1 DEADLY JXPLOSIOX. Fifteen Killed While Celebrat ing Election Results. FIREWORKS ACCIDENTALLY SET OFF atn4lnn iunrf. York. In Which iBurntF Cross da Vr Gathered Brforr llullrtin lloards, the rrne of the Horror. KEW Yi;K. Nov. 5.-By a nrema tm of fireworks In Madison square ln-t nlklit fifteen people nr" Sn-Heved to have been killed anil for ty aerionsly injured. Owina to tl.c panic and confusion anions the crowd watching the election returns It was impossible to make a correct estimate the f.itnUtK--. The explosion took place amonif the firework thnt were to be set off to celebrate the announce ment of the elotiori return. The re port was so heavy that windows were jroken In the bouses around the square. When th Crst panic had suV -dtled, sLv-en r-'m were found r.n Tonsciot:" on The around. Soti.e of th'-. Alwevi r. iiuek".y n-.ovtrcd. Other f:'-d bean borrllly mutilated. The tin-work were piled on the east side of Madison s. inure awaiting the time to set tl.' tn ofr in the i-olitli-al eel ibration thiit was --iiiir held. A gr-;:t crowd of lioyn preyed around Jie place, and n s'juad of jiolicen.en tried in vn in to k-ji theni back. It is not known Jut how the explo sion occurred. hut it is supposed that sparks from a bomb or u skyrocket t off in the square or from the roof t the Flatiton building dropped Into the pile. The explosion simply mowed down the crowd sts'idiin. arouud. Rockets and balls of fire whizzed through the air In every direction. The rent mob in the square broke Into u panic. Ambulances were summoned from all the hospitals In the lower end of the Fire alarms brought fc&tfiii that treated havoc among the thrones on Broadway. An hour after the explosion the neighborhood for blocks aroand was lu a turmoil. HALE JOHNSON KILLED. Prohibition lrnlrr Shot by Man of Whom lie Tried to Collect Debt. EFFINGHAM, II!.. Nov. 5. Hon. Hale Johnson, a Prohibition leader of national prominence and a vice presi dential candidate on the Prohibition ticket In lSl was shot and killed by Harry Harris late yesterday at Bogota, l Tillage in Jasper county thirty miles !rom here. Mr. Johuson, who was iiraetlcini; law at Newton, the county tea, went to Bogota to collect an nc tmint on which judgment had already n rendered against Harris. An altercation occurred between Johnson and Harris at the Harris iome, and the Litter secured a shotgun lad fired at Johnson at close range, the rharge striking Johnson In the face nd causing instant death. Immediate ;j after the shooting Harris Jumped into Johnson's bucgy and attempted to sake his escape, but was apprehended iy a deputy sheriff who had aeeompa lied Johnson and who was a witness to the shooting. Johnson's body was .ken to his home In Newton, and Har ris was locked up in jail in the same ,4a ee. Harris at a late hour committed sul jide In the county jail by taking poison. Johnson was the nominee of the Pro hibition party in this fctate for governor n 1S0, but later accepted the nomina tion for the vice presidency and with drew as guliernatorial candidate. YeneKueln Itehela Beaten. CARACAS, Venezuela, Nov. 5. The government r ports having gained a leclslve victory over the revolutionists art week. Government troops dh 'odged the rebels from their last strong Uold at Pipe, near Pan Mateo and six niles from I-a Victoria. The revolu tionary leaders Mendoza, MatoK, Ro- ando, Crespo, Torres and others, ac- .-ording to government reports, have ;n scattered, and the (Unhanded rebel imuy passed through Villa do C'ura ast Sunday nitrht. The rebel general .tieru I rep' r ed to have been hilled. M. I'lerre Devuatiitrd. ST. JOHN'S. X. l-, Nov. 3.-Tho own of St. l'l' rre, MiUfloii, has been Jevastateil by f.re. A destructive coii iagration started at niicht and swept he main portion of the town. The gov nior' bouse, the government build' its. the couiinoii.se, the titiniling occu lted by the Biinistry of marine, the Ro can Catli ii'.c cathedral, the presbytery, he schools tnd a number of other iuildings were destroyed. A Mold llnrKlar. " CLINTON. la., Nov. 4.