The Columbian. (Bloomsburg, Pa.) 1866-1910, November 28, 1901, Page 6, Image 6

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    THE COLUMBIAN, BLOOMSBURG, PA.
FROM EA8T BESTON-
Begun on New Enterprise Olher
Itomt.
fork
Now that a charter1 was granted
to the Tine Creek Oil Company
week ago last Wednesday of which
J. B. McIIenry, of Renton, is Presi
dent; J. F. Kingsley, of Cambra,
Vice President; D. C. Brittain, of
Register, Secretary; and Alfred
McIIenry, of Cambra, Treasurer;
they contracted last Friday with an
operator by the name oi Shearer for
boring three wells to a great depth
one near the site of the old "salt
well or later oil well," one above
Jonestown and the third probably
on Green Creek. Work began last
Monday, clearing off the ground
preparatory to the erection of a
derrick. The boring, according to
contract, is to commence within
thirty days, but the contractor in
tends to begin within fifteen days.
A thorough test will now be made
and if great mineral deposits are
here in the heart of the earth, the
earth must now yield her hidden
treasures to this progressive and
determined company. Over ten
thousand acres of land has been
leased by this company and more
will be added.
Mrs. Sally Ashelman, of East
Benton township, was butted by a
buck sheep last Thursday and but
for her daughter Pauline and other
timely aid she would no doubt have
been butted to death.
There is still considerable corn
standing in the shock among the
farmers oi this locality?
Notwithstanding the great a
mount of rain the streams and wells
are exceedingly low in many places.
The people living along the free
mail delivery routes feel highly
gratified with this kind of postal
service.
Cambra and Benton will now be
connected by mail facilities through
the tree delivery system. A closed
pouch will be carried to and from
the above named places. This
will obviate the necessity of the
mails between those places to be
9ent the circuitous routes via
Bloomsburg and Shickshinny and
vice versa.
The Coronation Ceremony.
What Will Happen When Edward VII. I
Crowned King of England.
Now comes the first great cere
mony of the coronation. Grouped
ound their Majesties are the Bishops,
iheir supporters: four great nobles
oearing the pointed Sword ot Tern
ooral Justice, tne blunted Sword of
spiritual Justice, Curtana, or the
Sword of Mercy, and the Sword of
State; other great nobles bearing the
various articles of the regalia; the
'teat officers ot State; Garter King
jfArms; the officers of the House
lold; as well as the Queen's officers
md supporters, with her ladies be
lind her chair.
There is a moment of breathless
expectation, for all are aware that it
s the recognition of the monarch by
us people which is now about to be
symbolized. Slowly and majestically
the King stands up in his chair and
.hows himself to his people at every
ne of the tour sides of the theatre.
Meanwhile, Frederick Temple, Lord
Vrchbishop of Canterbury, turns his
;oodly presence to the east siue.
vlaik with him the lowlier figure of
Lord Halsbury, England's Lord High
chancellor, with the bearded Duk
if Norfolk, Hereditary Earl Marshal,
md the Lord Great Chemberlain and
he Lord High Constable. Preceded
iy Garter King of Arms, th,ey go to
lie other three sides ot the theatre,
md at each side the Archbishop says
n a loud voice, " Sirs, I here present
into you King Edward VII., the un
loubted King of tins realm; where
ore all you that come this day to do
our homage, are ye willing to do the
ame?" And on each side the answer
i returntd in the long and continued
cciamations of the people present,
rying out, "God save King Edward
II. 1 The trumpets sound a rati
ication of this curious survival, which
.ads our minds back through the
eceding vistas of history to those
lim ages where the roots of monarchy
uay be traced in the victorious war
lor's being acclaimed over-lord by
brother chieftains. Mrs. Belloc
L.OWNDES, in December Lippincotts,
The following letters are held at
he Bloomsburg, Pa., postoffice, and
'ill be sent to the dead letter office
)ec. 10, 1 90 1. Persons calling for
tiese letters will please say " that they
ttxt advertised Nov. 26, 1901":
ox, Min Annie, Lutz, Mr. F. M.
Jay L. Gookins, Hoe, Mrs. S. I.
One cent will be charged on each
etter advertised.
O. B. Mellick, P. M.
For Bent.
A farm situated on the Berwick
irnpike, one-half mile from Ne
'olumbus, known as the King farm
artiei oesiring to tent please give
inference. Apply to
B. P. King,
943 Louisa St.,
11-14 4' Williamsport, Pa,
CONDENSED DISPATCHES.
(able Rrrnt of the tVrrlc nrleflr
nnd Trrartr Told.
Jonestown, Mb., wns nearly destroy
ed by lire.
The trlnl of Police Coptnln IMainoud
of New York begun nt Albany.
The president's niessnue wns com
pleted nnd given to the printers.
Four were reported dend nnd one dy-
ng at Kuoxvllle, Pn ns the result of
uslnir kerosene to stnrt n fire.
The mnin building of the Itrndley
ertlllzer works, North Weymouth,
Muss., was burned; loss, $1X),IHK).
Monilnf, ov. 23,
The business portion of Wnrnnrt
Hinge, Pn., was burned; loss, $r0().iHM.
A son wns born to Mr. id Mrs.
lfred U. Vnnderbilt nt 721 Fifth ave
nue, ev lorK.
Inrvnrd defeated Ynle in the chntn-
lonshlp football frmiie nt Cambridge,
Mass. The score wns 2'i to 0.
Ynle. Harvard, Frlneeton, Columbia
nd Cornell linve formed nn Intercol-
glnte busketbnll association.
Fire completely destroyed the lnrge
felt plant of Julius Do Long & Co. In
Allegheny, Pa.; estimated loss. I'tUMK).
,t Snulte f to' Marie, Mich., the
bleaching plniit of the Canudlnn Flee-
ro Chemical cotiipiitiy was burned;
loss, $75,000.
Satnrda)-, Nov. it.'t.
The Bank of Liverpool wns robbed
by a bookkeeiwr of $N.-0,000.
The president appointed William Cro-
zler chief of ordnnnce of the nrmy.
The court of appeals declared uncon
stitutional the law prohibitlug ticket
scalping.
Count von Hntzfeldt, until recently
Germnn embassador to Great Britain,
died in London.
Fire Commissioner J. J. Scanncll and
William L. Marks were indicted by the
grand jury in New York city.
At Huntington, W. Va., the packing
house and office of Armour & Co. were
destroyed by fire; loss, $30,000.
President Castro of Venezuela caused
the arrest of Ramon Guerra, minister
of war, on suspicion of conspiracy
against him.
Friday, Not. 22.
The Grand Opera House in Detroit,
Mich., was damaged by fire to the ex
tent of $10 000.
Two hundred press feeders and help- j
ers in Baltimore joo printing omces
went on a strike.
The national grange nt its Dnal meet
ing In Lewiston, Me., decided to meet
in Michigan next year.
John Verrnll, nn Englishman, deliv-
red himself at the police station in In-
dinnnpolls, Ind., admitting forgeries
at.gregutlng $12,000.
Two explosions of nitroglycerin nt
the Forclte Powder works, nenr Land
ing, N. J., shook the country for miles
around, but fortunately no lives were
lost.
Thnradar, Not. 21.
Lord Kitchener reported a Boer de
feat near Tretorla.
The vault of the Woodbury (Conn.)
Savings bank wns robbed by burglars.
A Chicago man committed suicide
under the mlstnken belief that he had
killed his wife.
The president will recommend that
the Chinese exclusion net be strength
ened to increase its efficiency.
The appeal court in Loudon decided
that the crown is entitled to legacy
duty on the estnte of W. L. Winnns.
Charles T. Yerkes revealed a scheme
to run a deep level express line under
neath the existing Metropolitan Dis
trict Hues In London.
Wedneadar, Nov. 20.
The new Italian embassador has
been presented to the president.
An Alabama negro has been sentenc
ed to death for highway robbery.
A Are at Charlotte, N. C, destroyed
property to the amount of $100,000.
The national reciprocity convention
of manufacturers has begun in Wash
ington.
A strong government force has left
Panama to attack the Colombian in
surgents at Chorrera.
A Bad Slip.
"Just think what happened to me,
Clara. I was out hunting, and as I
stepped out of a thicket "
"Oh, you told me that a week aero!
"No such thing. Why, I didn't hear
It myself until yesterday." N. Y.
Times.
HeTlaed Edition.
"Is this the family Bible?" inquired
the young man of Ids best girl's
brother.
"Yes," replied the youngster.
That's the new one. The old one
that's got sister's real age in it la up
stairs." Tit-Bits.
RIGHT UP TO DATE.
(Benson's Plaster Is Pain's Master.)
These are days of records and of the beat.
Ing of reoordn. Benson's Porous Bluster, for
quickness of action and thoroughness of
euro, has no records to beat except its own.
Bonson's Plaster, always the best, always
the leader, is to-day better than ever. It
sticks to the skin but never sticks in its
tracks. It marches on. .
The people not only want to be cured
but oured tuieklt mid Benson's Plaster
does it. Coughs, colds, lumbago, asthma,
bronchitis, liver and kidney complaints,
and other ills approachable by an external
remedy, yield to Benson's as icedoes to heat.
Neither Belladonna, Strengthening or
Capsicum plasters are to be compared with
Benson's. People who have ouce tested
the merits of Benson's Plaster have no us
for any other external remedy.
More than 5,000 physicians and drug
gists (and a thousand times as many non.
professional persons) have called Benson's
Plasters one of the few (!) borne remedies
that can be trusted.
Fifty-five highest awards have been made
to it in competition with the best known
plasters of Europe and Amerioa. Better ;
proof of its merits is inconceivable. Be
sure to get the genuine, j
For sale by all druggists, or we will pre.
pay postage on any number ordered In the
United Stutes, on reoeipt of 25o. each.
ab'iTv A Johnson. Mfa. Chemists, X.T.
SOLDIERS' MONUMENT.
Oik
of the Pineal In rennaslvanla
Dedicated at Tonandn.
TOWANDA, Pa., Nov. 20.-The dedi
cation of the. beautiful soldiers and
allors' monument took place here to
day with great. pomp nnd ceremony..
Gorornor Stone and staff, General
Panlel E. Sickles. General Horatio
King, Levi G. McCaulcy, department
commander G. A. It., nnd other notn
bles were present. In the parade which
occurred previous to the dedicatory
ceremony were several companies of
state troops, led by the Ninth llegl
ment band, Grand Army posts. Sons of
Veterans, Independent batteries and
many civic bodies.
The monument cost $20,000 and la
SOLDIERS AND SAILORS' MONU
MENT AT TOWANDA. VA.
said to be the most beautiful of its
kind in Pennsylvania. It is thirty
three feet high, cut out of solid Ver
mont granite from a design by Passi
teur. On two sides arc striking bas
reliefs, one representing the battle of
Antletam, the other Pickett's cbarge
at Gettysburg. The four figures sur
rounding the base represent infantry,
cavalry, artillery nnd the navy. The
whole is Burmounted by the figure of
a color benrer.
The monument stands directly In
front of the new two hundred thou
sand dollar courthouse, facing the
main street of the town.
AGRICULTURAL DEPARTMENT.
Secretary Wilson's Report Shows
Substantial Improvements.
WASHINGTON, Nov. 20. The an
nual report of the secretary of agricul
ture, Hon. James Wilson, is considera
bly larger than in former years. The
secretary announces an important ex
tension of the forecast field of the
weather bureau, which now Includes
reports from certain points In the Brit
ish isles and on the continent of Eu
rope, from the Azores, Nassau, Bermu
da and Turk's island. The Atlantic
forecasts based upon these reports now
form part of the regular ulght fore
casts Issued In Washington. Three new
forecast districts have been established
In Boston, New Orelans and Den
mark. An extension of the forecast to
farmers through the rural free delivery
is contemplated. Substantial Improve
ments are reported In the department's
system of wireless telegraphy.
A large portion of the report covers
the subject of animal Industry. The
grand total of animals and animal
products exported during the year ex
ceeded $2oO,0(K),0()0 In value.
The organization of the bureau of
plant industry is reported.
Another of the newly organized bu
reaus is that of forestry. The secretary
reports that this bureau is co-operating
with the federal government, with sev
eral states aud many private owners in
handling their forest lauds. Altogether
assistance has been asked for a total
area of 52,000,000 acres, of which
4,000,000 are held by private owners.
The work of forest management is re
viewed in some detail.
The secretary expresses the belief
that Irrigation will in the near future
become a subject for legislation by cou
gress, there being Important reasons
why it should have the attention of
that body.
