THE COLUMBIAN, BLOOMSBURG, PA. THE K1XC0SIHS FEET Doubts Regarding Coronation Laid at Rest. IT WILL TAKE PLACE OX AUG. 9. AMrph-nlnit Tlmt i:ilnrl Would .u Hp Ahlp to Mm nil tif Slrnln of llip trtmnny .llln?itl liy HeimrtM l-'rni t'owt-ti. I.ONlM)N. J ill v .'ill. 'III.- latest nml most ri'llnlilc iiifnn.;r. inn iiiclirntcs tli.it Kliijt Kilwiiril'x I'.uc-tcT were not tlllstiiki'li In tlx in;; Alltf. !l M the 'l:iti upon which his in: jKt y coiiM lp crowned. The sinister rumors which hfivi' porviiili'il nil cl.isscs for t!:c- last U'v il.iys now iipiiiiir to luivc lost tlmt st'tnliliinoi' of irnl nihility whic h niniU' veil tho iiH'iiiln'rs of thi' cnliini't iicfv mid lost nnotluT ipostiioiiPiMi'iit of the ron unit ion miht ht nccei-situti'cl. Tin; iippri'lii'iislon tlnit Kinu lMwnril would he umililc to fii.'iinl tho strain Of the coromitioii ccri'ijiony lnis Iiccii greutl.v lossi-iii'il liy t lie tuuioiini'i'nii'iit tlmt his imijisty is now pel mUto'l to use his fovt unci, with tho it hi of u stick, hits ('olio si little wnlkltiK. An other lute ti'h'Kl'illil from I'owrs, isle of wlKht. saylni: that nearly nil the restrictions upon the klni.'"s diet hnvo been withdrawn, has licen welcomed 88 evidence that the recent ominous deductions were drawn wiihout due allowance for the doctors' extreme cautiousness. While the kin was te.t liiK his nhllity to walk two stalwart Jackles stood at his side. After this ex periment, which hoded well for his ful tillin the necessary coronation func tions at Westminster nhliey. Kins; Kd wnrd sat sniokin on the deck of the royal yai ht and watched the races of the small yachts off ('owes. Those who drew Inferences from tho fact that the Invitations to Westmin ster nliltey were not dated have had their fears dissipated hy the proclama tion published in the C.a.'.elte tix!n All. ! ns the date for the coronation, which postdates and is altogether more important than anytliiii!; which mii,ht or uilrht not have appeared upon the cards of invitation. AecordliiB to the present nrranse nients. Klni; ndwnrd and Queen Alex andra will leave t'owes either Aug. t or Auk. 8 for lSuekliiKliain palace nnd will return to the royal yacht An, is, when the entire fleet will puss before King Edward and salute him, thus making a second naval review. After hln return to the yacht the kins is ex pected to take an extended cruise to the northward and subsequently to spend some wi-eks at l'almoral, where preparations for the arrival of their majesties have already been com menced. It Is perhaps significant that Queen Alexandra, the I'rlnce of Wales and Other members of the royal family were all ashore yesterday playing lawn tennis and hockey Hp IVai Hound to Go, ST. JOSKI'H. Mo., July So. Charles Treble, a prominent farmer and stock man residing near l,:mhani. Neb., nmde three attempts to commit suicide before su eding. He first tried to shoot himself through the heiirt, but the bullet, the last one in the revolver, fniled to strike a vital spot. He then leaped in a fifty foot well, but was taken out by relatives. Later on ho took the rope from the well and hung himself from a rafter in the barn. Heavy floods which ruined hundreds of acres of his crops, causing him henvy losses, are responsible for the act. Knxliiper Killed. DAYTON, (., July By the wreck ing of the Panhandle limited late at night at Trebins Station, near Xeuia, Engineer Clark of Xenlii was killed, his fireman of Cincinnati, name un known, had his head crushed, right arm broken and both legs cut off, three passengers, two women and a man, were burned to death in a Tiill man sleeper and a number of other passengers were Injured. A wrecking train was hurried out from Xenia and another from this city with all the doc tors that could be secured. AuHlriun Strike Siircncllnjf. LEMUKIM1, (ialicla, Austria, July 29. The strike in East (ialicla of over 100,000 agricultural laborers, most of them Itusslans, and which developed into a rising against the landed pro prietors of the district, is becoming more serious. Gendarmes attacked the strikers and were attacked by them in return. Crops and farms have been destroyed. Several peasants have been wounded and others arrested. Wllxou'a 1.1 re Huvpd. WASHINGTON, July L"J. The life of Dr. Uussell Wilson of Ohio, who was captured with a revolutionist party in Nicaragua, has been saved through the representations of Minis ter Coreu'of that country and of Sen ator Ilanna of Ohio. A cablegram has been received at the state department from Chester Donaldson. I'lilted States consul at Mnnagua, Nicaragua, an nouncing the fact. faold Found In Vermont. HUTLAND, Vt July UH.-tiold as saying $737.1)0 to the ton has been dis covered in the mountains In the town of Prldgewater by E. C'. Page, a Cali fornia mining expert. A number of New York men have been trying to buy land there, but the farmers ask prohibitive prices for their property. A linndrPtl TbounKud to linrlly. NEW A UK, X. .1., July :!0.-Tm will of Cyrus O. linker has been probated. Mr. llaker, who was a stockbroker of New York city and who died July 4. left uu estutu estimated at $1,0)0,mmJ. The will bequeaths $10'J,000 to local charitable Institutions. CONDENSED DISPATCHES. fTotnble Evpntu of th AVetk Ilrleftr unit TPPplr Told. Joseph Chamberlain visited the houso of commons for the first time since his accident. The third rail electvical equipment for the 1'nrk avenue tunnel. New York, is practically assured. The battleship Illinois, put in dry dock at Chatham. Eimlaiid. was found to be considerably damaged. The Iioherty brothers of England easily defeated Ware ami Hallowed in doubles at t lie l.ongwood tennis tour nament. Colonel Arthur Lynch, accused of t.igh treason, was remanded in the London police court. Two American, testilied against him. Harry I'e Windt. arriving at Seattle, Wash., I'll route to this city from l'aris by land, declared a railway practically connecting Asia and North America feasible. Tnriclnr. .Inly Sft. Kioting has taken place In Venice nnd I'adua over the recent communal tlect ions. The damage by Saturday's cloudburst in Steuben county, N. Y., Is estimated at SJ.-'O.IMNl. The claim of over !.i"'i by May Yohe against Lord Francis Hope has not b""ii sustained. The Mississippi river commission has report d estimates for the Improve ments in 1!H.H of f2.rii.iHHi. Heoirts of the serious Illness of Jo seph Chamberlain, England's colonial secretary, are pronounced untrue. II. L. lioherty. champion of England, defeated II. II. Hackett of New York city in the Longwood tenuis tourna ment. lnndny, July 2. 1'onr negroes lynched a negro horse stealer near Shreveport, La. Ir. Charles K. Adams, formerly president of Wisconsin university, died at Kedlands. Cal. At Cairo. Egypt, fifty-two new cases of cholera and thirty-eight deaths from the disease were reported. Two men were killed nnd two others seriously burned by an ex .lost. 11 of gas In the coal mines near McCurtain, I. T. The attempt of five men to wreck a trolley near Rochester. N. Y.. resulted in a rear end collision in which seven persons were seriously hurt. Snturdny. July SIS. William J. I'.ryati addressed 5,000 people in Kockland, Me. Heavy storms in Pennsylvania caused much damage to crops. Daily earthquakes have occurred In lUindu-Abbas, Persia, since July 0. A severe typhoon swept over the is land of Luzon between the thirteen and eighteenth parallels. A Denver express on the Hook Island railroad was wrecked near Omaha, with the loss of two lives. Forty persons, a number of them prominent, were poisoned by drinking lemonade at Maryville, Tcnn. Many will die. Frldny, July 2.I. Two negroes were lynched In rhi lippe, W. Ya. l'our French ollieers were killed by a premature explosion of a mine. Three American robbers secui'ed $.10,1 MX) from a Mexican Central rail way train near p.ermijilo. Wyoming ranchers have turned loose fi.1,000 sheep, and the militia may be called to suppress trouble. The Japanese government formally claimed Marcos Island, said to have been discovered by Captain Iti'sehill. Hard coal was advanced to ?S a ton. Miners say the operators have vast quantities of coal in sight nnd are un necessarily pushing up prices. Tliurduy, Jnly 21. Chicago terminal for proposed wire less telegraph system was chosen. The war department reported good progress on the new army post build ing In Manila. Another !?1c),0t"0 has been sent from tho Illinois distric t United Mine Work ers for anthracite strikers. More riots occurred In Paris, with several arrests, over thb government's treatment of religious orders. The United States transport Sumner readied San Francisco from Manila, witli a hundred army officers and their families. CJoildard Cannot Live. CAMDEN. N. J., July :io.-Tho con dition of Joe Goddard, Jhe Philadel phia pugilist, who was shot during the ltepublican primary elections, is re ported by the physicians at Cooper hos pital as critical, and there Is little hope of his recovery. Harry Miller, a local policeman, who was stabled in the ab domen, is doing well nud will probably recover, Isaac Fowler, a constable, who was stabbed at PeiisauUeu, near Merchantvllle, was not seriously hurt. The body of John Morrlsey of Phila delphia, who was shot and killed. Is still at the morgue. Miner Cinllty of Contempt. PAKKEIISHUHG. W. Vn.. July 25. Judge Jackson lu the United States district court yesterday held "Mother" Jones nnd seven other organizers of the United Mine Workers and a num ber of Hungarian miners guilty of con tempt in violating his restraining order of June 10 and passed sentence, on them of from sixty to ninety days lu jail, with the exception of "Mother" Jones and the Hungarians. Root nud Wood Go Abroad. NEW YORK, July 2.1. Among the passengers who sailed cm La Savoic of the French lino were EUhu Hoot, sec retary of war; General Leonard W. Wood, General Horace Porter, embas sador to France, and William Nelson Cromwell, counsel for the Panama Ca nal company. General Wood will at tend the German army maneuvers and bring borne his wife, who Is 111 In Fruuce. TIDAL WAV1TS HAVOC Ten Drowned and Six Ships Wrecked In California Gulf. RESULT OF EARTHQUAKE SHOCK. Deports From plirimkn Sliow the elmlp Dlnltirltnncp to llnve Ilcpn More (.pnprnl Than nt I Ir.t Told. SANTA HAIU5AKA. Cal.. July SO. Ten persons were drowned and six hips nre wrecks In the gulf of Califor nia ns the result of the tidal wave fol lowing the enrthnuake. At Mazatlan the Potnery Kuby, a large passenger steamship, was driven shore and sunk. Ten passengers were drowned, and the rest managed to teach shore on wreckage after being hours In the water. At Cuaymas five vessels In the bny were driven ashore nnd sunk. Two of them, El Grnviuu and El Prlucipa, were large steamships engaged in coastwise trade. The actual damage In Santa Itnr bara was slluht. but citizens are In a highly nervous state, fearing a recur rence of the shocks. The Lonipoe valley experienced n shock Monday. About In p. lu. a vio lent shock was felt which lasted fully thirty seconds and was so severe that dishes, clocks, house plants and other articles were thrown from shelves. The people were stric ken with terror and ran from their houses, some fear ing to return, as other lighter shocks continued for several hours afterward. Another heavy shock was felt at 5 a. m. and one at 11 a. m. yesterday. A large water tank was knocked over, the earth cracked at many different places, and 'the Santa Ynez riverbed was slightly" changed In places. At Los Alamos, forty-five miles north of Santa Ilarbara. an unusually severe shock of earthquake occurred, doing damage to the property of tin; Western Union Oil company estimated at from 512.IMK) to $1.1.1 Hill. At Harris Station, on the railroad, n fissure Is reported to have opened, and from It a stream of water "J feet deep and IS feet wide is now flowing. The Minkprii In p1irnsUn. OMAHA. Neb., July lin.-Ueports continue to come In from Nebraska towns which were visited by the earth quake. At Carroll, Neb., only one shock was felt, lasting thirty seconds. Humbling like that of a heavy freight train continued during the entire time. At Elgin three shocks were felt, each lasting fifteen seconds, during a space of ten minutes. At Iinttlo Creek two shocks were experienced, and they caused consternation. Persons ran from the town into the country .sur rounding. P.attle Creek reports that some damage was created at Tllden, O'Neill, Petersburg and Oakdalo, but this report lias not yet been substan tiated. On the Omaha and Winnebago Indian agencies a celebration and dance were in progress. Half an hour nftr the first shock not an Indian could bo fliuiid near the festival ground. The celebration was broken up. Dispatches from various points In South Dakota in tile vicinity of Yank ton report similar disturbances. The shocks were heaviest throughout the Elkhorn Hlver valley and covered a territory more than b0 miles square. Onp TnUpni Three Left. POTTS V1LLE. Pa., July .?0.-Louls Oschenbach of Dorset, on the Lizard creek branch of the Lehigh Valley railroad, was killed by lightning Inst evening, lie was a railway repair man, and with four other repair men sat In the West Peiin station while the storm was raging. They sat on n bench, with Oschoiibnch In the middle. His shoes were torn from his feet and bis body was turned black by the bolt of lightning. His companions escaped Injury. Oschenbach was thirty-two years of nge and married. In precedent eil Knlnfnll. ITHACA, N. V., July ). Director A. G. Allen of the Cornell branch .of the United States weather bureau an nounces the rainfall here thus far In the present month has reached the re markable figures of CO" Inches, tin In crease of 00 per cent over the average for June, which was :i.7'l Indies. The total for the first twenty-eight days of the present month is, with one excep tion, larger than that for the entire month during the past twenty years. Solomon's Temple Fonnd. VIENNA, July 2.1. The Neues Wcl ner Tagblatt says that Dr. Selllm, a professor nt the Vienna university, who' Is exploring Palestine In behalf of the Imperial Academy of Sciences, has discovered the walls and gateway of i the ancient temple of Solomon In tho neighborhood of Janohah, in Samaria. More Troop Leaver Manila. WASHINGTON, Jnly :jo. The war department bus been advised of tho sailing of the transport linford from Manila with -1!2 enlisted men of the Eighth infantry, 14: men of the Fif teenth Infantry, 104 men of the Twenty-sixth infantry, Il sick, .1 insane and (il discharged soldiers. Place Far Vanderl.lll'a Noa-ln-I.atv. LIVERPOOL, July :!0.-The Post Statt-s that the Duke of Marlborough Is about to be upKlnted to an olllce treat In social if not political charac ter. If he Is not made lord lieutenant of Ireland, the Post says, he will get the governor generalship of Australia. Civil XVnr Veteran llrad. PHILADELPHIA, July W.-Pnul Van der Voort, past commander in chief of the Grand Army of the Re public, Is dead at Puerto Principe?, (Hiba, of paralysis of the heart, lie -ti born lu Ohio lu IMUJ. WAS IT A FAKE? The ffpfpftt of r'llinlnimotin tty JeN frlpn nt Krlfipn So ttpportpd. SAN FHANCISCO. July US. Now that the .lellries-l'itzsiiuinoiis con test for the world's championship is over the cry of "Fake:" has been raised, tlioimh without Justification In the opinion of Heferee Graney, George Sil.r and the great majority of other quitting men who witnessed tho con test. A ooniinunlentloti sent to Mayor Scbmltz before the fight, to be opened after It wn ended, stated that the writer hml been Infoiined that Jef fries was to win In the eighth round, which he did. The mayor stated that If the charge that the contest wns a prearranged affair cannot be disproved he will be compelled to prohibit such exhibitions hereafter. The t'mht Friday night wns mmle In the presenceaof S.Sno persons gath ered from nil over the United States. The battle was hard from the start, and for a time it looked as though the "old mnn of the ring" had a good chance to regain his lost laurels. Jef fries was bleeding badly and scented tired before the fight was more than half end"d. while Fitzsiinmoiis ap peared to be fairly fresh. In the cluhth round Jeffries landed a left hook on the jaw, and Fltzsimmons fell and was cnunt"d out as he lay unconscious. Ho recovered soon after he was taken to his Corner nnd, arising, said: "I was fairly beaten. I have retired now permanently. If I had won this battle. It would still have been my last, nnd I would have turned the champi onship over to Jeffries to defend." I'nnther l.oonp la piv York City. NEW' YoliK. July -js , young Mexican panther got away from Di rector William T. Hornnday's animal family in the Prolix Zoological park yesterday and spread terror not only among the visitors to the park, but also in the neighborhood for miles around. Night overtook a hunting party that Included a squad of mc mmcrit attend ants, headed by Curator Ditmars, and platoons of police from three police stations, with the panther still at large. When last beard from, lie had crossed the I troll x river and was doing what ever mischief he was capable, of some where near Willlamsbridge. An I'.IuHt Hundred Acre Orehnrd. HANCOCK, Mil., July 'JO.-The To noloway Orchard company has been incorporated by a number of govern ment pomologies, and work will be begun immediately planting an or chard of N m) acres In winter apples along Tonoloway ridge, near Hancock. II. E. Vaiidemen, .who established the department of pomology of the United States agricultural department Is pres ident of the coaqmny. A Trennury Dellelt. WASHINGTON. July no. There will be a deficit lu the United States treas ury for July amounting probably to about $0,1 io.ik io. A treasury deficit for July is not unusual. The expenditures during the first month of the fiscal year are always heavier than In other months, from the fact that many con gress appropriations are made availa ble on July 1. v Fntnl Itiopute Over n Woman, MIDDLESHOUO. Ky July M0. At Mingo mines here Warren Smith killed Calvin Senter by shooting hltn through the heart. Ilefore Senter was shot lie mortally wounded Smith. A dispute over u woman was the cause of the shooting. AVnuen Volnnlurlly Inrrenned. CUM I'.EHLAND, Md., July 2U.-Oftl-clals of the West Virginia Central and Pittsburg Hallway company announces n voluntary Increase of wages to Its employes. The Increase affects all the employes of the transportation depart ment and averages 10 per cent. FINANCIAL AND COMMERCIAL. fl cot I ii it Stock Qnotntlona. Money on call steady at 3 per cent. Prime mercantile paper, 4'.ifiS per cent. Stcrltnif . cxchunne steady, with actual business In hankers' bllla nt $4.8Tt(4.l8 for demand and at $4.ST,i.44.s5ij for ttu duys Posted nites, J4.hii und Rtaifc. Com mercial bills, U.MVM.&iV. iJur silver, 53c. Mexican dollars, 41i.jC. Clovcrnment bonds steady. State bonds Inactive. Itallroud bonds IrrtKUlur. Closing prices: Atchison 102 N. Y. Central. .,161 C.,C..C.& St. L. lciui Ontario & West. 33 Chen. & Ohio... 52"4 Pacific Mall .... 3914 People's Ous....1(i:i ReadinB 8 Del. & Hudson. Vna Hock Island ....1U0H Erie as St. Paul 184ij Gen. Electric... 1MH Sugar Refinery .131 Lead 21U Texas Pacltlo .. 45 Louis. & Nash. .144 t'nlun Pucitio . .ius. Manhattan Conlltt'i Wabash pref. ., il Missouri Pac... llfc Went. Union ... &ti 'pvv York Market. FLOUR Unsettled and weak, with buy ers UmlSe. out of line; Minnesota pat ents, fci.WKiH.lu; winter straights, $.'I.Du& 3.K0; winter extras, J3.lo1i3.Jj; winter put tints. S3.T5''x4. WHEAT Developed n heavy tone and sharp declines under further bin south west receipts and favorable weather; Sep tember, 7-"ii75 !i-li'.c; December, J.V'cTOc. It YE Statu, tkl'ijMc., c. I. f., New York, car lots; No. 2 western, (jtiViC, f. o. b afloat CORN Demoralized by heavy liquida tion, a larKi-r movement and favurubl Weather; September, HS,,Hime. ; Decem ber, 4y;4!ivc. OATS -Ruled quiet and weak with oth er markets; track, white, state, DutiTUc. ; track, white, western, (i.Vii70c. POI'.K yulet; mesa, i.TJti 10.50; family, S24.tXi21. LARD Easy; prime western steam, lO.HTc. EGOS Steady; state and Pennsylvania, 2iJ'd )'-vC. : wentei ii, candled, Mi lW'ijC. SUGAR Raw steady; fair relinlnpr, 2rAC.; centrifugal, t tet. 3ac.; relined steady; crushed, 5.1.V. ; powdered, 4.75c. TI'ftPKNTINE-Hleady at 4ii'...Ti47c. MOLASSES Steady; New Orleans, 23W 41c. RICE Firm; domestic, Wjfj6e.; Japan, IV" c TALLOW Firm; city, 6ic.; country, 6'"7ic. HAY Firm; shipping, 6MJ70ci good to choice, Vo'nil. l.'lve Stock Market. CATTLE Market steady; choice, 7.504i 7.I0J; prime!, good, Sti.jOMti.75; vuul calves. $71 7.T5. H0U8-Market steady; prime, heuvles. tti'ul.lO; mediums, k; heavy Yorkers, $7.1)5 fclf; light do t,.WUll.96 llg. $7.8&'u?.t; roughs. $C'a7.rA SHKEP AND I.AM KB Market slow; best wethers, $4.154.35; culls and com mon, lMul; choluii lumbs, $5.6u&5.75. Lot Owners in Cemeteries Have the Right to Select Ihcir Own Workmen. Tui'gc IVnnyf acker, in Philadelphia has decided that lot holders in ceine leries could select their own workmen, and he refused the motion of a special injunction made by the trustees of th: Palmer burying ground to restrain Jacob G. Feniniorc and others from constructing foundations for tomb stones in the cemclery and from inter fering in any vvay with Albert Kmcrick Jr., the superintendent of the burying ground, in the performance of his duties. The equity suit arose from a dispute as to the right of an individual to select his own workmen to perform work on his own burying lot. The trustees of the cemetery appointed a superintend ent to look after the ground and keep all property in good repair. His duties further required him to superintend the grave digging and to collect the fees for this and kindred service?, which constituted his salary. Several marble men insisted upon having their own workmen go to the cemetery and build the foundation for monuments and headstones sold by them. The cemetery company ad opted a resolution giving the superin tendent exclusive privilege of doing that kind ol work, and when Fcnimore insisted that lot holders had a right to select their ovn workmen, the com pany told him he was a tresspasser and sought to have the court enjoin him from doing any more foundation building in the burying ground. In refusing the injunction the court practically decided that Fenimore was right in his contention that lot holders could choose their own workmen. "My Family Doctor-'' liluc Island, III., Jan. 14, itjl. Mfssrs. Ki.v linos.: I have used your Cream Halm in my family for nine years and it lias become my family doctor for cold s in the head. 1 use it freely 011 my children. It is a (Jodstml to children as they are troubled more or less. Yours respectfully, J. KlMiui.l.. . Judge for yourself. A trial size can 1 e had for the small sn;n of locts. Supplied liy druggists cr mniied by Ely Ilrothets, 56 Warren St., New York. Full size, 5octs. Easumptionof llidaigbt Servico Between Philadelphia and Williamsporl via Reading- t , : : t 1 i t . . 1 . . . Dcgiiinmg tnuibuay, juiy 3131, daily train leaving Philadelphia (Read- ai) 1 1:30 p. m. lor will. iamsport, and beginning Friday, August 1st, daily train leaving Will iamsport at into p. m. for Philadel phia, will resume service. These trains will connect to and from Eaglesmere. Eeduced Bates to Salt Lake Oity- On account of the Grand Lodge, B. & P. O. E., to be held at Salt Lake City, August ia to 14, the Pennsylvania Railroad Company will sell excursion tickets to Salt Lake City, from all stations on its lines, at reduced rates. Tickets will be sold and good going on August 6 to 8, in clusive, and will be good to return until September 30, inclusive. Tick ets must be validated for return pas sage by Joint Agent at Salt Lake City, for which service a fee of 50 cents will be charged. For specific rates and conditions, apply to ticket agents. 7 31-it jjm CHICHCSTCR'3 ENGLISH Pennyroyal pills 9JV' V Origin I and Only flenuliie. IOT sL llltllf.ni E.I r1.fl&JKIft la KKD n4 Voltl mctklUe buxe. i!e4 , with Liu ribbon, Takr mo oth rr. Ilt-fii ICcrou HutHttitutioM nd 1ml I iio nit. Bui of lour lrur-ciil. or srQ.l 4r- IB i ot r Part leu Intra, TwtlMonlitU tad "Relief for l.tlle," Uttm, by r lura Mall. 1 0.OOO Tetlin.Diu. Hold bf Ilr..i.i. 4'kl.t.Hl.. ' 7-3id4t. ALEXANDER BliOTliKltK & CO. DEALERS IN Cigars, Tobacco Candies, Fruits and Nuts SOLI AGENTS FOR Henry Mail lard's Fine Candies. Frebh Every Veek. 3?jtriT"2 Goods j SEci-a.XjX'sr, SOLE AGENTS FOR F. F. Adams & Co's Fine Cut Chewing Tobacco Bole agents for t he following brands ot Cigars- Honry Clay, Londres, Normal, Indian Princess, Samson, Silver .s Bloomsburg Pa. IK YOU ARE IN NEED OF CARPET, MATTING, or Oils CLOTH, YOU WILL FIND A NICE LINE AT a Doois aboe Churl IIouhc. A large lot of Window Curtains in stock. Eedtioed Kates to San Fratcisco cti Lou Angeles- On account of the biennial meet- ! ing, Knights of Pythias, at S in Fran- cisco, Cal., August ti to 2J, 1902, the Pennsylvania Railroad Company will sell excursion tickets to San Fran cisco or Los Angeles from all stations on its lines, from August 1 to 9, in clusive, at greatly reduced rates. These tickets will be good lor return passage until September 30, inclusive, when executed by Joint Agent at I,os Angeles or San Francisco and pay ment of 50 cents made for this ser vice. For specific information regard ing rates and routes, apply to ticket agents. 7.31 at " Have by some surgeon Shylock on thy charge to step his wounds lest he do bleed to dc.nh." People can bleed to death. The less of blood weakens the body. It must follow that pain of blond gives the body strength. The strcngihcning effect of llr. Pierce's Golden Medical I)i?covcry is in large part due to its action on the blood, making glands and the UKrc;cd supply of pure, rich blood it produces. It is only when the blood is inipovei i.-hed and impure that disease finds a soil in which 10 loot. The 'l liscovcry" pur.fies the blood and makes it antagonistic 10 disease. When the body ii emaciated, the lungs ate weak, and , theie is obstinate lingering cough, "Golden 1 MmmccI iJiscnvciy" puts the body on a figliiing foe ting against disease, and jo in I ci cases the vitality that disease is thrown r.lT, and physical health pcifcdly and per- nia'.cntly restored. It has cured thousands who were hopeless and lul lcs, nnd who had tiicd all other means of cure without avail. , Tvcniy.onr one cent 'tamps to cover ex pense of mailing only will olita n n copy of I Jr. Pierce's Common t-cuse Medical Ad viser, 100S pages, in paper covci. Send thirty-one stamps if cloth binding is pre fcrie.l. Adilicss Dr. K. V. Pierce, Ilulfulo, N. Y. CmteDDial Envtlcpts- The envelopes ordered by the Cen tennial committee have arrived and orders for them may be left at this office. The prices are as follows: 1000, $3.50; 500, $t.8oj 250, $1.00. This includes printing business card in the corner. tf. Use Ai.i.k.n's Fcxvr-EAsr, A powder to be shaken into the shoes. Your feet feel swollen, nervous and hot, and pet tired easily. If you have smarting feet or light shoes,, try Allen's Foot-I'.ase, It cools the feet, and makes walking easy. Cures swo'len, sweat ing feet, ingrowing nails, blisters and callous spots. Relieves corns and liunyons of all pain and gives rest nnd comfort. Tty it to day. Sold by all druggists and shoe stores for 25c. Don't accept any substitute. Tiial package fkke. Address, Allen S. Olmsted, l.cKoy, N. V. 7-17 d 4t The Markets. BLOOMSBURG MARKETS. CORRECTED WEEKLY. RETAIL PRICES KuUer, per pound. $ 32 18 14 16 Eggs, per dozen I.ard, per pound Ham, per pound Beef (quarter), per pound Wheat, per bushel Oats, do ' Kye, do Hour per bbl Hay, per ton Potatoes, (new), per bushel Turnips, do Tallow, per pound Shoulder, do Side meat, do Vinegar, per qt Dried apples, per pound Cow hides, do Steer do do Calf skin Sheep pelts Shelled corn, per bushel 6 to 8 1 00 60 4 4o 14 00 80 40 06 12 ia OS 07 3i 05 80 75 90 2 00 1 3o 1 60 1 40 14 II 120 I 00 Corn meal, cwt Bran, cwt Chop, cwt Middlings, cwt. Chickens, per pound, new, do do old. Geese, do Ducks, do do COAL. Number 6, delivered 3 50 do 4 and 5 delivered, 4 4$ do 6, at yard 3 10 du 4 and 5, at yard 4 25
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers