THE COLUMBIAN, BLOOMSBURG, PA. SUB LOST HER JEWELS. An KpUodr of Hirer Steamboat Pori fin? Rested hy n ( timing Mnrrhiae. Fpcakliifr of the MarlboroiiKh-Vandor. Hit ctiKajrpment, hero Is something tlinl Is Idn In It: one nlrht, away bnrk yon der In the Intter ntxtlrs, 1 was a rasHon ger on a. steamboat the Richmond runnltifr from Louisville to New Or lonns. It wag a down trip, and the bont had readied the "Court Country," that rKlon lying alonsr the Mississippi bo low Natche to the Bellic. The verse! was Bulling; nmoothly down the majestic stream, and It wa long after midnight. The great and rnipcrb cabins were as quiet as the tipper floors of a grand hotel at such an hour, save that a party of four gentlemen flaying .whim In the forward part of the main saloon kept up the faint, low conversa tion necessary to the game. 'Twas perhaps 1 o'clock when the card jilnyers and those who were awake In their berths on that deck were startled by a scream from the ladles' cabin, and there came rushing down toward the clerk's oftlce a handsome matron en deshabille. Clinging to the lady's skirts nnd crying n sympathy with her mother's distress was a little girl of six or eight years, perhaps ten. "My diamonds are gone!" the matron said, In a husky voice to the alarmed right clerk. A thief, who had probably watched for this opportunity for years had reached over the transom of the lady's state room from the outside and had ut fiway and carried off the pocket o? her dress containing $100,000 worth of treat Jewels. Probably he went asho -e et the next landing after the theft had lieen accomplished. At any rate, he made good his escape, and the Jewels mere nover heard of again by their owner. The company owning the boat In the lawsuit that followed proved that a safe was kept on the boat for the express purpose of caring for valuable property or Jewels or money of the passengers, and the plaintiff lost the case. The lady was Senora Tznaga, wife of a wealthy Cuban; the little girl was Consuelo, afterwards Duchess of Man chester, then Duchess Dowager, now IDuchess of Devonshire, and for her was named Consuelo Vanderbllt, whose mother was a girlhood friend of Con euelo Yznaga, and who Is to be the Duchess of Marlborough. Chicago Times-Herald. The Man at the Lever. ' The locomotive engineer Is a remark ably placid fellow, with a habit of de liberate precision in his look and mo lons. He occasionally turns a calm ey to his gauge and then resumes his quiet watch ahead. The three levers which he has to manipulate are under his hand for Instant use, and when they are used It Is quietly and In order, as an organ ist pulls out his stops. The noise In th cab makes conversation difficult, but not as bad as that heard In the car when passing another train, with or Without the windows open, and in look ing out of the engine cab the objects are approached gradually, not rushed past as when one looks laterally out of a par lor car window. The fact is that the engineer does not look at the side he Is looking ahead and therefore the speed eeems less, as the objects are approach ed gradually. Those who have ridden at ninety miles an hour on a locomotive know that on a good road (and there are many such) the engine Is not shaken and swayed in a terrific manner, but Is rather com fortable, and the speed Is not so appar ent as when one Is riding in a parlor car, where only a lateral view Is had. The engineer can be very comfortable If he la quite Bure of the track ahead, and it Is only In rounding curves or In approaching crossings that he feels nervous, and it Is doubtful if It Is any mere strain to run a locomotive at high tpeed than to ride a bicycle through crowded thoroughfares. Judging by the countenances of the bicycle rider and the engineer, the engineer has tather the best of It. Railroad Gazette. Knitting Doer anil Hears. ' A deer and bear farm Is the latest In dustrial project for northern Wisconsin, and the men behind the' plan think that they have a fortune In sight. The farm i;t situated in the woods a few miles from the Great Northern road, and is already fairly well stocked with ani mals. The proprietors are James Allen an old woodsman and hunter, and Dr. Harrison, a New Yorker, who has been spending much time in the northwest. They propose to raise deer and bears for the market, for the meat as well as the fur. The plan is not to turn the animals loose in the woods, where they may be shot by every hunter who comes along, but to keep them In pens or corrals, where they can be attended by their keepers and watched over the samo as domestic animals. The Idea originated with Mr. Allen two or three years ago, and since then he has kept several male end female bears and a number of dter In separate pens near his home. He has found that the animals will mate n captivity as well as In the wild state, and has a number of cubs and fawns to prove his statements. Allen Is now engaged in enlarging his pens, buying up all the deer and bears he can find, and preparing for winter, when the stock will need more care and attention than at nny other time during the year. The Intention Is to feed the deer in much the Bame manner as sheep, whll9 the bears will, in addition to corn and potatoes, have more or less meat. Philadelphia Bulletin. A Napoleon of llartor. ' Bowling Green boasts of possessing the champion knife swapper. He Is a little boy, son of a preacher, and this la his record, as given by his father: "That boy, not many months since, worried me till I bought him a knife. Like a boy, he left it out one night and it got rusty. Then he lost Interest in It and began at once to swap it off. Well, the little rascal has naturally a knuck of trading, and, sir, he took that rusty knife and with a little work on it and a pood deal of talking, he suc ceeded in exchanging it for two knives. Those knives in turn he traded foi three knives, worked considerably on thoin, and got a cheap watch for th three. He kept trading till ho had con. eluded forty-seven different bargains most of them in his favor. At the end of the forty-seventh trade he owned a shotgun, a hound puppy, two Jack knives, and sixty-five cents in money betides other Binn.ll trinkets too nunier. us to mention. Dowllng Green Democrat ODDS AND ENDS. The Connecticut River was named by the Dutch Versche River, "fresh river." Welcome reports say there Is to bo a boom In shipbuilding down In Maine this winter. Now York hotel men have decided to do awny with hotel spreads on New Year's Day, The "toothpick" shoe Is not new. A man In llurllngton, Vt., has a pair that was made In 1706. An Alabama railroad has been sued fo:1 $10,000 damages because one of Its conductors, kissed a passenger agalnxt her will. The hotel proprietors In Cuba are re quired by law to alTlx a two-cent stamp on the register opposite the name of each guest. The table on Which Cromwell wrote when he affixed his signature to the warrant for the execution of Charles 1. was recently sold for 145. One of the most fatal of the diseases affecting persons employed In the se dentary occupation of telegraphing Is declared to be consumption. The Mormon Church authorities de clare that members of that church must not accept political nominations without the consent of the church. The Pectan, the largest tank oil steamer ever built, has Juxt been com pleted at West Hartlepool. She Is 88S feet long by 48 broad and 3 deep. The Government of Canada has pro hibited the sale of Intoxicants among the Indians of Hudson llay Territory, and punishes severely any violation of this law. A Swiss scientist has been testing the presence of bacteria in the moun tain air, and finds that not a stnglo microbe exists above an altitude of 2, 000 feet "Japan for the Japanese!" This is the latest rallying cry of the Mikado's subjects, and it Is the cause of much disturbance among the foreigners dom iciled in the Island empire. A new woman's club has JuBt been formed In Chicago, which has taken the name of the White City Club. It will admit men to membership, but will not allow them to hold office or vote. A Brooklyn young lady, who was rather stout, tried a quack preparation for reducing her flesh. She lost some flesh through its use, and also her mind, and la now in an insane asylum. Philadelphia has made a new depart ure in the matter of night schools, and hereafter one of the schools will be de voted to a course of lectures on the history and working of our political system. GREAT MEN OF THE DAT. Senator John Sherman has endorsed William McKlnley, now Governor of Ohio, as Republican candidate for Pres ident. The general consensus of opinion seems to be that Rudyard Kipling Is a genius in spite of the fact that he mokes cigarettes. William H. Gladstone called the Sul tan of Turkey "a curse God has given to mankind." The Grand Old Man still has perfect control of his famous vo cabulary:' At Amesbury, Mass., Gov. Morton is having a four-passenger hunting-cart constructed. A lunch-box and an Ice tank are a part of the article's equip ment. President Cleveland Is looking for ward to a hynt for squirrels In the oak woods lying back of his country seat at Woodley. The President spent several days hunting squirrels In these woodj last season. The squirrels are unusuul ly numerous this year. Gen. Eckert, president. of the West ern Union Telegraph Company, talking from Pike's Peak with friends in his New York office, might be a subject for contemporaneous artists to work on. What it meuns to the world practical electricians know and others ought to ascertain. Mme. Janauschek despairs of the modern stage. Tanks, railroads, saw mills, monkeys, horses and cows and a throng of brazen-faced females, very lively young women who scream and howl, as Boubrettes, In a production of vulgar farce-comedy, usurp the ground made sacred by histrionic art and genius. That is the substance of her wail. INDUSTRIAL NOTES. A gold mine near Sitka is so excep tionally well placed that $2.50 per ton ore is profitably worked. The bicycle craze has started many new Industries for instance, the mak ing of leggings, for which big factories now exist. Salt-marsh Bedge, consolidated In blocks by tremendous pressure, fur nishes a cheap paving material in Vir ginia and Pennsylvania. The Roman builders were perfectly acquainted with one of the most mod ern wrinkles of fireproof construction the use of porous or hollow bricks In flat arches for the sake of lightness. The principle is now well established that a city has no legal right to pollute the water of a river which flows thence past other towns. IN A DREAM. It is said that on the night before the death of young John W. Mackay his friend and companion, Mr. Dlgby, dreamed that he witnessed precisely such an accident as on the day follow ing he witnessed. It was a man in Saco, Me., whose sleep, usually Bound and dreamless, was bo disturbed the other night that he awoke and arose to find his barn floor on fire. He was Just in time to put out the ilames. Mrs. John Held, of Point Lick, Ky., went visiting recently and dreamed that some one had entered her ccl.ar at home and stolen some of her pre serves. And they had! When she went home thirty-two quarts of stuff were missing, or, rather, mlt'sed. Dreams quite often work by contrar ies, though, as in the case of a llttU girl who took her small brother on a Kentucky railroad train, fell asleep and dreamed her brother had fallen off. Still in her sleep, she dragged him to a window, raised it, and would have Jumped out had not th other passen gers Interfered. ' A CYCLING IFJSTER 'S THE RESULTS OF LONG, HARD RIDING. FULLY 3,000 MILES ON HIS WHEEL He Makes Some Reflections on the Benefits of the Sport and Tells of its Dangers. i i from th Prtu, V!: Jinl?- 'I- The Rev. ffm. P. F. Ferguson, whose pic ture we give above, will not be unfamiliar by sight to many readers. A young man, he has till had an extended experience as foreign missionary, teacher, editor, lecturer and pastor that has given him a wide ac quaintance in many parts of the country. In an interview a few days ago he said : " In the earlr aummer of '94 I went nnnn tour through Canada on my wheel. My route was from Utica to Cape Vincent thence by tteamer to Kingston, and from there along the north shore of the lake to Toronto and round to Niagara Falls. I arrived at Cape Vincent at 6 o'clock, having ridden against strong neaa wind ail aay. "After a delightful sail through the Thous and Islands, I stepped on shore in that quaint old city of Kingston. A slight shower had fullen and the atreeta were damp, so that wis dom would have dictated that I. leg-weary as I waa, should have kept in doors, but so anxious was I to aee the old city that I apent the whole evening in the atreeta. "Five o'clock the next morning brought a very unwelcome discovery. I was lame in both anklea and knees. The head wind and the damp atreeta bad proved an unfortunate combination. I gave, however, little thought to it, aupposing it would wear off in a few hours, ana the first flush of sunlight saw me speeding out the splendid road that leads to ward Napanee. "Night overtook me ata little village near I'ort Hope, but found me still lame. I rested the next day, aud the next, but it waa too late; the mischief waa doue. I rode a good many miles during the reat of the season, but never a day and seldom a mile without pain. "The winter cams and I nut awav mv wheel, saying ' now I shall get well,' but to my disappointment I grew worse. Home days my knees almost forbade walking and my anklea would not permit me to wear Klines. At times I suffered severe pain, so severe as to make study a practical initios nihility, yet it must lie understood that I concealed the condition of affairs as fur us possible. from being local the troulilo beRon to spread slightly and my anxiety inert-used. 1 consulted two physicians and followed their excellent advice, hut without result. So the winter passed. Our day in Mareh 1 liappentd to take in niy hand u newspaper in v. Iiicli u axa Iwsk This! That when yon are looking for a place lo purchase meals, thill we hare recently otiened a Hfo hti'iit market in the Kiwis liiilUltug, fvir tieroMiidi mid Jejtermm Hirer!, irhrre you mill reiviv polite ait'l )irom, attention, nd get the lieat ijuttltiy of meats). os Jchn I Mm. WE ARE NOT CRYINC because there are so many bakers uud confectioners In liloomauui g, BUT WE ARE REJOICINC over the fact that the many cus tomers who uau our brcud and cukes YEAR IN AND YEAR OUT have long since learned thai they are the bent. Our stock of liirlst uias candy Is large and open Mr Inspection. It Is pure, and the price Is right. II. A. McOEK, Ea3t Street Baker. R A I N1 M 110 iAACSM to A VtlnrVtlst ItnlliqlltA - element. We don't want it all the time, but there is one thing we do want. It is MEAT. Last article is indispensible. Then, why not get the best? Get it from a butcher that un derstands his business depends on his good meat. Such a man is WOLVERTON, IRON STREET, BLOOMSBURG, PA. 1 Ulica, if. T. good deal of space wan taken by an article In relation to l'r. Williams' rink I'ills. I did not at that time know what they were supposed to cure. I should have naid no attention to tlm article had I not caught the name of a lady whom I knew. Heading, I found that she, in similar circumstances, hail been greatly bene- lit etl by the use ot 1 ink I'ills, and knowing her as I did 1 had no doubt of the troth of the statement that she had authorized. The first box waa not cone hefore T save a change, and the third had not been finished before all signs of my rheumatic troubles were gone to stay. " I say ' gone to stay,' for though thcrsj has been every opportunity for a return of the trouble, I have not felt the first twinge of It. I have wheeled thousands of miles an never before with ao little discomfort. I have had some of the most severe tests of strength and endurance, and have come through them without an ache. For ex ample, one afternoon I rode seventy miles, preached that night and made fifty miles of the hardest kind of road before noon the next day. Another instance was a 4 Cen tury run,' the last forty miles of whirh were made in a downpour of rain through mud and slush. " You should think I would recommend them to others t Well. I have, and have naa me pleasure or seeing very good results in a number of instances. Yes, I should feel that I waa neglecting a duty if I failed to suggest Pink Pills to any friend whom I knew to be suffering from rheumatism. THB PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH IN WHITE BORO, OF WHICH KKV. WH. KEKGLSON IB PASTOR. "No. that Is not the onlv di cure. I personally know of a number of cures from other troubles, but I have needed them only for that, though it would be but ..... w ui j gtrueiui liuailll litis uecn better this summer than ever before in my life. Dr. Williams Pink Pills for Pale Peoplo are now given to the puldio us an unfailing blood builder uud nervo restorer, curing all add that my general health has been forms ot weakness arising from a watery con dition of the blood or shattered nerves. The pills are sold by all dealers, or will be sent post paid on receipt of price, CO cents a box, or six boxes for W.flo (they lire never sold in nuiK or ny me ns), hy addressing Dr. Vi il liaiuV .Medicine Concujy, ScuuiecUuly, N.Y, SHERIFF'S SALE. lly virtue of a writ of Fl. Fa., issued out of the Court of I'omaion Pleas of Columbia county, Penno., aud to mo directed, there will be ex posed to public enle at fie Court IIouso In bloomsburg, I'a., on SATURDAY, MARCH 28, 1896, at S o'clock p. m., all that certain pleco or par- eel of land situate in Flshlngcrcvk township, ColmnbU tounty and 6tate ot Penna., bounded and described as follows, to-wlt: Bounded on the north by Huntingdon creek, on tue east arid south by public road, and on the west by Abraham Evelund, containing ONE ACHE or land more or less, whereon are erected a FRAME DWELLING HOUSE, and outbuildings. 8 led. taken Into execution at Vie suit of Carey A Pealer vs. Ellsha K. Knbblns, and to be sold as the property ot F.llsha K. Kobblns. J. D. McUENHY, Bbittain, Attorney In fact. Sheriff. AUDITOR'S NOTICE. Estate of Jacob Andes, late of Hemlock toirnshtj) tieceutit'il. The unilerainneil, nil aiulilor annntnled bit the Orthaue' Court of lUAuwhla County, todintrilnte the fund Intlif luind of the accountant to and among the pal-lien entitled thereto, trill nit at his oitlce in BlooiiMlmry, Pa., on Tuendnu, April 7lh, 1S!W, at 10 o'clock a. 111., trhen and it here all eoim hariny datum againet naid estate must ; pear and prore the same or be debarred from coming tit on mid fund, W. II. SSYDER, S-ll-ffl. Auditor. ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTIPTiL Estate of Fred Schirtnn, lale of the Totm. of liloomsbura. deceased. Xotlce Is hereby glren that lelttrs of admtnls. Irattun on the estate of fYed Schirlnn, late of the Tmen of IVoomshurg, deceased, hare been grant ed to Die undersigned adiiitnitralrl, lo irliom all p rsons IndrMrd to said estate are riipiested to make itayments, and those hat ing claims or demands will niukikiinieHthe same irtthont de lay to CA Til A HIK 8VU H7.V.V, Herring, Att'j, Administratrix, H-6-rtt. tlloumsburg, fa CHARTER NOTICE. In the Court of Common rieas of Columbia count it, lt'iinstiliinia. Sotice is tteret'U glren tha' an application irllt be jimdn lo the snnl court on the HiVh dag of Marcn, iK-.it,, at MiorliH'k- a. m., under the "Act to , procidr for the incoriiorattan and regulation of cerium 1-orinnattons," approved April ito, 18TI, I and lis supiilements, bit I. I), White, J. K. Lwk- ara, it. u. Mwnraod, II, O. Holmes mid W. v. Jurtl for the charter of an Intended corporation lo lie called The Industrial Cluli, the character mid olijecl of which is the maintenance of a club for social enjotrmenl, and Jor this puriose to hare, pus ess and enjoy all the rights, benefits and privileges conferred by the said Act and ill supplrmtmts. MAOlI.h, 8-47-41. WISTUHijTKKX, Solicitors. EXPERIENCE, -PROFESSIONAL CARDS.K N. U. FUNK, ' ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Mrs, Ent'l Building, Court Hons Alley, , BLOOMSBURG, PA. A. L. FRITZ, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Post Office Building, and floor, BLOOMSBURG, PA. C. W. MILLER, attorney-at-i-aw, Wirt's Building, 2nd floor, BLOOMSBURG, PA, JOHN U. FRKK7S. JOHN 0. DABX AM REEZE & IIARMAN, ATTOHNSjYS ANI COUNSELLORS AT LAW, BLOOMSBURG, PA. Offlces: Confront., nrat door below opera House GEO. E. EI WELL, ATTORNEV-Al-LAW, Columbian building, 2nd floor, BLOOMSBURG, P,(L VM. h MA GILL, ATTOXNEY-AT IjW. BLOOMSBURG, TA. Offi ce in Peacock's building, Market square. W. II. SNYDER, ATTORNEY- T-LAW, Office 2nd floor Mrs. Ents building, BLOOMSBURG, PA. ROBERT R. LITTLE, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Columbian Building, 2nd float, BLOOMSBURG. PA. THOMAS B. HANLY, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Office in Peacock's Building, Market Sq. BLOOMSBURG, PA. H. V. WHITS. A. . TOST WHITE & YOST ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW Wirt Building, Court House Square. BLOOMSBURG, PA. H. A. McKILLIP. ATTORNEY AT LAW. Columbian Building, 2nd Floor. BLOOMSBURG, PA. IKELER & IKELER, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. Office back of Farmers' National Bank. BLOOMSBURG, PA. R. RUSH ZARR, Attorney-At-Law. BLOOMSBURG, PA. Office in Clark's Block, corner of 2nd and Centre Streets, i-i2-'o4 W. A. EVERT, Attorney-At-Law. BLOOMSBURG, PA. (Office over Alexander & Co. Wirt building. EDWARD J. FLYNN, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, CENTRALIA, PA. forace Llddlcot building, Locust avenue. JOHN M. CLARK, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW AZTDJOKXaOl Of THE PEACE, Mojer Bros. Building, 2nd flooc, BLOOMSBURG, PA. J. IL MAIZE, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, INSUIAJKOI AXD RIAL ESTATE AGIST Office in Lockard's Building. BLOOMSBURG, PA. B. FRANK ZARR, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Clark's Building, cor. Maia and Ceatza SU BLOOMSBURG, Fa. WCan be consulted in German. W. II. RHAWN, ATTOlUtEY-AT-LAW, Office, oorner of Third and Maia Stmts, CATAWISSA, PA. J. B. McKELVY, M. D., SURGEON AND PHYSICIAN, Office, North sida Main St., below Market, BLOOMSBURG, PA. Dr. J. C. RUTTER, PHYSICIAN AND SURGION, Office, North Market Street, BLOOMSBURG, PA BriOUL ATTtNTION TO PlSIASSS OPCBIL H. BIERMAN, M. D. HOMOEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN AND SU ornci boors: Office & Residence, 4th xt. Until OA. m., 1 to and 7 to 8 p. u. BLOOM8BC10, PA. S. B. ARMENT, M. D. Office and Rerit'crce No. 18. Vi F '' b DISEASES OF TIIK THHOAT AND Nop! SPECIALTY (8 to 10 A. mo 4 1'. M 1 7 to 9 P. 8 to 10 A.M. BLOt'H.M'l aQ ornci BOCRft. Ft. DR. ANDREW GRAYDON, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, -Bloomsduro, Pa.- Office and residence In Prof. Wallcr'a rod market street telephone. HONORA A. BOBBINS, M. JJ., Office, W est First Street, BLOOMSBURG, PA. KTSpeclal attention given to the ee and the fitting of glasses. Dr. F. W. REDEKER, PHI SICIAN AND 8UKGEON, Office and Residence, t'entre St., be'wwn 4th and 6th Sts. Diseases of the ear, nose and throat a specialty. BLOOMSBURG, PA. 18 to 10 a. m. OFFICE HOURS! -(I to S p. m. (7 to 9 p. m. J. J. BROWN, M. D., Market Street. Bloomsbvrg, P. THE EYE A SPECIALTY. Eyes treated, tested, fitted with glased and Artificial Eyes supplied. D ours 10 to 4. Telephone Con rc rloa DR. M. J. HESS, GVduate of the Philadelphia Dental Col lege. Office 2nd floor front, Lockard t Build ing, corner of Main and Centre Streets, BLOOMSBURG, PA., Dentist v in all its branches, Work guar antecd as presented. Ether and Cas ad ministered or electric vibratos and l ocal Anesthetics used for the painless extra, tioa of teeth free of charge when artificial teeth are inserted Lockard's Building, 2nd floor, Corow Mainland Centre. Dr. W. II. HOUSE, SrjKGEON DENTIST, Office, Barton's Building, Main below Market BLOOMSBURG, Pa. All styles of work done in a superior tuar:':T, and all work warranted as represented. TEETH EXTRACTED WITHOUT PAIN, by the use of Gas, and free of chargt -Va artificial teeth are inserted. 9"To be open all hours during the dar. DR. C. S. VAN HORN, DENTIST. Office corner of East and Main strect to. posite Town Hall. Office hours 8:80 to 12 a. m ; 2 to 5 p. iu. BLOOMSBURG, PA. C. WATSON McKELVY, FIRE INSURANCE AGENT. (Successor to B. P. Hartman ItPTirPRPnlfl Iwnla.nf tk. n. . tes In the world, among which are : CASH TOTAL BrBFLrl FrankHnofPhlla.. Oueen. ot N. Y. . 600,000 8,M8,M5 i 5.3 V est cheat er, N.Y. soo.oeo 1,7M,.W -2 N. America, Phlla. 8,00.,tioo 9,730,8 ,. raj UFFICE IN I. W. MCKELVT'S 8TO. 3"Losses promptly adjusted and paiH. M. P. LUTZ & SON, (SUCCESSORS TO FREAS BROWN ; INSURANCE AND REAL ESTATE AGENTS AND BROKERS. N. W. Corner Main and Centre. Strw;., Bloomsburg, Pa. Represent Seventeen as good Compani jes as mere are in tne world ami ad losses promptly adjusted and pai! at their Office. CHRISTIAN F. KNAPP, FIRE INSURANCE, BLOOMSBURG, PA. Home. Of N. Y. i Merrhnnta tt HI ...... J. N. J.; Clinton, N. Y. ; Peoples', N.Y.; f-d. int7. I'a ! German Amoritin Tna o' - tt.nu aua v -U i r York; Greenwich Insurance Co.. New Vn-ki Tavcoa a"... T.. . ' '7 iu. o.( jersey city, N. T. These old cornnrntinno bi-o . . m by age and fire tested, and have neve r had a loss settled by any court of law. Th -lt assets are all invect i..- . . ... ounu Ki,uiuir., hjsi liable to the hazard of fire only. Losses promptly and honestly adjusted sad paid as soon as determined, by Christ p, Knapp, Special Agent and Adjuster, BLxic. burp, Pa. The nennli. nf rviiomi,;. ... v ..kj patronize the agency where losses, if r, are settled and Citizens. ' ' " EXCHANGE HOTEL, G. SNVnER, Proprietor, (Opposite the Court House" BLOOMSUURG, FA. T n ri'f n ii rt r rt.i v...i !...., ....... .1 . i rooms, hot and cold water, and all mii. conveniences CITY HOTEL. W. A. Ilurtzel, 1'rop. TctPr F. ltuldy, Munagor io. 121 est Main Street, ULOOMSBURG, PA. CaTI-iure and curvtnient snmi.U L'alh rc-onis, hot and cold water, ni d all modern conveniences, i'ar stocked wilh best wines and liquois. First-class livery attached.