THE COLUMBIAN, BLOOMSBURG, PA. CONDENSED DISPATCHES. Ratable Rtrnli of the Werk Ilrleflr Chronicled. It Is denied Hint the Itrltlxh Itoynl cadeniy over despised or rejected Whistler or his works. Henry II. Taylor of New Hnven hns ade a public eonfesslon of having misappropriated funds of a railroad. Charles h. Hunt, county clerk of Monroe county, N. Y., was at nick by a train nt Hymn, N. Y., nnd perhaps fa tally hurt. Arnold White, the author, Is In Jnll tec refusing to pay a $."00 fine for writ ing an article about Whltnker Wright, Um promoter. John K. Hrown, canhlor of the New Holland (O.) bank, has disappeared With the combination of the safe. Foul jday Is suspected. The sultan of Turkey has sent his son to the Russian embassy to express Ma regrets nt the murder of the Itus stan consul nt Monastlr. Torailnr, Ask. 11. The European squadron has arrived it Gibraltar from Lisbon. The body of a man was found on top at a car from New York at Uoston. The Queens county (N. Y.) trolley strike was quickly ended, the company Standing firm and the men yielding. . The president has granted n pardon to William Follls of Texas, whose tes timony Is said to be essential In a niur dfcr trial pending in Texas. The tall end of a hurricane moving KTer the Antilles struck the eastern end t the Island of Jamaica and did great latnage to banana properties. An unknown man was drowned nt be landing of the Itoscommon County Hen's excursion, New York. Nearly 1500 people were In n pnnlc. Mme. Therese Humbert In the Purls iwindllng trial accused the Judge of lostillty and promised to explain where he missing millions are. The Rtrlke riot at Cracow, Austrian Poland, is said to have resulted In six y deaths since Aug. 5 through conflicts jetweon the strikers and the troops. , Senator and Mrs. Iepew, Karl and fjonntess of Shaftesbury, Countess of Jrford and Designer Watson will sail 4ortIy from Liverpool for New York. Carrie Nation's summary conviction tor selling hatchets In violation of a tlty ordinance has been declared ille gal by Judge Newcomb at Scranton, a. Governor Heard has declined to ln erfere In the case of A. E. IJatson for he murder of several members of the 3arl family. Batson will be hanged at i'ake Charles, La. Russia and Austria have decided to nd home all Servian olflcers studying .a their military schools. Russian otll ers have been forbidden to have any ntercour.se with those of Servia. Governor Terrell hns ordered the ato prison commission at Athens, Ga., 0 make ajfull Investigation of the J.vbJpplng of Miss Mamie Do Cris, the vhlte girl, at the state farm by War '.en Allgood nnd to report the findings t o blm at once. ; When arraigned in Jefferson Market ourt. New York, a man arrested as n otel thief was Identified by Central )fflce Detectives Kane, Clarke nnd eabody as the famous "Red" Heyle, vho is wanted everywhere, but who as hitherto always managed to es ape. Monday, Am. 10. In a manifesto u Belgian federation as denied tlie charges made against he administration of the Kongo Free Uate. Heavy winds nnd a rain storm have -assed over Pittsburg, Kan., wrecking any small miners' houses, killing one (Mirson and Injuring several others. Mrs. Lew Dockstader, wife of the ulnstrel, was attacked and beaten by hree highwaymen In the presence of 1 crowd of travclors near the Long Is and City (N. Y.) ferry. The English South African commls .Ion finds that flies were the active igents In the dissemination of enteric 'ever In standing camps during the loer war. The fever cost about $20, 0,000. T. C. Carnabun, a millionaire mining ;ian, fired four shots at Hugh Swear igen In the Burlington ticket office at icnver and then attacked Swenringen vlth the butt of his revolver, badly In uring Dim. Five reformers have been arrested ;t Peking, one being the brother of tho Iceroy of Wuchang. Police have been tatioued at all the gates to prevent jen suspected to be reformers from ?avlng the city. The police have canvassed Havana to nam what persons hnd In their pos--esslon weapons of war. They Ihivg ome upon r,HiO Remington rifles, 1.000 arblnes and .'.0 Mausers, together with t quantity of ammunition, bayonets .nd sabers. The officials of the Empire City track, ear Yonkers, N. Y., are Investigating "jt two recent fires in the large stables :ntalnlng tho valuable trotting horses ow gathered there for tho grand cir- Ult meet. They feel certain that un n-endlary has been at work. As rreinior Combes was returning the prefevture ut Marseilles from a ' nnquet given by the Friendly Society s t Teachers, nt which a number of sen iors and deputies were present, two ustol shots were fired at his carriage y an Italian anarchist. Tho premier tub untouched. The discovery that a plant culled Oct mum vlrlde, like the gr i basil, is de structive to mosquitoes has caused nueh discussion among scientists ut Carls, but till now no one was uwure hut the sweet basil plant, common in he south of France, Spain and Italy, Jt equally destructive. Mamie licirls, u lieautiful convict, 'mown till over Georgia as tho "dia mond queen," has been whipped by of ilcUUs of tho stuto prison farm at Mll- elgevllle, (3a. She was Insubordlnato Hid was lienten Into submission. Tho ncldent has created a sensation, for, though a convict, the young woman was gently bred, cultured nnd accus tomed to refined surroundings beforo her craving for sparkling Jewels led her Into the bypaths of crime to prison, Sntnnlnr, Ana-. 8. A body of Moors entered French ter ritory, nnd a fight followed, In which Heveral were killed on each side. Michael Sweeney, n union workman, was shot and killed In Chicago by a foremnn whom strike pickets hnd at tacked. Wreckage Indicating a collision be tween a steamer and a sailing vessel was sighted five miles south of Slilnne cock, N. Y. An American artist, Miss Knte A. Cnrl, will paint the portrait of the downger empress of China In the Pe king summer palace. Maurice Runkel, who wns Indicted with Machen nnd McGregor in the post office scnndal, has surrendered to Com missioner Shields and given .",0K bull. A terrific rain and hall storm at Abi lene, Kan., unroofed scores of barns, ami hundreds of wheat stacks were scattered over the fields. The hull de stroyed much young corn. Falling from a lie Kalb avenue car nt the Brooklyn bridge, New York, an elderly man died among a crowd of passengers during the rush hour. He was Peter Sullivan, an express agency owner. Parsons, Kan., hns been visited by a severe windstorm. The shops of tho Missouri, Kansas and Texas railroad were demolished, and the front of the Hail Dry Goods company's building was blown In and six persons were hurt: At Nelson, Kan., the railroad station was wrecked nnd several houses were blown from their foundations by a tornado. J. McMullen, a miner. w-ns killed and George Banks, his wife, his son ami daughter were dangerously Injured. With two cousins disputing for pos session of a girl and she hesitating be tween them. Magistrate Naumer of Brooklyn decided that Katie Somer vllle, fourteen years old, should be sent to her old home In Tyrone, Ire land, where her mother lives. One man nnd one child dead, eight more with serious injuries in the hos pitals, two of whom Mill probably die, nnd n dozen others badly cut nnd bruised was the work of havoc left In the wake of n seven ton hook and lad der truck lis It zigzagged nnd thun dered through West Fortieth street, New York. Friday, Ann. 7. Festival hall nt the St. Louis fair Is to have a dome larger than St. Peter's nt Rome. Sheriff I W. Williamson of De Soto count). Miss., was shot at Hernando In a pistol duel with a rival for ollice. The French bark Grande Duchesse Olga has reached Portland, Ore., from Antwerp after a stormy voyage of over a year. Baron Speck von Sternburg has pre sented his credentials us German am bassador to President Roosevelt at Oyster Bay. Trofessor C. It. Henderson at the Uni versity of Chlengo has declared that the present county jail system is a free school of crime. Korea has conceded lnnd at Yongam pho, on the Yalu river, to Russia, but has refused permission to build tele graph and telephone lines to that place. Managers of New York state fairs have been warned not to permit any Immoral or questionable exhibitions or practices under penalty of forfeiting state aid. Albert Seavls, a negro, one of the con victs who escaped from Folsom prison, has been captured on a train at Au burn, Cal. He showed fight and was shot In both legs. Thursday, All. O. Whitaker Wright, the promoter, has been released in London on ball. A Berlin dispatch says 700 persons were drowned In floods at Chefu, Chi na, July 27. Thil May, the artist and Illustrator of Punch, the Graphic and other peri odicals, died nt Ixmdon. The first moose ever seen in that part of the state was encountered by two boys fishing In a lake near Leominster, Mass. David Shortsleeves, a machinist who had been missing for some days, was found deud at his home In Saratoga, N. Y. The president has designated Lieu tenant General Young for supremo command of tho army. He will be made chief of stuff. The young daughter of Henry Lowe of New York died at Los Angeles, Cul., while her father was speeding on a so cial train in an effort to see her ullve. Robert J. Kllpatrlck, employed as a laborer at the United Stutes mint nt Philadelphia, was arrested on the charge of stealing 8,18 silver dollars from the vault. A Panhandle express was derailed near .Tewett, O., by engineer putting on brakes suddenly to save u walker's life. The fireman was killed and sev eral passengers hurt. The British minister at Peking has been instructed not to consent to the Chinese government's demand for the surrender at Shanghai of the editor nnd staff of a reform paper. William Hamilton, the farmer who confessed that he murdered Mabel Richards, (he eleven-year-old daughter of Sheriff Richards, was taken from the county Jail ot Asotin, Wash., by a mob and bunged. Caught by the heavy windstorm, one man was killed and three or four were so badly Injured that they will dio und many received less Injury by being hurled from buildings in the world's fair grounds nt St. Louis. SsV the Flag BBsesaesBBSBssaaa By MBS. GEN. CEOBGE E. PICKETT i (Oopyrlfht, NO, by Dally Story Pub. Co.) THE Ion; lines of infantry had wept up through the green val leys of southern Pennsylvania and -re wearledly marching' northward to a battltfield somewhere, no man of them could have told where. They only knew that they were tired and footsore and hungry, and the rich preen fields they hnd passed had brought no comfort. A young soldier took off hia ragged cap, wiped the perspiration from his face and looked over at a little cot tage with Its encircling vines. It made him think of another little cot tage across the lines, where the vine had embowered his childhood. As the head of the column came op posite the house a girl ran out from jlhe open doorway to the front of the portico. She had United States flag tied around her as an npron and she stepped upon a chair that the whole army might see it and waved it defiantly at the approaching troops. The leader looked around appre hensively. Some of his men hnd come from the most frightfully devastated part of the south. How would they take the sudden defiant presentation of the banner under which that ruin had been wrought? With a swift, graceful movement he wheeled his black battle horse out of line, lifted his cap, bowed to the wurlike maid and saluted the flag she bore. He turned to the advancing men, waved his hand, and every tattered cap was lifted and each man as he paused saluted the enemy's colors. The leader rode forward to his place and the long line moved on. "She Is a little fighter," thought the boy who had waved his cap to her. "I should like to hove her for a sister. Only if she were my sister she would wave but ond flag." He sighed, remembering the lonely cottage under the iisfjrnolias. "In love again, by Jove," said the older soldier who marched beside him. "Hi, boys I What do you think? Shivers is in love with the little Pennsylvania amazon." "Shivers is always in love," said an other. "He's the victim of chronic affection. Do you remember how he fell In love with the guerrilla's daughter and came near being shot for a spy? Some diy Shivers will have a fatal attack of love and Gen Lee will quit lying awake nights try ing to keep at the hrnd c.f the army; in the light of Shiver's increasing military fame." "Military fame, indeedl" growled a rugged veteran. "All the fame Jack Shivers will ever get will be for writing verses and singing love songs with guitar accompaniments." All the while they weie marching on they who dreamed of home and love, they who professed a lofty scorn for sentimentalities, and they who went silently to the field where on a cause was to die. On the morning of the third poor Jack Shivers was one of the se who lay behind the low, long hill and looked eastward into the spate be tween two ranges of fire-crowned peaks. A man was crouched down' beside him with his hand resting on, his shoulder. Neither spoke, but there was a comradeship in the touch that told of a love greater than men put into words. Beyond the crest they waited as the slow hours went by waited till the order came, and they went down into the valley of death. What they did on that fatal field of Gettysburg is inscribed on the page of history. In the beginning of the retreat Jack Shivers was wounded. The over whelming force of the enemy were closing in from every point. "He Is dead," thought the man. He scarce noticed the shower of balls that fell about him nor marveled over the apparent miracle that not one of them touched him as he bore the unconscious boy to a spot of greater security. Under the grove of trees not quite in the line of fire he laid his friend on the smooth grass that had been untouched by the storm of war. With his untutored skill he dressed the wound and sat looking at the still face and trying to tug with the fingers of hope against the weight of despair that filled hia heart. The boy moved restlessly and opened his eyes. "Are we dead?" "No; unfortunately we are lone somely alive. We'd have more com pany if we were dead." "Did we win the battle?" "Did we win? Boy, I am too heart weary and dazed to know anything but pain, unless it be thankfulness that you are alive." "But tell me something where are we and where nre the others? O, I see; I am wounded and cuu't go on but you you must leave me or you will be taken prisoner or killed." "Not much, old mun; here, open your mouth and take a uwig of this." The sun which hud risen so bright ly upon our hopes went down sadly on defeat, and durkness closed around the grove, und still the mua sat there, watering over the helpless boy. After a long time he saw the whiteness of the day stealing gradu ally through the leuves, lying In shafts of light across the green car pet of grass. He remembered dully that It was the Fourth of July. He felt us if the world were deud and no one was left but him to keep the i The Girl With I ghostly Independence Day that was climbing over the hills of the east. Jim went to the edge of the woods and looked up nnd down the white sand road. He heard the crunch of wheels and presently a man whis tling. The sound seemed to bring him out of his isolntlon. He was still in a world where men could whistle. He stepped out into the road as the Svagon drew up. The driver stopped his horses suddenly and said in a gruff, but not unfriendly, tone: " 'Mornin." "Good morning." "What do you want, comln' 'round skeerin' my hosses so early in the mornin'?" "A ride in your wagon and some thing to eat." The man took from under the wagon seat some pieces of bread and meat and a bottle of coffee. "I keep a perambulatin' house er entertainment. Breakfus' fer two ef you wan ter bring a friend, an' trained waiters. Furrln languages spoke. Guests rekested not ter fee the waiters. All perkisltes b'long ter the boss. All you want now is a fire ter warm it by an' somebody ter perside at the bar, which I'm him." There was a glint of honesty in the rugged face and a frank tone in the voice that inspired confidence, and Jim led the way to where his wound ed friend lay. "Furty as a plcter. I'd like ter set him up on the mantel piece ter look at, but in a storm I'd rather tie ter you." He o far yielded to the universal dominance of the picturesque as to kindle the fire and heat the break fast for the wounded boy, "I allers goes pervided; no tellin' what might turn up." "You had brought it for yourself, and now you are giving it away," said Jim, who had arrived at a stage where the claims of his fellowracn begnn again to appeal to him. "That's nothin'. Anybody along the road'll give me a lunch. Most of 'em expect a ride in my wagon some time. It allers makes folks gen'rous hearted to you fer you ter hnve fiiimp'n they wnnta." "Now, you fellers caln't stay hyer," he said after the breakfost was fin ished. "It's dangerous. Somebody'!! come along an' nub you en, leastwise, my hotel is the only trav'lin one In these parts, an' when it moves on you won't have no feed." Thar's a place down hyer on the road whnr you'd be safe 'nough. I'll take you thar. They's Yanks en you's rebs, I take It, but they ain't people to go back on a feller what's wounded, ner one at's takin' keer er the unfort'nit." "Yes; we're rebs. What are you?"' "I'm a teamster," replied their host, with a fine air of neutrality. They stopped in front of a cottage with a rose vine growing over it and pink roses peeping out brightly. A great Newfoundland dog sleeping in the yard arose and came to the gate, wagging his tail in a friendly way. "Here we are," said the teamster, lifting the boy out. As he carried him up the steps, confident of the welcome he did not stop to ask, a girl came out on the portico. "How are you, Rosalyn? You see I've brought you a Johnny reb to take care of." The girl frowned darkly. "How dare you call him names? Maybe he was that when he fought. When he Is wounded he is a southern soldier." "She has brown eyes," thought Shivers, looking at her with a long, slow glance through half shut eyes. She was not defiant now, but gentle and sympathetic, and Shivers thought she had tears in her eyes when she looked at him. He could not see well. He was dazed by fatigue and the pain of his wound. Even as he looked at her he drifted off into un consciousness. When he came back to the world the soft eyes still looked compassion ately at him. His thought went back, groping for a memory of her. "You are the girl who waved the flag at me." "Oh, but I wouldn't if I had known that you would be wounded, I'm so sorry." "Sorry that I am wounded?" "Yes, and that I waved the flag." ' "I am not sorry for that; I rather liked it. Perhaps I am not so sorry for being wounded as I was some hours ago." His wound had been skillfully dressed and the pain was lessened. Through a window opposite his couch he looked out into a mesh of pink blossomed vines above which was a glint of blue sky, sun-bathed. And the soft eyes yet looked ut him sor rowfully. Small wonder thut his grief was assuaged. July dreamed into August, August drowsed into September, September awakened the world to a new life,' and then Juck Shivers went to his southern home, leaving a very sor rowful little muiden in the cottage under the oak trees, but she held a sweet hope in her heart as he held her hand at the parting and said, "When the war is over " ; The daisies have blossomed many times on the fiel of Gettysburg anil the snows of time have descended upon the heads that then were young.' In the little cottage under the mag nolias a white-haired man and wom an go hand in hand udown the slope of life. When the Fourth of July' comes she lifts brown eyes upward to him and says: "Let's hang out the old flag, Juck." lie ussents and she brings it from its hiding pluce. The pnsserby might say thut its colors' were faded and its stars had lost their sheen, but Jack Shivers says It is more beautiful now thuu when it' waved defiance to him in the longi ago. Then they both fall to dream ing of the Fourth of July in '63. Growing Old Ought not to mean growing weak and feeble. It does not mean weakness or feebleness for those who eat with good appetite and sound digestion. It Ts of the utmost importance that old people should retain the power to digest and assimilate food which is the sole source of physical strength. When age brings feebleness it is generally because of the failure to assimilate the nutrition con tained in food. Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery cures diseases of the stomach and other organs of digestion and enables the per fect digestion and assimilation of food. It invigorates the liver and promotes general physical well betug. "It Is wtlh sratiUdr we acknowledge what Dr. Plerct't medicine saa done fur rrauf1iiiith er'a rood, in fct It h cured her." wrilea Miss Carrie Ranker, of Perryaburg;, Ohio. "She had doctored with aeverat phyalclane but found na relief until Dr. Pierce sdrlaed her what to do. She haa taken only three bottlee of ' Golden Med ical Dincovery' and ia eutirely well. She anf fered with pain In kldneya, Madder and lirer for ten years, and her liaiba were swelled with dropsy o bad ahe could hardly walk. My grand mother's name ia Mrs. Caroline Hennen. her age la 71 yeara. 1 will gladly answer all letters ot Inquiry." Sick people are Invited to consult Dr. R. V. Pierce by letter, re. All cor respondence is held as strictly private and sacredly confidential. 0 Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets regulate the bowels. RAILROAD NOTES. Of Interest lo Our Many Readers and the Public I'. General. Seashore Excursions via Read ing Railway. Philadelphia and Read ing Railway will sell special excursion tickets to Atlantic City, Cape May, Ocean City or Sea Isle City as follows: Thursday, August 13 and 27, ten day tickets. Rates from WiUiamsport, $5 00; Milton, Lewisburg, Sunbury and Sha mokin, $4 50; Ashland, Girardville, Shenandoah, Mahanoy City and Tamaqua, $3.50. Proportionate rates from intermediate ticket stations. Stop-off allowed at Philadelphia going and returning within time limit of ticket. For time, trains and further information see small flyers at all Philadelphia and Reading ticket offices. Seashore excursions via phila delphia and Reading Railway. They will sell special excursion tickets to Atlantic City, Cape May, Ocean City or Sea Isle City as follows : Thursday, August 13 and 27, ten day tickets. Rates from WiUiamsport, $5,005 Bloomsburg 4.50. Stop-off allowed at Philadelphia going and returning within time limit of ticket. For time of trains and further information, see small flyers at all Philadelphia and Reading ticket offices. 7-30-4L Reduced Rates via Pennsylvania Railroad for Mt. Gretna Fair. On account of the National Live Stock Breeders and Exhibitors' Association Fair, to be held at Mt. Gretna, Pa., August 17 to a 1, the Pennsylvania Rai'road Company will sell round trip tickets to Mt. Gretna and return from principal stations between Altoona and Bryn Mawrj on the Northern Central Railway Between Sunbury and Lulherville, inclusive, and on the Philadelphia and Erie Railroad Division east of and includ ing WiUiamsport. Tickets will be sold August 14 to 31, inclusive, good to return until August 25, inclusive. For information in regard to train service and specific rates application should be made to ticket agents. Equalled seldom, Surpassed never. Niagara Falls Nature's Won derwork. Every section of the United States can claim some special exhibition of Nature's Wonders, as the K la Otic fif t!if rprmnni tvliv It r7 ' ft 66 17 tTa A JSM JJ IV.T Rogers Bros. the product of this longr experience are best. They ara Enl.l