1 THE COLUMBIAN. BLOOMSBURG. PA. NOTES FROM GOTHAM, TWItlcs Is at present very quiescent Dnt tt Is expected that flllup wtll b gtren to It locally by the arrival o Richard Croker, who Is expected In i ftsw days. The local Tammany ma skin Is badly out of repair, and It l! to(rht by many that the rormei chief may be able to suggest a plan o reorganization that will prove accept able to the various conflicting elements it Is a little early, however, for polit ical reorganization. There Is a legis lative session to be held, the Greatet New York scheme to be set In opera tion, a new revision of the excise law to be undertaken, and new State and Inderal administrations to be Inaugu rated. Thomas Jefferson believed thai political parties had their origin in mis Dtelon and dissatisfaction, and doubt less the best time to reorganize a de feated party is when the political snemy has becenne fully occupied in en toying the sweets and responsibilities ot power, and the disappointed onet ire howling by day and scheming bj aight for an opportunity to got even lth the leaders who have failed to re irard them. That time will doubtless jome, but meantime the promises of re aawed prosperity, for whatever cause jontinue to absorb the attention of cap italists and speculator, and there t svery prospect that business activltj frill continue at least until after tlu Holiday season. ' The Horseless Mall Carriage. It Is rather surprising that the mo tor vehicle, which attracted so niucl attention In Europe and this couutrj a year ago. has entirely failed to tak with the public. There were publli competitors In Paris and Chicago, riva makers advertised the merits of theii designs largely, and it was freely pre dicted that the horseless vehicles woulc toon be common on our streets. It ap pears that the obstacle Is In the cosi rather in the merits of the new vehi cles. The present prices for a mot 01 jarrlage range from $3,000 to $10,000 and it is needless to say that the cosi la practically prohibitory. It Is prob1 able, however, that the motor vehlcl will soon begin to "mote." Manufac turers have seriously taken hold of th problem of produefng a cheap vehicle 4 Brooklyn concern promises to soon have a practical carriage on the mar ket at a cost of $000. It Is also stated that Second Assistant Postmaster General Ncilson, who has made a spe cial study of the subject, has a scheme to use a horseless mail carriage in th If city. One of the vehicles is now it course of construction, and if it should grove a success, it is proposed to have a number of them, and mail mattei will be taken directly from the street boxes, sorted during collection from box to box, and then carried dlrectlj t the postal cars at the various rail road stations. This change would re lieve the pressure at the branch sta tions and at the General Post-office. Rumors of changes In the excise lawi tills winter are exciting the liquor deal era of this city. It may be said that the Raines bill contained no serious ob stacle to the prosecution of the usual saloon trade. Under the hotel features of that law, the saloona were all rap idly transformed Into "hotels," and in this way secured an Immunity for all night and Sunday selling such as had not been enjoyed in years. President Roosevelt's police spies ceased to be & terror, and a wave of peace and con tentment spread over the liquor-die-penslng fraternity that obliterated the recollection even of the big State tax tee. The Raines law hotel has become a feature of our city life. It abounds everywhere. But It is only fair to say that never was the traffic more quietly conducted, and there has been little evidence from the outside of the evil which certain aggressive reformers de clare the new law has produced. The threats that the law will be so amend ed this winter as to wipe out most oi the present "hotels," as well as in creasing the tax, has produced no little commotion, and it is probable that the strange spectacle will be presented oi the saloon interests arousing them selves to fight as earnestly for the pres ervation of the present Raines law as they did against Its passage last winter Senator Raines is said to favor a re form of his own law. He Is chairman of a special Senatorial committee, ap pointed last year for the ostensible purpose of studying the operations ol the new law. It is reported that the committee will soon begin public ses sions. Among the changes Senator Raines is said to favor Is one increas ing the number of rooms necessary tc constitute a hotel. The present law requires only ten rooms even In large cities. It Is proposed to require at leas' twenty-five rooms .for each hotel lri cities of the tlrst-class, fifteen In cltlet of the second class ,and ten In all othei places. Such an amendment would re sult in closing hundreds of places in this city and Brooklyn, some of which oxisted as bona fide hotels years before the Raines bill was ever dreamed of. There seema to bo no limit to the de velopment of the bicycle idea. In th dreams of the enthusiasts, human mus cle, with the aid of crank and sprocket is destined to rival nil other kinds o: power as applied to epecd. It is seri ously proposed to apply the bicycle U railroad traflio. Thu Inventor of tlu WJ!jrirjnrjrii7'i'"iiiriiTiiTi,"iif The Licyclo Car. bicycle csr is Reuben H. Plass, and hi claims thsit he lma mado arrangemcnti with one of the loading railroads of the United States, and that a car will soor be constructed In which the bicyclist may not only go at his llvllest pact without fiar at iuteri'uution or dpngei Of accident, but actually propel uiui self across the continent. The exterlot of the car is much like that of the Pull man or Wagner drawing room. Th Interior presents an appearance that will delight the heart of the bicycle en thusiast. The decorations of sides and celling are so made as to give a most pronounced bicycle effect. frieze ol dainty painted wheels ornaments both ends and sides. The roof will be a study In cycles in fantastic form and artistic arrangement. It Is, in fact, a svmphony on wheels. Between the windows are dainty lockers In which the wheelmen or wlvaelwomen may ttore their belongings, and every ap purtenance will be present thit the most exacting cyclist might consider aecessary. The modus operandi of the car is that of the moving sidewalk. Along each side is a flexible traveling plat form driven by a pulley on one of the axles of each truck of the car. Th power Is transmitted through a cross bolt to a friction pulley on each end o' the traveling platform. On each o these platforms are mounted a doubli row of seven end eight bicycles, thlrtj ftKoRcther. The relative positions o the wheels are maintained by an lngen ions contrivance which absolutely pie vents them Jostling one another. The crank shaft and crank of everj wheel, la provided with a panl nn ratchet. These, as every wheclmai knows, will permit the rider to peda .lions without overexertion. When 1! Is desired the car crn be propellec singly; that is. without the asuUtanci of a locomotive and separate from thi rest of a train. This can bo accom plished by the unaided efforts of thi riders, who can, by pedeling at a brisl pace, transmit the power from th traveling platform on which they rld to the car axle and trucks. The ldei of railroad cars being propelled froir one city to another by clubs of ent.hu slastlc "wheelmen Is certainly a takinj one. MILTON S. MAYHEW. Anilrcw .I.'h-Usuii's Intlormnnt. The matter of enforcing collection! In something that has embarrassed tlu Washington departments from the be ginning, and some Secretaries have de cided It one way and some another There is a characteristic story told ol Gen. Jackson in this connection. Then was a boarding-house keeper here lr the early thirties who had been a Jack son man from the moment he heart Mm In New Orleans in 1815. Jacksor knew him well and was quite fond o: him. A department clerk owed the President's friend a formidable boarc bill and rofused to pay it. The land lord complained to Jackson, who asket him if he had the clerk's note. He die not have it and Jackson advised him tt secure the fellow's note and bring V to him. The clerk was glad to settle the matter that way and readily gave his note and congratulated himself up on the fact that he had that ugly mat ter off his hands, at least. The land lord took the note to Jackson, who In dorsed It. Then a bank discounted it He met the clerk a few days afterwarc and the latter tantalized him with the question: "What did you do with mj note?" "Oh, the bank discounted It,' was the answer. "Who Indorsed It?' asked the clerk. "Andrew Jackson President of the United States," wai the reply. "The devil he did?" ejacu lated the clerk, who set about at once to meet it the day it fell due, and mee' it he did. Louisville Courier-Journal. Ahead of tho Cinme. The old man is a great favorite 01 Newepaper row; his only falling is tha he has asthma, which he has to drowi out occasionally. Last week he started out to drown .his hay fever on pay day. When he left the office he counted among hie possessions 25, his week's salary. Just what happened to him is a mystery, be cause he never gained consclousnesi until he woke up in the station house the next morning. He searched hit pockets they wore empty. Eight o'clock came and the station keeper came to let him out. There wai no charge against him; he had onlj been locked up to sleep it off. Station keeper Collins called out Bob's name, and then began to hand out things thai had been taken away from him when he was locked up. of which Bob had no knowledge. First his watch, then 37.50, halt again as much as Bob hat when he started out; then a new suit of clothes, an umbrella, a 'box of papei collars and a basket of grapes. Bob lc still wondering where thej came from. But he entertains the highest opinion of the police depart ment and the board of safety. Louis ville Commercial. The Professional Thief- The professional criminal is hope less. " A good thief as the police phrase it does not steal to relieve his poverty. Possibly he has a hoard hid away somewhere, but at all events he has money in his pocket. Other wise, his " pals " would distrust and avoid him as being a danger nus man to work with. If he prospers at his calling, success only whets the zest with which he pursues it. When he is caught and " put away" for a term, the incident is to him what a bad fall is to a fox. hunter. Possibly he may find honest employment on discharge from prison, but before many months elapse the old restless ness and love of adventure become too strong, and he resumes his " leei- timate calling." He generally resumes it immediately he regains his liberty Blackwood's Magazine. It is often a mystery how a cold has 1 been "caught." I he fact is, however. thot when the blood is poor and the j system depressed, one becomes pecu i liarly liable to diseases. When the I appetite or the strength fails, Ayer's Sarsapariila should be taken without delay. 1 No, Maude dear, the gray feathers you observe on your turkeygobbler are not aue to wornment about Xmas 1 How Bhoes are Made( In Brockton, Mass., the queen of all our "shoe cities," stands the mas sive framework, glittering with myriad windows, of the W. L. Douglass Shoe Go's, factory, where bales of leather change with marvellous 1 apidity into famous shoes. The shoemaker's bench of "ye olden time" has disappeared, and in its place ponderous machines stamp and clank and growl and toss bunches of leather from one to an other like a pack of dogs worrying some hapless little animal, till the shapeless leather that the cutters pounced upon in the long room at the top of the building comes riding into the packing room, a rack for its car riage, a polished and shapely shoe. Probably no place in the world oflers such a splendid object lesson in shoe making as does the Douglas fac tory, where everything has been sys tematized down to the minutest detail, and so carefully arranged that a walk through the streets of this busy little world of a factory illustrates clearly the development of the shoe. First comes the cutting room. Here is little machinery, but leather is every where, from the scraps that litter the floor and fill the bins, to the neatly piled "vamps" and "tops"' arranged on racks, each pile labelled with the nan.c of the cutter. The most mar vellous tiling in connection with this part of the work is the ingenious sys tem whereby every bit of leather is kept track of. The foreman maps out the work j that is, he determines there shall be so many boxes of shoes cut that day and each box shall have so many pairs of a certain size. The cutters, each one doing but a single thing, such as cutting a "vamp," gets J his leather and goes to work, trimming the leather with a curved knife, ac cording to metal pattern. His work passes under the experienced eye of a. inspector, who at a single glance judges the quality of the leather and sorts it into different grades. It seems hopeless confusion ; yet every bit cf leather inevitably finds its mate of the proper grade and size when they all appear in the sewing room below, pursued by a relentless check list, watchful to detect the slightest deviation from the right road. In this room is a wilderness of ma chines, many of which are run by women. Up at one end of the room the cut leather starts on a rapid jour ney. One machine seizes it and bites it a few times and seems to toss it away spitefully. Immediately it is thrust into the claws of another ma chine that stitches it in another place until it comes out at the other end ot the room in the shape of a shoe top. l hen the lasters seize upon it, to fit the top to the inner sole. Some of the shoes are "lasted" by hand, others by a peculiarly vicious looking ma chine that spits out tiny nails, and pounds the unfortunate shoes with all the energy oi a chairman calling to order a caucus. The Douclas neoDle never hesitate to buy the most im proved machinery, and all the latest methods way be seen in this room. Down this room, too, the half fin ished shoes pass rapidly. On goes the outer sole, sometimes by sewing machine, sometimes by a machine that screws the sole on with little brass screws, that the iron monster has swallowed voraciously. With a single stamp the heel goes on, the rough edges being shaved off by a whirling knife. The channel nude along the sole by the stitching machine is filled with cement, and under the angry stamp oi a metal boot the channel is made flat again. Now we have the completed shoe in the rough. But there are a dozen more machines, and a dozen more processes to be applied in the way of nnisning touches. iinally, the shoe, resplendent in polish, neatly shaped and finished to the last detail, is wheeled on a rack before the eagle eye of the final inspector. If he passes it, the shoe is finished, and hav ing followed the leather through the hands of five hundred and sixty work men, the check list triumphantly re ceives its final endorsement, and we have a perfect shoe. Fifteen minutes is all the time they want to make a shoe, when they hurry matters. Tho Fact that Doctors frequently advise change of air and climate to those suffering f.om c.itarrh is proof that catarrh is a iocal and climatic disease. Therefore, unless you can leave home and business, you should use Ely's Cream Balm. Ap plied directly to the seat of the dis ease, it effects instant relief and a satisfactory cure after short continu aic. No mercury nor injurious drug is contained in the Balm. An American traveling in Spain siys : The women of that country are the most beautiful in the world, but they are superficially educated ami as companions soon grow tire some, because they possess no basis for conversation, no general informa tion, no ideas. A secret drawer in a trunk is said to have furnished new evidence for thi Moser heirs, who claim land on a part of which Tamaqua stands. .i 1 1 1 1 1 LONG GUT LOVOOM COUPON m o GUMMED What brings relief from dirt and grease? Why don't you know? SAP For 1897 Leading Newspapers for the Price of 8 The "Philadelphia Press" by special arrangements, at great cost, is entitled to all the news received by the New York "Times," "World," "Journal," "Chicago "Tribune," St. Louis Globe Democrat," " Cincinnati Commercial Tribune," and the "Boston Journal." All this news is telegraphed to "The Press" over special wires every night and presented to its readers fresh and attractive every morning.. This is all in addition to the service of "The Press' " own staff, great corps of correspondents and the Associated Press. Great Papers in Greatest Feat Ever Eflocted In Journalism. Tie Phi adelphia Press Pennsylvania's Greatest Family Newepaper Devotes more attention to the house hold and family than any other paper. Has a page every day especially for women, edited by the brightest woman in journalism. Gives daily a column' of well tested cooking recipes which are of the greatest value to every housekeeper. All the news about horses written by experts and thoroughly reliable. Subscription: Daily "Press" $6.00 a year. Daily and Sunday," $S.oo. "Weekly Press," $1.00. Address: "The Press," Phila delphia, Pa. For "want's" t,f any kind, put a small "ad" in "The Press." It pays to use "Press" want ads. Wanted-An Idea 253S8 Protect your Idrnni thpy may bring you weultu. Wrltt JOHN W01)EHUURN ft CO., Patent Actor naya, WaahlDgiou, D. O., for hlr tl.Mji) url ul ud lUt ot two buudri iurwitluna wanted. Try theCOL UMBTAN a year. euii 009 STRAIOHT R STICKERS 17 LIO 1 G!T YOUK " JOB PRINTING DONE AT THE COLUMBIAN OFFICE Fine PHOTO GRAPHS and CRAYONS at McKillip bros.. Bloomsburg. The best are the cheapest. THE MARKETS. m.ooMsnuRG markets COHKBL'TRD WKILT. KITAII, mtVl. Butter per lb 21 Eggs per dozen ' Lard per lb i . . . . . 08 Ham per pound. Fork, whole, per pound Beef, quarter, per pound , . , , 0. Wheat per bushel ' ' Oats " ' R)c " " j. Wheat flour per bbl iJ0 Hay per ton i2 to $14 Potatoes per bushel, j0 Turnips " " Jt Onions " " j0 Sweet potatoes per peck i3a Tallow per 11) ,1 Shoulder " " Side meat"" ,i Vinegar, per qt ')07 Dried apples per lb 0j Dried chemcs, pitted. , I0 Raspberries ,ia Cow Hides per lb 3i Steer " " 0 Calf Skin )go Sheep pelts , .75 Shelled corn per bus ,50 Corn meal, cwt 1,50 Bran, " Chop " , i.00 Middlings " .go Chickens per lb new ,c8 " " "old cS Turkeys " " I21 Geese " " .10 Ducks " " oS COAL. No. 6, delivered a.60 " 4 and s " 3 $5 " 6 at yard a 35 " 4 and s at yard 3 60 Bring the Babies. INSTANTANE0USPR0CESS USED. Strictly first-class guaranteed photograph!, crayons and copys at reasonable prices. We use exclusively the Col lo! ion Anstotype pa pers, thus securing greater beauty of finish and permanency of results. CAPWELL, MARKET SQUARE GALLERY. II-22-ly. Over Hart man's Store. Thi Leading ContemtorT of Anuria ial r a.ltim. director. roaodedloiauby TC 5$ KF.W Or Send for Pro.ptctW iMl- enrint foil information. riANK w. hali, ueneni manafer. eirce 3'ind Yrar. 1 A repreicntntlvo American Iiusl 1 no; c- Hchool for both sexes, founded I by Thomas May Feihok, A. M., 1 I'll. I). Couples y.tt-inatto bu.l 1 ik training Willi n practical, ' Foui.d mid useful EiH'ltxu educa 1 tlon. It offers three full courses: ; KiiKiiK'ss, Hlioriliund and Typo 1 writing, F.iikIIkIi; the whole eou I fctltu'.lni; u:i Ideal combination. ! . r.i :tn-.lcs lira cheerfully assisted lo 1 1 i tis. J.o'.h lmy and Xlcht Sessions are now running. Students rocelved nt 11 ry tlmo. 1-1 llll K S4 'UtIUI, Oli-fllD ( h.ll St., PMUila. lirrant llulMli,.. NEW DINING ROOnS. A LARGE and well furnished dining room has been opened bv TJIDDV ITlDIKn o"1'" second flour of his flAKKI flUrtAnU, r e s taurant. Meals will be served nt the regular dining hours for 25c. and they can also be obtained at any lime. The table will bj sup plied with the delicacxi of the season and the service will be flrtt-class. Entrares by door between ItaUurant en Ualfalera'i grocery store. CHARLES NASH PURVIS, WILLIAMSPORT, PA., Collections, Loans, Invest ments, Sales Agent and Real Estate Private Banker. Deposits received subject to Drafts or Cli?.ks, from nny part of the World, money forwardel to any place; IrtceU nt 3 l'ct cent, nllowed on deposits with us for one vear or more niuetv d.ivs notice of wit" (Ira wai must be given on all interestdienrinj deposits. 96-9-to-iy Wanted-An Idea Proteo your ldej ut m7 brlug oU ""T Writ JOHN WKDDEHUURN ft CO.. Patent nors. Wuulustou, D. C.for th.lr i,Su) uris.1"1" u4 Ust ut tw lMiwlr4 UtmUvus swW- '