THE COLUMBIAN, BLOOMSBURG, PA. s : 'V'r Warm Weather.. FOOT WEAE RUSSET SHOES AND OXFORDS Clarks' Building, Main THE COLUMBIAN. BLOOMSBURG, PA. rOK SALE. Desirable vacant lots and number of good houses and lots In Ulooinsburg, fa The best traalnens stand In Illnomsburg. A very desira ble property containing lit acres and first clans buildu p v IHi ifowl will In a business worth flow tolittOO per year at Willow urove. lweUlngs In Kspy, Orangevllle and Beach Hsren. A large number of farms In Columbia Oounty, one In Lu.erne County, one In Virginia. Two Country Store Stands In Columbia County and one In Luzerne. County, A water power planing mill, dry dock and lumber yard aud klieds In Beach Haven, I'a. Also 10 acres of good farm land at same place, by Si. V. I.VT5 SON, Insurance and Keal Kstate Agents, HWXMm1 ki.,l'A. ti. SPECIAL NOTICES. CHICK KHINO IMA NO FOK SAI.K.-In fine ton. ii. .on, pi ke reasonable, terms easy. Jnqutn -at thin office or address Lock Box A., UIoouihUui'k, I'a. tf. ALL KWI1S OF BLANKS FOH .TTSTICES and ooNSTABi.Ks at, tue Columbian of. (Ilea. ti- Boarding And furnished rooms to rent on Main street. Steam, gas, hot and cold wa ter and bath. Apply to Mrs. M. M. Phillips, at Phillips' Cafe. tf Ilouse to Kent. On East Reck street, Koonibburg. Inquire at this office. NEIGHBORHOOD NEWS Interesting Items From Various Points in the County, Reported by Our Stafl of Correspondents. ' East Benton. Corn fields all over the country look spotted. Worms are said to be the cause Winter grain is now nearly all gathered. It is said to be a good crop. Rev. W. R. Campbell, wife and child, missionaries in Mormondom in Mendom, Utah, are enjoying a vaca tion and visiting friends in this locality and New York City. Will used to live with us when he taught school in this neighborhood. T. II. Tubbs, Jr. has his new house nearly completed. Timothy is a first class mason. A TENDEEIOOT'S EXPERIENCE. Making a "Bean Hole" in a Washington Log ging Camp A Greenhorn Makes an Amus ing Mistake and Gets Laughed at by the Old Time Lumbermen. " My first experience at lumbering,'' said a certain prominent citizen the other night, " was in making a bean hole. Of course you don't know what a bean hole is. No more did I when I went up on Rum river in 1S68 and applied for work in one of Wash burne's camps, I neglected to tell the boss that I didn't know the differ ence between a gee haw and a cross haul, and maybe he took me for an all rounder at the business. Anyhow I was hired offhand, and the next morning the foreman said to me, Weistling, you take Joe and Charlie here and go over to the new camp and chink up and build a bean hole.' All right,' I said, as cheerful as could be, and off we started. " As soon as we'd got into the tim ber I halted the boys and asked, 'What's this chink up the old man wants ?' Toe looked at me pretty hard and told me about tightening up be-1 tween the cabin and logs with clay. 'And what's a bean hole ?' I inquired. But the boys seemed to be getting pretty tired about something. You see, they didn't like the idea ot being put under such a greenhorn, and both claimed they didn't know what a bean hole was. So I told them to wait there a minute, and I ran back to the fore man and said, 'Look here, Mr. Cole, how big do you want that bean hole ?' Oh, 6 by 6 or 8 by 8,' he said. 'And how deep do you want it ?' Three or four feet,' he answered. " Well, when we got to the new camp we chinked the cabin all right, and then I measured off a space 3 feet square, and we started to din 8 feet deep. I was going to carry out. the boss' biggest figures to show wh.it a good man I was. We dug all that day and it was hard work, for the soil was loose, and the sides of the hole kept tumbling in on us. When we got back to camp that evening t'ie foreman asked me if I'd finished the bean hole, and I told him not quite, but we'll finish her up tomorrow. To ward noon next day we were prttty near through and we were smoothing the bottom of the sepulcher when the foreman showed up to examine pro gress. I didn't notice, him till I heard him roar, 'What the are you fellows doing ? I looked up, and there Btood at prices to suit all.i Street. the old man with mixture of astonish ment and indignation on his face. Then I knew something was wrong I'd had my misgivings all along but I answered us coolly as I could that I was making a bean hole. " A bean hole ?' he shouted, 'a bean hole ? Well, you come out of that bean hole quick, you blanked bean hole idiot !' And then he began to laugh, and I never heard a man laugh like that before nor since. It seemed as if lie never would get through, and of course it sounded very unpleasant to me. I soon learned what bean hole is. " You see they build a log inclosure about 3 feet high and 5 or 6 feet square and fill it with clay. In the middle they sink a deep hole and start a fire of maple sticks in it. When there is a good bed of coals, they put in a pot of beans and cover it over with ashes and clay, and the beans steam in theie till they are done and make the best eating you ever got in the woods. But the bean hole wound me up in that camp. The story went all through the woods and from the head waters of Rum river to Anoka, and there was so nvir.h snickering whcivtr I went that I couldn't stand it. Why, men came 10 and 15 miles from other camps to get a squint at the chap that built the bean hole. So, though I didn't make ary more specially bad breaks there, I pretty soon called for my time and got out of the country." South Bend ( Tlrti67i.) Journal. MAKING BIRCH OIL. SIMPLE PROCESS USED IN THE WILDS OF CONNECTICUT. A very large quantity of birch oil is manufactured in the wilds of Connec ticut, and with a simplicity equalling sugar making in the Vermont forests. Birch twigs are cut into even lengths of five inches, and thrown into water tight tanks having copper bottoms 5 a coil of steam pipes is arranged in the bottom, and three feet of water pour ed in, the tops are hermetically sealed, steam turned on, and the water kept boiling for six hours. Into the side of each boiling tank a" steam pipe is inserted and runs in the form of a worm into a barrel of cold water, and cold water is flowing continually into this barrel ; the steam rising from the boiling birch twigs passes through this pipe and is condensed in the worm, while the oil drops from the end of the pipe into a small receiving jar or pail. The oil as it drips down, being a dull brown, in carefully clarifi ed until of a very light green ; and, instead of chemical processes, clarifi cation is accomplished by simply spreading a heavy woolen blanket over the wood inside the tank. In a proper kind of mill, however, the oil now drops out pure and ready for market ; one ton of birch yields four pounds of oil, and the oil is worth $3 or more per pound. One of the wrong things in this world is that a woman has to wait for a man to speak. Her happiness may de- fiend upon him, nit she ts not per mitted to tell him fo, as he would be to tell her. She must depend upon her ability to cre ate and foster in him a favorable and ardent feeling. To do this, she must depend much upon her atmcarance. N o man admires a sal low skin, dull and sunken and circled eyes, bloodless lips, sunken cheeks. No man wants to marry an invalid. Very few invaldB are altrac five to either Bex. 1 1 isn't natural that tl.t v should be. Manv a woman's heart's happiness has been wrecked be cause of a crop of pimples or because of a l ull hrv.nth, or because of some other un pleasant symptom of an Irregularity in the 7 llH performance 01 uer natural lunvuuuB. Health In u wnniiin brings clear complex ifin, rid lips, vivLc ity, r-y.rkle of eyes and intellect. Eternal watchfulness is the price of health. The dowuwuid road to disease is fatallv casv to travel. Little disorders, little irreffularities, little drains, lead to the most serious consequences. Put a stop to them Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription will do it without the embarrassment of examinations and "local treatment so much dreaded by modest women. In nine cases in ten. there is absolutely no need of thtiu. The "Favorite Prescription " has been prescribed by l'r. Pierce for over 30 years arid ha9 cured the very worst forms of lemale troubles. A hook of i(-8 nai'ea. cnntMntnir much valuable in form at inn nnd letters from hundreds of grateful women, will be sent in a plain envelope, sicurcly sealed, on rccelot of this nr.tire ami ten cents, in stamps, to part pay postage, by World's DlSPKKHARY MKDICAf. ASSOCIATION, HO. 663 Uuiu Street, ttuiiulo, N. y. A Clean Collar One that you enn keep clean all the time a collar that docs not wilt when you get over-hented; thnt docs not frny on the edge, or tenr out nt the buttonholes, nnd can be cleaned by simply wiping off with a wet sponge or cloth. These collars and cults are made by covering linen collars or cuffs on both sides with waterproof "celluloid," thus giving strength and durability. They are the only waterproof goods so mnde, and every piece is stamped as follows: ELiKoirj (1 II Mb. mark. Ask for this, nnd refuse to take any imitation if you expect sat isfaction . If you r dealer docs not keep them, send direct to us, en closing amount, and wc will mail you sample. Collars 2S cts. each. Cuffs 50 cts. pair. State size, and whether stand-up or turned-down collar is wanted. THE CELLULOID CO., 4H-W Ilromlway, new xorK. WINTER OATS. SOMKTTIINO NEW. lilfi YIELD. U11 the tarm ot J. 1 . Welsh near Orangcvil!c, a crop of winter oats has just been threshed. Winter oats in northern climate is a rare thing. Last fall a bushel and a half of winter oats was purchased and sowed about the middle of October, as an experiment. On account of the strong stooling properties of this oats, the seed was spread over nearly two acres. This proved afterwards to be sown a little too thin. The yield was something over one hundred bushels, which seems im mense when the amount of seed is considered. By sowing ten days or two weeks earlier this year, and sowing about a bushel or a trille over to the acre it is believed that a still greater success of it can be made next year. The seed will also have the advan tage of having come from a crop that has been through one severe winter. It certainly ought to be acclimated. This spring it seemed as if there were nothing left of it; nothing showed above ground when the snow went off. A few days later it showed up better, but still ran a narrow escape of being plowed up and sown with summer oats. When too late for summer oats it was still gaining ground, but was threatened with buck-wheat. Finally it came out in head and thick ened up remarkably, and proved a great surprise to all who had been watching the experiment. They weigh nearly 40 lbs. to the bushel as they come from the separator. This ex periment may prove of great benefit to the farmers of the north. There are many points in their favor and but few against. They can be sown in fall, when wheat and rye are, and thus relieve the ensuing spring work of this pressure ; and this is a great point gained should the opening ot spring be late, These oats, sown after corn or potatoes, cover and pro tect what would otherwise be a nude soil ; and the roots prevent washing of the soil by rains. They furnish green feed late in the fall, for they do better to be pastured off than if not. There is great gain in seed. These require but three pecks to the acre, while spring oats require a seeding of two to three bushels. Winter oats "stool" or tiller remarkably. Given room and a fertile soil, single grains throw up from ten to twenty stalks, which bear large, well-filled heads. They have a stiff straw, stand up well, and seem to be much more productive than spring oats. 1 hev come off in coon season to plow and sow crimson clover for fall pasturage, winter soil protection and for a renovating crop to turn down in the spring, spring oats are to late for this. Winter oats, follow ed by crimson clover, may become one ot the fixed changes of our pro gressive new agriculture. NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS- The duplicates for 189s are now in my hands for collection." All dog, state, county and school taxes paid before Saturday August 14th, a reduc tion of five percentum will be allowed I will be at the office of Guy Jacoby j!.sq., over f ost Oihce on Ihursday, Friday and Saturday, August, 15, 16 and 17 and Thursday, Friday and Saturday, August 2a, a.t, and 24 between the hours of 3 and 6 o'clock in the afternoon to receive taxes. J. K.. Bittenbendf.r, Collector. 6-28 4L 123 West Fifth St. A good quality of envelopes can be obtained at the Columbian office, for $2.00 a thousand, with business card Y 1 printed on the corner. tf. Brief Notes. The magnificent Luther monument planned in 1883 is about to be erected in Berlin. There was a gain to Congregation alism last year of ninety six churches and a net gain in membership of 18, 906. As the result of six weeks of revival work in Fort Scott, Kan., there were 8 1 8 new members added to various churches. The increase in the value of church property in the United States since 1870 has been $325,146,538, or near ly 92 per cent., while the number of churches has increased 42 per cent. Archbishop Williams has, signified his approval of the principles of the New England Sabbath Protective League, and a Roman Catholic priest has become a member of the Execu tive Committee. At the Mariners' Church in New York City a most important mission ary work among sailors of all nation alities is being carried on. Not merely are services conducted in the chtrch, but the ships that lie in the harbor are visited. The Oxford (England) Nonconform ist Council has vehemently protested against the clerical action of the City Counci', which voted a sum of money out of the municipal funds for the maintenance of a sectarian day school. The religious bodies of South Australia reach numerically as tollows; Anglicans. 90,000 ; Methodists, 50, 000, of whom 15,000 are Bible Christ ians, and 2o.oco Primitive Methodists; Roman Catholics, 47,000 ; Presby terians ; Roman Catholics, 47,000 ; Congrcgationalists, 12,000. The New York's Remarkable Record. The New York, of the American Line, though not the fastest, has the best record for regularity of any o f the Atlantic fleet. Her average time has not varied for years, and she can be expected almost on the minute every voyage. She has crossed the Atlantic more times and has carried more passengers than any other steamer of her age, and has been more regular about it. The New York made fourteen trips west bound in 1893, with an average time of 6 days, 21 hours and 31 minutes. In 1894 she made fifteen trips west bound, with an average of 6 days, 21 hours and 4; minutes. Her sailing distance was 2770 miles. In 1893 she made thirteen trips east-bound, with an average of 6 days, 20 hours and 30 minutes, which was just one minute faster than her west-bound time that year. In 1894 she made fifteen trips, with an average time of 6 days, 20 hours and 94 minutes. Therefore in crossing the ocean 57 times in both directions, at all seasons of the year, her widest variation for two years was only 1 hour and 21 minutes. London Engineer. DR.KILMER1 o o t.RCAt KIDNEY LIVERS "MffiL Pain In the Back, joints or hips, sediment tn urine like brick-dust frequent calls or retention, rheumatism. Kidney Complaint, Diabetes, dropsy, scanty or high colored urine Urinary Troubles, Stinging sensations when voldinir, distress pres sure In the parts, urethral Irritation, stricture. Disordercil Liver, Bloat or dark circles under the eyes, tongue coated, constipation, yellowish eyeballs. GusrMtee-Uiiu contents of One Botue, if nod buneut& DnitfirtHU U1 rutund U you the price pniit At DruciflMto, COc. Mze, $1.00 Size. "Inralidi' Guide to Health" free Cotuultutlon fro. Da. KlLMKH A Co., UlKOUAMTOK, K. Y. on Iram Derr's land, near A. J. Derr's store, Jackson township, Pa. Shingles, Plastering l: HsmlociS a:,l h cut i: tills, We have saw mills on this tract running daily, and have there on hand and can cut timber &c. at any time, Slilnt'lea, Nol.allS and S In. selected, !. BOM Nn 1. nil r. mid Hln. heat. ulnn. i-J.NI M riastertng lath, 4 ft. lonit, ft.M M " 8 ft. long, ii.iiSM Hemlock, common stas, tH.uo M For special orders and for Term &c , write or call at oflice of k I Blocmsburtr. Fa. 8-8Wy 'S - for Infants Castor! a Is so well adapted to children that I recommend It as superior toany prescription known to mo," IL A. Arcrkb, M. D., JU Bo. Oxford BU, Brooklyn, N. T. "Tk use of 'Cantoris, Is so universal and Its merits so well known that It seems a work of supereroiratlon to endorse IU Few are tho Intelligent families who do not keep Castorla within easy reach." Cauxm ILuemt, ft. P., Kew York City. Tns Ckktaiti D OXFOR ...1TE"W.. EOR SPRING Largest County. Prices the Lowest. Jones & Main Street, IF YOU ARE IN NEED OF CARPET, MTTDG, or OIL CLOTH, YOU WILL FIND A NICE LINE AT W. M. HOWIE'S 2nd Door above Court House. A large lot of Window Curtains in stock. They are here in all the newest and dressiest shapes select ed from the best shoemakers patronage ot my mends has enabled me to put my shoe stock in the front rank which makes your shoe buying a pleasure. Spring and Summer weight Underwear. Hosiery, corsets, etc. of the best makes and the best assort ment at the lowest prices. Cohijes Iron' and Main Sts. E. A. RAWLINGS. PKALER IN All Kinds of Meat. Beef, Veal, Lamb, Mutton, Pork, Hams, Bacon, Tongues, Bclogna, &c. Free Delivery to all parts of the town. CENTRE STREET, BLOOMSBURG, PA. JttarTelephone connection. and Children. Castorla cures Colic, Constipation, four Ptomaeh, Dlarrha-a, rractatlon, Kills Worms, girt sleep, awl promote d (rest Ion, Without Injurious medlcat Ion, "For several year I hare recommend your 'Castorin,1 and shnll always continue ts do so as It has invariably produced benefkl result" Enwnt F. Fumsc, if. D., 123th Street and 7th Ave., New York City Coktaut, 77 Mnuur Bramrr, Kw York Crrr, TIES and SUrvilViEP. Stock in the Walter BLOOMSBURG, PA. in the land. The very liberal fy H fAOOrC. ALL, OUR GRADUATES GOT GOOD POSITIONS This year. In fact the dent itul fur book-keepers anil stcnoi;r.iir:or was greater than the supply nnd many students were given piiinn before they graduated. Every student has pinven competent. Hie attendance was much larger than we had dreamed possible, and tl"' outlook for the fall term is even brighter. THE SCRANTON BUSINESS COLLEGh" is an Emphatic Sheets. Write for the new College Journal. It is free. Bl'CK, WHITMORU Hi CO., ITIUcf pals, A DA MS A VK. t LIS VKS .ST., 8CK N. rM$&?$ . tar vt sue. i.ai,' FOTO GRAPHS AM. SIZES, NEW STYLUS. Halnli G. Phillip, Oruuud Floor tinUuiy, opposite Ceutrul lluu-l, BLOOMSBURG, PA, IHII.I.IfM nt-na tlte KOJiftl. v-K-iy GET YOUR JOB PRINTING DONE AT THE COLUMBIAN Of'FICK 17