-Iurtng the rrght a burglar entered the residence of .. A. Fay, editor of the Advertiser, and ritli a pistol which he t.k from under 'ar'a hdad, after lighting the gas, com lled Fay and bis wife to give him iioney and diamonds valued ut $1,.'00. t'he robber then backed out of the room tnd escaped. Baling Cement la t.ermany, BERLIN. Oct. 31. Unusually heavy American order for Portland ceiiicnt fcave been piuced In Germany, and sev eral cargoes are all oat. Including Ber in shipments. The demand Is attrlbut 1 to the construction of rtje New York underground railroad. Cholera llaaea la Palestine. JF.IM'!"'AI.F.M. Nov. 3.-There have been " c iw.s fi-.m cholera here end Tity-e!fe-lit at GhuziM-h during the past week. Great distretsa prevails at Ldda because of the total inade quacy of medical aid there to cope with the disease. CONDENSED DISPATCHES. Ratable F.srats nf the Week tlrlety and Trelf Tld. John F.hrgond of Gouldsl-oro. IJn., hot a big black bear in his orrhnrd. Robbers blew oj-en the vault In the bank at Greenwood. Wis., and secured ll.ra.i. The new budtret In Japan estimates the revenue at f 120.nri.nio and the ex penditures at S131 .. "I. A magnificent specimen of golden ea gle was shot near Mil ford. N. Y., by John Hesdnrfer of New York. Albany. N. Y.. rejected by an over whelming majority the offer of flft.,. fNj by Andrew Carm-eie for a library. Tuesday. ov. 4. Seven hundred Iron molders struck at Cleveland, U. Many sheep Mr!shd in snowfall in Texas and New Mexico. A rich vein of gold has leeii discov ered In the Black Hornet district of Idaho. The Chinese government Is to send students for p"t graduate courses at American universities. Advices from Guatemala were that 2"i.(i hundredweight of this year's coffee crop were lost as a result of eruptions of the volcano of Santa Marin. . Monday, Xor. 3. The house of Joseph Korderk In Chi cago was blown up by a dynamite bomb, killing two members of the fam ily and Injuring several others. Ch.'irb-s H. Miller, a noted landscape engineer, died in Philadelphia, aged seventy-three. Fire at Larchniont. N. Y., destroyed several bu-iiiess blocks and the homes of a dozen families. President Roosevelt spent the second day of his Virf'nla ontinc In visiting the battlefield of Cedar Mountain. Walter Cole, full back of the Tennes see Denf and luiinb school football team, was reported to be dying as a re sult of Injuries received In a game played at Maryvllle. Tenn. Saturday, nt. 1, Pogs saved four men from fire In Chicago. The Morgan Opera House at Shurou, Pa., was ruined by fire. The transport Sh-ridan arrived nt San Francisco from Manila. Indications are that South Manitou Island will sink In Lake Michigan. t'hicairo beef packers are said to be planning to control stockyards as well as packing houses. Edmund Rersch was convicted of jR-rjury In the St. Louis boodle case and sentenced to the penitentiary. Goods and library of Rev. Lr. Moore- house, famous as a debt raiser In the Methodist church and now reduced to want, brought barely $70 at auction. Friday. Oct. 31. The sum of So3.4'j7,1m) was paid by the ship trust for the White Star line. Three persons were killed and one badly hurt iu a train wreck near Ox ford. O. The Archduchess Elizabeth of Aus tria has been betrothed to Prince Jo- hann von LIchtenstein. Colonel Swayne's Somaliland expedi tion has reached Herbera. His wound ed are doing well. The P.ritish are gathering u large force to attack Mad Mollah. Six months Imprisonmeut in the Kings county penitentiary was the sentence pronounced by Judge Kellogg of Yonkers. X. Y.. on W. B. Raymond, the automobilist who caused the acci dent In which twenty-two persons were hurt. Thursday, Oct. 30. Musicians In Paris theaters, 1,200 in all, voted for a general strike. Chicago ami Alton Railroad company advanced the wnges of its shopmen. Burglars dynamited the vault of the private bank of Charles K. Knapp. In Sodus, X. Y.. obtaining, it is believed, $o,0X in cash. About 'J,ih) shipyard joiners of the northeast coast of England have struck work as a protest against a 5 per cent reductiou in their wages. Ladrones Commit Ootraarea. MANILA, Nov. 3. A portion of a gnnf of hull-ones which has been oper ating on the Island of Biliran, Just north of the island of Reyte, where they committed various outrages, crossed over to the inland of Leyte last Wednesday and entered a small town near Curigara. Here they cap tured and beheaded the presidente of the town, murdered his wife, whom they slashed with bolus, and nlxlucted the presldente's children. The motive of this crime is wH to huve been the presldente's friendliness with the Americans. Son Nliot by Ills Mother. ItlCHMONI). Ya., Nov. 3. Mrs. W. S. McLanc of Covington, Va., shot to death her son William, thirteen years old, whom she mistook for a thief. Late In the night Mrs. McLane heard some one moving around the outside of the house, tike culled repeatedly. but noises continued, and, fearing she was ubout to be attacked, Mra. Mc Lane. tired a shotgun out of a window, She opened the door and found her son deud. William was in a Halloween disguise and had Just returned from a frolic with some of bis young friends Kesv I'oataice Stamp Oat. WASHINGTON, Nov. 1. The new issue of 13 cent postage stumps Is out, The postmaster general haa Just re ceived the first sheet of the printed ntampx, uud the stamps shortly will be on imle in all the postoitlces In tho country. The Issue bears the portrait of the lato President Harrison. Governor ate" t'onuitloa AlnruilncT SPUING FIELD, III.. Nov. 5,-The condition of Governor Varan I consid ered very alarming. Ho has been in a dullrioua condition all day, and hie temperature Is 104 degree. THE COLUMBIAN, BLOOMSBURO, PA. XlTWASTE ALLOWED. Business Nowadays Is Conducted on Narrow Margins. Therefore Staff That Was Oace Ton aldered Yorthlrs Is Worked Over I atll It neeotnea Val aable Merchandise. (Sptclal Chicato letter r T I. not the money you make. but the money you save, that can make von rich." This is the maxim that nearly every bov earning three dollars a week hears from his father. Rut the father if he happen to be one of the kind tbat practice what they preach has been "WE MUST BE CAREFCL." applying this maxim in his business all hi life. Economy in manufacture, reduction of expensen in the handling of goods by the merchant these are to-day the primary objects of eiery threwd bufi r.es man. In the largest cities where the greatest fortunes are made, the principle is carried farthest. Step into ary big factory or into the ftice of a large mercantile house, and you will see this principle of economy carried out cn the most gigantic scale, and at the same time in the most minute de tail. A committee soliciting-contributions for a charity recently called at the of fice of a millionaire manufacturer in New York city. The i.-itor appeared just as the millionaire was severely scolding one of his bookkeepers for wastirir a sheet of paper. "Surely, we wont' get a cert here," whispered a lady of the committee. "Not from such a stingy old man." Great was the ladies' surprise when the millionaire wrote out a check for $.'00 for the charity. The donor t eemed to guess the woman's feelings, and remarked, coolly: "You see, madam, we can afford these little charity outlays here, because we don't let our employes waste papers or pencils in the office. We re juM as careiul in the factory, and we have figured it out that we clear $"00 a week that way." Upon asking for the privilege of go ing through the factory, the mem bers of the committee met a polite but positive refusal. "It costs too much," the millionaire explained. "We'll pay for a guide," a gentleman rejoined. Rut the millionaire shook his head and figured it out. There were 2,000 IS A TOY FACTORY. employes in the factory, he said, get ting an average of 20 cents an hour. If visitors appeared, every man would look up from bis work, many dropping the taak in hand a mimimum average delay of three minutes. This would make -.'0 a visit, and with the rule against witors once brckc-n, the mil lionaire baid, hi factory would, or might soon, so raise the cost of pro duction as to wipe out profits. "Five hundred dollars for charity is nothing," he concluded. "But five cents wasted in violation of butlnees princi ples is the first step toward bank ruptcy." Mr. A. D. Converse, head of the largest toy factory in the United States, in an interview recently, pointed to the enormous value of the waste prod ucts of manufacture. Fully ten per cent, of the total manufactured prod uct of the country, he said, was ob tained by careful utili.ation of rem nants. Without ingenuity and con stant watchfulness the factories of the country would lose this margin, and thereby find more than their total profit wiped out. Mr. Converse wag afcked how American toy manufac turers managed to compete against the starvation wage product brought to this country from Kuropr. Fniploye in American fatigues t 1 from tlirre to four times th wage of the boys and girl making toys in Swis-i and German towns, aud yet in recent year American toy bare undersold the Im ported article. 7 Of course, labor-saving machinery has much to do with it." said Mr. Con verse. "Rut the European manufac turers are gettirg the same machine! that we have here. We Americans, however, keep the trade, because we know how to save that is, save in thn right way. There is no trick In sell ing. It is only when we learn to make goods so that we can sell them at a profit, whiie the other fellow in vrttr tocompetemustsellthemat cost, that we clinch trade. And this margin of profit we secure by making the mcst out of all that might seem to be waste ; product. For instance, in that toy railroad train yonder, every ch'p of i iron scrap is used In the manufacture ' of some smaller toy, and if we have a ' little iron left over on that, we keep ! it for a still smaller toy. The scraps ef cloth, even the pieces rf wood, are used up in the s-ame way. and I tell you we spend many dollars of tlma cheerfully, to think out a plan for saving ore drop of paint on every toy." i Ry throwing nothir.? away, by tit:' Izing every particle of supposed waste so as to coin it into the largest pos sible number of dollars, the Cr.ir.n Stock Yards plants of Chicago have bcome the enormous institutions they are to-day. It has been aptly sai l that eeryth'ng about the poor pig i- ntil ired ext-ept its dyinir squeal. In fact, the value of the pork pale irto insig nificance compared with the by-products: Grease for the soapmcker. a hide for the tanner, hair for the brush manufacturer, blood and brains f r the chemist, various rerr.r.ar.'s for the g'ueniaker. etc. ' On a large scale all thi can be saved, ami thus the farmer ar.d country butcher, with ksser facilities, are knocked out of ccmpetition. Now follow the course of the po.lt Itself after it has left the hands of the packers. Perhaps the meat is sold first to some high-class hotel. There the chef cuts up the best por- tions for his guests: what Is left is sold to some ordinarily good res taurant. In a big city this sort of a restaurant will waste none of the remainder. One part that which j never left the kitchen is sold to the cheaper restaurants, and the rest, the scraps from the plates of the guests, is carefully gathered for the "hash houses" in the poorest din- Vl 111 1 fei HOW STALE BREAD 13 USED. tricts of the city. So far has this system been carried ri Chicago that the proprietor of a large restaurant told me that men in his business could no longer compete at a profit unless they made this profit by sell ing their waste product for a cent or so per pound. Did you ever stop to consider that what is the waste or remnant of one factory is the raw material for some other kind of manufacture? To go back for illustration to the pig. One waste product of the stock yards is hog-grease. This is a raw material for the manufacturer of soap. From the grease the soap maker gets another waste product glycerine which in former years was thrown away with the so-called spent lye. Becently. however, soap makers have recognized the impor tance,, of extracting the glycerine from' the waste and selling it. The big factories have done so and have thus been able to cut prices on the soap itself until the smaller competi tor was placed in a sad plight. The big soapmaker sell the glycerine to the manufacturers of nitroglycerine. These men use what they need of the product, and their waste product in turn is sold to the makers of dye stuffs, where finally the last cent's worth of the original hog-grease is utilized. Still more complicated Is the man ufacture of coal tar product . When gas Is obtained from coal there are two wiiste products the coke and coal tar. That apparently is all, und were it not that both of these can be sold at a pood price the cost of gas would be three or four times as great as it Is. But from the coal tar itself thousands of dollars' worth of waste product can be ex tracted by distillation, each In turn a waste product or remnant of the previously left-over product. Thus creosote to preserve lumber, oils, such as bensine and naphtha, aniline dyes, succharine, much sweeter than sugar, antiphyrrine and other medi cines, perfumes and chemicals, some thing over 50 different products sold to over 200 different industries, are obtained from smeary coal tar which until a fev years ago was often thrown away as useless. So thor oughly have the manufacturers of artificial gaa recognized the Impor tance of utilizing these waste prod uts In other words the economy of manu.'uc tu e --V. n t so.-r. -..-.rc-tinrbiuotic individuals in Philadelphia even suggested a process of distilling the pitch already contained in the asphalt street pavement. .... E. T. 0UNDLA8& Bargain Babies. If ba'nea were for tale the most invet erate bargain-hunting woman In the world would not look Tore bargain bahv. She would want the best baby that could be bought, regardless of price. Every woman naturally crave a healthv, handsome child, and ber crav ing can be gratified if she will but re tnem1er that the child' health is her own gift, and to give health she must km have It to give. Mothers whose babies have been weak and puny have nursed in strength their first atrong child after using Dr. Tierce's Favorite Prescription. It it the best preparative for maternity, encouraging the appetite, Jl'.iieting the nerves and inducing re reining sleep. It gives the mother strength to give her child, and makes the baby's advent practically painless. Mr wife hid been tick nearly atl hr life." MO Mr. E. 15. Pricks, of I'tterfUirg. Menard Co.. Illinois B" tr. "and after trying errry tolar I could I Sin's of I midc up ror mind to trr Fivonte Prescription ' 1 got six bottles, which rnv wife took, a urtleipoonful three limes a day. until tue baby cams. She felt better after taking the 6rt bottle, and when baby wm bora he weighed nine and a half pounds. To day he t six month old and weighs twentT two poiinds He is as good a child as any one could wish. The doctor says he is as hesithy as any baby could be. and also says the use of your ' FiVurue Prescription ' was the cause of such a healthy baby " Dr. Pierce'f Pleasant Pellet are the best and safest laxative for the use of delicate women. TsrsT those who have tried. I suffered from catarrh of the worst kind jnd never hoped ior cure, but Kly's Cteam Bilm seems to do even that. Oscar Ostrom, 45 Warren Ave., Chic.tyo, III. I suffered from catarrh; it got so bd I could not work; Iuei Kly's Cream Lalm and am ert;re!y well. A C. Clarke, 341 Shawmut Ave., Boston, Ma-. The I'.abn does not irritate or cause sneez ing;. S)1J by tlru,; -iits a: 50 c's., or mailed by tly Brothers, 56 Warren St , New York. Tto, ! who say mean thin;$ don't always mean what they say. Thtre'a a story of a farmer an 1 his son driving a load'to maiket. Of the team they aere drivirg one was a stea ly rehable old gray mare the other a fractious, balky black horse. On the way the wagon was stalled and the i lack horse sulked and refused to pull. "What'l! we do father?" saij the lather, "I guess we'll have to lay the gad on the old gray." That hsmely compliment to women: "Ihe gray mare s the better horse" suggests how often when there's an extra strain to be borne 11 is laid on the woman's back. How often she breaks down at last under the ad led weight of some last straw." Women who are drajrij'ng along wearily through life can gain real strength by the use of Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. It puts back in con centrated form the strength making material which working somen use up more rapidly than it can be restored by Nature in the ordinary processes of noutishmerct and rest. Ir. Pierce s l leasar.t relicts are universal favorites with women because they axe easy to take and thoroughly effective in curing the consequences ol constipation. The unsuccessful man U generally the most lavish with advice. The eccentricity of genius would be con sidered boorishness id an ordinary mortal. Dk. Acnew's Catarrhal Powl-er. Rev. W. H. Main, pas'.or cf the baptist Emanuel Church, Buffalo, gives strong testi mony for and is a turn believer in Dr. Ag new's Catarrhal Powder. He has tried many kinds of reu.euics without avail. "After using Dr. Agnew's Catarrhal Pow der. I was benefited at once," are his words. It is a wonderful remedy. 50 cents. 33 fcold by C. A. Kleun. The things lazy man who is content to take as he finds them complains that he never finds them Help the Overworked Heart. Is the creat engine which rumm life through your system hard pressed, overtaxed, groan- I. 11. i 1 111; uuuer lib icir.ci uccause uiseae nas -ieg-ged it? Dr. Agnew's Cure for the Heart is nature's bihrtratnr inH rUnncr and Hailv . . t . demonstrates to heart sufferers that it is the sates', surest, and most speedy remedy that medical science knows 34 Sold Ly C. A. Klcim. A fat woman rejiices at getting thin unui sne mates trie 1101 rune discovery mat her clothes no longer fit her. Little Craves. Old time a quarter-a-box "l'urgers" are quitting the held in whole battalions. Dr. Agnew's Little Till at 10 cents a vial are driving them out at all po-nts. Because they act gently, more eflectively. never pain, and are easy to tr.ke, Sick Headache succumbs to one dose. 35 Sold by C. A. Kleirn. ''Do you believe in long engagements?" he aked. "No," replied ihe summer giil, the shorter the better." Havk you Eczema? Have you any skin disease or eruptions? Are you subject to chafing or scilding? Dr. Agntw's Ointment prevents and cures any and all of these, and cure Itching, Bleeding and Blind Files besides. One application brings relief in ten minutes, and cases cured in three to six nights. 35 cents. 36 bold by C. A. Kleim. The new issue of thirteen cent postage stamps is out aud w ill soon be on sale iu all the postoffices iu the country. The issue bears a portrait of the late President Harri son. t Baart to 1 r'9 Rin(1 '" Hay9 'm BOUgtlt Signature , Vtr , "T"- OASTOIIIA, Baart th The Kstid Yott Hart Always Bought LIST OF J0R0R3 For December Tirm el Court, Commincint, Monday, December 1, I9C2. f!AMt JCROt. t Angle, II. V undertaker, Sc ti 2 Birch. Josip. baggageman. Rloom. 3 Bruncr, John. gent. Millville 4 Clemens. Geo. E., bar., Berwick 5 Clemens. Fred, foreman, Berwick 6 Christian. J. C farmer. Pint 7 Dc-rr, Calvin, farmer, Jackson 8 FairchildssHarvey.furmer.BnarcreeV q Gordncr. Bc-nj. J . farmer. Pitl9 to Gillispy. John, farmer. Greenwood II Jlartman, nervcy. larmcr, .n.imsoti 2 llaiionbucb. J. S., farmer, 13 Johnston, W. C. clerk. U Kline, Rubv tk-rk, Centra Montour Berwick Mifflin 15 Luti. John, farmer 10 17 Lontr. 1. M , farmer, Fishingcreck McGcargell. Curtis C. far.. Orange IS Miilc-r. W. M.. butcher, t isliingcrecV 19 Mourcv, O. Y butcher, Montour 20 Kith. K.. !., butcher, Greenwood 31 Rhodes, Isaiah car., Clevel'd 22 Sthoncr, W. B., clerk, Bioorn 3 Trescott, Hovd, surveyor, Millville 24 Wolvcrton, J. K., merchant. Bloom r-F.TIT II RORS FIRST Wf.KK. Allwrtson, Guy. laborer, Benton T. Albc-rtson, Francis, farmer, Jackson Ash, Joseph, farmer. Benton Bowman. John, farmer, Greenwood Black. V. V gent. Bio-mi Buckingham. G. A., tinner, Berwick Black. David. J. P., Ccntralia B, CuiT. Michael. ag;ent, Centralis It. Dcus. John, laborer. Pine Kveritt, T. II., farmer. Pine Edwards, Isaac, phvsician, Benton B. U Earhart, John, cie-ik. Bloom U Eves. Frank P., farmer. Mt. Pleasant 14 Fairehilds. J din, farmer, Briarcreek 15 F airman, Thomas, landlord, Bloom 10 Hartell, Bovd. farmer. Main 17 Hunsingcr, Wilson, heater, Berwick H Ile-nr.c-. Joseph, farmer, OratU'c n) Herring. A. B.. farmer. Orange B. 20 Hower, David, millwright, C.-ua- T. 21 llunsinger, Freas. roller, Berwick 22 Hampton, William, far., Koarinnc'k 23 Kestc-r, Jeremiah, miller. Main 24 Knorr, Henry, laborer. Berwick 25 Keefe-r, J. F.'. foreman, Benton T. 20 Vc-lick, John, farmer, Mt. Pleasant 27 Mensch. William, fatme-r, Montour 23 McHcnry. Allen, sawyer, Jackson 2) McEwen", Henry J., far.. Greenwood 30 Musslenian. 1 .. lal;rcr Scott 31 Mordan. Wesley, carp., Bloom 32 Mather. S. Y farmer, G-ccnwood 33 Nuss, J. B., miller, Maia 34 Ohl. Isaiah, machinist. Bloom 3; Roan. Clark, black smith, Bloom 3O Roberts. Arthur, merchant, Montour 37 Runyon, Elmer W., farmer, Montocr 35 Rarig, Frank, fanner. Lot. u si 3'j Reiehart, Cyrus, farmer, Madisoa 40 Sterling. Lloyd, farmer, Scott 41 ShuUr., J. X.. carpt.. Benton T. 42 Savage. Harry, merchant. Bloom 43 Smith. F. M.,' engineer. Main 44 L'tt. G. W., gent. Bloom 45 Volkmnn. Galhard. farmer, Montour 46 Wolf. John J., farmer. Orange 47 Welsh. F. M.. farmer. Greenwood 45 Whitenight. Harry, laborer, Centre Sl.CONU WhF.K. Beck. William. H., fanner, Bogert. William, J. P., Biiltjj. John, farmer. Centra Scott Loccsl Cleveland Catawissa B. Bodine, B. S., farmer, Bercrer. John J.. J. P.. Burrows. Benjamin, laborer,- Bloora Crawford. Clinton, farmer.Mt. Pleas. Creasy. II. B.. farmer, Catawissa B. rrt-as. Perry, clerk, urange, t. 10 Frantz, Henry, merchant, Berwick 11 Ferns O. r., farmer. Briarcreek 12 Geary, J. H., miller, Catawissa B. 13 Hutton, Sylvester, farmer. Orange 14 Hummel. John, laborer. Fishingcreek 15 Hawk, Win. B., farmer, Roaringcreek 16 Hawk. Frank, farmer, Beaver 17 Henkleman, George, farmer. Centre 13 Hayman, Peter, f aimer. Greenwood 19 Hower, Wi'lium, tanner, Mt. Pleas. 20 Hagenbuch. Isaac, farmer, Montour 21 Johnston. Chester, farmer, Madison 22 Keller, Sam'l Y. farmer, Orange 23 Kramer, C. A., farmer. Madison 24 Mc Ana'.l.uhn R.,marble cut..Berw'k 25 Mears, H. R., clerk Montour 20 McAllister, William F., lab.. Centre 27 Monroe, John S. .mine eng., Conyng'm 25 Shaffer, J. D., contractor, Bloom 2; Smith. Boyd M., merchant, Berwick 30 Smith, Frank, machinist, Berwick 31 Vandcrslice, W. P.. far.. Mt. Pleas. 32 Wenner, David, farmer, Fishicgc'k 33 We'diver, lohn E.. b'.k. smith. Bloom 34 We'diver, Miles, farmer, Madison 35 Young. A. P., farmer, Greenwood 36 Yohe, William, farmer, MitEia For the meeting of the American Bauker's Association the Lacka wanna Railroad will sell round trip tickets to New Orleans at greatly reduced rates. Tickets will be sold November S, 9 and 10 and will be good for return leaving New Or leans within eleven days of the date of sale. By the payment of 50 cents additional the return limit will be extended to November 30. Ask nearest Lackawanna agent for lull details. 16-4L Unber Sraj'g Sxert Powders far Children S'jccessfullv us-d by Mother tiray, nuse In the c'ulldreu's Home lu New York, e ure Fevert-h-ncus. Bail stomnc-h, Teething lilsorders wove and rrcuUte tue Bowels sua lteatrov Worms en er So.ucD U atlmonliUs. Tluy itru-rnil. Ai all rlniir:,'ts's, SV Maiiirilx Fke. Address Allen s. Oluiaiuad, he Koy, K. y. lo-ia ot Leases, 3c each, 30c a dozen. Notices to quit, 10c a dozen. For sale at this office. tl. Beat the Kind You Nave always BocjH PARKER'S UAin El A I CAM CImiim aid bnr.r.e Vis bail rrowufaia a luxumns trusei. t-s.ci jc ,H Hslr to lis Youthful Color-. aCurw. d riKit htr luiii. 71 v -t tl '' at r'"..f ," CASTOR I A For Infanta and Children. The Kind You Have Always BougM Bears the Signature of svr er Subscribe for Tub Columbian.