The Columbian. (Bloomsburg, Pa.) 1866-1910, August 31, 1905, Page 6, Image 6

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    6,
1 1 111
Territory Valuable for Its Oil,
Coal and Fisheries
A RUSSIAN PRISON HOLD
on Yields $111,000,000 Annnitlly
Coast 250 Mile Long nnrt
IfonntattM S.OOO Feet Hlult
Oosuitry Cold anil VntllUbk
Fur Hearing Antmnls.
As big as Belgium and Holland put
ttier, very nearly ai big an Ire-
1. and fully twice aa big as
i, Sakhalin is a long, narrow
HUad, nowhere wider than the State
f Massachusetts Is long, and at cor
mi polnta not wider than Nnn
nwkt, aaya the Uoston Evening
Transcript. But this ribbonlike Island
5f northwest of Japan, stretches
mi the coast of Siberia (from
bleb, a narrow sea aeparates It) for
:tiltance of 670 miles. Sakhalin has
rtrer 260 miles long and moun-
atm t.OOO feet high. It's by no
tans a vest pocket country.
0ly here and there la the soil at
M fertile, and even then you must
latent yourBelf with raising market
Tack and expect to get malaria while
41ng your garden. Such at leant
MM been the experience of Russlnn
MaI colonists who have tried to
twrt a living from the soil. More
irm, the country looks every whit as
xAoapiUbleas experiment has proved
t to be. If It had no other claim to
rnportance Its dense forests would
enough to make it worth owning,
tactically untouched, they stretch
one end of Sakhalin to the
Beaidos, there Is coal not eunlly
ulaed, but abundant. At Duey the
'angriest criminals have worked
halned to their barrows, and each
ar they spent In the mines has
anted as a year and a half toward
taataning their dlsfharRe. Sakhalin
taa long supplied ships with fuel.
According to C. S. PatonofT the oil
dons of Sakhalin are richer than
hosw of America. Subterranean
sAes some of them with an area of
i,000 square feet lie so close to the
urfa.ee that natural gushers can be
ally established. The oil regions
and themselves readily to explolta
. Ion, for the east coast is only from
wenty to twenty-flve miles away,
,:nd there nature has provided hur
sKm that boats drawing twenty feet
if Iwater can safely enter. For four
aonths of the year, to be sure, those
iarbors are icelocked, but the Ice can
e broken by specially constructed
steamers known as "lcdokol."
Meanwhile another sort of game
bounds in the north a fine menng
rle at large, composed of bear,
ixes, sable, antelope and reindeer;
l the south an occasional tiger; on
ha coast a remunerative profusion
if seal, sea lions and dolphins, not to
lentlon a species of plebeian whale
.tttle prized by blubber hunters.
But the chief source of wealth in
he Sakhalin of to-day la the fish
Ties. The rivers teem with salmon,
iie waters along the coast with her
. Ing. In a single year Sakhalin
lelded $1,500,000 worth of fish, and
,ila in spite of the most discour
sing conditions. The Russians
-ouldn't give the Japs a free hand,
or would they themselves develop
i full possibilities of the fisheries,
-.s long as the island remained a sort
f Siberian backyard, into which
idles were constantly to bo thrown,
: was bad policy to encourago fleets
I fishing boats to come prowling
long the shore. The boats might
: "lin out the population. Every year
Sakhalin sends a million dollars'
AOrth of fish fertilizer to the Japan
ese rice fields. This fertilizer, nee
;rrring, is so Indispensable to rice
Towing that when the war cut off
Jum Japanese fishermen from the
'akhalin coasts two Japanese towns,
.low k a! do and Otaru, petitioned the
llkado to Bend troops to seize the
.Aland.
