10/16/08

Traveling on the Pennsylvania Turnpike - Part 1


Mr. Billett and I have been traveling in Pennsylvania this month. One place we visited was a famous house designed by Frank Loyd Wright. The house is called Falling Water, because it was built over a creek and waterfall. The house was spectacular.

Before we visited the house, we were staying with Mr. Billett senior, near the city of Reading in Pennsylvania. To have enough time to visit Falling Water and the neighboring area, we spent a couple nights in the town of Somerset. We also visited the city of Pittsburgh on a rainy day.

Pennsylvania's main highway is the Pennsylvania Turnpike. It is a toll road, and not very scenic. On the way there we took smaller, more interesting roads, but on the way home we decided to save time, and take the Turnpike. The toll on the pike is proportional to the distance you travel on it. Each exit is numbered according to its distance from the Western end of the turnpike. (see picture below, click to enlarge it.)


From Pittsburgh (mile 57) to Somerset (mile 110) we paid $3.00 for the toll. The next day we were traveling from Somerset (mile 110) to Reading (mile 286). Your job: figure out about how much the toll would be for that distance.

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