THE COLUMBIAN, BL.OOMSBURO, PA Uncle Sam Has OrJcrcd That They be Self-Supporting. RATIONS ARE CUT OFF The Young Men Are Driving Teams and Grndi'iB Roads at $1.50 a Day. Sitting Bull' Widow Earns Her Living Making Beaded Moc casins. The Sioux Indian hjis gone to work. He has done it reluctantly and under protest. He has douo It contrary to the advice of hla father and hU grand father, lint hnck of his father and his grandfather Is the great, father at Washington, who ways that If a mau will not work neiUior shall he eat. The rations have been cut off from those who are able to wurk. So the Indian has cast aside his blanket and with it the leisure of more centuries than the white man can count. He fee accepted the new order of things m he accepts everything else, with a philosophy which looks like Indiffer ence, says the Chicago Chronicle. "The white man offers you work ow, said old Chief Ked Cloud, when the young men camo to him for coun el, "and they take away the rations tlat were promised under the Mack Hills treaty. They will give you work for a little while, then you must And It for yourselves. They will g've yera nothing. They wilj do nothing tor jrou." But the time has gone by when the word of the chief was final law. Tho yornig men went to work. On the Mr Ridge reservation about one fcurth of the Indians are self-supporting. They work on the roads, grading and driving teams, for which they get $1.50 a day. Several of them save been employed building dams did reservoirs over the reservation. few do a little farming and raise cattle. Opening for American Barbers. In en East End police court the other day a curious case of assault we heard. A youngster, it appears, was sent by his father to have bis fcsJr cut. The barber, according to ttve father, ran a pair of clippers all ewer the boy's head except in front, wlhere he left an enormous fringe; to mark hla displeasure the father gave the barber a sound thrashing. It is, however, not only In the East End that barbers show a great ignorance of tjhelr trade. In New York or Paris ft 4s the easiest thing possible for a man to have his hair cut properly. In London It ia hardly too much to say that there are only half a dozen places where a barber knows his business. The average barber has only one method of cutting hair, which he in Tariably carries out, irrespective alto gether of the wishes of his customers. I believe that if an American hair dresser were to open a dozen shops In different parts of Ijondon he would rapidly make his fortune, provided, of course, he employed the right sort of men to cut his customers 'hair. Lon don Tattler. Do Small Houses Diminish Heads. London. Do small bulld'ings cause small heads, and do small heads mean abort. lives? Doctor Warner, who has exam n led 100,000 London children, traces a con nection between physical degeneracy and small buildings. "One of the signs of physical de terioration," said Doctor Warner, "Is thnt heads are growing smaller, and especially In the cases of females. This form of degeneracy is very near ly connected with the erection of high buildings. When we come to look at iine cotMlition of childreu In districts where the residences are of a great heights and el.e we find a larger pro portion of small heads. "Small-iieaded children are not con 6ned to the poorer classes. On the contrary, It is quite as marked among children of the wealthy. They are all bound to die sooner than they nor mally should. They are not necessar ily unintelligent, but they have not the necessary strength for a long life," St. Louis Republic. New Interest In Torpedo Boats. Owing 'to tho ucceis with which torpedoes have been used by the Jap anese in the Far East, the Navy De partment has redoubled Interest and activity In all things pertaining to tor pedo warfare. There Is a keener demand upon the part of young officers for the com mand of torpedo craft. Many of the torpedo boats held In reserve at Nor folk and elsewhero are being placed in commission. That the Hoard of In spection and Survey thiinks these ves .sels should lx kept ready for service at all tl men Is tshown by a recom mendation for Installation of heavier machinery in the Ericsson, liiddle and others of the ame typo. A Cemetery for Dogs. Philadelphia, Pa. Fern Hock is the tnoftt remarkable cemetery in the world. On Clumpiest Place, an estate of Revolutionary renown, where Red and Puff were sheltered alike at vari ous periods of -the strife, where Wash ington BMjnt a week planning and where the Prltlshers under Howe en camped three nights, Is a resting place of famous cats ami dogs. Ranks First In Prune Growing. Santa Clara County, Callforn'a, pro duced 00,0(10,000 pounds of prunes in 1902, or half of the output of the United States for that period, besides large quantities of apricots and cherries, thus outranking every other oovrty ia the Golden State. IN A MARRIAGE MARKET. Odd Custom In a Prominent Russian Mart for Wives. Perhaps the best known of these Russians ninrrluRo tnnrkets Is tho one thnt lakes place njniunlly at Klul, near i Moscow, and which has Just been lieid 1 with tho usual success. It occurs flu r ltig tho week of Kpiphany (Kusfilin i style), and nil the young women that wish to get married In the courso of tho year are mustered In a long row in the principal streets of thnt large nnd stra-gling country town. In order tr I mako themselves attractive to the ! young men who come to see and fid tnlro them they wear nearly all their belongings on their hacks. Their fin ery does not consist only of their best clothes, but it Includes a lot of old family trinkets, sometimes valuablo scarfs, cloaks and furs, heavy silver Jewelry and necklaces.Jacketa showing i rows of prettily chelated or llllgree silver buttons, and many of the girls bring even their linen and other do mestic property along with them in gaudily painted chests and trunks, sit ting on them like dragons watching a treasure. ' After exposing themselves for hours to the close scrutiny of tho would-be benedicts the girls march off In a procession to church, there to per form at tho shrine of some saint par ticularly potent In procuring connubial bliss, such as St. Chrysostom and St. N.ltanzcn, worshipful prayers. On the way to church It Is not onlypermis ablo but good form for the young men : to follow and accost one or the other of the girls In the way of conversation. If any two of the young people think they suit one another a formal visit Is paid by the Intended groom to the parents. Dut before the actual j marriage Is arranged a number of In terviews takes place between the re spective parents, every item of the trousseau being exacted beforehand and noted down as part of the bride's dowry. Harper's Weekly. A Robin and a Rat. Tho other day, while a gentleman of Porthollow, St. Keverne, was walk ing past a farm In the neighborhood, lie was attracted by a robin, which flew about him, flapped its wings In his face some two or three times and appeared greatly excited and dis tressed. The gentleman's curiosity be'ng arrouscd, he watched the robin for some time. It flew towards him and then back Into the hedge a short distance away, uttering apparently cries of distress all the time. The gentleman walked toward the hedge where the bird seemed to wish him to come, and creeping up close he dis covered a medium sized rat, which bad got Into the robin's nest and was devouring one of the little young birds. At the sight of the gentleman tho rat Jumped out and was knocked sonselesB on tho road. When the robin enw the rat lying on the ronil she flew at. u and pecked It viciously. The rat was killed and thrown over the hedge into (he field, and as the gentleman walked away the robin seemed (o chirp him her thanks. There were four young birds In the nest. One was killed, but the other .three were free from injury. London Globe. The Martian "Canals." After experimenting on the cracks and fissures that appear tn cylinders and spheres subjected to pressure M. A. Tlaumann, an engineer of Zurich, Switzerland, has proposed the follow- 1 ing explanation of the markings on the planet Mars, ordinarily known as "canals." Says the Revue Sclentifique In a notice of M. Uaumann's hypoth esis: Mars may have a brittle, solid crust, with a more drastic nucleus, th!s difference of rigidity, depending simply on differences of' temperature In the v arlos strata. When the planet cools contraction takeB place, and the outer layers yields little by little to the pressure. In places where the pressure is greatest, cracks always double, as shown by M. Baumann in his exnerlmenl8 annear. It is dos- fcible that afterwards, by the Interven- 1 lion of living beings, the edges of these cracks may have been removed, J so as to form canals. But the same result may follow from the progres sive enlargement of small fissures. Tho rectilinear canals Indicate a homogenous constitution of soil. Fin ally, the outer crust, now solid, may have remained long in a plastic state, which would have prevented the form ation of mountains. Literary Digest. As to Pronunciation. As a general thing, says the Mobile Register, tho English tongue Is more I correctly used in the South than In j any other part of tho country, for tho ' reason that there Is a predomlnence of English stock In the South, and not. the admixture of continental blood such as corrupts the language of the . inhabitants of the Eastern. Middle and Western States. Even that for j Which we are most rivaled in England the soft, almost inaudible r final. The Southerner says "Sir" as if it were written S'r, and that Is the Eng lish way. The Yankee says "Sirur-r," with a bold twist of the final r, unlike tho pronunciation of English by the cultured In any part of tho world. The King Sets Fashions It was noted with mingled awe and delight by nttontivo English reporters funf King Edward, on his recent visit to Ireland wore his hat slightly "tilted to the right." All loyal hats will now 00 worn slightly til toil to the right. The Chinaman and Telephone. Wah Lee. an Americanized China man from San Francisco visiting In Hartford, Conn., expressed surprlua when he learned that not one of his countrymen in Hartford has a tele phone, Pasteboard From Peat. Pasteboard made of 40 percent peat fiber and CO percent wood shavings is a standard product both Ja Germany And Sweden, being stronger, lighter and cheaper than pasteboard made In the ordinary way, . . NEW LINCOLN PORTRAIT. That of an English Artist Recently Brought to Light. There has Just been resurrected from some out-of-the-way place in tho Capitol an excellent portrait of Pres ident Lincoln, which for fifteen years has Iain hidden away from general knowledge. It is a full length, l.fe size painting, and has a somewhat remarkable history. It was painted by one W. F. Travis, an Englishman, who, as the story goes, came to this country during the war, with tl.o hope of Joining tho I'nlon forces. Ho was, however, somewhat crippled, and was refused admission to. the army bccnu.ic of hi physical disa bility. He then turned his attention to painting and sought a sitting from President Lincoln, but could not ob tain an audience. Finally he was for tunato enough to meet tho President in the street, and begged a sitting. The President said he had no time to grant sittings, but finally consented to one of fifteen minutes' duration. Dur ing that time Travis so interested the President that he Becured other sit tings and eventually completed a por trait, which Senator Hoar and others pronounce the finest likeness of Lin coln ever made. Travis was unable to sell his picture and took It back to England, where it was afterward bought by a man named Webster, who was at the time Register of Wills of the District of Columbia. Webster brought the portrait to the Centennial Exposition, and it Is related that when Mrs. Lincoln came upon it sud denly the likeness was so striking that she fainted. The pieturo was pur chased from Webster's heirs. Perhaps the most striking feature of the portrait, aside from the great likeness, is the infinite sadness which is shown on the countenance. Tho detail is also perfectly worked out. Lincoln Is shown standing by a chair, on which rests his hat, into which ho has carelessly thrown one glove, the other having dropped to the floor. In the President's hand, which rests on a small desk, Is a document which bears the title, "Constitutional Amendment Abolishing Slavery Throughout the Nation." Above the desk is a picture of Washington cross ing the Delaware, and on top of the desk is a small bust of Washington. New York Tribune." HASTY SERMONS. In our age women commonly pre serve the publication of their good offi ces and their vehement affection to ward their husbands until they havo lost them or at least till then defer the testimonies of their good will. Yet we should willingly give them leave to laugh after we are dead provided they will smile upon us while we are alive. Montaigne ' After treating her like a goddess the husband uses her like a woman. What is worse, the most abject flat terers degenerate into the greatest ty rants. AddlBon. He that hath wife and children hath given hostages to fortune; for they are impediments to great enterprises, either of virtue or mischief. Lord Bacon. I have hardly ever observed the mar ried condition unhappy but for want of Judgment or temper In the man. Richard Steele. Certainly wife and children aro a kind of .discipline of humanity. Lord Bacon. He that loves not his wife and chil dren feeds a lioness at home and breeds a nest of sorrows. Jeremy Taylor. Wireless on Warships. The rapid development of the wire less telgraph system In the Navy Yard was shown lately, shortly after the battleship Kentucky had gone down the bay to Tompklnsville, where she was to anchor before pro ceeding to Hampton Roads, says the Brooklyn Eagle. A question a to tho disposition of some material came up In the commandant's office. It could be settled only by reference to the Kentucky. Then this dialogue oc curred with a lieutenant at the com mandant's end of the telephone. "Hello, is this wireless?" "Give me the Kentucky. She ought to be off Governor's Island about this time." "Pick her up In five minutes, eh? All right. Tell them the command ant's office wants to know about" and then came the question which had something to do with hawsers. Ten minutes later the lieutenant went to tho 'phone again and this conversation with the wireless sta tion In the yard occurred: "Get the Alabama, off Forty-second street, and find out how she is getting ttlong with her ammunition." In a few minutes back came tho information required. Many of the warships of the navy hnve the wire less system on board and, when thus equipped, if they are within reasona ble distance, communication is by wireless, as the commandant's ufilce has found that Is the best, way to reach tho ships. Wives at 6 Shillings. Wives in Tanganyika are considered a luxury, and even In Xululand they cost from 30 to 1G0; but on the Tanganyika plateau one can be had for live or six goats. One goat ennuis 8d to Is. therefore one wife equal Cs at the most. Government Railroads. Canada has altogether only 20,000 miles of railroad, of which about l.oihJ miles are street and suburban lines: operated by trolley. Over 14,000 milos of steam railway are owned by the government and four companies, WAKEN YOUR SLEEPY FOOT. Sprained Ankle Followed Numbness to Foot of George Wright. It Is not well to let your feet sleep. Whenever you experience thnt pecu liar numbness In tho lower extremities that presages n little nap for them, take vigorous methods at once to bring them back to wakefulness. If you do not you mny regret your omission, as a young man from Syracuse who has been stopping In this city now does. Tho young man Is Oeorgo I Wright, son of chief of Police Wright of Syracuse. He came to the city to start work as a chnluman on the sur vey of thi' line of the promised bnre canal, and with a friend went to the Majestic last evening. During the pro gress of tho play he sat with one foot reding across the other leg. When tho curtain fell at the end of the final act, bo arose to go out with his friend. As the foot was placed on tho floor and received the weight of his body he felt a sharp pain and had to sit down. Ho was assisted out, and Dr. Douglas was, seen. Ho gave tho information that the tendons of the foot and ankle wero badly sprained and ho would bo Incapacitated from work for some time. Utba Observer. Cats and Shells. A lady who was In Port Arthur dur- Ing tho bombardments ordered by Admiral Togo has described tho curi ous effect It produced on cats by the cannonade. "I was at my window dur ing each bombardment," she has re lated, "but only through the day, bo cause at night I did not dare stir out of bed. In front of me there was a llttlo roof on which five or six cats of the neighborhood collected. Each tlmo there was a bombardment tho , cats duly arrived, and, havng observed i them, I on the second occasion pro ceeded to watch them. With my fam ily we passed tho hours looking at them. At each gunshot the cats arched their backs and stiffened their legs, and seemed both terrified and furious. Then when a hissing shell arrived It gave the signal for a fright ful battle. They Jumped at each other, raging like tlgars, and seemed to hold each other responsible for what was taking place. The effect was so com ical we could not help laughing, al though the occasion did not Inspire gayety. After having fought the cats retired for awhile, as though bewild ered, but as soon as tho bombardmeut commenced again they went through the same business. Each time It was always the same." St. Jams Gazette. TALES OF WELL KNOWN PEOPLE. Sarah Barnhardt has had what Is probably the greatest experience of all tragediennes in the simulation of suicide. Her death by self-administered poison total up roughly to 10, Ooii;she has jumped Into the scenic artist's Seine over 7.000 times; she has sent over 5,000 bulletsinto her head from a revolver, and nearly tho same number of daggers has the great act ress, to the Inexpressible sorrow of Intomperately sympathetic spectators, plunged deep Into the sblffon at the Bliio of her bodices. At a reception one night a lady asked Mme. Bern hardt if she really kept a coffin at her house in Paris. "Certalnly,"answercd tho actress with a smile, "and so would you if you were tho morjrue's most constant customer. While Secretary Hay was In the country one summer an important, piece of official business wag pending and he arranged with Washington that any news that might arrive about the matter should be telegraphed to him in cipher. Day by day he waited, but no telegram came. One morning, hap- j penlng to go to the lonely little tele graph office, he said to the operator. "I suppose you have received no dis patch for me?" "Why, yes sir," the operator replied, !' there was a dis- ' nntr.li fnt. vim lha ntlirti ,1nv Imfr ft ivoa all twisted and confused. I couldn't make head or tail to it so I didn't think it was any use to send it up to you." As there is a law against burying within tho limits of Albany, N. Y., Bishop Doane of that city had a spec ial act of the legislature passed to get permission to be buried in the cathed ral. His friends were worried when they read its text. It began with the usual verbiage. The ending was some thing like this: "We do grant that Bishop Doane be buried within the precincts of the city of Albany. This act to tako effect immediately." His Heart Was Black. A country sexton officiated at a fu neral clad in a red waistcoat. At the conclusion of the obsequies tho vicar gently remonstrated with the old grave-digger, saying: "Robert, you should not wear a rod waistcoat at a funeral; you hurt the feelings of the mourners." Robert repliod, placing his hand on his breast, "Well, what does it matter, sir, so long as the heart 13 black?'1 A Negro Trust Company. An evidence of what the negro Is doing to better his condition is shown in the Incorporation of tho Creek citi zens' realty bnnk and trust company, which was formed at Muskogeo, Kan , with a capital stock of $50,000. All tho officers uud (stockholders aro ne groes. Insurance on Joli.t of Meat. A Birmingham insurance olllce re cently received a claim for compensa tion from a lady client for tho loss of n Joint of meat which was burnt In tho oven. Site Informed them that the loss was duo tp lire. Frigate With Skeloton Crew. An Hticiout frigate with a skeleton crew on board, has been discovered at Havre, during dredging operations for a new channel. Sho was British aud was sunk by the Are of the French Prti jn 1759. sr vsnia nutri-jp. lbv. J The American Farmer the Rest In llic World. The American farmer Is the greatest ninn In the world to day because lie Is ninMer cf the soil he Is gniniiiR" in intelligence quite as rapidly ns his products are increasing In magnitude. Our recent combines of capital in United States measured in money are enormous, yet such figures sink into insig nificance when compared to the money, brain nnd brawn invested in agricultural Industries. For Instance, the farmers of Minnesota nnd Dakota have received tjon, 000,000 for their products in a single year. The farmer knows what Nature will brinir forth for him from his experience In the past. He knows if certain seeds are nlrinted and properly fared for that Nature i will take care of the rest. In the same wy are master of your own destiny. I'roviding your blood is in good order, it only needs a little effort on your own part to keep healthy and strong rid your body of the poisons that are apt to accumulate and your system is ready to ward off the attark of the germs of disease. Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery makes rich red blood by increasing the number of red blood corpuscles. There is no alcohol in this frest tonic to shrivel up the red blood corpuscles. As an alterative extract, made only of herbs and roots it goes about ita work in nature's way. It stimulates the liver into proper action, and feeds the worn-out nerves, stomach and heart on pure blood. Used for over a third of a century it has sold more largely than any other blood medicine in the United States. More bottles of Dr. I'ierce's Golden Medical Discovery are sold to-day than ever before that is a true test of its medicinal value after thirty-eight years of deserved popularity. Dr. Pierce's "Medical Adviser" sent on receipt of stumps to pay for mailing only. Bend ai one-cent stamps for book in paper covers, or 31 stamps for cloth-bound vol ume. Address Dr. 4. V. Pierce, Buffalo.N. Y. Some Monster Cannon. Some experiments carried on near Cherbourg, Fance with the new model big French fortress guns show that this question of gun calibre touches interests outside the purely military sphere. The guns are of 12 4-5-inch calibre, and, although only three Bhota were fired, it had been Judged pru dent to warn the neighboring inhabi tants to leave their windows and doors open as a precaution against the tre mendous concussion expected. In fact, the first shot did great damage to the earthworks around the gun, and as there was no time to warn the officer in command the next two discharges completely shattered them. Luckily, the men ordinarily serving the gun had been kept at a distance until the effects has been tested. In the result new service rules will have to be dlvtsod, and a largor uninhabited area around these guns will be neces sary. Strange Food for Humans. According to a writer In the Scien tific American, perhaps the most sin gular food for human beings Is the larvae of a fly which Is common in parts of California. This insect Is , found In such vast quantities in Lake Mono that it Is washed upon the shore? in vast windrows and can be collected by bushels. The water of Mono is very singular, seemingly heavy and smooth like oil; so much so that it resists ordinary wind and refuses to become ruffled. When the larvae be gin to appear Indians gather from far and near and scrape them up, place the wormlike creatures on cloths and racks in the sun and "dry them, when they are beaten up and husked, look ing then like rice. The Indians call the food "kooh-chah-bee," aid many bushels are collected at this time. That larvae are nutritious Is shown by the condition of the Indians, who soon grow fat on the rich diet The German Navy. Among the officers of the German navy are five admirals, seven vice-admirals seventeen rear-admirals, sixty two captains of sh,lp. twenty-five of fri gate and 111 of corvette. Tho ships of the navy consist of nineteen bat tleships, eight coast defence ships, twelve armored gunboats, ten armored cruisers, twenty-nine protected cruis ers, seven ordinary gunboats, fifteen training ships, nine special service vessels, and nine harbor ships. Of these there are in commission ntn; battleships, four coast defence ships, one armored gunboat, seven armored cruisers, nineteen protected cruisers, six odlnary gunboats, eleven training ships, and eight special service ves sels. London Engineer. Lack of Horses In Japan. One reason given for the excessive reliance on manual labor in Japan is the absence of grass In the country. All hay has to be Imported, and, na turally, horse-keep is very expensive. Under the old conditions of Japan's existence the banishment of the horse was a matter of small Importance. But with the necessity of maintaining a huge army on European principles the circumstances constitutes a serious drawback. Cavalry and mounted In fantry canndt be dispensed with, ami yet the Japanese have provided them only with extreme difficulty. Ex change. $100,000 for Poor Negro. . Andrew Beard, a negro who has worked for 20 years in tho railroad machine shops in Birmingham, Aa, has Just sold for $100,000 a patent for a car coupler which he Invented. Composition of Human Body. Some one has figured that tho nor mal human body has in it the iron needed to make seven large nails, the fat for fourteen pounds of can dles, the carbon for sixty-five gross of crayons, and phosporus enough for 820,000 matches. Out of It can be obtained, besldos, twenty spoonfuU of salt, fifty lumps of sugar and forty two liters of water. Out of 1,173 persons inoculated against the plague at Habl, India, only 2.1 per cent died, while of those w,ho refused to be inoculated 2C.6 per cent died. JURYMEN FCn MAY TERM. The following nrc the "Gentle men of t lie Jury," drawn lo serve at the May term 6f Court: (III AMI .II IIOUH. 1$, S. Pioiline, farmer, Cleveland .lohti ('minimi, gent, Bloom 1 1 11 rr v Cretiy, huckster, Cnta. Tvf. Hoy biblitie, farmer, (irccnwvtod N.'.I. Knglclmrt. wagon maker, Scolt .I0I1 it Knrhnrt, clerk, Bloom Charles lick, f irmer, Montour Henry Fry, fanner, Madison Jacob Feiistninitclier. farmer, Main A. W. (Iruver, limner, Main Hoy (I I Ingenluieti, fanner. Orange tw Joseph Henry, farmer, Orange twp. Wesley lletler, farmer, Mi 111 ill. J. O. HiirtiiiHii, laborer, Cntn. Jloro J. V. Iphrr, farmer, Henton twp. Warren Kline, fanner, (irccinvood Jacob 1 nouse, farmer, Jnclewm Harry Mc.Micliael, farmer, Mt. Pleasant 0. K. Pealcr, fanner, Klshlngcreefc. James (Julck, blacksmith, Montour. Harry Kceholt.. farmer, Orange twjv, C. K. Knvngo, jeweler, Hlooni M. J. Smith, merchant St ill water, ltoro John Scott, fanner, Centre rvriT juiiohs. Michael llurrett, laborer, Conyngham Frank Hovee, laborer, illoom Itowman Jiower. lulxirer, Herwiek ('. J. Jirittun, laborer, lierwick Charles Hrader, laborer, lierwick Frank Dcrr. liveryman, Illoom Frank Dciltrick, laborer, Hlooni Frank Davis, farmer. Ml. Pleasant Pardee F.verhard, farmer, Jackson Luther K.ver. clerk, Catuwissa JJoro Jonas I'M gar, carpenter, Greenwood Kdward Knglehard, farmer, Frtwikllu Charles Fruit, mail carrier, Madison John (lurdner, farmer, Pine K. Ji. Ouie, oonl dealer, Catawlssn lloro Henry HiiciiHteel.farmer,Orano twp Kdward Hurt men, farmer. Madison Lcmwnl Harmaii, farmer Briarcreek F. H. Hugenbuch, farmer, Center L. K. llipnetisleel, farmer, Mt. PJsnt Howe Ikeler, fanner, Hemlock John M. Johnston, farmer, (IreenwoM Tilden Kline, blacksmith, Hlooni James Karshner, farmer, Mifllln F. H. Kline, farmer, Heiiton twp Knmnuel Levnn, miner, Conyngham David Long, miller, Koarlngcreek Isaiah Masteller, fanner, Mudisou W. II. Miller, farmer, Mllllin Hobert Morris, gent, Bloom Frank W. Miller, merchant, Centralla Hurley Mosor. farmer, Madison Benjamin McMichael, farmer, (Jr'nw'd tieo. V. Miller, farmer, Greenwood J. W. Milllin, merchant, Bloom John Meusch, farmer, Montour Jerre Oherdorf, Bhoemaker, Cato. Boro Kdward Kooney, laborer, Conyngham V. P. Bobbins, fanner, Greenwood Charles, Bebble, laborer, Mt. Pleasant David Sterner, lalxircr, Bloom Jacob Steen. landlord, Hugarlcaf H. V. Smith, laborer. Mitllin K. G. SwcpiKJiiheiser, farmer, Center S. K. Stcauinun, farmer, Sugarlonf Jnuuh Townsend, farmer. Scott Miles Welliver, fanner, Madison ChuM. M. Wenner, farmer, Fisliingcreek SKCOM) WEEK. Charles Aten, farmer, Mifliln P. Lloyd Applemun, c'rpntr, Benton B 1. M. Bet., merchant, Montour Kvan Buckulcw, deuler, Benton Boro George Budmun. laborer, Berwick Kmanuel Bogerf. farmer, Fisliingcreek H. L. Beishline, farmer, Fishingwreek D. W. Curter, laborer, Hlooni Jocph Chrismun, boatman, Bloom Geo. M. Durling, furmer, Milllin Henry Deichmilier, farmer, Hemlock V. K. Diettrieh, merchant, Scott Jackson Kmmitt, farmer, Hemlock: William Gordner, farmer, Pine Harrison Greenly, farmer, Pine Stephen Hughes, farmer, Cuta. Boro Clinton Hartmau, tax collector, Soott Heuben Hess, pent. Bloom John H. Lunger, J. P., Jackson William Lemon, carpenter, Bloom Willium Masteller, carpenter, Main William McMahon, farmer, Mt. Pleas't John G. McHenry, distiller, Benton T Bruce McMichael, fanner, Fishingc'k John Morris, farmer, Pine Mark Mendcntmll. clerk. Millvllle ' Moses Miirkle, shoemaker, Berwick I J. G. (juick. coal dealer, Bloom vv . J-,. Junker, clerk, Bloom W. H. Kiiuyoii, farmer, Madison Joslah Ralston, merchant, Bloom FMisha Kingrose, farmer, Center B..F. Sharpless, gent, Bloom ' J. 'it. Sutton, tax collector, lierwick J. L. Williams, farmer, Center Isaiah Y eager, former, Catawissa tw p Oentralia Y- M. 0- A. The Volunteer Young Men's Christian Association, of Ccutralia, recently formed, is progressing fine ly. A room in the Oscar Fetter- . man building has been leased for association purposes and it will be open every evening from 7:00 to 10:00 o'clock for the members. The public is requested to contribute reading matter and amusements. I Sunday afternoon meetings will be ' llflrl in til, ntftu nlilrtAro HUMPHREYS' Veterinary Specifies cure diseases of Homoh, Cattlo, Sheep, Dogs, Ilogs and Poultry by acting directly on the sick pabtj without loss of time. A. A. FEVERS. rnnMtlnn. TnHuima. oumcilillou., Luug Jiivrr, Milk Fever. n. n.)PRAIH. .aiiineaa. Initirlei, ouHnnfltbuuiualUiu. f C. IfiOHB THROAT, Quloay, EpIioMle. oinuaiUUieuiper. , uiaui I WOIIM8S. Dou. Orubi. K.E.) ( Ot Oils, Colda, InfWnzs, luOamed F. P.M'OMf. BHIvarh. Wlnd-Blowa. ouuiu ( Diarrhea, llyaenlery. O.O. Prevent MISCARRIAGE. "'iu!aiKID"BV BLADDER DIBORDEBft. CUWOiSLIcera, Ureaae, Farcy. J. K. I BAD CONDITIO. Rlarln Coal, era J iudlcealluu, ttlouiacb Biaigera. too. each 1 Stable Cue, Tea Specinct, Book, Aa., 1 At drugglata, or eent prepaid 00 reeelpt of price. Humphreja' Medicine Co., Cor. WtlUam aud Job Street, Mew York. 1 . VT BOOK HAILED FREE,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers