R, i ''V.,.. , THE COLUMBIAN, BLOOMSBUA 4 U 4 It: i i-. i SOUTH AFRICAN WAR Boers Overrunning Oape Col ony and Seizing Provisions. POLICY OF ESGLASD OCTLIXED 'War Ofllt-e DoIiik All In It Powh ft Bnntnln Kltehrarr Ureal Xeed of Mure Mounted M en. LONDON. Jnn. )). A dlspntch from Cape Town Hoy: "It Is ri'portml thnt the Ilocrs liav reached Sutherland nnd nre within 150 mHr of the villiw of riiniPtWrtr. 'The country around Kituliriley Is be In fli'iirrd of pcoplo, live stork mid food stuffs. A foinnmiido of 150 looted R tint tie farm seven mile from Kimberley. "It is reported tlint all residents ot Vryburir. who arc unable to supply them elres with provisions for two mouths must be lirotiKht south." Lord KiiKliin, undersecretary of tnt for war, in an Interview rcgurdini: the serious trend of events in-tonth Africa. : tbe possibilities of pence and the fiction the war ollice is taking to neud mutters, aid: "The condition of nffnirs in South Af rica absolutely forbids prophecy. You . cannot cull it war, yet iu some respectf It in worse than war. It in well niKh im possible to fijtlit in the ordinary way gainst a people who l ure no uniforms, I "The secret of the whole thinK con sists In horses. We have enoujrh men there, hut not enough mounted men. This is not due to the paucity of supply j cnt out. but to the difficulty of aeeclimn- fixing the iinimnls. The trouble is that j fresh horses have Ihwu sent up the conn- ! try before they were hardened to the ' climnte. "The niniy Is mtiim' S,(H)0 horses h ! month now, and we are troinir to hepin to commandeer horses throughout the disturbed regions. One would think the Boers would prefer to get a fair price , for their animals from the Itritish to giv- i ins: them up to (icncral le Wet for nothing. Personally I believe wo should have begun this plan before now. j "What with depriving the Boers ot , mounts and transforming all our men ' into mobile bodies cnpable of pursuing , detached commandos we trust the com mandos may be run to earth, although It I is arduous work. "Yon cannot expect to end Bitch a war i as this in a day. The disturbances in j Burma continued for ljiore than four ! years. I beliere that If the Boers now In the field knew the true state of affairs and were aware that the continuance of ' opposition could not possibly improve the terms offered them a majority would . have sense enough to cease lighting. "Meanwhile yon mny be assured of the ; fact that the war office is not guilty of inertia. Lord Kitchener Is getting all he : asks for. Lord Roberts Juis a perfectly free hand. What can be done in being done." KNOX IN A FIGHT. Three nritlsh fifflrcn and Fifteen Men Heported Killed. LONDON, Jan. 8. Lord Kitchener cables the war ollice as follows: "A detachment of 120 men belonging to Knox's command cunie into contact with a superior number af the enemy near Lindley. "Colonel Lang and two other officers and 15 men were killed nnd two officers and 20 men wounded. No details have been received." In response to the appeal of the Prin tress of Wales for further contributions to the fund for tbe families of the men nt the front Mr. William Waldorf .Astor has contributed 5,000 SEVERE WEATHER IN EUROPE. Intense Co 14 tnd Trfunendcroa Galea Cause Snfferlnic nnd Death. LONDON, Jan. 7. .Severe cold has suddenly set in throughout Europe. In England it is accompauied by a uorth- easterly wind, amounting to a gale over tbe channel. At Iover a boat was cap ued, four persons being drowmed, and probably other accidents will be reported. On the continent the wuather w rstill more severe. Snow has fallen as far touth as Naples, MmA In St. Petersburg the cold is so intense that the poliue in the streets have had to be .frequently re ieved and the wliuiiJs to he ulusud. At Vfesoow the tctujjecuture in .5i0 .dtgrees JmjIow sero. Tremendous gnles.nxe blow' ug over the Adriatic. Terrible blizzards ire reported from Austria and southern Russia, extinguishing signal lights and esulting iu the derailing of the Orient