THE COLUMBIAN, BLOOMSBUROPA. s THE FAMINE IN INDIA. BY JUSTIN E. ABBOTT OF BOMBAY. EIGHTEEN YEARS RESIDENT IN INDIA. A famine the niont wtdesprpnd and hpvctp of tills rentury now darken tbe whole of western and rontral India, 1111 nren equal to Now Knglnnd, Now York, Now Jersey, Pennsylvania, Ohio, IndlnnH. Illinois. Michigan nnd Wis onsln. Sixty million people are Involved, of whom probably 10.0d0.000 will perish unless aided. The living skeleton Is the Indisputable evidence that the resources of the people nre eshuusted. Along the highways, In lonely ffr-,,m.ua,,;,..lilt:- ,Mlinilli' SKELETONIZED HY FAMINE, passes, by stream bods that give no hope of water, weak and emaciated bu Ban beings are falling and dying by hundreds dally. Jreat numbers who reach relief camps are past help, and the very food they ravenously eat kills tnem. Children, orphaned or deserted, are picked up by scores as they wan der. Terrible tales are told by eyewitnesses of these helpless little ones be ing devoured by dogs and Jackals. The cause of the famine Is the failure of the monsoon rains from June to October last year. The farmers, who v mw' "WHAT WILL YOU DO WITH ME?" tFajnfne girl not too tar gone y save. In spite of all that can be done by the government there Is a vast field for the private charity now being so splendidly supplied by America. Britain and her colonies and various European countries. Doubtless the most efficient gency for distribution of this private benevolence Is the body of several hun dred American and European missionaries located In the famine districts, whoRe experienced services are freely given to this work of humanity. Missionaries supplement official efforts by assisting as many as possible to reach relief camps. Those too weak for the Journey, unprotected young wo men, mothers with children and deserted orphans, are given refuge and tender tiOYEKNMENT ItEI.IEF WORK-MAKING A RESEHVOIR. care. Weavers and other petty artisans ure supplied with work which pre vents the breaking up of their homes. Industrial schools are maintained which In a few months give boys a training that makes them self supporting. It Is the duty and privilege of every one to have some share in this sacred work of humanity. Money may be sent to Brown Bros. & Co., r'. Wall street, New York, treasurers of the committee of one hundred, William E. Dodge, chairman, and Dr. I.eander T. Chamberlain, executive director, by whom It will be cabled promptly to the responsible and representative Amcrico-Indlan relief committee, under the chairman-. ship of United States Consul William! H. Fee, at Bombay, with the veteran missionary, Bubert A. Hume, as execu tive secretary. This committee aids . and co-operates with our heroic fellow citizens of all denominations In the famine districts. The New lork committee of one hundred on Indian famine relict co operates with committees of the same name In Boston. New Haven, Baltimore. Washington, Indianapolis and other! titles, each of which has charge of the work In Its own section. The commit tee announces that, thanks to the hearty assistance of the press of the United States and the express compn- ules, which forward gifts without rharge. It has received contributions imountlng to $100,000. On receipt of i postal addressed "Committee of One Hundred, 73 Bible House, New York, supplies of IlliiNt rated literature are ent without charge and expressage free. The help of Individuals, clubs, lodges, labor unions, employers, pro- prtetors of hotels, churches, Sunday schools, young people's societies. King's Daughters, etc.. Is sought in dlstrlbut- K "API,Y ,0THKB BElro"E TnB FAM,NK 'jig this literature and organizing relief movements. Two cents a day will save &fe, and $2 will provide work for a furnished person uutil the next harvest. . i llii I i 'I'tiW' number 80 per cent of the population, were already Impoverished by the fam ine of IS',17. Expenditure of every kind was stopped; hence the laboring class and artisans huve hud no work. The British government Is relieving the sit uation by gratuitously feeding the In firm, the aged, the emaciated and the children. The ablebodied are employ ed on cash wages In building reser voirs and Irrigation works, railway em bankments, roads, etc., which will greatly mitigate future famines. About (i,(ii)0.0i)0 ure now In dally receipt of of ficial relief. Connected with the camps are hospitals where those In the ex tremes of emaciation are nursed back to strength. The death rate is by far the greatest In the native states where government control Is least. Here, however, the government Is assisting by loans of money and of the services of experienced officers. Already the authorities have spent J47.0O0.OO0. With the failure of crops Id the fam ine area there began a flow of grain from other parts of India and other countries. From Burma alone there was Imported In ten months 427.000 tons of rice, worth $70,000,000. Mer chants have carried grain everywhere, and the price has remained fairly uni form at a cost only twice that of ordi nary years. There are millions of peo ple, however, who have no money and bo work. It Is these moneyless mil lions for whom help or death is the only alternative. jm toss'. , CONDENSED DISPATCHES. Notable Events of tlie tVeelc Briefly nnd Tersely Told. Heavy rnlns fell In northern Kansas and saved the corn crop. John Pelninite of Niagara Fulls com mitted iulcide by leaping into the rapids. A $135,0K) (told brick arrived at thn New York branch of the Bank of Mon treal from Cntiadn. Three dcnths have occurred at Nome from smallpox, which Is snid to have been taken there on the steamer Oregon. A revised estimate placed the loos by Saturday's fire st Proscntt, A. T., at more tlmn $l.(MHt.(MM), with insurance ol less thHii $2iH,00. Japanese and Chinese laborers at Stevenson. B. C, become engaged In a street tight over the war In China, and the latter were beaten. It was stated at the treasury depart aiont in Washington that no furthei withdrawals of deposits from the na tional banks were probable. It was announced in Ottawa thnt an agreement has been reached as to terms of arbitration of clnlnis ariitig out of Seizure of American and British miilinn Vessels by UuhsIhii cruisers in IN!I2. Tnesilnr Jnl- 17. Yrstcrdny was the hottest of the season In London. The Mexican government has inau gurated an active campaign against the Muya Indians. Three parties sent out by the United Ftates ecological survey are now at work in the Cape Nome district ot Alaska. Ten thousand Boers, according to a Cape Town dispatch, will emigrate to the United States after tho wnr ig over. An unsuccessful attempt was mode to wreck and probably to rob the Union Pa cific flier about four miles from Manhat tan, Kun. A Union line car on the Lee avenue division of the St. Louis Transit com pany was blown up by dynamite. Two passengers were badly injured. Curtis Guild of Boston, who was tendered the appointment as first assist ant postmaster general to succeed Terry S. Heath, has declined to occept the of fice. Monday, .Inly 10. Fire in o car of a South Side elevated train in Chicago put the passengers in great peril of their lives. C V. Eskridge, editor of the Emporia (Kan.) Republican and former lieutenant governor of Kansas, died from self in flicted wounds. At New Custle, Col., fire destroyed all the fruit warehouses and principal busi ness houses of the town. The loss will exceed $100,000. In Baltimore Louis Eicon, a shoemak er, killed himself, his wife and 13-month-old bribe and wounded almost unto death his 8Vj-year-old son. Judge W. II. Washington of Philadel phia, a diract descendant of Augustine Washington, father of George Wash ington, died at Castle Creek, A. T. Saturday, July 14. Another victim of the oil tank car ex plosion at Somerville, Mass., died. Vatrick Welsh, n North Pelham (N. Y.) farmer, was gored to death by h's bull. The rail reducing mill of the Illinoit Steel company at Milwaukee has resumed operation. The recently quarantined Chinese ol San Francisco hove prepared suits fol damages against the city. Superintendent Kilburn addressed the state bankers' convention at Saratoga on the requisites of a good banker. A collection of rare coins, valued be tween $3,000 and $10,000, has been stolen from the Milwaukee public museum. J. G. Schmidlupp has offered $100,000 to build a wing to the Cincinnati Art museum as a memorial to his wife and daughter. Cuttle were reported dyiug by thou sands in the drought stricken counties ol Pima, Pinal, Sauta Crua, Yuma, Cochise and Maricopa in Arizona. The doors of the Dime Savings Institu tion of Newark, N. J., were not opened owing to the alleged stealing of its fund by Charles H. Westervelt, secretary and treasurer. Friday, July 13. The Indians at Ited Lake, Minn., were reported holding wur dances. Fifteen persons were badly injured in a trolley car accideut at Springfield, O. Exceptionally hot weather caused nu merous sunstrokes and prostrations in London. Disastrous forest fires were reported near El Dorado, in Colorado, and Pres cott. in Arizona. Ex-President uud Mrs. Hurrisou left Indianapolis for their summer home in the Adirondaeks. Bandits robbed n freight train at Santa Fulalia, a station near Chihuahua, on the Mexican Central. Immense subterranean streams of port wuter have been discovered from 1,."00 to 2.000 feet above sea level on the Is land of Hawaii. Thursday, Jnly 12. Two young women were saved from drowning ut Patehogue, N. Y. Fire, started by a tire balloon, destroy ed thousands of acres of California tim ber. The work' of removing shag rock from San Francisco harbor has been com pleted. The colouiul cruber Fiona went ashort near Codroy, on the southwest coast ot Newfoundland. Chicago promoters hove arranged a $;0,00O,(lO0 deal to Insure a perujuueut pure water supply for St. Louis. Eighteen buildings, comprising ovei half of tho business port of Walnut, Ills., were burned, with a loss of $U2,(XK. Serious trouble was reported threatened between the Mojuve Indians at Fort Mo jave, Colo., and the agency authorities. The Baltimore and Ohio express from Washington for New York was wrecked near Philadelphia. It had $3,000,000 iu gold on board. The switch had been tam pered with. Saloon Keepers Sentenced, CAMDEN. N. J.. July lH.-Flve well known saloon keepers of this city liuv been sentenced to one year in the Trenton penitentiary nnd six others to the county jail for six months, with varying hues ot from !r0 to $150 each, for selling tiquoi on Sunday. Can You Tki.l Why you have constant headaches, nre nervous and sleepless at night and feel tired in the morning ? Your blooj isn't carrying the right materials to your nerves and other organs, licgin taking Hood's Sarsapanlla, the great blood en richer, and you will soon realize a change. You will (eel better and stronger, will relish your food and enjoy refreshing sleep. Nausea, indigestion ure cured by Hood's rills. WAR AGA1 JtST RUSSIA China Said to Have Made a Declaration. SERIOUS TROUBLE IS MA5C1I0RIA. Ilnsstan Trnnsnort Seised nnd I'.scorl Killed Siberian Town Destroyed. 1.1 llnnn hnnu Iteltnrs HI Mission to PeklnK. LONDON, July IS.-The news of the Manchuria disturbances Is not regarded as justifying the serious view attributed by The Daily Mail's advices. Amur Is boundary territory between eastern Si beria nnd Manchuria. The district has been the scene of local disturbances for a long time owing to the provocative eon duct of the Cossacks toward the 2.1.000 Chinese employed In the construction of the Itusso-Mnnchurion railway. The Doily Mail publishes a sensational dispatch from St. Petersburg, dutod Monday, which asserts thnt there Is no doubt thnt China has declared wur against Kussia. "The ltussian press," snys the corre spondent, "is restricted to the publica tion of official detnils, nnd the publica tion of many dispatches from the front hns been prohibited. I hear, however, from a reliable source thnt the Chinese troops and the Boxers seized a ltussian transport vessel laden with munitions near Aigmi, on the Amur river, about IS miles from the ltussian frontier, killfcig almost the entire ltussian escort. "They nxt suddenly attacked nnd bombarded the town of Blagovecheusk, capital of the Amur government, on the Amur river. The garrison held out bravely, but was finally overwhelmed. Nearlv all perished, and the town was burned." The Moscow correspondent of The Daily Mail soya: "Leading firms here have learned that their tea aivd silk warehouses at Kalg.in. in the province of Chili, near the great wall, have been plundered and burned by Chinese rioters anil troops, goods worth 70,000,000 taels having been de stroyed." The Dally Telecisiph has the follow ing from Cnnton, dated July 10: "In an Interview with the foreign con suls todny LI Hung Chang Bnid that his mission to Peking was twofold to snve the lives of the foreign ministers and to arrange the best possible terms of peace with the allied powers. The American and French consuls, while congratulating him upon these commendable purposes, reminded him of his pledges to protect foreigners nnd to preserve pence in southern and central China. "Earl Li replied that he must obey the summons to Peking, but that he had taken all necessary precautious. He add ed that he hnd received important ca bles from Lord Salisbury nnd M. Del cosse. demanding protection for the for eign ndnisters in Peking and threatening to take life for life of the high officials responsible If the ministers were murder ed. He told the consul thut he was the only man in China whn dared transmit such messages to the empress, but that he had seut them verbatim and that he did not doubt they had exerted n powerful influence In saving the ministers lives. "He went on to say thnt. ns the doyen of the viceroys, he had also induced all the other viceroys, except two, to join in a lengthy memorial to the throne, ask ing security for the foreigners, suppres sion of the Boxers and full reparation for all damages." According to a dispatch from Shanghai to the Duily Mall, doted yesterday, a massacre occurred on July 0 at Tai-Yuen Fu, capital of the province of Shousi, 40 foreigners and 100 native couverta being killed. Esoaped From Tlen-tnln. DENYEIt, July 18. George Yan Nor man MctJee, professor of civil engineer- lag in the Imperiul university of China nt Tlen-tsin, yesterday cabled his father here that he barely escaped In one of Admiral Kempff's launches and has reached Nagasaki. The party, wus fired upon by the mob nil the way down the river to the foreign concession. Marines For China. NEW YOUK, July 18. One hundred marines were culled upon for active serv ice in China at the Brooklyn navy yard yesterday. To a man they expressed a willingness to go aud a desire to avenge their comrades. These marines, with detachment from Boston, Washington and Norfolk, will leave here for Sun Francisco on July "tt. F.nfclneera For Chlnn. FISIIKILL LANDING, N. Y., July IS. Companies l; and L of the engi neer corps arrived at West Point from diets Point yesterday. I hey received orders to leave for China together with nil eugineers at West Point. They leave next Monday. J hey are under com maud ot Lieutenant Jewey and numbei 150. Itoosevelt In St. I'anl. ST. PAl'L, July IS. Governor Theo dore Roosevelt of New York addressed a most enthusiastic crowd in the Audito rium in this city last night. Thousands of people besieged the doors of the hall l two hours before they were opened. When, at 7 o'clock, the crowd wus liually given a chance to get iuside, every inch of space was filled In a few minutes. Thousands of persons surged uliout the streets unable to gain entrance. The day's session of the National ltepublieun League Clubs' convention was a tame affair to that presented when the Empire ' Stute governor arrived before the build ing, just before 0:110 p. in. He was com pelled to reply to the repented culls for a j speech. Governor Roosevelt concluded his peroration at exuetly l):0, when the oiidieuce arose en mnsse, nnd over (i.lHHI voices shook the air for about live min utes. A carriage was waiting at the door. The governor entered at once, was driven to the station, and ut ll:2.ri he wus Hying enstwurd on his journey home. Emtiuasador Drnper Home, WORCESTER, Mass., July 18. Em bassador William F. Draper has arrived home on a short leave of ubsence from his post in Italy. He will spend severui weeks here. General Draper says the powers have tuken the correct diplomatic attitude iu deciding they are uot technic ally at war with China. Consul Hay Cuiuinir Home. CAPE TOWN, July 13.-t'nited Stutoi Consul Adelbeit S. Hay of Pretoriu it about to return to the United States Butches of prisoners nre arriving her daily from the front. One lot contained 88 English uud Irish names. BESS ANtgctable Preparation for As similating iticFoodarKincguia ting the Stointtchs and Dowels of Promotes Digcslion.Checrrur ness and Rest .Contains ntMlltcr Opitim.Morphine nor Mineral. TtoTNAKCOTIC. nntpeaffHdJO'SAKmrtTaiSR IStmplun Seal' Pi rarixrmlr.tbittt Ctmfird .Suarf Wimymm nartr. Aperfecl Remedy forConstipa non, Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea Worms .Convulsions .Fevcrish ncss and Loss OF SLEEP. Facsimile- Signature of KEW VOTJK. EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER. Not an Ordinary School When WilHuiusport Dickinson Seminary was founded, money making was not in the thought of its promoters. To give young; nun ami women thorough intellectual and moral training nt the lowest possible cost was its jaramount aim. It remains its para mount aim. Buildings have been added, equipment increased, the faculty enlarged, but Williamsport Dickinson Seminary Until! true to It first principle. It li a Homo nnd ('hrimian school. It provide for heitltli and koi-Iu! culture a carefully hi for mental and moral tralulug, taking a perxonul lutereat lu each pupil, nnd adjusting mot hods to need, believing that true education seek to develop the highest type of manhood uud womanhood. A splendid field, wltlr HthletU'H UlD-nled Iij h trained athlete, make hall Held and gymnasium of real value. Mwlinmlng pool forull. Kingle bed for ladles. Nine regular courses, with elective studies, oiler wide selection. Six competitive oholarhlps are ollared. Hevcntt-en skilled teachera classify and In struct, making school work other than drudgery. Music, Art. Repression and Physical Culture, with other hranche or alone, under teachers Ith best home and Kuropean training. Home, with tuition In regular studies, fj.yi.00n year, with discounts to ministers, ministerial candidates, teachers, nnd two 'rom same family. Kali torm opens Meptember 10, WOO. Catalogue free. Address Rev. EDWARD J. GRAY, D. D.. President. Willhvmiport. Pa. bb : A bad sign the forger's signature. The New Lippincott Magazine for August The "New Lipp'ncott" for August brings I out William I.e (Juex's latest novel COM- I l'LETE IN THIS NUMBER. "The Sign ! of the Seven Sins" is a story of love and ' mystery in high life on the Trench Riviera, i The "Palace of Delight" at Monte Carlo, 1 that spot of irresistible fascination, is con- i spicuous in the earlier pages. The strong ' plot compels intense interest until the clear- I inc up of mysteries at Paris. Altogether tiie tale is so exhilarating that it is sure to find favor with summer readers everywhere. Among the rcmaikably good short stories of the month, of which there nre four, Seumas MacManus has contributed a jolley Irish sketch which is a guaranteed cure for the "blues." It is called "Two Cockneys and a Conspirator." "The Way Penny Looked at It," by Re ginald Panficld Chase, a new writer of marked originality, is n story of a woman's love for her husband which in its unselfish ness is idyllic. "l'emme Dispose," by E. F. Benson, the author of "Dodo," is a most ingenious char acter shuly. An English nohlcinan's infatu ation for "a woman of no importance," which is interrupted by the death of the young man's father and followed by an un expected denouement, n akes a story well worm reading. "2620 Oxlurd Place," by Katharine 11. Prown, another newly "arrived" author, is a lively little romance connected with divorce, but in so hopeful a way thai it is singularly refreshing. The scene is in Washington. "A Swede's Campaign in Germany," by Stephen Crane, was written very shortly be fore his death, proofs which had been cor rected y himself having been received a few days after Mr. Crane's funeral. This paper deals with the battle Leipzig in a manner that throws much light on South Africa. Continuing the series on "American Belles," Virginia Tatnall Peacock has a de lightful paper about "Theodosia Burr." There is a fine portrait of this handsome woman, who, with nil the world against her father, could yet say she was "proud to be tho daughter of Aaron Burr." Contributions of verse nre "August C.uests," by Cale Young Rice j "Dawn in Midsummer," by Sara C. V. HaUowell; "Omar Khayyam," by Mbert Charlton An drews; "Dearest and Best," by Marie van Vorst," nnd "The Song of the Singer," by Arthur Ketchuni. "The Walnus and Wine" department has clcAer storiettes, poems, nnd anecdotes, by Caroline Lockliart, E. IIovcy-King. Erancis Churchill Williams, Reginald Wright Kaulf man, P. C. Terry, l ied Kosslyn, nnd others. One never knows whom to trust when ev ery church has a nave. Baartta Tho Kind you Have Always Bought For Infanta and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears Signature Thirty Years I I j! Never kiss a girl on the spur of the mo ment. The lips are much preferable. Distressing Stomach Disease IVrmi nently cured by the masterly power of Souik American Nervine Tonic. Invalids need suffer no longer, because this great remeilj can cure them all. It is a cure for the whole world of stomach weakness and indigestion. The cure begins with the first dose. Th relief it brings is marvellous and surprising. It makes no failure; never disappoints. N matter how long you have suffered, yur cure is certain under the use of tliis gnat health-giving force. Tleasnnt and ulwiys safe. Sold by C. A. Kleim, druggist, IJ$ West Main street, Bloomsburg, Pa. l)'4 '9 No man proposes to remain single. Wiie he proposes he expects to get married. HOOD'S PILLS cure Liver Ills, Bil iousness, Indigestion, Headache. Easy to take, easy to operate. 25c. When a fellow gives comes a man of note. I. O, U. he bi." In ill stages of nasal catarrh there shou'.J be cleanliness. As experience proves Ely' Cream Balm is a cleanser, soother and healer of the diseased membrane. Jt is not drying nor irritating, and does not produce sneezing. Price 50 cents, at druggists, or it wdl be mailed by Ely Brothers, 56 Wane street, New York. L'pon being placed uil the nostrils it spreads over the membran' and relief is immediate. It is au agreeable cure. The vaudeville actor is judged by appear ances. Relief is Six Hours. Distressing kid ney and bladder diseases relieveJ in su hours by "New Great South American Kid ney Cure." It is a great surprise on account of its exceeding promptness in relieving pa"1 in bladder, kidneys and back, in male or fe male, Relieves retention of water aim1 immediately. If you want quick relief '" cure this is the remedy. Sold by C. A. Kleim, druggist, 128 W. Main St., Bloom burg, Pa. 4 20 ly. Exclusive society is always to be found ' jail. Buchanan, Mich., May (ienessee Ture Food Co , Le Roy, N. : Oeutlemeu : My mama has been a srcil coffee drinker and has found it very injurious, llaviuc used several packages of your tir.iif O, the drink that takes the place of colTee, she finds it much better for herself ''" us children to drink. She has given up oil fee drinking entirely. We use a package tlrain-O every week. I am ten years old. Yours respectiuiiy, digj 4t Fannie Williams. The baseball "rooter" would be Sceil offended if referred to as the root of all evil. Br,th. , slhlHiBl You Have mrtm Bignatwe the . U' For Over of