The director general of prisons
risked permission to organize an
vrmy of Japanese Jailbirds for ser
;lc In Sakhalin. Such overtures as
.Iiese mot with governmental dis
xmragement, but the seizure of Sak
halin by trained troops was under
aken as soon as practicable. Nor did
,'apan fail to perceive that a Sak
laltn In the grip of a foreign Power
ould constitute a Ktundlng menace
. Japanese agriculture. It was the
oase of Corea over itpuln, only with
herring substituted for grain as the
vital point.
Where We CJet Our Salt.
Salt la so common an urticlo that
one is astonished when ho realizes
the amount of it produced In the
United States during the year 1904.
The number of barrels was 22,030,
002, valued fit $G, 021, 222. In FpUe of
this enormous output, coming mostly
from New York and Michigan, tho
United States imported salt to 'tho
value of over half a million dollars
and exported 25,608,577 pounds,
valued at $'9,006. The deposlu of
salt In the United Statos are not nu
merous, those in New York, Michi
gan, Ohio, Kansas and Louisiana be
ing the only ones which are worked
commercially. Uoaton Herald.
A Vegetarian Danger,
In some respects vegetarians suffer
more than moat eaters from uric acid
poisoning, seeing that bcuns, peas,
lentils and peanuts contain twice as
much of the poison as meat. The na
tives of India suffer greatly from uric
aoM diseases, owing to the quautily :
of dahl (lentils) they eat. Other na
tives who avoid dahl are almost en
tirely free, Loudon Mall.
COST OK LIVING IN GERMANY.
FoodnturTs Advanced Greatly In the
Last Ton Years. '
Germany Is no longer the paradise
of American and English families
with incomes Just large enough to
starve on genteelly at home, says the
New York Sun. Ten years have
brought great changes In the stan
dards of life In Germany, not only in
lierlln but In the smaller cities.
Roughly speaking, the cost of living
has Increased by a third to a half.
In the matter of rent and servants'
wages Ilerlin is still better than New
York. Comparatively few families
In Herlln boast the luxury of an en
tire house even fewer, perhaps,
than In New York. The rest live In
wohnungen, or flats, like their Amer
ican compeers. The yearly rent for
an apartment of four rooms In a de
sirable locality in Berlin varies from
1375 to $400. Ten year ago the
prices In Berlin were a fourth less.
There are complaints In Germany
of the degeneration of domestic ser
vants, but at least a fair knowledge
of cookery is a general possession,
and In the second place, strict over
sight on the part of the police pre
vents absolute disregard of the sa
cred ness of contracts. The minimum
monthly pay for domestic service Is
$5. Even this Is an Increase of at
least $2 within the last decennlum.
Turning to the cost of foodstuffs,
the outlook Is less encouraging. Al
most without exception, articles of
dally consumption have Increased In
price from a third to a half In ten
years. As an example, mutton,
which previously cost li cents a
pound, now costs 25 cents. Butter
has risen from 20 to IS cents a
pound, and eggs from 15 to 22 cents
a dozen. This Increase has been
partly the result of deliberate legis
lative effort to Improve the condition
of the peasantry by the Imposition of
protective duties on the products of
the soil.
In general, Berlin holds the same
relation to other German cities as
New York to American centers of
population, but the cost of living In
Hamburg and Frankfort is more
nearly on a par with that of Berlin
than the cost of living In Philadel
phia or St. Louis with that of New
York. An exception in this connec
tion must be made In favor of the
cities of south Germany.
is si-i
w
"7 ' ,nr
Anthony Finla,
the young arctic explorer, recently
rescued by the expedition under Wil
liam S. Champ.
World's Wealthiest Country.
In the half century from 1850 to
1900, when the population of the
United States Increased from 23,
000,000 to 76.000.000. or multiplied
three and one-third times a rate of
increase far beyond that of any other
great country its wealth expanded
from $7,000,000,000 to $94,000,
00e000, being multiplied more than
thirteen times. No other country
closely approaches the United States
in wealth. From the most trustwor
thy data obtainable, this Is how the
principal countries stand in 1905:
Spain $12,000,000,000
Italy 18,000,000,000
Austria-Hungary ... 30,000,000,000
Russia 35,000,000,000
France 45,000,000,000
Germany 50,000,000,000
United Kingdom.... 55,000,000,000
United States 110,000,000,000
Wealthier than the countries the
United Kingdom and the empire of
Germany which stand nearest to it,
the United States Is rapidly increas
ing its lead over other nations.