xpress nt Allpajiua. Tlie storm caused i collision between Jiassenger trains at . ilikoia, near 8zatiur, Jlongury, si per ons being killed. Nine people were fnxu-n to deaSh on a tighrond iu Transylvjiuin. Odeiisa is .uwpletcly snow bound. The harbor is ruxeu over, nnd trains are unable to en fr or depart in conseiiuence of tlifc.triftH. Ilentk Fur u KIhh. MINNEAPOLIS Jau. a-A HUiol to -.'he Times from Tuconjjj says: "Last , eck nt I'rcscott, W'ullu IViilia ouiusty, luiik Sliuiu in fun kixsind Miss illlu . .none, whom he had bliudfoklod. Kiio i.'seuted his action und, pulling u baljiLu itll hoi- but fittililiMil liim in tit. he piu was broken off in hk Jiuik ami lod poisoning resulted. Next day the inn became so intense that SJouu went t i the hospital at Wnlln Walla. An X ty luachino failed to locate any sigu of le tiemiiining portion of the pin, and loan grew worse anil died. Miss Boone ' ad remarked in Slonu's presence thnt le had iievcr hecu kissed. This iuuoccKt mark kid to Sloan's deuth." Stock Market Breaks All Records NEW YORK, Jun. 8. All records ere uroKctt jn tnu siock market uguin esterday, and the 2,000,000 mark iu . ties was passed by n big margin. The ital sales ot stuck for the whole dnv B over U.'JOO.OOO and of bonds $H,718! J0. The previous record wns 1 ,87:1.(10 :Ufes, recorded lust Friday. It was a marknble day. The first hour saw the tost reckless unloading of stock for tnk ig of profits ever seen in Wall street. ..if changes in prices resulted. liroaaed Head While Maklnor Will. ONEONTA. N. Y Jnn. 0. While dic tating his will in the office of Attorney Haymond at Frankliu William Jackson uf Treadwell said, "I sometimes think I won't live long," and when the sentence was finished his head dropped on his cheat; and he was dead. Jackson was 74 tart old nud a retired farmer, CONDENSED DISPATCHES UA LIGHT THE 'i ltAlN. I PRAIRIE DOGS ALL GOING. , Rotable Kventa at the Week Briefly and Taraelr Told, Heavy snows are reported at Van couver, B. C. Dozens of trains were snow bound in southern Iiussia. The transport Sherman was caught in a typhoon off the Japanese coast Dec. 18. A New York state tuberculosis hospital Is to be built at ltaybrook, Fraukliu ounty. The French Mediterranean fleet Is to be equipped with wireless telegraph ap paratus. The Philippine commission has com pleted the code for the government of municipalities. M. Paul Deschanel was re-elected pres ident of the French chamber by a tote of 2!M to at" for M. Henri Brlsson. Three Believue hospital nurses were In dieted in New York for manslaughter for the alleged killing of lxmls Hilliard in the Insane pavilion. Taeada)-, Jan. 8. President McKlnlcy has a slight cold. The situation In Veneiueln over the asphalt dispute was declared critical. A man claiming to be one of the ('uda hy kidnapers offered to turn state's evi dence. Ex-Senator Fred T. Dubois was nomi nated for United States senator by the fusion cuueus In Idaho. Captain J. D. Bulloch, a famous agent of the Confederates during the American civil war, died in Liverpool. The residence of Kdwnrd H. Taylor at Model City, near Ixvlaton, N. Y was burned. Taylor, his wife and three small children perished In the flames. Monday, Jan. 7. Additional re-enforcements have been ordered to Lourenco Marques. The number of smallpox cases in Kan sas City exceeds 100, a majority of the sufferers belug white. The first Ice this winter was cnt nt Catskill by the American Ice company. It was ten Inches thick and of high unl Ity. The Right Rev. Bishop Wlnand Mi chael Wigger, head of the Roman Catho lic diocese of Newark, N. J., is dead at South Orange, N. J. President Stickney of the Chicago Great Western railway went to Boston to claim as his bride May Crosby, whom he loved 40 years ago. Bntardny, Jan. IS. A heavy gale has done much damage on the Pacific coast. The recent snowstorm did little injury to California orange crop. Embassador White was elected to the Berlin Academy of Science. Grip is prevalent in New York city, but an epidemic is not expected. Nineteen cases of plague are reported at Vladivostok, 15 of them fatal. Reported settlement of French shore dispute in Newfoundland denied. Three men were killed in powder works explosion nt Thompson's Point, N. J. Earthquake occurred ot Nevada, El Dorado Springs and Appleton City, Mo. Eight Turkish soldiers were killed in attempting to arrest suspected emissaries of tbe Macedonian committee. Friday, Jnn. 4. Secretary Hay has recovered from bis recent illness. Three failures were announced on the London Stock Exchange. Great snowstorm in southern Oregon and 'northern California. Very cold in northern New York. Thirty-one below at Saranac lake. Joseph Leiter of Chicago' is negotiating for control of Canadian packing trade. Methodist Episcopal Bishop W. X. Ninde was found dead in bed in Detroit. French gunboat Menhir and torpedo crulsar Fleurus collided iu Brest hnrbor. Duke Henry, betrothed of Queen Wil helmina, has left The Hague in a pet over discussion of his position. Governor Jordan of New Hampshire in his Inaugural address declared school children should play more and study less. Several fires in tenement houses in New York and Jersey City caused the deuth of at least two persons. Many others were injured. "Tnnrsday, Jan. S, Ex-President Kruger has bronchitis. A bomb was found iu a Chicago street car tunnel. The Berlin Reichsbank celebrated its twenty-fifth anniversary. Erie's new sheriff pledged" himself to stop all gambling iu Buffalo. The Norwegian bark Hovding has foundered in the Bristol channel. Ten Germans were killed in the firing of a salute at Lei-tung, China, Jan. 1. Briefs in the insular possessions enses have been filed with tbe supreme court. The United States circuit court of ap peals sustained the lower court in deny ing a petition for a National Linseed Oil receiver. Strike Leads to a Shut Down. SCRANTON, Pa., Jan. 7. The 800 employees of tbe Mount Pleasant colliery of the Elk Hill Coal ani Iron company are again on strike, the third time in a year. They decided to strike Saturday night iliecause the superintendent refused to give a diliver boy the rate of wages the boy claimed he was entitled to. The company anticipated the strike by post ing a nuiice 'tlint the colliery from this date would be shut down. TIim will save I th? frora "ny A1" w;'n he ! !!"i,,n- , Tlf 'w,n'na"5r w'" ke, ' 10 '".'- licj-y clnscA until the men rescind their strike order. ISIlfbi Men BnfTocatrd, MIXMSAHJJ.18, Jan. 7. Wight men lust their lives In a fire nt 115 Wushing- : ton avenue in so early morning fir which ; had its origin ia the rear of the Standard Furniture company. The men were over ! taken by an immUHe volume of smoke in ' U . IT 1 . n nt.. . 1 ' B,,c.on(j, I ne uairviirti mimi-i, tijjiui uiTiiiim uie third and fourth floors of the building, and death in every instance was due to suffocation. When the men were found in various pints of the house, u ma u named Erickson was dead and the seven others unconscious. Mexican Gold Mine IloiiKbt. OAXACA, Mexico, Jan. 8. The fa mous Escmidra gold mine, situated near Oactlan, state of Oaxacn, has just been sold to New York city parties for $;i,500, 000. J. Sloat Fussett is said to be one of the purchasers, The mine is enormously rich. J; Killed by a Train WHITEHALL, N. Y.. Jan. 9.-George H. Buel and M. G. Russell, two promt Bent residents of this place, were instant ly killed by a light engine while attempt' uag to cross tbe railroad tracks. M R- UENMNGTONS niece and her 1 I ," WMWW.Wfn .r , U II II II I' 'f II III I BENNINGTON'S niece nd hef hjuband moved to Kvanstnn last spring. Since thrn it has been Ilennirg ton's custom to go out on Saturday even ing, once or twice a month, and remain over Sunday. He a widower, childless, and a good1 deal more portly.than he was 20 years go. Bennington had an important engagement t his oflice downtown last Monday morn ing. He had to be on hand at 8:30. "Let me see," said Uncle Dan, looking at bis time-table, "there's an express train leaves at 