THE COLUMBIAN. BLOOMsBURO. PA. 1 j 1 it;; And v a Hxad Making POORLY DRAINED ROADS. Frequent Inspection and a Little Work Will Keep Them Passable. Drainage la the key to auecess In making earth roads, and conxtant watchfulness la the mire means of keeping them up after they are once well made. Water Is destructive to any road, especially to a dirt road; therefore, drainage that will at once carry away rainfall or melting snow is absolutely necssary. Again, little breaks In the road may be made by rain or by a heavy load at any time, and if not repaired Immediately will grow Into mud holes, ettpeclally In the winter, and these mud holes easi ly and rapidly develop Into an almost impassable mire. But frequent in spection and a little work will keep the road In good condition and with less cost than under ordinary meth ods. With good drainage established In building the road and frequent In spection to keep the drainage efficient and to mend promptly smull Injuries to the surface, the earth roads of the United States could be maintained In a much higher state of usefulness than at present, and at considerably lower cost. The aim in making a road Is to es tablish the easiest, shortest, and most economical Hue of travel. It is there fore desirable that roads should be firm, smooth, comparatively level, and fit for use at all seasons of the year; thnt they should bo properly located so that their grades shall be such that loaded vehicles may bo drawn over them without great loss of energy: that they should bo properly construct ed, tho roadbed graded, shaped, and rolled; and that they should bo sur faced with the best available material suited to the needs. It Is to be hoped thtjt all tho heavy traffic roads In the United States can be macadamized, graveled, or other wise Improved in the not distant fu ture; but owing to tho .absence In many places of rock, gravel or other hard and durable substances with which to build good roads, and by reason of the excessive cost of such roads where suitable material is scarce, the majority of our public highways will of necessity be com posed of earth for many years to come.. It is fortunate, therefore, that under favorable conditions of traffic, moisture, and maintenance the earth road is the most elastic and most sat isfactory for pleasure and for light traffic. Tho condition of the com mon roads In this country, especially in the Middle West, Is so deplorable at certain seasons of the year as to operate as a complete embargo on marketing farm products. Beauty of Shell Roads. In many of the Eastern and South ern States road stones do not exist; neither is it possible to secure good coarse gravel. No such material can be secured except at such an ex pen so for freight as to practically preclude its use for road building. Oyster shells can be secured cheaply In mor.t of these States, and when applied di rectly upon sand or sandy soil, 8 or 10 Inches In thickness, they form ex cellent roads for pleasure driving and light traffic. Shells wear much more rapidly than broken stone or gravel of good -quality, and consequently roads made of them require more con. stant attention to keep them in good order. In most cases they should have an entirely new surface every three or four years. When properly maintain ed they possess many of the qualities found In good stone or gravel roads, and so far as beauty Is concerned they can not be surpassed. Straight and Level Roadt. In the prairie State of Iowa, where roads are no worse than In many other States, there Is a greater number of roads having ' much steeper grades than are found In the mountainous Republic of Switzerland. In Mary land the old stagecoach road or turn pike, running from Washington to Baltimore makes almost a "bee line," regardlesg of hills or valleys, and the grades at places are as steep as 10 or 12 per cent, where by making little detours the road might have been made perfectly level, or by running it up the hills less abruptly the grade might have been reduced to 3 or 4 per cent., as is done in the hilly reg gions ot many parts of this and other