Greenfield Evening Republican, Greenfield, Hancock County, 18 May 1896 — Page 4
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'Senate and Hbuse itends Doing.
AM FOR THE WEEK.
rpriation Bills to Be Passed Ahead If All Other Measures—Three Such Bills Before the Senate—Conference Reports Expected °n Several Bills Already Passed—Adjournment May Be Delayed. '.* WASHINGTON",
May 13—The present
Week in the senate bids fair to be given -up largely to matters pertaining to the District of Columbia. The consideration of tlie dollar gas bill will consume considerable more time, and when it is disposed of the district appropriation till will be taken up if it is liot cut out i"l)y the conference report on the legislative bill.
it if 3xpectod that the district appropr?ution bill will lead to considerable •discussion. There are numerous items .•.in it which will ca1! i*./* explanation and provoke anjagoiii 1, nut the least of -which is the am v-.'-r changing the house provis. .vu off the specific appropriations for charitable iustitu-. tions. It is lle^d that many of these concerns aro sect oiaj 'nd there will be an effort to have '"he legislative, ex^ecutive and judicial avariation bill "xecommitted for further consideration of the provision in regard to United "•States commissioners as the house provision, which the senate conferees have accepted is distasteful to many of the senators.
It is expected the conference report on -the river and harbor bill will be made early in the week, but whether this will consume much time will depend upon how much of the senate additions the senate conferees may concede to those of the house.
The senate managers are still disposed to press the appropriation bills to the exclusion of other business and will have the fortifications bill ready to take up as soon as the district bill and the conference reports on other appropriation bills are disposed of. They do not •contemplate giving way to other bills except those to which no^opposition is made until the last of the appropriation "bills shall be passed. There are still three appropriation bills which have not received the attention of the senate. These are the District of Columbia, fortifications and the general deficiency.
Forecast of the House.
WASHINGTON,
May 18.—The house
probably will devote much of its time •during the week to the consideration of conference reports on appropriation bills. It is expected the conference reposts on both the naval and river and harbor bills will be presented, and on twth lively fights are anticipated. The -senate amendments to the latter bill placing half a dozen additional projects under the contract system at a cost of about $12,000,000 will attack the bulk of thfl opposition, and in case the senate does not yield to the house on the naval bill in respect to the number of new lattleships to be authorized another attempt will be made by the economists of the house to agree to the senate's redaction.
If the senate conferees yield, however, the matter will be practically beyond the jurisdiction of the house. It may be that the committee on rules will arrange for the consideration of the immigration bill this week if opportunity offers. The Murray-Elliott contested election case from the Fifth South Carolina district is also scheduled for consideration this week. The majority re--port unseats Elliott. Silver Men Opposed to Final Adjournment
WASHINGTON,
May 18.—The impres
sion is growing about the Capitol that jfche silver men will soon take a position against finn,l adjournment before the national conventions. The movement embraces silver advocates in both houses and of all parties. There has been no formal agreement so far, but there has been a general exchange of views, and there is no doubt that some of the leaders hold the opinion that it will be wise to postpone adjournment until there •hall be opportunity to know what position the conventions will take on the financial question. TWENTY-SIX BUILDINGS BURNED. Half the Business Portion of Blue Island,
Chicago Suburb, Destroyed by Fire.
CHICAGO, May 18.—Nearly half the business portion of Blue Island, a suburban town, was destroyed by lire yesterday. Altogether 26 buildings Were consumed, entailing a total loss of about $150,000. A shifting wind was blowing almost a hurricane at the time and the fire spread rapidly.
Three hundred people who were attending a dance in Saenger hall had a narrow escape from death. The building caught fire while the dance was in progress and a stampede ensued. Many persons were bruised, though none was seriously injured. The last of the esraping crowd rushed through a cloud of smoke and heard the sound of burning timbers behind them.
In spite of the efforts of the firemen all the buildings in Grove street between Western avenue and Henry street, the west side of Western avenue, between Grove and Vermont streets, were entirely destroyed.
LAKE DISASTER.
Schooner Sunk and live of Her Crew Drowned. CHICAGO.. May 18. The schooner
Mary D. Ayer was sunk in collision •with the steamer Onoke in Lake Michigan off Grosse Point early Sunday morning, and five members of her crew were drowned, two being saved. Those plosfc were: Captain Williams, Charles
Matson, mate Henry Shira, seaman Tom Jones, seaman, and Fitz Cook. All were from Chicago.
After the accident the Ayer drifted down the lake with her bow stove in sud was picked up by the steamer City of Dulath. Shortly after being taken in tow she sank, and only two of the -crew of seven were able to escape.
The captain lost his life in endeavoring to save the schooner, which he eas* ily co did have abandoned in time to fe escape uiowning.
There was a dense fog on the lake at wihe time of the collision, and the accident is not beHeved^w^YQ^.§0Sjth» ^resdlt of ctifelessness.'":
TELEGRAPHIC TAP3.
I
CondeoMl News by Wire From Different Y/'rti? "V parts of the Globe.
The E'lwood Windowglass- company of Elwood, Ind., will run to May 29 or later, unless the men strike.
The little daughter of John H. Lane of Freeport, Ind., was fatally scalded by overturning a cup of hot tea, dying within a few hours.
The trial of Gertrude Taylor at Oregon, Mo., charged with the murder of her father, Dillon B. Taylor, ended in a verdict of not guilty.
It is said that another strike will be inaugurated in a few days affecting all the structural ironworkers and bridge men in New York and Brooklyn.
The barns of Penniston Brothers and J. C. Stewart, near Anderson, Ind., burned Saturday night, and four horses perished. Boys and cigarettes started the blaze.
United States Inspector Fowler, at Port Townsend, Wash., reports that 2,372 seal skins have been taken during the season. This is the highest catch reported for many years.
Henry Stefke, a baker of Bloomington, Ind., was thrown from a buggy Saturday night and instantly killed by his head striking a stone. He leaves a wife and two children.
The American plateglass factory at Alexandria, Ind., has closed down temporarily, and will not resume until July 1, pending the construction of the new polishing hall.
The British bark Mozambique arrived at quarantine, New York, from Rio Janeiro, with five of her crew having died from yellow fever in the tropics and one seaman having committed suicide.
E. H. McOlun, a real estate dealer of Chicago, committed suicide because he was unable to borrow fJ00. McClun had collected $200 for a client and used the money himself. He had an excellent reputation.
The village of Painted Post, near Corning, N. H., was visited by a disastrous fire, entailing a loss of $150,000. The Bronson house and the large plant of the Western Engine company, employing 100 men, were destroyed.
Mrs. Jennie Baker, a soldier's widow, residing with Mrs. Mary Powell, who conducts a saloon and boardinghouse op Western avenue in Dayton, O., choked to death Saturday evening while eating a piece of raw beef.
At Shirley, Ills., Saturday night, Wilbur H. McCoy shot and killed Peter Smith on the platform of the Chicago and Alton depot. Smith was a farmhand. McCoy was a student of the Bloomington college. He is under arrest.
The Armour Packing company plant at Kansas City has discharged 100 additional persons from its force, making a total reduction thus far of 1,000. The strikers are quiet, and the boycott against the Armour meats is being carried on quietly.
The committee appointed to select a poem to be read oh the centennial anniversary day of Tennessee, for which a prize of 1100 was offered, have awarded the prize for the poem written by Mrs. Virginia Frazer Boyle of Memphis, Tenn.
Ex-Senator Temple Houston, son of the first president of the Texas republic, has been acquitted of the murder of John Jennings in a terrible duel in a saloon at Woodward, O. T., last fall, and the wounding of Ed Jennings, John's brother.
The congress of Honduras has granted a concession to New York capitalists for the building of an international railroad from Puerto Cortes to Amaju, and ratified the convention providing for a commission to fix the boundary between Honduras and Guatumala.
Matt Adams of Denver, who was arrested in England early in April, upon papers alleging that as clerk of Arrapahoe county, Colo., he had embezzled $40,000, has reached New York on board the Cunard line steamer Campania. He will be taken to Colorado to stand his trial.
The flour trade of the Pacific coast with Ecuador, via San Francisco and Guayaquil, is now threatened with destruction at the hands of Chillians, and already it is suffering very seriously from the competition on account of high freight rates eharged by the American Steamship company.
At Arlington, Tenn., during the progress of a festival at a negro Baptist church, a general row broke out. Ferrell Miller and Will Thompson had their throats cut, Sarah Jarrett was severely cut about the neck and arms, and a number of others were seriously injured. All of the parties are negroes.
Within the next week nearly every blast furnace in Youngstown, O., will be idle. All have accumulated large stores, and the action is taken to stiffen prices and reduce the amount in furnace yards. None will be blown out, but will be banked so that they can resume operations at short notice whenever desired.
Elmer Franklin, a prosperous farmer near Fountain, Ind., was badly injured In the woods Saturday by a tree falling on him. Several ribs were crushed and one arm broken, besides receiving internal injuries. He was shot several weeks ago by footpads. He has been the victim of several accidents during the past year.
Andrew Staley, an aged and wealthy distiller, who lives by himself about three miles north of New Carlisle, O., was assaulted at his home by three masked men, who beat him with clubs until he was almost insensible and then ransacked the house. They found only $30, and escaped. There is no clew to their identity.
William Justice, a farmer residing near Marion, O.. aged 45, attempted to cross the Erie railway in that city Saturday and was struck by the New York and Chicago limited. He and his two horses were killed instantly. He had left his wife and daughter shopping in the city, and was about to return for them before returning home.
Robert E. Edwards, a paper hanger, formerly a palace car conductor between Pittsburg and Chicago, shot his wife in the face, in Chicago, while she was asleep. The woman was not fatally injured. She jumped through a window and escaped from her husband, who turned the pistol on himself and died instantly. Jealousy was the cause.
Police Captain Killilea, who has been on trial in New York on the charge of accepting a gratuity, has been found not guilty. The offonso imputed to Killilea was the acceptance of $100 from the manager of the Yale-Princeton football game at the Polo grcruuds, in 1893. The captain testified that the money was expended in providing luncheon for the poMceinen on duty at the game. lmliontions.
Fair weather," followed by local thunderstorms during the. eveu-ing or nighti jfresh and brisk southwesterly winds.
8ING AGAIN.
., Ton sang me a song, 'Twas the close of the year. Sing again!
I cannot remember the name Or the words. 'Tis the same •. We listen to hear When the windows are open in spring And the air's full of birds. One calls from the branch some sweet thing, And one sings on the wing
The refrain.
You sang me a song My heart thrilled to hear. The refrain Has run like a fillet of gold
Through the woof
Of the cold
1
Dark days of a year. Tonight there's a year at its start, All the birds :.re aloof. Your eyes hold the sun for my part, And the spring's in .your heart.
Sing again I '—Seribner's Magazine.
ENGLAND'S FOOD SUPPLY.
And How It Might Be Endangered In Certain War Contingencies.
Strong as the English war fleet is, it is very far from being strong enough to successfully engage a possible combination of fleets and at the same time protect our sea borne food supply. If the United States and Russia declared war with England, there would practically be no food supply left to protect. They would keep the immense supplies we now get from them at home, and the fear of capture or destruction would effectually prevent Argentina and other neutrals from sending food to us in any sufficient quantity.
What is wanted is that, instead of only a precarious week's supply, we should have stored up in this country enough corn to last for at least 12 months. Experts in the corn trade agree that there would be no insuperable difficulty in gradually accumulating this store of corn. It would be for experts to advise as to the best methods and places of storage.
Perhaps the best plan would be to distribute it over the country in magazines at the military depots, giving the military authorities charge of it, but if it was in the country and safe it would not so much matter where it was. Although most of our corn is made into flour at the great ports, it would not be wise, seeing that most of them are so defenseless, to store it there.
The entire control and management of this great national store of corn should be under some permanent government department. Although its existence could not fail to have a steadying effect on the corn market, it should be outside all speculative influences, the price at which it would be sold, when necessary to sell it, being fixed by law. It would be no sacrifice, in the long run, for the country to provide such a reserve of food, as it would always be worth its cost.
Other nations accumulate gold for use in wartime. We should have a war chest of corn. If we have it, what will it do?
It will give our navy time to devote itself to the crushing of the navy or navies opposed to us. It will give us time, with our great resources, to augment our fighting fleet to almost any extent, and it will give our farmers time to grow three or four times as much corn and breed a much larger quantity of cattle and sheep than they now do.— Nineteenth Century.
A Patent Flycatcher.
A machine for catching flies off the backs of cattle, and so affording the animals relief and comfort, has been invented by a farmer in Madison county, Ky. The flycatcher is a kind of covered pen or passageway through which the animal must walk to secure relief. A few feet from the entrance there is a cupola or dome in the roof of the passageway, made of glass and arranged as a flytrap. Beyond this the passage is darkness. The animal walks through the machine, and just as it passes under the dome and enters the darkened part a set of brushes sweeps off tlje flies, which naturally rise into the lighted dome, and the steer passes out at the other side free of flies. The flies are retained in the dome trap. The inventor has experimented with his machine and finds that the animals soon learn the value of the machine and know enough to walk through it when the flies begin to bite. The device has been patented.
Bernhardt's Debut.
"The divine Sarah" has just been describing the emotions that shook her when she appeared for the first time on the boards: "I can picture the evening as though it were now. The excitement —oh, it was so grand!—drew forth my inmost passion, for I was very young then, you know, and it gave me zest and fervor for the ordeal I had to face. I can see the little theater and the people seated in the audience. My heart for the moment seemed to stand still. The first words I uttered fell from my lips with distinct accent. I made one grand step forward, and then all my nervousness vanished." ..,
Drudgery.
The everyday cares ahd duties which men call drudgery are the weights and counterpoises of the clock of time, giving its pendulum a time vibration and its hands a regular motion, and when they cease to hang upon its wheels the pendulum no longer swings, the hands no longer move, the clock stands still.— Longfellow.
Art thou a man, and shamst thou not to beg, to practice such a servile kind of life? Why, jwere thy education ne'er so mean, having thy limbs, a thousand fairer courses offer themselves to thy election.—Ben Jonsonu
Letter writers in Spain receive, about 10 cents a page for writing letters, if required to take extra pains, as with a young woman's love letter, they charge 16 cents. j'
Rhode Island over 100 years ago was called: Little Rhody, an allusion to the diminutive size of this commonwealth.
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EXERCISES FOR THE THROAT. BURIAL OF A POPE.
A Branch of Physical Culture Not Often Tonehed On.
The chronic sore throat is not infrequently produced by the misuse of the vocal organs. Very often that unruly little member, the tongue, is accountable for the difficulty, as it is for a great many other troubles in this transitory life. Many people have a habit when talking of pushing the tongue so far back against the delicate membranes that line the throat that irritation more or less painful is caused, and if it continues any length of time ulcers will form, and so will a doctor's bill.
Control of the tongue is excellent in all senses of the word. Physically this organ may be managed by depressing it into a hollow at a point three-quarters of an inch back of where the tip of it comes when in a natural position in .the mouth and at the same time singing very light head tones. This exercise requires some patience at first, but "the habit of keeping the tongue down is soon acquired. In speaking or singing it should not be allowed to hoop up and fill the mouth, thus interfering with the free passage of the tones of the voice from the throat to the front of the mouth, where they should strike hud then escape clear as a bell. This hooping up of the tongue in the mouth is the cause of much of the indistinct and slovenly utterances to which we are too often obliged to listen.
In many people we notice the line from the point of the chin to the neck is in the form of aright angle. In a shapely throat this line forms a curve just as a canary's does when the small yellow artist is warbling his carols.
To develop the throat and make this angle a curve, stand before a mirror so that you may watch the throat swell out. Now thrust your tongue out as far as it will go, then draw it back quickly and forcibly, at the same time bringing it downward in the mouth as far as you can. Place your thumb and forefinger against the larynx (commonly called the Adam's apple), and if you are making the right movement you will feel the larynx pass downward. For a week or two make the movements lightly. After that time put as much force into it as you can. The exercise should be practiced for a few minutes several times a day to insure rapid and good results. 'to fill up the hollows of the neck, stand correctly, and then slowly fill the lungs with air without elevating your shoulders. As the air is forced upward into the throat hold it there a few seconds and then expel slowly. This exercise is best performed soon after rising in the morning and before retiring at night.—New York Post
SCIENCE TOO SLOW.
Discovery of Cat Language Not Likely to Be of Much Use.
"We live and learn," said the ordinary man. "I always thought that a cat could either mew or purr or spit or leave it alone. It now seems that I've done an injustice to the beast's vocabulary. Professor Marvin Clark, I'm told, has been studying the language of cats, and has discovered 600 'primitive words.'" 'Of which,'' the mere boy said, "599 are either blasphemous or improper.'' "The professor doesn't say so, and I don't see how you found it out." "I see this professor says that cat language bears a resemblance to Chinese. It's rather rough to insult a fallen and vanquished nation that way." "Well, if there's anything in it," the ordinary man remarked, "it would account for the Cliino-Japanese war in a novel and perfectly satisfactory way. But really, when one comes to think of it, it is much easier to believe that cats talk than that monkeys talk. Cats and owls both make sounds exactly like the sound of a human voice. Given a churchyard, a dark night and a white cat, and you have all the materials of a ghost story." "It's a pity," the journalist said, "that discoveries of this kind cannot be turned to some practical use. Why don't they discover the language of the horse? It would make driving much easier if you could tell the gee exactly what you wanted and explain to it verbally the perfectly innocuous character of any object at which it might be likely to shy/' 'Ah I" said the eminent person. "Before that discovery arrives we shall have the autocars and no horses at all.''— Black and White.
Call Them Wheelways.
There is need of a good word for designating a road from place to place exclusively for bicycles. Bicycle path is the term commonly used. There are several reasons why this is not a suitable term.
In the first place, the word path probably is derived from the Greek verb p'ateiA (to walk), and means a footway. Secondly, the expression is too long it has f\:ursyllables. Thirdly, it is clumsy it has t\s*c accents. Fourthly, it is not euphonic.
Instead of bicycle path The Companion respce: fully suggests wheelway. This word i^ analogous in its formation to driveway. The word has not boon used in any other sense except by one or two writers incorrectly to designate those parts of a wagon read in which the wheels run Way means the entire road, and not some part of it. Wheelway is better than wheel road for the Same reason that driveway is better than drive road. It suggests recreation before utility.—Youth's Companion.
A Sordid View of It.
"There's a great difference between Pfisher's two boys. He gave each of them $10,000. Silas has invested his money in real estate. Julius is spending his in fine oloathes." ,i "Don't you worry about Julius, He's spending his money in buying cut flowers for the rich Miss Boodelle. It'll pay aim a .bigger i^xes^syme day than .wer $itas wiii,gei^/"
n,.j
Si -i^hidftgo'^ritune l*
Impressive Ceremonials That Follow t^M Death of the Pontiff.
When the death of the reigning pop« draws near, the cardinal secretary of state informs the dean of the sacred college, who summons his colleagues to the residence of the dying man. The cardinal vicar issues orders that prayers bf offered in the Roman churches the cardinal penitentiary attends the bedside of the pope, to whom the sacristan of the pope's chapel administers extreme unction. As soon as may be after death has occurred the body must be formally recognized by the cardinal camerlingo, who, in obedience to an ancient custom, first knocks thrice on the door of the bedchamber. Getting no answer, he enters and taps thrice with a silver mallet on the dead man's forehead and thrice calls him by name. No response coming, the camerlingo declares that the pope is dead. Thenceforth the camerlingo is the most important of the cardinals, having charge of the x^reparations for the conclave, of the government of the palace and of the transactions with the representatives of foreign powers, to whom he officially announces the pope's death. The papal guard of Swiss halberdiers attends him when he goes out his arms are stamped on the medal of the vacant see he takes an inventory of the property in the palace and affixes seals to the dead pontiff's papers. But in order to prevent him from overstepping his authority the sacred college appoints three cardinals—a bishop, a priest and a deacon—who are called the heads of the orders, and whose business it is to oversee his acts. They serve for three clays, being replaced by others chosen in rotation.
Meanwhile the great bell of the capitol, the so called "Paterine," has tolled the news to the citizens in Rome. Formerly this was the signal for unlocking the jails and for unrestrained disorders. Brokers used to set up booths where pools, as at a horse race, were sold on the probable next pope, enormous sums being squandered in this species of gambling. More recently that sc«mdal has been less open. Every one is on tiptoe with excitement. Churchmen as well as laymen display an eagerness out of tune with the grief in which the church is officially declared to be plunged.
For during the novendial, or nine days succeeding the pope's death, the celebration of his obsequies and the mourning for his loss are supposed to absorb universal attention. His body must first be embalmed and then attired in funeral apparel. When masses have been said over it in the presence of the cardinals, it is removed to St. Peter's, where, on a magnificent catafalque, it lies in state. Finally, on the ninth day, the public funeral—one of the great pageants of the world—takes place, after which the body is coffined and laid away in the temporary receiving tomb, to rest there until, when the next pope dies, it is lowered into the crypt of St. Peter's for permanent burial.
Needless to say, the funeral ceremonies of the novendial cause no abatement in the preparation for the conclave. The day after the pope dies as many cardinals as happen to be in Rome meet to confer. The oldest of their number, the dean of the college, presides. They swear to preserve the utmost secrecy concerning all their proceedings. They renew their oaths of allegiance to the holy see, binding themselves to defend and guard the rights, prerogatives and temporal possessions of the church )up to the effusion of blood.) Then they discuss questions of immediate urgency, listen to the reading of the laws governing the election and hear the camerlingo's report of his business. The congregation reassembles each day, its members being constantly increased by the arrival of cardinals from a distance. William R. Thayer in Century.
Parliament Clerks and Civil Service.
Popular situations and desirable ones are clerkships in either house of parliament. In 1887 the clerk of the house of commons, Sir Reginald Palgrave, introduced the system of limited competition. There are usually one or two vacancies annually, and the obligatory part of the examination, besides the usual subjects, embraces constitutional history and Latin, while the optional subjects include Greek, French, German and mathematics, of which subjects the candidate may attempt two only. The examination fee is £6, and the limits of age are 19 and 25 years. Clerks between the ages of 19 and 24, whose parents do not reside in London or the vicinity, must be provided with such a place of residence as shall meet with the approval of the clerk of the house of commons.
The whole clerical staff in this house numbers 34, and the salaries run from £100, the figuro at which a junior begins, to £1,000, at which the remuneration of the principal clerk culminates. The staff of clerks in the house of lords is smaller, but is recruited in a similar way, the only important difference in the examinations being that French is in this case compulsory, Italian taking its place among the optional subjects. Tn tiie house of lords' staff there are 18 clerks, with salaries running from £100 to that of the chicf, who yearly draws £1,200. Besides these, many liavo extra allowances which run from £25 to £450. Vacancies occur but seldom. There has been no appointment made since 1890. —Chambers' Journal.
Little Sense of Humor.
A story is told in an Irish paper illustrating the curious absence of tho sense of humor in the'late Mr. Parnell. At the original constitution of the Land League a certain Mr. A. J. Kettle was in the chair. It fell to Mr. Parnell's lot to move a vote of thanks to the chairman, in the course of which he saidi "I need hardly observe, gentlemen, that in Ireland the name of Kettle is a household word.'' It was plain-—indeed he afterWard confessed so much—that he had not the faintest intention of making a pun, and, though everybody else saw tho joke, nobody dared to laugh. I,
SIDNEY L. WALKER,
Attorney-a/t- Law.
(Office with E. W. Felt,)
Special attention given to collections. Notarial word done. 4-1-96
E. MACK,
TEACHER OF
Violin, Piano, Comet,
Residence, North Street, next to New .Christiaa Church. d&w
au
DE. J. M. LOCHHEAD, 80ME0PiTHICj PBISICUN and SURGEON
Office and residence 42 N. Peno. street, Test side, and 2nd door north of WRlnut street.
Prompt attention to calls In cfty or country. Special attention to Children*. Womena' md Chronic Diseases. Late resident Dhyslciau St. Louis Cbildrens Hospital. 39t.lv
DR. C. A. BARNES,
Physician and Surgeon.
Does a general practice Office and residence, 83 West Main Street, wld Telephone 75.
Old feople.
Old people who require medicine to regulate the bowels and kidneys will find the true remedy in Electric Bitters. This medicine does not stimulate and contains no whiskey nor other in toxicant but acts as a tonic and alterative. It acts mildly on the stomach and bowels, adding strength and giving tone to the organs, thereby aiding Nature in the performance of the functions. Electric Bitters is an excellent appetizer and aids digestion. Old People find it just exactly what they need. Price fifty cents per bottle at M. C. Qnigley's Drug Store. 14yl
Try a can of Hopkins' Steau^ed Hominy (Hulled Corn). It is delicious. Full qt. 10c. 3Ww4
and How to Get There.
The Ocean Resorts
Atlantic City, Cape May, Asbury Park, Ocean Grove, Long Branch, and famous resorts along the Jersey Coast are located on the Pennsylvania Lines. As a direct route to Newport, Narragansett Pier. Martha's Vineyard, Nantucket and the popular watering places along the Atlantic from Chesapeake Bay to Maine, these lines offer special advantages.
In the Mountains
Cresson, Bedford Springs, Ebensburg, Altoona and other resorts in the Alleghenies are located on tho Pennsylvania Lines, which also ioad direct to the White Mountains,the Adirondack*, Watkins Glen, Mt. Dessert Island, and places of Suuimer sojourn in Eastern New York, Vermont, isew Hampshire and Maine-
The Lake Region
The low tourist rate over the Pennsylvania Lines brings Mackinac, Petoskey, Charlevoix, Mt. Clemens, St. Clair, Muskegon, Traverse City, Mackinaw City, Sault Ste Maiie, Gogebic, St. Ignace. Watersmeet, Au Sable, Iron Mountain and all the romantic resorts of Northern Michigan within easy reach. The return limit will be ample for an extended sojourn. Tourist tickets will also be sola over these lines to Ashland, Cedar Lake, Devils Late, Peliran Lftfee, Three Lakes, Waukesha and other re.sorts in tho Northwest
For Information conccrning rates, time of trains and tho through «ervice, please apply to nearest Pennsylvania Line Ticket Agent, or A.MITHS V. VAN DUSEN. Chief Assistant G»:ucra JPassenger Agent, Pittsburgh, Pa.
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