6 THE COLUMBIAN, BLOOMSBURG, PA. SMUGGLERSJCAUGHT. Entry of Chinamen From Canada Checked. ARRESTS IN NORTHERN KEW YORK. Th nnlnrM of Uetllno- Orientals Into 'Mil ( ounltj From llrltlxh Territnrr llellefed to Have Hecelvrd a llrnthltlow, FLATTSltL'ItC, X. Y., Xov. 27. Tin cosines of HinucirlliDJ Chiiiumrii ncrost the border fmin Camilla into thi Mate 1 believed to have received it deathblow. Late Saturday night two Chinamen were seen ns they were bcitm drawn through this village in a covered two scaler drawn by two horses. They were traced to Keescville, X. Y to which point tliey had iiccn driven from lliMiitningl'oid. a distance of 4." miles, and there located in a Chinese laundry. They wore arrested and brought to I'luttshurR yesterday, where they were given a hcnrinir lip fore United States Commissioner Woodward. They gave tlieir name no Fining Lutm, aged 23, and 11am Chill (ice. aged 1M, and they both stated through an interpre trr that they were born in China anil that they wore from the province of Kwangtuug. They were committed to ail here and will bp given their examina tion this nftprnonn. The man who drove them from Hem mingfmd to Keosevillo psenped, lint the customs officials think they know who lie is. Sunday niglit almnt 11 o'clock four more Chinamen were captured at Mulono by Chinese Inspector Kctcham anil Dep uty Marshal Koby and Policemen Whip ple and I-nlicy in n raid on a Chinese restaurant which lias recently been open ed In Malone by Frank O. 1'arks. a Chi naman who came there a few days ago from St. A Ilia us, Yt. These four Chinamen were driven from Athelstan, (Jue., to Malone, X. Y.. in a sleigh covered with tidies and delivered to the Parks restaurant. Parks was also arrested. Hp is believed to lie an old of fender ami is also believed to be In league with certain persons in Xew York. The driver of the team escaped. Parks, anil pOHKibly the four Chinamen arrested with him, will be brought to Plattsburg, as the Malone jail is full and running over with Chinamen, there being no less than il" there. There are six or eight iu jail here awaiting trial. "Prohibit" -Vol WUponrniceil. CIIICACO. Xov. 27. Chairman Stew art of the Prohibition national committee announces thai funds for the campaign if 1!X4 are already being collected and that it is the intention of the party leaders to make even a more vigorous ((irapalen than the last one. "More than $7,000 has already been gent in;" said Chairirlan Stewart, "and this, too, only three or four days nfter notices had been sent out that we were ready to begin tho work. It is the intention of the national Mimmittee to effect mi organization in ev ery precinct of every township in every state, and every state campaign of litul will be vigorously fought." TTiankoiti vlnK For Porto Rlcana, SAX JUAN, Porto Itico, Xov. 24. (Jovernor Alleu's Thanksgiving procla mation fixing Xov. 2!) as a general holi lay was issued yesterday morning. In :b course of it he reminds tho Porto icans that during the last 12 months the island has been bouutifully blessed, that he crops have improved, that industrial ml financial conditions have become freer under the influence of good government,' hflt tho island has not been visited by jiestilenee or other calamity and that the reuerul health of the public is now excel lent. Van Wyrk May Stay. ALBANY, Nov. 24. Governor Roosn elt bite last night gave out his decision a the application for the removal from iffice of Mayor Robert A. Van YVyck of Sew York city. He declines to remove he mayor on the grounds that while he ras undoubtedly a stockholder in the Imoricnn Ice company there has been no iroof that he willfully violated the law forbidding a public otlicer to be a stock kolder in a corporation luivliig dealings - ith his municipality. Hew I'ostotltce For New York. WASHINGTON, Nov. 27 Postmns r Van Cott of New York city conferred ith Postmaster General Smith und oth r officials yesterday regarding the pro posed new postollice building In New iork. Mr. Van Cott expressed the opin n that the bill now pending appropriat es $2,5lK),ft(l(l for this purpose would ass at the approaching session of con fess and that the building would bo rected as close as possible to the Grand .Vntra 1 station. Huirnr Iloom In Colorado. BUG All CITY, Colo., Nov. 27.-Tho 'ninense new sugar refinery, costing with pniirtennnees and reservoirs $1,IHHJ,0(M), 4a r ted yesterday, and the occasion was rlebrated by n harvest festival. Sugar ',Ity is only seven months old, with over 'iHOO people. The sugar beet lands sur unding are irrigated by the use of wa er stored in Twin lakes, 200 miles tlis ant. Twelve thousand acres are being wised for the beet crop. Itrettk In the Id le C'nnal. EOMK, N. Y Nov. 27.-A break has ecurred in the titl mile level of the Krio anal four miles west of here. One bun tied feet of the lierm bank wont out, k! the water rushed down on the Hats, 'he eanalboat Percy and Charley lies Is the break. The water is swiftly go g out. and nil bouts on it will bo .uuuded where they are. Vlruliiiu's Vote, RICHMOND, Nov. 27,-Tho olfici.il -ite of Virginia in the Inst presidential eetiou as ascertained by the state hoard ' convassers is as follows: For Iiryan, '.(J.171J; for McKinley, 117.1.11; for 'oolley, 2,1f'i7; Itryan's plurality, 2it, lil; ltrynu's majority, 2i,S.1!). ITlvorpp In l olly Minutes, WASHINGTON, Nov. 2i. V. B. ,'atthews of tlie Washington bar ol .ined a divorce for prominent Washing 'uhins at KocUville, Moiitgiiinery eotm ', Md in 40 minutes from the time of ...iug the suit. Tornmlo Rnrriw Ti'viin Town. DALLAS, Nov. 2li. A tornado did rtueh damage to property nt Flatonia, iu 7ayette county. Twelve places of busi iutn nro reported wrecked, but no lives were lost. Thu dnnitigo is estimated at CiAl.ES AND FLOODS. Maeh Damn on the I.nVcs nlrera Over Their Dimki, CLEVELAXH, Xov. 27. A terrible tortn is raging along the chain of tho great Iakps. At 2 o'clock yesterday morn ing tho wind reached its maximum veloc ity and blew nt the rate of til) miles an hour up to 5 o'clock. Hnln has been falling almost continuously since Sat urday. Tho lowest temperature was 84 degrees yesterday morning, but the pierc- i lng wind made it seem colder. The wind was from the north and northeast, and the main storm passed Just south of here. The Western Union and Postal Telegraph companies report that many of their wires are down, not only In this but In other states. Most of the damage is east of this city. Con siderable damage was done to telephone wires. Limbs of trees were broken off like twigs, ami many large trees were tip- j rooted. A dispatch from Lorain says that a ' terrific storm has been rnging there, i Thousands of dollars' worth of damngo has been done, nncl the end is not yet. The schooner St. LnwTcnop, which went ashore a few days ago, has broken up. The east government pier is going rap- ' idly, and the indications nro that Lorain as n harbor will not be on thp map if thu storm continues. Over 1,HMI feet of the pier has been swept away completely, i and the northeaster is threatening tho j west pier, the lighthouse and range light. The Cleveland, Lorain and Wheeling docks are also suffering, the foundation being washed out. (liemnnK Hirer Itnmpnnt. KLMIHA, X. Y., Nov. 27. The high water Is evidently reaching its climax here. The Chemung river registers 14 feet (1 inches above low water level and is slowly rising. It has nearly ceased raining. Many parts of the city are Hood ed, and the tire and police departments have been busy aiding in the work of res cue. Nearly all the basements in the business district are junior water. Thn property loss will be considerable. Tele phone messages from points along the headwaters of the Chemung report the worst Hoods since 1SND. At Knoxville, Pn., two iron railroad bridges were swept away. Trallic on the Cowanesque branch of the Pennsylvania division of the Now Y'ork Central is suspended. Floods In West Vlritinln. j GUYANDOTTK. W. Va.. Nov. 27. Continuous rains for the past 4H houi have produced unprecedented floods in Guyamlotte valley. The river and its tributaries are overflowing their banks and are bearing away quantities of cross ties, lumber and other property. Some O.ttOO logs have gone out, taking with them the false works of the two new rail road bridges south of Harboursville. Tho loss is estimated at .$20.000 to $2.1,000. The track of the new Guyamlotte Valley rail road, just completed to Salt Rock, a dis tance of IS miles, has been almost mined. The river Is rising above, aud still more, damage iu expected. Death In the floods. COLUMBUS. -O., Nov. 27. The dam age done throughout the state will reach thousands. At Chagrin Falls the tele phone switchboard burned out nnd set hiilf a dozen houses on fire. At Cam bridge several buildings were blown down, and at Batavia Miss Annie Hiird was drowned, driving into a stream where a bridge had washed out. The Ohio river and southern Ohio streams are rising rapidly. Wires are down In all di rections, aud trains are delayed. j Schooner's Crew In Peril. KIXGSVILLK, Ont., Nov. 27. An tin known schooner is sunk on the middh ground off Point Pelee, and the sailors are lashed in the rigging, for the masts are abovo the water. Since Sunday morning the tug Home Rule, from Am horstburg, has been trying to rescue the men, but there Is such a high sea run ning thut her efforts have been fruitless. It is feared that the men will die from exposure before aid can reach them. Dam Bursts. ATHENS, O., Nov. 27. As a result of tho heavy rains the reservoir near Chaun cey burst yesterday and flooded the town a mile away. The reservoir covered three acres and was 20 feet deep. A hundred yards of railroad track was washed our, and nearly all thu residences in Chaun cey were Hooded. A hill defecting the course of the water saved the Chauncey mine, where 100 men were at work, from being flooded. Freshet nt Albany. ALBANY, Nov. 27. The heavy rains have caused an eight foot freshet In the river here, with excellent prospects of the water flooding Quay street. The big rise was unexpected, and the merchants along the docks were not prepared for it. The current iu midstream is very swift, and all tows are delayed. j Ktnndnrd Oil In Itonninnln. LONDON, Nov. 27. "The Standard Oil company," suys the Bucharest cor respondent of The Iaily Express, "has obtained concessions for mining aud erecting pipe lines on nil the government tracts as well as a monopoly iu sinking oil wells in Roumuniii. The price of the concession was -100,000." Noled tiolf I'lnyer Demi. BOSTON, Nov. 211. Willie Campbell, the well known golf player of Scotland, is dead in Porchester of a complication of diseases. He was 38 years of uge. Xew York Markets. FT.OUR Btate and western steady and unchanged, with demand chiefly for brands; Minnesota patents, J.i.WJH25; winter straights, M.WUa.&'i: winter extrus, $2 tKi2..iO; winter patents, :i.B(rti3.80. W H HAT Steady, but very dull; small world's shipments and fears of a bulllt-h visible supply were the sustaining fac tors; December, ;7l4t77iic; Junuary, &7S 5-1ie. , , m ItYK Steady: slate, DUftulc., o. i. f., New York, carlots; No. i western, 63c, f. o. b., afloat. .... . ' , CORN Firm and higher on an excited short senre west and more wet weather; IJDC.emlicr, 44Hc: May. tSHo. OATS-Dull, but steady; track, white, state, aslitc; truck, while, western, 2Stf '"pORK-Steady; mess, Jl?∈ family, Jlu.Sll-'llI!. , , I.AKD Steady ; prime western sttam, 7 HL'TTER Steady; state dulry, lCft2lc; creamery, IMii.'ic. 'J I HKSK Steady: large, October fancy, lliy.; small, October fancy, IU1,!;. WIGS Steady i stato and Pennsylvania, 2fa27c. ; western, loss oft'. 2ic. Sl.'OAR Raw steady; full' refining, 3c: centi-ilaual, Uii test, rellned steady; urnsbed, Dr.; powdered, 5.7UU. MOUABSKS HU-udy; New Orleans, 42?J D3c. ItK'K Steady; domctlc, iiUtjiio.; Ja pan, 4:VuZc. HAY- Quiet; shipping-, 77ViJjS0i:.; good tor thole, h'j'ii'J'jC, BEAT TJIEC0KNETI8T FOR the Inst year or o," iwiil a young man about town, "a little puny of good fellows, including myself, have been occupying rooms on the second floor of an old huiidir.g near Jackson siptnre. It is a ramshackle barracks, but the atmosphere is delightfully boheminn, and we were all im niensely pleased' with our ipinrters until about six weeks ngo, when a young German bookkeeper rented the lust vnciint mem in the hail. lie was a pompous, pink-fared chp, with white eyelashes and a military walk, Bnd, while you could at a glance that there wns nothing congenial about him, we could no doubt have put up with his presence nil right if it hadn't been for the fact that he played the cornet. "The first niglit the new lodger tuni-d up every man on the floor thought it was sim ply a practical joke; but whi n it began all over again tuxt i veiling, we put up a tic mendoiis kick. The German was perfectly calm. He said he belonged to a music so ciety and wns obliged to practice his parts. He had no other place for rehearsal', lie aid, and, having rented his room for six months without any special conditions, he proposed to toot just as fteipietitly and vociferously as he pleased. It' we didn't like it we could go to blazes, or words to that cfltct; and thereupon he shut, the door and ftiwtcd in on a 1i lint. "I must confess the fellow's deadly coolness sof t of awed us, and when we held a council of war nobody had any pra ticn! suggestion to ofler. ( H courv, one or two were in favor of a slugging match then and there, but 'wiser counsels prevailed,' as tiny say in the papers when the lynching delegation for gets the rope, and we dreided vaguely to try moral suasion. tt until t work worth a cent. Then we attempted counter-irritation in the shape of pounding on puns and tiling saws, but the cornetist kept right on through all the uproar without mifsiug a note. One of the boys undertook to get him ill link, I in t was laid out stiff himself at two a. m., and the German practiced for the balance of the night deadly sober. When we appealed to the landlord he only s-hnigged his shoulders and turned out the palms ol his hands. "The room next to the German," contin ued the young man, "is occupied by my friend 1 til lee. who works in an architects of fice. One evening, about two weeks aftet the trouble began, 1 was pa-sing his dool when J was startled by the nios,t blood curdling growl I .ever heard in my life. It wns not very loud, but there was a concen trated, tigerish ferocity about it that madi my hair bristle on my head. It was such a sound ns one would imagine might be niaild by some savage ben-t hull' crazy with rage ot hunger. 1 stopped stisk Mill, too surprised to think, nnd again the growl sounded from the o!osd room, longer und more terrifying thun before. "At that the German's door flew open and he came bouncing into the hull as pale as a ghose. 'My Gott!' he gasped; 'whut it dot, anyhow?' "Before I could reply Billee himself ap peared. 'Good-evening, gentlemen,' he said, pleasantly; '1 hope my pet isn't uu noying you.' " 'What the dickens have you got in there Billee?' I asked. " 'A llondurian pig-dog,' he replied; 'a very rare animal, given to me this morning by a friend from Central America. This one has a record as a man-killer,' he went on, 'and has already chewed up four or live na tives; but I'm going to tame him and teach him to do tricks.' '"Where do you keep the brute?' I in quired, beginning to smell a rat. " 'I have him tied up in my cloutt,' h said. "At that the cornetist turned green. The closet is a double affair, opening into both rooms, With only a flimsy purtition between. 'In dor closet!' the inir-ician roared 'You must take him audt right away! Dot pig-dog might bite the boards through!' " 'Well, sir,' suid Billee, calmly, 'I rented my room without any special conditions at to pig-dogs, and I propose to keep him in the closet as long us I jolly well please Good evening.' "Needless to say, Billee's pig-dog became the sensation of the hour, and while we ull understood thut it was a put up job of some kind, nobody could imagine how it w done. We could hear the growls and Bil lee's voice speaking to the creature at the same time, so it was evidently not a vocal imitation, and he replied to all question with a mysterious smile. 'Wait and see, he said, and mehnwhile he was careful t lock the door every time he went out. 'Il would be a terrible thinir.' he remsrl-vd casutilly, 'if that pig-dog were to got loose j in the hall. "On the second night the cornetist tuned up rather timidly, nnd instantly the pig dog began to growl. For a few moment the duel continued. Then Billee came into the hall and knocked on the German's door. 'Kxcuse me,' he said, very politely, 'but I wish to inform you thnt music infuriatei this animal of miue, and it is impossible foi me to control him while yon are playing. It is nothing to me,' he added, 'and you may do as you please; but I felt it my duty to put you on notice.' " 'I shall complain to the police,' said the I cornetist, furiously. " 'AH right,' said Billee, and presently the 1 tooting was resumed, but it lacked its usuul 1 vigor. At each note the snarls of the pig- Aiir fa fttnrfnl I r Union In nt in olw... ! an hour the concert came to an abrupt close. "Well, the new lodger stood it exactly one week, and, 'pon my word, he had my sympathy. Every evening he barricaded hit clotet door with all the furniture in his room, and I have my doubts whether he slept a wink. 1 know he invested in a shot gun und about a bushel of ammunition, and he exhausted everything in the way of pro test, both to the landlord Hnd the author ities. At last he surrendered abruptly, moved out .bug und bnggnge early one after noon, und we arrived in the evening to tind him gciue. "That night we celebrated the capitula tion by a grand smoker in Billee's room, and us a special feature of the entertainment he divulged the mystery of the pig-dog. It was absurdly simple. Billee, an 1 already men- j tinned, works in an architect's ollice, und, i among other odds and ends in his (juurters j is a drawing board covered with ordinary coarse caiivus. The snarl of the pig-dog was produced by merely scraping a table., knife over the surface. It made u sort of" 'owww-w-w-w!' that didn't sound partic ularly impressive when one saw the trick j being done, but when out of sijjit the illu- ! ion was perfect. Moreover, the note could be raised or lowered by varying the speed of tut scraping, and the effect was amazing ly aniniiil-ltlc?. Billee made the d is-cowry by accident, while- trying to erase un ink spot, nnd the scheme flashed nt once into his brain. The name 'pig-ekig' was an iu spirutioM of tho moi ,nt. "Jiilke has been the hero of tho establish ment ever since. He snys he- intcmis to pre sent the drawing board to the City J'ark zoo us un addition to its collection of hlrunge and W't auiiiiuls." H. O. Times-Democrat. More ntplotnMcr, He I nm the benrcr of n chnrmed life. She fsnronsticnlly) Indeed! What great (lnnpersi hnve you ever psenped? He None. But I hnve lookf & .to your eyt, nnil henrd the pound of your voice. After a lnpse of ten or 1.1 minutes she lipcnme conscious, of what he meant nnd iprmltted her ' hpnut iful head to rest ng-ninst his brenst. Chiciitfo 1 itneB-llcrnld. Oa To Ills f'nrvr. Heckles Youth Fnther, denr, would It be nskinir too much for you to nd- vnnce me n Rmall loan say about $5(1? The Governor Not nt nil, my son. You might nsk me for double the nmount with equal likelihood of fret tiitff It. Yon can't afford to be modest In those little requests ti lilt more than 1 enn afford to grunt them. Ohio State Journal. Ills Think. He thought he thought great thoughts nnd thought No other thought a thought; If others ever thought he thought, They thought he thought he thought, Chicago Times-Herald. It ST TIIK HKiHT ST ATI It K. Mistress Are you not rather small for a nurse? Nurse Xo, indeed, madam. The chil dren don't fall so far when I drop them. J ujrend. Miss Got li Hill's lilen. He So you visited Pompeii? She Oh, yes. He How did you like it? She Well, I must ay I was awful ly disappointed in the place. Of course, It waa beuutifully located and all that, but it wus dreadfully out ol repair. Tit-Bits. Or Two KviU. "Rupffles, I am Borry to hear you were burned out the other day. Did you lose all your household (foods?" "Y'es, but we don't feel so awfully bad over It, Lumpkin. We expected to hnve to move next week, anyway," Chicago Tribune. Kwlir W'elbllche. Vastly to our surprise, the beauti ful maniac ceased'to atrupfrle the mo ment we put her In the strait-jacket. "It must fit perfectly lovely!" she exclaimed, radiantly. "It is so very uncomfortable, dou't you know!" Puck. His Delusion. "The life of the farmer," said the poet, "la just like a dream!" "My, my!" exclaimed the fnrmer, ns the paper fell from his hand, "how 1 would like to ketch that feller an' fodder-pull him awhile!" Atlunta Const! tution. Ills Position. Mrs. Hoon Mrs. Gabbleby can talk entertainingly In three different Inn gnages. Mr. Hoon Y'es; and I have noticed that her husband has to keep still in one. Judge. 8nlipy Miss Pert. Missj Oldglrl It la not for lack of opportunities that I have remained single. Miss Pert. No; I daresay you have given the men plenty of chuncea to propose. Tit-Rits, His livuellclrnl Ways. City Nephew What do you think of Dr. Pillsbury as a physician? Fnrmer Hayroob Safest doctor anywhere In this part of the county neurly always off fishin when he's wanted. Judge. Overtrained. Mrs. Bluckwiidds Nice t' hev chick ens trained so's y' kin ketch wun fer dinner unnytime. Honrder Yes; I was just wonder ing if this one we're eating wasn't a bit overtrained. Ohio State Journal. The Hude Bachelor. Yeast They say thnt women have discovered a way of seeming to be al wnys young; do you know what it is? Crimsonbeak Y'es; lying. Yonkers Statesman, Tit for Till. Irascible Lieutenant (down engine room tube) Is there a blithering idiot nt the end of this tube? Voice from the Engine Uooni Not at this end, sir. Tit-I'.itg. Ta Ul ngr Xu t Dunces. "So your sou is to muiiy? hv doesn't he wult till he is older uinl wiser?" Ah! but In that case he would never marry ut n!l!"--N. World. One IHfiionli,, First Citizen You can't i nii:-cli the diameter of our imrty leaders. Koce.tKl Citizen T..u blueliV Jlrculi iyn 1.1 fe. Their V'.!d Wnj. ' "What are iiboriines, pn?" "Aborigines, Hobby, arc pn-plo who act nil the time thu way yon do when we have company." Chicago P.ecord. Tho Kind You Hnvo Alwnys Bought, ami which linn been in use for over JJO years, 1ms borno fho ftiRiiatiiro of - and lins been nirulo under hi por- jtffl?jf So,ml supervision slneo its Infancy. yuzrSit SZtCU4, Allown one to deceive you In this. All Counterfeits, Imitations nnd " Just-n-gnod" nro hut Experiments thnt trilto with nnd endanger tho health of Infants and Children Experience ngnlnst Experiment. What is CASTORIA Castorla Is n harmless Mibstiluto for Castor Oil, Paro porle, Irops nnd Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotlo Mihslanee. lis Is lis guarantee. It destroys Worms nnd allays reveilshness. It cures Diarrlnea. and Wind Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation nnd Flatulency. It assimilates tho Food, regulates tho Stomach and Itowcls, giving healthy and natural lcep. The Children's Paiiacc: Tho Mother's Friend, GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS Bears tho The Kind You Have Always Bought 111 Use For Over 30 Years. EARTHQUAKE ONLY JARRED IT The Dninnuc to lnlr (ilnelrr In Alaiku .Mnch l.cma Tlmn Uni Iteiiurli-d, The reported destruction of the fa mous Muir phieicr on the phorcs ot Gliicier bay, Alaska, by un eui'thuijukc Inst yeur in pronounced untrue by AYilliiim E. Pmrce, who pot within four tulles of the ulncicr iu August of this year on the excursion steamer Queen, says the New York Sun. Peiirce says: "The Muir glacier is just as grnnd as ever. The trouble this season has been that vessels have not been able to get close enough for passengers to 6ee it. The earthquake shook off large masses of Ice from the face of the glucler, which, when floating In the bay, appear as huge icebergs and block the passage of vessels. Hy next sen son the bay will be clear again und the glacier can be approached as in former years. "The damage by the earthquake il but as u drop in the bucket. I can bet ter explain its work by saying that It -took off the face of the glacier for 50 feet or so, while the main body extends back, visible to the eye, 20 miles. The glacier runs back from its face on Gla cier liny to the head of the Davidson glacier, which faces on Lynn canal, a distance of 45 miles. All this season Muir inlet has been full of smnll bergs, so that vessels, ufter proceeding ns (far as they could, were forced to back "out. On the August trip of the Queen the surface of the glacier looked to be from 25 to 30 feet high, but it is In reulity from 150 to 2UU feet high. Next year people will be nble to get close to It, and w ill find it just as large and just as grand as It ever was. As a rule vessels have not been able, dur ing the past season, to get closer than (10 or 15 miles to the glucler," ENGINEERS' HAUNTED HOUSE. New York Railway Men Affected b , the Memory of a Dead Fuce ! nt a Window, ' "Some houses ore haunted to some people nnd all right to others," suid an engineer on the Ninth avenue elevated road, relates the New York Sun. i"There'ls a house on our line that is haunted to the men who have been on this run for u few years back. Maybe ,you remember the story. It was print ed when the incident happened. One of our men noticed a man's fuce nt the window overlooking the rond. Every time the train passed for three days, I believe, the engineer suw the fuce". It was always the same. Then he told somebody else about it and on Investi gation It was discovered thnt the man at the window was dead. He occupied the room alone. There wns no one else In the house. He had killed himself nnd in a note found on his table It wns writ ten thnt the man wns lonesome, and that he had raised the window just before the net so thnt he might die in the noise of the city. That, w as all there was to the story. "Every since thnt time every en gineer and flremnn on the line who was employed nt that time turns his face nwoy In pusslng thnt house. - I have heard them nil speak of it, and to each of them thut house Is hnuntcd. nl t hough it Is now occupied, and I don't suppose the people who live there know nnything about the story. I know I have tried to forget it, but just before my engine passes it the recollection of the dead fuce ut the win. low comes buck to me nnd I 1 il lic r close mv cyi s or look In an oppt.slte (liriclon." Boors tho Ida Kind Yen Ham Alwnys Boutfit YA Signature of Tiki Many I eoi i.k I'Uii.y With (,'v TAkKit- It strikes one like a ihniitlt T-c'iip, develops ttith n lapidity tl at no o lur dis ease does. I ir. Agneu's I'atnrihal l'owilrr is the radical, quick, afc and plensant cure that the d seasc ilcninmls. I'xe tlie nivalis, prevent its deep scaling nnd years ef dis tress. Don't dally with catarrh. Annew's gives lelicf in ten minutes. 50c. 41; Sold by C. A. Klcim. Down in Kentucky the families are fe that have no family fetid. Distressing Stomach Disease-Permanently cured by thu ni;.sierly rower of houili Ainetican Nervine Tonic. Invalids need suffer no longer, because this great remedy can cure them nil. It is a cure (or the ulmlc world of stumach weakness nnd in1igcstinn. The cure begins with tlie first dte. The relit f it brings is marvellous and suriuisinji. It n akes no failure; never disappoints. Nn matter how long you have suffered, your cine is cettain under the use of this great health-giving force. Pleasant nnd uluavs safe Sold by C. A. Klcim, druggist , 12S West Main street, liloomsbuig, l'u. 1)4 19 A gridiron and a piece of tost are calm lated to innke any bird quail. Jf.i.i.-O, the New Dksskrt, plenscs a!l the family. Kotir fkvois : Lemon, Orange, Raspberry and strawberry. At your groceis. loc. 11 22.1-t Few men nre so absent miudtd that they forget to laugh nt their own jokes. AWEUL Exi'EH 1ENCK Willi HEART DIS EASE. Mr. L. J. Law, Toronto, Cn., writes 1 "1 was so sorely troubled with heart disease that I was unable for 18 niot.tlia iu lie down in bed lest I smother. After tak ing one dose of Df. Agncw's Heart Cure, I retired and slept soundly. I used one buttle nnd the trouble has not returned." 50 Sold by C. A. Kleim. It lakes a corkscrew for some fellows Ut screw up their courage. What Shall we Have for Desert? This question arises in the family every day. Let us answer it to-day. Try Jell-O, a delicious dessert. I'repaied in two n.in utes. No baking ! add hot water nnd set to cool. Flavors: Lemon, orange, raspberry and strawberry. At your grocers. 10c. nziJ The fellow who is color blind has no busi ness to play poker, . Trovei) Priceless. Kuby coats and cinnamon flavor. Dr. Aguew's Liver Tills aie household favorites. Impurities leave the system. The nerves ore toned. The blood is purified. The complexion is bright and ruddy. Headaches vanish and pertect health follows their use. 40 doses IOC 51 Sold by C. A. Kleim. The only opening some people ever expttt is that supplied by the crave digger. Mother Gray's Sweet l oaders for Chil dren, successfully used by Mother Cray, nurse in the Children's Home, in New York, cure feverishness, bad stomach, teeth ing disorders, move and regulate the bowels and destroy worms. Over 30,000 testimoni als. They never fail. At all druggists, 25c. Sample free. Address, Allen S. Olmsted, LeRoy, N. V. n-J2l4t The chronic borrower thinks that of the five senses the greatest is th sense of touch. Nearly one hundred thousand copies of the Higgle Uooks have been sold. No. I is snout horses. No. a trenis of bi-irics of all kinds. No. 3 is a Loultry book a gem. No. 4 tells all about cows and dairying, while; No. S is the most comprehensive bok on swine yet printed. Pi ice of each, 50 cents. Address Wilmer Aikin-on Co.,1 niU. It's a poor nctor who can't take his own Iart- , It costs the government one- fifth of a cent n pound to i.i.pect li.-g nuat li c.il. ex I unci. The examiners are .-t uii'lied nt nu t!i g cat s'aiiclntMig icniei., v licit- nA" ait- i.liUli ieo fof l''Oloiein inaiutt. U'v" wou'd l.e no need of this m uo.op c exnm" i.annii if brcidcis w.iuUl follow tlie iiicth'M' of ho- culture lad down in ihi. iu-'lt'" Swine' Hook. Vuu ought to g.-t i'. f n 50 cents to the Wilmer Atkinson Co., I i"'-'- O .Zk. S3 T O 11 3C ,, n s 5 Signature ot t