The Columbian. (Bloomsburg, Pa.) 1866-1910, February 06, 1902, Page 6, Image 6

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    JAFT ON PHILIPPINES
Qovernor of the Islands An
swera Many Questions.
IIJOMII OF 5AT1VES FOR PEACE.
K Much Reliance to Be Placed on
Reports bjr Private Letters.
The War Has Been t on- I
darted Humanely. i
WASHINGTON, Feb. R. Qovprnot
Taft continued lain narrative before the
ennte conimittec on tho Philippines
oncoming conditions in the Philippine
rchlpchiKO.
Governor Tnft Mid thnt the irront
majority of the people of Hie inland
4ealre ponco nnd that the Insurrcctlon
fata were by their acts preventing tlie
3888 of the people from settling down
and earning u quiet living. Intend of
being nllowed to do thla they were
kept under u system of terrorism which
hotild be stopped.
Governor Tnft look up nnd nmilyzed
the army's work In the Mauds. He re
tailed that us soon as General Otis had
received re-enforceuients snlllclent for
hiH purposes the Philippine army bad
broken up and scattered into guerrilla
bands.
In response to a question by Senator
Patterson as to the practices of tin;
lineabeliea Governor Taft warned the
committee and others against accepting
Without u rcat degree of allowance
the vttfteincnia made In private letters.
Be considered most of these as unielia
ble. Judging from what lie bad seen of
thein. In general it was impossible to
prevent retaliation by private soldiers
mnder nil circumslaiueB. As a rule, the
witness said, American prisoners were
treated well by the Filipinos. Tills, so
tit as lie knew, was uniformly true of
tie Filipino officers who were high In
command. There were some cases to
the contrary on the part of subordl
sate Filipino officers. He bad not, he
said in reply to a question from Sena
tor Culberson, known anything of the
Mports of the killing of Filipino pris
oners with the knowledge of General
lfetealf of Kansas. Governor Taft said
that notwithstanding he was not In an
attitude of favor to military rule it was
till his deliberate Judgement that
Clever had a war been conducted in
which more compassion, more restraint
and more generosity had been exhibit
ad than in connection with the Ameri
can war in the Philippines."
After reading a part of General Boll's
order Senator Culberson asked if he
till entertained the same opinions pre
viously expressed as to the military
policy in the Philippines. To this Gov
acnor Taft replied: "The war has been
all over these islands, and that which
remains Is a crime against civilization.
It Is also a crime against the Filipino
people to keep up a state of war under
(be circumstances. They have worn
out the right to any treatment but that
which is severe and within the laws of
war."
In conclusion Governor Taft was
jueationed concerning the acts of the
Philippine commission for the punish-
Mem or treason, out ne expressed a de
sire to postpone discussion of this mat
ter to a time when more attention could
He given it. He had not, he said, been
present when this law was enacted,
tat he had an opinion on the subject
which he would be glad to give.
The committee then adjourned for
tba day.
A Few Survivors Found.
YOKOHAMA, Feb. 3.-Four officers
and seven men of the detachment of
ilO Janauese Infantry previously re- ,
ported to have been frozen to death,
with the exception of one man, on
the northern end of Hondo island have
:een found in various stages of ex 1
vauwtioii. Forty corpses have also been I
:'ound. Major Kamaguchl was discov
ered alive, but frozen to the ground
y the blankets his men had thrown
. .vrer him. Three living and seven
- lead soldiers were found lying near
Major Kamaguchl. The search for the
oat men is impeded by snowstorms,
.nd scant hope of finding further sur-
Ivors is entertained.
Another Million For Harvard.
CAMBKI1M5K, Mass., Feb. 3. Fol
iowlng the announcement nt the Har
axd commencement exorcises last
).'une that J. Plcrpont Morgan had
, (greed to erect at the cost of over $1,
00,000 three of the buildings required
, or the accommodation of the Harvard
aedical school, President Eliot has just
.uinouiucil to the medical faculty thnt
f. D. Koekfil'cller propose to give $1,
;00,000 in furtherance of this great
iroject proided that other friends of
he university will raise a sum of inon
.y in the neighborhood of $r,oo,( loo to
ie used by the Harvard medical sthaol
(or land, btiihlisjn or endowment.
Another liix Steel Corporation.
TACOM A, Wash., Jan. ;!!. The Ta
wma company has been incorporated,
vlth $yr..iHi:i.iMM) capital, to erect blast
'urnaces in.d u steel plant here at a
out of several million dollars. The
ompany i luithorlzod to do a general
lining, smelting, lumbering and nier-
Uandise business. United States Sena
ar A. !. Foster will be president,
ittttugu not an incorporator.
toasters folllile Willi Hiewtrlo Cur.
PEOIUA, 111., Feb. 5.-Six boys.
"Misting down a hill last night, crashed
to an electric cur, and four of them
irwc Injured, two fatally. The police
7r guiirdin:,' the crossing, but owing
;i the darkness the coasters were not
rtn In time lo prevent the accident.
l.uii.uy IM1I 1'iiKNrd.
ALBANY. N. Y., Jan. .il.-Tho Ilog
era Mil nbollslilug slate hospital boards
if nmnagers and extending the duties
:io4 powers of the state lunacy com
mission has been passed in the assem
bly by a vote of 07 ywu to -10 nays.
CHILD BOSSED 111E DIAMOND.
How a Seven-Year-Old Bor t'mplred
a Game Between Men
Plavera,
Out at the Y. M. C. A. grounds in
west Philadelphia recently two base
ball teams composed of grown men
some of them old enough, one would
think, to have more serious things
to do, were struggling for supremacy.
It was not a particularly- scicntiflo
game Indeed, it was often ludicrous,
and, the star performer wus the um
pire. He was little ".Toe" Craddoek,
scarcely larger than a three-cent
piece, and about knee-high to a grass
hopper. The little fellow is only
seven years old and looks younger,
but he had nil the gesture nnd man
ners of the professional umpire down
pat. Moreover, he knew all the in
tricate points of the game nnd gave
his decisions in a shrill, piping and
yet officially stern voice.
It was laughable, says the Phila
delphia Record, to see some of the
players, when a close decision would
be given, fly into a rage and hotly
argue with the midget umpire. In
their excitement hcy seemed to lose
sight of the humor of the situation,
lint, when the little fellow would ma
jestically order them otT the field, the
few spectators would roar with
laughter. The playeis themselves
didn't see anything funny in it until
the game was over and they had
a chance to think about it.
NOSE INDICATES CHARACTER. ;
i
Ho Not C'oniplnln If Yon Ilnve n nijt
One, for That's the Verj
Hnt Kind.
A large nope is always an unfailing
sign of a decided character, writes
Iilanclie W. Fischer, in an nrticle on
"Heading Character from the Face"
in l.ndies' Home Journal. "It belongs
to the man of action, quick to see and
to seize opportunity. A small nose
indicates a passive nature, one less
apt to act, although he may feel as
deeply. He will have ninny theories,
while the possessor of a large nose
will have deeds to show. Persons
with small noses arc most loving and
sympathizing, but their friendship is
not? the active kind.
A nose with the tip slightly tilted
is the sign of the heartless flirt. A
long nose shows dignity and repose.
A short nose, pugnacity and a love
of gayety. An arched nose one pro
jecting at the bridge shows thought.
A straight nose shows an inclination
toward serious subjects. A nose that
turns up slightly Indicates eloquence,
wit and imagination. If turned up
much it shows egotism and love of
luxury. A nose that slopes out direct
ly from the forehead, that shows no
indenting between the eyes, indicates
power. If the nose is indented deep
ly at the root the subject will be weak
and vacillating. A nose that turns
down signifies that the possessor is
miserly and sarcastic.
SIGN CAUSES HARD FEELING.
A Chicago CIstar-MaUcr Who Think.
He Has a Grievance Attains!
HI. Neighbor.
The business quiet of a South side
thoroughfare has been rudely shocked
because of an altercation that has
grown out of the display o signs on
the same building, relates the Chicago
Chronicle. The first floor is occupied
by a cigar manufacturer, who takes es
peclal pride in the merits of his goods
and resent any imputation that tne i
grade is not the best. For this reason
he has caused to be suspended above :
his door the following placard: j
f FINE CIGARS! I
; EVERY LKAP ITSEO WITHIN : ,
: COMES D1RKCT KKUMri BA. :
His fellow tenant who occupies the
floor above took umbrage at the other
man's self-laudation and posted the
following announcement In letters eas
ily descried a block away:
: OUR FARM PRODUCTS. INCLUD- :
! INC1 CABBAGE, DON'T COME :
! FROM CUBA. BUT FROM :
: WISCONSIN AND :
: IOWA. :
A suit in the courts is threatened by
the cigar man unless the objectionable
sign on the floor above is removed or
amended.
INDUSTRY OF A TINY BIRD.
Its Enormous Appetite Keeps the
Little Wren Busy During Its
Waking- Hours.
One of the most industrious of 1
birds is the wren. Its industry is ,
probably due to its appetite, which '
is seemingly insatiable. It seems to
be ulwuys hungry and is ever on the ,
alert for means to satisfy the crav-
lugs of its appetite.
This is the season of the year when
the city man returns from his two
weeks' outing in the woods, primed
up with more accumulated knowl
edge than the' good old "man with '
the hoc" has been able to acquire in
n lifetime. One of him, who has been
spending the vacation time in Vir--ginia,
furnishes details as to the
abnormal cravings for food displayed
by young wrens. He found a nest
and took up a position where he
could watch at his leisure. The moth
er wren made 110 trips to the nest
within four hours and a half, and
this was the bill of fare which the
three baby birds consumed:
Twenty green caterpillars, 16 May
flips, 29 uiiii'Mitified insects, 11
worms, two bugs, ten grasshoppers,
seven spiders nnd a chrysalis or two.
The Antliulty of Mr.n.
A very iHodera'.e estimate for the
f ntiquity of man, according to recent
U'vestigntlona of a French scientist,
Is 238,000 year.
THE COLUMBIAN, BLOOMSBURG, PA.
DINED ON GOLDFISH.
The Customer Got What He Thought
Was a New Dish.
Canaht the Little Sparklers with
Hook and Line and Then Or
derrd Them Fried Hood
Thing- for the Walter.
The gentleman who, in nautical
phrase, seemed to be "three sheets
in the wind, with the mainsail flap
ping," careened against the window
of the all-night restaurant, says the
St. Louis Star. "I wan' som'thin'
feat," said the bibulous one. ".Som'
thin dif'rent." He went Into the res
taurant and huskily Inquired of the
waiter what there was in the place lu
ishnpe of food.
"Kggs, steak, cold beef, any kind
of pie. Whafll you have?" rattled
the waiter.
The bibulous one leaned his head
on the nearest tabic nnd wept. "Thas
jes what nil uz.er waishers said," he,
sobbed. "I don' wansh eggs, steash
t r col' beef. Wansh sunshin di Trent."
"Sorry, sir," suid the waiter. "What
particular think different would you
like to have? Perhaps we can send
out and get it for you."
"Wansh flf cents' worth fried
polar bear."
"Sorry," nain replied the waiter.
"A lot of Kxkiinos were in here this
evening, and they ate up the last
piece of polar bear meat we had. We
can send up to t Tip park and have the
polar bear in the zoo killed for you,
hilt we couldn't get the meat, back
here for three or four hours."
"Too lontf, too long," moaned the
inebriated individual, "no us-h."
He arose and walked unsteadily
out of the restaurant, but paused nt
the door to look back reproachfully
nt the waiter. Then e spied the
tank of goldfish that stood in the
restaurant window. His face bright
ened up and he returned to the table
again.
"I wanst golsh fish," said the bibu
lous one. "Fry fresh golsh fish. Like
HE FISHED FOR HALF AN HOUR.
mosher user to mashe. Wan' kech
tim selfh."
"Couldn't do that, sir," said the
waiter. "The goldfish are a window
ornament."
"Don't care whash golsh flsh are.
Want 'em. Mush have 'em frish."
"Can't serve them, sir," said the
waiter.
"Ah, get out," pursued the bibulous
customer. "I got plentshee money.
Ain ten dollars 'nuflf for ole golsh
flsh? Here's y' ten dollars. Gimme
hook en' line."
The waiter decided that ten dollars
was a pretty good return for the gold
fish, so he accepted the money eager
ly, and went back of the counter and
hunted up a black thread and a bent
pin.
The strnnger insisted on using his
cane for a fishing pole, and so tha
black thread was tied to one end of
the cane, the bent pin was baited
with a crumb of bread and the cus
tomer began fishing. He fished for
half an hour without getting so much
as a bite. lie began to revile the
goldfish and the restaurant and the
waiter, and threatened to break the
tank with his cane
The waiter engaged his attention
for awhile by selecting some more
suitable bait, and while the customer
was doing this the waiter reached
down in the water and caught a gold
fish with his hand and put it on a
plate behind the counter.
Then when the customer resumed
fishing the waiter yelled: "You've
got a bite; pull!" and when the cus
tomer yanked his pole up the whiter
dropped the fish by the side of the
tank.
"Y'ou got him, you got him!" yelled
the waiter, "but he dropped off the
hook. Here he is."
The customer was greatly plensed,
and went back to get some more of
the magic bait, while the waiter cap
tured another fish. In this way all
four of the fish in the tank were
caught by the angler and sent back
to the cook, who simply put them in
a pan of water, for the waiter had
been careful to see that they suffered
no injury and had kept tliein alive
in a bucket of water, into which he
had put them as fast as they had
been taken from the tank.
The cook fried some whitefish thnt
had been in the Ice chest, and the
waiter deftly spread some gold foil
taken off plug tobacco on the sides
of the fish. He served it in neat
style, deftly 4removing the gold foil
with a knife. The bibulous custom
er put the gold foil in his pocket as
a trophy of his capture and ate the
flsh with great relish.
He gave the waiter a dollar and dis
appeared In fine spirits down the
street. After he was out of sight the
cook and the waiter returned the
goldfish to the tank.
r'',r CUr '
to succeed Roberts.
rUe of Con.au.ht. Kin.'. Brother,
Will Become Commander-la.
Chief of British Army.
There have been rumors for some
time that Lord Roberts had had all
lie wanted of the office of commander-in-chief
of the British army, but no
definite statement has been made on
the subject.
From one of the half-dozen men
who should be able to speak authori
tatively on the subject, it Is learned
that the rumor Is not only correct.,
but that the date set by Lord Rob
erts Is April, and that the king's only
remnlning brother, the duke of Con
naught, will be the successor of the
VV-,"
K,''-,-.-VM.fc:
DUKE OF CONNAUOIIT.
(To Be Anpolnted Commander In Chief
of the lirltl.Hh Army.)
hero of Kandahar in time to cut a
big figure at the coronation. The
late Queen Victoria could see no
reason why the army should not re
main in the family, anil was most
anxious that the duke of Con nn ught
should succeed the aged duke of Cain
bridge when public sentiment de
manded the retirement of the lat
ter. When her plans were defeated and
the appointment of Lord Wolseley be
came necessary, she contented her
self with the thought that at last her
son could succeed Lord Wolseley. Rut
Lord Roberts' capture of Cronje, nnd
the resulting wave of popular en
thusiasm, and the equally strong con
viction that the war otlice must be
reformed again, defeated the queen's
wishes, and Lord Roberts was made
commnnder-in-chief.
Rut the abrupt removal of Gen. Rul
lcr by Lord Roberts caused a revo
lution in feeling, and for the first
time in his life the beloved "Robs"
heard hisses mingled with the cheers
sent up in his honor whenever he ap
peared in public.
That was a bitter experience for a
man so fond of popularity, and is
said to be one of the causes of his
intention to resign. Another is his
discovery that he is quite unable to
cut the red tape that is bound so
tightly around the war office by its
civilian force.
