The Columbian. (Bloomsburg, Pa.) 1866-1910, June 04, 1903, Page 7, Image 7

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    THE COLUMBIAN, BLOOMSBURG, PA.
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THE CHANGE
Conduct by J.V.DARROV,
Preaf Cormpst Sob I'or Sfnfe
ffnnH
PENNSYLVANIA GRANGE.
Worthy MatKrr" W. F. IIU1 and Es
timable Wife. 1
Tho stnto grange of Pennsylvania
lins for tlie pant fivo yonrs tmil nt 118
head Mr. W. F. 1 1 1 1 1 of Crawford coun
ty, a wide nwnke young farmer In
fcouth Slionnngo township. Contrary
to tho usual rulo, he wont from col
logo direct to a life upon tho farm.
Kecognlzlng In tho grango n poteut
factor for tho fanners' welfare, ho
early joined grange No. 844 and has
Inco given to tho Order his host
thought and energy. After nerving
several years In the subordinate and
Pomona granges he was In 1N04 elect
ed lecturer of the Pennsylvania stale
grange. In 1898 ho was promoted to
tho mastership of tho state organiza
tion. Tho Order of Tatrons of Husbandry
Is strong In the Keystone State and Is
highly prosperous at present. Farmers
lire joining the many granges a9 never
before. Tho treasury shows an in
crease of nearly lt)0 per cent over this
tlmo one year ago. Between $15,000,
000 and $20,000,000 worth of farm
property is in this state protected by
the grango Insurance companies, whllo
MR. AND MBS. W. F. HILL.
the admirable trade arrangements of
the organization enable its members
to save other thousands of dollars an
nually.
Whllo the grnnge can very properly
be used to promote and advance tho
home and family interests along every
avenue of need, yet the crowning vnluo
of the grange to its membership is in
Increasing confidence iu their own abll
ity to do things and to get results.
Farmers are too apt to take somebody
else's offer as the best that can be
' realized. In Pennsylvania the granges
are learning self reliance. When ills
Batlsllcd with tho insurance rates of
fered by the existing companies, they
went after something better and estnb
llshed their own grango companies,
When dissatisfied with excessive ex
actions by middlemen, they establish'
ed a business system of their own. Pa'
troiis are becoming moro and more con
scions of their mental development and
of tho possibilities as a united body
They purpose using this agency to fur
ther educate and elevate the American
farmer.
The accompanying portraits of Mr.
end Mrs. Hill will especially interest
members of the order in the Kcystouo
Btute. Mrs. Hill has been worthy
flora of the Pennsylvania state grange
and is now lady assistant steward of
tho national grango.
The Grange and the Country Preaa.
The New York state grango organ
Ized the first grange news correspond'
ence bureau in the United States. The
press correspondent presented the ad
vantages of such correspondence at the
last meeting of the national grange,
ainee which time Michigan, Pennsylva
nia and far away California have or
ganized along similar lines to furnish
grunge pews items for the weeklies
and interior dailies of their respective
states. In New York state 400 papers
are using the monthly news bulletins
and In Pennsylvania about 2t0. This
shows that there is a demand for news
about the granges, and what is tru in
respect to tho press of the states above
named must be equally true regarding
the newspapers of other states where
numerous granges exist, and the van
ous state grange organizations will do
well to see that the country newspa
pers are supplied systematically with
such news.
The Oldeat Patron.
Massachusetts' oldest Patron la Alon
so S. Sanderson, now over ninety-two
years of age. He was a charter mem
ber of Granite grango of South Worth-
lngton, Mass. Ho moved to bouth
Worthiugton in 1821. and was married
to Sophia Drake Nov. 23, 1S34. For
sixty-eight yeurs Mr. and Mrs. Sander-
sou lived together. They had four cull
dreu and thirteen grandchildren, of
whom twelve are now living. Although
ninety-two yeurs of age, ho attends tho
grange meetings and is thoroughly in
terested. Has uny other state an older
member of the Order?
A Rhode laland Grange Hall.
Little Compton, II. I.,' owns the finest
grunge hall in the state. The cost of
building, laud and furnishings wus
about $5,000. It Is C8 by SO feet, two
stories and finished .very prettily; has a
largo and commodious slugo, with cur
tain and scenery. It will seat 300 per
sons. '
Granges meet monthly, semi-monthly
or weekly, and the interest In grange
work Increases In about tho same or
der.
Sometimes things we can do are neg-
llected In our discussion of things we
icannot do.
ONE HUNDRED FOWLS.
la the Ilnuae Here Draprllird Thrr
Will Find Comfort In V Interna ,
Well aa In Snminer.
Tim frrminil tilnn nt n. Iwiiihi, nlinwn
herewith is designed at the request
of a subscriber, to accommodate 100
fowls. It is 40x10 feet in size, faees
the south and has a four-foot alley
in front for the use nf small chicks, i
It Is divided into two pens and the
tmrtliJitlla fir .if Uvn-lni-h tnouh wire
netting. The front partition may be
of one-Inch mesh two feet high if
it Is desired to keep the little chicks
from getting in among the larger
mica, a piHiiorni lour reel wiue,
should hn hllilt. in tha inlirp li'liu-th
of the back side, 2 feet, from the
40 6
Ni
V
IlUUSK FOR A HUNDRED HENS.
floor. Nine inches above the platform
place three roosts 12 Inches apart.
The house should be seven feet
high In the front, five feet at the rear
ami ten feet at the rhlgc, if it is to
be covered with shingles. Four 8x10
inch 12-liyht windows should be
placed at the front, and one may be
placed at each end if desired. There
may be a door in each end or one in
the front. To make this house frost
proof, it must be built with double
walls with an air space between. Lay
2x0-lnch sills on a stone or brick foun
dation, laid in cement. The studding
should be made of 2x4, placed two
feet apart.
On these nail square edge boards,
cover with a wind and waterproof
sheathing pager, and then put on
matched siding. Seal up the inside in
the same manner. In winter time put
on storm sash and a double door.
Where a house is built as thoroughly
as this, a ventilator should be pro
vided. A six-inch tube should extend
from the peak to within one foot
of the' floor, and be provided with a
damper which can be opened and closed
to regulate-the flow of air. Enough
air will leak in around windows and
doors to keep it fresh. Farm and
Home.
INEVITABLE MISTAKES.
Whr Ile:lnnera In the Poultry ftnal
naa Moat Expect to Loae
Money at Flrat.
No one that has not had experience
in poultry raising should invest heav
ily in that business. The only safe
way is to start small and increase the
flock as rapidly as experience in
creases. The novice generally starts
iu with the firm resolve to succeed
from the start. Frequently he gets all
the information he can from books
and from practical poultrymen, and
he vainly imagines that the informa
tion so acquired will save him from
mistakes. Hut the mistakes are made,
just the same, though they are doubt
less fewer on account of what hus
been gleaned from the experiences of
others. People must have experi
ence by themselves to really fit them
to cope with the numerous situations
they must face. Let the novice set it
down as a certainty that he will make
mistakes of a most serious nature,
and that as a result of such mistakes
great losses will result. In some
cases these losses will be greater than
the profits for the entire year in
which they occur. We tell the novice
of this before they occur, so that he
may not be entirely discouraged and
give up the effort when they do occur.
Kven people that have been brought
up on farms encounter these discour
aging experiences when they try to
handle fowls in considerable num
bers. The ones that have had a little,
experience in raising poultry ore the
ones most likely to invest consider
able sums in an equipment before
they are really competent to manage
such equipment. liecause they have
had some experience they imagine
ttiemselves to be experts. Most of
the failures are due to inexperience,
but the people that have failed are
not usually willing to admit this even
to themselves. Kven the farm boy
that, has fed chickens and gnthered
eggs since childhood will do well to
go a little slow when he enters the
ranks of professional chicken raisers,
for it hurts less to lose 50 per cent,
of a flock of a hundred than it does
to lose a like proportion of a thou
sand fowls. Farmer's' Heview.
Heiilnue of the Queen Bee.
That retinue surrounding the queen
is something after this fashion in this
locality: Under normal circumstances,
when a queen is' traveling over the
comb, no worker accompanies her. If
she runs against the hind end of a
worksr, the worker will pay no more at
tentlon to her than to another worker.
If, however, the worker is in such po
sition that she can recognize the pres
ence of the queen, whether the queen
touches her or not, the worker will In
variably squarely face the queen; and
I if tlis queen stands still long enough
there will be a circle of bees all facing
' centrally. As soon, however, as the
queen moves on, the circle breaks up,
never to be formed again of the same
bees. Gleanings.
K'ivt OtT BUFFALO IN CANADA.
Thlrtr-'ivhree of the'ltnre Animal
Are t'nefnlly I'rraerved at
Winnipeg.
There are 33 buffaloes in the dominion
herd at the lianff National park in Win
nipeg. All are In splendid condition,
says the llangor Commercial. There
are 14 full-grown bulls and the old
patriarch Is 30 years of ape. lie was
the first animal to be owned by Lord
Strathcona at Silver Heights, where all
the animals now in confinement in the
west came from.
This animal is of historic Importance.
Very soon he will be shot and then he
will be mounted. He has been a might
fighter and has retained the leadership
of the herd throughout many years
until two years ago when he met his
Waterloo. Old as he was his Immense
bulk and strength enabled him to kill
one antagonist and to nearly dispose
6f another. Had it not been that he
broke his horn on a rock the Issue
would probably have been different.
The bull which now rules the herd
is one Imported from Silver Heights
and which defeated all the other bulls
one by one. A herd of such dimensions
as that is a sight which, sinee the time
when the buffalo roamed in countless
herds over the prairies, has rarely
greeted the eyes of a white man. The
enterprise of the ofllclals who have had
the buffalo In charge for their efforts
to preserve this tangible link of those
days before the great west felt the
taming hand of the white set tier upon
his mane is to be commended by all who
feel an interest In the life which oc
cupied our great solitudes before his
tory began for us.
AGED WAR VETERANS.
Some European Snlillera WJio Have
Lived to I'pn-arda of a
Century.
It is not always true that war
shortens life. The sole survivor of
the Greek war of independence, who
was brought to the notice of King
George the other day, is said to be
105 years old, and the Inst survivors
I of our wnrs have often reached a
' much greater age, says the London
Chronicle. Sir Joseph Fayrer, one
of the king's physicians, has spoken
to a man who foupht in the. battle of
Ituxnr, which took place in 17C4.
i William Gillespie, who saved the col
ors at Preston Pans, and is on the
1 roll of Chelsea pensioners, died In
Dumfries at 102, and the last survivor
I of tho capture of Gibraltar lived to
be 115. J nomas Wimms, who dietl in
1791, near Tunm, In Ireland, had
fought in the battle of Londonderry
in 1701. and Phoebe Hessel, the Ama
zon, who received a bayonet wnnnil
at Fontcnoy in 1745, lived to be 108,
receiving a pension from the, private
purse of George IV. until her death.
A veteran of Culloden drew a pension
for 60 years, and died aged 10(1, nnd
a man, whose horse was shot under
him, at Edgehill, in 1642, died, 94
years later, aged 113. There Is now.
no survivor of Waterloo, but Mme.
Glvron, of Viesville, ITainault, saw
the ground drenched with blood, and
Napoleon riding "as if in a dream."'
WINE IN POWDER FORM.
The French Have a. New Method of
Obtaining; a Ileveraite In Con
centrated Form.
The liquid part of wine contains
light ethers, ethjlic alcohol, heuvy al
cohol and oils, and substances such as
furfurol and aldehyde. All these pro
ducts are poisonous. The solids of
wine are coloring matter, fixed organ
ic acids and mineral salts, all of which
are harmless, with the exception of
the lime being bad for the gouty, says
the Philadelphia Record.
Now, a wiue which is deprived of the
heavy alcohol oils, lime and potash,
should contain, no Injurious elements.
According to L'lllustration, it seems
that Dr. Garrigou, of Toulouse, has
been able to obtain this result by con
centrating a wine in a vacuum, this
process taking away the cooked taste
which ordinary heat produces. lathis
way wine may be reduced toa dry pow
der, and If then the powder be placed
In. water or ethylic alcohol all the
properties vt the wine are recovered,
with the exception of the poisonous
elements. By this process there is ob
tained a perfectly harmless wine,
which may be kept indefinitely and
which is handled readily.
A Monument to t'ooka.
It is proposed to erect what is
termed a monument commemmorative
of the culinary glories of France in the
center of the great markets of Paris.
A committee of city men, headed by a
noted restaurateur, hus been formed
for this purpose. The memorial is to
be a large fountain ornamented by me
dallions of celebrated gastronomic au
thorities Careme, who wrote on (he
culinary artj Brlllat-Savarin, author of
"La Physiologie du Gout," in which7c
curs the famous phrase, "L'homme
d'esprit seul sait manger;" Griuiod de
la Eeyniere and two other food experts
of the past. Around the fountain there
are to be sculptured figures of fish
wives, oyster women, poultry and pig
meat vendors, salad sellers and cham
pion market porters, all "forts de la
halle."
Now He Is Good.
An obedient husband up in Franklin
county, Maine, was objecting to doing
certain work about the house, and he
quoted Scripture to his wife, showing
that the household duties should prop
erly be assigned to the woman. The
good wife replied by reading to her as
tonished liege II Kings, xxi, 13: "I will
wipe out Jerusalem as a man wipeth a
dish, wiping it and turning it upside,
down." That hiiBbuud has wiped the
dishes ever since. .
TEE STATE ATaGLANOE.
Four hundred and eighty-five
foreigners on Tuesday became citizens
in Luzerne county. They were sworn
in in big groups.
S. n. Stillwell, president of the
State Fisheries Commission and claim
agent for the Lackawanna Railroad
Company, died at Scranton Friday
evening at the age of sixty three
years.
The new city administration of
Scranton made a radical departure on
Sunday by closing peanut stands, can
dy, butcher shops, bakeries, ice cream
stands, dry goods, grocery and furnish
ing stores in which business had been
done on Sundays.
All efforts to stamp out the
small pox epidemic in Scranton have
failed. The disease hangs on persis
tently. New cases are reported near
ly every day. There are at the pre
sent time 32 cases in the city. Seven
were reported on Saturday.
Charles Grener was shot in the
stomach by his brother George at the
family home on West Pine street,
Dunmore, Monday afternoon. The
doctors say the wounded man cannot
live. George was committed to jail.
He alleges tli?t Charles was abusing
their mother.
The Lock Haven Taper Mills
have been awarded a contract for
furnishing 1,500,000 pounds of paper
to the internal revenue department
this year, a contract that these mills
have been filling for ten years past.
They also furnish the paper for gov
ernment stamps.
Marshal Wynn, aged 4, the first
congenital hip disease patient to be
operated upon in this section after
Professor Lorenz's visit to Philadel
phia some months ago, was taken
from the plaster cast at the State
Hospital at Fountain Springs on
Tuesday, and found to be cured. The
child after being released, walked un
aided. The plant of the Eastern Steel
Company, of Pottsville, valued at
several million dollars, was on Friday
sold to Charles F. Hickey, of New
Vork, for one dollar.
The sale includes the large open
hearth furnaces and new steel mill
just erected. It is stated that the
sale means the reorganization of the
company on a large scale.
Judge Hart, of Lycoming county
has handed down an opinion of gen
eral interest in the case of the city of
Williamsport against the St. Paul's
Evangelical church. He decided
that the church is not liable for taxes
on the parsonage, which is built ad
joining the church and which is used
for church purposes at the same time
being occupied by the pastor and his
family.
At the meeting of the Pennsylva
nia State Educational association to
be held at Wilkes Barre June 30 and
July 1 and 2, there will be an exhibi
tion of school work in vhich it is de-si-ed
that all parts of the state shall
be represented. Work from any
schools of the State will be received.
David Wyant, Dorranceton, Luzerne
county, is Secretary of the committee
on exhibition.
John Cranage, a mine contractor,
was on his knees drilling a hole in
West Shenandoah colliery when a
rock said to weigh fully a thousand
pounds, fell upon him, pinning him to
the ground.
After four hours' hard work work
men managed to reach Cranage,
whom they expected to find dead,
but, to their surprise, he had no bones
broken. A irecess in the rock saved
him.
Irrigation will be resorted to m a
desperate attempt by farmers in
Schuylkill County to save some of
their crops. Water in immense quan
tities will be brought down the moun
tains in railroad trains and distributed
over the farming lands in temoorari'y
laid pipes. The temperature fell
thirty degrees recently, bul no rain
fell.
Prayer for rain was offered in all
the churches.
A Renovo report states that last
week a boarder ot the Renovo House
developed smallpox and the hotel was
promptly quarantined. Eight other
cases have since developed in the
same hostelry. Several of the afflict
ed men were employed in the Penn
sylvania railroad shops and there is
considerable uneasiness among their
fellow workmen. There are also six
cases of smallpox in South Renovo,
just across the river from Renovo.
The rival political leaders of the
Wilkes-Barre township School Board,
which has failed to organize, although
elected some months ago, met on the
street Monday night in a peisonal
encounter.
One leader, it is claimed, accused
the other seriously, and they and their
adherents pitched into one another
and a merry fight ensued. When
revolvers were drawn others inter
fered and prevented bloodshed. Ar
rests are expected.
OASTOniA.
Bears ths M Kind You Have Always Boujtit
Where They Make the Mistake
President Roosevelt, General Miles
and others unite in saying: "Agricul
ture is our principal industry." There
is a slight mistake in the sentence.
As far as the course of thie govern,
ment as now directed is concerned,
the sentence should be amended to
read, "Robbing agriculture is our
principal industry." With high tariff,
high transporlat.on rates, and trusts
controlmg all the farmer has to buy,
while he himself has no trust, and no
protection in any way to enhanse his
income, to prattle the praise of agri
culture is so ironical that it is getting
rusty.
no You Realize
a constant war is carried on between your
stomach and your taste ? What pleasts one
may not suit the other. The question is what
to eut. "ft, the cereal that Ustes good,
forever set at peace the jarring, human fac
tions. f is agraia product with all health
giving nuti iment retained. "Ztn builds up
the body; adds to ihe strength; keeps the
brain active and clear, "f " is cooked and
rendv to eat wtth milk or cream. Grocers
sell -ft. 2-12 ly
WANTED SKVKHAL INDTJHTRIWS l'KH
sons tn each state to travnl for house estab
lished eleven years and Willi a lurue nuptial, to
call upon merchants and agents for successful
and profitable linn. Permanent enxairnment.
Weekly cash saliiry of 115 and all traveling ex
penses and hot'l bills advanced In cash each
week. Experience not essential. Mention ref
erence and enclose self-addressed envelope.
T11K NATIONAL, H34 Dearborn St., CMcuro.
t-i 16t 8-0
SCIRE FACIAS SUR MECHAN
IC'S LIEN.
In the Court of Common Pleas of Columbia
County, No. s, September Term, 1903.
B.C. Creasy, doing business la tbo firm name
of Creasy Wells,
vs.
Gall C. Shalt!!, owner and Gall C. Shultz, Con
tractor. To Gall C. Shultz, owner and Contractor.
You arc hereby notified that a writ of Scire
Facias has been Issued on tho Mechanics Lien
or materials furnished by plaintiff to you: filed
on May 4t,h, 1903, in the abovs entitled case;
which said lien covers the following d-scrtbed
premises: All that certain lot of pround situ
ate In the Boroiiffh of West Berwick, County of
Columbia, and State of Pennsylvania, bounded
and described as foltows to wit. Beginning at
a point, on Falrvlew Avenue at the corner of lot
No. 1st: thence along said lot south two de
gree fifty minutes oast one hundred and sixty
feet to Dewey Alley; thence along snld alley
south elghty-sevon degrees ten ruinates west
rorty-flve feet to corner of lot No. 188; thence
along said lot north two degrees fifty minutes
west one hundred and Bixty feet to Fafvlnw
Avenue; thence along said avenue north eighty
seven degrees ten minutes east forty-five feot
to tho place of beginning; containing seven
thousand two-hundred square feet. It being
lot No. 188 In D. A. Michael's addition to the
Borough of West Berwick, and whereon Is
erected a two story frame dwelling house
twenty by thirty foet, with an L six by fifteen
feet, and plaintiff claims therein the sum of
$494.31, and the lien dates from Oct. 13th, t'X2.
You are also notified that Judgment may be
entered against you, and the property described
In said Hen sold, If an affidavit of defense be not
tiled by you within fifteen days after June 2Sth,
1903. DANIEL KNORR.
Uba'nt IIihrino, Atty. Sheriff
SHERIFF'S SALE.
By virtue of a writ of Fl. Fa., Issued out of
the Court of common Pleas of Columblacounty
Pen nsylvanla. and to me directed there will be
exposed to public sale at the Court Bouse In
Uloomsburg. county and state aforesaid on.
SATURDAY, JUNE 13, 1903,
at two o'clock p. m. 'AH that certain messuage,
tenement and lot of ground situate in the boro
ugh ot Catawlssa, county of Columbia and state
of Pennsylvania, bounded and described as
follows to wit: On the east by Fourth street,
on the sout h by a private alley, on the west by
a public alley, and on the north by Wesley
John; being twenty-five teet front on said
Fourth street and two hundred and tea feet
deeppaiallel with private alley on the south,
whereon Is erected a
TWO STORY FRAME DWELL
ING HOUSE.
Seized, taken tn execution at the suit ot Ada
Scott vs. nnle Carl and Harvey E. Carl and to
be sold as the property of Jennie Carl and
Ilarvey E. Carl. DANIEL KNOKK,
Shall, Atty. Sheriff,
ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE
Estate of Ellinbeth D. PMllipi, lalt of Bloom-
burg, Pa., deoeawd.
Notice Is hereby given that letters of admin
istration on t ne estate or Girzarjetn u. trumps,
late of the town ofJHloomsburg, Pa., deceased,
have been granted to thb undersigned adminis
trator to whom all persons lndeb'ed to said
estate are requested to make payments, and
those having claims or demands will make
Known tne same wiiuout aeiuy to
J. M. Class, Atty. J. L. DILI.OK,
5-14 6t. Administrator.
EXECUTOR'S NOTICE.
Estate of Ann Ivep, late of Uemlock township
deceased.
Notice Is hereby given that letters testa
mentary on the estate of Mrs. Ann Ivey, late of
Uemlock township, Columbia County Pennsyl
vania, deceased, have been granted to William
TUley, resident of sold township, to whom all
persons Indebted to said estate are requested to
make payment, and those having clulms or de
mands will make known the same without
delay to WILLIAM TILLEY.
6-4 lit Executor.
PROFESSIONAL CARBSJs
N. U. FUNK,
ATTOBjrrT-AT-tAW,
His. Eat's BaOduig, Court Haass AII07,
BLOOMSBURG, PA.
A. L. FRITZ,
ATTORNEY AT LAW.
Offlce Uloomsburg Nat'lDank Bldg.,8d floor.
BLOOMSBURG, PA.
J. H. MAIZE,
attorney at law, insuranci and
real estate agfnt,
Office, in Locksrd's Building,
BLOOMSBURG. PA.
JOIIH 0. PHSSSS. JOHNS. BASMAM
FREEZE & HARMAN,
ATTORNEYS AND CCTJNSBLLPKH AT LAW
BLOOMSBURG, PA.
Office on Centre Street, first door below
Opera House.
A. N. YOST,
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
Wirt Building, Court lletiFe Squsrt
ELOOMSBURO.PA
II. A. McKILLIP.
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW.
Columbian Building, 2nd Floor.
BLOOMSBURG, PA.
RALPH R. JOHN,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
Hartman Building, Market Square.
Bloomsburg, Pa.
IKELER & IKELER,
ATTORNEY ATLAW.
Office bsck of Farmers' National Bank,
BLOOMSBURG, FA.
CLYDE CHAS. YETTER,
ATTORNEY--AT LAW,
Bloomsburo, P
Office in Wirt's Building,
W. H. IUIAWN,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
Office, Corner of Third snd Main Sts
CATAWISSA,. PA.
CLINTON HERRING,
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW.
Ofllce with Grant Herring.
BLOOMSBURG, PA.
KiT Will be in DmnoevilV vn.l...
each week.
WILLIAM C. JOHNSTON,
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW.
Office in Wells' Building over E. A.
Gidding's Clothing Store, Bloomsbnrg, t
Will be in Millville on Tuesdays.
H. MONTGOMERY SMITH,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
Office: Wirt building, over AUxand
Bros. 11-16-99
EDWARD. FLYNN,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
CENTRALIA, PA.
rvofflce Llddlcot building, Locust avenue-
M0NT0CR TKI.KPHONS. BELL TKLIPHOKV
STSS TSSTSD, GLASSES KITTSD.
H. BIERMAN, M. D.
nOMffiOPATMCl'UYSICIAN AND SCHGMtt
orrics houss: Ofllce Residence, 4th St,
10 a. m. to s p. m., 6:80 to 8 p. m.
B LOOM SB UK G, Fl
. S. JOHN, M. D.,
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON.
Office and residence, 410 Main St-7-3-iV
BLOOMSBURG, PA.
J. J. BROWN, M. D.
THE EYE A SPECIALTY.
Eyes tested and fitted with glasses.
No Sunday work.
311 Market St., Bloomsburg, Pa.
Hours: 10 to 8 Telephone.
DR. M. J. HESS.
DENTISTRY IN ALL ITS BRANCHES,
Crown and bridge work
A
SPECIALTY,
Corner Main and Centre Streets.
, BI.OOV SIL'FG PA
Columbia A Montour Telephone connection.
Dr. W. H. HOUSE,
SURGEON DENTIST,
Offloe; Barton's Building, Main below Hark
BLOOMSBURG, Pa.
All styles of work done in a superior mannei
a work warranted as represented.
TEETH EXTRACTED WITHOUT PAIN,
by the use of Gas, and free of charge when
artificial teeth are inserted.
ssTTo be open all hours during the day.
C. WATSON McKELVY,
"RE INSURANCE AGENT.
(Suooessorto B. F. Hartmsn
iMSrte!it,7elveortlle ""'DB-est Compan
les In the world, among which are:
CASH TOTAL 8UBPLOS
Vnbii. i... CAPITAL. ASSETS. OTBB IU
Penna, Phlla 400,000 8,t,s5.ltH) 1 iis!s
Oueen.of N. Y.. . 500 000 SW, i iogiw
N. America, Phlla. 8,000,000 ,;30,689 855
Office First Nat'l Bank Bldg., sd floor.
Losses promptly adjusted and paid.
M. P. LUTZ & SON,
(SUCCESSORS TO PREA8 BROWS)
INSURANCE AND REALESTATK
AGENTS AND BROK1RS.
o
N. W. Corner Main and Centre. Str.-,
Bloomsburg, Pa,
o
Represent Seventeen as good Com
panies as there are in the World
and all losses promptly adjust
ed and paid at their Office.
SADE T. VANNATTA. '
(Successor to C. F. Knapp.)
GENERAL IXSVJtAA'CE
Office 238 Iron St., Bloomsburo,; P a
Oct. 31, 1901. tf
CITY HOTEL,
W. A. Hartzel, Prop.
No. 121 West Main Street,
WLarge and convenient sample rooms, bat
rooms, hot and cold water, and modern MB
veniences. Bar stocked with best wins aa
liquors. First-class livery attached.
EXCHANGE HOTEL,
G. Snydir, Proprietor,
(Oppositethe Court House)
BLOOMSBURG, Pa. -
Large and convenient sample rooms, bath
rooms, hot and cold water and all modern
ccq veniences.