Leslie's Weekly. 1
The Ant na a Medicine.
Having thoroughly exploited the
curativo powers of the bee, writers
have now apparently turned to the
ant. The latter, llko the former, owes
Its medicinal virtues to the formic
acid that It contains. Indeed, this
acid owes Us name to the ant (Latin
formica. )
According to the investigations
of M. Clement, of Lyona, formic acid
is a very important drug. It aug
ments considerably the muscular
utrcugth and resistance of fatigue.
. . . Us use causes to disappear the
smisutlon of fatigue In the limbs, of
ten felt on awakening In tho morn
ing. . . . Theso statements have prob
ably only relative value, but Clement
has supported them by experiments
with Mohho'b ergograph on a young
man of 22 years. . . . The results
showed that after the use of formic
acid the subject was able to furnish
ten periods of work instead of Ave,
and to raise a weight 479 times in
stead of 232, making an expendi
ture of 100 kllogrammeters of en- '
orgy instead of 21. Literary Digest.
K Si t
. 'til A4 t
THE COLUMBIAN, BLOOMSBURG,
CONCERNING CELLAR DOOPA.
Fr,h the Old Time Door of Weoit to
Newest of Galvanized Steel.
Time was when cellar doors were
II made of wood with irou strap
hinges, each complete duor couslstlug
of a pair of wooden flap doors closing
In the middle, to be thrown back cut
either side when the door was open
ed. A weather strip was nailed along
the edge of one of these Haps.
Outside the houses, and in fact in
many other places, such cellar doors
were often set at an Incline from the
building, so that they would the better
shed water; and there were the tra
ditional cellar doors down which chil
dren loved to slide, as they still do,
for that matter, wherever such cellar
doors are found.
Cellar doors, either flat or Inclined,
arb still to be found In countless num
bers everywhere, and in cities as well
as In the country. But along much
traveled business thoroughfares In
cities wooden cellar doors were soon
worn away and broken under the In
cessant scraping and trampling of
many thousands of feet, and so In
such situations wooden cellar doors
were long ago largely supplanted by
cellar doors of Iron, these not In
clined but set level with the sidewalk,
so that they would form no impedi
ment to travel.
These were a wide departure from
the old time wooden cellar door, but
they have now been long familiar In
such localities, and for a time It must
have seemed, If anybody ever gav
them a thought, that in them had been
reached the limit In cellar door con
struction. But the really modern city
cellar door Is to them what they were
to the ancient cellar door of wood.
The newest city cellar door de
signed for use in crowded streets,
one Introduced within recent years,
Is built of steel, and galvanized, and
hung on heavy brass hinges. Of rigid
construction In its own parts, and
shutting Into a rigid frame, this cel
lar door when cloned in as firm a
support to the feet as the surrounding
sidewalk in which it is set, while the
galvanizing of the door and the hang
ing of its parts on brass hinges pre
serve the door from rust and help to
make It practically indestructible.
New York Sun.
Has a Trade For Any Time of Day.
The thriftiest man in the United
States lives In Louisville. He has
trades that fit any climate, season or
time of the day. As an example of his
wonderful versatility, a friend tells
the following Ktory of an average i,,y
In the life of this strenuous man:
One morning last week he started
out with a rug to sell on commission
for an installment house. He sold
the rug, and then came back and took
out a clock, which he also disposed of.
About noon he was called by an un
dertaker to embalm a body, which he
did. Another undertaker sent for
him to drive a hearse to the ceme
tery, and after he had disposed of
this errand satisfactorily he preached
a short sermon at the grave.
He drove the hearse back to town
and filled In the afternoon for a
candymaker who was taken suddenly
ill.
In the evening he worked from 6 to
8 o'clock In a barber shop, and from
that hour until midnight set type on a
dally newspaper.
Hindoo Woman's Nose Key.
"It Is considered an insult and ex
tremely indelicate in India to refer
to a woman's nose ring, but so many
ask me, What Is that flower they hold
in the mouth?' that I must tell what I
shouldn't," says Edmund Russell.
"It Is the badge of wifehood, even
more sacred than our wedding ring
set always with the costliest and most
beautiful Jewels a woman posseses
and the last she will part with. A
ruby with two pearls is tho favorite
as symbolizing a heart between two
guardians of purity.
"This Is something going out of
fashion under English influence; the
Bomaji ladles and Zoroastrlan sisters
do not wear them, but every ortho
dox Hindoo woman has her pak-cliabl,
or 'nose key,' as it is called, usually
two, one of precious Jewels and costly
pearls, the other a little plain gold
safety pin, which Is slipped In Just as
the great circle is being drawn out,
for the nose muBt never for a mo
ment be left free." Everybody's
Magazine.
Tuberculosis in Germany.
According to recently published sta
ttlKtics compiled by the Berlin Im
perial Bureau tuberculosis is rapidly
decreasing in Germany. In cities hav
ing more than 15,000 inhabitants tho
deaths from tuberculosis per 100,000
in the years between 1877 and 1881
were i!57. This rate has gradually
diminished until In tho four years be
tween 1S97 and 1901 tuberculosis
showed a mortality of only 218 per
100,000.
Bearded Wonen,
Two Gorman doctors have been
looking Into the question of bearded
women, and they have discovered that
out of every 1,000 sane females, 290
are bearded. Of these 2U0 have only
Blight down, 40 have a very visible
beard, and 10 are unmlstakeably
adorned with this hirsute appendage.
Out of 1,000 Insane women examined,
481 had slight beards, while Jlfty-six
had beards well grown. Reynold's
Newspaper.
London's Social Haven.
London has always been the gocial
fcnvtn of tho foreigners of mediocre
position but ambitious aspirations.
Satirized years ago by Thackeray, it
is even more evident today that with
gold and a pleasant manner any in
offensive and prepossessing foreigner
can buy himself social toleration in
what is commonly called the "upper
circles." Ladles' Field.
THE riSH LAWS
An Interesting Summary lor Thoso
Who Go Fishing
A week or two ago we printed a
summary of the game laws and
with this issue we present some
thing of interest to those who like
the pastime of fishing. Kvery ses
sion of the Legislature there is
some new law or amendment to the
game and fish laws, and a person
Hi list he active to keep track of all.
In the first place it is stated that
the section prohibiting fishing on
Sunday was held to be in force by
the Superior Court of Pennsylvania
in Commonwealth vs. Rothermel
No. 40. January term, 1905.
Any citizen of the Commonwealth
may prosecute violators of the fish
laws.
No game fish can be legally taken
except with rod, hook and line.
Penalty $25 for each offense.
Among game fish are included;
Salmon, brook trout, black bass,
rock bass, biue pike, pike, perch,
Susquehanna salmon or wall-eyed
pike, pickerel and sunfish.
The season for the legal taking
of trout of all kinds except lake
trout begins April 15th and closes
July 31st inclusive.
1 ne season lor all other game
fish begins June 15th and ends Feb
ruary 15th inclusive.
Penalty $10 for each fish illegally
taken and retained.
Fyke nets without wing walls
may be used for the taking of carp,
eels, catfish and suckers, in waters
not inhabited by trout during
March, April, May, October, No
vember and December.
All nets so used must have at
tached a metallic teg bearing the
name and the aduress of the owner
and all fish other than carp, eels.
catfish and suckers, so caught must
be returned to the waters from
which taken. Penalty $10 for each
net used in violation of the law and
$10 for each fish so taken and illeg
ally retained.
