THE COLUMBIAN, BLOOMSBURG. PA DIMM Efforts To Establish the Silk Industry in This Country. EMPLOYEES POORLY PAID fore Revolutionary War Many Americans Found Silk-Producing Profitable Southerners Could Work Whole Crops In Conjunction With Cotton Raising. It requires 300 bilk, worms to make pound weight of merchantable co Cooiih. It takes cloven pounds of co coons to produce one pound of silk 3.200 worms to tho pound of silk. When we take note that tho United States imported In l'J04 over 1G,000. 000 pounds of raw silk, we are con fronted with tho fact that somebody had to keep more than 62.8imi.imio.ooo worms at work to supply raw material for ono year for our silk factories Now It Is not very intellectual labor to keep a worm munching mulberry leaves, nor Is it to reel the worm's filmy product into skeius. This labor Is consequently paid in Italy at the rate of only 10 to ID cents a day, and in Japan at 8 to 12 cents. For that reason the silk manufacturers believe that the United States will never go Into the silk worm business. But oft and on the American people have always felt differently about it. Ever since the year 16C0, when a man by the name of Aspinwall established nurseries of the mulberry on Ing Isl and, efforts have been periodically made to render this a silk -producing country. Quite a promising silk-producing in dustry In this country was broken In pon oy the Revolutionary war. This put the Americans out of the silk growing habit. But about 1833 a man came along and circulated some silk raising stories and statistics which were so alluring that there was a per fect craze for setting out the moms multicaulis. or broad-leaved mulberry. In New England many fields that were producing profitable crops wpre put into mulberry trees: all over the country there was a "multicaulis craze." Two or three years later an excep tionally hard winter performed the service of killing oft most of the mul ticaulis plantations. But reminders of them exist in scattered wayside trees all over southern New England, while in the South there are today wild mulberry thickets descended from these exotics. The mulberry tree will grow In the United States and the silk worm will flourish here. In fact, there is no country In the world which is better adapted to silk culture. Tho only reason why we went abroad in 1904 to get 16,000.000 pounds of raw silk was economic. The delicate threads spun by the worms have to bo reeled on skeins In reeling establishments called filatures. We have no filatures because we have no cocoons to keep them going. And we have no cocoons because we have no filatures to take them. This is not a very good reason for keeping out of the silk-producing busi ness, and the government has always realized it. L O. Howard, a government ento mologist, reported at some length on the matter in 1!)03. He declared that "there are thousands of people who are eager to learn of some rr.eans of increasing their income by ever so slight an amount," and that "at tho present market price In Europe enough people in this country would take up silk culture to secure a large annual crop." He gave it as his opinion that improved reeling machin ery would solve the economic part of the problem, and showed that no proper machinery has ever been used in the United States. By the way, raw silk and silk co coons are on the tariff's free list. Probably they would not be if there were a silk-producing interest In this eountry. This may account for the very pessimistic way in which the silk goods manufacturers talk about the prospects of establishing a silk producing industry here. Silk-worm raising In essentially a houshold industry In Europe and Asia, and would be here. Its advantages to the people of the South would be immense. Tho country people, white and colored, of that section, could produce the whole crop without rais ing a pound less of cotton than they do now. If, on the other hands, the crowding out movement that is now being di rected against the colored people of the South should succeed, and an Italian peasantry should come upon the soil in their place, tho cocoon In dustry would probably be very quick ly c . tiililisUr.d there if reeling estab lishments were started. But It is not upon tho lj-cents-a-day basis that tho United Stales would want a silk reeling industry. It would 'want the thing done with Im proved automatic machinery and on a first class American basis. Tho prob lem is one that is up to the inventors. J. E. C. Siamese Twin Pigs Died. Siamese twin pigs were born In Minot Corner, Me., a few days ago. These freaks were bound together from their snouts by thick cartllugo. Their heads were so fastened togeth er that neither could move without first Rrunting to tho other. Because of the pluclng of their eyes they could see from only one side. They stepped on each other'B feet every time they moved. Theso peculiar freak plgg lived only a few hours. They were born at night and died the following day. SERVANT GIRLS ARE SCARCE. Immigrants Prefer Work In Factories and Shops, Says Labor Report. The number of Immigrants who are desirous of entering domestic ser vice Is becoming scarcer every day. Many of the girls now arriving arc anxious to enter commercial life or work in shops and factories. "Where to find domestic help is one of the great questions of the duy. An effort has been made in tho South west to educate young negro women for domestic service. Graduates of these technical Institutes are skilled in their work and are In great demand Thoy help out the situation only in their Immediate vicinity, and to a Very limited extent." The statement covers conditions at the close of tho year 1904, and, re ferring to the demand for labor In tho various trades, says: "The print ing Industry, metal trades, theatrical anr musical trades, cigar making and stationary engine tending furnished less employment In 19o4 than in 1903, while tho building trade, public employment and miscellaneous trades like barberlng, the manufacture of leather, paper, glass, etc., furnished moro employment. "Notwithstanding the diminution In employment In tho third quarter of 1904, quarterly earnings averaged higher than in 1903 and nearly as high as in 1902. tho average for all organized worklngmen having been $197 In 1902. $190 In 1903, and $13.1.50 In 1904. Earnings Increased In eight of the thirteen groups of trades, the decreases being In the industries clothing and textiles, wood workings and furniture, food and liquors, the atres and music, tobacco In which employment, as a result of labor dis putes or other causes, diminished noticeably. "Four Industries with lessened em ployment transportation, machinery and shipbuilding, printing and station ary engine tending present Increased earnings, as do the four Industries in which employment Increased. The Increases were due In the first place to advances in wage rates; second, to changes In composition of organiza tions reporting caused by the disso lution of unions of unskilled and lowly paid workmen; third, by the addition of allowances for board and lodging, where such are given in addi tion to cash wages. "The volume of Immigration at the Port of New York exceeded all rec ords in 1903. but has diminished In 1904. A marked change has taken place In the character of the migra tion, the number of Italians entering having declined more than fifty per cent and that of Poles. Slovaks, Mag yars and other races of Southern Europe nearly as much. On the oth er hand the Hebrew Immigrants have Increased seventy-four per cent and there was also a large Increase in Immigration from England. Scotland and the Scandinavian countries." George Sutherland, Elected to the United States Senate by the unanimous vote of the Repub lican members of the Utah legislature, Is a lawyer of great ability and one oi the moiit popular men In his homo state. Mr. Sutherland is a gentile, and, until the division on party lines, was a member of the liberal (anti Mormon) party of Utah. Against his will he was forced to accept a nomina tion for representative in the national congress in 1890 and was elected. Ho declined a renomlnation at the ex piration of his term and made a race in 1902 for the United States Senate. J to was defeated by Reed Smoot. Dutch in Russians. No country has a deeper or more real interest in Russian Ju.mu than Holland. It Is Hulland which for well r.lch a century, without making any noise about it, has steadily ab sorbed tbe'Russiau stocks IhKiied with much eclat first In London, then iu Berlin, afterwards In Purls. Of tho largo Dutch holdngs In foreign in vestment stocks probably between one-third and ono-fourth are Russian. Perhaps the view is exaggerated, but a recent assertion that between ono tentli and one-ghth of Dutch Invest ments, Eay, a round 1,000,000,000 guilders, consists of Russian stocks, lies gono unchallenged. At any rate, In tho "Official List" of Amsterdam ono counts some ninety different Rus sian loans. The list Is headed by the "Hamburg loan" of 1820; It closes with the latest 4 per cent issue, which Is too young yet to have tho recognition of official quotation. Lon don Times. Explorers who have lately returned to Adelaide from the interior of Aus tralia declare that large tracts are swarming with countless rabbits, on which the blacks now mainly subsist. M c&r imi 111 IB Synnadian Marble Imported by New York Builders. ARE OF VARIOUS COLORS The Lapis Synnadlcus of Ancient Rome, Where It Was Used for the Decorative Features of the Tem plesImperial Ottoman Bank of Constantinople Is Interested. Turkish marble is what the stone Is called In prosaic languago, but the material was known to the ancient Romans as lapis Synnadlcus, and to the Inhabitants of Phrygla, where It was quarried, as lithos Doclmacos, It is famed Synnadian marble, widely used In Rome for tho decorative fea tures of temples and public buildings. Strabo speaks of the high repute in which It was held, and tells of col umns of slabs having been transport ed to Rome with great trouble and expense. Tho quarries were between Synnada and Docimaeum, towns of Phrygla northwest of the plain of Ipsus, near the modern Bulwudun. The Synnadian marbles were of vari ous colors, but the variety to which the name Is generally applied Is a white with red spots. Tho present Importation, however. Is a white stat uary marble. It is an Interesting commentary on the decadenco of the Oriental artisan that, while hugo blocks suitable for columns wero tak en to Rome before the time of Christ, the modern quarrymen, with access to Improved machinery, can turn out only small blocks. Not a single one of the stones which have Just reached New York contains a cubic metre, and most of them measured only a few feet. Although the Synnada quarries havo never been lost or forgotten, they have been neglected because of the lack of transportation facilities. Now It Is believed that the Smyrna rail road will render the marble available for the Western market, and an effort will be made to open and work the quarries. The Imperial Ottoman bank of Constantinople has become Inter- ested In the venture. The great demand for unique dec orative material for modern buildings has led to the search for rare marbles in all parts of the world. The most promising fields for these are in Greece, the Aegean Archipelago, Asia Minor, and Egypt. These countries were all carefully exploited by the master builders and sculptors of an tiquity. Scores of quarries that were worked two thousand years ago, but the very location of which was for gotten, have been re-discovered and re-opened. Several years ago the fa mous quarries on the Island of En boea, producing the Clpolllno, or onion-skin marble, were found Just as they had been left by the craftsmen before the Christian era. Crude bronzo tools and roughly shapod col umns wero lying in the trenches. These quarries are now being vigor ously operated, and the product has been used in New York. . The old quarries on the Island of Seyros have also been recovered, and the rich, rod mottled marble is now held in high favor in this city. When Athens was In Its glory one of the choicest treas ures of the builders and sculptors was tho cream-white marble from Mt. Pen elious. Through the generosity of a rich Athenian banker, the Pentellcon quarries, Idle for many centuries were opened to furnish marble for re pairing the Stadium at the time of the revival of the Olympian games. They are still operated, and tho mcr ble has bfypn used for wainscoting In a number of the finest of the recent of fice buildings in the city. So it has come about that modern American architects are taking tribute from the very same veins of marble that yicld er material for Praxiteles and his fol lowers. Dorothy Russell Einstein, Daughter of Lillian Russell A Long Time Filling Up. New Mexico and Arizona have had a long chance to acquire people as well as square miles. The Spanish explorer, Coronado, toured through them in 1540 in the course of his search for the Seven Cities of Cibola. Santa Fe, the present capital of New Mexico, was founded early In the seventeenth century. For 200 years the land has been calling for settlers, and the total result up to date Is a population of 818,000. Chicago Tribune. n S " ; ' v ' n FORCING SULPHUR BY STEAM Unique Mining Methods to Get Great Deposits In Louisiana. The prairies of Louisiana are now Competing with the volcanoes of Italy In putting crude sulphur on the mar ket; and the Latin lawmakers aro considering ways and means whereby the product of Mount Aetna may be protected in the marts of Sicily and the Italian mainland, from those of the Louisiana lowland, says tho Even ing Post's correspondent. During the past half-year exports irom Now Or leans have begun to attract the at tention of tho sulphur consumers of the world, of the freight agjnts of the Southern Pacific railroad, and of the shipping firms supplying steam ves sels with' their cargoes. During the winter miles on miles of cars of sul phur have come Into New Orleans, and shipload after shipload has gone out to compete with the "yellow devil" from tho extinct craters of Sicily. Ono of the peculiar wonders of tho United States Is the remarkable and apparently inexhaustible deposit of pure sulphur which exists near the line of tho Southern Pacific, in Cal casieu Parish, at the little villago of Sulphur. Many years ago the exist ence of sulphur had been accidentally demonstrated, and Investigation re vealed the immensity of tho beds be neath the bare prairies. Attempts at shafting had been defeated by tho ex istence of a great stratum of quick sand above tho sulphur, which was some 500 feet below the surface. Aft er a series of crude efforts to shaft, giant casings, arranged to fit Into each other In the manner of sewer pipes, were landed on the coast in the neighborhood of Avery's Island, and rolled across the country some forty miles, to the scene of the labor, but after much effort and expense the plan to sink the Iron circles was de clared futile. The sulphur beds of that part of the prairie, under which the mineral lies, finally passed into the hands of Standard Oil people, and even they were unable for a long time to realize upon the Investment. Numerous at tempts were made to overcome the natural disadvantages without suc cess. The plans, which were finally sucessful, were unique in modern min ing. The apparatus consists of a gi gantic battery of boilers, plenty of steam, and a few three or four-Inch steel shafts driven or bored through the earth Into the sulphur deposit. Steam was forced in with heavy pres sure through one of the shafts or wells Into the sulphur mass. The heat gradually reduced the sulphur to liquid, and the pressure from the steam forced the melted sulphur out of the other wells or shafts to the surface, where it flowed a molten, golden mass, into properly prepared vats. When cooled, it was broken and shipped In bulk, being nearly 98 per cent pure and worth at the mine $28 per ton. Virtue of Peat Baths. Tho discovery of the value of peat baths was made accidentally many years ago. On the coast of Finistere there lived at ono time a very poor family. The father of the family eked out a scanty living by killing aged cat tle and divesting thorn of their skins. The ghastly remains ho sold to tan ners and refiners. Of the three chil dren which belonged to this couple one was a poor creature, delicate and wretched, and apparently half wlt ted. The mother was so ashamed of this offspring that she could not bear to have the child in sight. Conse quently he spent most of his time, half clothed and badly fed, rolling about in the peat bogs which were behind the cotage. Little by little It was noticed that the child was improving in health, that his skin was becoming as fair and soft as a peach, his eyes bright and his spirits and actions those of a strong, healthy boy instead of a half-witted little animal. The old country physician on one of his rounds noticed the Improved con dition of the boy and mentioned that fact and the cause at a medical con ference In Paris. The result was the use of the peat bath, which leaves far behind any other kind of hydro therapy cure known to this day, and Its success is becoming greater each season. Don't Waste Your Energy. Only a hundredth part of tho pos sible light contained in a ton of coal is made use of. The other ninety nine parts are dissipated in varloui ways energy wasted. The waste of energy which goes on in man's use of his own powers Is equally extravagant. A very small percentage of his energy shows Itself in sound work. People expend ten times the energy really necessary In almost everything they do. Some grasp a pen as if it were a crowbar, and pour out as much energy in signing their names as a football does in a match. Look back over tho day, and seo where your energy has gone. See how much has leaked away in trifles. By no means try to curtail your ener gies, but stop tho leakages. Answers. The Decrease In Salt. Tho latest government statistics stnto that the United states produced 18,908,089 burrels of slt during tho years 1903. This Is the smallest out put since 189S, und shows that tho use of salt is decreasing, says Suc cess, This is probably due to the recent disclosures of eminent scien tists that peoplo ent too much salt, that there Is sufficient natural salt In the water we drink, In tho air wo breatho, and in the fruits and vunr3 tables we eat to supply the human system, without sprinkling it plenti fully on every dish. Many diseases are now placed to the use of salt. Do you remember the little thlng-s thnt gave us nn much pleasure when we were ynuiifj ? With what lent did we oil down to the table after our play wn over and e.it the mush and milk our mother put before ua. But a we get older it takes more to give ua pleasure. Mush and milk no longer tantca good to ua, and our digestion may be impaired. The best advice we can give to such a person is to tone up the stomach with Dr. Pirrce'a Golden Medical Discovery. It la nature's most valuable and hrallh-giving airent made without the use of alcohol. It contains roots, herlm and batks. and is the concentration of nature'! vitality as found in the fields and wood. This remedy has a history which speaks well for it because it was given to the public by Dr. R. V. Pierce, founder of the Invalids'' Tlotct and Surgical Institute, at Buffalo, N. Y., nearly forty years ago, and has aince been sold by drtiKgist in ever increasing quantities. Some medicines, tonics or compounds, en joy a large sale for a few years, then disap pcai from the public attention, but Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery haa proved such a reliable blood remedy and tonic that it often enjoys the cqnfidehre of several generations in family, and its in creased sales year by year coming from the recommendations of those who nave tried It, prove its lasting merit, so that every bottle bean the stamp of public approval. Every other blood-maker ana tonic for the stomach that we know of contains alcohol, kilt Dr. Pierce guarantees that no alcohol ia contained in his "Medical Discovery. I If thO Blood PUITipofthe hutna system, is out of order the nerves are starved for want of blood, and indigestion, sleepless ness, sick headache, lack ot vigor and ner vousness are the result. Or. AgiR'w'i Heart Cure relieves heart disease in 30 minutes, cures and strengthens the organ so that rich blood courses through ihe veins and health reigns where disease was supreme 25 Sold by C. A. Kleiin. A sharp man won't cut his friends. When Baby had Scald Head-When Mother had Salt Rheum-When Father had Piles. Ur. Ajnew' Ointment cave the quickest relief and surest cure. These are gems of truth picked from testi mony which is given every day to this great est of healers. It has never been matched in curative qualities in Eczema, Tetter, Piles, etc. 35 cents. 26 Sold by C. A. Kleim. It's all up with the church steeple. Like Tearing the Heart Strings. "It nt within the concep tion of man to measure my great sufferings from heart disease. For years I endured nlmust constant cutting and tearing pains about my heart, and many a time would have welcomed death. Dr. Agnew's Cure for the Heart has worked a veritable miracle." Thos. Hicks, Perth, Ont.-27 Sold by C. A. Kleim. The lane and the worm will turn. Not a Quarter-Hut 10 cents, and 40 doses, in a vial of Dr. Agnew's Little Pills. No pain, pleasure in every dose--little, but awfully good. Cure sick Head ache, Constipation, biliousness, Nausea, Sallowness. 28 Sold by C. A. Kleim. The run. messenger boy is out of the usual To accommodate those who are partial to the use of atomizers in applying liquids into the nasal passages for "catarrhal trou bles," the proprietors prepare Ely's Liquid Cream Balm. Price including the s raying tube is 75 cents. Druggists or by mad. The liquid embodies the medicinal properties of the Solid preparation. Cream Halm is quickly absorbed by the membrane and does not dry up the secretions but changes them to a natural and health) character. Ely Brothers, 56 Warren St., N. Y. A little snake is as apt to bite as a big one. High Pressure Days- Men and women alike have to work in cessantly with brain and hand to hold their own nowadays. Never were the demands of business, the wants of the family, the re quirements of society, more numerous. The first effect of the praiseworthy effort to keep up with all these things is commonly seen in a weakened or debilitated condition of the nervous system, which results in dyspepsia, defective nutrition of both body and brain, and in extreme cases in complete nervous prostration. It is clearly seen that what is needed is what will sustain tho system, give vigor and lone to the nerves, and keep the digestive and assimilative functions healthy and active. From personal knowledge, we can recommend Hood's Sarsaparilla fortius Curpose. It acts or. all the vital organs, uilds up the whole system, and fits men and women for these hgh-pressure days. "I wonder why the leaves turn red When autumn comes," the maiJen said. "Perhaps they blush" and then she frowned "To see the naked limbs around." Ninety-aight Per Cent. There is a fascination about big profits to a business man. But the conservative ami cautious trader prefers to have the lesser per cent, of interest and the larger per tent, of safety in his investments. There is no busi ness man who would nut consider it a sound proposition to invest in an enterprise in which ubsolute loss was impossible and which offered ninety-eight chances in a hundred o a rich profit. The statistics of cures eflect ed by Dr. Pierce's (ioldrn Medical Dis covery show that ninety-eight per tent. 1 f rases of "weak lungs" can be absolutely cured. Almost if not all forms of physical weakness may be traced to starvation. Stara tion saps the strength. The body is just as much starved when the stomach coiuiot ex tract nutrition from the food it receives as when there is no food. "Weak ljngj," bronchial affections, obstinate coughs, rail for nourishment, "Golden Medical Dis covery" supplies that nourishment in its most condensed and assimilable form. It makes "weak lungs" strong, by strengthen, lug the stomach and organs of digestion which digest and distribute the food, and by increasing the supply of pure blood, JURYMEN FOR MAY TERM. The folio.ving ore the "Gentle men of the Jury," drawn lo serve at the May term of Court: (I HAND .IfllOHS. II. 8. Dodinc, dinner, Cleveland .loli it ('minimi, gent, I'.looni Harry Creasy, huckster, Cuta. Twp. Key DiUline, farmer, Greenwood N.'.I. Englclmrt, wagon maker, Meol .loliii Enrlmrt, clerk, Dlooni Charles Eck, farmer, Montour Henry Fry, farmer, Madison Jiu'oli Fcnstamiichcr, farmer, Main A. W. (Iruver, tanner, Main Dnyd Hugciibuch, fiinner. Orange twf lose id i Heni'V, fiinner, Orange Iwtv. Wesley Heller, farmer, Mifflin. .1. (. Hnrtmnn, laborer, Cutii. Horn J. W. Iphcr, farmer, ltenton twp. Warren Kline, farmer, Greenwood Jacob K House, farmer, Jucksnn Harry Me.Micluiel, tanner, Mt.PleasanJ (). F. Pealer, farmer, Fisliingereek .lames (Jiiiek. blacksmith, Montour. Harry Sccsholt., farmer, Orange twp. ('. K. lavage, Jeweler, lllnoni M. .1. Smith, merchant Stillwnter.Hmv John Scott, farmer, Centre l'KTIT Jl'iiOK. Michael Dnrrett, laborer, Conynghnm Frank Doyce. Inborer, Dlooni ltowman Dower, laborer, Derwiek C. J. Drittnn. laborer, Dcrwiik CliarU-H Hinder, laborer, Derwiek. Frank Derr. liveryman, lilootn Frank Deitti iek, 'laborer, lilootn Frank Pnvix, farmer. Mt. PlctiManl ln nice Kvcrlmnl, farmer, JaekHon Luther Kver. clerk, fntawlwa Itor Jonas Kdttr, carpenter, (ireen wood F.dwant F.iiKlelmrtl, farmer, Franklin CliarlcH Fruit, mail carrier, Madison John (inrilner, farmer, PI110 K. J). Utile, eoul dealer, Catawiiwu lloix Henry HiiipcnHteel.fiinner.olUngo twp F.dward ilartinpn, farmer. Madison Lennuil Harnian, farmer Briarcreek F. H. Hanenbuch, farmer, Center Ij. K. Hlppcnsteel, farmer, Mt. l'lftit. Kowe Ikeler, farmer, Hemlock John M. Johnston, farmer, Ureenwood Tilden Kline, blacksmith, Itiooni James Karshner, farmer, Milllin F. It. Kline, fanner, Denton twp Emanuel Levim, miner, Conynghnm David Ijouk, miller, lioarlngcreek Isaiah Masteller, farmer, Madison? W. 11. Miller, farmer, Milllin Uoliert Morris, gent, Dloom Frank W. Miller, merchant, Centralis Hurley Moser, farmer, Madison Denjainln McMichael, farmer, Gr'nw'd Geo. W. Miller, farmer, Greenwood J. V. Mltll in, merchant, Dlooni John Mensch, farmer, Montour Jerre Oberilorf, shoemaker, Cuta. Doro Kdward Itooney, laborer, Conyngliant V. 1. Kobblns, farmer, Greenwood Charles, Kebble, laborer. Mt. Pleasant David Sterner, laborer, Bloom Jacob Steen. landlord, Sugarloaf It. W. Smith, laborer. Milllin E. G. Sweppenheiser, farmer, Center S. K. Steadman, farmer, Sugarloaf Jonah Townseml, farmer. Scott Miles Wei liver, farmer, Madison Ohas. M. AVen tier, farmer, Fisliingereek SKCOND WKKK. Charles A ten, farmer, Milllin P. Lloyd Appleman, c'rpntr, Denton 11 I. M. J 4ft z, merchant, Montour Kvan Buckalew, dealer, Denton Don George Dudman. laborer, Derwiek Emanuel Dogert. farmer, Fishingc-reek It. Ij. Deisliline, farmer, Fisliingereek D. V. Carter, laborer, Dloom Joseph Clirismuu, boatman, Dloom Geo. M. Hurling, farmer, Milllin Henry Deichniiller, tanner, Hemlock W. E. Diettrieh, merchant, Scott Jackson Emmitt, farmer, Hemlock William (lordlier, farmer, Pine Harrison Greenly, tanner, Pine Stephen Hughes, farmer, t.'ata. Doro Clinton Hartman, tax collector, Scott Ketiben Hess, gs-nt. Dloom John H. Lunger, J. P., Jacksiui William Lemon, carpenter, Dlooni William Masteller, carpenter, Main William McMahon, fanner, Mt. Pleus't John (i. McHenry, distiller, Denton T Druce McMichael. farmer, Flshingc'k John Morris, fanner, Pino Mark Mendeuliall, clerk, Mlllvillo Moses Markle, shoemaker, Derwiek J. G. Quick, coal dealer, Dloom W. E. Jtinker, clerk, Bloom W. H. Kiuiyon, farmer, Madison Joslah Kalston, merchant, Bloom Elishu Uingrose, farmer, Center D. F. Sharpies, gent, Dloom J. It. Sutton, tax collector, Derwiek J. L. Williams, farmer, Center Isaiah Y eager, former, Cutawissa twp $14,000 lor Dickinson College. Andrew Carnegie has given an additional $14,000 to President Reed, of Dickinson College, for Conway Hall, making his total gift $64,000. lie is thus far the sole donor for the hall. Dr. Reed will have to raise a sum equivalent to this donation. President Reed announced on Monday that the total sum contri buted to Denny Hall, now nearing completion, is $58,000, with $12, 000 to raise to make the necessary $70,000. HUMPHREYS' SpoeiflnH cure ly acting directly on the. mcle jxirta without dibturbiug the root of the nyHtuiii. No. 1 for Fevers. No. 2 " Worms. No. 3 " Teething. No. 4 " Diarrhea. No. 7 " Coughs. No. 8 ' Neuralgia. No. 0 " Headaches. No. 10 " Dyspepsia. No. 11 " (Suppressed Period No. 13 ' Whites. No. 13 " Croup. No. 14 " The Skin. No. 15 " Rhoumatiam. No. 10 Mulurin, No. 19 " Ciiturrh. No. 20 Whooping Cough. Ko. 27 " Tho Kidneys. No'. 30 " The Bladder. No. 77 La Grippe. Ia small bottles of pellets that fit the vert pocket. At Druggist or mailed, 25o. each. Modiotd Guide mulled free. Humphrey!' lied. Co., Cur. William John Strool Maw York.