7:48. That'll get me down town i good time. I can just about catch it." So he hurried away. It is a little farther from where the Dal lingtons live to the main station at Davis street than to the Dempster street station; therefore Bennington went to the latter, but jurt lie was stepping on the platform it occurred to him that some of the fast trains didn't stop there. A sudden fear took possession of him. If he didn't get the 7:48 train he wouldn't be able to reach his of fice at 8:30. Be simply had to go in on that train. Yanking out his watch he saw that is was 7:43. "Here, you," he called to a young fel low whose cap was perched jauntily on the back of his head, "docs that 7:48 train stop lere!" The boy gave his cap a push forward and said: "No." "Uncle Dan looked at his watch again. It is about half mile, at an off-hand guess, from Dempster street to the Kvanston main station. The train would start in a fraction less than five minutes; Mr. Hennington had i . A n.iii,., i,;a K(.Anlr i been younger once, and without his break fast, he weighed about 187 pounds. There is a curve in the track between the Dempster and Davis street stations, so that liennington could not see the latter until he hud covered nearly half the distance. He waiked long enough when he had round ed the bend to look at his watch once more. It was almost 7:4(1, and as he started for ward at high speed again he saw with con sternation that the train was pulling into the station. His heart went down, down, down, and if the swear words people merely think but do not say out loud are recorded' against them there will be a very black page for Mr. Daniel W. liennington to ex plain eome time. At first he thought of giving up. He drew an index finger along his forehead, scraping off the perspiration and flicking a shower of it into the air. Then he rcmcmlicred three words that his old father had told him long, long ago to always keep in mind: "Never ray die!" The staticr was nearly a quarter of a mile away, but '.be train was not moving, and with a new and magnificent burst of speed he went on, sometimes going over two or three ties at a leap, and breathing like a horse with the heaves trotting uphill. He could feci a wide stretch of unoccu pied territory between the end of his un dershirt and the tap of his trousers, but he kept repeating to himself: "Never say die, never say die," and paid no attention to the gateman who yelled: "Hey, there! Get off the track! YouH get run over." Then the bell on the engine began to ring, and the gaenien at the crossings set their clappess to clanging: "Danger! Dan ger! Danger! Danger!" liennigton was within a leap of the end of the long platform. He was a little afraid that his fuce might explode, for he could feel it bulging and burning, but that waa a risk which, under the circumstances, had to be assumed. There was a his of steam from some where under one of the cylinders; then a sec ond one from the other side of the locomo tive, and Uncle Dan knew that the train had started toward him. He bounded upon the platform, still in his mind repeating "Never say die," and rushed on. The en gine was only 50 feet away, but gaining headway rapidly. "Don't try to get on there!" some one cried, but Bennington had no intention of stopping to argue the matter. At hrst he thought he would wait for the rear plat form of the last car, but he saw at once that the speed would be too great for him by the time it was within reach. Then he threw off his good resolutions of the past to the winds A hundred times he had called people fools for jumping on moving trains. What, he had argued, waa a minute, an hour or a day lost as compared with the chance of being ground to death or crippled for hfe under the relentless car wheels; lhat philosophy was good enough then when one had plenty of time, but he had in his hurry forgotten all about it, and riuhing at the front end of one of the coaches he jumped The conductor and one of his assistants had seen what was going to happen, and were ready. They stood well dswn on the steps, grabbed Bennington by the arms as he' missed connections and dragged him aboard. "What's the matter with you!" the con ducror demanded when they had him safe on the platform. "Are you crazy? There's another express train due here in four nun. utes. W hy didn t you wait for that: Bennington could only look at him. in a sort of blind bewilderment and gasp, He dropped into the first seat he came to and tried to catch his breath. He fanned himself with his hat; he wondered in 19 different kinds of long dashes why every body had waited for him to run until his breath was gone and he had almost been dashed to deuth under the wheels before it was thought necessary to tell him that an other fa.st train would follow in four min utes. Everybody in the car was looking at him and talking about him, and he had no doubt that the whole crowd thought he was crazy But lie didn't care what anybody thought of said at least he tried, while gasping and agitating the air with his hat, to make him self believe he didn't care. Suddenly he felt that the train was slack ening. He looked out the window, and saw that they were approaching the Dempster street station. While he was wondering what was the trouble the train came to a full stop, when 40 or 50 people calmly got board. Then it was that the spirit of Mr. Ben nington took on a fiery quality. Ho jumped up, rushed to the platfotm and cried to the conductor: "Does this train always stop here?" "Yes, sir; it always has ever since I've known anything about it. All aboard!' The young fellow with the cap on the back of his head tnuiitered leisurely out of the little station as the train moved away, and threw a kiVs at. Uncle Dan as the lutter shook his fit and jumped up and down on the platform of the ear. The old gentleu.un reached bis office at 6:22, but the client with whom he had an engagement at 8:30 was an hour and a ball lsts. Chicago Tiiun-Urald. The Df itrocllT Hodenta Have Had , t . -, mm mm Tassenifers who have ridden the bet ter pnrt of a day through western Ne brnska and eastern Colorado will re member the prairie dog He Is numcr 'cus In that section of the country. He lives invl1ngeft, and the villages are as close together as the villages of certain parts of Europe, But the prairie dog hnsi had his day, The agricultural department, says he must go. Mr. Wilson has decided that I the dogs kill the grass nnd ruin good ' grazing land. "Tnma Jim" has little of the love of picturcsqueness in his make-up. He i eminently practical and his philanthropy is of the type which seeks to make two blades of 'grass grow Instead of one. Therefore he proposes to relegate the prairie ;dog to the picture books and to the stuffed specimens of the museum along with the buffalo, says the Des I Moines News. j Mr. Wilson's chemists have discov ered n mixture which will make whole I .vlllnget flght for the first i.te, but 'which at the last biteth like a serpent i and stingeth like an adder. Under its i influence the hole that knows the prnirie dog will know it. no more for ever. The frisky, nervous, barking lit tle benat will join the innumerable enravnn of prairie dogs who hnve gout before. There will be more grass when tht prairie dog is gone, and therefore 'iM .tn . i . i.-nnr.. more cattle. There will be less break 5ng of the legs of cowboys' ponies and the rattlesnake will live nlone In tht hole until the Riimmons comes to him also. THROUGH THE HOLY LAND. The Train Moves Slowly, ns If l.olh to Disturb Its UnnntliiK Shades and Phantoms. There Is no rush in the orient; th train moves slowly through Holy Place. s If loth to disturb the shades nnd phantoms haunting the Land of Prom ise. writes Mrs. Lew Wallace of "Jeru salem as We See It To-Dny." In Ladies Home Journal. Deep emotion pos sesses us. The JaiT.i gate is the em trance from the west, a market wber there is much traffic carried on In V0' rious languages. We hear names that start far-reaching associations in the remote past. We see costumes such at Absalom, the beautiful, the beloved wore; men in soft raiment, flowini robes, beggars, lepers. Chief union, the motley swarm is the uneonquerea Arab, stately as Saul, silent in his pic turesque garments, as though the still ness of the desert nnd passed into hit soul, unmoved at sight of the foreign machine come to break his civilization Job was such a one sheik of the desert with lordly bearing, as became 1h leader of horsemen with upcars ant the owner of camels, greatest of ol men of the east. Does this sound Ir reverent? Wait, we are Hearing tht hill where David set his throne; th. slow wheels turn slower, a shriek, a jerk, stop. The turbnned brakemnn calmly calls "Mount Zion" a rush ol feeling, a thrill that can come but once we lift our eyes to the city of our Lord, whether In the body or out cf the body I cannot tell. BURY LEPERS ALIVE. The Victims Are Gnests at Ilnnqaets That Trecede Funerals In China, The Chinese have a curiously cheer ful way of disposing of their lepers. The relatives of the afflicted persons propose to him that they bury him alive, and such is the fatalism of the Chinese , that the victim readily con sents. An elaborate meal is served to him, in the way of a farewell ban quet, nnd then the funeral procession forms. The man who is about to be immured under the sod follows his own ! coffin, and when he reaches the grove he takes a dose of laudanum, Jiops into the box and settles down for eternity. ! Dr. Wittenberg, writing on the sub ject of leprosy in China, states thnt the pure nerve form Is the least coa mon. In such cases, as is well known, the patients may go on for years. As to the mixed form, It is fairly common, but it is a difficult matter to estimate the number of lepers in any given dis trict.. The su'fferers lead the common life so long as they remain free from de structive lesions. When these occur to any marked degree the leper is either segregated in a hut or he is allowed to wander about the country, sustaining life by begging. Dr. Wittenberg re cords cases of direct contagion from mother-in-law to daughter-in-law, , What we Eat is intended to nourish and sustain us, but it must be digested and as similated before it can do this. In other words, the nourishment contained in food must I e seuaraied bv the dieeslive oruans from the waste materials and must be cariied by the Mood to all pans of the body. We believe the reason for the great benefit which so many people derive from Hood's Sarsa parilla lies in the fact lhat this medicine pive good dijjfsiion and makes pure, ri :h blond. It restores the functions of those orgnns which convert -v into nourishment that yivcs Btrenib to i.erves and muscles. It nlso cures tlysprp la, scrofula, salt iheum, hoi!s, gores, pimples und eruptions, catarrh, rheumaasin and all ilimae lhat have their origin in impure h'oou. The carpet in a Rirl's bedioom wears out first in front of the mirror always CASTOR I A For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature ill 1 1 ' J li-ftl II II II i hi i i ii n mi i-'i ! Ill UI.TIJIJLU11HI II; i iv.a 1 1 .,i, ii i Jmmmmmwmm, '" -?Jr IBIS AVcgctable Preparation for As similating live Food andBcfiula ling the Stomachs and Dowels of Fromotcs DigcslioiLCrmfuI ne3 and Rcst.Conlalns neither Opium.Morpliine norIuicral. Not Naim. c otic . jav mfoun-smnmaw flmmJtut Stti' Mx.SmM RorktlU MM jlnurSfr e Jtoomtmt - (YwiW.tiMSV IliisYy' nrmr. A perfect Remedy forConslipa Tlon , Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea Worms .Convulsions .Fcvcrish ncss and Loss of Sleep. Facsimile Signature of NEW YORK. EXACT COPy OF WRAPPER. F you want the news of the world written and pictured, the finest art and the best literature, then you must read COLLIER'S WEEKLY America's Foremost Illustrated Journal Hall Caine's Latest and greatest novel, "The Eternal City," begins soon, Send tor free copy of the opening chapters. A Beautiful Genuine Diamond Ring Freo m .-.