Twrnly-nlne lludlea Fonnd.
TELLUU1DE. Colo., Nov. 22. The
number of victims of the terrible dlS'
aster lu the Snmggler-l'iiiou miue is
now known to be nt least tweuty-nine,
with a coniddcrable portion of the mine
yet unexplored. Besides the twenty-two
bodies taken out and Identified Y ednes
day night seven were located yesterday
afternoon In the north end of the ninth
level, but the gas is still too strong to
permit the reHcuers to reach them, and
their Identity is as yet unknown. Sev
eral members of the searching parties
were overcome lu their efforts to bring
out the bodies. It probably will be sev
eral hours before they can bo readied
or any further explorations made.
No More I'rlsefttfhtN In Indiana.
INDIANAPOLIS. Ind., Nov. 20.
Governor Durbln says he will not al
low any more prizefights to occur in
Indiana if it slinll be within his power
to prevent them, lie suld the sport
lug element bad been fairly warned,
and if it shall be possible he will cause
the arrest not only of the principals,
but of the backers, trainers and pro
moters of the prizefights. Fights have
been scheduled for Alexandria and
Muncle on Thanksgiving evening.
. Many Earthquake Victims.
LONDON, Nov. 20. According to a
dispatch to The Standard from Odessa,
ISO persona perished lu the recent
earthquakes at Erzerum.
i'i
r
lj!f :l
flips. Bryan is GuretS
Rezd Hoi Letter to Mrs PinUham,
"Dear Mrs. PiskhaM: I vras sick for two years with fall
lnff of the womb and inflammation of the. ovaries and bladder.
1 was
villc,
Sir
IIow many women there are who suffer just like Mrs. Bryan
did I If you ask such sufferers what treatment they have.you
will find they are depending upon some professional theorist
who has never cured a case of uterine or ovarian trouble, or
you will find that they went to their druggist to get Lvdia E.
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and were advised by the
dealer to take something else. You may be sure that such
suffering from female derangement will not exist when Lydia
E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is used. This statement
finds overwhelming verification in the grateful letters from
women.
When you ask for Mrs. Pinkham's medicine at your dealer's,
you may safely distrust the motives of any one who asks you
Pi
'-111'
llliiL
to take sometning ease in place or
I I lydia E. Pinkham's
T5000
REWARD
GREAT BETS IN HISTORY.
Some of the Largest Waa-era ot Which
There la Any Eslatinar
Record.
Lord George Pentinck, in 1843, in bet
ting on his horse Gaper, for the Derby,
stood to win 150,qu0 ($720,000), but
saved himself upon Cornerstone, and
retted 30,000 ($144,000), says the New
York Herald.
Another time a bet of 90,000 ($432,-
000) against 30,000 ($144,000) was
booked between old Lord Glasgow and
Lord George Bentinck.
The marquis of Hastings bet and lost
103,000 ($494,000) on the Hermit's
Derby.
Bell & Co., of Wall street, in August,
1900, had $230,000 plnced in their hands
to bet on President McKinley's reelec
tion, at odds of 2', to 1. Their offer
was absorbed in fractions.
Lord Dudley bet 24,000 to 8,000 on
Peter In a race at Ascot with a book
maker named Morris. Peter was
beaten.
A syndicate headed by a man named
Lambert won 90,000 on Don Juan in
the Cesarevriteh at Newmarket in
1883.
SUrt.OOO.OOO For Hulling Stork.
PHILADELPHIA. Nov. 23. The ex
penditures to be made by the Pennsyl
vania Railroad company in 11)02 for
rolling stock will aggregate $25,000,000,
a sum unprecedented In railroad histo
ry. Of this amouut about $19,000,000
will be expended for cars and the other
$G,000,000 for locomotives. As already
announced, the company will require
19,000 freight and coal cars for 1902,
the greater number of which have been
already ordered.
Elunteen Circuits on One Wire.
HOL'LDEIt, Colo., Nov. 23. Dr. Wil-
Ham Duane, professor of physics at the
State university, has Just been granted
a patent for un invention by which a
lnrge number of telegraph messages
can be sent over one wire and return
nt the same time. In the physical
laboratory at the university it Is said
that he has had as many as eighteen
circuits working on the same wire and
return nil at the same time.
Another Exponltlon Assured.
PORTLAND, Or.. Nov. 20. Can
vassers for subscriptions to the Lewis
and Clark centennial exposition, which
it Is proposed to bold in this city In
l'.K)5, begau their work yesterday. It
is understood that practically the en
tire capital stock of the corporation.
$300,000, is assured as the result of
the duy's work.
All niKht 1nt the 'VMiUtlra. '
WASHINGTON. Nov. 2U. Two
American express passenger locomo
tives which have been in use for nearly
nine mouths in Bavaria have proved
entirely satisfactory except as to their
whistles, whose sound is pronounced
"unearthly." This Information has been
communicated to the state department
by Consul General Mason ut Ucrlin.
lhnmiiarM
Rain and sweat
icss Oil. It r- .
nes
it the damp,
keep lue leath
er ftoit and pU
able, btitctiet
do not break.
No rough ur
face to chafe
and cut. lh
harne&s pot
only keep
looking like
new, but
wrart twice
ai long by the
ue of Eureka
lUrueai Oil,
Sold
everywhere
In cans
all uxei.
. Made by
Standird Oil
Company
Hi-, -in ': -i
Dioaieu very rmuiy. auy jeit
limb would swell so 1 could not
step on my foot. I had such
bearinff-uown pains 1 could
not straighten up or walk
across the room, ana Rtich
shootinjr pains would go
inrnitpn me mat i
thought I could not
stand it. My mother
srot me a bottle of Lydia
E. Finkluun'a Vegetable
Compound and told me
to try it. I took six
bottles and now. thanks
to your wonderful medi
cine alone, I am a well
woman.
" I wish every woman
suffering1 with female weak
ness would bepin its use at
once." Mrs. Elsie Bryan. Otis-
Mich.
Vczctahlo Compound.
Wehe deposited with
the Nnttonnl City Bark,
of Lynn, $5 oo, which
win uc paiu lu unj per.
on who can find that the above testimonial
letter In not genuine, or waa published before
obtaining the writer's apecinl permiaoioa.
Lvnn E. Pinkram Mkdkinb Co.
Caallra In the Air.
Cholly Why so quiet. Miss Grace?
Gruce (lightly) Oh, I was building
castles in the air.
Cholly What did you use lor a cor
nerstone? Grace A solitaire. Town Topics.
Phenomenal.
"We have the most wonderful cook
you ever saw. You know, we ouly en
gaged her as a plain cook."
"Yes."
"Well, she makes good bread."
Town and Country.
Great Chicken Karma.
There are great chicken farms In
Virginia. The land down in the Old
Dominion is become so poor that It
will not grow crops, so they are go
ing into the poultry business. Salem,
Rivington and Riverton have immense
poultry farms.
"Quick Lunch" is one of the comVuonest
of city signs. The sign doesn't say "a
hea'thy lunch of good food" the character
of the food apparently is not considered
It's just a quick lunch eat and pet away.
Is it any wondt-r that the stomach breaks
down ? F'ood is thrown at it, sloppy, indi
gestible and innutritious f od, very often,
and the stomach has to do the best it can.
Normally there should be no neeu for medi
cal assistance for the stomach. But the av
erage method of life is abnormal and while
this continues there will always be a demand
for Dr. i'icrce's Golden Medical Discovery.
It is the one medicine which can be relied on
to cure disenses of the stomach and other or
gans of digestion and mm ition. It is a med
icine designed for the stomach, and to cure
through the stomach remote diseases which
have their cause in the derangement of the
stomach and digestive nnd nutritive system.
It cures when all else fails.
The hero of the hour
last much longer.
sometimes doesn't
Too Kny risoi'LE Dally With Ca
tarrh. It strikes one like a thunderclap,
develops with a rapidity that no other dis
ease does. Dr. Agnew's Catarrhal Powder
is the radical, quick, safe and pleasant cure
that the disease demands. I se the means,
prevent its deep seating and years of distress.
Don't dally with catarrh. Agnew's gives re
lief in ten minutes, jo cents.
Sold by C. A. Kleim. 49
The love of
rjit.
money is what makes a man
Troveu Priceless. Kuby coats and cin
namon flavor. Dr. Agnew's Liver Pills are
household favorites. Impurities leave the
syttem. The nerves are toned. The blood
is purified. The complexion is bright and
ruddy. Headaches vanish and perfect health
follows their use. 40 doses lo cents, or as
cents lor 100 pills.
Soid by C A. Klcim. 51
It doesn't take dynamite to blast hopes.
BAILED AD N0TE3,
PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD.
Mexico and California Person allv
Conducted Tours. The Pennsylvania
Railroad Company's Personally-Conducted
Tour to Mexico and California will leave
New York on February If, visiting St,
Louis, San Antonio, Monterey, Tampico,
San Luis Potosi, Guanajuato, lrapuato,
Guadalnjara, (ueretaro, City of Mexico,
Airuas Calientes, and Li Paso.
At El Paso tourists for California only.
who will leave New York February 25, will
join the parly, and the Mexican tourists who
do not care to go to the Pacific Coast will
return to New York. The California party
will vit.it Lot Angeles and the auothern Cat
ifornia coast resorts, San Francisco, and, on
the return trip, the Grand Canon of the
Color.. do in Arizona. Tourists will have
thirteen days in Mexico and nineteen days
on the I acme Coast, the California tour re
turning to New York on March 87, the
whole tour covering forty-five days. The
rate, covering nil necessary expenses during
the entire trip, will be $575 from points on
the Pennsylvania Railroad east of Pittsburg.
For Mexico only the rate will be 350,
and for California only, $375. The party
will travel over the entire route in a special
train of Pullman drawing-room sleeping
cats, compartment, dining, smoking and ob
servation curs. California-only tourists will
use special cars returning from El Paso, and
Mexico-only passengers will use special cars
returning from El Paso, For detailed itin
eraries and full information ad tress Geo. W,
Boyd, Assistant General Passenger Agent,
Philadelphia, la.
A MOST SEASONABLE NUMbEtt
RflcClure's lor December.
No one will ask for better holiday rc .
ing thnn Hint which the ChiUtmns nunilxir
of McCinrc's Mi'garine will furnish, lini
sn t foremost, of i-nuroe, is John LsFnrgc'i
nrticic on "Michael Angela," the hist ot a
series in which during the following c.ir
this great nrtist and critic of our own c'ay
will ilicun in the pages of McCluit's tlic
greatest nrtist of the past.
Hut et this cheerful lime of the ycir fic
tion is especially seaonal'lc, and it nmU
but a glance at the title p.iRe of the number
to show that it provides this not only in a
rip,ht Chnsimas like anuiiu.ince, out niso in
i range of style anil variety of subject ti sit
1 isly every taste and stimulate every interest
Theie nie, in fact, no less than seven cp.
j arnte short stoiics, most of them by writen
! already well known to reader ol MiCluic's,
j ar.d all of them certain to stick in the nitm
I ory and provoke a dcsiie for moie fiom the
i same source.
j "A Mendicant," by Adnclii Kinnosuki, it
! a tale of Japan in the heyday of romance,
' tottchintjly simple in plot and full of ihc
1 spirit of that medieval idealism which finds
its prototypes in the West in the tales of
; the troubadours and minstrels. Again, fir
the briskly humorous style of tecilal, it
, would be hard to excel 1 Icrminie Temple.
Ion's vivacious account of "D,irly Oill and
the Good 1'cople." Life of to-day is v.ni
t ously dealt with by II. A. Crowcll in ' I he
l'ictuies and the Pineapples," a siorv of the
1 Italian quarter of New York ( by Thcndnte
Dreisrr in "A True Patriarch," the fining
i title to the portrait of the old man it pur
i trays j by John Swnin in an "Indceiident
! Hoy," a (.ketch of the unique juvenile aourt
of Cook County, Illinois j and ly Ray Stan
' nard Baker in "Al the Tunnel's l.nd," the
' ktory of two brave men who risk their hvrj
; in the pressure workings of a submarine
tunnel. In another Emmy Lou story, "the
Shadow of a Tragedy," George Madlen
Martin continues a now famous series.
In this number, also, commences a seiial
certain to attract national attention Stew
ait Edward White's "The Forest Runner,"
a novelette, the scene of which is laid in the
forests of northern Michigan.
Stranger almost than any of these is the
true account, by Augustus liruHe and J. K.
Macdonald, of the eight days' wanderings of
an American, Charles Hunn, in the Arctic
circle. Vet not a word of "Lost in the
Land of the Midnight Sun" stretches in the
least beyond the truth ; indeed, much of the
sufferings ol the man has been left kto the
reader's imagination a more explicit recital
would have been too horril le.
Last, but not least, we have another of
Miss Morris's stage recollections (of Salvini
this time) and another of William Allen
While's characterizations of the men whom
people want to know the truth about and
about whom Mr. White has found so much
truth to say, this time of Senator I'lutt.
1 he illustrations of the number are re
markably fine. Mr. LaFarge's article is to
be illustrated with reproductions in tint
from photographs of some of Michael An-
gelo's greatest paintings and sculptures.
the stories will be illustrated with pictures
that illustrate not only in th sense of a
bare literal visualization of episode, but in
that finer adjustment of style which catches
and teproduces the very motive and spirit of
the story.
The Christmas "Hew" Lippinoott
In the Christmas number of "Lippincott's
Magazine" there appears a completed novel
by Louis K-an Shiiinn, the author of
D Arcy of the Guards." As a compli
ment to its hero, the title is "Ralph I ar
rant." There is the same sparkle and spirit
so much admired in the author's earlier
book, while in ( lot this may be said to out
distance its predecessor.
I here are many short stories, one ol these
is the latest love-story of the sea by Cyrus
lownsend Brady. It is called "1 he Lap
lain of II. li. M Ship Diamond Rock " It
U is stirring as anything the distinguished
author has yet done, and tells how a seaman
commanded a fortified rock.
"The Unfinished Elegy," bv Karl Edwin
Harriman is a pathetic Christmas story
about a musician.
A charming sort of "Alice in Wonderland"
story is contriliuted by a young Englishwo
man, E. Ayrton. It is entitled "The Little
Gale of Fairyland."
Paul Laurence Dunbar's story called "The
Visiting of Mother Danbury" continues his
series of tales about types of Ohio country
people.
"King Edwards Coronation," by Mrs.
Belloc-Lowndes, of London, tells definite'
oi the event which will happen in n few
months. The august ceremony is described
in a way that seems to carry the picture with
it. Tht? Queen's part in the program is also
explnined.
with Christmas in the air, Agnes Reppli-
et's talk about "I he Oppression of Guts"
must find a ready echo in many hearts. She
treats the subject in her own keenly witty
way.
A paper by Edmund Gosse, I.L.U., about
"The best Books," is both good reading and
helpful, coming from this scholarly source.
Some qnaint old forgotten legends ubout
Christmas are told anew by Abbie Farwell
Ilrown in her contribution entitled "Christ
mas Stories of the Saints."
I. Zangwill's two poems, "Sea of Mar
mora" and "Smyrna Harbor," are r.uelv
beautiful specimens of the prose writer's ver
satility, and breathe of his recent travels in
the Orient.
Two Christmas poems of unusual merit
ar-j "The Hallad of the Scullion-Maid," by
Theodosia Garrison, and Zitella Cocke's
"Bethlehem. Other poems are contrib
uted by Meribah Reed, Charles Llnier Jen
ney, and Mary E. Slicknev.
The "Walnuts and Wine" department
this month is merry with a Yule-tide flavor.
Lots of fellows get cold feet waiting for
dead men's shoes.
Awfuu Experience With Heart Dis
ease. Mr L. J. Law. Toronto, Can.,
writes "I was so sorely troubled with heart
disease that I was unable for eighteen
months to lie down in red lest I smother.
After taking one dose of Dr. Agnew's Heart
Cure, I retired and slept soundly. I used
one bottle and the trouble has not returned."
bolU by C. A. Kleim. 50
All who use atomizers in treating nasal ca
tarrh will get the best result from Ely's
Liquid Cream Balm. Price, including spray
ing tube, 75c. Sold by druggists or mailed
by Ely Bios., 56 Warren street, New York.
New Orleans, Sep.. 1, 1900.
Messrs. Ely Bros 1 I sold two boitlesof'
your Liquid Cream Balm to a customer, Wni.
Lumberlon, 1415 Delachaise St.; New Or
leans; he has used the two bottles, giving
him wonderful and most satisfactory resul.s.
Geo. W. McDuff, Pharmacist.
CASTOniA.
Bean tis 4 Ihe Kind You Have Always Boujtt
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of