l- Irorlf-xv'WI. Wit ero. Fer cloQ ITo. 6, explaining points cf la- i L A , m a tae leakers M International B!1tc Comraay, M KurlJeu, Coon. -.)J PBPHS1 s P. 1 sJ 7 Yosemite Valley and "Big Trees" ot California, The Yellowstone Park, The Torrid I uxuriance of Florida, The Adironda k, White Mountain etc., etc., but Niagara Falls is fully equal if not superior to all others of Nature's scenic beauties and in ad dition is easier of access and at cheap er rates from the Middle States than any other. The best way to reach Niagara Falls from this vicinity at ft low rate is to take advantage of one of the Philadelphia & Reading's Ten Dol lar Ten Day personally conducted excursions via the Reading Lehigh Valley Route. The dates for the balance of the season are Aug. 13th and 29th. Sept. 10th and a6th, and Oct. 8th. The participants in these trips leav ing Reading Terminal 8.30 a. m. have a pleasant ride through the scenic Le high and Wyoming Valleys and arrive at Niagara Falls in the early evening. A Dining Car attached to train fur nishes meals Table d'Hote at 50 cents per capita. Opportunities are afforded for sev eral side trips and for stop off on re turn trip. Tickets are good going only on special train and good to re turn within ten days on all jegular trains. Round trip $10.00. Full information as to Side Trips, lares and time of connecting trains from other points, etc., can be pro cured from any P. & R. Ticket Agent or addressing Edson J. Weeks, General Passenger Agent, Philadel phia. Ocean Grove Excursion Thurs day, August ao, Via Reading Railway. Special through train will leave A. M. Fare WiUiamsport - 7:36 $550 Bloomsburg - 7:27 450 Danville - - 7:S3 4-5 Milton - - . 8:13 4.50 Lewisburg - 8:53 4.50 Sunbury . - -9:11 4.50 Shamokin ... 9:47 4.50 Mt. Carmel - 9:37 4-5 Ashland - - - 10:29 4.00 Shenandoah . 10:17 3-75 Mahanoy City - 10:54 3. 50 Tamaqua - '11:28 3.50 Route, via Wayne Junction and New York branch, arrive Ocean Grove 5:00 p. m. For rates of fare and time of special train at interme diate stations, see small flyers. Tick ets good ten (10) days. Stop-off allowed at Philadelphia returning. reduced rates to the seashore. Last Low-Rate Excursion to Atlantic City, etc., via Pennsylvania Railroad, for the Season. The last Pennsylvania Railroad low rate ten-day excursion for the present season from Lock Haven, Troy, Belle fonte, WiUiamsport. Mocanaqua, Sun bury, Shenandoah, Dauphin, and prin cipal intermediate stations (including stations on branch roads,) to Atlantic City, Cape May, Ocean City, Sea Isle City, Avalnn, Anglesea, Wild wood, of Holly Beach, will be run on Thursday, August 20. Excursion tickets, good to return by regular trains within ten days, will be sold at very low rates. Tickets to Atlantic City will be sold via the Delaware River Bridge Route, the only all-rail line, or via Market Street Wharf, Philadelphia. Stop over can be had at Philadel phia, either going or returning, within limit of ticket. For information in regard to spe cific rates and time of trains cot suit hand bills, or apply to agents, or E, S. Harrar, Division Ticket Agent. WiUiamsport, Pa. it. Kailroads Complain of Oar Shortage- All the railroads of the country are complaining of a car shortage at the present time, especially of hoppers and gondolas. Because of the exten sive lake movements of coal, coke and ore, the Pennsylvania lines west are hampered in all kinds of cars and the officials are much concerned as to the outcome. Combined with the vast grain movement the lack of terminal facilities in the West, caused by the heavy freshets, have placed Western roads in an embarrassing position, which makes the situation thoroughly serious. The enormous crops have put the railroad managers at their mercy and many are at the point of throwing up their hands and confessing to their inability to cope with the situation. No Pish for Private Parties. The state fish commission will send no fish for stocking purposes to per sons who desire to place them in private waters. This is now pro hibited by law, and a penalty of $2? is provided for applying for fish for such waters. In former years a large number of trout have been secured from the 6tate and used in streams in which the public were prohibited from fishing. You Will i.ike it" Better than other cereals because It's different. It's better ! There is Hoiiu tliinn about the flavor that everybody liken. The pure selected ' grains from which uJfn is made qo through n scientific process originated by food experts, making it the most heallhful as well as the best tasting of cereals. " is already t o eat by adding milk or cream, You can eat "It three times a day. At grocers every where. 3. j 3 jy 1
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers