The Columbian. (Bloomsburg, Pa.) 1866-1910, August 12, 1897, Page 2, Image 2

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    THE' COLUMBIAN. BLOOMSBURG, PA.
NOTES FI10M GOTHAM
SOME OF THE CONTRASTS OF THIS
........ GREAT CITY.
Cdnrntloiml Interests llnnkrri Predlr
t inns The OiiIciiMs in Hie I'arks-Kven
the .Snlrntioti Army Gets Discouraged
1 raining tlio lli.
Special New York Letter.
This city may properly be called the
centre of the cJuiu'Jonal interests of
tUv country, and lor this reason there
Us a keen iuteruil felt in the retirement
o! President H. Donjaiuin Andrews, of
Ilmwn University. An attempt tins
bivo made to create tho impression
that Dr. Andrews was forced out of
the presidency of iWown on account of
his views on the currency, and an ef
fort hAs been bade to place him in
the roll of a martyr. It is not blieved
that the Dr. deeiros to have this im
pnsion go abroud. His views on the
currency are his own and they are said
to be intensely opjKised to the gold
standard, but equally opposed to the
fret- coinage of silver as an independ
ent proposition by the Nation alone.
Dr. Andrews describes himself as a
blmetaJlist," and one very impatient
e?Vf h the operations of the single stand
ord.
Speaking of the Andrews incident re-
Dr. E. Benjamin Andrews.
calls a discussion between several
bankers respecting what would be the
effect of the Ala-ska gold discoveries
on the silver question. Most of them
wjr inclined to the belief that the
possible production of the new gold
coiintry had been greatly exaggerated
for the benefit of the transportation
Dumpanii. One banker of natioal rep
U'tntinn aaid that there could be no
possible effect on the monetary situa
tion unless the discoveries of gold
re-re so stupenduous as almost to take
I ii. out of the list of precious metals.
He explained the situation by saying:
"The ditliculty in expecting any
Change in the ratio between gold and
siivir from new fields like Alaska is
tbn.: the production of gold and silver
by weight Is so disproivmionate that
It would lake mountains of gold to
oii-re up the difference. The gold pro
due: ion of lHJi for the whole world
If.j than 9,000,00) ounces-. The
1'iii.ed States alone the same your
pr.ivrde-d 40,000,000 ounces of silver,
and the world's product of the white
mi-.?; was over lour times that am
ovi . or twenty times as m-uch silver
a.i -: ;J, weight for weight. If Alaska
bl ;.d prove as much of a gold field
a
A i.
to
fc.
tU'.
c:
i
v..
I'.
fr
fib
RC-
so
CI.
re
iith Africa, tho I'nlted States unJ
a!ia put toge'.ber, soiuu.hing alto
: improbable, it would help us to
.p the gold exports and maintain
.-serve, but it would not disturb
Sally the relations between goFd
liver."
s otily within the past few years
!ii? handling of bananas has been
.. tho name of a distinct trade.
us!y it was only a part of the
rale, and, like most kinds of
the banana was counted on as
or its season. The banana sea
js "ou" when apples, berries and
aative fruits were "off." As time
jii, however, the greater familiar
ity the banana taught people that
Ir. was one of the most excellent and
ad-: able of fruits, a steady demand
.ip which perUU tho year round,
.dans took up the banana and
.mended it for Its healthful and
shing qualities, and altogether
aiiana has come Into high favor.
is brieily wiiy the people of the
.-J .States will eat this year some
i.OOO bunches of bananas, or
I'L.
ro
no
the
Thi
I'n
20.M
ro;;hiy one bunch averaging 208 ba-n.-.i
i s to every family in the country.
As ue from its commercial importance,
tht banana trade is interesting for lt
IiUi.u-esque features. From the dark
tiuod Jamaican or Mexican who cuts
tho stalks where they grow through
the colored roustabouts and white
ban ilera who load and unload the ves
sels, the wholcwale and reLall dealers,
to the Greek and Italian push-cart
merchants who tell the fruit upon our
city sueeits, there is a range of thrift
and shifuesKiiess, and a variety of hu
n;ui.kind that it would be hard to
match In any other industry.
The boat engaged in the banana
trade are properly coasting vessels,
light of draft, to accommodate the
shallow harboru of the tropics, built
t'u- fal: ,-tpeed aiicl uveal carrying ca
pacity. Most ot thoia belong to the
different firms that Import the fruit
and carry irom liu.liuO to 30,000 bunches
ot each trip. Tins mans from 2,000
00U to 4.000,001) :unar.as in evc-ry cargo.
The perUhablu nature of their load re
quires quick won; !u loading and un
loading those boats, and there Is no
more lively or interesting scene thun
a banana vessel taking ou or discharg
ing cargo.
Stories from the Klondike district,
of the proweeas and ferocity of the
mcaquitoea, have evidently stirred up
tho pride of New Jersey and the ad
jacent region of Governor's Island, for
from the former comes a story of a wo
man leaving her baby in a hammock
for au hour and coming back to find it
covered with mosquitoes and dead.
From Governor's Island comes a story
of a private aoldler who was bitten be
hind the ear, while on dress parade
and bled bo profusely that he fell in
a. faint from hie wound, which was af-
forwards dressed by the surgeon, who
pi-onouneed it dangerous. If there are.
tiiy bigger mosquito stories than theia
they have not yot found their way in
to print.
Uvery New Yorker Is familiar with
the setters In the e-mail parks. There'
Is certainly nothing niofe pitable no
mure scathing indictment against all
the economic systems that the mind of
i.;a.:i has devised than a man with a
wife and children dependent on hlra
vainly seeking employment. Such a
run Is rarely seen on the park benches,
lie is constantly on the move, until
sutil-tdckencd by constant failure he
Lctomrs a suicide or a drunkard.
Hut who are thae men in the parks?
From what ranks of humanity does
fiilon Square park draw Its daily bri
gade ot net tors? Many of them have
been in business. They failed from
one cause of another. Sotne of them,
afier experiencing a fair degree of
prosperity, became Inert, al towed
things to drift and at length them
toiti drifted into the downward path,
losing all ambition and hope. Singu
lar us It may seem, a fair proportion
of these men do not show traces of
i-vef..r,ive drinking. They are merely
?ul!si4ng creatures. They will sit for
hours looking at the gitn making
scarcely a movement and giving HMle
attention to passers-by. They like to
Le near other humai beings and
thpy roll-.h the noise and din whleh,
in.lii.-vrious humanity make in Its ef
fort to obtain Its dally bread. The
sight of meu and women hastening
about their btiirtne.-a sooth's tho
fitters and the noise and din is lulling
music tiixHi their ears. So nil day
long, and through half the night, they
sit, contemptible and contentedly, with
no sense of accountability to urge
them to do their work In the world,
and the Inward monitor, that ought
to tell them that a lazy man Is one of
he most despicable creuturea in the
world, as silent as If It had the destiny
and disaster of dumbness upon it from
the beginning.
Many have asked the question, "how
flo these men subsist?" Nearly all
appear to be the possessors of at least
ordinary appetites. Some of them, no
doubt, live upon the intlustry of wo
men mothers, wives and sisters, and
others upon the fruits of crime. Some
of these moo are alone in the world,
and they dally solve the problem of
how .to live. Every morning at 2
3'cloek there Is a distribution of bread
at the Vienna bakery. Long before
that hour there is a general mustering
of this division of the Grand Army of
Ouu at the bakery. Ejch one gets a
loaf ot bread or some rolls and a glass
f milk, in summer, or a cup of coffee
in winter. The bread Is more than
sufficient for a meal. Tart of It is put
in a f iipaciotis pcket and saved to
ippe.uo the clamor of appetite durins
he enming twenty-four hours, if noth
iv.g better happens or offers. Provi
.li.nce U kind to the beiiLh warmers.
I'rc y.iently t li.y have opportunities
tj eat and drink during the day.
Probably not one In twenty of these
men has railed in any occupation, bus-li.csr-.
or profession In which they eu-I'.tavo.-cl
to succeed. Those c them
who held psi:lons of respectability
l:;t tln:n through Inertia. They were
ico lx.:y to grasp and hold opportuni
ties. Wot many of th&in are harmful.
Wickedness of the dangorcus sort da-tn.-ir.ds
enorsry. It would be interesting
to follow the fate of the Grand Army
j: Outs. Occasionally energy has a
second birth with sotne of tbo mem
bers, and they again become active, if
not useful. Not ewry active man is
useful. Some drift far away, carried
by the tide of humanity. Others keqp
n the ranks until they become decrepit
with age and are passed into the poor
house.
Some of those men have indeed been
reached and a low reformed by that
Junior Drum Corps of the Salvation
Army.
new instrumentality for good, the Sal
vuilon Army, but the vast majority of
them sink lower and lower in the
sile of human degradation with each
iueeeeding year. Even the Salvation
Army people look upon the cases of
most of these outcasts as hopeless, so
far as any reformation in this world is
concerned, and there Is a tendency
among the Army people to turn their
attention to the younger people who
may be more easily reached end re
f oi med. Uecontly they organized a
Junior drum corps to furnish for them
the kind of music which all seem to
think Is a necessary accompanyment
of their religious services, and in oth
sr ways they are seeking to lay bold
:f the young and lead them in the paths
that they should go.
CHARLES F. FGLL1SN.
A Outer Itosciie,
The passengers on a Tenth street
trolley ear, gays the Philadelphia Rec
ord, were treated to an unusual sight
one morning. As the car was bowling
along in the vicinity of Parish street,
a couple ot sjwrrowsi one in chase of
the other, a woo pod down in front of
the c.r. The pursued, by a quick flank
movement, eluded Ha tormentor by
darting under the roof of the front
platform, and before the motormaa
Unew what v.a up, the bird had perch
ed on his hand which gripped the lev
tr. Thero it sart contentedly, wtoile the
passengers craned their necks to get a
view of the odd spectacle. The spar
row didn't seoia to mind the fact that
tl.H motorman's hand was constantly
turning around as he manipulated his
b vtr, and, after riding on Its queer
rercli for fully a block, chirped Its
t....:Uiij u:id Hew away.
I would gay to all: Use your gentl
v. vo'.-o at home. Watch it day by
d:iy as a pearl of great price; for It
will be worth mure to you in tho days
to come than the best pearl in the sea,
A kind volco is Joy, like a lark's song,
to a hearth at home. It Is a light that
lings a well as shines. Ellhu Bur
ritu . . -
HUMOR OF THE INDIANS.
It Rum to t'anntlral Jnknn ami t No
Alwny AirHnti.
" 'Most everylwdy Imagine that rh
North American Indmn Is a soloiim
Dud dlsnlrled lndlvlilu.il." said rh. ex.
! winy otlWr, a be leaned gracefully
linos. Hi his chnlr ami lazily puffed
wny nt hU afternoon clirar. "Hefoiv I
met n redskin I don't know how ninny
times I hud beard it ninertml that a
n race they Wero dewtHufe of humor n
a patent otilce report of n graven liiw
iiKC r'.nt when I grt netnialntvd win);
the nboTlKin.il In his natKe wild. t
found that this wns a mistake.
"Th Indian ts a burn humorist
There ltu't the xllghteMt doubt of that
The grent trouble Is, however, that hU
btmior rum chiefly to practical Jke.
I rvmeiibT one time inei rlng (nr rather
discovering a few roiVs ilxtnnt) a blf
Indian, when I was out walking alutie
ubnut two miles from camp.
"Well, he discovered me ubout Mia
Mine Unie, and tli( liHimto he did so
he M out a'terrlfk' wr.r-whoop, began
fluiirMiliig hU tomahawk, and stnited
for me on "a un. He oimoed me until
I keeled over from exhaustion, and
t'.MMi histoid of pcalplng niu as t na
turally expected he would fntii his
pi-evhiiw actions, he uasis-ted lilt to my
fwt, w-lth ii liriml grin on his face,
and gruu-ted: 'L'gh, Injun only yell for
fun. Too liad wuiv white mail. Injun
don't want nealp. Waut chew terback
er.' "The w1i !e ruceedlnn it se.'imul wa
only his humorous method of striking
a xtinngw for u chew of tobacco. If
I had hud Something to xtrlku back
with It might not har qult so
funny for him but unfortunately I
liad lft my weaoous in Miup.
"And again, I remember the time a
lot of Iridla'ns, who hud bum fooling
nrouud on the warpntli, we're forvthl to
Apltnlatt and surrender their game
toMinernl Mile.' iMiiinuii(l t the liua
Ridge Agency, and ttie Inst thing the
humoi-oiM vuases did before turning In
Jhelr shooimg-lroas was to load every
old musket of the lot half wuy to tho
luuR'.lo with slugs and nails and m-rup
lion, and other bric-a-brue of the sort,
mid then hang around at a safe dls
t.'.trce. tt see tho fun when u bonfire
wax uiude of t!ve guns tis was Uio
usuui rule in xueli ttis.
"Hut, lue-ktly for the soldiers, they
discovered the trick In time, and the
expected fun failed to pan out. Still we
must take rti will for the deed, and
this little Incident goes tp how, Mint
as a practical Joker the wily alxvrljrlnal
Is not to be lightly gueezed ait."
The Siiperntltloim Mint.
Scndds So Prince PlcnyunsUl says
lie's an heir apparent. How does llmt
1kMHi'U. when he's the youngest huV
MImm Siaid.Vr-Oh. he explained that.
Ills brother I.s the kelr 'consumptive.
Puc.'t.
I'n pa Itlunt I like to argue with
tl nt young TouiIIus.
fwi-ctest Susnu I hope you flud lilm
logl.1 cl, papa.
"Wl.y. my chHd,"
iJe-uuo I think he's the logical
candidate for your sou-ludaw."
(J'.v eland Plain Dealer.
When she scorned me," shrieked
tlie inui.ih. "I vowed that idle should
ne.er leek upon my fuce again. I
IKlLst keep my vow."
Accordingly he waved aside the
pilfered washbasin and all wns still.
Detroit Tribune.
"I'm a plain, blunt man. Margaret,
and can frame' no honeyed speeches.
Will you marry me'.'"
"I'm a little on the plain, blunt or
der myself. No." Detroit Free Press.
"I tell you that a Juror In a murder
case bus on awful responsibility on
Win."
'Yes, Indeed. If he goes to sleep ho
Is liable to be fined for contempt of
court." New York Truth.
"So you were at the oiera last
night?"
"Yes." ' i
"How were tho rolces?"
"Excellent. The way those boys
rendered 'Opera books bos of the
oHra' left an Impression on the audi
ence fhnt will not soon be forgotten,"
Hoxbury Gazette.
Slings mid Arrow,
The giants who frighten us most
often turn out to be common-sUed
men on stilts. Ram's Horn.
A woman's Idea of politeness Is to
nver accept an invitation without
first protesting that it would bo an Im
position. Atchison Glob.
"How did you happen to become
Mich a pfftmounced vegetarian?" ask
ed the oldest Inhabitant. "All my sub
scribers paid that way." replied the
country editor. Yonkers Statesman.
"I never saw so much stupidity,"
said the colonel from Kentucky. "I
went Into a saloon In Boston and call
ed for a little whisk, and they huuded
nie a small broom." New York Jour
nal. t .
Contaminated.
The daughter of a North Carolina
"moonshluer" tided to horsewhip a do
tectlve who had wounded her father In
the scuffle for lus "still." She said
afterwards:
"I did It because he took the rifle
ami she'd the red of my pa!"
This comes of reading Steve Orane
In the rough but realistic Tarheel sec
tion. Atlanta Constitution,
An Katlinute.
"Now long is It going to take to got
through with this case?" asked the
client, who was under suspicion of
hoiixobrciiling,
"Well," replied the young lawyer
thoughtfully, "It'll take me about two
weeks to get through with it, but I'm
afraid It's going to take you about four
years." Washington Star.
A Marked Woman.
Any woman who w;ears a bird on her
fiat now Is a marked woiimu, and but
one feeling anlmutes those who nolo
her dlsregurd of popular opinion. As
a matter of fact, she had much better
let None Irregularity in the putting on
of her dress render her conspicuous
thun to Haunt a dead bird as au urua
mint. Boston Herald.
IMilloeutuuhioHl.
"The fifth wheel to a wagon Is uss
less Just now; but wheu I get that
puncture repaired It will bo as good
as ever," remarked Byker, as he de
posited his blko In the farmer's one
horse conveyance and theu climbed la
ANDY
CUREC0n5TIPAT10H
10
2S SO
lJi 1 B mM4 1
MfVTiTMniBT , r T T
I DC AT I1TPT V rTTltJlllITrPn to cure unTfiiof fntntlrnllnn. rmrnrrN re lh Meil I.umi
AUJUbU ILL I UUAllnlU liUU i ..... ertn or rrlnchul rnn.p mm nitnral malls. Mm
1mt hnnktM fr. Ail. KTKKMMI IIFIKIV
What brings release from dirt and
grease? Why don't
you know?
SAPOLIO
STOVE NAPTHA, the Cheapest and
Best Fuel on the market. With it you
can run a Vapor Stove for one-hall
cent per hour. Give us a call and be
convinced.
W. O. Holmes,
Eshleman & Wolf,
L. E. Wharey,
W. F. Hartman,
PRACTICAL MEN TO THE FRONT.
Mechanics Have Attained to Distinguished
Positions in Recent Years.
The master men of Victoria's reign
have been, says the Review of Re
views, not the politicians and states
men, the soldiers and sailors, the
poets and artists they have been the
engineers, the shipbuilders, the elec
tricians, the men who have yoked the
thunderbolts of Jupiter to the hammer
of Vulcan and have usurped the au
thority of Neptune over the waves, at
the same time they have outstripped
the herald Mercury by the spread of
their dispatches. The steam engine,
the steam ship and the electric wire
have in Co years effected a more
revolutionary change in the concep
tions of distance than all the millenni
ums that have passed since the stone
age.
When the queen ascended the
throne the United States were six
times farther away than they are to
day. India was 40 days distant, in
stead of 16 ; Australia six months,
instead of six weeks. While this
shrinkage has been made a practical
reality for all manner of brute sub
stances, a much more rapid and total
conquest of space and time has been
effected in the exchange of thought
and knowledge. The cables have
enabled us to beat the sun, to deliver
messages in London hours by the
clock before they started from India.
To-day all news of importance is
practically reported simultaneously all
over the whole world. Our steam
ships bridge every sea, our cables link
every continent, and commerce, that
spider of the planet, is weaving all the
nations of the world into one vast
web, and the home and nest and
central abode of that spider is the
country and capital of our queen.
Tired, Nervous, Sleepless
Men and women how gratefully they
write about Hood's Sarsaparilla. Once
helpless and discouraged, having lost
all faith in medicines, now in good
health and "able to do my own work,"
because Hood's Sarsaparilla has
power to enrich and purify the blood
and make the weak strong this is
experience of a host of people.
Hood's Pills are the best family
cathartic and liver medicine. Gentle,
reliable, sure.
Bands Off the People's Money,
Those who are anxious to reform
the currency through the agency of a
commission and by goldbug methods
had better let the people's money
alone. It would not be improved by
the tinkering it would get from Wall
street retormers.
"Taking the government out of the
banking business" is one of the pro
posed reforms, which means that the
right of issuing paper money shall be
taken from the government and hand
ed over to the banks.
The experience of more than thirty
years has taught the people that they
have lost nothing by allowing the
government to issue circulating notes,
but rather that by so doing they have
secured the best and safest currency
that was ever circulated in this country.
On the other hand their recollection
of the losses they sustained when the
banks issued a!l the paper money con
vinces them that it is best for their
interest that the government should
CATHARTIC
Al '
CRUGGI5T5
to., ( hlrarn. Wnntrral. ;r-w- - -9'-1
Bloomsburg, Pa.
remain in the banking busines, or in
other words should continue the safe
and convenient paper currency known
as greenbacks. With that kind of
money in their pockets the people
never lost a dollar from depreciation.
The retirement of the greenbacks
is intended chiefly for the benefit of
banking institutions. Such a reform
would cost the people from $10,000,
000 to $15,000,000 a year in interest
on the bonds required to sustain the
bank circulation, with no profit except
to the banks. Therefore it is best for
the people that the government should
continue in the banking business, if
the issuing of paper money constitutes
such business, and the public in
terest be promoted by the currency
tinkers keeping their hands off the
people's money. T.v.
It speaks well for an article when
the longer it is used the better it is
liked. Such is the case with Ayer's
Hair Vigor. Feople who have been
using it lor years, could not be in
duced to try any other dressing for
their hair, because it gives such per
fect satisfaction.
Aa Evening Discussion.
"I don't take any gre't account o'
the proverbs an axioms an so on that's
printed in the magazines nowadays,"
remarked Mrs. Philander Peasley to
her husband as she laid down the last
number ol a monthly publication.
"I've been a studyin over a volume ot
'em that some man has writ here, an
I wonder that folks'll publish sech
stuff ! You can make 'em mean one
thing or 'nother, jest accordin as you
see fit. Now here's one on 'em, 'It is
as unfortnit to seize the wrong chance
to do or say a thing as 'tis to let the
right one pass by.'
"Now I'd like to be told how folks
would come out ef they was to be
sca't at both sides like that ! What I'd
like is the old fashioned proverbs.
There ain't any two ways o' taking
them, an gettin misled.
" 'Make hay while the sun shines!'
Now, ain't that clear ? 'Haste makes
waste.' What's truer'n that, I'd like to
know ? There ain't one of them old
sayin's but what's true as preachin,
howsumever you take'em. They can't
be turned an twisted round to mean
anythin a body pleases!"
"Do you recall one about 'A thing
ain't lost when you know where 'tis?' "
inquired Captain Peasley in his usual
shrill quaver.
"I should say I did," replied his
wife promptly, "an many's the time
I've heard it."
"Well," said the captain, with a
suggestion of a laugh in his trembling
old voice, "I had a cook once thet
quoted thet to me when the teakittle
was washed overboard, an all the cups
an saucers, but we did n't seem to be
able to find 'em, Sary."
"I reckon you've set up about long
enough this evenin," said Mrs. Peas
ley dryly, and shs bundled the captain
off to bed with considerable haste.
Youth's Companion,
What do the Children Drink ? .
Don't give them tea or coffee. Have
you tried the new food drink called
Grain O ? It is delicious and nourish
ing and takes the place of coffee. The
more Grain O you give the children
the more health you distribute through
their systems. Grain-O is made of
pure grains, and tastes like choice
coffee but costs about the price. All
grocers sell it. 15c and 35c.
Fine PHOTO
GRAPHS and
CRAYONS at
McKillip Bros.,
Bloomsburg.
The best are
the cheapest.
THE MARKETS.
BLOOMSEURG MARKETS.
COHHICTBD W1IILT. BITAIL PMCBI.
Butter per lb $
Eggs per dozen
Lard per lb , "0.
Ham per pound (J
Pork, whole, per pound "i0$
Beef, quarter, per pound, . . . 0.
Wheat per bushel j'0q
Oats " "
Rye " " .,o
Wheat flour per bbl 4 8
Hay per ton i2 to $14
Potatoes per bushel, new 7q
Turnips " " ,i
Onions ' " ,0J
Sweet potatoes per peck 30
Tallow per lb 0,
Shoulder " " "... )03
Side meat " " c8
Vinegar, per qt
Dried apples per lb .05
Dried cherries, pitted It
Raspberries ") u
Cow Hides per lb 4
Steer " " '
CalfSkin
Sheep pelts
Shelled corn per bus
Corn meal, cwt ,r0
Bran,
Chop " ,gj
Middlings " rc
Chickens per lb new n
" "old 10
Turkeys " " ,ji
Geese " " ' ,$
Ducks " " o8
COAL.
No. 6, delivered j.fio
" 4 and s " 3.85
" 6 at yard a.3j
" 4 and s at yard 3.60
The Leading Conjerratotj of America
vaki. r amltsn, uueclor,
Fouul I in 1&33 br
$0
mm
.1 tl00tir,v full
Tt1
Send for Proipecta
Riving full information.
Fawk W. Hal, Gtneral Manafef.
NEW
DINING ROOHS.
A LARGE and well furnished dining room
lias been opened lv UIDDV HTlDHUn ontiit
second floor of his nAnltl AUKAflU, res.
taurant. Meals will le served nt the regular
dining hours for 25c. and they can also be
obtained at any lime. The table will be sup
plied with the delicacies of the season and
the service will be first-class.
Entrance Ij doer between Bstaurant aa
Malfalera's gricery store.
PATENTS
Caveats and Trade Marks obimned. and 11
Patent, busluesH conducted for MoDKlUTK
r it LS
OUHOFFirKISOPPOSITHTriK C. 8. PAT
ENT OFFICE. We liuve uo nub-agencies, 1
Business direct, none can transact patent busl
ness In less time and at. Less cost tliau those re
niote from Washington.
Send model, drawing or photo, with desertp
tloa. We advise If patentable or not, free
cuanre. Our fee not due till patent is secured
A book, "HowtoObtuln Patents," with reier
enceg to aotual clients In your State.county, 0
town soul free. Address
C. A. SNOW co Washington, I). C.
(Opposite Lr. 8 Patent Oitloe.i
EXCHANGE HOTEL,
G. Snyder, Proprietor,
(Opposite the Court House''
BLOOMSBURG, PA.
Large and convenient sample rooms. Bath
rooms, hot and cold water, and all moJern
conveniences
Wanied-An Idea siS
Er,.,",,Jm" mar brill "u ""'Ml
Writ. JOHN WJiUUEKUUitN CO.. Patent ACi
&y. Waiiulugtoii, I). O , for Itaelr el.suj irl u
ana list of two bundrf li,.cunui- wiuiiod ,
For all Biliovs and Nehvous
Tt . . . . it. . .
im. i uvy pumy ine
Clood and c'v IUalthv
I ! 1
I I ana WChM '
j SPOT ui5r
HRGHT
lit
WAV
PilLH
action to the entire system, B EBi"
Cure DYSPEPSIA, HEADACHE.
CONSTIPATION and PIMPLES.
5.37.6m.
uluueu. Puck.
1