The Columbian. (Bloomsburg, Pa.) 1866-1910, July 18, 1901, Page 3, Image 3

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    THE COLUMBIAN, BLOOMSBURG, PA.
The Week in Business.
General business continues its even
course, with all the leading industries
well employed and with confidence ex
pressed on every hand. Bountilul
crops of wheat seem assured, and the
damage to corn, while considerable in
some directions, does not promise to
be sufficiently general or serious to at
all impede the progress of the country.
Labor troubles are in process ot settle
ment, and speculators have been re
sponsible ior most of the unrest which
has been reflected in the markets.
Steel mills are actively employed,
and there is a distinct improvement in
the demand for finished products,
while quotations are without alteration,
la bars for use by makers of
agricultural implements there is a brisk
movement, plates are taken readily,
and there is no sign of diminished
purchasing in structural material.
Rails are ordered freely, with notable
pressure for trolley and other light
weights.
Textile lines hava settled in a steady
position that promises more last
ing prosperity than if prices had been
forced higher or sensational activity
Jiad followed the altered attitude ol
buyers. In jobbing circles it is thought
mat traue will not be prosecuted vig
orously until August, but salesmen on
the road send in good orders. Heavy
weight woolens are securing duplicate
orders and mills are making extensive
preparation for the light weight seas
on. Manufacturers are well employ
ed and exhibit increasing interest in
raw material. Wool has not altprpii
in price, but the tone is firmer and
sales increase. Growers are said to
be selling rather than consigning,while
many ranchmen refuse to do any busi
ness at present prices. In the cotton
goods division there is nothing new,
recent advanced prices being fully sus
tained and mills keeping wheels in
motion as a rule. The raw material
has declined, large receipts of the old
crop and many bright dispatches from
the South having more effect than
stories of drouth in Texas.
Grain crops this season are occas
ioning much uneasiness among specu
lators owing to the extremely compli
cated situation. According to latest
official and unofficial prognostications
there is reason to anticipate the
heaviest wheat yield ever harvested,
and, making the customary allowance
for domestic consumption, even with
the small supplies on hand when the
year opened, there appears available
for export about 50 per cent, more
than went abroad in the year of the
greatest shipments. et prices arc
far above the low record, and vigor
ous rallies follow each decline. Ex
tensive needs abroad continue, the
movement from Atlantic ports for the
week amounting 103,208,634 bushels,
against 2,198,443 a year ago, and
western receipts were 4,579,378 bush
els, against 1,618,677 last year. Corn
exhibited remarkable strength, drouth
and head since July 1st giving reason
to expect less than the official report,
which indicated more than two billion
bushels. This cereal is now at an ex
ceptionally high point, and estimates
of 200,000,000 bushels for export are
too high, as foreigners will not buy
ireely at the enhanced value.
The money market was easier, and
seemed to have lost the panicky tone
of recent weeks. Currency move
ments chiefly comprised shipments
from the West to cover loans here by
the interior banks. The New York
banks also gained moderately from the
Treasury. More banks seem to be
favorably disposed to the sale of the
old short-term bonds to the Treasury
at the price of the new two per cent.
Foreign exchange ruled weaker on
the continued sales of commercial fut
ures, and remitting demand was small.
Small gold exports were made to cover
special operations, and they were un
warranted by the rates for exchange.
New York's foreign commerce took a
slightly more favorable turn. Stocks
were greatly excited owing to the crop
damage reports from the corn belt,
and disregarded the indications of a
record wheat crop. Declines were
severe, but a heavy short interest
caused some fair rallies at the end
of the week.
There is more catarrh in this sec
tion of the country than all other dis
eases put together, and until the last
few years was supposed to be incura
ble. For a great many years doctors
pronounced it a local disease, and
prescribed local remedies, and by con
stantly failing to cure with local treat
ment, pronounced it incurable. Sci
ence has proven catarrh to be a con
stitutional disease, and therefore re
quires constitutional treatment. Hall's
Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J.
Cheney & Co., Toledo, O., is the only
constitutional cure on the market. It
is taken internally in doses from 10
drops to a teaspoonful. It acts di
rectly on the blood and mucous sur
faces of the system. They offer one
hundred dollars for any case it fails to
cure. Send for circulars and testimo
nials. Address, F. J. Cheney & Co ,
Toledo, O. Sold by druggists, 75c.
Hall's Famiiy Pills are the best.
Speaking ot autographs, it's the
man with a big bank account whose
signature is most valuable.
WASHINGTON.
From our Regular Correspondent.
Washington, July 15, 1901.
It seems to be difficult, if not im
possible, f.r this administration to
perforin any official act that does not,
directly or indirectly, open the way
for a gang of thieves to profit at the
expense of honest men. The ink was
not dry on the proclamation for the
opening to settlement of the Indian
reservations in Oklahoma before the
thieves had discovered a way to profit
under the regulations provided for the
opening and started the machinery for
doing so. The machinery was ready
before the proclamation, as it has
been known for some time that honor
ably discharged soldiers, sailors, and
marines would be allowed to enter
homesteads through an agent, while
others could only do so in person, and
the general land laws gives ex-soldiers
and sailors credit for the time they
served in the army or navy in counting
the time necessary for residence on a
homestead claim in order to acquire
title, while all others must reside
thereon for five years. That is all
the land pirates, who are plentiful in
Washington, wanted to know. They
began hunting up the records of hon
orably discharged soldiers and sailors,
with three or more years service to
their credit, and to make deals with
them to have homestead entries made
in their names, and as soon as the
proclamation was issued they began
telegraphing the names of these bogus
homesteaders to their agents in Okla
homa, who will file the applications.
Those applications which draw desir
able land in the lottery to be held
next month the pirates will hold on to
by purchasing the claim of the soldier
or sailor in whose name it is registered.
One citizen of Oklahoma Mr.
Thomas F. Black who is now in
Washington and who knows all about
the scheme of the land pirates, said :
"The applications of honorably dis
charged soldiers and sa'lors for land
will be many times greater than that
of any other class, but I would like to
bet that there will not be a corporal's
guard of them who will become
settlers or even go to the teriitory."
m
The only applications for patent
that will be delayed by the action of
the commissioner of patents in sus
pending hearing before himself and
the Assistant Commissioner during
July and August are those in which
appeals are taken from the 140 Exam
iners, whose work has not been and
will not be suspended, and C. A. Snow
&: Co., the successful patent lawyers,
say they average scarcely more than
one in each hundred of the appli
cations filed.
The popular impression is that the
Bank Examiners, whose business it is
to keep watch on the doings and con
dition of the national banks, are chosen
because of their expert knowledge of
banking methods. Of course, they
should be. But Capt. Andrew Jackson
Duncan, a gentleman with a good old
Democratic name and a big Repub
lican pull, and who has been a special
Indian agent for four years, has just
demonstrated that the popular im
pression is wrong by getting himself
appointed Bank Examiner for the
Canton-Akron, Ohio, district, with" no
special qualifications tor the place
except that he is Mr. McKinley's
brother-in-law, and desired the place.
Senator "Billy" Mason ought to be
able to make some use of this appoint
ment, as it was made by Comptroller
Dawes, the administration candidate
for his seat in the Senate.
at
Strong efforts are being made by
the big interests behind the publica
tions, fake and otherwise, that are
getting the benefit of the $30,000,000
a year the government loses by carry
ing at second class rates publications
not entitled to be in that class, to
frighten Postmaster General Smith
into not issuing the announced order
defining more strictly the requirements
to be exacted of publications carried
for one cent a pound. Mr. Smith
says the order will be issued, and that
it will accomplish its purpose, but it
will be just as well to wait and see
before giving him credit for possessing
the courage to resist the influences
which desire to go on profiting at the
peoples loss. If it be the real thing
the country will know it.
That branch of the steel trust which
supplies tiie Navy with machinery
forgings is overplaying its greed, and
the result may be the biggest sort of a
Congressional row, which may show
up the responsibility tor the clause in
the contracts for new ships that makes
the government a helpless victim in
the clutches of these greedy concerns.
The clause is that which forbids the
use of any foreign material in the con
struction of new warships. Under
that claim the Midvale Steel Com
pany and Bethlehem Iron Company
have put their prices for machinery
forgings at a ridiculously high price.
To give an illustration of the manner
in which the government is gouged, it
is only necessary to mention one
article crank shafting of which
many thousand pounds are used.
This government has to pay $2.25 a
pound, while in tEngland the same
tirade of crank shafting sells ior a8
j a 1
cents a pound. There is no doubt of
where the instigation for that anti
foreign clatue in these contracts came
from, and Congress thould see to it,
not only that it is siruck out, but that
individual responsibility for it should
be placed. Let the country have the
name or names of the creature or
creatures of this greedy trust.
Methods in Nature Study
It is refreshing to note that nature
study is becoming more and more a
common feature of school and college
work, and also that the methods used
are somewhat different from those in
vogue some years ago. Time was
when the study of birds meant shoot
ing them, or collecting their eggs and
nests, and when the ardent student of
quadrupeds, insects, reptiles or any
other living thing, felt it necessary to
prove his love for his subject by knock
ing it in the head, and to measure his
knowledge by the s'zc of his collection.
Thanks to the camera and common
sense, things are different now. The
naturalist has learned that he can find
out more . about birds and animals
by making friends with them when
alive than by dissecting them dead.
At least half of the popular books
on nature study which have appeared
in the last few years have evidently
been the work of the out-of-door nat
uralist. The lover of nature takes his
camera, his opera-glass, his text-book
and his note book, and hies him to the
woods or fields, where he quietly sits
down on the ground or props himself
against a tree, and keeps very still. It
is not his purpose to interrupt, but to
watch, the housekeeping of his friends
in fur or feathers. He knows that the
report of a gun or the smell of blood
will effectually put a stop to .he kind
of studying he desires to do. It is not
practicable to kill a person and make
friends with him at one and the same
time, and the rule holds just as good
if the person is a squirrel or a robin.
The nature-lover, tnerefore, sits for
hours in his chosen place, tramps for
miles over wood paths or through un
trodden wilderness, not for the sake
of bringing home a well-filled bag of
game, but in order to store his head
with interesting information. He
wants to find out, perhaps, what the
habits of a certain bird are, and how
its song at certain seasons of the year
differs from the mere twitter heard at
other seasons; what it lives on, and
how far north it ranges. Can he dis
cover all these things by lying in wait
for the bird and shooting it, or taking
it home to live the rest of its short life
in a cage? Nothing of the kind; this is
a case in which he, not the bird, must
pay for his knowledge. So, like an
honest man, he pays, and in return
learns more not only about that bird,
but about various other creatures met
in his travels, than the mere sports
man would know if he hunted a hun
dred years.
Old woodsmen, it is true, often
know a great deal of the habits of wild
things, not only from the hunters but
the naturalist's point of view; but it is
well known that they seldom hunt for
mere sport, and never kill more than
they need for actual consumption or
for sale. One does not find an Adi
rondack guide running amuck in the
woods, blazing away at everything he
The Duty
of Mothers
What suffering frequently results
from a mother's Ignorance ; or more
frequently from a mother's neglect to
properly instruct her daughter I
Tradition snya " woman must suf
fer," and young womon aro bo taught.
There is a little truth and a great deal
ot exaggeration in this. If a young
woman Buffers severely she needs treat
ment, and her mother should bee that
she gets it.
Many mothers hesitate to take their
daughters to a physician for examina
tion : but no mother need hesitate to
write freely about her daughter or
herself to Mrs. I'iukham's Laboratory
at Lynn, Mass., and secure from a
woman the mobt efficient advice with
out charge.
Mrs. August Pfulzgraf, of South
Byron, Wis., mother of the young lady
whose portrait we here publish, wrote
In January, 18'Jt), saying her daughter
had suffered for two years with irreg
ular menstruation had headache all
the time, and pain in her side, feet
swelled, and was generally miserable.
She received an answer promptly with
advice, and under date of March, IS'.'!),
the mother writes again that Lydia K.
I'inkham's Vegetable Compound cured
her daughter of Till pains aud irregu
larity. Nothing In the world equals Lydia E.
Pinkham's great medicine for regu
lating woman's peculiar monthly
troubles. .
sees. Powder and shot are too preci
ous, for one thing. Consequently the
people in fur and fea'.hers, not desired
by him for lood or other purposes,
soon learn to know him, and he under
slands them. Sometimes he is not
much of a sportsman in the ordinary
sense of the term. And the men who
attend to the preserving of game and
the care of forests know quite as much
of woodcraft as those who live by
shooting the wi'd creatures.
Joseph Jefferson at Seventy-Two
The Great Comedian Seems to Have Found
the Fountain ot Perpetual Youth.
" In Florida, where Tonce de Leon
failed to discover The Fountain of
Perpetual Youth, Joseph Jefferson
seems to have found it," declares
James S. Metcalfe, in the Ladies'
J fame Journal for July. "He is a
picturesque figure. His ruddy cheeks
and bright eyes give the lie to his
seventy two years. He is slender, but
not with the leanness of age. His hair,,
mostly black, streaked only here and
there with gray, and in length showing
a wholesome contempt for the fine art
of the barber, blows about in the
breeze. His fingers are as quick and
deft at knotting a line or adjusting a
sinker as those of a boy on the banks
of a stream, and he enters into every
detail with boyish enjoy; nent. His
fishing he alternates with landscape
painting, writing and the care of plants.
In none of these pursuits does he claim
professional skill, but he brings to
them something more than profes
sional zest. Mr. Jefferson is a very
abstemious man. In eating, as in
other things except occupation in the
open air he evidentty believes in
moderation as a means to well living
and long living. He did not join in
our afier luncheon smoke, stating that
if he had not given up tobacco a good
many years ago he felt sure that he
would not be with us now. Whatever
the secret of his long and useful life,
it is safe to say that every one of his
countless friends and admirers would
be glad to lengthen it by a fulfillment
of his own Rip's favorite benediction:
'Here's his health and his famil'y, and
may they live long and prosper.' "
,
It is one of the unsolved mysteries
how two men can exchange umbrel
las and each invariably get the worst
of it.
say "Consumption ean be cured."
Nature alone won't do it. It needs
help. Doctors say
"Scott's Emulsion
is the best help." But you must
continue its use even in hot
weather.
If you have not tried jt, send for free sample.
SCOTT 8t llOWNE, Chemists,
400-415 Pearl Strict, New York.
50c. and Ji.oo; all druggist. q
RAILROAD TIME TABLE
LACKAWANNA RAILROAD.,
BLOOMSBURG DIVISION.
Ia effect Juno 10, 1U0O;
A.M.
6S8
... 7 111
Hupert 717
NORTHUMBBBLAND,
Cameron
Cuuluxky ,
Danville
(Jalawlusu
KAoT.
r-.M. a.m. v..
10 UU 15 BO
BOS
1.60
till
a 11
a i
84
it 40
a 4
BlouuibOurif............. 7ii4
tittpy .. 7aJ
Llu)0HMue............. 7 8t
willow urove 17 44 a So
UriurureuK ....... 7 4H 2ti
BerwloK 7 da
Beach Haven....- 602
HleU'a Ferry 8 12
bhlcksuluuy . . 8 17
llunlouK's.. s
1019
10 31
10 37
10 43
10 4S
Nauilcoke......... 8 3d
Avoudalo 8 4si
Plymouth 847
riynioutu junction hoi
Klngs'.un 8 61
Bun ueU....... 9 01
Forty Fort 04
Wyoming - 9 09
WestPlUston 9 13
Buwiueuanna Ave tun
1'iiiHion v i
buryea .... 9 83
Lackawanna v liti
Taylor Si
Hollo v ue 9 37
HCUAN10..' V4t 4 60 12 85
A.M r. U. P.M
STATIONS. WEST.
a.m. r.u.r.n.
80KANT0N. .... 6 46)10 06 1 15 5 60
Buuevuu. o on
3 01
8 08
3 09
9 sto
3 81
8 38
8 ii
8 47
8 62
4 OO
4 03
4 07
4 U
4 17
4 u
4 24
4 i'H
4 82
4 41)
4 45
4 60
8 12
8 27
6 Wi
8 3H
44
tt 50
ffl 68
11 05 7 05
11 2V
l'i'iVi
li'b'i
1160
18 08
12 14
12 17
7 12
7 21
7 81
7 41
7 48
735
Hut
8 04
8ii
8 111
8 IN
8 1H
8 'J5
8 li
ti 85
8 4S
P. M
Taylor.
Lackawtnua ...
Duryea
l'lttstou
HUHiiueliannu Ave
West I'll talon .,
Wyoming
Forty Foit u
Bennett
Klngaton'
I'lymom h Junction
Plymouth
Avomlule - ......
Nantlcoke
Ilunloek'8
hlilekshlnny
lllek'i. Kerry ..
Bench Haven .
Berwick.
Brlnrcreek ,
".VlllowCirove...,
LI urn mage
Kepy
HlooniHburg
Hupert
Ctituwtasa
l.invlilo -
Cntilasky
Cameron
NOUTlltkUKKI.iND
101 a 03
10 23 2 111
10 20
10:tl
11183
10 .W
10 40
8 65
7 01
7 in
7 07
710
7 13
7 17
h'Yi
7 SO
V:';8
7 4'J
7 IS
7 61
KOI
8 12 til 43
8 1s 11 4H
8 23 11 64
8S8 :
8 HI '
8 34 fl2Py
8 SO 12 15
R44 Uii
8 19 1SV7
8 64 12 32
UM 12 47
2 13
a 17
8 111
8 23
27
II) 4!l
1064
ll'o':i
11'ii
11 17
1 1 20
a si
9 40
5 5' 1
(1 Uii
6 09
0 13
It)
8 111
6 2!
fl's'i
0 35
0'i'3
a 49
S 64
2 58
8 06
8 20
8 31)
8 37 (7 M
8 44 7 K.I
8 61
S5S
7 13
J uuiir (in n v.
A. V. BALISUVKY
Hupt
9 21
V 85
4.M.
f Flag station.
, T. V.. l.KK,-
8 ."
8 ;t
8 fS
4 tli
4 12
4 17
4 22
4 3S
f4 42
18 67 4 4S
1 10 6 00
r. m. p. u.
Pennsvivama Railroad.
Time Table t -frt cl June , mot
fcrauion;! Tl)lv
1'ltlHlUU " '
WIlKeiimrre. IV
I'lyin'lii Fuv ' j
Nanlkoke ... ."
Mouniiaiiia . .
Wapwuliopei.
Neacopeck ar
Pottdvllle lv
lliiieton
Toiuhlcken "
Fern uiun "
Buck bleu ."
Neacopeck ar
Negoopcclt lv
cteaxy "
KHpy Ferry '
K. Uloomaburg"
I'atuwlKsa ar
CalawiHxa lv
8. Danville.... "
Bunbury "
H""""T
Lewlnburg ....I
Ml ton
v lllliuiiHport. .
.. h i. Haven... .
Ol 'iVO '
A ..!.'....
L.jek Haven..
llellefoutC
Tyrone
rtinipsburg.,.
Clem-Held ....
I'ltuburg
M
I 8 46
7 IK
1. M.
i 1 in i,
I 7 :.:
t id;
8 01
8 13
8 24
A. M
t 6 :i()
7 on
7 a.'
7 211
7 8.
8 00
A. M
i 8 24
8 83
( 8 43
8 4".
nr.
8 66
9 14
9 85
A. M
I 42
10 I::
10 08
11 On
11 59
A. M.
A. M. P. M
Munbiiry. ......... Iv I 9 wi1 I 1 65
UarrlHbiirg ar, 1 11 301 S3 1.1
P M.
12 10
1 H5
2 15
4 41
5 37
6 65
no mi,
If 3 .
.Ill 14
10 6lll
II ti
ll 18
11 2li
A. H.
ill 281
11 8ill
11 4'.
11 SO
P. M
11 57
11 ft.
12 1."
in 40
P. M
i 1 10
1 4:
1 89,
8 80;
8 40
4 4(1
8 2.
P. M
13 4'
14 41
11 on
! 2
M9 09
111 30
rhtlaolplila..nr
Baltimore....
WaHhliigton...
Hunbury
lv
Lewlatown jc ar
Pittsburg-
Uarrlaburg lv
Pltthburg arl
P. M.
! .1 17
8 11
4 in
A. M.
510 00
P. M.
11 41)'
9 ti 551
A. M.j
I 11 4.'.
1 a c.v
P. M.
23
1; 00
7 15
P. M.
a 13
8 50
ill 30
P. M.
13 45
111 30
11
I 2 ikI
I a 12:
P. M.
I .. (.8
1 l ii
8 .'1.
8 4'i
58
4 07
A. M
11 ftS
ia 4x
1 03
1 10
1 35
P. M.
I 4 07
4 18
f 4 24
4 291
4 85
4 85
4 53
t li
P. M'.
t 6 4
8 18
B II
7 10
8 0:
9 00
r
i 4 27
4 62
P. M
t 6 00
I 8 07
8 17
8 87
B 4
7 00
P.
7 01
t 01
7 20
7 as
7 82
7 32
7 61
8 16
P. M
I V 45
A New Departure!
In addition to the regular lines, the
unders:gned has established
A MILK DEPOT,
; where can be found, at all times, fresh
t milk, cream, skim milk and butter
milk. Also butter, eggs, lard, canned
meats, fcx. .Buckets lumisnea ior
lard in 3, 5 and ten-f ound pails,
AT LEADERS MEAT MARKET
l!eef. Veal. Mutton. Lamb. I'otl
Bologna, Sausage, Ham, Bacon, Scrap
nle. Vienna Nktisace. Trine. I5oik'.
f . o 1 '
Ham, Ac. All meats fresh and clear,
and prices rifiht.
F. HI. LEADER,
Centre Street Market.
10 08
1U 60
P. M.f P. M)
I 5 25! I 8 81
6 .V. HO 10
P. M, A. M,
110 20 1 4 2-"i
1 9 4r.l a 811
110 6. i 4 05
K-
P. M. P. If
! 7 l .'i 10 25
A. M.I ' A. M
I 1 .'ill 5 30
5 WeeKd.ij . Hullj . f Flhg i hi H n
llttsburg.,..lv
narrlHburg ar
Pittsburg lv
Lewlstown Jo."
Hunbury ........ ar
WashIngton....lv
nan imore "
Philadelphia..."
Harrmnurg lv
suubury ar
Pittsburg lv
I'learlleM ....
Plilllpsburg...
Tyrom;
Bellefonte....
Lock Haven... ar
Erie lv
Kane "
Kenovo '
Look Uaven...."
Wllllamsporu."
Milton
LewlHburK "
Suubury ar
Bunbnrr lv
8. Danville '
Catawlgaa '
B. llloomHburg"
Espy Ferry "
L'reaay "
Neacopeck ....ar
Nescopeck lv
catawiasa
Kock Glen ar,
Fern Glen
Tomhlcken
Haleion
Potuvllle ......
Nescopeck lv
Wapwallopen.ar
Mocanaqua " I
Nantlcoke "
Plym'th Ferry"
Vllke8bar're...."
Plttstond S) ar
scranton
A. M.I
1 1 ;.r
p.;n!
1 11 mi
A. M.
I 4 20,
a. m.
t 7 SO
t 9 201
f IU ii.
111 41
iii;2oi
A. M
I 8 35
I 5 05
P. M.
12 4
4 09
4 st;
7 15
8 81
9 30
P. M.
I 5 3
8 40
12 40
1
A. M.
a 10
a 22
"s'To
A. M.
8 60
7 13
7 83
7 89
7 48
7 53
8 03
A. M
8 85
9 01
V 07
9 21
10 15
M
t 8 02
8 18
8 SK!
8 47
B 57
9 01
A. M
t a so
10 OH
I 4 45
I 4 25
A. M.
I 7 65
I 9 3i.
t 6 45
t 7 ST.
I 8 80
9 19
9 06
9 40
A. M
I 9 66
10 17
10 36
10 43
110 47
10 68
11 06
A. M.
t
10 Sn
11 22
11 88,
111 89
11 58
A, M
.11 06
Ml 20
11 82
11 64
P. M.
12 02
13 10
P. M.
112 55;
1 24
a. tn
I 3 (id
t
I 9 30
p. Ill
A.
t I 60
t 8 4l
I 8
A. M.
til 40
1 10,
A. M.
I 3 U0
I 8 10
9 32
10 311
A. M.
I 8 00
10 811
11 25
P. M
T1240
1 27
1 15
1 65
P. M
t 8 00
a ai
a 88
a 43
2 65
8 o;
P. M.
15 15
8 41
6 47
G 03
B 65
P. M.
t 8 05
8 19
8 29
3 48
8 6'
4 05
P. M.
t 4 5ii
6 21
a.m
I 8 CO
P. M.
I 8 10
a. m.
t 8 00
P. M.
t 8 10
t 5 00
n. in
110 60
til 46
11a at
P. M.
t 4 OO
t 5 40
A. M
8 00
9 28
10 12
12 15
1 ao
a 17
P, u.
I 8 OC
4 Ot
4 52
4 47
B 20
P. M
t'B 48
B 09
6 7
6 82
f 8 86
B 48
B 65
P.
t 7 05
T 28
7 84
7 42
8 OS
P. M
t 66
7 09
7 81
7 42
7 S
8 00
P. u
t 8 88
9 05
t Weekdays. I Dally, t Flag station.
Pullman Parlor ana Sleeping Cars run O
through tralna between sunbury, WIllIamBpor
and Erie, between Suubury and PhllaUelpbli.
and Washington andbetweenliarrlsburg, Pltte
burg and the west.
For umber lnloi nation apply to Ticket
AJ?B.BHrTCniNKON J. K. WOOD,
Oen'l. Manager. Uen. Pass, Agt.
& READING
Potts
8.S6 p
7 62
I ft!
8 01
8 119
S20
8 4"i
P M.
tu n. row). Ag
SOUTH. -
AHKIVI.
Ii. & M Ii. It
am
7.10,
7.08
7.08;
8.53
6.60
a.m. pm
12.05 8.20
12.00 8.18
11.67 8.14
11.47 a.Oi
11.43 6.69
5.49
5.8H!
6.84
5.27
5.17
6.12
6.40 ll.SIJ
6.29 11.21
aiS, 11.19
B.1t 11.18
8.08 11.05
B04ll.lX)
6.02110 58
6.98110.61
6-43 10.41
pm
a.m
9.10
9.05
1 50
1.4M
1.80
1.01)
ia.63
12.451
12.81
13.10
5.10 la.on
5.03! 11.63
4.63:11.45
5. 4') i 10.40 1 4.50 ll.SOl
am am p m p in
LKAVfl
HTATIOKB.
Bloomsbu'g
" r. a t
" Main st.
Paper Mill
..Llirht Kt.
Orangevll'ei
.. .Forks..,
...Zanei's.,
btlllwater
...Henton.
...Kdson's..
.Cole's Cr'k
..Lanbacn.
...Central
.Jam. City,
NOKTU
L8AVI
am pm pm am
8.47 a 4ll6 115 6.10
8.49 9.4218.37
8.52,a.4ti6.40l
9.01 a.54l6i.37
9.05 8.IS9 8.55'.6I
9.15 8.1017.04 7.10
9.23
9.27
9.88
9.43
9.47
9.60
9.:it
8.20,7.1417.85
8.24'7.18 7.41
7.23
7.:w
T.87
741
8.30
8.40
8.44
8 47
8.67i7.fil
10 10 4.07,8.01
10.144.10i8.05
a m pm p m am
imin
8.00
8.30
8.40
8.48
9.00
9.25
9.35
PHILADELPHIA
RAILROAD.
THAWS LEAVE BLOOMHBCHQ:
For New York, Philadelphia, Heading
vllle. Taraaqua, weekday 7.20 11.80 a. in
I ....... n. . A .. .. a 1 IA n m
If OT V llilttmSilUft, WVVAUUO, l.V, u.,1
1. ,.J. .on.
For Danviue ana juiiiuu, iromuaj d, . . uj.
8.SH. . o .. ...
For catawlfipa weeaaays (..v, o.oo, u.ou a, m..
12. J0. 6.00. 6.80, p. m.
For Kupert weekilaya7.20, 8.88 11.30a. m.,H.80,
9 nit ft mi AttO. n. m.
For Baltimore, wasningtoD auu buo weni via
B. s O. K. K., through trains leave Heading Ter.
mlnal. Philadelphia. 8.20. 7.55. 11.26 a. in., 8 4d
! J? n m. KunriavH 3.20. 7.56 11.28 a. m
8.46, 7. 2T, p.m. Additional trains from 84 and
Chestnut street station, weekdays, 1.S5, 6.41
8.23 p. m. Sundays, 1.35. 8.23 p. in.
THAINH FOK BLlMiMhHl'HO.
Leave New York via Philadelphia 7.30 a
m., aud via Easton u.Hia. m.
Leave Philadelphia 10.21a. tc.
Leave Heading 12.15 p. m.
Leave Pott svlTleia.se p. in.
lHveTatnaaua 1.49 l). Ii'...
Leave WlUluuiaf Oi l weekdays 10.13 a IE, 5.42 p
m.
Leave Catawispa weekdays, 7.oo,8.B09.1oa, m
1.31) 8. .111. 8.08 o. m.
Leave Hupert, weekdays, 7.08, 8.28, 9.18 11.40
a. Ul.,l.oK 8.1(1. 8.21.
ATLANTIC CITY DIVISION.
In effect Juno!. 1901.
Leave Philadelphia, chestnut Street wharf
and sout h St reel. harf
For Atlantic cii i weekdays. kx-
iress.R0". o.no. 10.15 a. m. (Saturdays only, l.:iu).
2 . 3 00 . 8 10," 1. 00, 4 ..,il, 6.011, 15 411, 7.15 8 30 p. 111.
AccnnniiiKlai 10)1,111)0 a. m., tviu .:) p. in. oun-
diivs Express, 7.30, 8.00. 8 3i, 9.10,10.00 1 1.00 a.
tn.. I.l, 7.15 p. in. Acciimniodallon, 8.00 a. in.
r hip. in i.oo excursion dally 7.00 a. in. Ad.
rill tonal SuiKliiv. 7.30 a. in.
Leave ATLANTIC CITY, Weekdays -Kxpress,
(Monday only, 1.SU), 7.00, 7 45 (from Halt lit Ex.
tension onlv, 7.M), H.20, 9.0O, 10.16, 11.00 a.m.
a.50, 1.80, 6.30, 7.30, 8.80, 9.80 p. in. Aceoiimiodii,
tlon. 5.25. 7.05 a. Ii)., 3.60 p. in. Sunduya Kx
prcss-8.45 a. m.. 8.80, 4.30, 5.30, 8.0)', 6 :!0, 7.00,
7.;0, 8.00, U.su p. in. Accommodation, 7.15 a. in.
4.32 p. III.
Parlor cars on nil express trains.
i.KAVfc PHILADELPHIA.
For CAPE MAY-Weekdays h.an. a. m.. 8 I
11.45 a. m., (1.50 IH, 6.30, p.m. Sundays, 8.45,0.15
a. m., mm i p. m.
For OCE N CITY" Weekdays 8.45 11.45 a. m
9.15,14.20, 6.:i0 p. 111. buuuays, 8.45, 9.15 a. m.
e.oo p. m. i
For ska ISLE CITY' Weekdays 8 45 a. m
a.15, r4.20. 15.30 p. m. Sundays, 8.45 a. m., 6.00
p. m. BI.OO excursion to Cape May, Ocean City
ana M'a isiu i iiy, a in. uauy.
1 south St., 4 00 p. in., (South St., 4.15 p. m
(South St.. 6 'to. 1.45 D. in.
NEW YOKK AND ATLANTIC! CITY EXPRESS.
eavesNKW voiik (Liberty street) 9.40 a. ni,
(Saturdays or.iy, 1 mi p. m.), a to p. m.
Leaves ATLANTIC CITY, 8.30 a. in., 115 p. m
Biwaaya, o.-hi p. m.
Detailed time tables at ticket offices.
W. Q. BESLEH, EPSON J. WEEK8,
Ueu'l supt, Oen'l Pasa. Agt.
Beagle Studio I
Prompt lattcntioti given to nil
Photographic Work.
Crayons, Framing. Copying and Eromide
Enlargements, Made at Short
Mice.
Hie Beagle Studio,
MAIN AND CENTRE STS.
PHOTOGRAPHS
IN COLORS.
We raint them in oil colors and would be
pleased to have you call and examine the
woik. We also furnish the most desirable
in PHOTO JEWELRY, a. well as the best
in portrait photogiai hs.
mmwmk
Market Square Gallery,
Over Hartman's Store. iyi2-2i
Him Ii! i i, ji ul In ni l! hi
Itl'HI ll.-V
3D
k ' J-.tl mi .- v" 'iililt r. f.v Hi
re OS: .. .'Yi Ii ft. I iX . .11" ...
I- wn i II C,V ... . .T . ii.. .U'-UJiMtJiUV .'ia 4
iilluV,i!l,ll!l,lii!i::H!!!l
E'ri fl" I ll'l'TII 'l , ! ' I
You can save money on Pianos and Or-
G"ns. You will always find Ihe largtst
stock, best makes and lowest prices.
PIANOS, From $175.00 and Upwards.
ORGANS, From $50.00 and Upwards
AVe sell on the installment plan. Tianos
f2;.oo down and $10.00 per month. Or
gans, fio.oodown, $5.00 per month. Lib
eral discount for cash. Sheet music, at one
half price. Musical merchandise of al)
kinds.
We handle Genuine Singer High Arm
SEWING MACHINES,
5.00 down and $!.oO per month. We also
handle the Demorest Sewing Mac'iine, from
f 19.50 and upwards. Sewing Machine
Needles and Oil for ill makes of Sewinjj
Machines. Best mal ti of
WASH MACHINES
FROM $4.00 UP TO d.00.
-. .i-O .
J. SALTZER.
Music Rooms No. 115 W. Main street,
below Market, Bloomsburg, Pa.
PATENTS
n anH TmHa VorL't nVi, . , n (nl anil ft 1
Patent bualneSB conducted for MODEKATj
Ulir.M.
OUH OFFICE IS OI'I'UMTli 1 11 S V. . rA'J
vmh nlLMi1!? U'o Hfit-A nn uYwitrpnptaa. a
business direct, hence can transart patent bui
ness In less time and at Less cost than those 1
moieirom v asiiuisvun.
send model, drawing or photo, with drscr:
tlon. We udvlHG ir patentable or not, tree
charge, our fee not due till patent Is secute.
A IjOOK, now lo win am riin'ins, nim mui
ences to actual clients In your State.County, o
town sent free. Address
i A. KNOW tl.l VI BRiimKion, o. u
(OppoBlte V. S Patent O0,c.)
BETTER THAN POSTOFFICE ORDERS
l'OR SIM PI ICITV,
FOR CHEAPNESS,
FOR CONVENIENCE".
WHEN YOU WANT TO SEND MONEY
U. S. EXPRESSlMONEY ORDERS-
Pennyroyal pills
li-r ( UK JU.M1 K'S KXiLLSU
In KKI Kut t.ol.l uiiiii im mhiih'
with Mun rlhNftti. 't t.ki' ni other. Kt'fti
lnv'Miii nabltiiitluiiN und linttife
tlon. Jy f T"i:r 1'tiiiri 1. 1. r n'i 4. 'ft
imr ft.r 1'artlruiHnt. Tft1nenUlw
ftnd Kcllef Utr l-mlU'is" in itttwr, .y r-
turn Maul. lO.tHMt Ititni,.nikl. Kn'il
p
Pop -Fizz!
Foam -Sparse!
1
The
Nation's
"ii temoerance
beverage
HIRES
Rootbeer
Make It X home. Sold
Trywbr in 26o. paok
ftguii, wbiota aiako
gaUon aeh.
CUAUI KM K. HIKES CO.
Hill
1
1)