countries. Straight roads are the proper kind to have, but In hilly coun tries their stralghtness should always be sacrificed to obtain a level surface so as to better accommodate the peo ple who use them. Avoid Large Stones. Macadam insisted that no ' large tone should ever be employed in road making, and, Indeed, most mod ern road builders practice his prin ciple that "small angular fragments are the cardinal requirements." As a general rule It has been stated that no stone larger than a walnut should be used for the surfacing of roads. Mutton of good quality usually sells at a higher price than beef and yet it ia produced at considerably less cost. Of all methods of Improving the soil and destroying weeds sheep are the best. ro FIX ON DANTE'S BIRTHPLACE. The Question Undecided at the Pres ent Moment. High and low, rich and poor, have now but one thought, that of locating the houses of the Allghlerl. This has boon attempted on various occasions, and some time ago It was established, to the satisfaction of the time, that Dante was born In a certain house, even the room being pointed out. To thli almost the whole traveling public has ootne In pilgrimage; but alas! a dV-bt has arisen, and It Is now said th.it Dante did not live there at all. The documents which should estab liph the right of the matter are few. bi". sufficiently plain to show that, If nrt Just there, the Allghlerl could not hr e been far off. One states that in 11 ) tho family wore living in the p.,sh of San Martino, and near the church, as there wa a heated ques- tl"n about a fig tree which Dante's an certors had planted and which they were obliged to root up. In 1277, after Dante's birth, they were again In trouble, this time with the abbot of the Church of the Ilndia, so that they were evidently still In the same ne'hborhood. and, In fact, there is another document which seems to say thHt Dante's father lived among the people of San Martino, while others show that after the poet's death they were still there. Thus the neighbor hood Is established, but the house Is n more difficult matter. Several build ings have been demolished, but tho only thing which has come to light Is a wall with a coat of arms, the same as thnt found on sevorol other hout.es of the dl itrlct and on tho Church of tho Hadln. But that proves nothing for or against, rs they may have been added later when the property changed hands. There are documents, they sny. tracing tho different ownerships of the houses from l:).12, nt which time th'-y were owned by an uncle of Dir.te'H. 10 18150. Thus the question Ff--vli fit the present moment. rail Mall Gazette. Million Dollar Caterpillars. A few years n.no a scientific person In Massachusetti Imported some cater pillars that interested him, and kept them In a bottle. But one day the bottle tipped over nnd come of t!i(j caterpillars escaped Into the scien tist's garden and presently stocked it with gypsy moths. To catch them and their descendants the Bay St?to has since spent about a million dol lars of public money. Tliey havo co.;t it many million dollar) besides in damngos. The old method of fight ing them was to find nnd destroy the cocoons. The State flnully gave that up, much to the regret of ninny of Its citizens. The bugs havo ninco in creased very much nnd carried de struction into the woods. It Is now proposed to fight these pe:ts in the latest fashion by breeding parasites which will attack them. That method is recommended by Mr. Kroehele, of Alameda, Cal., who tried It success fully In that State for white scale. The Massachusetts Forestry Associa tion favors tho experiment, which will not cost much, and Mr. Koabelo will doubtless be Invited to bring his para sites to Massachusetts anil rick them on. The whole country is concerned in this experiment, because a Massa chusetts Congressman hai Invited Congress to declare the gypsy moth a national enemy and to appropriate $250,000 to fight him. The parasite cure Is a modern wonder anil has been effective in cases of great moment. Mr. Koebelo says It will not wipe out the gypiy moths, but will keep thm down. The boll weevil may presently be restrained by the same methods. Harper's Weekly. The Pace. "There can be no question about one thing," said a man who does not take kindly to the hurry-up, strenuous ten dency of the time, "and that is the fact that we hurry our children along the highway of life at a too rapid pace. In your day and mine children were not so wlie. They did not push them so much at school. As you know, they did not begin the serious studies of life so soon. But now well, the Idea Is aptly put in a bit of verse which I found reoently in a South African paper. Here Is the way it runs: "Hurry the baby as fast as you can. Hurry htm, worry him, make him a man; Off with bis baby clothes, get him In pants, Feed him on brain foods and make him advance; Hustle him, soon as he's able to walk. Into a grammar school, cram him with talk; Fill his poor head full of figure.? and facts, Keep on jamming them in till It cracks." New Orleans Times-Democrat. Fair Titled Americans. Forty years ago Lord Palmerston predicted that "before the century is over these clever and pretty women from the States will pull the strings In half the cbancelleriei of Europe." A review of the world to-day bears witness to the truth of the prophecy. Lady Curzon, in India; Mrs. Cham berlain, in England; Mme. Jusserand, Baroness Moncheur, the Baroness von Sternberg, wives respectively of the French Ambassador, the Belgian Am bassador and the German Ambassador to the United States, are all of Amer ican descent or birth. Lady Herbert, widow of Sir Micahol Henry Herbert, formerly Britain's Ambassador, was an American, and to-day some of the most influential houses on the other side look to their American wives to maintain their prestige. II U 'Spectacular and Dramatic Life Story of Cowboy Days. NOW TO BE MILLIONAIRE From Gallows Tree to Affluence. A True Life Romance Comes Out of the West. Twice Sentenced to Death He Is Pardoned and Re stored to Citizenship. Three times condemned to bo hanged for a double murder and now a free man, a mine owner, with every prospect of becoming a millionaire such In brief Is the transition that fate has wrought In the fortunes of John Davis, known as "Diamondfleld Jack." Riches have come to him as tho fairy like climax to a life story as pictur esque, ai dramatic and spectacular, as any In the romantic history of the far west. Mining men from Coldflcld, the new camp near Tonopah, declare thnt Davis and his partners will be mil lionaires before two years more havo rolled away. Davis has been mining ever since he was snatched from the shadow of the scaffold, when death was so near that ho could almost feci the tightening of the noose about hla neck. He and hH associates are no.v owners of tho Daisy group of mines. In one of which tho strike referred to was made. , "Diamondfleld Jack" Davis was one of the leading actors in the bitter range war of 18!C, and, so far as popu lar Interest was concerned, he held tho center of the stage until Decem ber, 1902, when he was released from the Idaho state prlion. Davis waa in the employ of the Sparks-Harrell cattle company, the biggest stock raising concern in Nevada, whose cat tle fattened on the ranges of that state and Idaho. The senior member of the firm wai John Sparks, "Honest John" now gov ernor of the silver state. The pnsne slon of the ranges had long been dis puted between the cattle raisers and the cheep men. Intensely bitter feud 3 have resulted and many lives havo been sacrificed to the hatred between the two clashes. In tho spring of 1896 this bitter personal feeling reached Its height. Thousands of sheep were driven on to tho ranges that the cattlemen had for merly claimed as their own. The cat tlemen prepared to defend what they considered their territory, and armed men patrolled the ranges. Conspicu ous among these was "Diamondfleld Jack." In the western part of Ca-.sla coun ty, Idaho, the fight for the range was the fiercest. The sheepmen had been warned that to cross a certain ri'lge near Deep Creek meant death for themselves and their stock. Never theless, some of them persisted In driving their sheep Into the forbid den territory. Among these men were John C Wil .on and Daniel Cummlngs, herd ers. One day a rancher found both men dead in their camp wagon3. They had been killed with a rifle. There were many circumstances that seemed to point to Jack Davis and another man as having knowl edge of the crime. They were arrest ed. Tho man who was jointly charged with Davis was soon released, but with "Diamondfleld Jack" It fared wc ie. The jury found him guilty, and on April 14, 1897, he was sentenced to bt hangod. The case was appealed to the supreme court of the state, whit.'.i affirmed the judgment of the lower tribunal and resentenced Davis to die, fixing the date of execution as October 28, 1898. Eight days before the sentence was to be carried out Governor Hunt granted the con demned man a reprieve until Febru ary 1, 1899. Then the case was taken Into the Federal courts. From the United States circuit court of appeal 3 the fate of "Jack" Davis was passed to the supreme court of the Ulted Stales, which promptly affirmed the previous decisions. For the third time Davis was sen tenced to death, Jure 21, 19.01, being fixed as the date of the event. "Jack" Davis was a poor man, but powerful and wealthy friends came to his aid, conspicuous among them be ing Governor Sparks. When the last legal resource had been exhausted and when It seemed that Davis was doomed to die, the influence of Governor Sparks resulted In restoring "Jack" Davis to freedom. A temporary reprieve a day or two before the date set for the execution was followed by a full pardon and restoration to citizenship, which was issued December 17, 1902. After spending six years in prison, "Diamondfleld Jack" was free to go his way. He chose to go to Nevada, to the new mining camps surround ings Tonopab, and there he found the fortune that has set every human tongue In the cattle country to Lag ging about his phenomenal luck. Jack Davis began life for hlinielf as a newsboy in London. Later he stowed away on a sailing ship bound for South Africa. He went to the dia mond fields of the interior and met with varying fortune, until he attract ed the attention of Cecil Rhodes, then just beginning his consolidation of the diamond Interests. Davis became a confidential detec tive for the empire builder. Several years of this life satisfied Davis, and be came to this country, seeking thej far west as affording the excitement and danger he had learned to' love. Ho drifted about the border for several years and then became a cowboy on the Nevada-Idaho ranges. j "I feel as young now, at thirty, as I did at eighteen years of age." That is part of the statement of one woman, mother of six children, who found new life by the use of Dr. Tierce's Favorite Prescription. It is not the or dinary cares of the family, nor the natu ral obligations of motherhood, which make women prematurely old. But it is the womanly diseases, draining away the vitality, and undermining the strength, which take the roundness and supple ness from the form, the bloom from the cheek nnd the brightness from the eye. Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription cures those womanly diseases which rob women of youth and beauty. It establishes reg ularity, dries enfeebling drains, heals inflammation and ulceration, ana cures female weakness. It makes weak women strong and sick women well. It brings back to the mother the lightheadedness of her bridal day. This ia the testimony of thousands of women who have re newed their youth by the use of "Fa vorite Prescription. " For four years I suffered untold affony, writes Mr. It A. Nations, of Witt Spring, Bearcy Co., Arknnins. "Sometime 1 wuuld get some butter ami think I would get well, only to wtilte up Home morning not able to rite. In my hip mul nrounrl lower part of abdomen waa where I suflered the racist, and when the pain would Rive way it scattered all over me and I would be no ore and miff I could acarcely move. My husband got the best doctor in the country to attend me. but I did not improve any. Finally 1 told my husband that I wa going to try Dr. Pierce' medicine. By the time I had taken one bottle of ' Havorite Prescription ' X could notice a little improvement. Dr. Pierce advised me to take 'Golden Medical Discovery' in connection with the 'Favorite Prescription.' By the time I had taking five bottle of ' Favorite Prescrip tion ' and lour of the 'Golden Medical Discov ery,' I was well. That wa two year ago this summer. I felt well until 1 expected to become a mother, then a threatened mischance greatly weakened me, and my old disease returned. My husband got another doctor for me, but 1 seemed tojust drag along aad get no better. At last I told the doctor that if his medicine did not help me I would go back to Dr. Pierce's medicines. I did so, aud by the tiane I had taken them one month I could do my own housework, escept washing, and tended my garden, too. I wa stouter than I had ever Been while waiting baby' coming since my first baby came (thi one waa the sixth child). She is now eleven months old, and is a healthy child. As for me, I feel as young now, at thirty, as I did at eight een years of age." Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets cure bil iousness and sick headache. 4 Attacks Apostles' Creed. Dr. McArlhur Calls Introduction of Two Phrases Gigantic Fraud. Dr. Robert S. MacArthur, of New York, has caused a sensation by a bitter attack on the Apostle's Creed In an address to a convention of Baptist young people, Dr. Mac Arthur said: "The two phrases, 'He descended into hell' and I be lieve in the communion of saints,' which are recognized as part of the so-called Apostles' Creed, were smuggled into the creed. "Who is responsible for their in troduction we are unable to tell, but their introduction into the creed is, in my opinion, one of the most gig antic frauds perpetrated in the his tory of religion. "Members of one faith assert that the creed was formed by the Apos tles, each of them contributing a portion of the declaration of the principles ot faith." Dr. MacArthur continued: "The Apostles' Creed, it is called, though I know not why. It was formed and the two objection able phrases to which I refer were smuggled into it a hundred years after the last of the apostles had died. "I maintain," he said, "that it is most unchristian to consign anyone to perdition as is done in the first phrase, and that any minister who will repeat the creed, using these phrases, is no Christian." In a Pinch, use ALLEN'S FOOT-EASE. Shake Into your shoes Allen's Foot-Vase, a powder, ft cures corns. Bunions. Painful. smarting. Hot Swollen feet. At all Druggists and Shoe stores, 26o. 8-83 t SHERIFF'S SALE. by virtue of a writ of levari facias Issued out of the Court of Common Pleas of Columbia county, Pennsylvania, and to me directed there will be exposed to publlo sale at the Court House In Bloomaburg, county and state aforesaid, on SATURDAY, APRIL 29th. 1905, at two o.clock p. m. All those two certain lots of ground situate on the north side of publlo street lending from Bloomsburg to Rupert, designated as numbers (.1) and (4) in tho plot of 'ots as recently purch ased by C. W. Miller from KvaUne huporl being more fully described as follow a t wit: Num ber (3) beginning at a point on said road one hundred and forty-throe feet east of the land of J. B. Wilson; thenee north twenty-seven do grees twenty minutes west one hundred and nrty-slg feet to a stake corner or land of Mary U. Mendcnhall; thence along same north fifty decrees forty minutes east thirty-six fnet more or less to a stake corner ot lot Number 21; thence south twenty-seven degrees twenty minutes east one hundred and six ty-slx foet to public road aforesaid; thence south sixty-seven degrees west thirty-five feet to the place of beginning. Number 4 Beginning at a point on said road one hundred and eight and one-third feet east of Und of J. E. Wilson; thence north twenty seven degrees twenty minutes west one hun dred ana for y-sU feet to stake cornet of land of Mary B. Mendenhall; thence along the same north Arty degrees forty minutes east thlrty Ix feet more or less to a stake corner of lot Number S; thence along tne same south twenty seven degrees and twenty minutes east one hundred and flfty-slx feet to public road afore Sal I; thence along the same south sixty-seven degrees west thirty-five feet to the place of be ginning. Hei.ed, taken in execution at the suit of James C. Brown, C. O. Peacock and m. 8. Mover Kxrs , of Sarah 3. Brown, deceased, vs. Holmes Mldgley with notice to H. G. Esbleman terrc tenant and to be sold as the property of Holmes Mldglay with notice to 11. U. Eshleman terre tenant. W. W. BLACK, Wai.lbr, Atty. Hierlff. SHERIFF'S SALE By virtue of a writ or levari facias Issued out of the Court of Common I'loas of Columbia county Pennsylvania und to me directed there will be exposed to public suln at the Court Houso tn Bloorasnurg, county and state aforesaid on SATURDAY, APRIL 29th, 1905, at two o'clock p. m. All that curtain lor ot ground situate In the Town of Hlomsburg aforesaid, bounded and described as follows to wit: Ucglnnlngata stake at the sout h east cornir of lot now owned by Wm E. Kauffman on 'he line of Second street as recently widened by an ordinance of the said Town and extending eastwardly forty feet along the nort h side of said Second street; th-neo northwardly parallel with lot of the said KaufTman two hundred and thirteen feet be the same more or less to an alley extending along the south bank of Fishing crock; thence In a southwestwardly direction the course of said alloy about forty feet to lot of said KaufT man; thence southwardly along the line of said lot about two hundred and three foot bo the same more or leas to Second Btreet aforesaid. Seized, taken In execution at the suit of James C. Brown, C. C. Peacock and Wm. 8, Moyer Exn , of Sarah J. Brown, deceased, vs. William M. Harder and to be sold as the prop erty of William M. Harder. Wallsk, . W. W. BLACK, Attorney. Sheriff. F.LECTION NOTICE. Agreeably to the provisions of an Act of As sembly passed he mh day of April, lbTB, the annuul meeting of the stockholders of the Bloomsburg Llterory institute and State Nor- 11ml School of the Sixth District, will be held on the tlrst Monday of May, being May 1st, l09, between the hours of two and four o'clock, tn the afternoon of said day, at the office of the Normal School, In tho Dormitory. In V:e Town ot Hloomsburg, Pa., at which time tour persons win oe eiocteu as Trustees on tne part 01 tne s'ockholders to serve for the ensuing hree years: and at the samn time lour persons will be nomlrated to the superintendent of Public Instruction, two of whora may be appointed to serve for the ensuing three years on the part ot tne state. JOHN M. CLARK, Secretary NOTICE IN DIVORCE. Marr Kambo vs. Jesse Rsm'oo. In the Com mon Pleas 'ourt of Columbia County. No 68 reoruary t erm, inns. To Jesse Kambo late of Columbia County. Pa. Wubkbas Mary Kambo your wife has tiled a libel In the Court of Common Pleas of said county of February Term 19J6, praying a divorce aeainst you. Now you are hereby notified and required to appear In said court on or before Monday tbe 1st ay of May next to answer the complulnt of tne said nary Kamoo ana in aerauu or sucn appearance you will be liable to have a divorce granted In your absence. !. A Small. W. W. BLACK, i-t it Attorney. Sheriff. CHARTER NOTICE. In tit Common Pleai Court 0 Columbia County Notlea la hnrebr clven that an annllcatton win be made ro the said i'ourt on the 0rt Monday of May, 1U06, to wit May 1st, under tbe "Art to provide for the Incorporation sod regu lation of oertuln eornoratlons." ADDroved Aorll 89, 1HT4, and Its supplements by Abraham Kline. John Mcllenry, K. W. Kilne, J. P. Hauck and D.J. Poust for the cha-ter of an Intended cor poration to be called Thi mcHbnbt Cihitsrt Com pant, of Orange Township, the character and object of which Is to keep, and maintain a public burial ground, and for these purposes to have, possess, and enjoy, all the rights, bene fits, and privileges, conferred by tho Act and Its supplements. Christian a. small. ii-30-6t BOlleltor AUDITOR'S NOTIDE. In Re ettaie of Clark Root, late of Umnlock T ownthtp, Columbia County, Pa , dmeased. Notice Is nereby given that the undersigned, an Auditor appointed by the Orphan's court, of t oluiubla CouLty, to make distribution of the funds In the hands of Ell Ohl and Taylor Kuckle, Admlnls.rators of the estate ofciurk Boat, deceased, will sit to perform the duties ot his appolniment ai the law office of Hon Grant Herring on Main street In the Town of Bloomsburg, l a , on Friday, April 2Hth, W0f, at ten o'clock In the forenoon of said day; when and where all persons Interested In said estate may appear, or forever after be debarred from coming In upon said fund. 4-6 it CLINTON HKKKINO, Auditor. Professional Cards. N. U. FUNK. ATTORNSY-AT-LAW, Ent's Building, Court House Square, BLOOMSBURG, PA. J. H. MAIZE, ATTORNEY AT LAW, INSURANCE AND REAL ESTATE AGENT, Office, in Townsend's Building, BLOOMSBURG, PA. A. L. FRITZ, ATTORNEY AT LAW. Offlce Bloomsburg Nat'l Bank Bldg., Id floor BLOOMSUURG, PA. JOHN 0. rSIIIB. JOHK S. BASM AM FREEZE Sc IIARMAN, ATTORNEYS AND COUNP EL10H8 AT LAW BLOOMSBURG, PA. Office on Centre Street, I door below Opera House. II. A. McKILLIP, ATTORNEY AT LAW. Columbian Building, 2nd Flow. BLOOMSBURG, PA. A. N. YOST. ATTORN! Y-AT-LAW Eot Building Court House Square. BLOOMSBURG. PA. RALPH R. JOHN, ATTORNEY AT LAW, II art man Building, Market Square Bloomsburg, Pa. FRED IKELER, ATTORNEY AT LAW. Oftice Over First Natioml Bank. BLOOMSBURG, FA. CLYDE CHAS. YETTER, attorney--at law, Bloomsburg, Pa Office in Ent's Building, W. H. It H AWN, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Office, Corner of Third and Main Sts CATAWISSA, PA. CLINTON HERRING, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. Office with Grant Herring. BLOOMSBURG, PA. T Will be in Orangeville Wednesday each week. WILLIAM C. JOHNSTON, ATTORNEY AT-LAW. Office in Wells' Building over J. G. Wells' Hardware Store, Bloomsburg, Will be in Millville on Tuesdays. II. MONTGOMERY SMITH, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Office ! Ent building, over Farmers Na- I T I 1 tional Bank. II-lft-99 EDWARD. FLYNN, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, CENTRALIA, PA. r7omce Llddlcot building, Locust avenue MONTOCR TRLBPHONB. BBLL TBLBrMOStS STBS TSSTBD, GLAB8B8 MTTBD. H. BIERMAN, M. D HOMCJOPATHIC PHYSICIAN AND STJKeiO orrios hours: Office ft Residence, 4tb St. 10 a. m. to v p. m., 0:80 to 8 p. m. BLOOMSBUKQ, PA J. 2. JOHN, M. D., PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Officejand residence, 410 Main Bt 7-30-iy BLOOMSBURG, PA J. J. BROWN, M. D. THE EYE A SPECIALTY. Eyes tested anH t.cu 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 SPECIALTY, Corner Main and Centre Streets. , . BLOm SBURG PA Columbia A Montour Telephone connection. Dr. W. H. HOUSE, 8UHGBON DENTIST, Offlce Barton's Building, Main below Mark Bloomsburg, Pa. AH tv'es of work done in ft ftiirwsrit all w ork warranted as represented. TEETH EXTRACTED WITHOUT PAUL. by the use of Gas, and free of charm . item are inserted. To be open all hours during the day. . C. WATSON McKELVY, fire insurance agent. (Successor to B. F. Hartman tes in tbe world, among wnioh are vua,'m9 CASH TOTAL SCBFLVt Franklin nf Phtia viLXRS:X"!i. Penn'a, Phlla 400,000 8,SfCi60 lsisS Queen,of N. Y. .. 500,000 8,8.S,91s LMnli Office First Nafl Bank Bldg,, ad floor. AM claims promptly adjusted and paid. M. P. LUTZ & SON, INSURANCE AND RE ALESTATF AGENTS AND BROKERS. o y. W. Corner Main and Centre. Streets Bloosv.ur.., 7a. Represent Seventeen as good Com- ...to a mere are in me World and all losses promptly adjust ed and paid at their Office. SADE T. VANNATTA. ( Successor to C. F. Knapp.) GENERAL I2TSVRANC& Office 238 Iron St., Bloomsburo, Oct. 31, 1901. tf CITY HOTEL. W. A. Bartzel, Prop. JNo. isi West Main Btreet JsTLaree and convenient sample rooms, bat rooms, hot and cold water, nnd modern com. venientes. Bur stocked with best wine an 4 liquors. First-clas livery attached. EXCHANGE HOTEL, I. A.JSnydsr, Proprietor. (Opposite the Court House) BLOOMSBURG, fA. I si it n r 11 1 mi ii 1 1 nm't iLtn. lag roi rcs, hot and cold water, and all modern ;ir,i'U f. I