Section 9 of the act of May 29,
1901, which allowed the use of
seines in taking carp, eels, catfish
and suckers ij repealed.
Outlines may be legally set for
carp, eels, suckers and catfish in
waters not inhabited by trout, pro
vided dead bait only is used, and
the line is weighted to the bottom
1 01 me stream.
All other fish taken by the out
line must be released with as little
injury as possible.
The possession of game fish by
any one operating an outline is
prima facie evidence ol a violation
of the law. Penalty $25 and for
feiture of all appliances used.
Trout artifically raised may be
caught at any time and in any man
ner and may be sold for propagating
purposes, but not for food. Penal
ty $100.
It is unlawful to procure or to
attempt to procure fish from the
Fish Commission of this State for
the purpose of stocking private
streams. Penalty $25.
Fishing with explosives or poison
positively prohibited. Penalty $100
and imprisonment six months.
Arrests may be made on Sunday.
Arrests may be made without war
rant where parties are caught iu the
act.
All constables of the several
wards, boroughs and townships are
ex officio fish wardens.
To Give News to Newspayers,
T. H. Harahan of the Illinois
Central Railroad, recently gave out
an interview favoring the company's
agents giving newspapers the news
concerning wrecks and other im
portant matters. Heretofore offi
cials have withheld all information
and the news papers were obliged
to get the news the best way they
could.
The Central will now assist the
newspapers, and it is thought that
the road will not suffer in the least.
The newspapers of the country are
becoming more and more to be
recognized as public educators, says
Mr. Ilarahan.
(Jive Your Farm a Nanitj
The practice the farmers are
adopting of giving their farms a
distinctive name, generally emble
matic cf some leading feature in
connection with the premises, is a
good one. ' Under such name the
farm may always be known, no
difference how often it may change
ownership through sale or descent
to heirs, and is readily recognized as
to location the moment it is referred
to. The name upon a sign board
or a rural mail box is of much as
sistance, too, to persons traveling
along and naturally desirous oi
knowing what place is this or that
as they pass along. It's an all-right
idea. Fall in with it.
OASTOtllA.
Bean the j m Kind You Have Always Bought
PA.
DANGHR 5I0NALS.
No engineer would be mnd enough to
run by the Hag which signaled danger.
It In different with the averago man
or woman. I hey
attempt constantly
to run by the dan
ger signals of
Xnliirn anil flint
I attempt costs
! tli.iiia.iiil. nf llv.ia
I every year. When the
appetite becomes Irregu-
Inr or entirely gives out.
wnen Sleep is iron men
and broken, when there is
a const nut feeling of dull
ness and Inuguor, Nnturn
Is hoisting tho danger sig
nal. The stomach and its
allied organs am failing In
their work and the lxdy
is losing the nutrition on
which Its strength de
punds. nuc.11 a condition cans
for a prompt use of Dr.
Pierce's Oolden Medical
Discovery. It cures dis
eases of the stomach and
other organs of digestion
and nutrition, purifies
and onriches the blood and
builds up the body with
sound, solid flush.
" r have hid so tmirh tne-
It from your medlclnus im (ltd to sar faw
words Mist xou may line for puhllratlon,"
writes Mrs. J. 11. Downes. Crystal l.ske. Vnn.
"Had heen troublad with a complication of
dlseasnt for orcr two rears, hut kidneys and
ltvr bothered ma most. Some of my worst
ailments wero huadarhe, frrmii'nt nalns
around heart and undiir rlvht shoulder
blade. My hands and feet writ- cold nearly
all the time, and I had such chlllliieiw be
tween shouldurs. Home days cared but little
for food ! I lost flMh; felt so tired and mis
erable It seemed 1 couldn't do any Imusu
work. Took medicine from my physician,
but received no benefit. Hought a bottJe of
'Golden Medical Discovery.' and aflur tak
ing It I felt so much better n determined to
(Itc It a fair trial. Appetite soon Improved
aad gradually the disorders dtssppcared un
til now 1 am well."
A Oreat Doctor Book Free. Send 21 one
ront stamps to Dr. K. V. I'lerce, lluffalo.
N. Y.. to cover cost of mailing only and
he will send you a free copy of his luJ
page Common flense MccIIchI Adviser,
paper-covered. Cloth-covered 31 stamp.
Dr. Plerce'e Pellets Cure Constipation.
Women Who Marry
Hoch. the much married convict
ed murderer, is not in it with Dr.
George WitzhofT of New York.
rl , 1 , ...
ine ponce nave oeen uneriinng
new wives for him everv 1:iv and
- - - j ; y
ir is said that he has married and
deserted over fifty women.
That Witzhoff was an adventurer
became known just five years ago
this fall, whetl it was said flint- in
seven clays he had married just
seven women, and every woman be
came his bride only to learn later
that she had been robbed and
deserted.
At that time Witzhoff was board
ne at the home of a man named
Yokes, who lives in West Orange.
By this time the police net was clos
ing in fast on Witzhoff. To Mr.
Yokes he was knowu as Dr. George
Weston.
That the seven wnnteti hp marnVH
in as many days and a woman iu
iNewaric are not the only women
married bv the faseiuatintr Witz
hoff the police are certain.
What became of him immediately
after he left New York has not
been definite'y ascertained, but he
is known to have leit a strintr of
deserted brides in Philadelphia.
Kansas Citv. Chicago. St. T.nnie
Buffalo and Cleveland. Th rpe vpnrs
ago ne appeared m Boston, ai:d
there under the name of Muller,
representing that he was a dentist,
ne iaia seige to tue Heart ot Miss
Ftta Randall.
Miss Randall was in love with
her husband. He began to borrow
money from her immediately after
il 1 j .
toe weuaing, ana then to absent
himself from Boston. WitzhnfV
bride became suspicious of her new
m m m .
nusoanu oeiore sue had been a wife
six months. At last Mrs. Muller,
as Miss Randall still calls herself,
determined to follow her h lisha nd
to New York. She found him at
the home of Miss Anna Parkhill,
who, she says, also had married
Witzhoff, and who believed in him
implicitly. Mrs. Muller u-enr
to her home broken-hearted.
It seems that from Boston he
came to New York, and iu spite of
his many other wives there, who
were on the lookout for him, and
the police description which he still
fitted, he came boldly back to town
uuu uegan to marry.
The strange oart of tliia
that there are so many women who
aIC reauy to trust an unknown ad
venturer and to marry a man on very
snort accittaintance nf ivkm m,....
know nothing.
HUMPHREYS'
Wtltplnnvt, C? ...... 1
.-.7 ....... j, ,-lIU,. euro timenscs
of HorH.,, Cuttlo, Sheep, Dugs, Hogs ttud
J -V '""'"K uiiuuwy OU Ul6Blt'J PAW)
without lobs of time.
C-A! JOT?;. Fe?r;v.,:KVe,J;:flon"u-
wisa 1 llbu.,:au;.u,:n"',","" i,Uu,,m'
5iJL! WOltMH. Hoi.. Gruh..
O.O. Prevents MISCARRIAGE.
"JEljKIDaeV A BLADDER DISORDER
Humphrey.- Medicine Co., CvVZf??'
Streets, Mew York. wuuam and Join
WBOOR MAILED FREE,
err
1
RAILROAD NOTES
Special Excursions and Reduced Rate, .
Of Interest to oar Many Readers.
RkIUTCKI) RATKS TO fiRANOKRs'
Picnic at Williams' Grove, via
Pennsylvania Railroad.
For the thirty-second Annual In
ter State Grange Picnic Kxhibi
tion, to be held at Williams' Grove,
Pa., August 28 to September 2,
the Pennsylvania Railroad Com
pany will sell excursion tickets
from August 23 to September 2,
inclusive, good to return until Sep
temlxM 6, inclusive, at reduced
rates, Irom all stations on its lines
in the State of Pennsylvania, and
from Baltimore, Frederick and in
termediate stations on the Northern
Central Railway.
There will be an elaborate dis
play of farm machinery in actual
operation during the exhibitnn,
aud addresses will be delivered by
well known agricultural speakers.
For information in regard to
train set vice and specific rates ap
plication should be made to ticket
agents. 2t
Rktwckd rates to dknvhr.
Colorado Springs or Pueblo. Via
Pennsylvania Railroad, account
National Kncatnpment, Grand
Army ol the Republic. On ac
count of the National Kncampment,
Grand Army of the Republic, at
Denver, Col., September 4 to 7, th
Pennsylvania Railroad Company
will sell round-trip tickets to Den
ver, Colorado Springs, or Pueblo,
August 29, 30, 31, September 1, 2,
and 3, inclusive, at reduced rates.
Tickets will be good returning to
reach original starting point not
later than September 15 when pro
perly validated by Joint Agent at
either of the above-mentioned
places. Deposit of ticket with Joint
Agent and pay men', of fifty cents
will secure extension of return limit
to October 10.
For specific rates, routes, stop
over privileges, and further informa
tion, consult nearest ticket agent.
it.
Niagara falls kxciksions.
Iov-rate Yacatioti trips via Penn
sylvania Railroad.
The remaining dates of the pop
ular Pennsylvania Railroad ten-
daV excursions tr Nino-nra Polio
- " .....fu.M a alia
from Washington and Baltimore
...
are August 25, heptember 8 and 22
and October 13. On these dates
the special train will leave Wash
ington at 7:55 a. m., Baltimoie 9:00
a.m., York 10:40 a m, Harris
burg 1 1 140 A. M. , Millersburg 12:20
r. m. , Sunbury 12:58 r. m., Wil
liam'sport 21.50 p. m., Lock Haven
3:08 v. m. , Renova 3:55 p. m., Em
porium Junction 5:05 p. m., arriv
;.w v:,. T.v.n.. .
oS i-iia.na runs 319:35 p. m.
Hxcursion tickets, good for re
turn passage on any regular train,
exclusive of limited express trains,
within ten days, will be sold at
$6:90 from Sunbury and Wilkes
Barre; and at proportionate rates
from principle points. A stop-over
will be allowed at Buffalo within
limit of ticket returning.
The special trains of Pullman
parlor cars and day coaches will be
run with each excursion running
through to Niagara Falls. An ex
tra charge will be made for parlor
car seats.
Au experienced tourist and chap
eron will accompany each excurs
ion. For descriptive pamphlet, time of
connecting trains, and further in
formation apply to nearest ticket
agent, or address Geo. W. Boyd
General Passenger Agent, Broad
Street Station, Philadelphia. 2t
Nursey Stock Inspection.
The Pennsylvania Department
of Agriculture has inaugurated an
inspection which is to include every
block ot nursery stock in the state.
rive trained inspectors are en
gaged : 111 this work, and when thev
have finished the department will
be in a position to guarantee to the
citizens ol Pennsylvania that thev
cannot buy uninspected stock grown
iu this state.
The department requests the
riS7LITb,e I,llblicity for the
, Urere are " authorized
spectors of nursery stock except
he five experts now engaged n
this work for the department
Now that you are through with
your mower r,,r 11 J
, , !"-, nay raice, corn
plow - and many other farm imple
uients, clean them all carefully
eneKith0? ha bcc "p'
tned with kerosene or oil on all
bright parts. ,t ti,. ... .
a dean dry'pWTnd il
ycu will have machinery and uteu
J. s as gooaand bright as new A
bel r,.81 t,lis -ork wil!
win oi V V may dollars. Yo
will also have t u. , .
K a careful ma,,. 1 ".U 01