THE COLUMBIAN, BLOOMSBURG, PA. Woman In the Gallery Shouts "You Lie!" to Mr. Cochran. ACCUSED GOVERNMENT OF TRUCKLING In ttie Spnnle Itpvorlilao lllnrka U'ikj' lillorln l or an liiim-li-. ale Vote on the Slule lioo.l lllll. WASHINGTON. .Inn. 21. -The house yesterday passed the District of Colum bia appropriation hill and HUtscUcut 'V hcKan consideration of the Philip Ino coiniiL'p hill. The general deliate u the District hill was largely devoted discussion of the Alaska hotindary le dispute. Mr. Cochran (Mo.) de ttneed as n "cowardly surrender" the iise of the state department. Mr. ii pliurn (la. I took up the challenge and countered with the charge that Demo cratic administrations had surrendered the territory between latitude -111 and r4.'l(, and also the republic of Texas. While Mr. Cochran was speaking of the "truckling policy of the I'nlted States to Gtvnt P.ritnhi" a stylishly dressed young woman In the nailery leaned forward and tried out, "You lie." She then left the nailery. The senate pasyed the legislative, ex ecutive and jiuliciny appropriation bill. When the statehood bill was tak en up Mr. Quay demanded an imme diate vote, coupling his demand with Ihe statement that he did not care whether any senators desired to speak on Ihe subject or not. The bill, he said, was belli;; willfully obstructed by dis cussion. Mr. lioveridne denied this, and t'"ii .'iseiw:vd tin- uu'-isutv, oppos ing si.iti'hotiil for Oklahoma, Arl.onu and N'v .Mexico. On the conclusion of Ills iiinais Mr. Juay submitted a number ,f pr-'Vc-liions for the llxin of a d iv whiMi a vole conM be taken, but to all sue h .Mr. I!evei i.l:;e objected. !' ' ii.ur.a !. bvi.-l'y !:i oppo sition to the bill, and at i :'.',' the senate adjourned. Aurnin.'ililo'K iviftl.m. WASHINGTON, .Ian. L' I. Secretary Koot transiui! ied to the senate and 1iii- copies f a ctitioti recived by him through Governor Taft troin Ak'sI nalilo. the late insu'.i'iit leader in the Philippines. The petition is a remark able presentation of the conditions n;w exislinir in the Philippine, iimI Secre tary Hoot hastened to seed it to con gress because it went a lone way to ward supporting the statements ho had limit' to the committee of that body anil also demonstrating the necessity for prompt action on the part of cou Ule:'.s to prevent disaster and distress Mi the an hiiielago. SHELLED BY THu PANTHER. '.eniiiiii f'ruist'i OiumumI on Wne xiiclilll Tort, llui YYslM Ktllietl. MAUACAHIO, Venezuela, Jan. 19. The Gctimiii i miser Panther shelled tort San Carlos, at the entrance to I.aUe Maiacaibo, Saturday afternoon for one hour. The fort returned the tire with four nuns. The Panther withdrew In the direction of Curacao. Port San Carlos is twenty-two miles from Maracaibo and commands the oi:1:-nce to the lake or inner hay. 't lu re have been popular demonstra tion", on the streets lure as a result of the shelling of the fort. C lriisliiMu'n l.i. iiri' I,.-t1ir Trnilc. 0(SlM-:Nr.l"Kt;. X. V., .Inn. L'o.-TIie value of tin I'nilcil Stutcs customs im nnrts of all class." a) ( iileiislnirjr tlur luK tho year Just closed was !f l.",;!ti", HUT, with duties of ifJT.-'.iMHi, plvlnj; dcns'turg tin hccoihI plai'O in impor tance us u port of entry on nil the iioriliern lakes ami rivers, Chicago Ktmulliig first. There was also entered jucr -hnndise under consular seal to the value of !ji3,7'0,(HM) on which the duties were $1,!X)0,)(KI. In the coastwl.se trade 7SI vessels entered witli a tonnage of 100,000, and S.S5 cleared. Xiue liundrea and forty-live vessels entered from for l(iu port.1., the clearances being 045. Collision IvIIIm Miic Hull way Hands. SEATTLE, Wash., Jan. 'Jl. A tspe cial from Wcnatchee, Wash., says: "Nino men nre dead and einht or ten Injured as n result of u rear end col lision on the Grcnt Northern at a point known as Happy Hollow, just above Chiwtiukuni. A bridne tsuun train ran Into an engine standing on a rotary suowplow. A car contalnlnn fifly men lielor.ninn to the bridge crew was thrown from the track. The dead and Injured were nil members of the work Kiuin. Neither engineer, tirenian or brakeman was amonn the Injured." TlioDsnnils r'licloif Bturvntlon. LONDON, Jan. 10. Telegrams from Stockholm, Sweden, conllrin the dis tressing accounts of the famine In northern Sweden. About 70,000 per sons are affected by the famine, which extends from the sixty-first to the sixty-seventh degree north latitude and from the gulf of Bothnia and the Rus sian border far Into the interior. The starving people are eating pine bark, which Is dried, ground to powder, mixed with stewed Iceland moss and made into a kind of famine bread. To Alleuil Wexlcy Celebration. WASHINGTON, Jan. 2L-I'resldent Roosevelt has accepted itu Invitation to attend the bicentennial celebration of the blrthdny of Jolm Wesley to be held In New York on Feb. 20. He will' bo one of the principal speakers at the celebration. Ilank Wrecker. Plead Galltr. NEW YORK, Jan. 21.-Tho trial of William II. Kimball and Gamaliel W. Rose, charged with wrecking the Sev enth Natlonul bank, cume to a sudden end. The defendants pleaded guilty and threw themselves on the mercy of ADRAM 8. HEWITT. Kin y or nml ( oim ronmnna Illm In .mv York. xr.w YOUK, Jan. in, Abrnni 8. former mayor of New York Hewitt, and representntive In congress from 1ST I to 18HT. Is dead. Mr. Hewitt was born at llnverstrmr, Iioekland rounty, N. Y.. on July .'!!, in n one story and extension lo Cabin tin what was known as (lurnee'p tract. Mr. Hewitt's father was an 1'n ir ishman wlio came to the I'nlted States In 11)0 as the representative of the Knnlish firm of P.olton & Watts, lie was n liMin at once Industrious and capable. The boy Abrnni spent his boyhood days on the ltoeklnnd county farm, learning tli" rudiments of nnrleulture. He did not care much about it. He did care about the school, nnd as his first school had been In Xew York he nianiiKcd to keep up his attendance Upon a public school here In the win ter and worked on the farm In the sum. iner. With such assiduity did he apply himself to his school work that he stood at the head of his class when the final examination was held. In n special examination of nil public school candidates he pained a prize scholar ship in Columbia coll"ne. This was Just the opportunity for which he had been Ktrlviiii;. lie worked his wny through college by servinj; ns a private teacher. Mr. Hewitt was jrrndunted In ISI'J. and three years later he was admitted to the bar. His eyesight was so de fective that he was compelled to jrlve lili practice. A few years later he married the dainrhter of Peter Cooper, with whom he formed a pari norsh'p. The firm prospered and attained ;;rcat wealth. Probably the w l k by which Mr. Hewitt would l ! T. -r best to be remem bered was thai he performed in sirrl'StheUini: the Cooper 1'niou. PEN N YPACK ER GOVERNOR. 'S 1 :i n I I rr. i.i- r . u 1 I 'c re tmo ii .1' lit l'i'ii n I vf n III 'm I ":i i i i :l 1. HA'.MiiSlU TG. Pa.. Jan. Lb-Samuel W. Pciinypackcr has been Inaugu rated governor of P. i ieylv.u i.i to biie- e d William A. Stone; William A. l'.rown has succeeded .!. 1'. S. (iob'n as licntena nt governor, an 1 Poles Pen rose lias been eh end by Ihe es-embly to suei eoil himself in th" I'nlted States somite. The innu;ni'-al cere:oi:!es of the nov e;:!.r took place at noon. in. mediately alter these exercises the lici'teuant Lovcriior was linlueli d into oitlec. The house and senate balloted separately duriun the afterttooii for I'nited States senator, the l;( publicans voting for Senator Pcnm.-e ami the 1 icm. Mints for Colonel James M. (iitt'fey of Pills bum. 'Ihe inau;:ural parade wiic the linesl the state capital has ever seen. A lame number of political clubs, a pro visional brigade of the national guard of Pennsylvania and some of the best lnarehiun bands in Pennsylvania turned out to do honor to the new gov ernor. MINISTER ECVEN HERE. IleportN of l.iirar lkn iiientM Tor HcrvlceN Set ul 1ihI. WASHINGTON', Jan. Hi . Minister Itowen arrived in Washington today. Concerning Ihe published report;! Unit be laid been olTertd extravagant sums of money by President Castro to repre sent the government of Venezuela in the dispute, with (iermany and Great P.rltaln. Minister Itowcn said that ninny false statements had been circu lated. "When the (iiiestloii of remuner ation was mentioned,'' he said, "I in formed President Castro that 1 would not accept more than was recinired for my actual expenses, nnd I put an out side limit of 3."i,(kX) on the agreement. This was paid me in gold on uiy depar ture from I.n (iuiiyrn. That is all I asked, nnd it is nil I will receive." Minister Itowen was accompanied by his wife. SULTAN OF J0L0 DEAD. Ill Majfi.ly Vtcl.il. to uu Attack of ('lioleni. MA XI LA, Jan. 20.-Tlie sultnn of Jolo Is dead of cholera. His mother went to Jolo as a slave. Her career has been compared wilh the rise In power of the dowager empress of Chi na. She once unbltishlngly asked the Philippine commission for poison in order to enable her to protect her son in the sultanate. The sultan, whose nnme was Iladjl Mohammed Jaiuolol Klruiii, had been ut different times In conflict with the American authorities and had been ditlicult to deal with. Ills claims to sovereignty were Indorsed by Generul Chaffee and caused much discussion at the time. Battleship's Dead Rnrled. RAN JUAN, I'orto Rico, Jan. 19. The remains of the six men who were btlliwl 1 ill,, i,v til,,ul. ,11 if n .invt'liil, i .... ... ,. nl.nnrann h.mr.1 the fnltc.1 Kti.los tint. tleshlp Massnchusetts while nt target practice off Culebrn island were burled in the military cemetery here. The ex plosion occurred In the starboard after i eight Inch turret, and was duo to the i accidental discharge of a percussion ' primer while tho breech of the trun wns I open. Italnbow la a Clear Sky. AKRON, O., Jan. 20. A rainbow al most In the center of the heavens was plainly visible and observed by ninny persons here at a time when the sky was entirely cloudless. Tho rainbow contained all the primary colors, and tbu effect was most beautiful. New President For lloburt. GENEVA. N. Y., Jan. 21.-The Itev. Dr. Langdou ('. Stewardsou, chaplain and professor of philosophy of Lehigh university, was elected president of Hoburt college at the semiannual nieet ta of tb botrd of trust set. TELLER LACKS ONE. A Bad Mix Up In the Colorado Legislature. A RIVAL SENATE IS ORGANIZED. (Jovrrnor rcnhmly I riieil by h Vol-olt Kit c Inn to I'nll Oat Troops In Tlirlr Helm If He Itrfimpft I n(tr fore. IiEXVEU, Jan. 21.-Itoth housen of the general assembly balloted for Unit ed States senator at noon yesterday, and Henry M. Teller received tifty votes, only one less than Is needed to elect. Senator Mcliulre, a Democrat, refrained from voting, but he has said he would vole for Teller If It should appear that he could be elected. Only two ltepiibllenn senators were In the senate chamber when the vote was Mken, and they did not respond when fheir names were called. '.noli afterward the nine regular lie publican senators, with the two who were expelled by the Democratic ma jority and the eight contestants who were sworn In on the steps of the capl tol Monday night, assembled In the lieutenant governor's room and formed n se;ara! organization, the senate olli- ( i s previously chosen being ordered leuwned. A ballot v as then taken for penator. A resolution was adopted that the senate had reorganized and was ready for business. Subsequently two of the regularly clecb'd lb publican spli nters. I M ake and Cori.foith, 1. ft the Hauolt s- iiate and ri t'lt ned to the Hen. ito chamber, where they announced that tiny would net with t'.ie "regular s.'!i:,te" a id would no longu' partici pate Iti a "farce." Edward O. Wolcott, Ihe leading Ke pr.bilean c"i'idate for senator, and his fYU.ivcr5 arc urging the ,-,oonior to ti.ll out tile luiiitia lo place IlaL'Vtt :,ud Hie K. juibli, ans in po-so.-.un of the cl, umber. Governor Pen body said that he would not Interfere. !!:; fri"iiiis are ad is le.; him to keep his hands off, and they declare that if he shall recognize the Haggcit senile no legislation can I.e enacted at this session, and the it. ile go eminent must go without fio'ds for two years, as appropriation biiis could not be legally enacted. PLATT HE-ELECTED. Neir York l,ouis1aliirkM ( liolci Kor Kcnil lor II ill I it 'lll:HP ll Si-l-llc AI.P.ANV. N. V., Jan. b'l.-Thonuis C. Piatt lias bein re-eleeied I'nited Slates senator by the two houses of the legislature. 'The vote In the senate stood: Piatt, 2.-: Pool. :!; Sianchlleld. ".1. The us senibly vole stood: Piatt, Sli; Staucll lii Id, The three bolting (senators, Iirackelt, I'.rou n and lilsbcrg, made speecheti ex plaining why they could not vote for ; Plait. A dead silence fell over the ! chamber ns these Republicans, classed for years as strong Piatt men. declared that they could not vote for Piatt be en use he was not the proper man to choo.ic. Each briefly stated Ihe rea sons which Impelled his action. Piatt's lieutenants about the cham ber were highly indignant over the ex traordinary spectacle of Piatt, Repub lican boss, being denounced on the ttoor of a Republican senate by Re publicans. Charles A. Gardiner of New York, the choice of the Republican caucus, was elected to the board of regents by the full party vote. Alarer C'lionen Senator. LANSING, Mich., Jan. .l. -Former Secretary of War R. A. Alger, who by the ml interim appointment of Gov ernor Uliss succeeded the lale Senator James McMillan in the United States senate, was elected by the stale Semite nnd house to till out the unexpired term of Senator McMillan, the gov ernor's appointment having been mere ly to till the time Intervening between the death of Senator .McMillan and the convening of the legislature. All the Republicans of both houses and one Democrat voted for Senator Alger. Drill vi urtf Senntorlnl rltflit. DOVER. Del,, Jan. 21. The twenty one Democratic assemblymen who have offered any six regular Repub licans who will Join them to elect a Democrat for the short term senator ship and n regular Republican for the long term had n secret conference last ni;Tht. The regulars asked for more time to consider their fusion tn defeat Addlcks, and it was to consider this request that the conference was held, nnd the Democrats called In their state advisory committee. The result of the j conference was refusal to grant the 1 extension, and the time limit will ex- ...,.. 1 ... .1... I a,,r' t'onneellent lte-eleels I'Intt. IfARTI'OUD. Conn., Jan. 21. Tho (rcnernl assembly has re-elected Or vllle H. l'lntt to serve as United States senator for a fifth term. He received all the Republican votes except that of Owen E. Case of Barkhauistcd, a tobacco grower, who Is not In sympa thy with the Cuban reciprocity bill advocated by Senator I'Intt. Vurth Dakota Chooses IlanahrouKh. BISMARCK. N. D.. Jan. 21. The Ibglwiature voted for United States sen ator In separate session, and Senator H. C. Hiinshrougu was re-elected, re ceiving the unanimous vote of the Re publican members of each house. Hopkins Succeeds Mason, SPRINC1FIEI.D, 111., Jan. 21. Con gressman Albert J. Hopkins has been elected United States senator to sue- i Mod Senator Mason. DR. L0RENZ PRAISES AMERICA. Our Doctor, llnxptlal anil Nurses l.onil the Worlil. VIENNA; Jan, 21. Dr. Eoreii!!, on his nrrlvnl here from London, spoke freely reirardlng his linpressions cf the I'nlted States. "Above nil." said the doelor, "I was struck with the ningnltl cent charity of the Americans and their Immense gifts to educational Institu tions and hospitals. Their willingness, even their anxiety, to spend money In nidiug others Is almost beyond belief." Next to this condition Dr. I.orons! Hiild he hail marveled most at the large number of alleged healers In America, naming Christian Scientists and faith curlsts of every description, who seem to llourish there. The doctor was en thuslasllc with regard to the practice of medicine In the I'nlled States and declared that American doctors, nurses and hospitals lend the world. "American physicians represent pro nresslveness," continued Dr. I.oreiiiS, "while the English physicians are ex tremely conservative. In America It was ditlicult to accommodate the doc tors and students who desired to attend my clinics, while during my last week In Ignition many of the most eminent surgeons .showed no lutcre.it In the new methods, while others who were pres ent declared the old way to be the best." PITTOriELD CASE CLOSED. .Ieu Itioiisl!L- l-'or ArcliScnl to rrritilcnrs Piu-ly I li-inl (inllly. PITTSriKI.D, Mass., Jan. IM.-The il's.te.shig incident connected with President ltoosovolt's visit to the Perk shire hills last summer, when his cur-, liage was demolished by all electric car and his scent service cuanl, Wil liam Craig, killed, has hi en finally chi: eil in tin- superior court. The moto'tiian, Euclid Madden, plniih d ;;ui!ly to a charge of imiii slaughter and was sca'.cnccd by Judge Pierce lo six months in the house of correction and ordeu d to pay a line of Not ii ). whoe tiie conductor of the car, James 'T. Kelicy, who was also In dicted, had lib case was not not guilty las! i ca-v tried, v.e. placed on Hie. The for after pleading: ; to 1 he ludici meal retracted their plea es upon tiie mercy tin two ii femlants and threw ll.cmsel of Cut: court. GONZALES 13 DEAD. Miol l-'li-eil Iiv I.ii'oltvi.'in f.ovrinif ff Soieh I'aroltiiii I'no Kntitl. ! COI.r.MMA. S. C, Jan. ".o.-N. Cl. Goir:ales. editor of the Cobuubhi State, j who was shot on the yreet here by l.lelllenailt Governor J.lUies II. Tile ' in:: ii. a nephew of I'nited States Semi tor Tiiin an. is dead of his wound. I The announcement of his death has revived much of the feeling of antago- nlsui against Tillman which developed i when the circumstances attending tlia ' shooting became known. Tillman is In ' jail, and with the certainty that he will j be tried for murder there is some talll ; of summary piud.'hincnt. Jiilliii) ICnloh DiHtil. NEW YORK. Jan. '-'l.-Julfiin Ralph, author and war correspondent, is deao at ids resilience here. Dr. Calvin S. May, who attended Mr. Ralph, gave the cause of death as dropsy, compli cated with ulcers In the stomach and enlargement of the liver. Mr. RnlpL was stricken with u hemorrhage whlhi he was acting as correspondent with the Pritish army dmlng the 1'oer war. Ice ('tittcm' Strike Ketrlcil. NYACK, N. Y., Jan. 21. The strike of 4(H) Ice cutters at Rockland lake has been settled by compromise. The men went to work llils morning. The men wanted !2 a day, but agreed to accept if 1.73. FINANCIAL AND COMMERCIAL. CIomIiik Stock lilot.illn. Money on call sternly ut I per cent. Prime mercantile pupor, Mi5!4 per cent. SU'i-llns" i-xohiiniri." firm, with actual busi ness In bankeiH' ljills ut i-l.STl' fo demand and at $4.MI7iifi -t.tiUfeiJ for 00 day bills. Posted rates, !.S4',j und RSTHtyl.Wi, Commercial bills, t-i.VlWui-Wt- Hut Mi ver. 47'mC. Mexican ilollurs. iSlYiC Gov ernment bonds Htrons. Railroad bond steady. L'losins prices: Atchison Wei. 1'eople s Uu Keadtnic Rock Island .103H . uuh . 47i,4 .177-v, .IK'S . 4U' .1U1 . 444 . 9U! i Chen. Ai Ohio.... 6!V Del. & lluUsou.,171 Erie 3 l.ouls. & NaslL.tSfi-, Manhattan t'on.lMI Missouri 1'hc Ul'Si N. Y. Central... lrd't, Ontario & West. 33 Pacltlc Mail 39 St. Paul Suitnr Refinery Texas Paclllc . Union Pacific . Wabash pref. . West. Union .. New York Markets. FLOUR Quieter, but sllll very firm; Minnesota patents. $4.1ioi4.30; winter straights, W.)'n.l.m; winter extras, Jli.MKy) S.lu; winter patents, H.0.V4. WH KAT Opened weak under bearish entiles und liquidation, rallied on coverlns, but was heavy un iresn BenniK oiueis ! March, M l.Vlilc.; May l-l'u It YK- Sternly; statu. M'uiiic., c. 1. f.. New York; No. 'I western. D'.iVie.. f. o. b.. afloat. CORN Active mid BlroiiB on a scare of Januurv shorts and light receipts; March, D4l4c; May, 4SVf4U'c. OATS Strong on general commission house buyinn; truck, white, stiile, 48y 4;-,i c. ; track, while, western, 4:fi( 46' to. lrt)HK Klrmj mess, 18'ulS.W; family, JIK.fiij'n 1S.7B. I.AUD Dull; prime western steam, 10. Hie. BCi'TEH Dull; state dlry, lWiXie.; ex tru creamery, "tie. CHKKWK Firm; state, full cream, fan cy, small, colored, full made, lt'o. ; lule made. l:i44il4c. ; siniill, white, fall made, n 14'-c. ; lale made. 13o. ; larse, col ored, fall made, 14VtO. ; iate made, 130.; large, white, fall made, U'iC.; lale made, 13KUOS Dull; state and Pennsylvania, nverage best, 27c; western, fancy graded, Sic. SUOAR Raw quiet; fair refining. 8c. ; centrifugal, M test, 3c. ; retlned steady; crushed, 5 ?.r.c. ; powdered, 4.S6e. MUl.ASSli8 i'irm; New Orleans, 320 40o. KICK Quiet ; domestic, 4'.iSG?ic. ; Japan, nominal. TALLOW Steady; city, Oc; country, 6i4 liiflii.c. HAY-Flrm; shipping, 6570o.; food to choice, 9&C.H11.05. Live Slock Market. CATTLE Market steady; choice, S5.2M9 5. 40 : nrltne, l.M; good, n.iii'n;.; veal calves, fSOl S.6H. 1 n xia Market steady; nrlmn heavies. SO 7rnii.M); mediums. Jii.iUi'uli r' ; heavy .... : r.-...n ,vi. II. .v. tt' 1 (irHl'IH, .i.rii ii 'i , I'nm ii'ini-i", vi.uir,v ( :,.".: hIl'H. Jii.4ir .ll.;.U; rout'liH. K.'.lHI.l'.'i. HllKKl1 AND l.AMIiS-Wiirki't lower; best wethers, f4 r.0'r l.tui; culls and cotu- 1 moo, fLT6C oholo lambs, S.T69t.i ANcCclable Prcparalion Tor As slmilalinfi iltcFootlandRcgula ling die Sluinachs and Dowels of Promolca DigcsliciLChocrfur nessandncsi.Conlains ncilhrr Opuim.Morphine nor Mineral. Not lAnc otic. iSlx.Vmiut HtxkwItrSmlll- Ivfrrmiitf - III (urlwHnlrStia IiinfrrpxiM ' imr Apoifccl Remedy forConslipa lion , Sour Slomnch,I)inrrlioci Worms .Convulsions, Feverish ness nml Loss of StEEr. Facsimile Sinnlurc of XEW YORK. ! - tXACT COPY OF WRAPPER. Jjj JjJ J ALEXANDER iKOTUiK& M. DEA.LEI1H IX Cigars, TcTaacco Candies, Fruits and 1; fOl.f AGINTS ICR Hour)- MaJiliU'd's Fiut-Ojindu-K. Fresh Every Veek.' SOLE AGENTS KOR F. F. Adams & Go's Fine Cut Chewing Tolwca Bnlo Htfcnt b fr.r f be Hor.ry Clay, Londrcs, I.'onr.d, Bloomsburg Pa. IF YOU ARE IN NEED OF j : a 11 .ip e r , :?.a. a t t 2 k s , or OSL CliOTII, YOU WILL FIND A NICE LINE AT Poois aboe Cjurt riouso. A lare lot of Window Curtains in stock. Potatoes 60 Hp Price Changes Irom Sevenly to Eighty Cents a Bushel. Potatoes have gone up recently, the wholesale price in New York being now seventy to eighty cents a bushel. This is due to the cold weather and the congested state of the freight transportation on the railroads. It may take a car thirty days to come from the West, which with the temperature as it has been means in many cases that the potatoes will be frozen and worthless. The only way to ship now is to have a man come with the cars to keep fires in them, which is expensive if the trip is a long one. Plenty of potatoes are in the West and the price will fall as soon as they can be shipped safely. The crop in New Vork was a partial failure. Girls, Read This. " A girl who cannot make and bake bread, compound a pudding and wash and iron her own shirt waist is a fraud upon young American woman hood," declared the Rev. Jenkin Lloyd Jones before the National Housewives' Association, "and you, mothers and housewives, are to blame fir the common feeling of your daughters against kitchen service. This servant girl question," he continued, "is becoming more vital than trusts, tariff or anything else in the nation's category ' of unsettled things. It affects the home and farni ly, the most sacred institutions in the land, and has much to do with the unhappiness of the nation. The idea that kitchen work is menial must be corrected and the lessons must begin at Louie, in every home." For Infanta and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature in Use For Over Thirty Years THt CCNTJIUfl PoMMNTi NCW tOH CITV. follow! ng branila of Cltfari' Indian rrincccs, Seilscl, Cilui is The Markets. BLOOMSBURG MARKETS. COKItliCTEtl WEEKLY. Butter, per pound F-KBs, per dozen I.ard, per pound Ham, per pound Beef (quarter), per pound Wheat, per bushel Oats, do RETAIL PKICIS. $ tit 30 S 15 to 16 6 to 8 1 00 40 Co Rye, . do 11 t 1 x ' per ui)i 4.00 to 4 40 Hay, per ton ,$ Potatoes, (new), per bushel 7c Turnips, do 4Q Tallow, per pound o$ Shoulder, do !!.'.""!""!! 13 Bacon, do 18 incKar, per qt . Dried apples, per pound "... 05 utiles, do Steer do do caif skin Sheep pelts Shelled corn, per hushei.. Corn meal, cwt., Bran, cwt 3i US 80 7S 80 2 00 1 so 1 50 I 40 II II S 14 11 Chop, cwt Miildljni"). cwt Chickens, per pound, new! 'lo do old. Tv.rkeys do Geese, Ho Ducks, do Number 6, delivered do 4 and 5 delivered". do 6, at yard llu 4 and 5, at yard..." 3 So 4 45 3 o 4 S Assistant Postmaster General Edwin C. Madden recently isued the follow ing order: Registered mail, the delivery W..11.H me ocuuer restricts to the son arldrpsspil mutt ,l.,i: 1 per- wvwciivcicu iuuu one but the addressee, not even upon to no ma wnuen oraer. when it cannot be so delivered it must be rtturned to the sender. The endorsement "per sonal" does not restrict the delivery of any letter or parcel to the addressee in Hfrsim anA r n r r 1... , .., ,lv, picaiTiueu loriu 11 used in such delivery. of