THE COLUMBIAN, BLOOMSBURG, PA. County Superintendent's Annual Report of the School of Columbia County, The inost promising features of the work during the past year were the ircreise in the number of pupils at tending school and greater regularity in attendance. While more interest was manifested in the woik this year than ever before by palroi s, directors, teachers ami pupils, yet there is room for improve ment in various ways in many districts. The majority of our directors are cj reful, capable and conscientious, and seem ever ready to do whatever in their imlment tends to make the schools more efficient. The attendance of directors at the directors association at our last coun. ty institute was the largest ever known at a regular meeting of the association. Excellent addresses were made by Superintendents li. R. Johnson of Union county and J. George IJenht of Lycoming cou lty. It seems no more than right that directors should receive actual ex penses for attendance at the sessions of the association for the one day during the county institute. It was suggested at the last meet ing that as the district receives through the directors who attend, the Lenefils of the association, that it would be proper for the district to pay i!ie actual expenses of those who attend the meeting. The county institute was held October 21 25. All the teachers i.i the county except two were present. One of these was absent on account of sickness. The institutes during the past few years have been very largely attended by teachers, directors and citizens, and have been unusually interesting and successful. Interesting and excellent instruc tion was given Ly Dr. Arnold Tom- kins of Chicago, 111., Supts. R R Johnson of Union county, J. George Uecht of Lycoming county, Miss Margaret McCloskey of the Lock Haven Normal School, Mrs. L. N. Allen of Yonkers, N. Y., Prof. Wm. Noetling and Dr. J. P. Welsh of the Lioomsburg Normal, and Plot. E. K. Richardson of Berwick. Prof. J. A. ' Sp;nkel had charge of the music. The lectures were given by Dr. James lledley, J)r. Byron King and Rev. Tho.nas Dixon, Jr., and a concert, by me Anon concei t company. Eight local institutes were held. They were better attended by teachers, directors and citizens than ever before. Special efforts were made to give natural science a prominent place 011 the program of these institutes and Prof. Cope of the Normal did good work in this subject. Valuable instruction was also given by other members of the P'aculty of the Normal as well as by many of the teachers of the county. It is necessary to state this year again that a number of the out-buildings are not what they should be and that therefore the law in this particu Jar has not yet been complied with m some districts. One new school house was built during the year and many were re paired and made more attractive and co.. .'ortable. The P. O. S. of A., erected poles at a number of school houses in the county and presented those schools with beautiful flags. This society is to be commended for the good work it is thus doing While many of our schools have unabridged dictionaries, some libra ries, or the beginning of a library, and a few have good supplementary read ing yet there is a great need of im mediate attention to these matters and improvement in them. Each school should have an un abridged dictionary and a library. Our directors as a rule have been careful and wise in refraining from spending large sums of money for u..e'ess charts, but they might invest to great advantage more money in dictionaries and supplementary read ing. In many districts teachers are more carefully selected, and most di rectors are now fully awake to the fact that the little people, or primary pupils, should have the very best teachers. There nre in the county two hun dred a;.d thiity (230) schools. Of these eighty nine are graded. Twenty two (2t) school rooms have not suffi cienc seating capacity. One hundred and thirty-seven school houses are considered good. In two-hundred and two (203) school:; the Bible is read. We held twenty-five (25) examina tions and examined two-hundred and twenty-six (226) applicants. Of these forty three (43) were rejected. One hundred (100) of the teachers of the county are males and one-hundred and forty three (143) are females. Thirty five (35) is the highest average a.r,c of the teachers of any district and nineteen (19) the lowest average age of the teachers of any d strict. ' Fifty (50) teachers this year had no previous experience. Of these one (1) was a college graduate, three (3) came direct from the common schools, six (f) were educated in seminaries or academies, seven (7) were from High Schools, twelve (12) were Normal graduates, and twenty one (21) had attended Normal Schools. Ninety two (92) teachers had more than five years' experience in teach ing. One hundred and fourteen (114) held provisional certificates, thirty five (35) held professionals, eighteen (18) held permancnts, seven ty two (72) are Normal graduates, and two (2) college graduates have State certificates. One hundred and fifty-nine (1 cn) of our teachers attended Normal Schools, thirty-six (36) were educated in the common schools, forty five (45) in academies or seminaries, and three (3) are college graduates. Every school in the county was visited once, seventy (70) were visited a second time, and a number were visited three times. It was found at the time of the regular visit that one hundred and fifty-eight (158) schools had been visited by directors. During the past six years I have visited every school once each year ana always from seventy (70) to a hund.-ed (100) a second time. A teacher was employed to teach music regularly in the schools of Bloom and Catawissa. The work ac complished along this line in these schools shows that this was not only a desirable move but a successful one. The graded course of study prepar ed for the ungraded schools of the county and placed in them two years ago has done much to systematize the work m these schools and make it stronger and better. It is hoped that this course or a similar one, with all possible improvements, will be continued, "and that the time may soon come when each rural district in the county will regularly graduate each year a number of young men and young women who may most properly upon such graduation re ceive from the directors and the superintendent a common school di ploma. It is done in other counties and it can be successfully done in this as the work with the course during the past two years fully demonstrates. The Berwick directors have suc cessfully continued the cooking schoDl. This school is under the efficient supervision of Mrs. Kusel and it has proven an excellent thing for the young women of Berwick. The Berwick people may be proud of their cooking school, and this depart ment of their schools should receive the united and hearty support that it deserves. Our teachers as a rule, do faithful, hard, honest work. I shall ever gratefully remember the generous and kind help that so many of the teachers always so will ingly and cheerfully gave me. A few years ago not more than fifty per cent, of the teachers were regular readers of educational journals but to day less than seven per cent, do not read regularly such papers. The High Schools of the county graduated about the usual number. The Normal is in a very prosperous condition and continues to graduate large classes. Having been reliably informed at the County Institute in October by those requested to look into the matter that it was the intention of a large majority of the directors of the county to reduce the salary of the county superintendent at their next triennial convention, I informed the directors of the county and the pub lic immediately after the Institute that I could not, therefore, be a can didate for a third term. In conclusion, I desire to thank the directors, the teachers, the citizens and the pupils for the kind, generous, faithful support given me during the past six years, and I trust my succes sor may be accorded similar kind treatment and hearty co-operation. Wm. C. Johnston. Reading Employes' Relief fund. The statement of the Reading O Railroad Relief Association for May shows payments for benefits aggrega ting ip1S.030.30. Of this total there was paid on account of deaths, $5,420 60; accident disablements, $5,544.50; sick disablements, $7,083.20, Eleven death claims were paid, five occurring from accidents and six from natural causes. The total number of new cases reported during the month was 573- Ttia Same the World Over, The following is the statement of some observing individual: "Never judge a person by his outside appear ance. A shabby old coat may enwrap a newspaper publisher, while a man wearing a plug hat and sporting a gold headed cane may be a delinquent subscriber. Taken in time Hood's Sarsaparilla prevents sciious illness by keeping the blood pure and all the organs in a healthy condition. Subscribe for the Columbian. ' TRY TRY AGAIN. Keeping vegetables with stalks in water till cooked. the Keeping eggs by burying in salt. Keeping carrots and turnips by burying in layers in a box of sand. For seeding raisins, pouring boiling water over them and then draining. coasting or broiling meat over as hot a fire as possible. Roasting potatoes with meat by paring and putting -on a rack in the pan. Hickory-nut macaroons made of five unbeaten eggs, one pound of chopped meats, one pound of powder ed sugar, one tablespoonful of flour, two small teaspoonfuls of baking powder, dropped in tiny cakes in wax ed paper in the pan. Rubbing irons with a little wax to prevent starch sticking. Taking ink stains from wash goods by rubbing with yolk of egg before washing. Adding a pinch of salt to the white of egg in beating to make it froth. Removing schorch from linen by spreading over them this mixture : The juice of two onions, one-half ounce of white soap, two ounces of fnllers earth and one half pint of vinegar, all boiled together and cool ed before using. Peach pudding sauce of the extra juice in a can of fruit, with a little sugar and water and a few drops of almond extract : boil up and serve. Good Housekeeping. Don't think that your liver needs treating if you are bilious. It don't. It's your stomach. That is, your stomach is really what causes the biliousness. It has put your liver out of order. See what's the matter with your stomach. Sick stomach poisons liver and then there's trouble. Shaker Digestive Cordial cures stomach and then all's well. That's the case in a nutshell. Shaker Digestive Cordial is no secret. Formula's on every bottle. But it's the simple honest way it's made, the honest Shaker herbs and other ingredients of which it's com posed, that make it so efficacious. Any real case of indigestion and biliousness can be cured with a few bottles of Shaker Digestive Cordial, Try it. Sold by druggists, price 10 cents to $1.00 per bottle. G0NGRES3 AND THE CANNON- How Monumont Associations Are Supplied With War Relics. " Congress keens rinht on nassinir resolutions donating condemned can non to the at Lous battlefield, Grand Army and monument associations throughout the country " said an officer of the ordinance corps at the war Uepartment, " though it is a well-kno,vn fact that the Government has hati no condemned cannon on hand for twenty years or more. All that were left on hand after the war were given away in ten years, and since then to supply these donations the Government has had to make hundreds and hundreds of cannon for the express purpose of condemning tnem. " As a rule these soldier monu ments are placed on a square or ob long base and four cannon are need ed, one for each corner, to properly set them off. With the cannon al ways go the carriages j kept properly painted they will last practically for ever. The present Congress has do nated 120 cannon so far, and proba cy lorty more will be ad-led before they sojourn. As there is on hand but seventy-five cannon for which there is no present use, seventy-five or one hundred will have to be made immediately, and ' also immediately condemned, so as to comply with the law." Washington Letter in the Chicago Record. The season is annroachincr when one opens his mouth at the risk of letting in a fly. Scientists claim that the common fly is not a very nutri tious article of food for human beings. To our knowledge, no one has ever contradicted the statement. The taste of flies is not pleasant, but that doesn't handicap them as a luxury. The pickling factories haven't intro duced them yet, and until then the savory olive will hold dominion over popular delicacies. Don't swallow more flies than you positively must. I hey iv:ually die a violent death and lr 'e th! .gs very unpleasant for the stomach. Never eat the wings of a fly. Science proves that they are quite indigestible. . Mo Crepe When you take Hood's fill. Tfir lig, nlilash loned, sugar-coated lulls, which U-.ir you all to lili'ces, are not In It witli Hood's. Kasy to tuko and easy to oneritto, Is true ol Hood's rills, which are up to date In ovry respect. Safo, certain and sure. All PiEls drncglsts. ar.0. C. I. Hood ft Co., Lowell, Muss. Tuo ouly IMUs to take with Hood's Kursapurilla. Hoods oat In the rain A good penciling in a cold rain is often the beginning of consumption. Yet no one claims that the germs of this disease existed in the rainwater. Then how was this brought about ? The exposure was followed by a cold ; the vitality was lowered; the cough cout.i.ucd for some weeks; the throat and lungs became congested ; and thus all the conditions were favorable for the growth of the consumption germs. of Cod-liver Oil,with hypophosphites, does net directly attack these germs and kill them. But it does tone up the whole system and restores the body to health before serious harm is tioiic. 1 lie germs ot consumption thrive best vvnen the system is weakened and the throat and lungs congested. Do not delay until it is too late, but treat your cough early. Scott's Emulsion is oue of the very best remedies. 50 cU. anJ i a SCOTT & llOWNE, Chemists, New York. ALEXANDER BROTHERS & CO. DEALERS IN Cigars, Tcfcacco. Candies, Fruits and Huts v SOLE AGENTS FOR Henry Maillard's Tine Candies. Fresh Every Week. ZFtsrrtsr-H Good3 .a. Specialtt, SOLE AGENTS FOR F. F. Adams & Co's Fine Cut Chewing Tobacco Sole Rgenla for the following brands of Cigars- H-aar Clay, Loaircs, Normal, Indian Priacoss, Samson, Silvor As Bloomsburg Pa. fiitefl Iow &qd Gfcod Woifk. For the finest and best stoves, tinware, roofing, spouting and general job work, go to V. W. Watts, on Iron street. Buildings heated by stram, hot air or hot water in a satisfac tory manner. Sanitary Plumbing a specialty. I have the exclusive control of the Thatcher steam, hot water and hot air heaters for this territory, which is acknowl edged to be the best heater on the market. All work guaran teed. W. W. WATTS, IRON STREET. SHOES I Our Spring Styles of Shoes aie nearly all. 25 years experience in shoe buying puts us in the Iront rank of shoe dealers. Comfort, style and durability are combined in our shoes. Co?.:;r:ii Irdv and Main Sts. I It's the Lame Leg that BeU the pace. A chain is no stronger than its wuakest link. For X weak spots anil placw that seem big because they hurt, try Johnson's Belladonna Plasters. In Pat's phrase, they "suck out" the soreness and pain. Look for the Red Cross. No others bear that Bign. It means excellence plui. JOHNSON & JOHNSON, Manufacturing Chemists, New York. Those who once buy SERLIU'S keep coming back mixture make a the flavor of cof fee delicious. Ail Grotcrt. For Your Prutcction wo positively Btutn t hat I his remedy does CATARRH nul coMt.lii imucuiy or any ul:icr 1i:jui1jus drutf. 1.1. V't CREAM PALM rieonses the Nnsal Passives, AliayH In 11. unm.it Ion. Ileitis the Soil's, I'mluctH tlw Membrane from i 'olds, Keslores the hensun 01 Taste and tiiurll. IT WILL cure.COLD'nHEAD A nurtli'le Ih nnnll,1 flltiiltlv lotrt thn nexuttt and Is atfretmlilo. l'rlce so cents ut Di ul-l'Isis or by mull. KLV Hid (TllJJKS, 50 VUrruu Street, New York. WANTED-A MAN In oanli county for onn year to hire and supciln tend agents. tC5amonth. HUmp ae, exper ience and rcfrutu'OH. Ki, close stamp. TUB IlfllllAKD ro 1023 Filbert Street., J'lilludol plla. I'a. S-J8-1L d GET YOUK JOB PRINTING DONE AT THE COLUMBIAN OFFICE adding a lit-J tie of Seellff'sl m tr rirrlimrv 1 'MBAlWXi m Illoosnsburjjy Pa. ln.35.1y W. H. floore. Something New ! Fred Kuiner's improved Ar tificial Stone Pavement. All kinds of cement work. Prices low and all work guaranteed. All orders by mail promptly attended to. P. O. Box 374. BLOOMSBURG, PA. Removed ! SCHUYLER'S HARDWARE, TO MAIN and IRON STS. The "TWIN COMET' and' LITTLE GIANT" Lawn Sprinklers, BEST MADE. Unique, Eilicient, Labor Suv ing. Will eprinkle 4 times greater area than any other Sprinklers made. Highest Award at tha Chicago Exposition. Cnn la Keen In ttiirruHmiHlrrUUnu!r ir thn Kit-tin- ni litis imwiin iirr Ant mid Mm ki l titg., Utuuiiutiwry. I Send for circulars giving testimonials ami prices. E. Stebbins Mfg. Co., tiOLB MAS If FA CTUH RUN, Springfield, Mass. I jr-Aguncy for Woomslnirg at the UOLUM IHAN 0"loe- 8-1 -aiu. Fine PHOTO GRAPHS and CRAYONS at McKillip Bros., Bloomsburg. The best - are the-cheapest. THE MARKETS. W.OOMSBUKG MARKETS. COHRKC'TKU WFEILT. BXTA1L rHTCS9, Butter per lb $ Eggs per dozen 14 Lard per lb .10 Hani per pound .u rork, wlmle, per pound ,06 Beef, quarter, per pound .... .07 Wheat per bushel ,qo Oat3 " " 28 Rye " " '. .50 Wheat flour per bbl '. . 4.00 Hay per ton 12 to $14 Potatoes per bushel .ao Turnips " " , 1j Onions " " 40 Sweet potatoes per neck ae to Tallow per lb .1 Shoulder " l Side meat " " to Vinegar, per qt OJ unecl apples per lb oe Dried cherries, pitted 10 Rispberries T Cow Hides per lb .1 Steer " " ZZ CalfSkin Sheep pelts ' ' Shelled com per bus Corn meal, cwt 3 00 gran. " i!oo unon Middlings " 1. CO 1 00 .13 Chickens per lb new old. Turkeys " " l2I r,pp?c " .12 Ducks " " .10 08 COAL. No. 6, delivered a jo " 4 and s " 3.50 " 6 at yard a.aj " 4 and s at yard 35 Bring the Bablss. INSTANTANEOUS PROCESS USED. Slrictlv first-L-lau mm ' , f j 1 1 . 1 n j 11 .T, crayons and convs nt rcfunnnlJn n,;.. w- use exclusively the Collolion Anstolyi'e pa- ..., in sctuiing (jrenicr neamv ol linisn and permanency of results. CAPWELL, MARKET SQUARE GALLERY. l-2i-iy. Over Ilartman's Store. CITY HOTEL. W. A. Ilnrtzel, Prop. l'tter F. Heldy, Manager IV o. 121 West Main Street, llLOOMSllURO. PA. CiT't.nrpe nnil r- .. Diiiiiic IUUII18 Uatn rooms, hot anil cold water, and al modern conveniences. l!nr ttn lnl iik u. wines and liquors. First-class livery attached EXCHANGE HOTEL, G. Snyder, Proprietor, (Opposite the Court House BLOOMSBURG, TK. Lari?e and convenient cnmnl rooms, hot and cold water, and all nioUern conveniences HIRES RnntPi tains the best herbs, berries and roots nature makes for rootbeer making. Take no other. M i, on. bj Th. Ch.rl.. P. Him C-.., PhlMriiAl. The Leading Consenratori of America Carl Fahlten, Director. Vrn'TftRl Founded In jaw by -TV' CDVAl 1 f 0tfjZv't full information. l"? W. Hal, General Manacw. !?g Cm . g JJ rgP' 33 I 1