Stole the Body of a Murderer. of Ralph J. While, in Greon Valley Cemetery Robbed. The bo!y of Ralph J. White, the aurderer, has been slolen fiom the iweet Valley Cemetery in .Lu7crne ;ounty, anil the feud which arse over he placing it there has been revived. Friends and relatives of White are earching the woo.ls and through the tills for the body snatchers and they y they mean to shoot them when hey find their men. So far the search las been unsuccessful and there is no race ot either the coffin, the body or .he ghouls who stole it. The corpse as carried away in a wagon after the :oflin had been taken from the rough JOX. The burying of White created a jreat furor ami several fights. He murdered his nephew and so badly founded another that his injury made trim a raving maniac -and he has been n an asylum for some time. White as convicted and committed suicide n the jail at Wilkesbarre while await ing sentence. When his sister wanted to place lira in the family plot at Sweet Valley aeside his wife and children the trus ses and others who had relative: auried in the cemetery objected and went so far as to repulse and eject the funeral party by force cnd filled up' :he newly made grave. For nine days the people on either side fought for possession of the grave, but the op position was the strongest and finally the Whites appealed to the court. The trustees were ordered to allow the burial, but so strong was the feei ng against it and so great the fear of in outbreak that deputy -sheriffs had to remain on guard about the grave on the day of the funeral -and armed men had to guard the spot at night for some weeks. Ftnallv.-hen it was believed all objection had been over come the guards were taken away. Then the ghouls got the chance they . nought. LATEK. The authorities cf Sweet Valley have refused to allow the White fac tion to haul the discovered ocflfin and 3ody of Ralph J. White 'from the bot iom of Grassey Pond to the surface ind this action has still further eroused he friends and relatives of 'the dead nan. ! The authorities have .given the jrder because they fear an ..tUempt , if the Whites to replace the body in ts grcve in the Sweet Valley .Ceme ery will cause a fight witii those who ire opposed to it resting at theie, and a the present excited condition of he factions this might end in & fatal luarrel. The Whites have sent for .grappling rons and declare they wl get She Kxiy whether tne authorities: are wili ng or not, and will bury it at; the xnt of rifles if necessary in . the jrae from which it was stolea. The ther side is equally determisied jJ trouble is feared. STILL LATER. On Tuesday the body was taken rom the, pond and buried without Woodshed". A thousand people were; present, and some had guns. The Country School. , Bill that Aimito Greatly Increase Influetea Governor Stone signed the bill tor rjroviding for the centralization of township schools, and to provide high chools for townships, which is one oi be most important pieces ot good egislation enacted since the common chool law of 185.4. The bill aims to Ming all the pupils in a township with a the influence of better paid teach :rs, to do away with the remote country schoolhouse, and the elevation f the teacher's . protession and the general advancement of the public chools of the state. The bill requires a petition signed y at least a majority of the qualified oters in the township. These sign ers mutt own or represent property .mounting to at least one fourth of the issessed valuation ol the township. It oust then be submitted, to a vote of he people. It must be. voted on at a egular election, when township of- iicers are elected thus avoiding any .-txtra expense. It repeals no laws and does not interfere with the plans ;4 districts where centralization may not be adopted. The bill also provides for conveying of pupils from their homes to one or "lore central schools. It has tae re commendation of the county suerin- endents and the State school aVect- rs' association. The following letters are held at ' le Bloomsburg, Pa., postoffice, and 'ill be sent to the dead letter office rune 4, 1901. Persons calling for hese letters will please say "that they vere advertised May 21, 1901": Thos. Ilyland (3), Miss Mahala ;elly, Mrs. Geraldine Kellar. One cent will be charged on each jitter advertised. . O. B. Mellick, P. M. We have'a very nice line of email photo frames, with prices reasonable ind many kinds at Mercer's Drug & Book Store, CONDENSED DISPATCHES. HIbMp KvcnK of the Week lli-lefli nil Trraclr Told. A lnreo at eel concern wns Incorporated Ml Trenton. Severe flood were reported In the Tex (is panhandle. Chic-nun was selected nn the plnce foi the ( ly in ii 11 n pnincs of l'.HU. Uiipxinn Hpic are snid to have mapped itue hinbor of Nagasaki, .Inpan. Arnpnhnc Indians in Wyoming threat en onllireak, nnil troops hip nuked for. Ex-Congrewsmnn Olover of St. Louli whs r.'iniiied killed in n Colorado flood. Nino lni;idrcd einlcriints left l'orte Ttieo for Hawaii, with 400 more to fol low. Hev. Dr. . ICrnexr M. Ptlres of Chicago accepted n i'iiII to St. Thomas' church. New York city. The Cnnibridecport Nntlonnl bank Ciunliridifi', Mass., was dynamited, prolj' nlily for robbery. Nuw York Central stockholder met nl Albany. Acquisition of eoul carrying branches was reported. Tni'clj-, May St. Many were wounded in St. Petersburg strike riots. The funeral of Mrs. I.ytunn .T. Oapt was beld in Washington. The Cuban .convention was estimated to Ktnml 17 to 11 for the I'latt amend ment. The tntnl annual expenditures of the Anst;-o lliinguriuu niouurchy are about $71,100,000. The total Itritish losses in Fotith Af rica are reported nt 14,078 deud and 17, 20!) wounded. The last Itnlinn census shows the pop ulation to bo 32AV.I,Ti, an Increase ol 4,(Hs),000 since 1SS1. Superintendent Mills of West Tolnt was ordered to Washington In connection with the. troubles at the Militury acad emy. The ship Savonn arrived at Monte video with the uYaif bodies of the captain and four of the crew, who had been kill ed by being struck by a huge wave which washed over the vwnurl. Monday, Mnr 20. Extensive damage by floods was re ported from northern Texns. The strike of agricultural laborers in 'Andalusia, Spuin, arc assuming alarming jiro portions. 'The last Italian eensns shows the poptj lotion to be 32.44!),754, an increase of 4,000,000 silica 1881. The anniversary of the commune was rtJbrated by the revolutionary groups in IVris. Several arrests were made. "At Seattle, Wash., the torpedo boat de stroyer UoMstioro broke her starboard engine eccentric rod 'during a trial run, necessitating , the vessel's return to her doo.':. SaHirdnr, May IS. Severe earthquake shocks were felt in Obiu and West Virginia. Edwin F. .UhL, cx-emhassador to Ger many, died at (J rand Rapids. TIk governor it Wisconsin signed the bill putting an export tax on ice. Kuljus City's music festival was so successful tbut it may become an annual event. John X. Scrapie, a prominent Camden attoruoy, was arrested, charged with counterfeiting. flenercl Mascnrno,' the Filipino chief, with ays men, surrendered to Captain O'Neil oT.the Twenty-fifth infantry. Friday, May 17. Judce.nuhn ;F.'Gibbons of-Illinois wbb reportml .dying at Denver. The gnvurnor of Wisconsin votoed the compulsory vaccination bill. Four leavloads of cots and mattresses from New Tork liave reached Jackson ville, Fla. rreparntions were sld to be complete for the dedication of the Buffalo. exposi tion Monday. Jucqueti u, :tUe French cyclist, defeated Taylor, tie American, ix a championship match at 3'mis. King Edwntd has decided . that his birthday should i? celebrated on the same date as tbiU .of (Queen .Victoria. Tltaradar, Mar 10. The Gerniitn ,m;ich8tag jivas prorocued runtil Novambor. A bitter 1 ush tk'bate toot: place in the chouse of coiB.ijioiks. .St. Louis scilooiif were, ordered doted il)twn 1 au4 C a. in. The villuge olf Aeerena, Ituly, has fotn i.wpt by an aralunehe. (Legal means iiuve been taien to cloa--,tKi I'an-Amorlojji filar on Suoliiys. Ftur hundred .custom shoamaken is ;New York struck Jar tiigher wjiges. Iiclnnd'a, Population liminn, LONDON, May 21. In the house ol commons Mr. George Wyndhmn, chief secretary for Ireland, Mated that .the cen sus retvrns for Ireland showed a populu tion of 4,45t!,54tl, a decrease of 3.3 pel ouit sM)3 the previous ceosuH. Remote Pa&atbUUr. You have never bad .a wife, I pr- nine, a.,d the generous snutron vho ha taken, pity on huaa 1 the excnt of wippljbpf him with jurtne casi-off cloWiing ni,d a plate of Victuals. "Xo, maVm," answered Goodmsn Gonnonp, "n' I don't rtxkrn I ,ev r will Ciuve, o less I run iw-itost som woma.0 who ranta to mak the ex peerinuent of marryin' a mm to ro form Vim. Aw' that nin't lilely 4o happen." with his mouth (full of baked luenns, ""cause she'd liev to be young hurnnome." Chicngr) Trib une. WAIT J? lion't tie the lop of your letly and presrvs Jurs in the old fastiloued way. Heul Uietn by the new, quick, absolutely sue a way oy t tliln coaling oi pure, refined 1'arafiina wax. lias no tail or odor. air tight aod acid roof. Euilly applied, selul in adozMother wars about the bonce. Full directions with Men pound caka. Bold erywhar. Mad by STANDARD OIL CO- mm THE COLUMBIAN, MACIIINISTSMINIG President O'Oonnell Predicts an Early Settlement. MORE FIRMS GRANT SIXE DOUR DAI Some Shops llefnse to Yield in Dp' mnnils nf trlkers Locomotive AVorlts nt Itnnklrk hn Down Indefinitely. WASHINGTON. May 22. President O'Cotinell states that the ndviees received at lieuiliuiuters hi-re linllcate that an early settlement of the trouble between the machinists and employers will be effm-ted. Information at blind shows that during yesterday over 1-0 firms lin.l settled by grinning the nine hour day. Mr. O'Cotinell said that so far as lie knew about I ".,( M M men lira out in San Francisco and about .'1.000 in Cincinnati. In Chicago nearly nil the important shops have settled with the men. The reports from the south, lie said, show that nil through that section settlements are be ing effected. Half the firms in Philadelphia, he paid, have come to terms, and tile others are expected to follow suit. There has been no news of n clash anywhere. None of the government yards can be affected by the strike, as nn eight hour day prevails in nil government work. Word has readied the department that government employees are contributing funds in support of the strike movement, but no attention will be paid to this mat ter. Locomotive Work 9hnt Down DUNKIRK, N. Y., May 22. Heenuse 700 machinists employed nt the Brooks Ixicomotivp works struck for a nin hour day and 12'4 per cent increase in pay President Frederick II. Stevens, directed Superintendent McNaughton -to issue nn order closing the works until further no tire. This throws li.lKIO men out of work. The Brooks company is one of the firms Included in the American 'Locomotive company, and it is impossible to sny bow long the lockout will lust. The locomo tive works is the principal industry of the town, and its clo.sing will be a seri ous blow to business men. Cincinnati Strikers AY'lnnlng. CINCINNATI. May 22. The strike situution here remains favorable t the strikers, six more firms having signed agreements with the union, and conse quently about 100 more men will go to work at once. The drill hands and labor ers and others in these shops who struck with the machinists will also return. This makes in nil 20 shops thnt have signed the agreement, and it is said that a num ber of others are negotiating to the same end. There are still about 2jOO machin ists out. Crowley Gets Four Yvnra. RAN JUAN, Porto Uico, May 22. The trial of Harold Crowley of LnCkport, N. Y., son of ex-Congressman Crowley and a former employee of the postal de partment, on a charge of misappropriat ing postal funds was concluded at Ponce Saturday night after lusting two days. He was sentenced to four years hard la bor. It is probable that an appeal will be taken to the supreme court. At the time of his nrrest last March it was al leged that Crowley had appropriated $377 of postal funds registered In Ponce and en route from Ynuco to San Juan. The package was missed March 25, and Crow ley intended to sail from San Juau March 27. He had previously borne an .excel lent reputation. A Miracle In Brooklyn. NEW YORK, May 20. After being a cripple all his life Maurice Lavery, 13 years oil, Is said to have been cured at the shrine of Our Lndy of Lourdes, at Broadway and Aberdeen street, Brook lyn. The boy had visited the shrine twice a month for a half year, aud after being spvinkled with holy water in .the presence of 2,000 people be is said to have walked t the parish house without as sistance anil without using his crutches, the first time In his life he ever walked without their aid. Mrs. Bonlne Held. WASHINGTON, May 22.-The coro ner's inquest into the death nf Jamec Seymour Ayjvs, the young census officii clerk who was shot and killed in the Ho tel Kenmore ' last Tuesday night, ended at 1:05 o'clodi yesterday afternoon, when the jury brought in a verdict holding Mrs. Lola Ida Henry Bonlne for the ac tion of the grand jury. The jury says the fatal shot was fired in a struggle betweeo Ayers and Mrs. Boniue. The Total Kclluse, BOSTON, May 20. President Tritca ;t of the Massachusetts Institute of 't tcbnology has received a cable message from Professor Burton, in charge of the technology eclipse party, nnuounctng that important results had been obtained. Thf. weather was cloudy during a por tion of the eclipse, but nil four contacts were observed, anil ,o brilliant corona was liliown nt totality which lusted nearly six minutes. Photographs of the corona were ibtuined. Wireless Trleurrapiy For a Train. LOXJION. May 17.Sit:nor Marcoul aniiotiuijcs that be has successfully in stalled I is system of wineless telegraphy in a steam motor car and that lie is able thereby Jo communicate with a base while, twcling. The war .office officials jii-c ubout .to witness u demonstration of the claim. Olilo I'nrly In ftnlt Lake. SALT LAKE CITY, May 22. Gov ernor Nash . Ohio and party of 75, re turning from "the launching of tlm battle ship Ohio, were In Salt Lake City yester day. They wive handsomely entertained by the Mormon high church otliccj-s mid left for Denver. Flllnl Flood Xciir lluvnna. HAVANA, May 22. Two persons were drowned and many families ren dered homeless by a Hood at Pucutei Grniides, near Havnua. Captain of the Port Young hauled liouls overland ami rescued many. f'nllliiun in Succeed I.) num. ALBANY, May 22.-Governor Odell hi.s appointed P. W. Culliiiaii of Oswego as state excise comuiiNsinucr to fill the vacancy caused by llie death of Heury II. I.j mau of Oswego. fipiinlsh Flection It el urns. MADRID, May 22. Complete return! in thu election of the new chamber nf deputies show 2(10 iniuisteriiiiisf and 1411 member of thu opposition., BLOOMSBURG, PA. THE CROWD CHEERED. Dssanse llrlaht l.lttle Woman with ata I mbrella Pal a Cheeky Mash er to Flight. lie stood for two hours one nf terfioon Inst week, sny the Chicago Chronicle, og-linfr the women who passed the cor ner of State street and Jackson bonle vnfd In busy throtijrs. He was not handsome, neither was his figure one that, would jraln hirm mnny points in a bentity show. Indeed, from his ro tund person nnd the manner In which he occupied the sirtewnlk one natural ly would suppose his plnce mlpht more appropriately be at the livestock show. One little woman, pretty, well gloved and booted and with a bewitching- THE CAD HOWLED FOR PAIN. toque hat set jauntily on her head, passed the porcine individual several times. She evidently was hunting- up a particular shade of ribbon or on the scorch for a peculiar style of lace, for her brow was puckered and she seemed iperturbed. Because she passed and repassed sev eral times the masher thought it was due to his own charms. On her third trip post the corner the cad raised his hat. The little woman flushed indig nantly nnd ther was a dangerous spar kle In her eye, but she continued on her way. The masher looked after her, but decided to await her return. He took up even a more prominent place on the sidewalk. When the little woman had come out of one of the big department stores and prepared to sail past the masher she evidently had mapped out a cam paign of action. She unfurled her um brella and raited It, although the rain was falling but lightly. There was a gleam of revenge in her eye as she sallied out, but the cad on the cor ner, when he saw her coming, smiled complacently to himself. When just opposite the rotund mash er the little woman lowered her um brella, ostensibly to withstand a sud den blast. The steel rod of the parasol was pointing directly at the masher's third waistcoat button and when sh sharger home the cad howled for very pain. When, with seeming surprise, the little woman lowered her umbrella It was to see the fleeing form of her tormentor, and as he fled the laughs and jeers of the crowd followed him. BRIDE KILLS HERSELF. Drinks a Toaat la PoUon While Sor roouded by a Company of I.anhluw Guest. "Drink to my twenty-second birth day. I'll never 6ee another," cried beautiful Lillian Schilling the- other sight to a score of merry friends whom Mrs. Henry Harris, 193 Scholes street, Brooklyn, whom she was visit ing, had Invited to surprise her. With shouts of merriment and laughter at her prophecy the toast "DRINK TO MY BIRTHDAY." was drunk and Mr. Harris, the host, laughingly gave the young woman 23 blows on the buck in token of the day. As the guests applauded the one in whose honor they were gnthered sank back In a chair. "I'll never see another," Khe moaned ngnin. Her face turned livid and she fell to the floor. "I've killed myself," she gasped ns the wondering guests gathered about her. "I'll never see another birthday. I killed myself because nil my happi ness whs gone." They noticed then 1 lint her hud fallen to the floor. The yellow liquid it. had contained already wn discoloring the carpet. The toast she had proposed she lmd drunk in em bolic ucid. An ambulance hurried her to . St. Catherine's hospital, but just as she whs put on a cot she died. She was a bride of only a few months. Several weeks ago she q tnr relcd with her h us bund nnd went to live with her friend, Mrs. Harris. On the I'lunet I'ranus. A (listingulwlied astronomer usserts (hut on the planet Uranus the sun rises In the west and sets In the east. i filttmtlon In Jnckson vllle. lACKSON VILLK. I'ln.. May 21. The city ' tar ns peace and order Is concerned Is gradually getting back to the normal, but the demands on the re lief association slyiw no niHtcrinl abate ment. About :i..'tiN) rations hnvc been Is sued by the commissary department "lur ing each of the past two days. It is ex pected that there will be some reduction within the next few days. The saloons are no longer guarded, nnd the number of militia in the city Is greatly rcilu 1. The relief association lias decided to hold one Instead of two meetings dnily here after. . The Kenrsnrae'a 111k Unn Ilcplnced. NKW YOUK, May 21. Yesterday witnessed the successful accomplishment at the Brooklyn navy yard under the di rection of Naval Constructor Capps aft er live weeks' work and an expenditure of $i,IkK) ot the removal of the dam aged 111 inch gun from the lower section of the double turret of the battleship Kenrsnige and the installation of n new nlie in its place. There still remains the work of repl acing a portion of the side of the turret which had been removed. The new gull was forced Into place through the mniow opening, and the wolk wus pronounced n success. (icrinnn Shipyards to He Fnlnriced. P.F.KLIN, May 22.-The govt-rninciil shipyards nt Wilholinshavcn, nccnnliut to the Berliner Post, will be enlarged tc enable the coiiKtrueliim of warships ol 12.IMHI tons. The work will require t yea r. Chile's President Attain Stricken. SANTIAGO. Chile, May 22.-President Lrrasiuriz has bad another seven attack of paralysis. His case is consid ered to be very serious. Foiled. "I often wonder what's the best thing to tlo for the grip," remarked the stingy man, who was trying to get some advice gratis. "Go out without your overcoat," re plied the doctor. Philadelphia Press. , When a boy turns his bul;i ng pocket in side out we marvel nt the quantity and vari ety of articles he has stowed away. Odd lengths of string, marbles, i horse-chestnut, a top, brass nails, hickory nuts, nn ap ple, and many more articles are garnered by this "snapper of unconsidered trifles. We think the collection must be hard on a boy's pocket, and it is. liut do we ever think of the variety and miscellany of the substances we put into the pocket of our stomach ? There's the apple nnd the nuts, and things besides quite as indigestible as brass nails and with no more food value than so many marbles. And yet we wonder that the stom ach "gives out." When the stomach breaks down under the strain of careless eating and irregular nic-als it tan be perfectly and per manently restored to health and strength by the use of Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Dis covery. The action of this medicine on the stomach and other organs of digestion and nutrition is so marked, that relief from dis ease is nt once experienced, and the head aches, liver "troubles," kidney disorders, skin eruptions and other symptoms ot a dis eased stomach are quickly cured. When ever the use of a laxative medicine is indi cated, use Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets. They act in harmony with the "Discovery" and assist its action by purging the bowels of foul accumulations. The June "New" Lippincott- Maxwell Gray who wrote "The Silence of Dean Maitland" is the author of the complete novel entitled "Four-Leaved Clover" in the June "New" Lippincott Mag azine. This is a story of English country life. The name of Cy Warman generally pres ages something to do wilh railroads. "Op pressing the Oppressor" confirms this im pression, for it is a story of a political rail road deal, which may recall real episodes in the reader's experience. The author him self says that "ihe remarkable part of the story ii the fact that the building of a side track in an open plain turned out to be good business." "Her Maiden Name," by "Suzette" Car oline Lockart, must appeal to many persons at this season of crowded ocean travel, when unsuspecting girls are likelv to meet such men as "Horace Sylvester Monteith," com ing to Ameriua "to make large investments in land" or for other reasons. Clarence L. Cullen contributes a humor, ous skit called "An Enemy to the Throne." It is about a French Minister of Finance. 'Kah,;iah, Rah, Murray I A Story of Princeton Campus," is by Burton Egbert Stevenson, author of "At Odds with the Ke gent." This is undoubtedly one of the best in the series of College Tales now running through the "New" Lippincott, and docs honor to the Orange nnd black. ' A Great Midsummer Fair," by Francis J. Ziegler, is a brief, breezy description of the great fair that is held each summer at Nijni Novgorod, Kussia. In view of our rapidly growing foreign American trade this is an article of great value. Professor Lewis M. Haupt.member of the Isthmian Canal Commission, contributes an able paper on "Population and the Isthmian Canal." In it he says, taking into account the average decennial increase as calculated by Abraham Lincoln, "These figures show that our country may be as populous as Europe now is at some point between 1920 and 1030-say about 1925." There are poems appropriate to the month of roses ond up to the high standard of the "New" Lippincott. The "Walnuts and Wine" Department is full of clever nuts to crack and overflows with everything but "Exlra Dry." Wiikre Women Are Scarce. Moscow holds the record of large towns for having only fifty-six women to every one hundred men. i The Cure fefGrssi -4. i ?.rM .r i Colds, Gripgjc, WHOOPING COUGH. ASTHMA. BRONCHITIS AND INCIPIENT CONSUMPTION IS 4. i old by all druggists 25S50ctsI CURE RAILROAD NOTES- PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD. Rr.iitn-Kn Raiksto San Francisco, Ac count I'.invoRiii I.EAtiuK Convention. On account of the Fifth International Convention of the F.pwoitli League, to be held in pan Francisco July 18 to ij, the Pennsylvania railmad Company will sell, July 4 to IJ, from nil stations on its line, excursion tickets to S.m Francisco at greatly reduced rates. For specific information re garding rates, routes, and conditions ol tick ets apply to ticket agents. 2t Runt'CRn Rates to Cincinnati, Account Convention ok United Societies of Chkisiun Endeavor. On account of the Convention of the Uni ted Societies of Christian F.ndcaor, to be held in Cincinnati July 6 to 10, the Penn sylvnnia Railroad Company will sell July 4 to 6, from all stations on its line, excursion tickets to Cincinnati at one fare for the round tiip. These tickets will be good for return passage, leaving Liniinnati not earlier than July 8, ami not later than July 14. For specific rates and full information, apply to ticket agents. at G. A. R. Encampment Rkdixed Rates to Geiivsiiukg. For the benefit of those desiringo attend the Annual Encampment of the Grand Army of the Republic, Department of Pennsyl vania, at Gettysburg, June 3 to 8, the Penn sylvania Kailioad Company will sell excur sion tickets to Gettysburg from all stations on its I'tie in the State of Pennsylvania, on June I, 2, 3, 4 and 5, good to return until June 10, inclusive, nt rate of a single fare lor the round trip. For specific rates, apply to local ticket agents. 21 Low Rate Tour to the Pacific Coast. The Pennsylvania Railroad Personally. Conducted Tour to San Fran isco and the Pacific Coast, leaving New York, 1 liilivtiol phia nnd Pittsburg by special train of Pull man sleeping, dining and observation cars, July 8, will not be cenlined to delegates t the Epwotth League Convention, which will be held in San Francisco from July 18 to i, but will be run for the benefit of all who de sire to visit California and the Canadian Northwest during the summer season. Stops will l e made at Denver, Colorado Springs, Salt Lake City. San Francisco, Monterey, Santa Ilarbara, Los Angeles, San Jose, Port land, Seattle, HunlT 1 lot Springs, Si. Paul, and other interesting points en route. The round trip rate from all points on the Pennsylvania Railroad east of Pittsburg, 4iS8.;o, covers ttansportation, double Pull man berth, and meals in dining car; tw persons in a berth, each, $168 50. Rates from Pittsburg, $5 00 less. The tour will cover a period of 30 days. Persons desiring, may return inuepem.ent ly from San Francisco by various routes at proportionately low rates. For further information apply to ticket agents, or address Geo. W. Hovd, Assistant General Passenger Agent, Philadelphia. 2t It is easy enough to forgive when you are quite sure it is the most provoking thing yau can do. CASTOR I A For Infants and Children. Ttis Kind You Have Always Bought Signature of C&4i Orangeville Borough Ordinance No. 18. AN ORDINANCE AUTHOHIZING AND EM POWERING THE MONTOl'K AND COLUM BIA TELKI'HONB COMPANY, OH ITS SUC CESSORS, TO CONSTRUCT, MAINTAIN AND OPERATE, A TELEPHONE EXCHANGE AN 9 SYSTEM OP TKLEP1I0NK SERVICE IN THE BOROUOH OF OKANQEVILLE. AND TO) KHKCT THE NECESSARY POLES, WIRES AND CABLES, TO OPERATE THE SAME, UPON CERTAIN TERMS AND CONDITIONS. Be It ordained and enacted by the Borough Council of the Borough of Orangeville, and It la hereby ordtdaed and enacted by authority of the same : Section t. That the Montour and Columbia Telephone Company, or lta successors, be, and It Is hereby authorized and empowered to con struct, maintain and operate, a telephone ex change and system ot telephone service la the Borough ot Orangeville, and for that purposa to erect and maintain the nocessary poles, wires and cables, upon, over and through the scvernl streets, avenues, lanes and alleys, of the said Birough of Orangeville, subject to th conditions and restrictions hereinafter con tained, viz : Section 8. That the said work shall be dona under the supervision of the proper borough authorities, and. under and sublect to th eral ordinances of the said borough, relating to me ereciioa ot poies ana wires upon the streets, avenues, lanes aud alleys, of the said borough. Seotlon 8. That no poles Bhall be erected upon any street or avenne of the said borough where a lane or alley shall be by the borough authorities decided to be available for the aama purpose. Section 4. That the said oompauy, or Kb suc cessors, shall so erect Its poles and;wlres as not to interfere with the wires of the several cor porations now having poles and wires upon and over the Btroots, avenues, lanes and alleys, ot the said borough for any purpose, and so as not to Interfere with firemen In the extinguish mont sf rires. Sections. That the said poles shall not be erected so as to obstruct, Impede, or Interfori with the free Dow and passsgo of water In, through, over, or upon any gutter, drain, sewer, culvert, or water cou.se; nor so as to Interfere with or obstruct the convenient use of tha streots, avenuea, lanes and alleys, of the sold borough, nor so as to Interfere with or damage private property, or ot any corporation author ized to do business In sold borough. Section 6. Time the said Compaey, or Its successors, ahull erect neat poles, reasonably straight, repair and make good all damage or injury to the streets, aveuur.s, lunes and ullevs of th-said borough, and slile-walks thoreor.'or shade trees thereupon, used by them for the purpose utorcsuld. Section 7. That the said Montour and Colum Dtulelepunnu Company shall pay the costs of printing and publication of this ordinance, and a si pay the cost ot pi luting and publishing or dinance No. 17: mid th.t h..,. shall be grunted by the proper borough uuthor- . . um company to erect any polos, or string any wires or cables, ti,u suld Telepuouo ( Ulllpuny Shall Ill a w.llrt. . --wxiimmjuuimi, ordinance and enter Into a bond to tho tuld r""ul"W penal sum ot live hundred dol lars (i),O0i. condition ..... -i'-m iuu milium ci- formunce ot Us terms aud couuliious. rasaeu December Sid, l'JOU. C, B. WHITE, rresldi-m. of thu u, ., Attest : Clinton HmtHiNn, secretary. "l'eiuitu uccemoer va, luuo. . A. B 1IRKRINO, w Chlof Burgea.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers