The Columbian. (Bloomsburg, Pa.) 1866-1910, August 10, 1905, Page 6, Image 6

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    THE COLUMBIAN. BLOOMSBURG, PA
w
i
Comic Opera Armies at rtaytf
and Santo Domingo.
A COUP BY GEN. JIMENEZ
Anecdotes of Some Queer Doltim of
the Wfst Indian Soldiers ar: Mi-
rlnec Bit of German Hi.-r.r-Novel
Ways of Collecting Debts
In Santo Domingo and Haytl.
The last revolution In Santo Iinmln
f against the government of l'n'sl
at Wes y Oil Is only one of many
which bave taken place In that un
happy country since the assassination
af President Heureaux In I!K). Hour
Mux was an iron-hearted, heavy-hand-A
tyrant who kept the public peace
hy the pimple expedient of hanging
r shooting all the turbulent charac
ters he could lay his hands upon. Since
Ms death nobody has arisen strong;
aongh to preserve order among the
aaruly Dominicans.
Jlmlnez became President after the
aeath of Iletireaut. He was deposed
ay his own Vice President, Vaque,
who, la turn, was kicked out by Wos
J Oil, against whom the present revo
Nrden Is directed, .liniinez Is a
wealthy man, having made
several
aailliona of dollars an a merchant In
Saato Domingo. When In power he
aweenraged the development of bis
oewntry by American capital, and that
waa the main cause of his downfall,
atatarally he Is well liked by the
Aaaarlcass who live la Sumo Domingo
at hare pecuniary Interests there. As
Oamlnlcan politicians go, he Is able
aM anllghtenei, but he is not a good
SgMar a fatal drawback for a man
et hla aspirations. lie generally stays
ka New York when out of power, puts
sa the money and lets other people
the lighting
The stories told of the comic opera
afaales of Uaytl and Han to Domingo
at noetly true. An Englishman had
aoen tract to supply coal to the steam
a which called at the port of Santo
B)omlngo City. Three or four hundred
Oemlnleans worked for blm, carrying
Aa coal on their beads In baskets
'torn the wharf to the steamers. For
this work they were paid 25 cents n
lay. One day one of them nsked for
i holiday, saying he had to aitend a
."view of the troops.
Tou are one of the soldier, tlicn?"
aked the Englishman.
"No, senor," the half-naked mulatto
-eplled. "I am a general, and 1 have
a lead my brigade at the review."
The navies of llayti and Santo bo
il In go ore even queerer than the
urmics. The writer was once invited
.board the Haytlan flagship Cietoa
'lerrot, which was destroyed by the
rerman gunboat ra n;, r -.j c,in-
Ives. The main ib- - v.s-s literally
i farmyard, l'lgs, .a i f.iw!s and
log ran about In tin; wildest eon
ualon. Coal was stacked on dc k,
nd the ensine room would have driv
n McAndrew or any other go xl
cotch engineer frantic It waa so
.vered with dirt and runt. Hut the
lack and mulatto ollin is or. the quar
3rdeck atoned for all shortcomings,
'hey were gorgeous to behold, in their
mlforms of white, blue, crim . . .;1
iw, silver and gold. Some c : i! 'in
ere real "horse marines," wearing
dutifully polished llossian liors
nd spurs!
The foreign residents of Pori-nu-rlnee
tell a story of 11 ay id's jrrcai
it naval engagement. It happened
veral years ago, before the buildiug
the Cretea-PIerrot. Ilaytl's navy
ion consisted of three leaky, rusty
d tramp steamers, armed with a f-w
iclent cannon, which were far mm-e
mgerous to the gunners than to tiie
iemy.
Germany, having dunned Uaytl in
-tin for an indemnity owing on ac
uat of outrages committed on Ger-
an subjects during a revolution, at
.st sent a squadron of three ships to
illect the money. The Geraaan com-10-dore
delivered his ultimatum. "You
ust pay the money before noon," he
ili. "or I shall take your ships."
The President and his Cabinet were
aant. They felt sure that their
-ava admiral and his sailors could
anqulsh the enemy with horrible
-aughter.
Punctually at noon the shores of
le harlKir were lined with people
jltlng to see the glorious victory.
. reaently they saw the German ships
.'.uttlng out to sea, chased by the In
inclble armada of Uaytl. Patriotic
athuslasm waa at boiling point. Rut
hat was this? The gallant admiral
..id his heroic men were observed
amplng over the sides of their
alps Into the sea and swimming to
.ird shore. A glance through .'!
eiesoope revealed the horrid truth.
;'lie Haytlan vessels were not pursu
tig. They were being towed out to
.a!
When the admiral landed, with his
ne plumage bedraggled and spoiled,
.a said that the Germ.ins had boarded
snip unawares ami captured It
liiia he was mapping out his plans
' r'the glorious victory, lie didn't
tiinU it was fair.
The President and his Cabinet imd
run, hot foot, to the German Mln-
ter nnd promise to pay the l;i,leni-!
it:ty at once If he would call the thips .
ack. And, as the last straw to break !
telr national pride, they were Qbllg-
' I to borrow the money for th In-
;;mnlty from a German merchant at
4 usurious rate of Interest, lie was
.rie of the very Germans agtlust
v'nom the outrages complained of had
fen committed, so he got his profit
.1 paying the money from one po.-ket
i.; the oti . r. i
pf-Ht
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inhmmii
Survey of Mason and Dixon's
Line Lately Completed.
THE ORIGINAL MARKERS.
The Work When Flrat Done Extended
Over the Period of 8lxteen Years,
from 1763 to 1779 Much Trouble
Was Encountered with the Indi
ana. Mason and Dixon's line has just
been surveyed for the first time since
the scientists whose names It com
memorates traced It, 140 years ago.
The work now completed was done
under the direction of a Joint com
mission representing Pennsylvania
and Maryland. This line, which be
came historic ns the division between
the slave States and the free States,
was originally marked by stones or
other designations placed one mile
apart. But In the course of time
many of the markers disappeared, and
disputes as to local boundaries arose.
Pennsylvania and Maryland each ap
propriated 15,000 for n new survey of
the line, nnd work was begun In April.
1901. W. O. Hodgklns, of the Pnlted
States Coast and Geodetic Survey, be
ing In charge of the corps of engi
neers. As was the case with most of the
land grants made by the British
crown In the aeventeenth century,
William Penn and Lord Baltimore
found that their respective provinces
of Pennsylvania and Maryland appar
ently overlapped each other. For fifty
years much lawlessness prevailed
alone the border because of the
boundary disputes, and the settlers
did not know to whom they owed al
legiance. Finally, In 1700, the pro
prietaries of the two provinces em
ployed Charles Mason and Jeremiah
Dixon, two celebrated astronomers of
London, to fix the boundary line. They
began work In 1763. In June, 17A6.
when the party bad reached the top
of the Little Alleghany Mountains, 100
miles from the starting point, the In
dians assumed a threatening attitude.
Although the surveyors seemed to be
peaceable, the red men could not un
derstand why the palefaces should
cut this road through the forest, or
why some of them spent much of the
night In gazing at the stars through
brass cylinders. Finally the Indians
forbade further progress. Then at a
cost of .VX a council of the Six Na
tions was convened In New York, In
June, 1707, and permission was se
cured to continue the work. Tbe coun
cil sent a party of braves to art as
eJtort to Mason and Dixon, nnd the
survey was resumed; but in Septem
ber, when the Monougahela was
reached, the Indians again grew rest
less, and Mason and Dixon were
obliged to abandon their task twenty
four miles from their gonl. In 177!t
other engineers completed that part of
the line between Pennsylvania nnd
what was then Virginia, but is now
West Virginia.
Mason and Dixon were both .elect
ed members of the American Philoso
phical Society. They returned to Eng
land, and later were sent to the Capo
of Good Hope to observe the transit
of Venus. Dixon died In F.ngland in
1777, but Mason came to Philadelphia,
where he died In 17S7.
It Is the portion of Mason and
Dixon's line that extends as far ns the
western limits of Maryland, which
has Just been resurveyed. Some of
the original boundary stones were
found to be still In place. They had
been chiseled In England from lime
atone, and weigh 500 pounds each,
being four and one-half feet high and
one foot square. On one side la the
letter "P," and on the other the let
ter "M." Every -Ufth stone bore the
coat-of-arms of the two proprietaries.
Mr. Ilodgkln's men endeavored to
trace the stonea that were missing,
and succeeded In recovering a large
number. Borne were doing duty as
doorsteps, some were in bake-ovene,
one served as a curbstone In Clear
sprng. Md.. and two had been used in
building a church along the national
pike. - The old markers in many In
stances bora curious inscriptions,
some carred by soldiers of the Federal
and Confederate armies during the
campaigns of the civil war. Every
one of these stones that could be se
cured was placed In position on the
boundary line. If broken, the pieces
were clamped together. The stones
were set In a bed of concrete, to guard
against future removal. I
In a few localities a half dozen or
more of these stones were found In
proximity. This leads to the belief
that possibly they were not put to ac
tual use as boundary markers. It Is
known that the full number of stones
required by Mason and Dixon waR Im
ported, but in conveying thera west
ward through the forests, so many
difficulties were encountered, it is sup
posed, that a portion of the consign
ment was abandoned along the road;
nnd In the course of years settlers
found these stones useful for a variety
of purposes other than that for which
they were intended. This theory Is
substantiated by the fact that the
western part of Mason nnd Dixon's
line was found to be marked princi
pally by mounds or wooden posts, few
Stones being discovered.
During the survey many interesting;
stories came to light In connection
with Maon and Dixon's line, lu
Ilartford County, Maryland, where
one of the stones was found to bo
broken, it is generally believed by the
people that the stone was suddenly
severed on the day when Boutb Caro
lina seceded from the Union.
WOMAN'S SENSE OP HONOR.
Dr. Van Dyke Says Collective Life
la Needed to Develop It.
There Is one good result which I
firmly believe girls are going to get
out of their collective life, and that Is
a fuller development of the sense of
honor. This Is a delicate subject.
Every one knows that women are
generally better thnn men. Their
standards of purity and temperance
and reverence and kindness and solf
sacrifice are higher, and they are more
in enmest about living up to them.
But one thing Is lacking a clearer
conception and a stronger sense of
that tine flower of fair dealing which
Is called honor.
Women are Inclined (remember, I
am speaking collectively, and with
full exceptions) to think somewhat
lightly of obligations which rest mere
ly upon a tacit understanding and
mutual confidence. They are not
trained to a state of things In which
a nod of the bead amounts to a bind
ing contract, and a gesture of the
hand Is a promise to pay pood money.
They have so long enjoyed the privi
lege of changing their minds that
they regard It as a reserved right,
only surrendered when they have ac
tually signed a document. Within the
limits of the law they will do their
best to jret out of things that they
do not like. It Is not easy for them
to see why they should not take an
advantage when It Is for their Inter
est to do so. They have a tendency
to regard the states of love and war
aa perpetual and universal, and to
deal with their rivals and their ene
mies according to the old maxim
which says that everything is fair un
der those conditions.
College life sometimes develops a
peculiar form of self-importance
which cannot be regarded as agree
able or useful either In its masculine
or in Its femine form. It may be
called the academic vanity; and It
comes from mistaking the little world
of college for the big world to which
It Is only one of the vestibules. Yon
will see, every now and then, a young
person who has made this mistake;
a collegian, whose college spirit Is a
form of self-complacency, and who
exercises a bland contempt or a pain
ful condescension toward all outsid
ers; a prize-winner or a class idol
whose successes have resulted in a
visible enlargement of the cranial cir
cumference. Girls as well as men
are subject to the attacks of this bacil
lus of the big head. The mcgacep
halous microbe Is less frequent smong
girls than among men, and Its effects
are likely to be of shorter duration.
They seldom last more than two or
three years after graduation. As a
rule, I think that you will llnd that
girls who have had the benefit of the
collective life are characterized by a
certain straitihtforwardnesa and level
headedness which make thera easy to
get on with. Supercilious airs and
self-complacent assumptions are
more rare among them than among
the girls whose experience of life has
been confined to the mirror-lined
apartments of a luxurious home and
the echoing solitudes of what Is called
soclety."-I.r. Henry van Dyke.
Harper's Ita.ar,
Roads of Columbia.
The railway of the country, appar
ently, amount to about 4(K) miles, but
no two authorities or maps agree as
to their exact location or length. The 1 Rood "Ctiou and some special : m
longest stretch of continuous track j cles, which are interesting as w 11
Is less than seventy miles In length, as forceful and instructive. "The
and there is no such thing as a trunk
line anywhere In the country, al
though several have been "projected"
during the last twenty years.
There are but a few miles of dirt
road in the entire country on which
any wheeled vehicle can be used, and
the chief arteries of travel are still
the mule paths. Colombia Is said to
have a standing army of 0,000 men or Socialism," by Charles Q. De
and a navy consisting of three small France, are meaty in content,
gunboats and one cruiser. Among the short stories, Agnes
The Department of Panama has no Louise Provost's "The Negligible
more natural connection with Colom- Quantity" is one of the summer's
Sat coruntr STS STiS ; " W
and. South of the isthmian railway. b,?W a 1 those capitalistic enter
which crosses It from Colon to Pm8. I P"ses that make the safety of human
ma, Is a tropical wilderness of miss- llfe secondary to the accumulation
matlc swamps and broken hills, travel of wealth. The number is bright
through which Is dangerous if not Ian- j w'tQ bits of humor and wit and
possible, even to the half-savage na- contains several very good short
tives who people Its remote shores. ' poems. (Ten cents, lorn Watsetfs
The climate about the Cbagres Itlver
Is typical of most of this southerly
Jungle, which effectually shuts off Co
lon and Panama from the South
American mainland.
Pall. J A. . I I
. . I, ,. . '
Though practically unknown to the
world at large, the falls of Iguazu
stand second only to Niagara. The
Iguazu Itlver forms the boundary be-
tween Argentina and Prazll. Twelve
miles above its Junction with the Pa-
!Tha, ,rlrrTHd b0,?,,S a',m08t K
right ansles. The main volume of
water, moving
with great velocity
round the Inner or Prazlllan hank
v. . . 1
rushes into a long, narrow gorge, at
one point In which the waters make
a clear leap of 210 feet. This gorge
doeB not Intercept the whole volume
of the river water, and the surplus
currents rush out past It Into tho wide
elbow formed by the bend, descend-
lng In two leaps of Ksi feet ench In
the horseshoe called the Argentine
Falls. The distance from where the
waters enter the ltrasslliun pit to their
last cascade on the Argentine side Is
6,000 feet-E.change.
A Subterfuge. I
Sharpe I wonder why that Baltl-
more girl wished to be married up In
a balloon?
WUeolton rrobably she had boast-
ed that she wouldn't marry the nest
nun on earth.-CUcago News.
DON'T BE HYPNOTISE),
Hoodwinked, hoodooed, or over-persuaded
Into ui't'ffiliitir a stilntituto for Doctor
Pierre's Favorite Prescription with lis
record of nearly 40 years, embracing
hundreds of thousands of cures of
woman's peculiar ailments. It's the only
remedy for woman's Ills sold by drug
gists, that Is not. full of " liooe " poor
whisuv. or hail coho .
A guarantee of Jiooo Is offered that
"Favorite I'rescrlpt.lon " contains no alco
hol, opium or other harmful drug. Keeps
In sny climate.
"Favorite Prescription " Is a powerful
Invigorating tonic, and I mparts streniiili
to tlin whole system and to the womb
and Its appendage In particular. For
overworked, "worn-out." "run-down." de
bilitated teachers, milliners, dressmak
ers, seamstresses, "shoo cirls." house
keepers, nursing mothers, nnd feeble
women generally. Dr. Pierce s Havnrilo
Prescription Is the greatest earthly boon,
being uucciualcd as an appetizing cordial
and restorative tonic.
It's an Insult to your Intelligence for a
dttaler to attempt to palm otf upon you
an alcoholic nuilltnlc for this world
famed medicine. You knmo what you
want. It's his business to mrrt that
vniit. When bo urges some nnistitittc
he's thinking of the largur prolit he'll
make not of your welfare.
SERfl nnfl HVRN AWAY, In copies of
JU(UUU The People s Common 8enio
Mndlcal Advlnrr. a book Hint sold to thu ex
tent of A00.0UU rople a few
rprs iko. at 11.50 txr copy.
.n-t year wh lavo away
:W.00 worth of thou Invalua
ble luoks. This year we ahull
Vive away Sw.oco worth of
them. Will you Hharn In this
hrntflt? If an. send only 21
otm-rent stamps to cover cost
of mailing only for hook In
Miff papercoTurs,orSl stamp
for cloth-hound. Addn lr.
K. V. Pierce. Buffalo. N. Y.
If out of health, write to old Pr. Pierce.
He will send you good, fatherly, profes
sional advice without charge.
By.,. These suirar coated llttl
HViiiV Pellets are (he smiillest. the
KaWcXo uaitlest to take, and the eaHicHt
In the way they act No crlp
iBff, no violence, no disturbance to the vy
tm. dlel or occupation. Thtr am tiie rlgl
I Uttl Uw Pilla, Srat put up by old lr.
B. V. Plere. or 40 years ao. They bar
km much laaltatcd hut. Mvar wjualed.
Tkey cobm In Ttala. aJwaya fresh and relia
ble: eonTMlMt vast-pocket ramady.
Institute For Farmers.
Department of Agriculture Arrangit For
Four Hundred Meeting!.
Dates mid speakers for 400 farm
ers' institutes, to be held uuder the
auspices of the Pennsylvania De
partment of Agriculture during the
season of 1905-6, have been arrang
ed by Deputy Secretary Martin.
The state has been divided into
six sections, and a corps of three
lecturers will be sent into each sec
tion. These lecturers include many
well known authorities on agri
cultural subjects.
Deputy Secretary Martin has ar
ranged also to conduct a series of
practical schools of instruction in
agriculture, each school to continue
from three to five days, lor the pur
pose of giving actual object lessons
in the more important lines of fann
ing operations adaptable to the
. conditions in Pennsylvania.
'Tom Watson's" For Angost,
The hot weather hasn't cooled off
Tom Watson's editorials in the An-
gust number of his magazine-uot to
any considerable extent. Nor has
j his serious illness impaired the viKor
or lessened the fearlessness of his
attacks upon the national evils.
However, the August Tom Watson's
makes a concession to the heat of
summer by an unusual quantity of
; Money Show," by Frederick
Uphani Adams, told in story form,
is a stinging and bitter satire against
the dollar worship of our moneyed
classes and its attendant social and
individual decadence. "Should the
government Own the Railways?"
y J- A. Edgerton, and "Populism
Magazine. New York.
Here le Relief lor Women.
It you have tlni in the back. lTrtnArir. Plun
der or Kidney trouble, and want a certulu,
pleasant berb remedy for woman's Ills, try
Muher Grays AUSTRALIAN. I bAP. It Is a
are moniuiy regulator. At liruKKlstB or by
insiiwct. Sample packaKe KiJkB. Address,
The Motu UUoy.H. v. mm
UI I IU1 HU Pf ,"VQ
' Ix -mm J O
Veterinary Specifics cure diseases
of nnr nltfu r.. rr ,
vmZ7ia- n XT
Poultry by aoting directly on tbe sick pabtj
,.. r'
wuaout loss 01 time.
oValjESuVTmiii KSr,MiikV...Irnfl8n,n,a'
. . '
"uaiHu?u..!?;m:",,,eue"' l,uur'"'-
acisnne tiiiioat. QUin.y, EpUooiio
""" ti.t.uipi. iy, npuoouo,
JJJ; WOR.mm, ih.u, Grut.i.
R ,. ,.
"llu. ,nlUu"'
F. f.( w, nHiy.-h. wind-Biown
""ua'1 ,Mo"''"- iHieutery.
G a- Prr miscahriaor.
"kid.ev bladder disordebs.
cU, j llfi'- '.
. K )Bii.r.iTi
mSi f rdii..iioT. allo;.v",Sun,;,fr;.",
ft. e'h Suhle Ca., T'U 8(clfl,.i Book kn a?
" drusKi.u, or unt PrePii ou tec,,,lt ot
. """'Wmy.' M.ik-n,8 Co.. cur. wiium ,na joha
York.
l-HOOK MAILED FREE.
RAILROAD NOTES
Special Excursions and Reduced Rate
Oi Interest to our Many Readers.
Asbukv Park Hookuit. Des
criptive publication issued by the
Pennsylvania Railroad Company.
The Pennsylvania Railroad Com
P 'tiv has just issued nn attractive
iv.'drlei descriptive of Asbnry Park.
The publication is designed to
present the attractions and claims of
Asbury Park as a summer seaside
resort.
Persons desiring information con
cerning this popular resort may
obtain a copy of he booklet by en
closing two cents in postage stamps
to Geo. W. Boyd, General Passen
ger Ancnt, Pennsylvania Railroad,
Philadelphia, Pa. at
Spkciai. IClkvkn-Dav Kxcir
sion to Ocean Grove, Asbury Park,
or Long Branch via Pennsylvania
Railroad. For the benefit of those
desiring to visit the great Ocean
Grove Camp Meeting, the Pennsyl
vania Railroad Company will, on
August 25, sell excursion tickets to
Ocean Grove, Asbury Park, or
Long Branch from stations named
below at the very low rates quoted.
These tickets will le good for
passage to Philadelphia on train in
dicated, thence on regular train
leaving Hioad Street Station ot
12:27 2:32, 3:30, 4:00 and 4:09 p.
tn. that day to destination.
Kist Bloomsburg 8:34 $4.50
Catawissa 8:40 4:50
South Danville 9:00 4:50
Philadelphia Arrive 3:16 p. m.
Tickets will be good for return
passage on regular traius, except
limited express trains, until Sep
tember 4, inclusive, and will permit
of stop-off at Philadelphia within
limit returning. 2t
Mnoh Oandy Poisonous
Startling Discoveries Hav Been Mad
Food Comissioner Warren has an
nounced that his agents have ob
tained evidence that much impure
candy and cake is being sold He
said that his attention was called to
the matter by parents who had boeu.
ad vised by physicians that the
stomach ailments from which their
children were suffering was due to
their having eaten doctoral candy
and cake, and a chemical analysis of
samples had disclosed that mineral
pigments or ochres had beeu used
to ninkearti6cial chocolate. He slid
that in many cases it had Loen
.found that in some artificial choco
late layer cake tht; chocolate con
sisted of ordinary pigment and glu
cose, while a coal tar dying belong
ing to 1 11 azo group, many of waicu
are poisonous, had been substituted
for eggs. Chocolate fudge has
Ix-en discovered to be nothing uioTe
': rs than paint and glucose. He
said counsel, State Senator Brown,
is preparing a case that would mean
th'? at ivst within a few days of a
well k'i'iwn Philadelphia manufact
urer in connection with the sale of
artificial chocolate.
Tbe Potato Orop.
Th'.- (11 cry of a short potato crop
is out a.nain, and the people are ap
prehensive that that much needed
article of food will be scarce and
dear this winter. There is no doubt
but the early crop will not come up
to the expectation of the grower,
tor the dry season of the past mouth
or two has retarded the yield. A
prominent farmer of one of the near
by valleys, says that there should
be no alarm regarding the crop in
general, for they all expected a fair
yield of late potatoes owing to the
rains of the last week or two, and
as that is the crop which every per
son stows away in the cellar for the
winter there is no need of being
afraid as to the supply and quality.
Writer of Anonymous Letters.
There is no meaner type in the
human species than the writer of
anonymous letters. He is a sneak
and ft coward by instinct, and a low,
despicable, lawless cur in society
and bubiness. For real or fancied
grievances he attacks people, like
the thief and the incendiary, under
cover of darkness. He does not
scruple to ruin a home,, to injure
the business reputation oi a com
petitor or blackeu the reputation of
an innocent girl, if he can gain a
personal advantage, or eratifv bis
vindictive nature. When the law
catches him, as it often does, it has
1 ss respect for him than auy other
class of criminals.
CASTOR I A
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have Always Bought
Bears the
Sigaatur
e of
- - .