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•^m^''S>^!»^t.mi->^-i' Itedfea Daily Somml ©AKEfl * SfeNSON, POPW. Entered February 4* 1003, at Jte&taa, N, \y a» second-class matter, under AcM Congress of 'Warn % 1870^ . '.•* ^mm^wnon PRICE By-nntf tor carrier s fftpda years fifor * • sts montliarMeeptii lor tbtee *^^pffi'8, iidtariaM^ in v adyanoe.' Advening SiaWs on Application, Wednesday, ftlay 27,1903. 1903 Bit' £ 10 17 24 Wo. 4 fit 18 25 T«. 5 i2 19 \88 We, 6 13 20 27 Tfc. * 7 14 21 28 Fr. 1 8 15 22 29 Sa. —-j 2 9 16 23 30 MOON'8 PHA?I8. jQoartet * «.m.- (Quarter 19 a.m. -11 QUARTER MILLENNIUM, New York's 250th Anniversary as a Municipality. ., WHOLE CITY QAY WITH OUNTINtt Mnyor Low Presided Over Ceremonlet It City Hall—General Wilcon, Secre- tary Root; Governor Odell and Judge Gray Made Addresaei—Letter Read From Prwldont Roosevelt. Naur York, 'May 27.—Now York bill- clftlly commemorated yesterday the 2B0ti anniversary, of tho establishment of muniolpal government In Now Am stordasn, afterwards called by force and treaty between Holland and Eng> land. Now York, Tho whole) city was gay with bunt- ing. Tlio City ball, whero tho main exorclsca wore hold, and City Hall park .were tho center of attraction. the doooraifont thoro betas especially elaborate. Is U10 public schools In tho five boroughs half a million chll dron took par? In special patriotic exorcises. Mayor haw presided over tho core- moatc* at t&o Olty hall. Tho Invoca- tion tnu pronounced by tho Rev. Cor MOllUS I* Welti, pastor of tho Dutch Btffarmed church of Flatbnsh. the oldest church of that denomination In this vicinity. Mayor Low delivered n brief address, referring especially to tho city's marvelous growth and the oponh&oiod charity of Its people. \Oar special pride,\ said he. \ la that •wo are an American city, and our chief ambition Is to show how tho greatest American elty can greatly serro tho world.\ General James O. Wilson of the New York Historical society delivered the oration of tho day and was followed by Ellhu Root, secretary of war, who prefaced his remarks with a letter from President ItoosovolL After ex pressing his regrets at his inability to Bo present the pro3lrtpnt wrote: \ThO changes In Now York elty (hir- ing the 250 yeara which have just elapsed nro such as eonlil ho parallel- ed nowhoro else In tho world. Wo now bavo In New Yorlt the second larg- est city of the world, and It Is no idle c6ffijrtifft«lt to Jon and those assocl ateil with you, Mr. Mayor, for me to say that there la now no other city hero or abroad of whose governing offi- ciate Its people have more just reason to iee\ proud.\ In hla address Secretary Root said: \Tho people of tho city are able to show tljelr capacity to govern them- - selves, slaves to no ruler and to no l>arty. - The men who 250 years ago founded this municipal government were oorrod and wholesome men, and • their Bplrlt of freedom, of toleration, of elvio prido, and good citizenship sur- vives, aaemneating the whole Increasing mass of the great metropolla I am proud to come back from tho councils of the nation, to my own homo; proud to bo a «lt|zen of Now York.\ AtoeBSEW were also made 'by Gov- ernor .(Moll, Judge Clinton Gray of ifa.4 state court of appeals, the Rev. H, P. Mendes, Rabbi of Congregation Sheantth. Israel, and Bishop Henry C. Potter of tile Protestant. Episcopal diocefce of. NoW York. The Right Rev. John M. iflarley, anchbishop of Now York, pronounced the ljeiiedlctlon. •Moss&ges of .congratulations were received from Edwin Gray, lord mayor of York; President Gommo of the Municipal and County club of London; Chairman. MonksWell of the London county council, and S. S. Wltheryd of New York, consul general of Ecuador. Many dwellings and business build- ings were br/illiantly illuminated at night In nonor of the celebration, i 1 Broke Two Ribe Hiccoughing. Wilkes Barre, Pa., May 26.—Thomas McDonald, a -well known citizen of Plymouth, this county, had a severe and prolonged • Attack of hiccoughs. The paroxysm* beoame eo severe that two rlibs wars broken. VMdptPr Tola of Seijng H«p Mothf r. ..\'.'*•;•'.• Kill ..Her -HMabArt'sl.;/-; .: \ -f, :#ont!:ce11o, tey''27,-^]^fl.tr4cC' Attor- ney Andersoit opened for tie; state- in Mrs. Taylor's trlak lda'Sfay Pe-Kay; the 1 l* year old'daughtei- of .'tlte- ac- cused, was the 0nly Witness examined, Ida; Was an eye witness to .t^e snoot- ing of'Taylor and: assisted he* mother to burn the body. \When sftescaone ivfo> the court ipom to takes' tie; wit- iieBja stand) Win, r T<ayior •tad, neatly aBitat<ed, &h» ^untped 4o he*, feet apd rushed at the gir), . jjer cVtfnsel ma^e a dasft to detain hoj'a-n^ tiie district at- torney and •the: eherill made a grab| for her, Dut she eluded them, tinder Sheriff Parks stopped her \but {t re- quired all M? streteth; '. Wnea tlio witness tool? the stand •Mrs, Taylor watched ner movements closely. As tlxe daagfiter sat dpvyn she turne4 lier head towards: her mother and the two -women looked 16- to each other's eyes. There was intense hatred In- the I00X of the mother and fear In the eyes of the child. District Attorney Anderson stepped betwe<j(n them to obstruct their view, In her testimony Ida told how her |. mother shot her father and -with the axe, which was Introduced in evidence, cut off his, head. She then picked the head up by the •wfcjBkers, putjt Into the kitchen stove and hurned It, saying 4t Ida ever told she would «erve her the same way. ' The tubs In which portions of the body were concealed until it could tie burned, and the cupboard which showed evidences of murder and was afterwards patatod to hide the blood spots, wore 1 Introduced In evidence. Whon tho district attorney upoke of tho cupboard, Mru. Taylor arose, [.walked over to Ift opened the door, felt around on the shelves, closed it and resumed her seat. AUTOMOBILE VICTIMS. Funorali of Three of tho KJIled Took Place at Angouleme. Paris, Mny 27.—Tho funerals of Nor- mann, M. Tourand's machinist; Oupuy, tho soldlor, and CaJlton, the cyclist, who woro killed at Angoulomo during tho automobile raco, occurred yoator- day. Tho prefect, tho mayor and a company of eoldlors took part In tho coremonios. Premier Comhes, replying In tho chamhor of deputies to an Interpella- tion on tho automobile raco, said per- mission to raco had been granted ow- ing to solicitations Jn behalf of tho* In- tero3ta of French Industry. Tho accidents woro not duo to lack of precaution. Tho government was cot disposed to grant further permis- sions. If Mttomo|ill!sts want more speed trials they Must make a private track. Tho chamber should feck to cotirlllato publio r.ccttrity with the ln- tciesta of a deserving Industry. M. Combes finally accepted a sUnplo or- der of tho day, which was roted. J'N/,%irtt ? AaafHat IVI^JOB Glehrt* -,i^ ?-,JM&nfl&. May S^-^aljjcJeii 0-alza*- :«| w$Y«f lf*.}iig in the -tslaiid 'Of- ksyW Jtai'-Sasd -$fe$or Edward F,,6lestf»-' 0£$i»; Btb iffifehtry lor 15,000 peSoft dai»4ge|C. o'n„.tW ground, of aUsSe^.' falset':lm- prisonment:. djatea j.w^a an, jnsar|ejSt eymijathlisei' aijd ,was suspected of aid- ing jhs Sainar Insurgents;, M $$bl he, TW^S arrested ty |jia|or GJenn'# orders,, Oeneral, Sii)ith»and the olvitauthorltiesj o|Iieiyte apptovinig, an4: was eonBned la Sam*?; Ultimately <3al?a ,waa re- lease'd, -M^iOif Gleim ha? reported -the fliing Qt -th# suit t? Jf«loj: General DaVJs, -who prphably will refer the. mat- ter to SleefetaTy Boot, Dropped From Pay Roll. Now York, May 27.—Tho namo of Suporlntendcnt of Buildings Henry S. Thompson, who was appointed by Borough President Cantor to succeed P. M. Stewart, has been stricken off the May pay rolls by tho civil service commission. Gcorgo A, Hoancy, who was named oa private secretary by Mr. Thompson, has also been dropped. Tho point raised against Mr. Thomp- s-on is that tho commission is not in possession of any record to show that ho has had more than five years ex- perience while tho charter requires that the superintendent \shall be a com potent architect of at least 10 years experience.\ Four Me n Killed In a Mlnej Pittsburg, May 81—Pour men were killed and two badly burned by an ex- plosion of gas in tho mines of the Char- tiers Coal and Coko company at Fed- eral, on the Pittsburg, Chartlera and Youghioghcny railroad. Tho dead are: William Ncilsan, a mine boss; James Neilson, his nephew; Jacob Salor and Joseph Sniuck* Sixty men-were at work la the raise at the time of the ex- plosion but because the accident oc- curred In a portion of tho mine that had not heen used for several days the majority escaped. White Colony In Mlndoro. Washington, May 27.—-Manila news- papers contain an Interesting account of an expedition that has gone into Mlndoro, \ostensibly one paper puts it, \to exporo the country, but In real- ity to search for a white colony which it has long been claimed lived in the interior of the Island.\ According to this same account \numerous state- ments have been made by reliable persons, most of whom are officers in tho service, that the white colony exists, and they declare they have evi- denco to'prove the same;\ '.' President at Spokane. Spokane, *Wash>> May* 27. ^~ The Roosevelt train arrived here yesterday afternoon anfl iwias met. In the eastern ..Buburho by a coanmittee of SB citizens ieaded by ex-Senator Turner and a crowd eaOin&ted at 6,000 people,,Ait- era brief greeting the party took; car- riages for .a. two hours 4rlve through the' most attractive part at tho city. An escort vl mounted veterans of (the Spanish war in uniform, accompanied Ubja carriages. ; Jett and White In Jackson. Jackson, Ky„ May 27,—Tom •was brought Into Jackson, There no trouble in making the captureiand no dhnaonstration here. The grand Jury, aftet resuming the Marcuai in- vestigation, heard statements of Dr. J. M. Hash, who attended Marcumv Dil- lard, Hadden and Miss Emily Clark. Miss Clark was In Hargis* store when the shot was fired, Hadden was In Day's store, Kelly Kaah, tho I -only other witness during the morning, Is said to have made a sensational rev- elation but no details are allowed to be given out. Curtis Jett, also indict- ed, was brought from Winchester. ~~~8QME OLD THEATERS. M«rlomje« That Flant-!»*ed In An- cleat Greece and Itoui*. Tfon may wonder what there could be Injurious to public morality in n theater modo of atone. Consul P. Cor- nelius Sclpio Nnseia know, but history doesn't tell. The first attempt to build a stono theater In Rome was made n short time before be was elevated to lila olllce. It was sanctioned by the censors and wna nearlug completion when Sclpio persuaded tho senate to command It to bo pulled down, ad- vancing aa Ids reason solicitude for public morality. Tho Romans did not possess a regu- lar stone theater until a very late pe- riod, and, although dramatic repre- sentations wore very popular In early ttmea, It appear* that a wooden stage was created when necessary and was afterward pulled down again, nnd the plays of Plaotus and Terence were performed on such temporary scaffold- Ingn. In tho meanwhile many of the neighboring towns of Home had their stone theaters, as tho Introduction of Qreck customs and manners was less strongly, opposed in them than la th* city of Bomo Itself. Wooden theaters, adorned with the moat profuse mag- nificence, were erected at Rome even during the last period of the republic. A magnificent wooden thcator plan- ned by M. JEmllltis Scnurtia was built In his tedlleslUp B8 B. C. Its sccna consisted of three stories, and the low- er of them was made of white marble, the middle one of glass and ,tlic tipper one of gilt wood. The envea 'contained 80.000 tpeetnioHi. In 65 B. C, Cn. Poin- pey built tho first stone theater at Rome, near the Campus Mnrtlus. It was of great beauty and is said to have been built after the model of that of Mytllene. It contained 40,000 specta- tors. C Curio built In BO B. 0. two magnif- icent wooden theaters close by one an- other, which might be changed Into one amphitheater. After the time of Pompoy, however, other stone theaters were erected, as the theater of Mnr- eellus, which was built by Augustus ana called after his nephew Mnrcellus, and that of Balbus, whence Suetonius used the expression, \Per ttina thea- na. 55 —ClBt351iS9 Cofflmefelai. •m ' puMumkm m\&Ml \• .7 ' : W£T ; W«' Say j*t»»ai|tat v \TJne cdlteta woim by the, gtngllsh in, thej'serentfesntli. century;\ saM an old [tiber A*e £s*tyl«~ *« matt. .*«<*;*»•«• hat, olealei?; \were big, •etarelied thjnga agi§o.d4e4l.llke.a rutf, Sotaestimes ija,- .deed th^y were bigger than the.Mggest ruff, They reaulred a box of a good'' stee to be carried about in. \These collars wafe called bands. JJeh,Jpnson in 'Yolpone' mys, 'This band shows not my neck enpugtt.* Steele says, <The next that niotinted tfte stage was a n under citizen o^the bath, a : person: remarkable among '=the infe- rior people of'that place for ibis great Wisdom and Ms broad band,' \Bands you see, were collars, and by the same token bandboses Were collar boxes. They were big and ronud, just big enough to carry a clean, well starched band-r-Just as big, lik fact, a? they are today, \Whenever therefore, you talk of bandboxes you are unconsciously ret ferring to the collars as 'huge- as ruffs that the English of too seventeenth century wore.\ Cbased br an Exapavox. Emperor JPredcrlck William of Frus* ( sia sometimes would slguify bUs rejec- {• tlon of what ho considered an absurd petition by drnwlng on thy margin an ass' head and ears. One day, a baron of ancient patent having co\ ..med of another baron taking pi .-.cdence of huo, the king wrote on tho patition: \Mere folly. Whether a man sits above me or below me, nay birth remains the same.\ Oftentimes he would ask peo- ple in the streets who they were, a pe- culiarity which made nervous people evade the royal presence. One day when a man saw the king approaching he took to USs heels nnd ran, bat Fred- erick William pur«1S\d hh» in hot haste and when he overtook him asked, \Why did you ran away from mo?\ \Prom fear,\ answered tho man, wlicroupon his majesty gave him n heavy thwack with his cano and said that he \wished himself to bo loved and not toiie feared.\ Rice .JUttOo I#ove Story-. A dreamer and a man of action loved a woman. Tho dreamer said: \I shall write verges In her praise. They will touch her vanity, and she will love me for them.\ But tho man of actios said: \How old fashioned! I shall corner tlio stock market, ami that will bring her.\ So tho dreamer wroto verses, nnd bo Induced a friend of bis who rati a inng- oslno to print thvui. And the man of , action cornered somethlu.g or other nnd became a billionaire. In the meantime the girl married a man who Inherited bis money nod lived happy ever after. But tho dreamer WM' SO proud of lila verses that be didn't rare, nnd the man of action was so busy that It© didn't care. Tho only one to suffer was tfeo man she married.—Smart Set. Stoat: Mrxterlom W«y, ; What o,ueer quirks a good, ana/OfJe-' dleht mind- -will sometimes take! A- •clergy-man of exceptional schplarty at- tainments feMs me tfaat he qacib wrote what he at tho moment conceived, to b? the* word \righteous.\ The nature of his calling ought to suggest, that, of ail words tlifcs ohe should be ajnong the most familiar to him, and \indeed-It was, Yet when he hnd written it it dtdnotlaflk riglit, After puzzling over it for some tiino ho concluded that if niust end wlfeb \'lous\ instead of \eotm as he had -written It Finally In a mental muddle he ^vent to Ijls una-/ bridged dlctionafy, but was aiun?ed at flnding no atseh wrd thqrp. Deferring further search fgr tlie uonce, he com- pleted his letter and: then opened the dictionary again. Tbis time he found tjie word nil right anil dp its proper place, a fact which, he said, would have been n -wrsrntos to him if he had been a drinking man,-* The explanation of it was that by .some unnccoBntable freak he had got it into his noddlQ tlint it was spelled \ritcbeouii Ho hnd spoiled It so in Ids letter at«2 hnd o f course looked on the wrong page of the dictionary for It in the first instance. By the itime he. looked again tlio crotchet was out of hla mind, quel ho knew how to spell the word as well as Webster did.—Brook- lyn Eagle. Sicliolnrlr Men mad the Pninlt, If scholarly men more and moro re- ject the church as the means by which they will Influence opinion and con- duct and replace Ifby educational, ed- itorial nnd ndxuinlstratlvo agencies, the next century may be altogether guided In Its Intellectual decisions and in those of its actions which, depend on intellectual Judgments by forces out- side tho church,., Our grandfathers looked to the> minister for advice not only upon reWglouu beliefs and moral practice, but also upon moat matters outside their own direct acquaintance. The minister prescribed for the educa- tion of sons, solved social problem-* and acted as tho tsottrce and Judge of truth In matters of general knowledge. Our sons ie«n likely to regard the ministry as a body of men lifted to deal with tnesi's rellsrlotia welfare, but leas lifted lo be generous mentors In others. The direction of tho people In otlteV than pwrvly religious activities may pass wholly out of the hands of the church.-I*rofe*«or E. I*. Thorn- dike In Century. A. XUe Villas*. A traveler of tlio npper Kilo Urns de- scribes* a typical native village: \The houses are built of Nile mutl. each house nrnt-uraadnting n family of nn matter what also, the Inlmlilmm* of each village almo«t all ne»liitrd to each other, ceuipris'ng sometimes several hundreds of people. \Their streets are llttcncd with Bltlu animals of every kind obafmrt on<>'s path, dogs growl and snarl at the ap- pearance and Intrusion of n stranger. and women <!«•, hiding their fnewt In their yasbmaks Irst a white roan should behold their fca tares. Flics In swnnns settle on the children and lay their eggs on their eyelids, unwashed, because- they believe It to be contrary to their religion to wasb or tsmexvo the flies from their eyes.\—Chicago Record- Herald. APHORISMS. Indian Timber Land For Sale. - Washington, May 27.—Advertise' ments for the sale of the Umber on 108,000 acres of the lands owned by the Chippewa Indians in Minnesota have been prepared by the commis- sioner of the general land office and will be published soon. This adver- •lisment will be followed by another covering 200,000 acres. It is estimated that the proceeds* from the sales will aggregate $10,000,000 or 116,000,000. The money received will go to the Indians. ' Death of Agnes Ethel Tracy. New Yorlt, May 2fcr-Mrs. Agnes Ethel Tracy, who as.Agtres Ethel was known on the stage three decades ago, died at her homo here. n.i. i. ,| ••^..•jBX.-, —-_: , ^^^ Patient waiting Is often Uie highest Way of doing God's will.—Collier. Both man and woman Sdnd helle their nature when they are not kind.—Bai- ley. Duty and today are ours; results and fn'ttirity belong to God.—Horace Gree- ley. The future destiny of the child is al- ways the work of the mother.—Napo- leon. The more yon speak of yourself the more you are likely to Ue.—Zimmer- man. The wise are polite nil tho world over; fools are polite only at home.— Bacon. A laugh to be joyous must flow from a joyous heart, for without kindness there can bo no true joy.—Carlyle. A great deal of knowledge, which Is not capable of making a man wise, has a natural tendency to innke him vain and arrogant—Addison. Flgtitera In London Streets. The reign of George II. was a great lighting time. Every man who went abroad knew that he might have to fight to defend himself against footpad or bully. Most men carried a stout stick. When Dr. Johnson heatd that a man bad threatened-to Bofsrwhip him he ordered a thick cudgel and was easy In Ills mind. There were no police, nnd therefore a mnn had to light. It eainnot be doubted that the martial spirit of the country, which was extraordinary, was greatly sustained by the pr-artico of fighting, which prevailed alike In all ranks. The Real Tlilnjr. \Tell me, febtrold,\ she enJd as the gentle old horse they wore driving along the country road dropped into a walk, \am 1 your Ideal girl?\ \No he said fervently. \You're my real girl!\ Whereupon the horse, finding him- self totally neglected, stooped and be- gan to browse.-—Chicago Tribune. A TrrncSo Wrttftiaic Klnx. A IrnRle story of' a forgotten wed- ding ring Is told In tlte \Lives of th» Lindsays.\ fie tdtoold have bem ol church when Colin Lindsay. t!:e youta t Enrl of llalcarms, vsrus quietly eat- ing his brc.iUfa.il In nightgown nnd slippers, llonaindcd that Mitarltln of Nassau was wailing for him at the al- tar, bo hurrlwa to i-hnreh. but forgot tho rlns. A Eriend present gave btia «nc, whit-It be, without looking at, placed on the ftrldo's finger. After tho dpremony was over the countess glanced at her hnnd and be- held a grlnnlos deatb's head on her ring. She fainted away, and the omen mndo Koch an Impression on her that on recovering she declared sdio was destined to die within n year, a present- iment that pro-Iiably brought about Its own fttllilliiioat. for In n tew months tho careless Colin was a widower. Irrltdtion m»«2 I'«!n. A sharp definition -atould lit- drawn between Irritnefon'and pain. Irritation is not pain, btx£ only m. frequent cause of It. Thus a. crumb lodged In the larynx near ttee vocal cords produces violent irritation and prolongo<l cough- ing, which often result In actual pain. *So. too, a tpecSs: of dust In the eye sats up violent Irritation and Inflammation, followed by atmto pain. Of tlte sur- face of the body the finger tilts* ond the end of the tongrue are most sensitive— for instance, a biiru on the fingers is much more patlnful than one on the back would be, while one on the tongue would be more painful stilL Deep wounds are not painful, ns a rule, save as regards the -surface injury. An Union! Ajipcrnton. \Yes our society's new president cer- tainly is a busy woman, but they say she fs neglecting her duties as a wife and mother.\ \That is not true. I know for a fact that she manages to see her family al- most every day.\—Brooklyn Life. Eyes at Different Affea. The Stockholm museum possesses an interesting collection of eyes taken from human beings at different ages, which are cut across In suoh a way as to exhibit plainly the Internal and the external oye. It Is easy to observe that the eye of a young child Is as trans- parent as water; that of the youth a little less go; In the man of thirty the eye begins to be slightly opaque, la the man of flfly or sixty It Is decidedly opaque, and In tho man of seventy or eighty it is dull and lusterless. This gradual development of opacity is due to the increase of fibrous tissue and de- posit of waste matter in tho eye. Confusion. \Pardon me, dear,\ said the village editor's bride, \for appearing at dinner In my wrapper, but\— \Oh that's all right,\ interrupted the knight of the paste pot; \some o f our test thoughts come to us in wrappers.\ —St- Louis Star. It Wimn't. ( \Boys don't you know it's wicked to fight? Now, if I were you I'd kiss and make up.\ \Say wot do yous tink dis is- man's club?\—Life. -a wo- The shortest life Is long enough if it lead to a better, and the longest life Is too, Short if it do not—Col ton. 't TreM xtt Europe and Sforih A tncrtiut. Forest vegetation Is xnnc-h richer In North Ajnerlea Shan la Europe aa-J com- prises 402 species, of which 170 are native to tho .Atlantic region. 100 to the Pacific 10 are common to both, 46 to the Rocky mountain region, nnd 74 are tropical species, near the const of Florida as against 138 species In Europe. Six fsorth American species of forest trees—the Jodns tree, per- simmon, hack&erry, plane tree, hop hornbeam and chestnut—are also In- digenous In Europe, ail ( now growing there naturally south of the Alps. Titttrxxe't Toilet. The West Indian negro need not buy soap. He picks a bulb from the \soap tree\ In the jungle, which makes a beautiful lather. If he -wants a shave, lie uses a piece of sharp cocoanxit shell or broken glass and it answers as well as a razor. To clean \his teeth he picks a twig of \chewstick wliich Is better than the best camel's hair brush and dentifrice. Tile Correct R«irlr. At an examination held at the ag- ricultural college tho question -was put, \When is the toest time to sow bar- ley?\ The \ex&jninate a sharp coun- try lad from the district of Altenbut-g. promptly replied: \Three days before a gentle rain, sir.\—From tho German. A I,entl-«r No X^onger. \Never lend Burroughs any money?\ \Never did.\ \But you have.\ \No; used, to -thhutl did, but found I was making a gift every time.\— Boaton_Post. W«JL To, Rochester and Ontario- Beach, ; Gri above dfife the^Tork Qen- traJwill-selllowrftteexcui-moii' tickets •to Uocheatfer aiicl r Q»taHo fteaelt ; tickets -good going-ana retuwiJng Q n regular, except.-\Majn: Mm Jiinitetl train?. - ' - At- Rochester there .wilLle a mam- moth parade,.twp ball games between Rochester aijd \ Baltimore CluLs, majtinees at theatres ifec* Ontario Be<wb will open for the season brighter and'.'Ttettov than ever before in its history. There will be first class mtiaic, &c. Mani- tou Beach will also' be open! Cars will run every few miitntes from Charlotte and New York Central trains -will leave JS T e\v Yor^c Central Station, Bochester and Center Park, Brown Street and s 0tjs at short intervals. See agents for particulars. 90tl 2 To Buffalo and Niagara rails, Satur- day, May 30th. On above date the Now York Cen- tral Railroad will soil excursion tickets to Buffalo and Niagara Falls at extremely low rates; tickets good going and returning on regular ex- cept limited trains.^ Special train returning will leavo Buffalo at 11:80 p. jn. Attractions nt Buffalo will bo grand parade, two hall games be- tween Buffalo and Toronto Clubs Tony McGovern and Attell at Fort Erie at 3 p. m., matinees at theatres. See ticket agents for particulars. Buffalo and Niagara Falls Every Sat- urday and Sunday, May 30th to Sep!e«i6er 27th. Tito Now York Central will sell low rato excursion, tickets to ihiffaJo and Niagara Falls and return every Saturday nnd Sunday, eoramone-iu# Decoration Day, Hoy 30Ui, to ami .including Sunday, September 27th. Tho Buffalo Zoo is open for the season with excellent attractions. Hiogara Falls, the Great Catoaet, is tuebesfc resortitt America to spend the day for rest and recreation. Seo ticket agents for particulars. iHanltoo Beach Excursions Every Sat- urday and Sunday, May 30th to September 27th. The New York Central will sell one-day excursion tickets t o Mnaitoxi Beach and return every Saturday and Sunday, commencing Decoration day, to and including Sunday, Sep- tember 27th. Mnnitou Beach, eight miles from Ontario Beadb, i s reached via open care of the Afaniton Beach HUP, passing Long Ponil, UmdtWk'a Bay, Cranberry Pond and Crescent Beach. This is considered one of tho fiuest open car trips in America as It skirts Lake Ontario's shores the whole length of the line. See ticket agents for particulars. Saturday and Sunday Excursions to Rochester and Ontario Beach. Every Saturday and Suuday, Hay 30th to September 27th, the New York Central will sell one-day ex- cursion .tickets to Rochester and Ontario Beach and return at very low rates. Ontario Beach opens for tbe season on Decoration Day, May 3f)tli. Everything bright and new at this famous resort. Music and vaude- ville entertainment throughout the season. Plenty of out door amuse- ment to suit tbe taste of aU. Four Warn to rtealtjh. Hygienic living demands Imperative- ly the absolute purity of the four fol- lowing necessities: Air, water, food ahd thoughts. Granted these, you have the constituents out of which nature for- mulates\ such a perfect creature that the Inward purity seems to lend a radi- ance to the personality. It is not sim- ply a few breaths of fresh air a half dozen times a day that a woman needs, but a continuous supply, and jnst ns tire greater part of women are half starved for fresh air, so they are also stinted, aftener from ignorance than necessity,' In the quantity of water the body re- quires to keep it clean and healthy. Pleasure of a pure, elevating nature has come to be. recognized as having a distinctly therapeutic office and hence to be one of those, factors which merit the same-consideration and attention as other necessaries in a well ordered life*