THE COLUMBIAN, BLOOMSBURG. PA. STORMS JNJJRITAIN. Flood and Wind Devastate Island Kingdom. M45Y FATALITIES ALREADY REPORTED anlrrlnn) l.lahthaiiae HcKtroreil. ! In l:nllh ( hnnnrl ".overeat In Vrnra-Klniialinvn llnrlifir Strewn Willi Wrecknae. LONIiON, Nov. 1H.-A tremendous atortn, with torrents of rain. Is swuc't taj? the. north of Ilrltain n ml Ireland. Thrro hnve boon serlou HooiN In York blrc. Several of tin suburbs of lb Mn are Hooded, and elsewhere in Ire land great duimiKe ha been ilom liy floods. Several fatal accident have ccurrcd, und railway 'iiiimmiiU-ntloil la delayed. In sonn parts of the country the rain has continued for thirty-six hours. In the Manchester district, although there ban lieen considerable damage, the flood)! have leen ratlier welcomed than otherwise, as the mills hail Ions suffer ed from the unusual drought. The pale Is still rapine alone the coast. Reports continually arrive of shipping casualties, especially on the Northumberland coast, where the storm Is extremely violent. Three vessels were driven ashore last nl(?ht at the entrance to the Tyne. Four small vessels have been wrecked In the vicinity of Sunderland, nnd an other has been wrecked off Hartle pool. Altogether nine persons were drowned In these disasters. The light house on the Sunderland pier has been washed a Way. The gale In the Irish channel is the severest known for many years. Five Teasels hnve hern wrecked In Kings town harbor, which Is strewn with wreckage. The niallbont Nord. which started from TVvsvr for Calais nt half past 11 last night, ran down the lightship of the works of the new Pover pier. The erw of the lightship were drowned. It Is reported In Dover that sixteen persons went down with the lightship. The Nord has gone ashore at the fore land, bnt her passengers nre ald to be safe. ADMITTED TO PRACTICE. Rnaaell linrriaon Pr(ipnr to Fight War Department' Treatment. INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., Nov. 13. Colonel Kussell B. Harrison, son of former President Benjamin Harrison, was yesterday admitted to practice law by thp county, state, supreme and fed eral courts on the motion of former United States Attorney General V. II. Q. Miller, former law partner of the late ex-President Harrison, and State Attorney General Taylor. Colonel Har rison will open a law office In Indian apolis. and. it Is said that his associate will be Professor Ingler, dean of the Indianapolis College of Law. Colonel Harrison In reply to an In quiry said: "This consummation of a long cher ished Intention has been hastened by my own desire and my father's dying wish that I tdiould carry out his Inten tion to fight to the end the unjust and annillitary treatment meted out to me by the war department. Lender of Mntlny Hecnptnred. TOI'KKA, Kan., Nov. 12.-Frank Thompson, the leader of the mutiny nt the federal prison at Lnveu worth, which resulted in the escape last Thurs day of twenty-six prisoners, was cap tured eight miles north of Council Grove last evening by n posse under oniiimnd of I trinity United States Mar thai E. A. I'reneott. Thompson would uot surrender, but was taken after n hard fight with the olHccrs, in which was shot in the head, but not seri usly Injured. No member of the posse was hurt. Scliivnli'a Eiiorinoiii Snlnry. NEW YOKK. Nov. 12 It was stated n excellent authority yesterday touch' ng rcisu'ts that the salary of Charles M Schwab as president of the United Stutes Steel corporation Is fil.otio.iioo t year that his salary is really $1ihi,omO l year, with a contingent fee. The lnt .er amounts to onXoiirth of 1 per cent if nil that the Ktt;el corporation earns ibove its lixed charges and the imounts needed to pay the dividends in Its common and jircfurred stocks. Nearly Killed For llluht Cent. NEW YOKK, Nov. 12.- l.ecause ho lid not have the money -N cents to ay for a meal he had eaten Michael v'tekes, thirty-two years old, a driver, f 492 West Broadway, vn beaten on .he head with a baseball bar In n res- aurant on West Broadway and is In t crltic.il condition in Kt Vcncent's .tospltnl. Lady Cnrew Den4. LONDON, Nov. Rl.-Lndy jr.'athcrlue "ane Cnrew, grandmother of the pros- ,int Burou Cnrew, died yesterday t (YoodstowR, Waterford, aged 104. She .V88 a guem ut the famous Brussels I atU on the we of the hurtle of TiVater oo and was n noted beauty tut the , ourt of Louis Philippe. Corn Vl-ld Very Poor. WASHINGTON, Nov. 12-The ' imlnary estimate or the average yield r acre of corn as published In th . nonthly report of the statistician of he department of agriculture Is i1.4 ttashels as conipnred with an average .'leld of 25.3 per ucre in llMK) and 18'Jil . ,nd a ten year average of 24.4 bushels, Prince ( urUtla III. COPENHAGEN, Nov. 12.-Prlnce . Christian, eldest son of dhe crown ; rluce of Denmark. Is sever) 111 with carlet fever. Transport Tborana at Manila). WASHINGTON. Nov. 13-Th war department is informed that the trans. prt Thomas lm arrlvt-'tl ut Maulk., MERRIAM RETIRES. Coinmnnder of Department of Col orado Itenelten the Arte Limit. WASHINGTON, Nov. llt.-Brlgndiet General Henry C. Merrinm was placed on the retired list today on nccolint of are. His present command, the de partment of Colorado, will bp assumed temporarily by Brigadier General J. C. Bates, commanding the department of the Missouri. It Is expected that Major General Arthur MaeArtlmr about the 1st of January will be assigned to com mand the department of the Colorado. IK has expressed a preference for that GENERAL MERRIAM. assignment, and the orders will be Is sued when he Is relieved from his pres ent duties In this city as a member of the board of brevets. Next to General Wade General Mer- rlam Is the ranking brigadier general In the army. He served throughout the wnr of the Rebellion In the volun teers, having entered the service as captain of the Twentieth Maine In fantry In 1S02. He was n major gen eral of volunteers during the Spanish wnr. Ills most conspicuous service In later years was In commnnd of the troops during the Cosur d'Alene labor riots. This nfterward was Investigated by a committee of congress, and Gen eral Merriam's course was approved In the report. DEATH OF EARL LI. End of China's Great Man Waa Peaceful. I PEKING, Nov. 8. The end of LI Hung Chang, which occurred at 11 a. I ui. yesterday, was quiet. His vitality I slowly ebbed. For a time he lost con-1 eciousness, but he showed great tenncl-1 ty, rallied nt midnight, became semicon scious, partook of nourishment and ap peared to recognl7.e his relatives. The flames of the procession of papei effigies, chairs, horses nnd bearers burn ed In the courtyard of the yamen to carry his spirit to heaven told the crowd of officials who were gathered in the narrow street outside the yamen that the cud had come. Soon nfterward a procession appeared bearing a costly coffin of tenkwood beautifully lacquer ed. This cotfin LI Hung Chang took on his trip nround the world, nnd he brought It from Canton when lie came to Peking to settle the Boxer troubles. Since that time It had been kept In n temple here. Dispute Hastened Death. PEKING, Nov. It. A violent dispute with M. Paul Lessar. Russian mlnistet to China, over the Manchurian treaty appears to have been the immediate cause of the death of Li Hung Chang. C'olnmtiln Professor'a Trnvic Dentil. NEW YORK. Nov. 12. Under pecul iar circumstances not devoid of mys tery the life of Richmond Mayo Smith, professor of political economy and so cial science in Columbia university and one of Mayor Elect Low's warm friends, was dashed out last night on the stone flagging In the rear of his residence at linn Yest Seventy-seventh street after n fall from one of his study windows. His neck was broken, and he died an hour and a half after being picked up. CnrncKle Adds Two Millions to Gift PITTSBURG, Nov. 13. Just before the close of an all afternoon meeting of the board of trustees of the Carne gie institute yesterday Mr. Andrew Carnegie surprised and delighted the members present by the announcement that he had decided to Increase by $2, (hh'.imhj his a 1 rcaily large donations. Aliiliniiin Constitution Adopted. MONTGOMERY, Ala., Nov. 12. Ala bama voted yesterday on the question of the adoption or ratification of the constitution formed by the recent con vention, ami from the returns so far received It Is evident that the instru ment has cnrrled by a majority rang ing between 25,HH) and 3.,0(M. JifW York Markets. FLOCK StatR and western quiet and somewhat depressed by the wheat de cline; Minnesota patenta, $3.!KVS4 10; wlntt-r Btiaib'hts. $:i. 4id :i..ro; winter extras, ItSOif 2.DU-, winter patents. .U03.. VH HAT Weak and considerably lower by reason of vigorous December tinloud intr. easier cables and a break in corn; De cember. 7!iV" 15-lttc; May, &0T4iiSl!4 KYK Firm; tate. Biifi(14e., c. i. f.. New York. chtIoib; Ko. 2 western, 67'c., t. o. b., afloat. CIJKN Influenoad by the crop report, lower cables, ireneral locnl lllng- and leas setiv.e support; Iecember, KV'Jiiic; May, Stiff! 11114 c. OATH ICasler with the other markets; track, white, state. 4MyMc.; track, while, western', 4r.'ilc. HoHK'-guiet; mess. 15f(16; family, 17.2.Vfi ITia. LARD Easy; prim western steam, .:-,C. HUTTER Firm; state dairy, 14220.; ermory, lW231.u. riiRKHK ynlet; fancy large, Septem ber. Wl Wi. ; fancy, targe, October, t1t Kci fancy, umiill. September, lUlOc. J f.ini y, small, October, lur. VAiCH Slronn; state and Pennsylvania, EtiiiUTc.: western, cuudled, HirJUc. Tl'KpKNTINB Dull at itSiijax', MOLA-SSIiS tiuaUy ; New Orleans, 372? 42c. RICE-Bteady; domestic, 4fi0,o.; Ja pan. 4'V'I')0. TALLuU-Bteady; city lc; country, 6ff;c. HAY-Stendy; u'llyuliwr, 60(S63o,; good to cliulca, K'rjf, looking mu To the time when she was plucked from the very grasp of death, the natural im j.tilse of the womanly heart is thankful ness for the means which saved her, nnn a desire to help other women in like case. Those nre the motives which prompted Mrs. Kva Huraett to write the accompanying testi monial to the curative Fnver of Dr. Pierce's avorite Prescription, This is only one cure out of thousands. No one would dare say that the average woman was not as truthful as she is Rood. And it is the truthful testimony of the average wotnnn that ''Favorite Pi scription" cures womanly diseases when all other means and medi cines absolutely I fail. It estab lishes regularity, dries the drains which weaken women, heals inflammation and ulceration and cures female weakness. It tranquilizct the nerves, restores the appetite and induces refreshing 6leep. " I have (mended for some time to write to you," say Mm. Kva Burnett, of Ruellvillr. Lo gan Co.. Ky., "nnd give a testimonial in regard to what your tnedicine hn done for nit. My baby canie'in July. 1S.S9. and I had congeative chilla. and lay at (Tenth a door for ten long weeka. 1 waa in a dreadful condition and had six of the best doctora of the cltv. After everything had been done and 1 had been given up to die I aked mT huaband to get me a bottle of Dr. Pierce'f favorite Prencription. He hnd no faith in It, but he got it. and when I had tnken it two weeka I was able to walk to the dining room to my meala, and by the time I had taken three bottlea I waa able to cook for ray family of four. I can never praiae Dr. Pierce and hia medicine enough. " Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets cure bili ousness. Keepers Have Flitht with AlllKMtora. When the keepers, Mr. Snyder nnd Mr. Shannon, attempted to remove the alligators from their pen in Central park, New York, to their winter quar ters under the lion house the other day the animals rebelled, and it was only after the largest one had been tied up with ropes and the smaller one placed in bags that they were sub dued. While they were being trans ferred they bit ut the keepers, nnd roared so loudly that many people were attraajed to the scene. The keepers were greeted with sav age roars when they approached the largest alligator in the ien and tried place a rope about its