State Foreiti thev am gradually disapp f.arino under the blows of the woods- . MAN'S AXE. The state forestry commission re cently appointed by the governor has a wide and important work before it, the magnitude of which is doubtless fully appreciated by the gentlemen directed to consider the best way out of a serious situation, and if they dis cover some plan during the process of inquiry and investigation that will serve to restore wasted tcnitory they will solve a problem that has long had the earnest force of public pressure back of it, a pressure in the form of public necessity. It has been some years since arbor days were established as an avenue through which to repair the great loss es annually suffered by the work of denudation carried on by the lumber interests, and the Pennsylvania State Forestry association has been an in valuable auxiliary as an agent bent upon acquainting the public of the psrmaneut loss sustained in the gencr al destruction of the once unrivaled forests that covered the northern and western central counties ; but the re sults from these two sources have been feeble at best, and the state concludes at last by legislation to arrive at the core of the trouble through a forestry commission. This is a wise course to pursue. As a beginning it must event ually provide a sure foundation for future legislative action, and, the light turned on, the present condition of the timber sections means truth in all its forceful nakedness. The Forestry commission will find a remarkable condition, for instance in Shuylkill, Luzerne, Lackawanna and Carbon counties, from whose mountain sides the standing timber long since disappeared to be used in the mines as supports. Nothing has been done to restore by growth the supply so taken, largely from the fact that the native wood were exhausted and no recreation was possible. In other sections like those found in Clearfield, Clinton, Jefferson, Elk, Lycoming, Cameron and contiguous counties, where the axe and lumber man found virgin timber kingdoms fifty years ago, the despoliation has been of such a character as to cause much alarm even among the residents of the territory covered. For the first time this year the city of Lock Haven, once a thriving centre of the lumber interests, finds itself with a scant sup ply of logs for its mills, and in fact the great boom is practically closed. Williarasport has been the recognized head and front of the Susquehanna lumber trade, the mills there sending annually to market hundreds of mill ions of feet of finished and unfinished lumber, but the supply has been dwind ling down until there is no longer scarcely a respectable showing. Investigation will introduce facts to the commission showing that Pennsyl vania's once inexhaustible supply of timber has really such a thing as a limit, and that the time has come to save the pine and hemlock wherever the course of salvation can be judi ciously pursued. Only as far back as the year 1874, when John DuBois penetrated the wilderness from Drift wood alo ig Bennett's Branch Lick, he found fifty miles of close growth in pine and hemlock as straight as an ar row. To-day there is hardly a stick left worth cutting, and his claim that the timber stretch was inexhaustible comes as a warning cry to care for that which remains. If the commission can stop the pot hunter from firing up the woods, and kindred to him the very many who cultivate the huckleberry and black berry by burning over extensive areas yearly in order to have furious crops at the expense of the young timber shoots, they will eliminate the cause of much of the waste and destruction in state forests. If in addition to this the commission can induce the various corporations, companies and owners of timber tracks to set out again young trees in the place of those taken away, Mime day the virgin forests will return, but never again in the primitive purity the settlers found them a half century ago.1 $100 Bewasd, $100. The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to cure in all its stages and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh, being a constitutional disease, requires constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, act ing directly upon the blood and mu cous surfaces of the system, thereby destroying the foundation of the di sease, and giving the patient strength by building up the constitution and assisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have so much faith in its curative powers, that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any case that it fails to cure. Send for list of Testi monials. Address, F. J. Chenby & Co., Toledo, O. ISold by Druggists, 75c. int. The new central station for electric lighting will be opened in Japan this summer. The power in each case will be furnished by Pelton water wheels. All the equipment will be constructed in Japan. The Pennsjlratia Railroad it the World! Tair. A GLIMPSE AT ITS INTkRESTlNO TREAS fRKS. Of more real interest to the average visitor to the World' Fair than all the confusing array of locomotives, cars, ships, wagons, bicycles, and veloci pedes in the great Transportation Building is the compact yet compre hensive exhibit which the Pennsylva. nia Railroad Company makes in its own beautiful little model railway station. What with signal tower, over head foot bridge, automatic switches, tracks, ballast, and ditches just out side its doors, and the original "John Bull" locomotive, the oldest in Amer ica, with its train of antique cars, and the colossal iron vehicles upon which the hugh Krupp guns were conveyed from Baltimore to the Exposition standing in the shadow of its walls, it presents to the passer-by an appear ance so distinctly characteristic that a caret ul inspection of the treasureis of the interior is almost inevitable. Once inside, you enter immediately into a study of transportation history in the United States on the kinder garten or object lesson basis, and by means of models, ranging from the old Conestoga wagon, through a series of curiously fashioned cars, up to the standard locomotives and passenger coaches of to-day, you secure a most effective idea of railroad progress. Nor do the models here shown have to do with vehicles only. In the cases which line the walls of the cool, white interior are also to be seen models of track of all periods, various systems of signals in use at different times, and even tickets and time tables, not for getting conductors' punches and lan ters. In the way of models, the post of honor is given to a magnificent repro duction of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company's new double deck ferry boat "Washington," which plies be tween New York and Jersey City, a model complete in every detail, even to the electric lighting and the rub ber mats at the doors. Maps, in re lief, of a most interesting and instruc tive character are numerous, not the least important being one four feet wide by twelve feet long, showing at once the old Portage, the new Portage, and the present road of the company over the Alleghenies, all arranged to a scale, and giving a better notion of that wonderful feat of engineering, the i-Iorse shoe Curve, than cau even be had by a trip over it. To furnish a comprehensive idea of the magnitude of the Pennsylvania Railroad system no better method could have been adopted than that which is here presented in the shape of a perspective map, thirty-three feel long, showing the position of each train in motion on the system at 6 P. M. on Columbia Day, October 21st, 1892. the passenger trains being indi cated by tiny gilt locomotives, and the freight trains by similar locomotives colored blue. In addition to all this there is case after case of photographs, posters, letters, bills, and other docu ments, all more or less interesting, and a number of wax figures, clothed in the uniforms of the Pennsylvania's working staff of employes, from bag gage porters to conductors. Ayer's Sarsaparilla cures liver com plaint, rheumatism, and all diseases of the blood. Half Rates to the World's Fair by the Pennsylvania Railroad. In order to afford an opportunity to the public to visit the World's Fair, the Pennsylvania Railroad Company has decided to run a series of popular excursions from Washington and Balti more and other eastern cities to Chi cago. The round trip from Washing ton and Baltimore will be $17.00, and proportionate rates, a single fare for the round trip, will prevail from other stations. .This arrangement applies to all prin cipal stations on the Baltimore and Potomac Railroad, the Northern Cen tral Railway between Baltimore and Elmira, Philadelphia and Erie Rail road between Williamsport and Re novo. and principal stations on the mam line and branches between Har risburg and Pittsburg. The parties will be carried on spec ial trains composed of the newest and best standard passenger coaches, con taining all modern conveniences. The special trains will leave Wash ington 10.15, Baltimore 11.20 A. M., York 1. 15 P.M., Harrisburg 3.25 P. M., Altoona 7.40 P. M., and, stopping at principal intermediate stations, ar rive in Chicago 5 20 the next after noon. The first excursion is fixed for July 26th, others are fixed for August 2d, 1 2th and 23d., The return coupons of these tickets will be good within ten days, and will be accepted for passage only on trains leaving Chicago at 3.15 P. M. and 11.30 P. M. Identifying Him. Gummy Poor Paddock has lost three thousand dollars betting on the races. Gargoyle Paddock ? I don't think I know him, do I ? Gummey Perhaps not, but he's the man who picks out the probable win ners for the daily Blogun. Judge. Sensationalism and Cowardice. I The two chief tvils which afflict our business interest are sensationalism and cowardice. Eliminate the sensa tional features from bank aul business failures and give the precise truth, and eliminate the cowardice tlut makes tens of thousands each a panic in him self, and there would be a speedy re action in substantial values. Some of the newspapers yesterday announced under the most conspicu ous and panic-inspiring headlines, that half a dozen banks had closed in Kan sas and that several had suspended in Colorado. Of course, there can be no stability in financial operations in either Kansas or Colorado and no safety to any banking institution, but they bear no relation whatever to the great business interests of the country. Kansas has a wildly agrarian Gover nor, Legislature and State officers. Contracts payable in gold are illegal and communistic revolution is in the air inspired by a crazed Populist ad ministration. Who can aid a Kansas bank or send money to that State un der any circumstances short of imper ious necessity ? The same logic cuts Colorado off from financial support. It was her revolutionary si ver conven tion and the blatant demagoguery of her Governor that made the Colorado banks suspend. Several important banking houses and banks have been forced to sus pension by the present stringency, but in the case of every legitimate bank ing institution, it was not insolvency but the inability to realize fur cash that forced the closing of doors to pro tect assets and creditors. The other bank failures, as a rule, were only the inevitable collapse of institutions with out capital or integrity. Yet these failures, which do not affect legitimate banks or legitimate business or legiti mate values in any way, are heralded in the most sensational manner by many public journals, and every possi ble aid thus given to gamblers whose profession is to cheat honest investors by the depression of values. Sensationalism would be harmless beyond the contempt it invites upon its authors, but for the cowardice that shrivels up common sense with many who have money. The best of divi dend paying stocks are now purchasa ble at the lowest rates for years ; but the cowardice that is cherished by thousands makes them hoard their money. They draw it out of banks and lock it up in boxes. They know that the banks are safe, but others are afflicted with cowardice and lock up their money, and they do it without reasoning on the subject. By and by, when the securities they could buy to-day at the lowest prices shall have advanced twenty, thirty or forty per cent., they will rush in and make investments ; and when the banks and the business public will have no need for their surplus money, they will un lock their boxes and deposit it again Cowardice is the root of all our financial troubles to day. There is no reason for distrust and least of all for panic. The shipment of gold has ceased ; our exports of breadstuffs has been the largest within the last six weeks of any like period in the past ; there is abundance of money in the country for all legtimate wants ; the people of all business channels, out side of the petty silver States, are more solidly solvent than at any time in the last decade, and cowardice alone halts the return to honest values and general prosperity. Let sensa tionalism and cowardice be sent to the rear; let us trust our country, our government and ourselves, and pros perity will be speedily restored. Times. Are Tou Nervous. Are you all tired out, do you have that tired feeling or sick headache ? You can be relieved of all these symptoms by taking Hood's Sarsaparilla, which gives nerve, mental and bodily strength and thoroughly purifies the blood. It also creates a good appetite, cures in digestion, heartburn and dyspepsia. Hood's Pills are easy to take, easy in action and sure in effect. 25 cents a box. The first aluminum sea going vessel is under construction in the dock yards of the" Loire, France. It is a cutter and its total weight is 2,500 tons. If constructed of the ordinary materials it would weigh 4,500 tons. The Parisian Tramway Company, which some months ago placed elec tric street cars, operated by storage batteries, on one of its lines, is so well pleased with the result that all its horse cars on this line have been with drawn. I have been troubled with chronic catarrh for years. Ely's Cream Balm is the only remedy among the many that I have used that affords me re lief. E. H. Willare, Druggist, Joliet, 111. I have been troubled with catarrh for ten years and have tried a number of remedies, but found no relief until I purchased a bottle of Ely's Cream Balm. I consider it the most reliable preparation for catarrh and cold in the head. Geo. E. Crandall, P. M., Quonochawntaug, R. I. Sixty per cent, of the earthquakes occur during the winter months. $20, $iz and -2 :: $8.50 .V.v York clotliin maker was hard up for cash. We Lought all his Men's Suits (made to sell for $20, $15 and $12) at a price that enables tis to olicr them at $8.50 per Suit. We are selling: Boys' $5.00 Knee Pant Suits for $2.50. Hundreds to pick from. This was another clean-out BROWNING, KING & CO. 910-912 Chestnut Street WARREN A. RECD. Opposite Fort Of tie, Philadelphia A Chinese Courtship. HOW JOHN CHINAMAN PAVES THE WAV TO MATRIMONY. In his own flowery kingdom the heathen Chinese who desires to be come a benedict docs not dream of approaching his desired bride until he has heard what her father has to say. The interview with papa on these oc casions is largely occupied by a pro longed haggle over the amount the suitor is to give until the bargain is adjusted to mutual satisfaction. Then the suitor, highly perfumed with asafetida, which is the smart scent among the Chinese, as it was among the Carthaginians calls on the bride's mother, and is introduced to the bride, whom it must be under stood he has not yet seen. The visit consists largely of bowing, scraping, flourishing the hands, cringing in every posture, every kind of ceremonial and very little conversion. The lover does not speak one word to his intended, and seldom glances toward her. Usually singing and dancing girls come in and furnish diversion. He remains in her presence for two hours or longer, during the whole of which time he does not get a moment alone with his intended, or even a fair look at her face for it is not etiquette for him to scrutinize her too closely. When he has gone he sends a present. It is a good omen if he sends a gift of eggshells painted every kind of color. All his visits are conducted on the same plan. He does not get a direct and lull view of her face until they have "gone away," that is, until she has been brought in her palanquin to his house. There is some compensa tion in the fact that if he does not like her appearance he can send her back home. But this would cause such a scandal and be such an insult to the family that, as a rule, the ques tion of looks is thoroughly inquired in to by go-between of the fair sex be fore any serious formal step is taken in the matter. Chicago 2'imee. A lady, whose hair came out with every combing was induced to give Ayer's Hair Vigor a faithful trial. She did so, and not only was the loss of hair checked, but a new and vigorous growth soon succeeded that which had gone. The number of rods in the retina, supposed to be the ultimate of light, is estimated at 30,000,000. Deserving Praise. We desire to say to our citizens, that for years we have been selling Dr. King's New Discovery for Con sumption, Dr. King's New Life Pills, Bucklen's Arnica Salve and Electric Bitters, and have never handled re medies that sell as well, or that have given such universal satisfaction. We do not hesitate to guarantee them every time, and we stand ready to re fund the purchase price, if satisfactory results do not follow their use. These remedies have won their great popular ity purely on their merits. C. A. Kletm Druggist. The average strength of a horse is seven and a half times greater than that of a man. T JF7"!-. n WhT l Strictly Pur W IT V V White Lead the best paint t Because it v?;!l outjast all other paints, give a handsomer finish, better protection to the v.Tci, and the first cost will be less. If Barytcs and other adulterants of nrhit e lend zrs "just as good" aa Strictly Pure White Lead, why are all the r.Culteratcd white leads always branded Pure, or " Strictly Pure White Lead ? This Bcrytc3 is e heavy white powder (tjr.-und atone), having the appearance ci white had, vorthless as a paint, costing only about a cent a pound, and J? oily used to cheapen the mixture. V.'hat shocirty in to cloth, Barytes is to aaint. Bo careful to use only an old and itaadard braaj of whits lead the John T. Lewis & Bros. io strictly pure, "Old Dutch" process, and established by a lifetime of use. For colors use National Lead Co.'s Pure White Lead Tinting Colors with Strictly Pure White Lead. For eslo by the moat reliable dealers la palnU everywhere. If you are going to paint, it will pay you to send to ua Tor a book containing Informa tion that may eave you many a dollar it will sqly coat you poatul card to do ao. JOHN T. LEWIS & BROS. CO., Philadelphia, $!2 Suits Fine PHOTO GRAPHS and CRAYONS at McKillip Bros., Bloomsburg. The best are the cheapest. ftMioatar'a FnflUh MuaoftA Brand. lENNfROYAL PILLS OrtffiiiBl and Only Oitntne. A wmrm, su wmjm rrnniiia, laniii, mmm Prtirrlrt far ilhichtMter a JfofM Ma , mond Brd la MeJ stod fitid Biulll irsiaa, fM with bin rlhhon. Tk 0th nr. MtfuMe danirrotu mntUu- Hn mnd imitations. At Drujrjrlans, or md 4U In itsmpi for pvtkalrt, trait own tail aul "HHlrf fWr UdltCtnlriiir, hv rvtunsj fatlL 1 0.OOO TratlrMaiita. Af.imt Pnir. f Cfc1rhtMtr4aaUtnl VfV ftfUn fiitu- 7-tfH-tt. PILES MJAKESIS " (dm Inrtnnt relief and In an iiifiillihlo Cere for Film. Price 1 1. Hy iruirK""Sor man. rMimmes free. Adilww'MNA KKNIS." Box 2410, New fork City. !D TO STAY. That's the way with any animal fastened to Erath's Patent Hitching Post. JyThlH Pout can't 1 pulled up, loos. ened by force or heaved by frost, S costs less than a stone, wood or J Si cast-iron Post,. Made of wrought MUM "1 "U1U . 1 ... 1. 1 reui wi atyles and Sizes. C.W. ERATH 03 8. .Main, ELY:s. CatawrH UttJSAM BALM Cleans the Nasal Passages, Allays Fain and Inflammation, Heals the Sores. Restores the Sense of Taste and smell. TETTHE CURE. VER A particle Is applied Into each nostril and Is agreeable. Price SO cents at DrugelsM; by mall registered, 60 cts. ELY BKOTilfiiitt, 64 Warren HU, N .Y. OAVI1TI. DISION PATKNT. eOPYRIOHTeV. ateJ ror mnrunn ana ire BananooK write to MUNN ft CO- Ml Buoadwat, MIW Tome OldMt bureau for aecurlnf patent In America. Brerr patent taken out by us la brought before ib pubilo bBKotloe flTea tree ot ebaxse la tlia lamat elreulatloa of any ecu entitle paper In th man snouia be wunoui eari SL60 Mx nwtha. WUIM ppiHuiwr ih.www. Weekly. JS3.0U a Kn IntAlllffAnL Vuiiini.nit, 3' Broadway, Maw MUNN (JO, w York City. THOMAS G0RREY Plans and Estimates on all kinds of buildings. Repairing and carpenter work promptly attended to. hn Builder's Supplies. Inside Hardwood finishes a specialty. Persons of limited means w! o desire to build can pay pan and secure balance by mortgage. 01 WORLD'S HIR BEVERAGE. The most healthful mid popular drink of the ago. The proper drink for both table, and t1renlilw now within the reach of all. Kvery thrltiy housewife can provide, for lier home, grupe, or. ange, pear, cherry, apple.'banuna and pineapple ciders at the small expense of fifteen cents per gallon. Keep your husbands and sons at home y preparing for them those delightful and harmless drinks ; thereby saving the money that might possibly find It way Into the sa loons. Itoniy takes ten minutes to miiki) uny one of these delightful drinks. Enclose 10 cents for one, or 0 eeulH for seveu of the "Fruit t lder Heolpes". Address NIMS NOVELTY CO. MM t'allmot Ave,, Chicago, Tit sirs a? ka TI H Ax-EE 4 Solentlfio Americas PAViE LEAVES BANGKOK Eastern Division of the French Fleet Sails for Siam. CHINA EXPRESSES HER INDIGNATION The Brport That Franre Had Notified the Powers That She Intended to Bloekadu the Mamas Csaet Prematare I.atln Union Eiolndes tha S 1-fl Franc ftllrar Pleca from Circulation Other New. Hakokok, July 20. M. Pavte, French Minister liesiilent, started down the river yesterday on the warship Inconstant, ac companied by the warships Latin and Comrte. All In quiet in this city. . 041 Saiooj, July 28. Tha division of tha Far East of the French fltet, which is com manded by Admiral Humann, has sailed for the Gulf of Slam. The merohant Tea sels lying off Bangkok probably will receive Uuie before the blockade to leave the Menum river and put out to sea. I'ARis, July 26. At the Cabinet council held at Marley-le-Hol, which PresldentCar not presided over, the deliberation s wer entirely devoted to the Siamese question. After the counoll rose a semi-offloiiil statement of the proceedings was issued. This statement waa that, in conformity with the unaiilmoua vote of the Senate and the Chamber of Deputies, the govern ment had taken such measures to safe guard the Interests and dignity of Franca as were considered from hmm's reply to the French ultimatum to have been ren dered necessary. The reports yesterday that tho French Government bod notiiied the various powers of its intention to blocknde the coast of Slum were premature. No such notification has been officially addressed to the powers. Lord Dufferln, the British Ambassador, and M. Develle, Minister of Foreign Af fairs, will hold auother conference per sumably, on the question of the territorial demands made by France upon Siam. Tien-Thin, July 23. The Chinese gov ernment has received the news of France's territorial demands upod Siam with amazement and Indignation. That France should lay claim to country up to the 2;Jd parallel is regarded as an intrusion upon the rights of China, for at Peklu the con tention is that both banks of the Mekong, to a point well south of the 23d parallel are Chinese possessions. The Mandarin party, which is bitterly anti-French, is trying to force the govern ment to interfere. Washington, July 25. So far as the State Department is Informed there are no American citizens residing in Siam except about a score of missionaries. It is . not believed to be necessary to take any special measures for their protection. The United States has uo diplomatic representative in Siam and the consul general tit Bangkok; Mr. Boyd, is in thia country at present, leaving the office in charge of his son, the vice consul. If the welfare of our missionaries should be threatened, which is unlikely, they con without doubt secure protection upon ap plication to the minister of some other nation, as will be the case with the French residents. The commercial interests of the United States in Siam are insignificant, the ex port being very few and the imports being made up of teak wood used in ship build ing and some trifles of oriental and Jlay layneslan decorative work. Fatal Dynamite Explosion Near Havre. Paris, July 26. Four explosions shat ter the Ablon dynamite factory in Hon fleur, near Havre, late yesterday afternoon. All hands were at work when the explos ion occurred. Nine men are known to have been killed, twenty men were wounded severely and others were hurt seriously. Several bodies are believed to be under the burning ruins. To Exclude the 1 1-S Fra.no SUverpleoe. Paris, July 26. France, Italy, Switzer land, Belgium and Greece have agreed to exclude the 2 1-2 franc sllverpiece from the international circulation of the Latin Union. DESTITUTION IN DENTEB. Fifteen Thousand Teople In Need of Aid. Scarcity of Relief Fundi. DxitviR, July 26. Up to date 8,700 men have registered as out of employment and the list is steadily Increasing. Means are being taken to furnish employment and provide food for the hungry and destitute. Dean Feck and Rev. Tho. Uizell, who have been foremost in this work, announce that on account of the scarcity ot the re lief funds they cannot continue to feed the hungry longer than to-morrow. Meetings are held nightly to provide) means for aid In which Denver's most prominent people take part. It is estimated that 13,000 persons, men, women and children are in need of immediate aid. Food is being distributed at the various missions to-day. It is developed that the destitution is growing. Blgned the Scale. Antoir, O., July 20. At a conference) between officers of the Akron Iron com pany and representatives of the Amalga mated Association held here, that company signed the scale of wages submitted by the association. It is the one agreed to by Jones & Laughlin of the American Iron tic bteel company. Convicts as Itoad Boiler. Saranac Lake, N. Y., July 24. State Engineer Schenck says the plan of work ing convicts on the roads is a eood one. and that admirable work has been done during the puMt week. The experiment is unuer ine state engineer's direction. Actor Curtla' Trial to Heglo July 31. San Francisco, July 21. The case of M. B. Curtis, charged with killing Police Officer Grant, called for trial in the Super ior court yesterday, was by mutual consent continued until July 81. This will be Curtis' third trial. Mo Hank Failure at Vernon, Tex. Washington, July 24. The statemei made public yesterday that the First Nt Uonal Bank of Vernon, Tex., had failed proves to be erroneous. The First National Bank of Russell, Kan., baa failed. Dr. BrlsTC Declines the Offer. San Diioo, Cal., July 21. Rev. Char! is A. Briggs, who waa deposed by the Presby terian General Assembly, has declined at) offer of a testimonial ot $50,000 which CjajrUhUEKker C tikis, ajtiwished to rata, M 5 4- J! 5 1 1 si it - ' i ! ('; I .f,i. I . H Ml . e