TROOPS AT TAMAOUA General Qobin on Scene Recent Rioting. of ALL IS QUIET AT PRESEST TIME. .Mine WorkfM' Iriafrlet Prralrtcn t In liulrlnu Into Miootlnw of Strike l,Hilor Mini- Tronlilr In Prnrpil nt I'tint-ml. TAM.it'A. I'm., Auk. !'().-( JcikmmI Goliln, win Ih in t'oliiiniHitl of the l:ii talloii of the Twelfth ivj;li)iriil, 11:1 tlotinl Ktmrrt of I Viiiisylvniiin, ncnt from Khciinmloiih to the I'niithtr civek vnlli'.v, IniH nin'iit'il li'iinmrnry licnd qiiiii'trrx In the town. The kcimtiiI iiiuI hi MnlT will not lfiurn to MhmimiiiIhuIi until tho latter part of the week. The ftun'1-iil tif PiitrlcU Sharp, the strike leader who was shut ami killed at .'enUehoiilnj,' hy M Ueputy, will take plaee tomorrow. All the miners' loeal unions In the reclon are limklnj: arrannenientx to march to I.nnsford and attend the funrral, and (ieueral tiolilii will prnliald.v ftatlon troojis alonjj the route to lie taken liy the fu nrral. Tlionin Huffy, president of tlistrlet No. 7. and Peter (lalhmher, inemlier of the executive hoard, came to I.ans ford to make tin Investigation of the facta connected with the shooting of Sharp. After Interviewing several of the men who saw Sharp killed they went to Manch Chunk to nv: coun sel and to make arranticnicnt to push the prosecution of the deputy charged with the shootlnj;. Honap Ilj nniuttril by Mrlkrra. AVM.KKSHAUHK. I'm.. Auk. '-'D.-l'n-known parties exploded a stick of dy namite under the front door of John AVorkls' house In I'ittston township. The door was wrecked, and the In mates of the house were liadly fright ened. Six men were lodged in the dwelling. Two of them are working in the mines. It Is said that the two men who continue at work had lieen warned that If they did not remain at home harm would come to them. rroteat Auninat Troup' Presence. HAZLRTON. I'm., Aug. L'n.-I'resl-dent Thomas Huffy of district No. 7. United Mine Workers, has sent a form al protest against the presence of the Twelfth regiment nt Manile park, near Ooaldale. The note to Wovernor Stone declares that the situation does not re quire the troops and that an Investiga tion by the governor would confirm the truth of the statement. BOERS SEE THE KING. Bothn, Delnrey and De Wet Visit Cowen. LONDON, Aug. lH.-The Itocr gen erals ltotha, De Wet and Delarey, who reached here Saturday from South Af rica, have visited C'owes, Isle of Wight, to see King Edward on board the royal yacht Victoria and Albert. In an Interview with a representa tive of the press (ieueral Botha's sec retary nVsc.-ibcd the visit to his maj esty. He said that when the l!oer gen erals boarded the royal yacht King Edward came forward and after they had been Introduced shook hands with each of them. The l'.oers were highly pleased with their reception. After n brief and Informal talk of a nonpolit Ical character with King Edward they wore introduced to Queen Alexandra and rrineess Victoria. Tho reception by his majesty lasted a uuarlor of an hour. The king spoke of "the gallant and brave manner in which the generals had fought through the long and arduous campaign" and of "the consideration and kindness" with which the generals had treated British wounded. His majesty ex pivssed his warm wishes for their fu tures. It was at the king's suggestion that the Moors took the trip around the fleet on board the Wlldtire. Sc-ImvuIi En Route to Knrope. ALTOONA, Pa., Aug. I'll. Charles M. Schwab, president of the United States Steel corporation, has passed through here on his private car Lo retto, en route to New York, whence he will sail for Europe. He disclosed his destination to an old Altoona friend W ho talked with him since he has been ut Loretto. He said that he was going to France, where he will take a course of treatment at the mineral springs of that country. Hlsfchlef ailment is nn affection of the nerves. The Meol pres ident's stay amid the scenes of his boy hood has evidently done him good. He told his friend. K. D. Saupp of this city, that he never felt better In his life, and Mr. Saupp emphasized this by stating that he had never seen him looking better. Mrs. Schwab Is not with her husband. She will remain nt Loretto during his absence. Island Destroyed by Volcano. YOKOHAMA, Aug. 19.-The little is laud of Torishlmu was overwhelmed by a volcanic eruption between Aug. 13 and Aug. 15, and all the Inhabitants, numbering 150 persons, were undoubt edly killed. The Island Is covered with volcanic debris, and all the houses that were on it have disappeared. The eruption is still proceeding and Is ac companied by submarine eruptions in tho vicinity, which make it dangerous for vessels to approach the Island. Tor lshlina is one of a chain of Islands extending between the Monlu islauds and Hondo, the biggest Island of Japan. I'umoua Indian Scout Dead, MISSOULA, Mont., Aug. 20. Chief Chariots, the famous Indian scout of the Itocky mountain district, is dead n the Flathead reservation. It Is as serted that Chariots' death removes tho only barrier that has prevented tho aliening of the Flathead reservation 'or settlement. NOTED JURIST DEAD. I.nlhrr II. Mitrali, Once a I'nrtner of Webater. , Minm.ETOWN, N. V., Ann. 10. I.uther It. Marsh, the noted spiritualist, , once the law partner of Daniel AVeli- . uler mid for years one of the foremost ' Jurists of New York state, Is dead of ' old ajte. He was In his ninety-first year. j I.nther U. Marsh was horn In 1S1.1 In l'otnpcy, N. Y. Ity his alilllly and In- I dustry he pushed ahead Into a law of- I flee. He was admitted to the liar when ' yet almost a youth and soon earned a reputation for handling successfully most diMcult cases. Tor fifty-two years Mr. Marsh hold his place as a leader In the har. lie was for a long time president of the park commission and was for several terms a vice mesident of the I'niin league, of which he was one of the founders. In Mr. Marsh's home Tn Fifth avenue 'jo frequently entertained the notorious Mine. Ann Odelln Diss He I tar, who . was sent to prison later for her part In the spiritualistic pletnr swindle by which he was deceived for years. He helieved implicitly In her power. In 18S.S Mr. Marsh said his eyes were opened to Mine. Hiss He ltar's charac ter, lie found many of her stories false and that, lie had been deceived hy the medium. These disclosures and the ridicule that followed estranged him from friends of a lifetime, and he finally resolved to leave the city. He prepared to make his home on Lake Klie and sent on his household goods. Among the many mediums who con tinued to besiege his home after the Imprisonment of Mine. Hiss He ttur was Mrs. Clarissa Iluyler of Middle town, N. Y. lie was invited to visit her home. He accepted, Intending to remain only a few days, hut he never returned to New York nor continued his Journey to his country home on Lake Erie. CUMANA CAPTURED. Veneitnelnn Iteliels Win nn Impor tant Vlrtory. 1 WILLEMSTAD. Curacao, Aug. 20. News lias Just readied here that tho seaport of Cuuiana, in the state of Her lnndez, Venezuela, was occupied at; noon hy the Venezuelan revolutionists without the f.ring of a single shot. The government forces commanded by Ceneral Volutin! and the local au thorities of Cumana evacuated that town the night before. They with drew to the Island of Margarita, about forty miles north of Cumana, on board the steamer Ossun. A report Is current here that a num ber of lSrltlsh war vessels under the command of an admiral will visit La (Suayra, Venezuela, in a few days. No reasons for the presence of the warships In question at La (iuayra can be obtained, and the report is caus ing considerable speculation. Cumana, which is about I2i0 miles east of La tJuayra, was occupied for a short time by the Venezuelan revo lutionists last May. Upon this occa sion also the government forces left the town without offering resistance: Cumana Is abont fifty miles east of Marcelona. which was captured by the revolutionists tho early part of tills month. The revolutionists now hold the customs ports of Cludad Molivar. tluiria, Cano Colorado, La Vela de Coro, Carupano, Marcelona nr.d Cu mana. , DR. SCHENCK DEAD. "nn AVIio Thniiuht He Had I)Icov ered Secret of Se. VIENNA, Aug. 1!). Professor Sam uel L. Schenck, the distinguished em bryologist and author of "The Heter ininatlon of Sex," has died at Scliwan berg, Styrla. He was a savant in the University of Vienna and for a genera tion had given his whole time to the work for which he was noted. The au thor's declaration that the sex of a child could be fixed at will by the mother undergoing a course of treat ment before the child's birth created a considerable stir in medical circles when it tirst appeared a few years ago. A uumbor of persons, among them j the czarina of Russia, were reported to i have taken the prescribed treatment. ' In some few cases It was stated that ' the treatment had been effectual, among them the Countess of War wick, the Archduchess Frederick of Austria and the Hucliess of Aosta, but in the czarina's ease, if she underwent the treatment, It was without result. Ilefniiltlnw Treasurer In Canada. PASSAIC. N. J., Aug. i!0.-Chief of Police Handry has announced that he has positive information that William Malcolm, tho former secretary of the Mutual Loan and Muildlng association of Passaic, whose defalcation caused the association's failure. Is now In Canada and will try to head him off before he can sail for Europe. Three warrants for .Malcolm's arrest have been Issued by Acting Police Judge Van Horploog. They charge him with fraud, grand larceny and swindling. Tnrlff Treaty With China Sinned. WASHINGTON, Aug. LS.-Tlie state department has received a dispatch from T. S. Sharretts, tho treasury ex pert who was commissioned by the state department to negotiate a tariff treaty between the United States and China, stating that the treaty was tiigned on the 15th Inst, and that he would sail for .the United States on tho first steamer. Captain' Son Killed In Ilruwl. SAN ANTONIO, Tex., Aug. 20. Thomas Holt, son of Captain William Holt of the United States quartermas ter's department, was shot and killed In a saloon In this city, and Harvey Hairell, a mall route agent, was ar rested and lodged In Jail, charged with the shooting. Tho two men became In volved In u dltllculty over u trivial matter. THE COLUMBIAN. A LOVELORN SUICIDE Engagement Broken, R. R. Remington Kills Himself. GREAT SHOCK TO HIGH SOCIETY. (ilrl In Case n GranddnnKhter of - Mr. Wllllnm Antor and lcnd Sinn Well Known In IVenr York and .eiort. ' NEWPORT, K. I., Aug. lO.-Mltter disappointment over n broken matri monial engagement is believed to have been the cause of the suicide at tho Heading ISootn of Robert Reading Rem ington of New York. Mr. Remington came over to the Reading Room from his rooms fit the La Forge cottage nbout 1 o'clock and shortly after 2 sought the seclusion of the committee rooms on the second door of the club house. About 2:110 two sharp but some what muflled reports were heard, but those In the building appear to have ascribed them to automobiles going by, and no attention was paid to them. About an hour afterward Mr. Reming ton's body was found, he evidently having been dead for some time. A loeal undertaker was notified, and the body was at once removed to his rooms. The report of the suicide caused a great shock to the summer residents In this city. . His engagement to Miss May Van Al en, daughter of James Van Alen and granddaughter of Mrs. Wllllnm Astor, has been the topic of discussion for some months. At first it was denied and then nlHnned, and It Is generally believed that there was a definite en gagement, of the young people up to within the last three weeks, when It was broken. Since then Mr. Reming ton has been very gloomy and de spondent, although when asked about the engagement he steadily affirmed i that he was to be married In the fall. ; He left the city about a week ago, breaking up his domestic arrangements here and sending away all his effects. Last Thursday, however, ho suddenly returned to Newport. Ho- had fre quented the Reading Room, which is the leading club of Newport anil a gen eral lounging place for the men of tho summer colony, but had kept aloof from every one and seemed to desire to be left alone. Mr. Remington was nbout thirty-five years of age and a member of the firm of Remington Mros., advertising agents, of New York. Although of no very large means, he nevertheless was quite closely identified with the social colonies of this city and Now York. He had great friends in both places mid had been u constant visitor to Newport for the past seven or eight years. Ho mot Miss Van Alen some jears ago, but it was only during the past year that their names had been coupled. About two months ago the engagement between the two was an nounced, but soon after tho marriage of Miss Van Alen's sister Sarah to Mr. j Robert J. Collier In this city, July 20, It ' was stated the engagement between Mr. Remington and Miss Van Alen had been broken. It Is said that Mr. Van ' Alen was greatly opposed to the en gagement from the beginning. Mr. Remington had always been known as a man of very quiet tastes. He was nn expert autoniobilist and seemed to enjoy this amusement. He was well liked and had numerous friends. When the news was broken to Miss May Van Alen, she was greatly affect ed. A physician was called in, and the entire family was greatly shocked. Mr. Van Alen made tills statement: "I had the engagement broken off be cause I thought Mr. Remington's mind was unbalanced. .Many things which I had sjou myself and which had been brought to my attention led me to this conclusion, and It seemed to me an am ply sutlleient reason for severing the proposed connection. Latterly Mr. Rem ington has written letters to me and members of my family which I only can describe as insulting. In some the motives aitd meaning of the writer were utterly incomprehensible, while others were filled with references to my daughter couched In the most ex traordinary language. "Notwithstanding this Mr. Reming ton frequently visited my house and j c c" c&'stL' J"5 always was courteously received. Yes- I Cries! & Ohio..'. 64 terday he wrote to Miss Van Alen apol- ! Krte 39 ogizlng for the tone of some of his pre- Gen. Electric. Jsr. vlous letters, but his note contained i'jouIh'"& Niish." tr,7 nothing to suggest that he contemplat- Manhattan Con 147 ed any such desperate act. I believe he ; Missouri I'ac... m has been mentally unbalanced " for ' r.o'" w'", ' some time, though I cannot help say ing 1 think It showed cruel lack of con sideration for my daughter that he should have chosen such a place and such n time to end his life In this way." Santluito lulexlii Attain Arrested. SAN JUAN, Porto Rico, Aug. 2ii. Santiago Igleslns. president of the Fed eration of Workmen of Porto Rico, has been arrested at Aguadllla for Issuing a pamphlet criticising and attacking the Insular authorities for their atti tude on the recent labor Btriko. He was released In $500 ball. Santiago Igleslns was sentenced In Hecemlier, 1001, to more than three years' impris onment on the charge of conspiring to raise the price of labor In Porto Rico. The case was appealed, and tho su- i preme court of the Island reversed the decision of the lower court und acquit ted Igleslns of all the charges against him. Canada Seises American Schooner. HALIFAX, N. S.. Aug. 20. Custom officers have sc'ied the United States fishing schooner Howard Holbrook of Gloucester, Mass., at Causo on a charge of landing a cask of oil at Clarkes Harbor and seven pairs of rubber boots and a box of tobacco at Wrayton's Harbor without . declur.uig to tho customs or paying duty. I BLOOMSBURG, MET DEATH IN AUTOMOBILE. Rlllllonnlre Chnrlen l I'nlr and Ilia Wife Hilled In France. EVREUX, Franco, Aug. 15-While Mr. find Mrs. Charles L. Fair were speeding In their forty-five horsepow rr automobile from Trouvllle to Purls the machine swerved and crashed Into n tree, killing Mr. and Mrs. Fair and shocking their chauffeur so liadly that he has become insane. The accident occurred tit half past o'clock In the afternoon and almost In front of the Chateau Mulsson du Mai. The Fairs Intended to dine and spend the night in Paris and return to Trouvllle for lunch. Ths wife of the gatekeeper of tin chateau was the only witness of the disaster. She says she noticed a big red automobile coming along the road ut n tremendous puce. Suddenly some thing happened, and the heavy ma chine slid sideways from the right to the left side of the road for about sixty yards. It then dashed up an embank incut, turned a complete somersault and crashed Into a big elm tree in front of the gate of the chateau. The automobile was completely wrecked, the front axle was broken, and other parts of the machine were smashed, Including the steering gear. When the automobile turned over, the wife of the gatekeeper says she saw Mr. and Mrs. l air thrown high In tho air and fall wltli a heavy thud to the ground. The chauffeur, who was sitting behind tho I-a Irs, was precipitated Into a ditch. J ho accident was evidently due to the bursting of a tire. At the time it occurred the automobile, which was "capable of running seventy-four miles an hour, was going at the rate of six ty-two miles an hour. TROUBLE WITH TURKEY. Stnte Department ttfllclnls Admit Hv Istenee of Tcnmlnn. WASHINGTON, Aug. 20.-It Is ad mitted nt the state department that there is a renewal of tension but ween the I nlted States and Turkey, but the otllclals do not deem It prudent to dis close the present condition of affairs, Ihey say, however, that the condition Is in no way grave, but is of that strained character which has occurred from time to time with Turkey In re cent years. It Is gathered that the present tension grows out of the long pending claims of Americans who suf fered loss during the Armenian out break. To some extent the Stone ab duction gave added cause for irrita tion. The American minister. Mr. Lelsh niiiii, has been given wide latitude to deal with the situation as circum stances may demand. There Is tho fullest confidence on the part of the authorities here In the course being pursued by our minister, and as he has been given such a free hand In direct ing affairs it is not thought desirable to prejudice any steps he may be tak ing by official comments as to what has been or will be done. JUSTICE SHIRAS TO RESIGN. Another Vnenncy In lulled Stnten Supreme Court. PITTSMURG, Aug. 1!.-Goorge Shl rns, son of Justice Sliiras of the su preme court, said: "It Is true that my father expects to retlr from the bench of the supremo court early In tho coming year. "There is no particular reason behind the retirement except that he believes that there Is wisdom In the law passed by congress enabling judges to retire when they have reached the age of seventy years." Kansas Knrmer'a llorrlhle Crime. SAL1NA, Kan., Aug. 20. Joseph An derson, a farmer, drowned his four children in a cistern near here and then committed suicide by shooting. FINANCIAL AND COMMERCIAL. Cloalnu; Stock Quotations. Money on -call steady at 4 per cent. Frimo mercantile paper. 4-'So per cent. Sterllnif exchnnm? steady, with actual business In bankers' bills at H.SB.ra'i 4.6U.S7j for demand und at U.Wi 4.84.25 for 60 day bills. Posted rates, $4.S.Vt(4.S3i and $4.X7'.ai4.SX Commercial bills. It.Sffi; 4.S4S. Bur sliver, 52c. Mexican dollars, 41V4c Government bonds steady. State bonds Innctive. Kullroud bonds irregular. Closing prices: Pacific Mall .... 44 People' a Gas ...104V4 Reading" 67 Rock Island ,...1S2'4 St. Paul 1KT4 Sugar Refinery. 1.12 Texaa l'acltlo .. L Cnlon l'acltlo ..10914 Wnbush pref. .. 4SVi West. Union ... 92'4 New York Klurketa. FI.Ol'R Dull and in buyers' Minnesota patents. taxi'tilf",: favor: winter Htralshis, $n.4ii'i3.i"; winter extras, t3.uyjt 3.2R: winter patents. .t.;5'(( 3 90. VH EAT-Opened tinner on continued wet weather, but eased off later for lack of support; September, 13 b-WiZc. ; De cember, 72V4fi i'vC RYE Firm: state. sevfcfTtSTc.. c. I. f., New York; No. 2 western. 6Jsc., f. o. b., uflont; No. 2. 6iViMc., track. CORN Quiet, but generally firm on small receipts and the rains west; May, 4:iV(i44c. GATS Firmer on fears of smaller re ceipts and on moderate covering; track, white, state, nominal; track, white, west ern, nominal. PORK Steady; mess, J17.75V& 18.75; fami ly, Ilin'e 20.5H. I.ARD Steady; prime western steam, 10.6( ic. PUTTER Rarely steady; state dairy, 16fflHHo.; creamery, l120c. CHEESE Firm; new. state, full cream, small, colored, fancy, 97c. ; small, while, BTc. ; large, colored, 9iC. ; large, white, EGGS Steady : state and Pennsylvania, !Wi2il,;.e.; western, candled, 17'Vylltc. TE RPENTINE- Sttady at 47a47Vc. RICE-Easier; domestic, VYh6c.; Ja pan, 4i1i fie. TA I. l.oV Dull ; city, 6U'3lVc.; coun try, 6-VaKSe. HAY Firm: shipping, 6.V(( 70c. ; good to choice, ll.u&'ijl.lu. . Live Stock Market. CATTLE Market steady; choice, 17.75 iiS; prime, ti.15ij7.50; good, (6.0uu7; veal calves, I7..WK. Hods-Market higher: prime heavies, $7.10'u7.ir: mediums. t7.1e'yT.15; heavy and light Yorkers, $7,1017.15; pigs, 17.10; roiitftix. Ifi.Sil'.iil 50. WBU KKf' ANl).,''' ,1S-M"rket eaAy, niiul ui.tllnril V.l 1 ri i J ' . mill un.l mon, Il.60'u2; 'choke luuYus. 5.75'tf. PA. PARKS FOR THE PEOPLE. The Turf Is Not So Much llnrt hy th Feet as It Is from Roll kxlinimllon. The question of rcmtn injy or repine ing- "Keep off tJje grass" igns in pub lie parks lias become one of lively in terest in many fl lies because of u re port that the turf, in Central park, New York, is in danger, on account of the crowds not boiiifr kept to the roads and paths, remarks the Cleve land Plain Dealer. Comparison of experiences leads' to the conclusion thnt It Is not k much the feet of the people stray ng over the grass thnt has. caused the mis chief as the Inijudgnient of the park management. The turf Is perishing because the toil is becoming exhaust ed. Other parks have for years bean free to the people, who are allowed to wander where they please and set tie themsrlvrs down on the cool turf In twos and three, and In larger fam ily proups. 1'ark parties pather and school picnics bivouac under the shade of the trees, while the children romp and fcamper In the open spaces with no "Keep off the grass" signs to scare them to the roads made perilous by swift nutonud lies or thronged with carriages. In spite of all this the priiss In these narks flourishes, the turf seeming to be the better Instead of the worse for this-usage. I he pnrks are for t.he people. The only way the masses of the people can enjoy themselves J by having the freedom of the grass. The ex perience of other cities, as well as that nf Cleveland, Is that under rea sonable repulationsi such use of the park Is not injurious to the turf, provided care Is taken to keep the soil in condition to supply the prnss root with proper nourishment. NEGRO SCARED WHITE. trnnse F.fTeet of Terror on the Illaek Conk of an Eastern Snll-Inu- Ship. Fear of death in the nml.-t of a storm which threatened, to send the schoon er Fred A. Small to the bottom is said to have changed Ilerm Illanco, a full- blooded negro, into u white man. The chanpe lasted three days. Then, so the s4ory goes', lilancoV natural color asserted itself once more, and he re sumed his place on shipboard as a man of ebony, reports the New York Mail and' Fxpress. "I had heard of a nepro turninp white from fright," said Cnnt. Z. It. Thomson, of the Small, "but it was the. first- time I ever snw such a transfor mation. Ordinarily Itlanco is as black as night, hut while the storm lasted he was almost as white as snow." In a wrecked condition the schooner came into port the other day, and was towed to dry clock. Three weeks apo she left Valparaiso with a carpo or wood, birds and monkevs. Six davs later she ran into a severe storm. For four days and nights, her crew was kept on cVck. On the fifth din- topmast and bows-prlt. went bv the board. All this time Ttlnnen. the cook. Is said to have prown whiter and whiter. Centennial Envelopes 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, $1.80; 250, $1.00. This includes printing business card in the corner. tf. .isn PILLS .yT.v Orlclial Md Onl Ceinln Yji.BArE. AlotvirtlUMa. I.ll-. ut llruirlrt 4( f&g. " CHICHKSTEK'S KNULISII in nr.ll nni WOIU nivitillo Dos. Malta with bio ribbon. TakfiBosthnr. KelW Itauscrona SubntltuUoaa Md Imita tion. Huj of jour Uraitittt, or Krnd 4a. in uruuo ror Partlpalara, TeatlHaataU and " Kellef fur l.adlea," m lf!r, by ra tal Mall. I O.OUO Tcaumonlalo. Sold bf ' Uentlua Uus paimr. Mlattvu i, I'liU., fa. 7-3id4t. ALEXANDER BROTHERS & CO. DEALERS IN Cigars, Tofcucco Candies, Fruits and Nuts SOLI AGENTS FOR Henry Mail lard's Fine Candies. Fresh Every Week.! Fi.tTjiT-s Goods a. specialty. SOLE AGENTS FOR '. F. Adams & Co's Fine Cut Chewing TotSacco " Sole agent s for the following brands of Cigar- Ienry Clay, Londres, Normal, Indian Princess, Samson, Silver A Bloomsburg Pa. IF YOU ARE IN NEED OF CARPET, JJ1ATTIWO, or AM 1L CLOTH, . YOU WILL FIND A NICE LINE AT t W. M. BEOWEE'S 2 Doois aboxeUnrt Hju; A lare lot of Window Curtains in stock. Reduced Kat a to Grangers' Picnic at Wil liams Grove, via Pennsylvania Kail road. For (he Twenty-ninth Annual Inter-State Grange Picnic Exhibition, to be held at Williams' Grove, Pa., Vugust as to 30, the Pennsylvania Railroad Company will sell excursion tickets from August i$ to 30, inclu. sivc, good to return on date of issue only, at rale of one lare for the round trip, from principal stations between Altoona and Bryn Mawrj on the Northern Central Railway, between Sunbury and Lutherville, inclusive, and on the Philadelphia and Krie Railroad Division east of and includ ing Renovo. There will be an elaborate display of farm machinery in actual operation during the exhibition, and addresses will be delivered by well known agri cultural speakers. For information in regard to train fcrvice and specific rates application should be made to ticket agents, at. Take c.nre of the stomach and the health will tnke care of itself. If people only renlizcd the soundness of that statement the majority tniyht live to good old npe like Mosc "the ee tuiditiintcd, the natural force unabated." It is in the itomaih that 1 he blood is made It is from the stomach that nourishment is dispensed to nerve and mimcle. If the stomach is "weak" it can't do its hole work for each pait of the iiodr. If it is diseased the disease will taint the nourishment which is distributed, and so spiead disease throughout ihe body. It was the realization of the importance of the stomach as the very center of health ami the common source of disease, which led Dr. Pierce to prepare his "Golden Medical Dis covery. ' "Diseases which originate in the stomach mu-.t be cured through tlu sto- niacn." 1 he soundness of this theory is proved every day by cures of diseased organs, hcari, liver, lungs, blood, by the use of the "Discovery" which is solely and singly a medicine for the blood and organs nf digestion and nutrition. It inn temper nncc medicine containing no alcohol, whisky or other intoxicant. Leases, 3c each, 30c a dozen. Notices to quit, 10c a dozen. For sale at this office. tl. Am. who vsr Atomizers in treatinc n.ifal catanh will get the best result from l'.ly's Liquid Cream Hal in. I'uce, including rrny "3 I'd f, 75 cts. Sold hy druggists or maiied hy Lly liros., 56 Warren St., N. Y. New Orleans, Sept. I, 1900. Messrs. Ely Uros: I sold two bottles nf your 1 iquid Cream Balm to a customer, Wm. I.amberton, 1415 Delnchaise St., New Orleans; he has U'jed the two bottles, giving him wonderful and most satisfactory results. OEo. W. MCDUFF, 1'harmacist. 1'he Markets. BLOOMSBURG MARKETS. CORRECTED WEEKLY. RETAIL PRICKS .Butter, per pound $ 23 F-CEs, per dozen 18 5 16 6 to 8 1 00 6S 60 440 14 00 60 Lard, per pound Ham, per pound Beef (quarter), per pound Wheal, per bushel Oats. do Rye, do Flour per bbl Hay, per ton Potatoes, fnew). per bushel Turnips, do , 40 Tallow, per pound 06 Shoulder, do 12 Side meat, do 12 Vinegar, per qt 05 Dried apples, per pound 07 Cow hides, do r 3J Steer do do 05 Calf skin 80 Sheep pelts 75 Shelled corn, per bushel 90 Corn meal, cwt 3 00 Bran, cwt 1 30 Chop, cwt 1 60 Middlings, cwL I 40 Chickens, per pound, new. do do old. 4 II I2j 13 08 3 50 4 45 3 o 4 S Turkeys do Geese, do Ducks, do COAL. Number 6, delivered do 4 and 5 delivered, do 6, at yard do 4 and 5, at yard...