. And so at last the duke of Con
naught is to have his long-looked-for
chance. He is a clever, kindly and
popular man, who has the reputation
of being a really good soldier, quite
aside from his royal prestige. Then,
beside, it would be quite beneath his
dignity to go pottering about with re
forms in the war office.
Things could go on peaceably in
the good old way, and the secretary
of war could manage matters In any
way he chose, without interference
from the military end of the office.
The duke's personal popularity is
thought to be great enough to over
come any popular feeling that a more
brilliant, energetic and forceful man
should be placed at the head of the
army.
PLUCKY MISS ADAMS.
Will Tour the Country with Ilrrn
bardt and I'lay Itoiueo and
Juliet In French.
Miss Maude Adams and Mme. Sarah
Rernhardt will inuke a joint tour in
"Romeo and Juliet," but the play
will be given in French. According
MISS MAUDE ADAMS.
(American Actreus Who Will Play in
French with Bernhardt.)
to the original arrangement Mine.
Bernhardt was again to show her
versatility by touring America with
Miss Adams and playing Romeo in
English, the entire company to speak
that language, but the French nct
rcss for once found it impossible to
carry out her ambitious pluns. Sho
has sent word to Mr. Orau that she
must put down her English books as
presenting an impossible task. Eith
er the tour must be ahuudoned or
"Romeo and Juliet" must be played
In French. When Mr. Frohmun, her
manager, wrote to Miss Adams of
tho situation she promptly tele
graphed: "I'll do it in Fiench.
Who's afraid?"
mf :
x jPw""' 9-t f
Americanization of mexico.
Country llleh In M.or War. Almost
Completely Healeeted tatll
Recent Year..
It Is strange that Mexico was not
largely Americanized long ago, says
the Philadelphia Rulk-tln. Here is a
country which stands in the very
front rank In the matter of mineral
resources. In her soil can be found
In abundance silver, gold, copper,
Iron, coal, nnd, Indeed, practically
every desirable mineral that can be
found In the United States. Mexico
has a population of about 13,noo,(mn,
more than that of the Philippines,
Hawaii, Guam, Porto Rico and Cuba
combined; her political Institutions
are, nominally at least, much like
our own; person and property are
reasonably secure within her borders
and her people are steadily Increas
ing in intelligence.
Y'et this inviting field, which lies
at our very doors, was almost com
pletely neglected for years. Ye have
been of late expending a vast amount
of money in the hope of tranquilliz
ing and developing a group of islands,
with a scinl-civilizcd population, on
the other side of the globe. Mexican
exports nnd Imports amount to as
mueh in one year as the exports and
imports of the Philippines do in
seven.
It is gratifying to note that there
is now a disposition on this side of
the border to make up for this neg
lect. The more American cnpital
there is invested in Mexico the closer
1
the two republicans will be drawn to
gether. Whether this mny result ulti
mately in political annexation is a
problem for the future to solve, but
it can hardly fail to make for the
prosperity and advancement of both
nations.
MAN'S WILL WAS TATTOOED.
Story of a Mexican Miser Who Di
vided HI. Wealth In a Sln-
Kular Manner.
Terhaps it was not parsimony, as
his relatives alleged, that led a
Mexican miser who recently died to
tattoo his last will and testament
upon his body. They allege that tho
decedent, named Moreche, in order
to save the cost of pen, ink and pa
per, imprinted his will indelibly upon
his body with some red pigment.
When the old miser died his heirs
protested against the burial of the
body and petitioned the court to
have the remarkable "human docu
ment" admitted to probate. It was
a knotty problem, but the count de
cided that a copy should be made of
the tattooed will, and that the copy
should have the fU effect of an orig
inal will. After the copy had been
.made the old miser was buried by
his legatees, the original will being
"filed for reference," as it were.
This ease is another Instance ot
tha imaginations of authors being
realized in fact. In one of Rider
Haggard's stories the plot hinges
upon the existence of just such a tat-
tooed will, only in the case of Rider
Haggard's man the will was tattooed
on his back because he was ship
wrecked and there were no pens, ink
or paper handy for the drawing up
of the "last will and testament." In
the case of the Mexican miser tha
tattooed will could be read easily,
and the copy of it was attested by
four witnesses before being admitted
to probate.
I Modern Time S trill.
I Compressed air under electrical
control is the agent employed in a
clock system just established in
Paris. The whole aren of the city is
divided into sections about two miles
in radius, and In the center of each
' section is a station, with a reservoir
of compressed air, from which pipes
lead to all the clocks of that section.
At the central station Is n master
clock controlling a commutator, by
which electro-magnets are energized
every minute, thus intermittently
connecting the a.r pipes with the
reservoirs, the effect being that tho
hands of the clocks are driven for
ward once a ruimite.
1 Ol.n Age, Old age as u comes in the or
derly process of Nature ii a beautiful and
I majestic thing. The very shadow of eclipse
which threatens it, makes it the more prized
. It Ktanda for experience, Wnowledye, wis.lom
' and counsel. That is old age a it should
ie. but old age as it to oltea is me ns
nothing but a second childhood of mind and
body. What makes the diffeence? Very
; largely the care of the stomach. In yontli
I and the full strength of manhood it doesn't
'. seem to matter how we treat the slomach.
W aluise it, overwork it, injuie it. We
' don't suffer from it much, liut when age
' comes the slomach is worn out. It can' i
prepare and distribute the needed nourish
. nient to the body, and the body, unnour
: ished, falls into senile decay, lir. Pierce's
' Golden Medical Discovery is a wonderful
I medicine for old people whose stomachs are
I I.... il.lt t ...I .1: ..
I nun wuuac uicMions are "poor.
' Its invigorating effects are felt bv mind as
i ii - i i.. ... i . .
wen as oouy, ii lases me sung lrom old
age, and makes old people strong,
"One thing that keeps young men down
is their fear of woik. They aim to find gen
teel occupations so thev can dress well n,,,l
j not soil iheir clothes, nnd handle things
I with the tips of their fingers. They do not
like to get their shoulders under the wheel,
nnd they prefer to give orders lo others, or
figure as masters and let mine one else do
the drudgery. Ther- is no doubt that indol
ence and laziness are the chief obstacles to
I their success." "Success."
I ....
"It is a mis ake to imagine that nil men
are equal," says the Manavunk Philosopher.
"Some men can make lots mtiru kind of
fools of themselves than others."
Don't iinagmj thnt the women who lived
in the Middle Ages were all middle-aged
women.
OASTOitlA.
Beari tha Kind You Have Always BougW
Blgoatnro
Soft
Harness
Tea eu mates font har
nm sa soft as s sIots
and ss tntwh M win bf
otlnc KI'H EK A liar.
ess Oil. Yoa can
lengthm Its MAt-msk It
last twlrs sa long a It
ordinarily woold.
EUREKA
Harness Oil
makes a poer looking- bar
tins Ilk new. Mxl ot
purs, hMrjr bottled oil, w
TMVInllv prepsrrnl to wlta
SUiod in weatber.
rerrw'
all si
In cans-
IMS.
Midi bj STANDARD OIL CO.
The February Lippincott's Magaiin
Every month I.ippiniotl's Magazine con
ta nt a complete novel fresh from a pen
which ban "ariived'' or one which i Riuri
to. John Strange Winter (Mis. Anlinr
Stannard) the author of February's novel,
needs no introduction to fiction readers.
Tins latent tale is cal cd "1 he Smn.lin
after the inletisting family of a poor I'tiglish
aitist A wealthy relative comes to her res
cue, and one daughter marries a man who
loves ihe other. There is a sharp contrast
between these two g'rls. The one becomes
an actirss; the other's life is a noble sacri
fice With such a plot John Strange Winter
is in her element and "The Standings" it
Clic-of her best novels
I ippincoti's Magazine this month sus
lains its lecord for striking sho t stories.
One of these, by I harles II. Caflin, is enti
tled "For the Honor of His Wife." An
other, by I'ercie W. Hart, entitled " I he
Abracadabra AITair," is a clever deteciive
s ory in which a line is followed through
amusing nnd appalling difficulties. Owen
Hall's tale. "A Dark Night's f idc," deals
with a thrilling rule through n jungle, nnd is
lold in the nlert style of the author of "In
the Track of ihe Storm."
Two important papers in the February
I ippinco't's compel attention. Cap am Les
lie j. I'.rry, late of the War Kecord-t Ollice,
nt Washington, writes about "Lincoln's Of
ficial Habit" (apropos of the birthday of
Lincoln, February II). This embodies
some hitherto unpublished letters from Pres
ident Lincoln to his (icnerals in the Held,
giving evidence of his punctiliousness, clear
ness and conciseness,
The oilier paper is the second part of Sid
ney Lanier's posthumous essay, "Music of
Shakespeare's Tunc. Part I. was published
in the January number of Lippincolt's Mag
azine. This is a readable version of facts
known only to students
A sympathetic poem by I, ZangwilL
called "K ind Children," heads the list of
veise in the February Lippincotl's. Accom
pnn.ing tins aie the poems '-In Winter," hy
Francis Sleme Palmer j "At Ocahd," by
Louise Driscoll; "Epitaph," bv Clarence
Urmy; and "At Winter's End," by Caleb
Young Rice
1 lie "Walnuts and Wine' department
bristles with fun, or quivers with anecdotes
touching and tender.
KAILK0AD NOTES-
PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD.
Mkxico and California. Fomty-kive
days' tour via Pennsylvania Raii.koau.
The Pennsylvania Railroad Personally
Conducted Tour to Mexico and California
which leaves New York and Philadelphia oa
February li ly special I ullman train.
covers a large and intensely interesting por
tion ot INortU America, embracing a great
part of Mexico, the beautiful coast resort, of
California, and on the return journey from
California, the Grand Canon of Arizona,
one of the great wonders of the country.
fourteen days will spent in Mexico and
nineteen in California. The Mexico and
California Special, to be used over ttie entire
trip, will be composed of the highest grade
I'ullman I'arlor, ninoking, Uining, Drawing-
room, Sleeping Compartment, and Observa
tion cars, heated by steam and lighted by
electricity. Kound-trip rate, covering all
necessary expenses during the entire trip,
if575 from all points on the Pennsylvania
Kaurond system east ot 1'itisburrr, and tfCTO
from Pittsburg. F'or the tour of Mexico
only the rate will be if 350, and for Cali-
lorina only, which will leave reliruary 25,
$375. For itineiary .and lull information.
apply to ticket agents, or address George W.
110yd, Assistant ucnernl Passenger Agent,
Broad Street Station, Philadelphia.
Jan. 30-2t-P11ILA.
& READING RAILWAY.
Lakewood-in-the Pines Florida'
Northernmost Kivai.. Lakewood, New
Jersey, has been steadily gaining in reputa
tion every year as a winter sanitarium, its
situation being close, enough to the sea to
he influenced by the warm atmosphere
evolved from the Gulf Stream, which its
softened and impregnated with a special
healthful fragrance, by passing through the
balmy New Jersey Pine lielt.
Apart from its name as a health resort,
Lakewood with its magnificent hotels, pleas
ant drives, golf links, etc., is well known as
an ultra fashionable pleasure resort during
the winter and early spring, with as good
or better attractions than the southern re
sorts and not necessitating a long journey
going or reluming
Lakewood is best reached Irom I'hiladel
phia and interior Pennsylvania by the Phila
delphia & Heading Route. Atlantic City
Railroad trains leaving Chestnut Street
Ferry, Philadelphia, weekdays only, 8 00,
8 45 A. M., 2. 00 and 4 15 p m., mnk' close
connection via Winslow Junction and Cea
tral Railroad of New Jersey 10 Lakewsod.
Through parlor car on 4.15 p. m. train.
Lots of women can't pass a mirror with
out a pause f r reflection.
OABtPOniA.
Bean the Ito Kind You Have Always Bought
Signature V y ZLSZZoT
of
ELY'8 CREAM BALM Is m positive ear
Apply Into ths nostrils. Jt ts quickly absorbed.
cents at Drarirleta or by mall ; samples luc, by mail
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