head. Every time the keeper came near with the rope in hia hand the animal bit at him, and finally the keeper retired to devise a plan by which he could get the rope about his neck. This was done with the assistance of another keeper and a loud noise to divert the reptile. Then Mr. Snyder, by a quick move ment, succeeded in lassoing the alli gator. Tying it fc a post, the keepers succeeded, after much maneuvering, in putting the rope about its nose and under its jaws so it could not bite. Struggling and making desperate ef forts to free himself, the alligator was carried into its winter home. l.oantaK of Jewelrj', It is the practice of London West end jewelers to loan magnificent tiaras and other articles of jewelry for special iocca.sions. These things are loaned as a courtesy to specially pood customers, while other people less well known must make a deposit of the value of the jewels before takinjrthem. Derivation of "Tnwdrj-." "Tawdry" is derived from St. Au drey. In the early middle ajjes fairs were held in France and Kn-rland on St. Audrey day, and those annual patb crinps became noted for the paudy and worthless jewelry sold nt them. Told II I m the Iteaann. Deicon Scrimp Humph! Thinlt: you're pot to have a vacation, eh? Sfrupplinp 1'astor Yes, the doctor says I must po oft until this cough is cured. Deacon Scrimp Well, I'd like to know why preachers are always get ting bad couphs. Strupplinp I'astor Well, you see, we hnve to visit around a pood deal, nnd we are always asked to hold a little service before leavinp, and I think our throats become affected from breathinp the dust that flies from the family Ilibles. N. Y. YVeekly. f'upld'a Court rinnter. Cupid deals In heallr.B lotions, Which are far too dear for spurning; Cures for wounds the Jealous puffer, Hurts to pride and tad heart burnings. For two lovers who have quarreled (Where's a remedy that's faster?) To their lacerated feeliiiRs He applies his own court plaster. Philadelphia Hulletln. THE RIGHHTlNGlfPlJT OH.' (Benson's Plaster Is Pain's Master.) From the natural impulse, to "put soma, thing on" a painful spot all application for the relief of pain have arisen. The most successful have ever been pouU tioes or plasters, and the bust of these is Benson's Porous Plaster. No other has anything like the sumo power as curative agont; it is highly and scientifically medicated, and its standard is advanced year by year. Use Benson's Plaster for ooughs, colds, chest diseases, rheumatism, grip, neuralgia, kidney trouble, lame back, and other uil ments that make Winter a season of suffer ing and danger. It relieves and cures quicker than any other remedy. Do not accept Capsicum, Strengthening or Belladonna plasters in place of Benson's, as they possess none of its curative power. Insist on having the genuine. Tba people of every civilised land have testified for years to the superlative merit of Benson's Plasters; and 6,000 physioians and druggists of this country have declared them worthy of public confidence. la official comparisons with others, Ben. sou's Plasters Lave been honored with fifty-fltt highest awards. For sale by all druggists, or we will pre pay postage on any number ordered in the united Stutes on the reeeipt of 250. each. sVooept no imitation or substitute. 4. Beaburv A Jotm-va, )lfg. Chemists, N.Y, ft! ' li Mmm Kitty Green'. Elopement v By WILLIAM J. LAMPTON tCopyrlulit, W0I, by Author! Sin ll. nti .i KITTY ORKKN had promised J. In Meldon to be his wife, but lxil.y was a woman, and women are i;!fii'., from the cradle to the prave. She was pretty nnd petted, nud even the promise she ha given to her lover wns not always a reminder to her that her first duty was to him. John Meldon was one of the nvi who be lieve with the poet; "Her very frowns are talrer far. Than smiles of other molilen are," And when she frowned upon him for the pood ndviee he, as ten years her swnior, felt he had the ripht to pive her, he loved her the more and wns the more zealous, feeling that when nt last he had won her completely flie would be more precious to him for the effort required in the winning. lint Kitty Green's temper and tem perament were not of the John Mel don sort yet, and althouph she hnd promised to be his wife and said she loved hirri better than any other man in all the world, it must be confessed that Kitty could not persuade herself to withdraw her beauty and her win some ways entirely from the admira tion of other men, as it is provided In all cases of affairs of the heart the woman should do. No, Kitty loved admiration, and she loved to tease the excellent young man who had been the only one who had won a final nnd definite promise from her. They had been engaged for three months, and, while a portion of that time was Paradise to John, there were other pprtions of it when, if he had been asked for his opinion, It is feared that it would scarcely have been appropriate for publication. Yet with it nil, the idea of not loving her never once entered his mind. He knew the story, from his infancy, of the children of Israel In the wilder ness, and their final deliverance and joy in the Promised Land was his pillar of fire to lead him through the darkest nipht of Kitty's willfulness and coquetry. Her latest disregard of his wishes, not to say his rights, was her permit ting the attention of one Maj. Hunter, who had appeared in Winston social circles as a hero from the Philippine islands. Nobody had inquired of the war department at 'Washington for the major's credentials, and he was . Mich an attractive gentleman that no ' one thought of doing such a thing. In fact, all Winston society simply fell at the major's feet and worshiped because he had such elegant manners nnd such an extensive and intimate acquaintance with luth avenue and Newport and the diplomatic circles of the capital that to have questioned his position or any statement he made of himself would have been high treason. John Meldon, not being a society man, was not included nmong the worshipers of the major, and he was in a proper frame of mind to consider him calmly and to con- j elude that there was a mouse in the meal bap, though just where and how he had not then the means of know ing. What Mr. Meldon knew definite ly of the major was that he had proved conclusively to himself that Kitty Green would come into posses sion of a fortune plenty large enough for two when she was 21 years of age and that no other girl in Winston had anything like such prospects. For further particulars the major did not seem to care. j Kitty's lover maintained a discreet silence on the subject of the major until forbearance ceased to be a vir tue, nnd then he very mildly suppest ed one evening that she mipht at lenst divide her time between her promised husband nnd the ubiquitous mnjor. "Maj. Hunter is a gentleman," she said, with a toss of her pretty head, "and if I want to see him every day In the week I shall do so." "Vou have the ripht to do as you please, sweetheart," said Meldon, coaxinply, "but you have no ripht to I say who or what Maj. Hunter is until I you know." "I know Maj. Hunter is a gentle man," she continued. "Haven't I seen him nearly every day since he has been in town, and if he were not a gentleman, wouldn't I know?" "Sweetheart, sweetheart," pleaded her lover, "you are a dear little thing that a man of the world, such as Hunter is, could fool to death, and he is fooling you now. He has even gone so far as to investigate the rec ords to learn how much money you have." Kitty became wildly indignant on the instant. "Do you mean to iniinunte, Mr. Mel don," she exclaimed, with a flushed face and in an angry tone, "that Maj. Hunter has no regard for me except for my money?" "Surely, Kitty," asserted Meldon. "I say it positively as my belief." "Then I'll ask him," she said. "And, Mr. Meldon," she went on, "for this dander you have uttered against a man who has always ben polite and attentive to me, you may consider our engagement broken. You think Maj. Hunter is no gentleman, and I think you are not one. Uood evening, Mr. Meldon, and good-by." Meldon might have pleaded his cause, might hava apologized, might have recanted his Hunter heresy, but Kitty hud disappeared from sight, and he went out of her nouse cursing him aelf for a blundering Idiot, and yet feeling that he was not altogether wrong. He hod been properly armed for the conflict, only he iImI not know how to tie his weapons. John Mel don was not n woman fighter; he was n woman lover, and that Kind of a tonn is always weak, always awkward in the face of the foe. Kitty was Impulsive nnd Impetuous, and what she said to the major or what lie said to her no one knew, but by that fate which is always putting a' boy in the ripht place John Mel don's office boy was tip n June apple tree in the Green orchard on the right, two weeks aftrr his employer's dismissal, and he overheard Kitty nnd the major, on a rustic bench below-, making their final arrangements for an elopement. What the boy was do ing up the apple tree is not a mat ter of chronicle; boys have been known to go up apple trees with ripe apples on them for various reasons, and perhaps this boy was not unlike other boys. In any event, he was up the tree.'and he heard what wns said underneath his perch, nnd, though frightened almost out of his wits, he did not forpet any part of it, and, what was better still, being a faithful boy, he told 110 one except Mr. Mel don. John Meldon hnd been pond to the boy. and he was old enough to know that Mr. Meldon's course of true love was not running smoothly. "An'. Mr. Meldon." nid the boy. in concluding his marvelous tale, "Miss Kitty didn't want to run away an' pit married, but that major man said as how it was the best way, nnd she'd have to. She cried a bit, but she said she'd do it and show some people they couldn't lend her 'round by the nose, or somethin' like thnt." Mr. Meldon winced nt this, but smiled faintly, and gave the boy a five-dollar bill, with the admonition to say nothing to anyone about what he had heard. The five dollars was not needed to fix the boy's loyalty, but he put the money in his pocket because he had other uses for it. On the appointed night, with every detail of the proposed elopement clear before him as reported by the boy, Mr. Meldon and two friends lay hidden in the border of raspberry bushes not far from Kitty's w indow. The sky was overcast and the night very dark, but a faint light shone from the window. An hour after midnight a figure ap peared under the window, a low whis tle went upward and presently Kitty's eyes peered down Into the darkness. The major was there alone with a lad der, w hich he placed in position for her to step out upon. "Throw down the money and the jewelry," whispered the major, "and wliile I take them around to the car riage you get ready and I'll come back for you." Kitty dropped a couple of packages out into the darkness, which the ma jor found with a dark lantern, nnd started off with toward the lane be yond the garden. As he passed the raspberry bushes two men suddenly seized him, and before he could make a.ny outcry he was gagged and his hands were tied. The third man went to the foot of the ladder and a low whistle, as before, called Kitty to the window. Bonneted and wrapped, she came down the frail bidder and dropped into the arms waitinpfor her, was kissed encouragingly and hurried away to the carriage. I "Our driver is gone," whispered her companion the two men who had looked out for the major had not neg lected the driver but that doesn't mntter. "Hurry into the carriage and I'll drive you around to the church, where your own pastor is waiting to marry us, darling," ond out of the davkness came another kiss for Kitty, who was so dazed by the excitement of It all that she scarcely knew wliat was happening. But as the carriage whirled away noiselessly down the soft road of the lane, she realized vaguely that it was very thoughtful of the mnjor to have her own pastor take part in this romnntic marriage of hers. On the driver's box sat three men and two of them chuckled as if in triumph. The man with the lines titrht in his hands over the horses was silent as the grave. At the church the carriage stopped. Tw o of the men went in by a side door, and shortly after them came the third with Kitty. There was scarcely lipht enough to see one's hand before one's face, but the cheery voice of Kitty's be loved pastor seemed almost like a ray of sunshine to her, and she heard only , that during the brief ceremony which followed. Even that was faint nnd In distinct in words, but the sound of It soothed her and seemed to fall as a blessing upon this wild act of hers, i which without it she did not believe she could have carried to the final ac complishment. Regret was coining to rTitty, but willful people do not wait upon regrets. She knew at last that she was Mrs. Hunter; she heard the minister's words which pronounced the twain one flesh, and then came a little prayer, and after it a hearty voice out of the dimness of the chapel. "My very best wishes," Mrs. Meldon," it said, and Kitty, as some one turned the lights on full, saw John Meldon at her side and near him her pastor and her only brother. She could do noth ing at all, nothing except to faint away, which she did promptly. When she regained cons-ciousness she was at her own home again with John Meldon and her mother smiling down upon her. What had happened she could not tell, but something that made her cry and put out her hands, not to her mother, but to John Mel don. And the major? Well, af tr the cere mony, when they went to find him in the grass where they had left him, they found only the handkerchiefs with which he had been so hastily gagged nd tied. The money and the jewelry had gone with the major. Since 1SU0 the pension disburse ments have been more than a billion and a half of dollars. Putting food into a die:icd stoma, li js like putting money into a pocket with li .lrs. The money is lost. All it Value ocs f.if nothing. When the lom.icli in rli-e.-l, with the allied organs of dirrMion and nu. triiion, the fo.id Inch U put into it is l.ire. ly lost. The nutriment U not etr.ui,, (rotn it. The body i-i e.ik and the lil, .,, impoverished. The pocket can be nu n. I. ,. The stomach enn be cured. That sicilii, medicine for tin stomach nnd blond, I loci .1 Tierce's Golden Medical Discovery, ,n"$ wild peculiar promi tness nnd power on the org.un of digestion and nutrition, h is A positive cure lor almnil all disorder of tln ordain, and ciucs nlso such diseases ol the hcirt, blood, liver and oihcr organs, as hue their cause in a weak or diseased tond.tmn of the stomach. A true ftiend is one who doesn't offer ad. Vice. I, 1 IloiT.it r Ykstkrday, CrRKn To-day. Mm. U. C. Hurt, of 2ft Uroadway, N'jw Yoik, says i "I am niipriscd Bnd delighted t the change for the bettor in my c;ise in one cUr from the use of Mr, Agnew's l.'atanli: Powder. It worked like magic there's in excuse for a person sullcrin pain with tlni rctneHy within reach 50 cents. Sold by C. A. Kleiin. .;i A stitch in time is worth two ncedlc-5 in 1 haystack. In reply to inquiries we have pleasure in announcing that lily's Liquid (Jrrnm I'aim is like the solid preparation ot that .Klu.n.i ble remedy in that it cleanses and Vit u s membranes affected by nasal catarrh. Tlnr is no drying or sneezing. The Liquid Cream Halm is adapted to use by patients who li. vr trouble in inhaling thiough the noc an ! prefer spraying. The price, including sj ray ing tube, is 75c. Sold by druggists, or mailed by Ely Brothers, 56 Warren St., New ork. Genius and riches are seldom on speaking terms. IIkart Imsease Uri.irvki) in Thirty MlXUTF.s. Vr. Agnew's Cure for the llcait gives perfect relief in all cacs of organic or sympathetic heart disease in thirty minutes, and speeddy tlTects a cure It is a peerless remedy for palpitation, shortness of I reath, smothering spells, pain in led side, and all symptoms of a diseased heail. One dux convinces. Sold by C, A. Kleim. 41 The pedestrian usually strides in his profession. makes rap 1 Have You a Skin Disease ? Tetter, salt rheum, scnld head, ringworm, eczema, barber's itch, ulcers, blotches, chionic ery sipelas, liver spots, prurigo, psoriasis, or other eruptions of the skin what l'r. Ag new's 0;niinent has done for others it c.111 do for you cure you. One application gives rebel. 35 cents. Sold by C. A. Klcim. 44 EAILKOAD NOTES r E NN S Y LY A N I A RAILKOAI . REIlUCKD KaTKS TO Il.l.lAMIf)RT j .ACCOU.N I STATU COI.I.KC.K VS. i-KHKill 1 OOI BALL tjAMK, NoVEMUfK lOTII. Eur the benefit of those desiring to witness the football contest between the teams of the Irhigh University and State College at Wdl iainsport on November 16, ltie 1'ennsylvania Railroad Company will sell excursion tick ets from Uellefonie, Troy, Lenovo, Mitllin burg, East lllooinsburg, Shamokin, Harris, burg and intermediate stations, at rate of a single fare for the round trip (no rate less, than 25 cents). These tickets will lie sold only on No" ember 10, and will be gocd for return passage until November IS, inclusive. Winter Excursion Route Rook. In pursuance of its annual custom, the pas senger department ' of the I'ennsylvania Railroad Company has just issued an at tractive nnd comprehensive book, descrip tive of the leading winter resorts of the East and South, and giving the raies and va;ious routes and combination of routes to travel. Like all the publications of the I'ennsylvania Railroad Company, this "Winter Excursion liook" is a model of typographical nnd clerical work. It is bound in a handsome and artistic cover in colors, snd contains much valuable informa tion for winter tourists and travelers in gen eral. It can be had free of charge at the piincipal ticket offices of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company, or will be. sent postpaid upon application to Geo. W. Hoyd, Assist ant (icneral Passenger Agent, Rroad Street Station, Philadelphia. IIIILA. & READING RAILWAY. Rei'Ucei Rates 10 Wiu.iamsi'oht. On account of the Lehigh University vs. State College foot ball game, at Williams port, Saturday, November 16th, the Phila delphia &i Reading Railway will sell special excursion tickets from Shamokin, Mt. Car mel, Catawissa, liloomsburg and intermedi ate ticket stations, Pj Wilhamsport, at late of single fare for the round trip, with a min imum of 23 cents. Tickets good going on all tra;ns November 16th and good returning on all trains until Mondav, November iSth, tuclustve. Rate from Bloomsbuig, if 1.62. The Thanksgiving turkey flesh. is taking ou A man may have a weak voice and M use strong language TOniA . Boa tb 'Iw M You Have Alwars Cougit uiiuDUorvc 1 MWB VETERINARY SPECIFICS A. A.) PR VERS, Congestion. Inflsmmo cvucsiiluiM, Lun Icier, Milk Fever. H. II. jr-lIlAl. Lameness, Injuries, CUkJlS I Hheuuiallam. I". '. I MIHB THHOAT. Quinsy, EpIsooUe. CDKsa S llUleuiper, I). I. I U'ADUd II...- f l CUUEH E. K. iroi'OIIS. Told.. IntWnia. Inflamed cuius $ Lun, fleuro-fneumonla. K. V . F. H OI.IC, liHIyarht. Wlnd-Blown. . It Mt-ntfr v. vtLMM iiiarrne G.U 11.11 Prevent MlbCAHKI AGE. t 1 1 1 V Jk. 1)1 a nrkun mustD ntrnn I. I. IfcKIM DISEASES. Mange, Eruption, cuan) I Un, 4rt-a, Farcy. J. K. BAD OMH I IOV (Marine Coat. cubs I ludlgesllun, (iloinarh blassera. tlx, each) Ruble Case, Ten Hpoclflo, Book, to., 7. At druKKlau or atnt prepaid on rwelut ol price. Humphreys' Meilii'lne Co., Cor. William 4 John Bta., New York. VrrnHixAiir Manual Skkt Fast. NERVOUS DEBILITY, VITAL WEAKNESS and Prostration from Over work or other causes. Humphreys' Homeopathic SpeoiflO No. S8, in use ovsr 4.0 yun, the only ucoetMful remedy. (1 per vlahor special paokaga with powdar.for $4 Sola bf UruMliu, or Mul pnil pld on rMlpl o( prioa, UlSrUSKV' Ski). CO., Car. KUIIaai a jaa SU.,ftTai Kd-dt.. r!Ali HAIi bALSAM EjffeM:vSni 1 U!!rp yv.n'A -1 ""ut Pi ,.ll rruwi.'- ...tort C.raj thfut Color- k hr i riuy;lH -
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers