The Columbian. (Bloomsburg, Pa.) 1866-1910, July 09, 1903, Page 6, Image 6

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    THE COLUMBIAN, BLOOMSBURG, PA
CONDENSED DISPATCHES.
Matllt KrrnU of the Week Briefly
Chronicled.
Tb Bve weeks' strike nt John Dob
q'b Schuylkill mill bus prided.
The death list from the flood nt Jenn
Wtto. Tn., niny not exceed twenty-five.
WJiltaker Wright, tho London pro
aoter. Insists on returning to England
10 stand trial.
An Her In n Jersey City packing
(tant was caught In tho machinery and
vcelved fatal Injuries.
The government crop report shows
b week ending July 0 to be the most
Worublo of the season.
W. C. T. U. loaders ofter returning
torn the Geneva convention have do
red war upon Apostle Heed Smoot.
James Juvenal of riiilndolphin was
tefoated by Heresford In his lirst trial
cMt for the diamond sculls at Henley.
A peonage charge ho been made
t(ft!nst a Florida olllclal who Is alleged
O have 111 treated a sixteen-year-old
.tel.
The court, not a Jury, will decide the
alidlty of Millionaire Punsmulr's will
a a suit brought by Edna Wallace
Copper.
Tumdny, Jnlr T.
L. A. Moore, secretary of the city of
Dallas, Tex., was killed by his son.
More than 15,000 teachers have ar
ived in Hoston to attend convention.
A cloudburst In Terns has caused a
ttneteen foot rise In the Guadalupe
iver.
An attempt was made to wreck the
Colorado Springs power plant with dy
lamlte. The Venezuelan government has de
Ided to send an exhibit to the St. Louis
xposltlon.
Sir Thomas Upton has taken a num
' r of Ardnley society people on a trip
a the Erin.
Prince Adalbert of Germany after
ervlng at sea for a year will visit tho
it. Louis fair.
The kaiser's yncht Meteor was beat
n by tho Hamburg nt Lubock, The
mperor was Mrs. Goelet's guest.
Five buildings wore dostroyed In Os
ipee, K. II. A stable was saved by a
turning house being blown up with
lynamlte.
The United States transport Sumner,
vltb the Fourth infantry on board, has
en beached on the Luzon eoust. No
asualtles.
Onptnin Willard of the schooner Hai
ti Whitten of Gloucester, Mass., has
hot and killed one of his erew named
.'atrick Tetman at Cape Broyle.
The Japanese are mobilizing their
orces, and It is thought at Tientsin
hat in the event of a war with Russia
. -verything would favor the Japanese.
The concentration of Russian, Brit
sh, American and Japanese war ships
r the gulf of Fechlll has been declared
a parliament to hare no special ob
ect. Five hundred Turkish troops have
"oft the town of Kllhin to attack a
irge band of revolutionists who are
ncamped on an island in Lake Ama
oTa. A pilgrimage to the holy see in which
lergy and laymen from all parts of the
ountry were to take part and which
vas expected to leave New York on the
icw Ituliun royal mall steamer Lorn
ardla has been postponed.
Dr. R. B. Tarker, who was inspector
a the steamer Mount Vernon, was tak
n ill on the voyage up from Port Lie
ion and who was sent wlfh the vessel
'i the government quarantine station
t Ship Island. Mass., has died there
rotu yellow fever.
Ensign Huessner's sentence of four
ears' imprisonment and degradation
.nponed on him at Berlin for killing his
Id friend, Artilleryman Hartman, be
ftuse tho latter did not salute him
roperly, on the ground of the extreme
outh of the prisoner has been reduced
o two years and seven days' incoxcera
ion in a fortress.
Monday, July A.
Paul du Chuillu, explorer, left an cs
ate valued at $500.
The first automobile gymkhana was
. i feature of the fashionable doings la
.'aria.
A. M. Itoed boat W. C. Carnegie in
- he final for the chief cup at the Ek
vanok. golf tournament by 6 up and 8
play.
Richard Evelyn Byrd, fourteen years
- 4iL has completed a journey around
he world, made alone.
Emperor William and Trlnee Henry
.ere Mr. Cornelius Vanderbilt's guests
n the North Star.
George Gardner has defeated "Jack"
Joot in twelve rounds for the new
ght heavyweight class championship.
Instead of $10,000,000, as originally
tlmated, an appraisement filed gives
U.220.000 ns tho value of the late Dean
loffronn's estate.
Mauri Maffuuel. a youthful Tarry
iwn barber, has won a scholarship in
he New Tork university ottered by
ftas Helen Gould.
In a conflict between Turkish troops
nd Bulgarians near Vodunn, forty-six
tiles north of Salonika, the latter had
no killed and the Turks two wounded.
The sudden rlulng of Brush creek nt
rwln, Tu., caused by the cloudburst
ad the breuklng o,f the Oakford dam,
uused dumage in that vlclulty of sev
ral hundred thousand dollars.
Tha police depnrtinent of Toledo, O.,
las Issued an edict that the toy revolv
v must go and that any one using
hem or placing torpedoes on the street
or tracks or firing cannon crackors
rill be locked up.
A trolley car containing n number of
wssengers whs blown from the tracks
the Topoku (Kan.) city railway. Sev
eral powerful dynamlto bomhs had
wen placed on the tracks, and the
waning car exploded them.
"Ne fireworks must be set off on the
fourth" was the order of the chief of
!oUoe of Richmond, Va., wb feared
that viota might rtialt aecouat f
the spirit engendered by the street car
strike. His order, however, was Ig
nored. Scores of churches throughout the
great Kansas wheat belt around Tope
ka were closed, nnd the men and wom
en went Into the fields to help save tho
100,000,000 bushel crop now overripe.
In thirty counties 25,000 men worked
nt the harvest nil day.
During the progress of a terrific rain
storm nt Pittsburg four persons were
killed In an accident of most unnsunl
character. A large American Aug sus
pended from n grocery store became
soaked with the rain, and the high
wind blew It against nn electric light
wire which was carrying 2,000 volts.
The wire snapped under the pressure
nnd fell Into the street one end lodging
In a pool of water, charging It to a high
degree. Tour persons stepping Into this
water received electric shocks which
caused death.
Snlnrdny, J1y 4.
On Initiation of the Paelfle Postal Cn
ble company Archbishop Ireland of Kt.
Paul, Minn., sent messages of greeting
to Governor Taft and to Mgr. Guldl at
Manila.
Official netton declaring a strike on
all St. Louis Transit company lines was
taken at a meeting of 100 street rail
way employees representing the Amal
gamated Association of Street Railway
Employees of America.
A car on the Center line of tho Pitts
burg Railway company Jumped the
trucks on the Lincoln avenue bridge
and went over the bridge, falling to
Reeehwood boulevard, nearly a hun
dred feet below. Three were killed out
right and three probably fatally In
jured. B. L. Wright was accidentally snot
and killed on a passenger train nt Mc
Oeheo, Ark., by a boisterous negro pas
senger whom the porter was endeavor
ing to put off tho train. Robert Good,
the nogro. had threatened the porter,
and the latter drew a revolver, which
Good succeeded In taking from him nnd
firing. The bullet struck and Instantly
killed Wright.
Pence has been declared in the labor
wht which for two months has para
lyzed New York's building Industries,
resulting in losses to employers nnd
employed of $100,000,000. After a con
ference of twelve hours between repre
sentatives of twenty unions represent
ing 00,000 skilled workmen and the
members of the Employers' association
It was announced that a practical set
tlement of all difficulties bad been ef
fected. Friday, July 3.
The Pacific cable 1ms been completed
to Manila.
The plant of reduction works at Sil
ver City, N. M., has been burned; loss,
$100,000.
Two Chicago labor leaders have been
sent to jail for disregarding a strike in
junction. An American tulegraphlc apparatus
has been Inaugurated between Rome
and Naples.
Ard Patrick, the 1901 Derby winner,
has won the Princess of Wales' stakes
of f 10,000 at Newmarket.
Mrs. Anna Oppenheimer of Russull
vllle, Ky., has been charged with pois
oning her young baby at Cincinnati.
Congressman Hopkins told a Chicago
meeting that negroes ought to be sent
to congress by certain southern dis
tricts. Charles Alger, brother of Senator Al
ger, is 111 at the latter's Detroit homo.
He Is supposed to have been poisoned
by green goods men, ngninst whom he
hod worked as a Missouri postmaster.
Tharsday, July 2.
Two deaths are reported from heut in
Chicago.
A strike of smelter employees Is ex
pected in Denver.
An aged widow has been brutally
murdered near Vlnota, I. T.
Governor Odell and family have
started on a trip to Yellowstone pork.
Lteutennat McCue, accused of biga
my, has been detained at Fort Sheri
dan, 111.
Hurry orders have been given to fit
the army transport Bufort for sea at
San Francisco.
Berlin's exports to the United Statea
for the fiscal year reach $9,400,000, a
gain of nearly $1,200,000.
Postmaster Roberts of Brooklyn has
denied the report that there had been
a defalcation in the Brooklyn post of
fice. A conference of Jewish rabbis at De
troit, Mich., has urged the creation of a
board to whom change of 8abbth to
Sunday might be referred.
E. D. Wise, a New York water com
mission employee, was blown out of a
launch at Poughkeepsle by a gasoline
explosion and bud an arm burned.
Tho authorities at nolguin, a town
sixty-six miles northwest of Santiago,
have reported that an American named
Joseph K. Bradley haa been murdered
by robbers.
President Loubet has declined In ad
vance to receive a British Catholic del
egation in London whose members
wished to protest against French ex
pulsion of orders.
Charlie Evans, a negro, who was
charged with attempting to nssassl
nate Mr. Phillips nnd bis daughter at
Norway, was hanged and his body
riddled with bullets at Norway, S. C.
Two men charged with promoting a
sparring exhibition Illegally, six others
who, It was alleged, appeared in bouts
and the referee have been found guilty
in the Charlestown (Mass.) police court.
Thirteen thousand miners, members
of the Uuited Mine Workers of Ameri
ca, have ausponded work at Birming
ham, Ala., the old wage contruot hav
ing expired nnd a new oontruct sot
having been agreed upon.
In the United State court George D.
Oosby and Barnncas V. Cosby, farm
ers of Tallapoosa county, Ala., pleaded
guilty to the charge nt peonage and
were senteucod to serve one year aad a
ay In the AUaata penitentiary.
WASHINGTON
HAPPENINGS
.Timely and Interesting;Gossip from
! the National .Capital.
Prof, tlrll lioIlev II Hns Solred the
Problem of Areal Navigation
Why the Millionaire Flock
to Wimhlimton.
Washington. Alexander Grnlmm
Bell, not content with giving the world
the telephone,
and with giving
the denf and dumb
the menns of com
raunvention wi'th
their fellows, has
set out In the ripe
ness of fine old
age to add to these
achievement an
other which may
eait them both in
the shade.
For, great as is
the telephone nnd
Prof. Bell s Dream. beneficent ns It is
to enable the deaf to heur, those two
discoveries must yield preference to
the man who transforms the nir hi to a
medium of transportation and com
merce, overcomes the limitations of
grnvityand enables men to fly.
Jt bus been known among Trof. Bell's
r.l.jniTtnn (haf frit- anvprnl
' . , , M ...... K
years lie lias uuen woriving on i hc
lem of the flying machine. Hohassaid,
little about it even nmong his1 inti
mates; for he knows better than most
men how to keep his own counsel.
With the spirit of a true scientist he
has been experimenting at his north
ern summer home with kites of differ
ent plan and shape untH lie has nt last
discovered n form which he Isconfklent
will work. The striking thing about it
is that starting out with the orilinnry
form of n boy's toy kite composed' of
two cross bars and experimenting suc
cessively with box kites and oriental
devices be has, through mathematical
calculations as to lifting and motive
power nnd stability, hit upon a device
which exactly resembles theoutspreud
wings of a bird. This kite, with Ita
four triangular sides in the shape of
0 tetrahedron, he finds can be com
bined almost indefinitely with khs of
similar shape and size until together
they form a mammoth kite, the weight
of which in relation to the wing sur
face is such that one of them is capa
ble of moving through the aiT in a
breeze no stronger than is needed for
a boy's toy. Such a flying machine
Prof. Bell believe can carry sufficient
motive power together with human
freight without weighing Itself down.
He believes that under the guidance of
a helm it can be made to rise and glide
and gently fall without regard to the
direction of the wind providing a
means of rapid transit swifter than a
railroad or steamboat, and more se
cure. The Chinese Minister.
Sir Chcn-tung Liang-cheng. the
new Chinese minister, sets out to
make good the
loss of the la
mented Wu-tung-fanfr,
who, when
he first came to
Washington was
a revelation to
us of oriental ca
pacity. Chen-tung not
only possesses
Wu's tact h n d
quickness of per
ception nn easy
adaptability to
American ways
Chn Tung.
-what Wu
but he has in addition
lacked noble, birth and aristocratic
training. He has also what Wu
lucked nn American education;
though It is hard to see how even
with this advantage he enn hope to
excel the late minister in delicate ap
preciation of American traditions
iiuu uiiimg (U inougni.
Chen-tung is only 40 years old, but
he has seven children, three of whom
nre now in Washington with him.
His wife died two years ago, and his
mother superintends tho household
j quire auer trie insiuon or Aineri
, can widowers.
He has weathered one little dip
lomatic squall already. He was
China's special ambassador nt the
queen's jubilee In London, and Vic
toria knighted him. It pleases him
to use the prefix "Sir," which she be
stowed upon him, nnd so he is en
tered in the diplomatic list. Some of
', the other diplomats objected on the
ground thnt this was not according
to precedent, as "Sir" wns not a
title of his own government, but the
Chinese knight kept his lance poised,
' and he has won.
A Home of Wealth.
In the past ten years so many
lundsome houses have gone up in
Washington that
tho swell resi
dence section is
almost trans-
lorineu. it is
W I quite the fashion
for those who
have made their
millions in the
fninitiry vAn-in..
1' --In lumber ramps
in-riinps jn
soap factories to
come to Wash
ington to spend
them.
Homa of "Tom
Walsh.
The nationnl
cnpital has greater attractions for
' most of these than Manhattan
m - 111
I tm
" Sir"
IT 1
Island. If for no other reason. Wash
Ington is a good place for n rich man
to live, because he has here the full
est protection of the federal govern
ment. More than one millionaire
with nn eye to the future has figured
this out no mobs, no nests of an
archy, no discontented laborers
and above nil the overshadowing:
protection of the. government, of the
t'nited States with a regiment, of
cavalry just across the river at Fort
Myer.
Of course, there nre other reasons
plenty of them the he?t of so
ciety, cosmopolitan nnd dazzling,
with n comparatively easy entree;
the fascination of living at the very
renter of things literature, science,
nrt and splendid opportunities for
marriageable daughters.
Massachusetts avenue is now the
swell residence street of the city,
nnd it Is getting to be more so all
the time. The farther out the grent
boulevard extends the more splendid
becomes the mansions continually
added to its attractions. The Letters,
Alexanders, Bonrdmnns, Pattersons,
Townsenils have all spent fortunes on
Massachusetts avenue near Dupont
circle within the past ten years and
already their palaces are 'Iw.irfted by
the latest creations of newer million
aires. (Inrk, of Montana, who revels
in his reputation ns the Copper Monte
Cristo, has cleared away the old
Stewart castle on Dupont circle in
order to replnee It with a dazzling
erentlon In marble, nnd nlrendy
Thomas V. Walsh, n richer man than
Clark though not so flashy tho
mining prince pur excellence is com
pleting a million-dollar house which
for many .years to come will be
one of the architectural marvels of
Washington.
A Itepresentntlve Type.
"Tom" Walsh, as he is commonly
called, is an unspoiled child of genius.
With all his mil
lions, coming to
him in a way which
might well turn
the head of n simple-minded
Irish
man, he is' as un
affected nnd genu
ine as he was in
the old days when
he was sweating
over a pick unci
pan.
Most people be
lieve that Tom
Walsh's money
Walsh in Early Days.
"came easy," that is not true. He
worked for it n hard as any other day
laborer for that is how he started
and he figured as closely to accumulate
his pile as the thriftiest storekeeper
who ever sold supplies to the miners.
He labored along with grim determina
tion for years before the luck enme,
and he earned every cent he owus. Now
thnt he has his millions he menns to
enjoy them in his own way and there
are plenty of people with higher fam
ily connections nnd lower bank ac
counts who are quite willing that he
should.
It is only three or four years since
he first came to Washington, and in
that time he has managed through
hear good nat ure to win his wuy Into
the very best circle, so that now the
Walshes run have the pick of anything
that is going socially. He shows good
business sense also by Investing heavrly
in Washington real estate, neis build
ing a business skyscraper and is at
work on the plans for a great hotel, be
sides the fine house which has risen
out on Massachusetts avenue.
But with all his interests, he is never
too busy to administer an Irish "jolly"
to a posing friend. The story is that
Walsh's first big find, "The Last
Chance," came to him through a dream
thnt he dreamt one night of striking
gold in a certain spot and next day he
went there and struck it. Walsh denies
this.
Moriran's Mnaeam.
J. Tierpont Morgan is planning to
establish in Washington a national
111 use urn of nrt be
side which none of
the existing art
galleries either of
the capital or the
metropolis will be
"in it,"
For years Mr.
Morgan has been
collecting paint
ings, bric-a-brio
and antiques from
every quarter of
the world. He has
had his agents and
J. P. Morean. ex port sill all sorts
of strange places and he has finally
gathered everything he has bought in
one big collect ion in L,onlon mere to
await the time when he can bring the
whole lot to the United Slates and d'
vote it to the service of the public.
The obstacle in the way just now is
the high duty on work of nrt, the
owners of which nre expected by the
DJngley tnrrft' to pay handsomely for
the privilege of bringing their luxuries
into the United States. If he should
bring his whole collection in now und
pay duty on It the cost would bo nearly
doubled before the goixls were tin
packed in New York. Hut a way out
has been suggested by nn ingenious
body, who i anxious to see this museum
established in Washington. It is pro
posed to admit the priceless collection
under the defination "household ef
fects" without paying any duty at all
just as if it consisted of pokers,
tongs and kitchen utensils. It is tie'
clared that tble would be quhe within
the law, otherwise congress will be
asked next winter to puss a special net
suspending the tariff in this particular
case on the ground that such suspen
sion is for the public good.
LOUIS A. COOLISDGE.
Wfcen Sandow poses and the muscles
ridge his back and knot his anus, we
think we have before us tho very secret
of strength in those magnificent muscles.
But we haven't. Starve Snndow, or,
what is practically the some thing, let
him be dyspeptic, and his muscle would
soon fail. Strength is made from food
properly digested and assimilated, and
no man is stronger than his stomach, lo
calise when the stomach Is diseased di
gestion and assimilation are imperfect.
Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery
cures diseases of the stomach and other
organs of digestion and nutrition. It
enables the perfect digestion and assim
ilation of food so that the body is nour
ished into perfect health and strength.
"I hnt what mv phyldnn caltrd lntirftlon.
He ftnvr tne medicine for the Irouhle but it ilil
me no Rtxxl," writes Mr. W. H. Wells, of Wll
Inrd, N. C. "1 wrote to Dr. Pierce nnd utoted
mv raw. He aent me a descriptive list nnd hv-
Eii-nlc rules, I curried out thrse as best 1 cnnM,
ought six bottles of his 'Golden Medical li
covery' nnd commenced Inking it. A few dnys
later I noticed n irrent chnnge. Felt like a new
man. liefore I began the use of the '(".olden
Medicnl Discovery' I suffered grently with pain
in stomach, my nerves seemed all 'ma-down,'
I wns very thin in flesh, but uow cad eat heartly
end sleep good at night."
Dr. Tierce's Common Sense Medical
Adviser is sent free on receipt of stamps
to pay expense of mailing only. Send
twenty-one one-cent stamps for the paper-covered
book, or thirty-one stamps
for the cloth-bound volume. Address
Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y.
RAILROAD NOTES.
01 jntoresl to Our Many Readers and the
Public is Genoral.
Special Sunday Excursions to
the Sea Shore via the Penna. Railroad.
The Pennsylvania Railroad Com
pany has arranged for four low-rate
Sunday excursions for the present
from Lock Haven, Lewisburg, Wil
liamsport, Mocanaqua, Sunbury, Dau
phin, and principal intermediate sta
tions to Atlantic City, Cape May,
Ocean City, Sea Isle City, Avalon,
Anglesea, Wildwood, or Holly Beach,
on Sundays, J u'y 12 and 26, August
9 and 23, 1903.
Excursion tickets, good going and
returning on regular trains within five
days, will be sold at very low rates.
Tickets to Atlantic City will be sold
via the Delaware River Bridge Route,
the only all-rail line, or via Market
Street Wharf, Philadelphia.
Stop-over can be had at Philadel
phia, either going or returning, within
linvt of ticket.
For information in regard to specific
rates and time of trains consult hand
bills, or apply to agentf, or E. S.
Harrar, Division Ticket Agent. Wil-
liamsport, Pa.
Tour to the Pacific Coast via
the Pennsylvania Railroad, account
G. A. R. National Encampment.
On account of the National En
campment of the Grand Army ot the
Republic at San Frar.cisco, Cal., Au
gust 17 to 22, the Pennsylvania Rail
road Company offers a personally
conducted tour to the Pacific Coast
at remarkably low rates.
Tour will leave Philadelphia, and
other points on the Pennsylvania
Railroad east of Pittsburg, Thursday,
August 6, by special train of the
highest grade Pullman equipment.
An entire day will be spent at the
Grand Canyon of Arizona, two days
at Los Angeles, and - visits of a half
day or more at Pasadena, Santa Bar
bara, Del Monte, and San Jose.
Three days will be spent in San Fran
cisco during the Encampment. A
day will be spent in Portland on the
return trip, and a complete tour ol
the Yellowstone Tark, covering six
days, returning directly to destination
via Billings and Chicago, and arriving
Philadelphia, September 1.
Round-trip rate, covering all ex
penses for twenty-seven days, except
three days spent in San Francisco,
$215; two in one berth, $200 each
Round-trip rate, covering all ex
penses to Los Angeles, including
transportation, meals in dining car,
and visits to Grand Canyon and Pasa
dena, and transportation only through
California and returning to the east
by October 15, via any direct route,
including authorized stop-overs, $115;
two in one berth, $105 each. F.e
turning via Portland $11 additional
will be charged.
For full information apply to Ticket
Agents, or Geo. W. Boyd, General
Passenger Agent, Broad Street Sta
tion, Philadelphia, Pa. 9 21.
Seashore Excursions via the
Philadelphia & Reading Railway. The
Philadelphia and Reading Railway
will sell special excursion tickets to
Atlantic City, Cape May, Ocean City
or Sea Isle City as follows:
Thursday, July 16, and 30, August
13 and 27, ten-day tickets.
Rates from Williamsport, $5.00 ;
Milton, Danville, Bloomsburg, Cata
wissa, Lewisburg, Sunbury and Slia
mokin, $4 50$ Mt. Carmel, $4.20 j
Ashland, Girardville, Shenandoah,
Mahanoy City and Tamaqua, $3.50.
Proportionate rates from intermediate
ticket stations. Stopoff allowed at
Philadelphia going and returning with
in time limit of ticket. For time of
trains and further information, see
small flyers nt all Philadelphia and
Read:ng ticket offices.
Niagara Fai.i.s Excursions, Low
rate vacation trips via Penna. Railroad.
The Pennsylvania Railroad Com
pany has selected t,he following dates
for its popular ten-day excursions to
Niagara Falls: July 24, August 7 and
2t, September 4 and 18, and October
2 and 16. On these dates the special
train will leave Sunbury 12.58 P. M.
arriving Niagara Falls at 9 45 P. M.
Excursion tickets, good for return
passage on any regular train, exclusive
of limited express trains, within ten
days, will be sold at $6.90 from Sun
bury and Wilkesbarre; and at propor
tionate rates from principal points.
A stop-over will be allowed at Buffalo
within limit of ticket returning.
The special trains of Pullman par
lor cars and day coaches will be run
with each excursion running through
to Niagara Falls. An extra charge
will de made for parlor-car seats.
An experienced tourist agent and
chaperon will accompany each excur
sion. For descriptive pamphlet, time of
connecting trains, and further inform
ation apply to nearest ticket ac;ent, or
address Geo. W. Boyd, General Pas
senger Agent, Broad Street Station,
Philadelphia.
Reduced Rates to the Seashore.
The Pennsylvania Railroad Com
pany has arranged fir four low-rate
ten-day excursions for the present sea
son from Lock Haven, Trov, Belle
fonte, Williamsport, Mocanaqur,
Sunbury, Shenandoah, Dauphin,
and principal intermediate stat ons
(including stations on branch roatv),
to Atlantic City, Cape May, O .ean
City, Sea Isle City, Avalon, Anglesea,
Wildwood, or Holly Beach, on Thur.
days, July 9 and 23, August 6 and 20
OS
Excursion tickets, good to return
by regular trains within ten days, will
be sold at very low rates. Tickets to
Atlantic City will be sold via the
Delaware River Bridge Route, ihe
only all-rail line, or via Market Street
Wharf, Philadelphia
Stop over can be had at Philadel
phia, either goin or returning, with
in limit of ticket.
For information in regard to specific
rates and time of trains consult hand
bills, or apply to agents, or E. S. Har
rar Division Ticket Agent, William
sport, Pa. 2 2t
CENSUS OF DIVORCE-
Chicago Leads, aad has Double Ihe Record
of the Metropolis.
The census figures show a total of
51,538 divorced persons in the United
States. This includes only those who
have remained so. The number of
divorces, of course is many times
greater, for an immense majority who
break away from marriages through
the divorce couits remarry very soon
afterward. As expected, the women
are in a large majority, being 32,203
to 18,384 men, according to tha New
Orleans limes-Democrat. This is
explained by the fact that women,
when they are freed from the bonds
of matrimony, are less likely to run
into them again than men. The
latter believe that a second venture
may bring them better luck that
they simply made a mistake in f ?ir
choice and try again. This rule
more divorced women than men pre
vails throughout the Union, Omaha
being one of the few exceptions.
Again, as expected, Chicaso leads,
with a total of 4,341 divorced resi
dents 1,873 men and 2,468 women.
This is twice as many as New York,
which is second on the lis, and nearly
three times as many as Philadelphia.
Proportionately, however, San Fran
cisco is worse, having 1,700 divorced
persons. If their relative population
be considered, this is eight times as
bad as New York. Other cities with
an excess of divorced persons are
indianapolis, Kansas City and Louis
ville. New Orleans which is twelfth
in population, is sixteenth in divorce
statistics 279 men, 530 women; total
809. Detroit makes a better show
ing, and Buffalo as would scarcely
be expected of the city of Burdicic
and Pennell has one of the best
records in the country, with only one
divorced person to each thousand of
population, whereas Peoria, 111., has
one to each hundred, and is the cham
pion in the matter of marital incom
patibility. Did It Kver Occur to You
that your teeth are given to you for a pui
pose ? If people would spenil more time at
their meals and eat (00 I which requires chew
ing, they would have lets use for physicians.
uIt '8 a new prepared cereal food which has
the natural flavor of the grain, and on account
o' its being cooked twice is easily digested,
"f " ia not a mush, but" a delightful, ciisp
cuieal of great food value. Try "Jf" ad
you will like "If. Sold by grocers. 2-IJ Ijr
Despise not small things. A
cheap fire-cracker can drown the
voice of the most eloquent orator.