Williameport at Ly Haven givivs Harrisburg, 5.00 Pp. m., Philadelphia 7.32 p. m Leave Bellefonte, 8.16 P. m.. arrive at Loc . yen, 35 x n., leave Williamsport, Sy ¥ sbu Philadelphia at 7.17 a. my, © " TTIve at VIA LEWISBURG. Leave Bellefonte, at 6.40 a. m., arrive at Lewis- burg, at 9.05 a. m. Montandon, 9.15, Harris- L ars 11,30 a. m., Philadelphia, 3.17 p. m. satel elelonts, 200 OD. hy arrive at Legishurs, Bis td Dare urg, 6.50 p. m., Philadel- or full information, time table 4 ticket agent, or address Thos. E. Watt rgall on er Age : . Bitte K€ ni estern District, No.360 Fifth Avenue, TYRONE AND CLEARFIELD, R. R. NORTHWARD, SOUTHWRD, oF : : 1 3 | Nov. 29th, 1008 i 5d 8 Be do §|%d|* 1 P.M.| P. M. | A.M, P.M. AM pm 6 80 3 85 8 00. 9 20| 11 20/5 35 8 3 399, -|d9 14] 11 14/5 29 3a z sees) 0 USleucdyrone 8.0... 11 12/5 27 05 811 9 10] 11 09, 7 11if 4 16/f 8 22|... £9 03/f11 020 15 7 Loi 4 20if 8 211, £9 00(£10 59lp 17 IRs f 8 52/110 515 0g 3 oj 4 36848. f 8 45/110 44/4 pg is 440, 849 .«| 8 89 10 384 5s f 4 42/f 8 51 f 8 36/f10 35 7 88|f 4 44/f 8 52|.., £8 34/10 33g 02 748 35s 9 02 8 24 10 26/4 09 Toles 8s iin 0 ceenenee| 10 2014 37 Tours 0 «-Bovnton...... f 8 19|f10 16/4 81 T3818 £918]...... iners.....|f 8 15/110 12{4 27 9 3 9 9 23\...Philiosburg...| 8 13| 10 10/4 25 gu Saif 92.... Graham rene f 8 08/10 03|4 17 2h 21s 9 82|....Blue Ball..... f803 958412 3 ix 9 38|...Wallaceton ...| 7 57 9 52/4 5 $B 2a 9 45...... .Bigler.... (f7 50 9 458 B57 Ss 9 52 land....|f 7 43 9 383 50 89if 9 55|... Mineral Sp...| .....|f 9 343 45 8 34/f 5 43/110 00... ... Barrett...... f 7 35/f 9 30|3 41 3 Sur santos roves Leonard.....| ...... f 9 25/3 36 Ss 3 10 15/.,...Clearfield..... 7 25] 9 208 3( Siem f10 23... Riverview... 7 16/f 9 098 1c 2k & 07/10 28/...Sus. Brid 0S viruses £9043 14 3 2 10 85 .Curwensville .. 7 05/ 9 00(3 1c 299 9110 50|...... ustie........ f 6 50|f 8 50/3 on 25 6 25/110 57 Stronach. f 6 44/f 8 44/2 54 6 30| 11 05|....Grampian.....( 6 40 8 40/2 gp P.M.I P.M. | A, m lAr, Lv.ip.m lam lpn, ON SuxpAYs- -a train leaves ne Waking all the regular stops ALi h rp ilict . arriving there at 11:05. Returning it leaves Gram. pian at 2:50 p. m., and arrives in Tyrone at 5:35 BALD KAGLE VALLEY BRANCH. WESTWRD, EASTWRD, On Sundays there is one train each B.E. V. It runs on the same Beale a the orming: usin Jeanine Tyrone at 8:30 a. m., week 5 e on afternoon train leaving Lock LEWISBURG & TYRONE RAILROAD. EAST WARD. Nov. 29th 1903. WESTWARD Srarions. » B Pp o | ® 1 09 68 9 09 G0 £9 69 60 69 CO £9 80 1019 19 60 10 0 10 10 80 1 10 + OF C0 OB 3 Ob 0 =F =F od =F 1 = oF 7 3 1 00 50 00 00.00 00 00 00 00 00 00 © 1 1h 50 85 £0 10 10 89 0 10 10 10 20 €0 € 6 C0 C0 £0 £3 £0 C0 is 1 io 4 1h i BEER ER ERR ETERS ERROR SREEES READ poww Reap up. Stations - No 1lxo ofto 3 No 6/No 4|No 2 a. m.|p. m.|p. m.|Lve. Ar.lp.m, i 8'ig 110/76 40/1 96 BELLEFONTE. | 20's 10 0 40 8 Iron........... 721/651] 241 907 457/927 8 nario 7 26] 6 56] 2 | 901] 451] 0 21 8 733) 7 03] 2 | 855] 4 45 9 15 8 7 35/ 7 05) 2 853) 4 42 9 13 8 7 39] 7 09] 2 8 49| ¢ 38 9 09 8 743) 714] 3 8 46| 4 34) g 05° 3 745 7 16 8 .| 844] 431] 9 02 2 7471719 8 8 42 4 28] 9 00 9 751) 7 23] 8 8 39| 4 25| 8 57 7 53] 7 25] 3 8 36] 4 22| 8 54 Tor 729) 3 Sime LEWISBURG & TYRONE RAILROAD. 828) 4 13 ea 807 739 3 .| 8 22] insu FASTWARD, UPPER END. WESTWARD. siya An sulss ToT EEE te 00/18 Ee 18 33 N Nov. :9th,1908 | £ 11 45 : F : ® | 8 38|......... Jersey Shore........| 816] 7 50 TT 12 20 9 10|Arr. Lv P.M. | AN. AW | PM. 112 20 11 30 tve } WMsPORT EUAN 405] 918 10 C5] 4 20|..... Tce so (Phila. # Beading DL] eee 3 x = . 1 3 4 3» WES as weenie] $8 26{ 11 30 3 30 8 a P 1038! 4 50 pees EW YORK.........| +4 30 . 10 41] 4 57... in (Via Phila.) HM Tal] 30) 33 10 49) 507 5 mlAre, vo : foesi] hn el stsstet cris ae {Weck Daya 3 M.Prm $l §3|Famace i067] 5716 10. 40 Ar ..NEW YORK... 1] 4 0) 19) 8 2)... Dungarvin...| 10 49 5 25/...... { (Via Tamaqua) 3 12| 8 18 Warrior's Mark| 11 2¢| 5 a4f.... ] 3 05 8 09\..Pennington...| 11 30| 5 44|.... WALLACE H. GEPHART. 2 56 7068 oeesf 11 421 b 56 .... General Superintendent. | r 2 50} 760 aweeee| 11 54] 6 OB] ..... P. M. | A, M. |Lve, Ar. a.m, |p. ma. BELLEFONTE CENTRAL RAIL- ROAD. Schedule to take effect Monday, Apr. 3rd, 1899. BELLEFONTE & SNOW SHOE BRANCH. Time Table in effect on and after Nov. 20th 1908, Mix | Mix | Stations. 5 9 53[Lv.... ellefonte......... 5 1 ...... Milesburg... 5 201 10 04........Snow Shoe Int......... 5 30/10 14 ...8chool House......... 5 86/10 18 Gum Stump... 6 40( 11 26 ...Snow Shoe........ P. M.A. M. Ay siop on Signa), Week days only. W, W. ATTERBURY, J _R. WOOD. General Manager. General Passenger Agent. Money to Loan. WESTW RD EASTWARD .Tesd down read up No.5 No.of} Sravions. * lino 2/No q P.M. | A.M, ja (Lv Ar. a. mw. 4 00{ 19 80/6 30| ...Bellefonte...| 8 50 ILES A cure guaranteed if you use 4 07] 10 87/6 35 8 40 : RUDYS PILE SUPPOSITORY || 11% 1042/6 25). x D. Matt. Thompson, Supt. Graded Schools, 4 18] 10 51/6 46 B 8 81 Statesville, N. C., writes: “I can ey they do 4 21{ 10 56/6 50]... 8 28 all you claim for them.” Dr, 8. M. Devore, 4 25 11 02/6 56 8 24 Raven Rock, W. Va., writes: They pive uni- 4 25] 11 05/7 00 lg eg versal satisfaction.” Dr. H. D. McGill, Clarks- 4 40] 11 20/7 12]... | 807 pure, Tetin writes: “In 3 practice of 23 years —— RT —— ave found no remedy to equal yours. — : I § Price, 50 cents. Samples Free. Sold by =T50 vosres e8ern| 7 48 : on ists, aud in Bolle onte by C. M. Parrish 3 56 ] 3s Sloomsdott : a0] : or Free Qui in ne Grove Cro, |. 19-201y MARTIN RUDY, Lancaster, Pa, ”) | Prose : ; p H. F. THOMAS, Supt. and houses for rent. J. M. KEICHLINE, Att'y at Law MONEY TO LOAN on gould security 45-14-1vr.