--. . a . a urn oi ii, you om niiin, ni'iwnnsufDuine tnsiuona, auaone haudosenBter-. llns; Silver l'lated Tea Spoons HIKE, There u no chance or deception about lh aUvertliement. We speak the truth and nothing to Introduce 'MJUICK-AIAIO" Itvnnet Tablets for making; Delicious Desserts Into every household, and every person who will sell only twelve package will receive our generous offer ol this niUKiiillvfiiit Ilamnnl King, with one half dozen Sterling Silver Elated Tea or Dessert Spoons, which we give absolutely free for selling only twelve packages at io cents a package, ff yon agree to sell the 1 ablets, write lo-day and we will send them ty mail. When sold you send us the Lao and we Ktiaranton to send your Premium the same day absolutely FREE. If you wish ua to send the premium at once with the is packages of Rennet Tablets, remit Si.eo with the order and premium will be sent Immediately. We are an old, reliable concern, with a reputation for square and honest dealing, and we guarantee to do exactly as we say. The Silverware is guaranteed silver plated on pure metal. 1 he King 1 soUd 14-K. tiuld set with W-K. pure white renuiue Dlamood. Measure your ringer with a strip of paper for sue wanted. rUAKKXlN tllJtlMICAL to., 830 Filbert Street, Philadelphia, Psv What Shall we Have for Deskrt? This question arises in the family every day. Let us nnswer it to-day. Try Jell-O, a delicious dessert. Prepared in two min utes. No baking ! add hot water nnd set to cool, l'lavors: Lemon, orange, raspberry and strawberry. At your grocers, loc. Uiod The fellow who owns a pair of skates is the only one who is cutting any ice. Pill-Fame. io cents a vial for Dr. Ar. new's Liver Hills would not make them the fame they enjoy to-day if the curative pow ers were not in them. Worlh will get to the lop and lhat accounts for the wonderful de mand for these little gems. They positively cure constipation, biliousness, sickheadache. Sold by C. A. Kleim. The fellow who is driven to drink needn't blame it on the call driver. Salt Rheum Cured Quick. Dr. Ag new's Ointment cures Salt Klicuin and all iiching or burning skin i Ueaesin a dav. One application gives almost instant relief, l or itching, blind, or bleeding pile?!, it stands without a peer. Cures in three to six nights, t; cent. 76 Sold by C. A. Kleun. Jkll-O, the New Dessert, pleases all the f.miib , l our tbivois i Lemon, Oinuge Kaspbcny and straw berv. At yourgroccis loc. 12 2odt OASTO TV X -A. . Bean th I Itia Kind You Have Always Bought For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature In Use For Over Thirty Years 11521ft Address COLLIER'S WEEKLY, 555 WEST THIRTEENTH STREET, NEW YORK CITY. cmn s ti majrnniccut BOUU but the truth. We ar H.,.rm.n.H Distressing Stomach Disease Perma nently cured by the masterly rower o South American Nervine Tonic. Invalids need suffer no longer, because this great remedy can cure them all. It is n eurf "ur the whole world of stomach weakness and indigestiou. The cure begins with the first dose. The relief it brings is marvellous and surprising. It makes no failure; never disappoint. No matter how long you have suffered, yont cure is certain under the use of this great health-giving fiwce. Pleasant and always safe. Sold by C. A. Kleim, druggist, 12S West Main street, Dloomsburg, Pa. iy4 19 "No man' is too old to learn," says the Manayunk Philosopher, "and no man is Ion young to think lie's too old to learn." Aroi'LEXV. Dr. Agnew's Cure for the Heart is t (Tec live in apoplectic symptoms. If you have unpleasant dizziness, lightness or sudden rush of blood 10 the head, take pre cautions against a recurrence. This gre it remedy will remove the cause. The press of ills land has daily a list of sudden deaths which would not b.; Chronicled if Dr. Ag new's Cure for the Heart weie used. 74 Sold by C. A. Kleim When a convict has served half of hit term of imprisonment ubd is pardoned for gooil hchntior he looks upon ins lecurd witk paic'oualile piide. OASTOllZA. 8li:r 2U0M&i , VaSBBSSBBSSSS
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers