8 THE COLUMBIAN. Ul,OO..iSHURG, PA. THUIiSDAY, JANUAUY 0, THE NATIONAL CAPITOL. (Special Correspondence,) Washington, I). C, Jan. 7, 1908 The results of the so-called riding tests of mounted officers of the ar my have been made public and the report is not only interesting, but like the late Artemus Ward's Kan garoo, is "amoosinV It shows that a large proportion of the "Coi- nels" have failed to measure up to fhe requirements, and, unless the President changes his mind on the subject, will be marked for retire ment. This, of course, will make opportunity for a lot of promotions, and may have a wholesome effect upon the personnel of the force. A good many of the Generals and Colonels of the army have been liv ing luxurious lives in Washington and elsewhere and would probably have tough time of it if suddenly called into active field service. There is another side to the ones tion, however. (Juite a number of the Generals and Colocels of the army have been and are still serv ing on details in the -arious bn reaus of the War Department' and are required to mount nothing more fractious than a high stool and "sit" nothing more difficult to manage than an office chair. Of ficers who have grown corpulent as well as gray in the service could perform such service just as well as the "lithe and willowy" young sters who wear corsets and lead the German in the post ball rooms or at society funclious at the capital. The retirement of the seniors and promotion ot the juniors, in obedi ence to the President's whim prom ises, therefore, to be an unnecessa ry and expensive luxury. The htKiioroJs aspect of the af fair, moreover, is revealed when considered from another viewpoint. A Colonel on the retired list gets a salary of about $2,500 a year with absolutely nothing to do. Most of them are fairly well off and such an annuity, supplemented with their other sources of revenue will enable them to live the aristocratic life of "retired gentlemen," as completely as if they had been "born in the purple" aud inherited dukedoms and barouies. It is not altogether surprising, therefore, that some Colonels who can sit a horse like a centaur, should have failed iu the horseback test or de clined to enter the competition. They have 110 chance of reachiug much higher rank and have sons in the service who may be advanced by their retirement. In other words it is broadly sus pected that a good many of the failures to meet the horseback test were by design. A colonel in the army at the age of fifty-five, for example, has little chauce of pro motion unless he happens to be a Presidential favorite, under the regulations which retire him at the lge of sixty-three. But lots of them at that age have plenty of ability and ginger to acquire sue-1 cess in business or professional life, ff they resign from the army to take advantage of other opportuni ties, they forfeit the chance ol a re ared officer's pay in their old age. ilut the crazy notion of President Xoosevelt, of retiring them at any ige in the event of failure to meet his idens in equestrianism, gave chance to kill two birds with one tone. Roosevelt is really a wonder. Everybody laughs at him and yet no man in or out of Congress has che temerity to antagonize him. In nis recent faux paux in the naval affair there was ample opportunity :o make him beg for mercy. I have authentic information that he has since admitted that Surgeon General Rixey deceived him with respect to the deliverance of The Hague tribunal on the equipment DR. KENNEDY'S FAVORITE If Bemedy Is backed by ovor 89 years of remarkable .access In the cure of Kidney, Liver and Mood troubles, and the dlucouea peculiar to wo men. Not a patent medicine, but a proscription used by Sr. David ( Kennedy In Ills large and success .15 fill iirAf.tlre lnnff lief ore he Disced If f) it before the public The formula i0iri m Keeping wnu linn kiviiuuv 1 nrinclnlei. and many physicians fcnP"..ti'jN ol the blL'liest standing have pre. It scribed Dr. David Kennedy's Favorlto Remedy for their patlenU. Tin ntuUiment can be proved abso lutely. We have nover claimed that Favorite Hem dy will cure all case of Kidney, Liver and Uladder diseases and asHociated ailments, but the fact re mains that it has cured many canes practically aban doned by physicians. Do you snllir from any dnngerODB symptoms of Sidney, Liver and illund troubles? Have you pain n back, cloudy urine with sediment, pain in paxing jvater, constipation, skin eruptions, etc. T If so, iont delay, but use Dr. David Kennedy's Favorite Kemedy at once. Ton may have a sample buttle " tnd booklet containing valuable advice mailed alien utely free by simply writing Dr. David Kennedy'! rotis, Kondout, N. I. Mention Mils paper. Large .tulssti,vu,aiildru;t;istii. - "A Good Nunc &t Home" "Is a tower of strolled abroad" and the excellent reputation of C. I, Hood Co. nnd ; their remedies In thn city of Lowell, whero they ftre best known, Inspires confidence the world over, not only In the medicines but In anything their proprietors say about them. "If Mndc by Hood It's Good." "I believe Hood's Snrsnpnrllln the best alt ronnd family medicine known today." Mrs. G. D. Farley, 652 Wilder 8t., Lowell, Mass. 'I recommend Hood's Sarsapnrllla to any one." John B. Vvrrr, 14 Auburn Street. Lowell, Mass. "I am a strong and hcRlthy woman today, from taking Hood's Sarsnparllla, which I keep In the house for all the family." Mrs. Fannie Balch, 106 Leverett St, Lowell, Mass. "I consider Hood's Srxrsnparllla the best Mood-puriller In the world." Mrs. Jknnii E. Carlton, 113 Liberty St., Lowell, Mass. Hood's Sarsnparllla Is sold everywhere. In the usual liquid, or In tablet form called SarsatabS. 100 Poses One Dollar. Pre pared only by C. I. Hood Co., Lowell, Mass. of hospital ships. He offered to compromise, subsequently, and one of his friends, a man high up in official life urged the acceptance of the proposition for the reason, as he stated it, that it "would enable the President to save his face." But it didn't enable Brownson to recover the salary he forfeited by resigning. Congress will do little this week because it will require a week's time to get down to work after the sixteen days recess. For that mat ter it is the intention to do as little as possible during the session. G. D. II. CANNON CALL HOUSE. .'in Old Colonial Mansion on the Schuylkill ftiver. Although It lies on tho west brink of the Schuylkill, 110:13 ol tiio eld timers in "tho Neck" were unfamiliar with the traditions o" the (J.mrion U...1 House, v.hlh stands Domo dis tance from I'eni-oae Kerry roud aud 'uoui. halt or Uiiuc-g.i:ailt;is ol a nille wi'-st of tho l'uii'uea Ferry b.'idija. The house is notable for the wl.u'.ow in iij chir.ii-.cy, vhk-h certainly is unusual, it hn lecii explained that :he window was not part ol tho or isinal plan of the house, but was cut i:Uo the chimney . Icr a convenient lookout for offers of the Continen tal Army at the tir.ie of the Itevolu. tion. Tho house in near the river, nw. i.ic from t.ie junction with the Delaware, and at the time of the Rev olution there was nothing to prevent a cler view of the stream for a great distance, a3 most of the ground iu tna vicinity Is lov and the fort was built on very low land. While Col. William Bradford, tho printer and newspaper publisher, was in command of the fort near tho house, known during the Revolution as Mud Fort and later as Fort Mifflin, the fortification was attacked by tho British in force. This was at tho battle of Red Bank, in October, 1776. During the attack on the fort, it is said, a cannon ball ploughed its way through the walls of the house, and although the family wa3 at dinner at the time in the room through which the shot passed no one was injured. There is still to be seen in the walls of the old mansion the place where the shot entered. On the old map of Scull & Heap, published in 1750, the house is shown lying in the township of Kingsessing, on what is called Carpenter's Island. It Is called Blakeley's housa and was thr onl yone in the vicinity. Tho date of the building is not readily ascertained, but from the character of the brick employed in its construction it Is evidently of great age, dating from the early years of the eighteenth century. In the days before 1850 tho house was to be approached only from the east eMo of the Schuylkill by means of the rope ferry at this ;:r!nt. Then the bride was erected and, taking its name from the family In the neighborhood, the Penroses, who had the monopoly of the ferry, the road was" called Penrose Ferry road and the bridco given the name of tho ferry. In recent years the South western trolley line has brought th Cannon Ball House into clover to'-ch with the city proper. Philadel phia Ledger. The richest woman in Omt Britain is Mies Emily Charott? Tnlbot, who owns two rmpnlfVont estates which inherited from her father, worth about $7,000,000. Another rich wom an is Miss Alhe de Rothschild, who is very charitable and has a great hobby for gardening. Birds, when perched on trees or bushes, are natural weathercocks, us they invariably turn their heads to the wind. The finger of Bcnrn may be depend ed upon to come to the point w THE COLUMBIAN, OUR 8LAVIC FELLOW CITIZENS, Attitude of the Dohemlans and Poles In American Politics. American politics are for tho most part quite n much a matter of purely local interest as Polish or Croatian j.oiities could possibly l Since tho days of the anti.sla.ery movement, which enlisted tho generous sympa thies of tho old generation, of liberal immigrants, our politics have involv ed few questions of general interest apart from soma of our present bo clal economic issues. The educated European remains on the outside of American life quite as mucu because it is provincial as because he Is. Con sequently, unless he Is made over Into a complete American, the for eipner is likely to take part in our politics only as a matter of business, which Is to say corruptly. Among the simple minded yet shrewd fellows nt the bottom this is often quits naively and innocently the case- A librarian who is a good friend of tho various nationalities wh0 work In her town asked the Poles who were com ing in and out of the library on one election day what they were voting for. They replied cheerfully, pleas ed that she took an interest In their affairs and that they had so good a market tD report, "For $2." The whole situation Is one which natur ally lends itself to logrolling and poliiical trading. When there are groups of men with their full numer ical share of political power with no irse to which they want to put It and full of clannish feeling it is very easy for a leader of their own kind to "vote" them as a unit. If he In bid for by the offer of some petty o ""co It gratifies not only him but his wuole group who feel themselves vicariously honored in his person. While the conviction that Ameri can politics are corrupt draws In some men it keeps others out. A a a Slavic minister said to ma: My poo pic are not interested in politics they say 'Das 1st mehr Geldsache.' " As to political affiliations both par ties count Slavs as members. In tho niitehellum days tho slavery issue, tended to draw Bohemians and i-oles both of whom supplied gallant sol diers to the Union, into the Republi can ranks. It is Interesting to find th.it the Poles voted for Grant in 15 72, tho first election in which they were notaVly interested, not only be cusa of his war record iut because lv- reooprnlzed tho French republic d'irii-.g the Prussian war, while his o-poncnt, Greeby, was supposed to have favored Austria in Italy and Ger mnny in Alsice-I.crralne. Another rcFnn for Republicanism has ben tho simple and intelligible ono that th Irish were Democrats. On the oiher hand, in Chlct-go both Bohom lars and Poles are said to be "nor mally Democrats," nnd the explana tion in the ca?e of the Bohern'-ns 1 that Republicanism infant the r.d mlnistratlon end that Bohemians vera readily led by then past experience to .loin tho opposition. How far Slavs in this country are naturalized it is Impossible to say, the census ficu-es on the subject being unusable in this case. In Hadley, Mass., where forty seven Poles own property" and 123 more pay a poll tax, only two are naturalized, and I Judeu that tho Americans were far from cTrslrim to have more become voters. The policy of the more enlightened Slavic lead ers, on the contrary, is to urge citi zenship, and one at least of the na tional societies requires It. In many places their vote 13 an Im portant consideration. In the Illinois St.oto campaign In 1906 both Republi cans and Democrats nominated a Pole for the office of State Trer.fliirer. Ona cf these nominees had already serv ed In Chicago as Alderman and as City attorney. A number of Pnle.3 have sat in State Legislatures, both as Representatives, and in one in stance at least In the Sonata, nnd a W!seon3ln Bohemian's d!ik In tho Hottno was reserved for him on his election rs a sort of farr.lly perquis ite, or rather as a courteous recog nition of the servhe of his father and brother, vho hd preceded him in oiP.ce- Charities. How Thny Eeat the Glover, The "Drapers' Record" has been putting its finger on a weak spot In feminine nonesty, to which It has giv en the Ingenious name of "glovo nail ing." It appears that a good many ladles will put on a pair of gloves and wear them for a whole evening, by which time the "bloom" has quite been tak en off them and then they will dis cover somo defect, on the strength of which they will demand a new pair from the unfortunate manufacturer. No doubt something of this kind not infrequently happens, and no doubt, also, the real cause of the troi ble often lies, as they suggest In tho fact that a lady who owns a six and a quarter hand Insists on endeavor ing to thrust It Into a five three quar ter glove. MODEL SENSIBLE, USEFUL GIFTS tor'the HOLIDAYS W Attractively racked In Handsome Bin fie Fair Boxes TlMf eoBtato mon sad bsttvr nibbw IBM ny ofebsr mtk. bars f old-rtlt noB.nutlnr metal parts snd itroof surd sndf thi Mnnot w throusb. Ths nw beb t m fcctiua parsuls mm sad eomfort no Mtw what potlUua tha body may aaaiuaa. THETOVTWEAITHIEK ORDINARY KINDS. WHICH MEANS THKEB TIMES f BE SERVICE OF USUAL AO CENT SORTS Tho MOST COMrOMTJfBLM aapasidar mad lor saaa, youth or boy la Usui, Uaary sc Citrs Haari WalsbU, Ultra Uiitf (Ma KlUa Cuttl Thar tnako laaapaoalvo s'fta ovary nasi, y ooth or boy will gladly racalvo BEWr.S & POTTER. Dapt. , 87 Llacola Slraal, Boatoo, Haas Our awful Bru, Doa Svifssdsb Oovb Am Cut msllad for 100. pnatars. Inttractira bouklat, " btrla, or Uov to braas Uirraetlf." fraa If you naatiua fctil publioalioa 1214 BLOOMSBURf I A GIllL'S ClIAItlTV VAfliE 1 1 Iiicl(:.iinl!y They l.'nrt 11 Oivr.l .:. cf I 1111. Recently a totcrlc of tfrh, ! ear ing of n poor family lift cU-stir.; . on tho c:e:;th of tho father, d'-i,-r-itiir.otl to liriji the m in Eor.i" ii,y, fir.a'ly flecldlua; to have an evenii;;; of variety entortalnnient. One ;irl was anked to give some Imitatl-uib, which the did very cleverly; hit other snnp;, nnd two or three of tin boys nnd girls did n very clever tithe off from one of the comic opi'iaj which was not at r.ll Lard mid afford ed a great deal of enjoyment. At tho end they had a serito of tab leaux which they called "The Amer ican Girl." The first was an Indhiu. A very dark girl was chosen for th!. and her costunio was made from an old potato bag. Tho edges were all frayed and It was tied loorcly around tho waist. Under this she htid put a white shirt waist, with tho nwk turned in and the sk-evos t-.irmv! m She left her hair looco cud tied a band of ribbon, on which she h'u! glued some turkey feathers, around bor forehead, and with the aid of many beads and bracelets tho effect was most rcall.itic. The nt tab leau was "Tho Puritan Mal.l." Tula was very simply done. Thn t,l-! had a gray dress, which k!u f.irt er! in at the neck, and pluned on a 'ker chief. She made a poko cap of white lawn and she made n :no?t attractive little Puritan. This wr.s folio.- ea by tho girl of the Revolutionary times, and after that ca.;io tho twen tieth century girl, with a tennis racket In ono hand an:! n olf sMek In the other, unl nt the end they made one tableau of nil groupa-l to gether. The eiitertaiinr.fat jrove, most successful and the girls weiv delighted to find, on adding up lite, money, that they had ninde ni-j. tj dollars, although they had oj;ly charged fifty cents ndmlsMon, ph.! Incidentally they had hnd a go:,d deal more than ninety dollars' worth of fun. Silk and Sntin for Garnitures. It is not surprising to find ninny handsome dresses embellished with stitched bands of soft satin and ilk, s'neo these fabrics are sched uled among tho leading gar nitures for the Esasou Black and white combinations have alvi.B an appealing charm nnd a splendid effect is gained in this gown of white French challis, stitched with banda of Cluny lace and black satin. Tho Ekirt is laid In plaits all around the figure and the lace and satin ur 1 ranged at tho bottom In simple, though fetching fashion. At the waist Is a suggestion of the Empire modes, which are rtradually dyln.'j out, except for girdles, vests, etc. The ehort-waisted girdle la of black eatin touched with cords of tho pal est pink satin. Falling over tae girdles the blouso is trimmed with Cluny luce, applied at the front and forming the yoko. Filet is mixed with tho Cluny in tho brctelle effect and is stitched on either side with three rows of black BCtin. I Tho newest house gowns of toft, silky fabrics have all of the skirts friling in clinging folds under slight ly abbreviated waists. With this are worn bodices softly plaited and trimmed sparsely, though effectively with tho laces ot fashion. A stitch ed trimming about the bottom of a skirt lends it weight, and weight is an Important need of the thin, semi transparent skirt. Bean the 9 m 1,3,8 ml B r m 1 V mm U-5-tf FURS Meliabla kind. sold lioz& and we tell you just wlmt you are buying. We standi back of our Furs, Bigger variety tlmm evor n Alexander Brothers & Co., DEALERS IN m Cigars, Tobacco, Pipes, Confec-: tionery and Nuts. I Fins Candies. Freeh Every Week. ! iF'ESTsr-sr Goods ' .a. Specialty. SOLE AGENTS FOR J JUPITER, KING OSCAR, WRITTEN GUARANTEE, 2 COLUMBIAN, ETC. S Also F. F. Aelams & Co's Fine Cut Chewino Tobacco. ALEXANDER BROS. & CO., Bloomsburg, Pa. ; iOtaRrlRtRlilREEli1iil 1 IF YOU ARE IN NEED OF Carpets, Rugs, Hatting and Draperies, Oil Cloth and Window Curtains You Will Find a Nice Line at W. M, BBQ WEB'8 ELOOMSBURG, PENN'A: WHY WE LAUGH. "A Little Nonsense Now and Then, Is Relished by the Wisest Men:' Judge's Quarterly, $1.00 a year Judge's Library, $1.00 a year Sis Hopkins' Hon., $1.00 a year On receipt of Twenty Cents, we will enter your name for three months' trial subscription for either of these bright, witty, and humorous journals, or for One Dollar will add Leslie's Weekly or Judge for the same period of time. Address Judge Company 225 Fourth Avenue 3-21 "3 W. L. Douglas AND Packard Shoes are worn by more men than any other shoes made. Come in and let us Fit You With a Pair W. H. MOORE, Cornet Main and Iron Sis., BLOOMSBURG, PA. Visiting cards and Wedding invi tations at the Columbian office, tf "Jioilfi. lsTT. ei;ccr.4oen to rVV, I1ARTMAM St SO o) 6) I New York Our Pianos ! are the leaders. Our lines in- j elude the following makes : I Chas. M. Stieff, ! Henry F. Miller, j Brewer & Prvor, Kohler & Campbell, and Radel. j IN ORGANS we handle the Estev, Miller.H.Leiir & Co.,1 AND BOWLBY. This Store has the agency or SINGEH HIGH ARM SE M ING MACHINES and VICTOR 1ALKING MA CHINES. WASH MACHINES' J Helby, 1900, Queen, Key- stone, Majestic. J.SALTZER, Music Rooms No. 105 West Main Street, Below Market. BLOOMSBURG. PA