THR COLUMBIAN. BLOOMSBURG, PA 8WIMMINQ A HORSE. DIFFERENCE IN PROJECTILES. Mi t Lll Some Deeds of Darin Durin Manchurian Campaign SIX SOLDIERS ROUT ARMY One Private Volunteered to Find a Ford; Plunged Into River Six Timet to Emerge, Wounded, with Clothet Frozen Solid. How They Go to What Means Certain Death. At the battle of the Yalu says Will ' ni Thorp In the "World's Work," .o Japanese sailors, on different ;ip9, when In the very throes of .Uh, gaspod out, "Has the Chen ' 'icn sunk yet?" that vessel belni? one t the two most formidable lron-clads i f the Chinese fleet. "During my camrMgnlng In Man churia," said a Jar;nese who went through the Chinese war, and who now resides In New York, "I think the greatest hardships we had to endure was the terrible cold at Talehlng. It was bitter even for a Manchurian win ter. When we were on the march our beards froze to our coats, and I saw many men who had their ears and feet frozen off. But never once did I hear a single murmur or complaint from any man In the force." The energy and Initiative of the Japanese soldier were strikingly dis played by a private named Kato Jur oro, at Kiomalshan In the Chinese war. Mr regiment, when about to engage the enemy, was stopped by a broad and r.ipld river, llo was in the lead ing company. His captain sent back to rhe colonel for Instructions, and the Colonel replied that somebody must find a ford. Cut before the order could be received Juroro had waded out into the river In half a dozen places, until he found a shallow place. The river was frozen by a thin coat ing of tee, and the enemy on the op posite bank kept up a hot fire at him all the time. When he emerged, he was wounded, and his clothes were frozen to him like a sheet of mall ar mor, but he had found the ford and was content. The Japanese soldier possesses abundant initiative, and Is never afraid to act upon hia own responsi bility. One of the stories held up to the admiration of recruits tells of the exploit of a sergeant named Kodama and five men at Hwangchlatal. In the Manchurian campaign against China. They were sent to reconnoiter the Chinese position In the night. While they were doing so, the sergeant voted the extreme confusion and un I'oparedness of the enemy, and he .viceived the daring Idea of attack vg the entire army with his five men. hey discharged their rifles as quick ' as they could and rushed rapidly -om point to point, uttering blood curdling yells. The Chinese thought they were attacked In force and fled In confusion, leaving their camp and supplies behind them. "Did you see Fire Boss Gordon the 'JBblkata go nal!" ("There Is no help!") This phrinc Is heard in Japan as often as "Manana" in I.atln in America. It expresses at once the fatalism and the Spartan resolution of the Japanese character. When a mother hears that her son lias been killed In battle, she does not weep or show any visible sign of emotion. She bows her head and calmly says: "Shlkata go nal!" When a man is sent by his officer to certain death, ho does not sit down and write his last letters home or go around shak ing hauds with his comrades for the last time, as white men would do In the same case. He simply mutters, "Shlkata eo nai!" and walks out of the officer's tent straight to his mis sion. When Japanese Maids Are Jilted. A Japanese woman when aban doned by her lover takes a peculiar and picturesque revenge. When she no longer has any doubt as to his faithlessness, she gets up in the middle of the night and puts on a pleasing dress and wooden sandals. Attached to her headdress she carries three lighted candles and suspended to her neck hangs a small mirror. She takes In her left hand a small siraw effigy of the falihless one, and In her right a hammer and nails. Walking gravely to the sanctuary, she mdnrts one of the sacred trees, and nails the efligy securely to the trunk. She then prays for the death of the traitor, vowing that if her wish Is granted she will take out the nails which trouble her god, since thy are fuMened to a sacred tree. Night after flight she cornea to the tree, adding one or two nails, and repeating her prayers, persuaded that the god will not hesitate to sacrifice the man to save the tree. London Mall. How Condors are Caught, Anyone who has ever watched a heavy bird rise from the ground has doubtless noticed that it runs along tho ground for a few feet before It rlM-s; the bird must acquire some momentum bofore Its wings can lift Its heavy body Into the air. The na tives In certain parts of the Andes understand this fact very well and by means of It catch the great An dean vultures, the condors. A small space Is shut in with a high fence and left open at the top. Then a lamb or a piece of carrion is placed on the ground inside. Presently a vulture tees the bait and swoops down upon it, but when once he finds ho has alighted on the ground insldo he cannot get out, for he has no running space In which to acquire the momen- i !n"i that is necessary before hia ; whits can lift him. Brooklyn Timet, 1 Fine Performance In Swollen River. Mr. Hough the other day had some thing to any about the swimming pow er of a horse. Were a man to tell me thnt the average horse could not swim with a man on hia back I should only laugh at him. I have had too many of them swim with me on their lmcks. I rode cavr.lry horses for twenty years and Kome Imos had the same horse for four or Ave years; but I never had one which could not swim and carry me on his back. I have often undress ed; then, mounting my horse bareback, swam him for fifteen minutes at a time. I rode one horse for four years that I would not hesitate to swim the Misslixiiipl wlih. He was n slender, loiitf-legged sorrel, and a fast one, too. I ran him against some of the fastest horses the cowboys could scare up, and he bent them all. In the BummiT of 1KS4 I was down on the Sabonal Itiver, Tex., Jut where the railroad crosses It. The river was bank full after a heavy rain, and the current ran like a mill race. There was a cattle ranch on our side, but none on the o her for a good many miles; and a siage coach full of pas sengers was water bound over there, nml they were hungry. The men at tlio ranch wanted to send them some thing to eat, but snid that none of their horses could swim in that cur rent. "I have one that can," I told them. "(let your ropes ready." They got a long coll of half-Inch rope, and, cutting It in the middle, we had two that would reach across. Then taking my horse I went to the river, stripped to my undershirt and drawers, and tying an end of each rope around my waist got my horse In the water and using only his head stall and halter strap, no bridle, swam across, and the ropes were stretched and a basket hauled across. 1 was then ready to go back, but two ladles in the coach tried to stop me; they were afraid "that my nice horse would bo drowned." They did not seem to care whether I was or not. I got the horse in the water again, then wrap ping his tall around my left hand told him to "go ahead, Charley." 1 had never used a whip on him; he did not need It. lie swam with the current, and went yards down stream be fore landing, then climbed out, none the worse for his trip. In swimming a horse, if on his back, I would sit as far back as possible, t'so no bridle, but only the halter; lot the horse have his head and never hurry him. Forest and Stream. Mississippi Houseboats. There Is an especial charm about life on a houseboat on the Mississippi. 1'nlike houselmats on most bodies of wa'er, they can lnnd whenever they will and enjoy any chance pleasure by the way. Cities are In easy reach, and ( even a theatre party can be Indulged In at short notice. Between St. Taul and St. I.ouls seven magnificent riv ers can be reached by boats passing through more than that number of Sta'es. From Lacrosse to St. Louis house boats meet the eye every few minutes. At every town along the river one sees boats lying on the shore. They are usually moored in little bays, with i their launches- along-side, and shaded I by the overhanging branches of trees. When a steamer passes the occupants appear at the doors and windows, and sometimes go to the upper deck to wave their greetings. The boats lit in so perfectly that the lovely green foliage seems to have grown In antlel- j pat ion of the coming of each particu lar boat. ' I Numerous houseboats are In course of construction along the rivers. Minneapolis Journal. Stories if Dr. Temple. If brevity be the soul of wit, Pr. Temple's answer to a candidate for priot's orders Is all soul. ITavIng rer.son to think the candidate's utter ance indistlnit the Bishop Insisted upon hi3 reading aloud In his private chapel a chapter from the Bible. "I am sorry to say, Mr. Brown, that you j read very Indistinctly," pronounced the Bishop. "You should get lessons In elocution." "But, my Ixrd, you know the size of our church, one of the largest in the diocese; and yet a mem ber of our congregation assured me that I could be heard distinctly in every part of it." "Did she," was the Bishop's- dry rejoinder. A braggart who boasted to a friend of having pounded to a Jelly a noted boxer was suddenly pulled up by the retort. "And what was he doing all the timoV" I cannot Imagine Dr. Tem ple coming off second best In any such encounter, not even If his antag onist were a cockney cabman. When Bishop of Ixmdon Dr. Temple was driven from the Strand to Fulham Palai-o by su.-h a cabby, to whom he presented the precise fare of half a crown. After a long look, first at the half crown then at the Bishop, and then at the lordly palace and Its ex tensive grounds, the cabby found his speech at last. "If St. Paul were alive now it's not in a place like this he'd be," he sneered, as he gathered up the reins. "No," retorted the Bishop, "he'd be at Lambeth, and tbat't a shilling fare!" At a dinner party Dr. Temple was much more bored than edified by a young lady who told him a long story of her aunt's narrow escape from a railway accident. "Owing to a block at the corner of Park lane, my Lord, she Just missed the train at Victoria which was wrecked at Croydon. Wasn't It providential?" "Can't nay," snapped the Primate in his grating voice, "didn't know your aunt." T. P.'s Weekly. i'ou never know how little you can do until you try. Charley's INS II H ffll Looks as If Influx From South ern Europe Threatens us. A DANGER TO THE CITIES When Immigration Was Mostly of Teutonlo Stock, Country Wat Benefited, But Now the Class are Such to Prove Considerable Menace to Country. In an address before the Academy of Political Science in Philadelphia, Frank P. Sargent, commissioner of Immigration, declared the country was menaced by the hordes that are now coming to America from southern Europe. Mr. Sargent said: "It has become an established prin ciple of this government to frown : upon the efforts of foreign countries to bring to the United States to be come burdens thereupon, the indi gent, the morally depraved, the physl ! cally and mentally diseased, the shift less, and all those who are Induced , to leave their own country, not by their own independent volition and their own natural ambition to seek j a larger and more promising field of , Individual enterprise, but to carry out ! some selfish scheme, devised to take undue advantage of some classes of our people, or for other improper pur pose. Such a policy Is a wise one, as well as obligatory upon the govern ment of this great country. "The total estimated alien Immi gration to the United States from 1770 to 1820 was 250,000 "The total number of arrivals for the fiscal year ended June 30, 1903, was 857,046. This is the greatest num ber that ever applied for admission In a single year. The nearest approach to this was in 1S82, when 7S9.000 were admitted. "The character of the arriving aliens, however, during the past year differs greatly from that of 1882 and the years previous. Since the founda tion of our government until within the past fifteen years practically all of the Immigrants came from Great Britain and Ireland, Germany and the Scandinavian countries, and was very largely of Teutonic stock, with a large percenttaga of Celtic. Fifteen mil lions of them have made their homes ! with us. "In fact, they have been the path finders In the west and northwest. They are intelligent, industrious and sturdy people. They have-contributed largely to the development of our country and Its resources, and to them is due, in a great measure, the high standard of American citizenship. "The character of our Immigration has now changed. During the past fifteen years we have been receiving a very undesirable class from south ern and eastern Europe which has taken the place of the Teutonics and Celts. During the past fiscal year nearly 600,000 of these have been landed on our shores, constituting nearly 70 per cent, of the entire Im migration for that year. ' "Instead of going to those sections where there Is a sore need for farm labor they congregate in the larger cities, mostly along the Atlantic sea board, where they constitute a dan gerous and unwholesome element of our population. "The question that Individually and vitally affects the Interests of our peo ple is: What shall we do with the thousands that are admitted? Shall they be allowed to form alien colonies In our great cities, there to maintain the false Ideas and to propagate a lawless view born thereof as the re sult of their experience, foreign not alone geographically, but foreign as well to this country In their ideas of human liberty and individual rights? "Imm'rratlon left thus is a menace to the pence, good order and stability 0f American institutions, which will f-rnw an(1 crftase with the genera- lions arid finnlly burst forth In an archy ar.J disorder. ' "It is thus necessary as a measure r,f pchl c security to devise and put in f rce some means by which alien arrivals may bo distributed through out this country and thus afford the opportunities by honest industry of securing homes for themselves and their children." When Ironclads Were First Used. I It is an interesting coincidence that the first of modern lrouclnds was used by the French In tho Crimean war. Just some fifty years ago, says the Liverpool Post. Colonel John Stevens Is usually claimed as the originator of the Idea of Ironclad vessels in 1812, but the first ship of the kind actually, laid down was tho Stevens battery, designed by his son for the United States government in 1842. One au thority, however, claims the Ironclads an antiquity of centuries. The story goes that a certain Viking of 1500 years ago had a gruat warship made, which he called Iron Ram, and all of this ship which stood out of the water was of iron. Coming from fiction, or, rather, legend, to something like fact, many historians on this subject say that the Dutch at Antwerp, In 1E85, when that city was besieged by the Spaniards, built an enormous flat-bottomed vessel, armored It with heavy Iron plates, and thus constructed what they regarded as an Impregnable bat tery, so that they named their con trivance Finis Belli, Unfortunately, this vessel got aground before fairly In action and fell into the hands of j tho enemy. It was never employed by oither sldo again In any subso- j Quent enccur.ter. Capt. Haans, U. 8. A Tells of the Old and the New. Capt. W. C. Haans, U. 8. N., who has for the last four years been stationed at the naval proving grounds at Indian Head, Md., was recently at the Wol cott. In the course of a talk on naval matters, ho gavo a few Interesting facts, perhaps little known to the av erage man, anent the difference In the projectile In use at present from that of twenty-five years ago. "Of course, as you know," said Capt. Haans, "the projectile we uso In our army and navy to-day Is a conical shell of steel, either loaded with pow der, so as to explode, or by a time fuse of a certain number of seconds' duration. It Is wonderfully different from the shell of twenty-five years ago, which I can well remember, hav ing been In the navy for over thirty one years. "In those days one could watch the projectile as it sailed through the air In a graceful curve, at length bursting. There was even time to get out of the way before It struck. Had It not been for that fact our pension roll would be about half as big as It Is. That's a fact. The now style of shell, however, moves at the rate of a little moro than half a mile a second. In strik ing a metal target, its energy being transformed Instantaneously Into heat, It becomes red-hot and a flame can bo seen to burst forth from the point struck. Such a projectile moves prac tically In a straight line, and its im pact at a distance of a mile seems almost simultaneous with the dis charge of the gun. Such a shell, pass ing near a man, will tear his clothes off. "If It comes very near, though without hitting him, It will kill him Instantaneously. He drops dead with out a sign of a wound. Not so with the old Btyle shell, however. It would burst only luto a few pieces, whereas the modern projectile files Into a myriad of small fragments, each of them moving at a tremendous velo city, and causing havoc all round It." Origin of Familiar Sayings. "Giving the Cold Shoulder" Is de rived from a custom that prevailed In France, and also In Ireland, of serving up a cold shoulder Instead of a hot roast, to guests who had out-stayed their welcome at a house, and to whom the feeling of the host was thus Insinuated. The guest who failed to take this hint and relieve the home of his unwanted presence was a very stupid mortal Indeed. The "cold shoulder" is applicable nowadays to any coldness or slight extended from one person to another. "Spilling the Salt" and the 111 omen that attaches to It, Is traceable to the Last Supper of Christ with His Apostles, when it Is said Judas accl dently overturned the salt. Because of the after doom of the unfortunate traitor, to spill the salt at table Is an accepted sign of future ill-luck to happen to the person doing It. "Thirteen at Table" and its unlucky significance originated at this event also. Christ and His twelve apostles dining together for the last time composed the number that has since been regarded with superstitious aver sion, and not only In the matter of din ing, but in almost everything else as well. The Nome of To-day Is Quite a Town. "The casual visitor will not be able to distinguish between the city of Nome, Alaska, and tho ordinary East ern American town of the same size," said Col. William T. Perkins of Nome. "The prosperity of Nome Is firmly established," said Col. Perkins, "and there is no question that In the course of a few years It will be largely in creased. Tho city has water mains and electricity and an excellent sys tem of public schoools. Its muni cipal government Is a model for larger cities. Nome Is becoming a large wholesale center, something new In that part of the world. Rail roads are being built, and from Nome the entire surrounding country is be ing supplied with the necessaries and luxuries of life. Washington Post. Menelik In All His Glory. A recently returned traveler who was received by Emperor Menelik of Abyssinia describes Ills Majesty as seated in a small state chair, with gaily colored carpet at his feet. Ho wore white trousers, brown checked socks and very large patent leather shoes without lacings. A long flow ing coat of yellow striped green silk enveloped his body, and over this was a black satin, gold embroidered burnoose with a pink lined hood. His head was bound with fine white muslin, above which towered a broad brimmed straw hat, overlaid with gold leaf, and trimmed with sapphires and rubles. In his left ear sparkled a rose-cut diamond stud. A red silk umbrella, heavily embroidered, and fringed with gold, protected the royal head from the rays of the sun. The Mikado's Gigantic Guard. Tho Coreans are a big race, and the upper class have European features and fair complexions. Min has a sec retary who resembles in stature, faif hair and straight features the late Emperor Frederick. The six-foot serv ants of the Emperor of Japan, who attend at state receptions In liveries borrowed from those of the Emperor Napoloon's domestics, are Coreans. If the Japaneso secure what they are now after they will have Corean drum majors In, their army and maybe a Corean palace corps like the Cent Garde at the Tullerles. The Japan ese must seem pigmies among Prince Mln's compatriots. From Londoi Truth. Tlio Kind Ton Have Always in uso for over 30 years, and --7- eonal supervision bIiico its infancy. 'CCcCUAi Allow tio nnn t deceive von in tlila. All Counterfeits Imitations and Just-as-good nro but Experiments that triflo with and endanger tho health of Infants and Children Experience against Experiment What is CASTORIA Cnstorla is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotio substance. Its ago is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates tho Food, regulates the Stomach and Ilowels, giving healthy and natural Bleep Tho Children's Panacea Tho Mother's Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS SI Sears the The Kind You Me Always Bought In Use For Over :sO Years. Vmi ecMTAun cwMm, n Muamtv arc ft. ntw voem err. List of Jurcrs for December Term OH AND JIKORS inhline, IjcwIh, FishliiKcrcek. ower. 11. F. , JMarereek. 'arl, Joxepli, CntiuvisMi twp. 'usev. Win. J.. Hloomslmrir C'anwell, Win. H., ISloonibburir. I'liln W A I). I. 1 i ' i ' 'i ii. ft. Eiltfar, John, IW-nton twp. Freus, V. W. livrwick. Fritz, Itny, Jackson. (Mrton. A. K.. Pino. Hummer, (Icorge, Sujrarlonf. H iridium. ('. I... IViitiin Kiiriv Hughes, John, LociiNt. Hauch. C. 15.. Main. John, Wenley J , Main. Lemon, I lieixlore, (Jreenwood. Miller. K. A.. (Jrpe iiwihhI. Pensyl, liny, HlooiiiHburjr. JiiiottiiM, Jimiali, Cleveland. Kuckle, John, Uetiton twp. Itoberta. W. H.. t'ntHwisH.i tun. Klllivon. C. W . ItlimiiiHlinrir. Hiee, I'htw , lUoonmbiiri?. Struuuli, Elmer 1., Jackson. Jl'KOUH FIRST WKKK Alpeter, Itev. Peter, Catawissa. .1 ..... . I, r niiuuis, iMimiyiei, i,(Kiist. HiMIiImiv. Paul. Ulonmslmi'.r lilank.'LevI, IWrwick. t'reveliiiff, Daniel, lUoomsliurg. Cotl'mim. Win.. lll(MiiiilMt-,r Cadnian. II. F Millville. JJerr, t nl vim, Jackson. FltireliildM. .1. M.. Itriiirnr.,i.k (Soodhart, Win., Millliii. (.n ton, C lark. Main. (;,.nitv V, I I '....I-.. I!.. w.f riiti nun, llongluiiil, All'ivil, KourinL'creek. II II 11, (:..,- ivss, ii. v ., ;i mull. Ilniiek, J, S. Milllin. MaKenuuch, O. i)., Stillwater, llelwitf, t'linrles, Locust. 1 lurtmiin. ( 'Iiili Iim 1 1 PlIlllM.U Ikl ll T It. U ltl,wimul,urr Johnson. Chester M., Mmliaon. Kline, Chirk, lireenwood. Lemon, Elliot, Fisliinnereek. Mummy, Albert, Heaver. Menscli. Win.. M in 1 1 , i i Murray, duo. L Catuwissa twp. Nuss, J. 1!., Main. Oliver. Daniel. Itiru-lik. Old. Au.-tin, Scott. wjsrinu, li. d Iteuton lloro. Kuckle, Taylor, Montour. Palmer, Hiram, liloouisliurg. juiiiiuis, iurK, Cleveland. Itl'illv CM I.t,il,,wl.li.,r ltoiulurmel, Win. d., Conynnham. iiicimii, jonn a., uourintfcreeK. Itiilsloii. Itnv in IUII II wl tl I Vit Sliultz, 1). A., Madison. Snyder, Henry W., Cleveland. KtoveiH, Elins, Jackson. uiiHickie, lloyd, Suifurlouf. v nunioyer, It. 1'., fine, 'i'liomas. II. W.. Miiilisim. Trump, Chan., Oninixe two. r ii.. ....! i upie, jeremiun m., 1 isiungerreek. Yorks, C. E., Sujiarlouf. Vender. Wilson, ilerwiek. llippcnstecl, Joe, Scott. Ferguson, Win., Hlooinsburg. J L'KOltS SWUM) WKKK Ash. W. S.. Iti-iiircreeU lletz, Miles V lSloomsburjr. llrohst, M. L., Mt. Pleasant. Cliamlierliiin .l.mn.j lii,n Crawford, Clinton, Mt. Pleasant. i iiisseii, rnjn, unuige twp. in-mou, i yrus, .Millville. Davis, C. V., ilriurcreek. Evans. Aimer A llrlu Vi .r, .1 Evans. Win-liunl l.,ni..n. drimes, II. It., Millville, Jiomren, ueorgo, Tine. ness, ji. u. JJerwick. Ikeler. 1!. A . Mt PI m vn lit Johnson, A. 11., Pine. lMisnner, reter, Montour. Kerrigan. Jumes, Conyngham. iuue, jienry, Ml. nciisunt. Kramer. Clms. MmlUmi Labor, George, Fishingereek. !'"', .ci-iiiu, urungevllle. I.lll-lsll. C. I. S!ll,r.,rl.u.f I,iiurus, l-.mnnuel, Hloomslmrg. mi u-cuie, i lein., iserwicK. N'uss, Henry, Milllin. Howan, Dennis, Conynghnin. Kuckle. IS. .1 Mi I'i Staid, Win., Centre. Savage. John, Jackson. Shllller. E. W.. Ml. Pleilunnt Trump, Jas., Orange twp. in i.iew, u. vv ., nshingereek, N eluh, Orval, Ortuige twp. MB Bought, and which has been lias foorno Iho slgnaturo of lias been inauo under bis per Signature of Hartman, Pierce, Sugarlonf. Sitler, Sylvester, Cenire. Zaner, Wm. P., Main. l tTtanate Fattier aud Son I am as certain as I now live, says Mr. C. E Hartholi mew, Kalkaska, Mich., that Dr. David Kennedy's Favorite Remedy, of Rondont, N. Y., saved uiy life when I was a victim of that ttnible disorder Kright's disease. My son had a rever sore on his h jj ; lie too used Favorit2 Remedy and is now well. All druggists $i.oo; 6 bottles $5.00. Envelopes 75.000 Envelopes carried in stock at the Coluwuian Office, The line includes drug envelopes, pay, coin, baionial, commercial sizes, number 6, bl2, 6, 9, 10 and 11, catalog, &c. Trices range from $1.50 per 1000 printed, tip to $5.00. Largest stock in the coun ty to selett ft 0111. Entrance through Roy's Jewelry Store. tf I'.enuty in born in the lilooil. Beauty moie man sum deep " 11 s blooJ leep. When the liloo.l is t:.in e l t.y ilise.ise thp tloh will feel it anil the skin wi'i s'low il. al,ow or mU'Uly conili.x'o:i!, .inip!c, lli cl.es, ninl t niitions nre only die mtface sint of inipu'e b'outl Fa e washr;, lotion iora I lexion powders, may pa iu te ti e evil, but lliey tannji cine th iiieas. I he on y cure is to cle.inse the blood of the o sonooi n niier wh ch is the ause o' the outbreak til the flesh and s.k:n. Imp 1 e bW) can be absoliiuly purified by the u-e of Dr fierce' ('olden Medical 1 iscovrry. lU edict on flesh nnd si in is inaiked." bo.es heal and disnppear. The sk n bcc mei tmooih. 1 irijaiiis its naiuial color. The ees bri; hlcn anil sparkle, ihe whole body in radiant wi'h the bru:htne-.s and be..nty of heillh. "llold en Medical Discovery'' coniains no alcohol, whisky or oilier intuxicaiil. 1 nd is absolutely dee fioin opium, cocaine and oilier narcotic. The use of Dr. Pierce's P.e.i:ini pjllnin. nssuu the action of the " Discov ry,' cleansing the system of clogging u.allcr. by A Positive CURE Ely's Cream Balm ii quickly absorbed. Gives Relief at Once. It clennsos, soothes heals mid protects the diseased, mem bruuo. It cures Ca tarrh ami drives awny a Cold iu tho Hoiid quickly. He stores tho Senne8 of iATARRH I -Mm HAY FEVER luBte and Smell. Full size 50cts., at Drug giHts or by mail ; Trial Size 10 cts. by mail. Ely Urothers, 50 Wurron Street, No w York. REVIVO nesTOREs VITALITY Madoa Well Man 1 of Me. tri ion aoove results in SO (lavs. It sen Bowerlull aud quickly, euros ben all others (slL SOI11lffVYll.il will tk.l. 1 . - M .11 m ,wM ...ivuatLi uuir UI UlUIIUOOUtMiaUMB teen ill rocover tholr youthful vior by tuUnf 11 irii t' it t . . ..... quicKiy ana sum? restores nervous peas, Lout vitality, Impotency, Miilitly Emissions, ii',iowor,I'1Un Mory. Wasting riscsees. ss4 II effects of sell-obune or eicom and Indiscretion. I.U.VU uiiutatiaoiorBTUiiy.DutliMitoortuarrlage. u : Botonly euros by starting &t tho eist t,J tiiiieatie. bus isagreai mrvetou;o oui tloo l bull.icr, brin I vvk the pluk glow to palo cbccUs and r totlug tus Ore of yontb. It wards off Jnnauit nd Consumption. Inalnt on bavinf KI2VIVO.M iiimw By mall , - ----- -- vDMiut'ii ill ,if-i pncu. I -- - B.A HVOIMI1l,WIUl I S1VS written sraarmntM to aura tr n I Iha aim,... 1! 1. ...., ...... 1 . .. - I KOYAL MEDICINE CO., l ot Sale by Mover Bros., bluonisbu rg rmvm. AM! "C8 tit- ri is
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers