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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 11, 1912)
THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: FEBRUARY 11, 1912. Civilizing Wild Tribes in the Philippines fmm : mm . -. kmf ? i i a 'r ch i v i J? 1 Y Y I CMHier." It dl with th arter. Ill FS 1 ' '?- v"" " , I II-KnI ilndB and nhowii what w Today th Bairobu re farming In I I . V. I f ' VV '-N ' I 'V jpla Ilk Umm picture asd tbay an do-In- oonatdarabl rood. I The tribal line are fast dlaajuMarliic amons the a-ast of the north. In the mountain prorlno there now czlata T3 milts of rood trails, rare ere MR run from th coast to C erven tos, and la A short time ther will reach Bontoc, th capital In Ifucao there are MOW nan who each did ten days work on th road last year. The oM traits have been wi dened and improved, and tt la expected that an mllea of new roads will have teen completed durln- thla fiscal year. This road work la color on In atlndore and othcrwherea. Tae Aaaerleane Vereae tke Flllla. In cloatnc I would ear that the wild, men are arrald of th Fll ptno and that there la a mutual dlstniet between th two classes. Th Filipino despised th wild man on account of his Irnoranc. and fears him for the venseanc he ha shown In the past. A war of prejudice and hatred has risen up between him and th sml-ava(. nd It Is said that he has taunted th latter with th statement (CopyrU'lit. 11-. I Vrank Q. Carpenter.) only to th kiicrs. ane Uie : ri wore .VSU1NGTON, D. C Have en- strings of bells about lh 1. at ti c uuiie titled thla letter "Unci Sam, place that th American k : r 1 ncara her rtiUlaer." It deals with thxti!r. wild tlibrs of the Philippine I Ther Rata Hemp for Kiport. Today th Bairoba!t tire farming In earn est. Major G!lslteurr says they are now brinmnr In sotnetliln ItKe 1 jO.ooo pounds of hemp a month anl that his whole district exports ten turn' that amount. Many of th other tribes bring In KiimH and wax, and not a few of the wild mm ar laboring on the plantations uwnfd by th ChrUtlanr. Th greater part of 5fln!anao i. ilil, and some of the people far In the Intorlor are so savage that very little has been don with them. Trior are fifteen dif ferent tribe near Davao, acme of whom still live la tree, making their norms In th' branches forty or fifty feet above the ground. Thee people are much afraid Islands and shown what ws have done with them after thirteen years of civil and military rule. Th work so far has been that of our government, but the Plllplnoa would like to have a hand In It. Borne of them am now attempting to mak It a political Issue and to have these savages ruled by th active aasembiy at Manila. Hut Unci Pern know batter. He questions whthr th Filipinos ar able to vn govern themselves, and th civilisation of th wild men wlil be continued by th national government Million tail-Savage. As It ta now, fully one-eighth of th population of the Philippine Is seml-aav-aga. Th people have been counted by our census enumerators and we find somv thing like 700.000 who rank from th lowest tag of barbarism, as shown by the Negrito pigmies, up to th Igorrotes and Ifugaog of northern Luson, who hav irrigated rlc field, villages with public buildings and other things shoving a considerable degree of civilisation. W hav also sOO.OM Mora, who ar a sort of degraded Mohammedana, and of whom I shall writ later on. Let u first tak th) wild men outside th Moroa They ar scattered all over the Islands; they Infest the mountainous districts, an! vast treats of oum devoted entirely to them.. 8om of them an head hunters, many hav been slaves and not a few an as aavag as th poor est and meanest negri of the wilds of the I aaw a great many of these people dur ing my stay In the Philippines. The little black pigmies peeped out from behind rocks at me as I rede through the mountains, and away down In southwestern Min danao I had a chance to buy a black Slav girl for Hi. She was an Aeta, 11 yean old, and she only reached to my shoulder. She was half naked, and I could see that she waa as plump as a partridge, notwithstanding her sis. Avoag ke Baa-onaa. - In that asm region I was shown men belonging to tribe where on could not marry until h had killed a human being. These were the Bagobas. and associated with (hem wen the Oulnga. a class of spoclsl murderers appointed by the chiefs. Thy had th right to wear th turban wbioh looked for all the world like a red bandana handkerchief. The turban was a license to kill, and on of the wearers told me he had twenty heads to his credit. The Sagoba file their teeth and blacken them. They an polygamlsta, and formerly held human sacrifices on the slopea of Mount Apo, ths great volcano not far from Davao. I waa told that they prayed to th mountains, and their exact methods of sacrificing humans to it waa ebown. They wen very revenge ful, and carried on a vendetta from generation to generation, lancing or spearing their enemies on eight. I have Just gotten a report from thst part of the Philippine. It la from Major Henry Gllaheuser, the governor of the Davao district. Be says that ths Ba gobas have stopped murdering their fel lows, and an taking to farming. Many of them have been brought together la villages, when they have schools with regular teachers. la other places th wild boys an taught by th scouts and the polio. Is th town of Davao. which waa practically wild at the time I vu. tted the Islands, then Is an agricultural and Industrial school, attended by the boys of ths surrounding tribe. Military drill Is given and th boy, an taught farming. Wlien we took possession soma of th Eagobas hsd little farms and they raised htnj for their own us. They ton the fibers apart and wove their clothes trcm them. I saw hundreds of men and women who wen dressed In grass Jacketa and psnts. The pants of both sexes reached -J,! f-W . that th American government is to be only temporary snd that in time ail the tribe wlil be ruled by him. This th wild man tears and he baa come to the Ameri can again and again and begged him to stay and contlnne to give him his right la th courts and th other great advan tages which he now has. FRANK a CARPENTER. Hasswrleee Wessea, The Wandering Willie had received plentiful - Inward repairs at a a-eneroua farm bouse ha-f a mile down tne roo and when be eame to th next he migT. kave pl on, but he waa In still fur ther need, snd he knocked at th kitchen door. A kind woman responded to hi knock. He waa such a rexged specimen mat her heart was moved beion he spoke. t hy, vou poor man!" she exclaimed. "Come Into the houee! W haven't got much just now, but you can have nougb to keep body and soul tngether." ''Taln't that ao much, lady," he re plied, sticking out a foot In a dilapidated shoe, "as It Is something to keep upper and sole together." He laurhed at hts Joke, hut th woman dtd not. Women hav no en of humor, ah slammed th door In his far. Judge. What's the Matter With Your Baby? Th yoi:n; mother snd many an old for a child. one, too is nnen pussie to know tne cause of her child s III nature. The loudness of its crying does not necSe sarliv indicate the seriousness of Its trouble. It may hav nothing more the matter with It than a headaohe or a feel ing of general , dullness. . It cannot, of course, describe Its feelings, but as a prellnUnary measun you an ssfs In try ing a mild laxatlv. Kin times out of ten. you will find tt Is all th child need, tor it ntiane snd pevlahness r perhaps due te ob structlon of the bowels, and once that haa been remedied the headache, the sluggishness snd ths many other evi dences of constipation and Indigestion will Quickly disappear. Don't ghe tl.e little one salts, cathar tic plllj or nasty waters, for these will act aa purirat:ves. and they an too strong In. the families of Mr. J. E. Harmon, so star Ave.. Burlington. Iowa, and Hit K. Morse, Council ttmrta, Iowa, Uie only laxative given Is Dr. raid well's Syrup pepsin. It has bean found to answer most perfectly all the pur poses of a laxative, and Its very mildness and freedom from gilplng recommend It especially for the use of children, women and old folks generally people who need a gentle bowel stlmuiant Taoueands of American families have bean anthusiastlr shout It for more than a quarter of a century. Anyone wishing to make a trial of this remedy before buying It In the regular way of a druggist at fifty cents or one dollar a large bottle i family siae) oan have a sample bottle sent to the home free of charge by simply addressing Ir. I. ex Washington at.. Montlcello. 111. Your nam and address B. Caldwell o. 111. ' on a postal card-will do. of the foreigners, but they are gradually cl,d ,n n'hing more than a gjastrlng It to his fellows. He thereupon thrust beginning to have confidence In the new wu" pounuing on sons in ninuir. eondnions snd t in, ihsf h.u .in I "Nit are the Jaws of the human HZV DM igrssFBaax, Sanatorium Thig Institution to the only on In the central west with eeparat buildings situated In tneir own ample grounds, -'yet entirely distinct and rendering it possible to classify cases. The one building being fir.ed for and devoted to tee treatment of noncontagious and EOiimemal diseases, no others be ing admitted. Tte ohsr Kest Coitage te.ng designed for and devoted to the exclusive treatment of select mental cases, requinus (or a tlua watchful care and fe cial nursing. net be robbed or murdered. The government has been opening up tnlls all over Mindanao. It Is making roads and clearing out the riven and streams, so that the wild people can go from place to place In their oanoew. Then an mounted police almost evens. beings they have probably killed. The teeth In the )aws are plainly visible. There are seme of these head hunters today, but the American governors of the tribes write that the custom Ha been almost wiped out. During 1911 there wen no heada token by the Ifugaos, and wh.re. and life and property ar now 'V mon h Irrot Kalmgas. comparatively safe. In some places th Lieutenant Governor Hal waa warned wild men at used to pollr. their own ,hM "M1h" h" h'l vlsltsd country. Human sacrifices an being dons away with, and this Is also true of the animal sacrifices. .Down at Davao roads and bridges have been made throughout the whole district Then Is a wtnlsss telegraph station there and telephone will soon be put In. Work Aasonsj the Negritos. Before I speak of the work which has been done .In Luson and other large Islands when then are seml-civtlised tribes I want to tell you above the Ne gritos. These little people an about ths lowest and most barbarous of our Philip pine cousins. They an the aborigines, and an much ilk th pigmies of the Andaman Islands and th Bttle dwarfs which Inhabit th wilds of th Kongo, They ar about th smallest of mankind. I hav mat full grown women who could walk under my arm and have seen old men who did not reach up to my shoulder. The officials of the census measured nine full-grown men and the average height was four feet eight Inches. These people an as brack aa your hat, and their hair Is a woolly as that of the little men of the Kongo. They hav wid nostrils, thick lips and flat noses. Their teeth an black, made so by chaw ing th betel. The Negrito an scattered all over th islands. They hav no language exoept that of the people about them. They hav no tribal relations to speak of, and It Is hard to get hold of them except In Isolated cases. Th government has en ticed some into th schools, but they an usually timid and will run from th stranger. I saw some of them In the Zamhsles mountains while General Fred Grant was In charge of that region. They wen almost naked, and their houses were bark shelters or holes In the ground. The most of their riving came from hunt ing and' fishing, and they were expert trappers of gam. They us bow and arrows and tip their arrows with poison. As to th future of the pigmies, th government does not expect much. The Negrito I not numerous enough ts be an Important quantity, and th probabil ity I that h will be swallowed up by th other tribe and the Filipinos and will disappear. Maasyaas asM Tasssssei, Another low tribe la the Mangy an and another is the Tagubano. These peoples are mixed with th Negrito, but they are a little more advanced In civilisation. The government la now Investigating them. Then are many of them In Pala wan and Mlndoro, when they live In the woods, engaged In hunting and fish ing. They hav little patches of farms. W have American governors la Pala wan and Mlndoro who are now organis ing these tribes and beginning the work of clvlUxlng them. I am told that they have an alphabet and that It will be posalbi to get many of them Into the school. In the past they have sent messagea to one anouier on pieces of bamboo. Oar Bead Heaters la IwlS. But I want to tell you what baa been done among th bead hunters. When we took hold of the Islands we had tens of thousands of savage who made a regu lar custom of killing human beings that 1 ther might cut off their heada and keep them aa tropniea. This custom waa not .nee, ui " uuu , wor,,, MrUM ,,. , of to the wild tne of the northern part otwhJcn m mntoltea , .u and Luxon. Our government officials have human At ,hty wm mui h tsken photographs of the victims, hav- irrmld of the Americans and looked upon ing- found them shortly after the heads ; them as magicians. One time a party, of had been cut off. f have seen on of a ', hem came to Manila and Dean Wor man tied to bis shield with his bluody I cester gave each of them a piece of Ic. n- hanging down. and told them, that In America water They have also photographs of houses ' occamo like that In a inter. The men ornamented with human beads, and I j handled the ice and one raid he was one of the Kallnga settlements. He went. nevertheless. His head Is still on. Ia tae ataaatala Previa. ' It I right In this region of bead huntsrs and others that the government has now organised what is known aa th mountain province of northern Luson. That coun try Is as big as Massachusetts and Con necticut combined, and It Is Inhabited by wild or seml-ctvllu-ed peoples. It has, altogether, about (00,000, many of whom have been head hunter, and practically all of whom are th descendants of head huntsrs. - The province has a governor, who lives at th capital.- which Is Bontoc' and It has seven lieutenant governors, one over each of th subprcninces Into whloh th mountain province has bean divided. In this region then are flvs great tribes, all of which live In villages and hav more or less civilisation. Many. of them hav been Mml-otvtllsed In th peat, only th wilder ones being bead huntsrs. Tak th Tlngyans. of whom there ar perhaps 100,000. They ar farmers living In villages. They have a religion of their own, one part of which la a belief In spirits who are always hovering around them and affecting every aot of their lives. The Tlngyana sacrifice pigs and chickens to these spirits. Another big tribe Is the Kallnga, who In the past hav been famou as head hunters. They have axes made for chop ping off the head at a Mow, end ablet da for defense.- Some. of them live In the trees, and they an expert raftsmen and make theii war to and fro aa far as possible by water. Head hunting has been a religious busi ness with the Kaltngas, one of the cere monies being the taking out of th bmlns and eating them. Th chiefs of these head hunters an now co-operating with the American lieutenant governor. They have settled In villages and are beginning to farm. The Ifagaee ssi Their Blew Fields. Every on In th United Stat has heard of the Igorrotes, some of whom were seen at the St. Lotus exposition. They ban a number of tribes In northern Luxon. and, notwithstanding their head bunting, hav had a high degree of civili sation. They have farms and grow, coffee and rice and raise stock. From , reports which have recently come from Dt Merlon Miller and other ethnologists of ths bureau of science at Manila I lcerjn that these people are rapidly Imp roving. They are beginning to send their children to school, and hundreds of little fgorror boys, clad In nothing but a cap. Jacket and a string around the waist, may be seen trudging along with books In their It Into bis waistband. Vary quickly thereafter he was seen to sneak It ou again, and look anxiously down at lilt now moistened olothlng. , Hew Isere'lia Werki.. In' all of the region, known aa the mountain preserve, head hunting hai been practlrally suppressed. Hundred! of miles of new roads and trails hav been built, and govarnment tohani hav been established to supply the ic pi with good roads at reasonable price Unci Bam la also trying to route market tor th products of these peep! He he brought paao ts them, and Introducing various Industrie. Some i th Igorrotes and other tribes weav. mm wm Something out ot the ordinary sosse- to every woaiao and man, too. 1 be a(s opportunity ever onered te Item without cent ot oost ust how to acquire snd retsia healthy scalp, cultivate luxuriant growth ot heir, end restore faded or (ray hair to Its natural rioh color. These great leeurss, I oar la assieer eon tela last she laforvsatto every wessea wanM and a wemas slieutd be Wlthenf swtesseenr lAeesslssml kmr. Insist. slur-ls. Baasmeodabl lentves they u- sO smables.se thst sfier resdlnssbsa ye will knew Vlf taetesaeu? whslU vroaf wliissur sMIpsnd heir. ,T sad sew le srsst Meet. A iso sow to sweerat scalp Irrllatlaas. ana avoid shs Senear ar ertav snd errscaly hair. Ransseatsly piloted la peavpaM sroressir lauswsiea. f tear lee- el We will seed re isle sears Asms absolutely free, whes astlleauia la au1 e the Sosteard sseleiM la svary seeks ef Q haa I 1 Hair Tsele esdW ban Hair Hesterar. or It front I 1 prot'eereoa!aleh bsitls la peeked It enelosed 1 1 la year letter. Adarats HMMlTlLUS l)Rl.'U ICO Mescals, Tens. , . , . i' II 7w ,t,0Tr -' am wll Ins Th ktan se wseiae Who toast seffett ihwtbsr raassseatof avatArstraBked aalrdoessotrosieKoies and aot from seesssliy. mr e Bsn Hslr Restovr wm pnaiavsiy onnf osex siieeritiBai eoiev aaa sort, Instross eppeisas oi sooth. It Is aot a atlaeral ays. and its offset It not to simply eolor the stwraal tab of the hair. Is ets dirsetly aaoa I be Istsroal IswIlhlaUMharr Tbals Ortnataess Con tmnt. Fat, or even faxtlsh, women reader who want to be In the mode this year bob understand that th demand Is for lines, not curves, and govern themselves sc cordlngly. This means OFF with the fat It has become a duty. Many are trying exer cise or dieting, but It Is certain they win find these methods too alow, and unde sirable. The cheapest and safest way te get In form for the Dlrectoin mode la by means of Marmot Prescription Tablets. Any druggist (or the Marraela Co, Us Farmer Bidg.. Detroit. Mich.) will glv you a large alxed case of these elegant little fat reducers, containing a good, generous aupply, for seventy-fin cents, nnd even this quantity ahould be enough to make a decided Impression oa your excess fst. Many have lest aa much as a pound a day. These Marmola Prescription Tablet msv be used with Impunity end likewise perfect confidence, for. being made strictly In accordance with the famoua Marmola Prescription, they are, of course, quite harmless. They are rather bene ficial than otherwise, In fact, never dis turbing tli stomach or causing a wrlnk llne: of tiie fleslu ' ASTHMA If you suffer, call or write me a one and learn ef something you will be irate- i ful for th rest of your life. J. a. Mo Bride. University Place. Unrein. Neb. TRAVEL. HAMBURG-AMERICAN LABOEgT IT1UMH1P CejMFaJTT (a) OYER 403 SHIPS 1,210.009 MS m seal beautiful mats which Command a reau Hik and sUmalstes the siiliii. of eolorlnt matter by the llni blood price In th market They also do carv btssltitog Bsalisir Ksstersrltpsrsisssst. It Isduroe a aorasl produces and diatruniUoa Ing. unon a l l4latsnAVil iy suu every rsrsi.eiiros an seersaissaset uin I VUtVW WHAT iCWTw rerora. It reawves all ebstrnetioas la the i at Man- m bom, ltHsiTelystoBsfalllnfhalrndledtoes soar awaey vece It it laiis. ask ror Bisnea gasraawe wnoa you ear, rnoe.si.se. lid Dreveess their Unf arteries of toe and proveete ! sosaMygrswta. u, ana tney urine tneir - - - tod carving, tnapotkS and Metttssrsoiove,wWeoaVeoieeseesjtsisftee, aasrees nsssiegtvis seue oe,, bhssssMSiVsaej k. .niimi j kMsuaa a atccionaeli atrag O Owl Drug Oo-, Bail Orog Jo,, Beatoa inag tTas to the exchanges, where j. gc. aekmiat and gahaefsr Oat Price Drug snore. of the n stars! pirmsnt, and when assd la Mnsertioa with U baa Hair Tosle, It guarantted to restore rsr Bsir so its onsinsi oouissbi siorv. Maninar am ma eis utiiss.nej.s iunrim uiss sijsws vnsi Tbeae new roads are bringing the peo- wiUtlllwluiouleo.tif It toils. Atk for signed gaaraa lee wheayoe bay. I1ce.Hleests. . -pie together. They are trading with one - as . Iseeoslsfood and hslrfertilltor. Remoess Isndroff peeiUv. a not her, and are In fact entering new life. They like our government stores whore the salsa are made He metres nlus M nee cent end the cost of transportation, and thsr bring their fOK SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS basket work, wood curious they ar bought for casta as curios. So far the exchange hav been operated by th lleutensnt governor, but It Is be lieved In time that there will be men st pointed by the government to study the local needs and to bring In the goods to supply them. Moving Plctarea for th Savage. The government Is establishing schools snd Is doing what It csn to tea ah the grown-ups. One of Its methods Is by ths stereoptlcon lecture. The officers show moving pictures and other Ian tarn slides by which they teach sanitation, agriculture and Industries of various kinds, Ona picture will be a village In a wild state, and another the same vulaga cleaned ef dirt One will shew mt which I shabby and poor, and another a hut of the sunt sis well made. One picture will be that ot a head hunter when he was wild. The next prtetat him In daaeo'e clothing, and third as an officer, of the poMce force. The peo- TWO CRUISES Aroond the World , VICTORIA, LUISS (ls.soe TONS) I , The hw'slCruiainf Status afW win visit Maiolra. Seal a, Ravly, Earel. Jadta. Ceylea, gusslla SettUaeewta, jama, PalMpelsisa. Cwlaa. Japaa, Saad si test letaaasi Sim Ovsrltat Aasrltsa Tver. ntLAKD BTOIHSIOWi A ICS , siDsi TBira. OFTiOHALi 1 4 B4T tw frf TOLKS 1 11 S4II f.V uu Fm (if TtTklFm Sm Fracoxi NV. liulft.. 17, 1111 Duration 110 Days Each $6S0rp HAKBURGvAMIRICaN LINE t .10 W. Baaaolph Bt, tTklaagwi tr local tresis. Oerrlgst lilt PIMPLES began to ITCH AND BURN i Savagee Woo Are Wertk gflSO. Th same la true of the Ifugaoe,. an other agricultural people. The Ifugaos have rice fields which an faced with stone walls. The walla an built to hold back th earth and In some places they an forty feet high. These terrace rise up th hill Ilk gigantic tairwsys. run ning hundreds and sometimes thousands of feet over the riven when they begin. In each little terrace rice grows, and the land Is so valuable that the people an among the richest semi-savages of the world. Their wealth Is said to be about 3 000,- 00 American dollars or Hot per capita. The Ifugaoe have their own religion and their own . priests. They think the Got Thick ind Broke 0 1 Into Little Sores, .Tried Cuticura Soip and Ointment. Completely Cured. Psvespwt, West. "Two yean age t id skla aitesss ea my tae. At srst tber an only a few email red pimples and I did not pay any attennoa to than, but el but they IV so thick and taty started te Kck and bun that soeav times J taoogkt I saver weald be aba) to stand a. After two ssooths ths piav ekes broio out kite - Itttl sores. ' Teas sty attar told ass a try Cuticura Omtateat sad Bos, so I rot ntt a box of OutleUr Otojt asso! sod s esse sf Ccttrura Soap. After see weak I saw that la Oertmeat and Seep were doing set goad ss I oaauaoed te uss them tad after using tbsas three asocial I found that I -was oorapletely cured of skin dasssii "lged) Mm, Wlsuaoi BetcMaerrer, Ospt. n, nil. r7 irar BABY'S FACE ALL SCALES kcasstWsaTsriJ. She CeaU Nat Skep. in Coffey at, Brooklyn, w. T. -My bstby'ft race. brk and arms becarae all scales and la fsaaavg was terribM. 8bs weuld scratch trots It was beted mg add a sxsss ef ore. She eould set sleep sad I bad te walk the door with her night fter meat. I decoded te try-Cuticura eoap sad Ointment. Altar uaatf thtai two tseatna aae was cured coat pwteiy snd sow bar skin a dear." (Bigned) Mn O. Boehn. Sept. 2. 10 1L Cuticura Soap and Ointment ar sold everywhere. Sample of each mailed free, with 32-p. book- Address. Xutk-ure." Dept. T. Boston. TesderJaced men should I J j hav e before m a picture of two men j gu.cg to take his piece home and sbow suave wilb Cuticura Soap 6uaTaj buck, i III . V w-' I . i i.i iT The Outdoor life ot Galveston 13 a source of never-ending delight to lovers of sport.' You can fill your gome bag without half trying you can b sure of a day's "catch" of a dozen different kinds of fish in the waters about Galveston tarpon fishing, the sport of kings, is at its best here quail and ducks in abundance. t Best of all, yon can spend every day out la the open under tunny skies, breathing the pure, fresh salt sea air. Too can tak a plunge la the surf, yon can gall or drive, motor along- miles of smooth. Gulf roads, play golf, tennis or enjoy the beach, promenade in a roller chair; Aerwarua, 70a wlli look back to dayi of rare delight spent at Galveston. For comfort there's the new million-dollar Hotel Oalves. the ore-wi-lng glory of this delightful city, commodious, inviting, as superbly equipped as any eastern hotel a place that will add to your personal comfort snd, enjoyment while In- Galveston. : . ) ' Let i end you a handsome boost is colors deacriptlv ef Hotel Oelvaa. Address JOHN F. LETTON, Manager, Hotel Galvez, ;'.'. OALTESTOJT, TEXAS. . Going: to Galveston? Ton will get ther in better time snd greater comfort by exing ths Katy. Trains from yoor city make good connections at Kansas City with fast limited train splendidly equipped with free re clining chair cars, Pullman electric-lighted standard and observation sleep ers. It runs over the Katy all, the way, so there is no danger of missed connections or tiresome delays. . For fares, berth reservations or any information ia regard to ths Journey, nuurese . . , W. 8. St. George, Gen. Passenger Agent, M. K. ot T. Ry. . . WaiBwright Bidg., St. Lonls, Mo.