mr COLUMBIAN. BLOOMSBURG, PA UP In AN 111 Rockefeller Tells of the Book that Shaped His Life THE WORK OF LAWRENCE By FnllntvliiK III l'rorcpt the Oil Klnn Amiiswrfl n Fori u in Simi larity of t'urrrra Moth wt-rt OI vrviint I.ikIk I loth HcKimlc'l Property as a Ti uM. I remember ono of the things my employers did for nie la my boy hood. They directed my attention to the career of Amoi A. I.awronre, nnd It mado a doep nnd lnstlng Impos ition upon me. Many of yon mny hiive rend the biography of that suc rcsHful Ponton merchant who wan such a tisoful man, who mndo nnch admirable use of his money. An a young man Just (darting, probably ao other single thing played svich an Important part tn Hhnplug my life. John II. Hockefellor. Amos Adams I.nwronre was born in (Jroton In 1M4, Iweuty-flvo years prior to tho advent of John D. Rocko foller near Hlchford, Tloi;u County, N. Y. When the latter embarked In btiHinetf shortly prior to the Civil War, the former was famous over tin' country for his success and be nevolence. Ho It was who provided Pii.'inclal sinews for Cnpt. John thrown of Kansas-Harper's Ferry note, and It was afler him that tho the capital of Kansas was named Law retire. Among the ninny points of nlml Tr it f y between Rockefeller nnd his admitted mod. 1 It may be noted that both were ambit Ioms bids, and both formed an early desire to be come wealthy. Moth were regular Sunday school attendants, and both taught school In their early man hood and later. Poth regarded property as a trust, and both were powerful agents In the promotion of hlyber education. I'pon entering Harvard In 1S.11, Amos Lawrence opened the diary of bis college life with a text to the cf- W ; ' . 'I . j sw - :v .- z r. ,VtF.k f -W i 'if. n i r iv Jullll T. Hockefeller. feet that a man might bo honest, ac tive, brave, moral, and religious, and still never be a scholar, (iraduated four years later, he migrated to Hos ton, and formed a partnership with Robert M. Mason, bis brother-in-law, s general commission merchants whose specialty was cotton goods. lie had accumulated perhaps the great est fortune In New Kugland when he tiled, In 1SS6. So similar are they In many ro pects that the occasional homilies which the Standard Oil capitalist de livers at his own Sabbnth school In Cleveland, or at that of his son In this city, niir;ht be verbatim extracts from the diary of the Boston merchant-philanthropist. Amos A. Lawrence wrote: "My advantages for becoming rich are great; if I have mercantile tact enough to carry on the Immense though safe machine which my fnther and uncle have put in opera tion It will turn out gold for me as fast I could wish; and to be rich ould be my delight. "A good man will willingly endure the labor of taking care of his prop erty for the sake of others whom ho rsn so much benefit by It, but his thoughts and fears will not be per petually on tho alert that he may not lose a dollar and may not make ull fie can. If one can be rich uud yet for his private ease will not be, ho Is almost as loving of himself as he who heaps up only to count his dol lars, and refuses tho demands of eharlty." Compare the foregoing with a re cent statement of the great oil mer chant. "I always had a little money. I know that some people, especially ome young men, And it very difficult to keep a little money In their pock etboolc. I learned early to save money, and, as we have a way of fcaylug, It did not burn a hole in my pocket. "Before long I loarned that I could get as much Interest for 50, loaned at 7 per cent. the legal rate tn New York State at that time aa I could earn by digging potatoes for Un daya. The impression wus gain lug ground with me that it was a good thing to let the money bo my lave and not make myself a slave of money." Just to what extent he of Stan dard Oil hag been lnluenced in hla life by the philosophy and experi ence of Amoa Lawrence is more or less conjectural, but In hia frugal public or rather aeml-publlc ut terancea there is a marked similarity. CIGAR FACTORY READER. Place He Fills an Important Ona for Benefit of Worklngmen. Tho render In a cigar factory Is an Important personngo. Mounted on a duis near the center of the room, with a skylight directly overhead, he sits In a cumfortablo chair and reads to the workmen the news of the world, fic tion, history, political economy, poetry ami selections that may bo requested. lie Is not employed by the owner or manager of the cigar factory, but Is su lected by a committee of the workmen. He is pal,j usually about $1!0 a week. As soon as the workmen are seated at their benches or tables and stait rolling the "smokers" the reader be gins. He must have a clear voice, not too loud or harsh, which can be dis tinctly beard In all parts of the large room. First the daily papers are taken up and the telegraph news of the world la read. Where no paper printed In Span ish can be obtained containing jrr.-.s dispatches the reader translates tin English text, after first reading it aloud for the benefit of the American workmen who may not understand Rpnnlsh. After the telegraphic report comes the local news and then the edi torials. Thus the first half hour Is spent. Never more than one-half an hour's reading is required of the rend er at one time. After his first rest the reader takes up some scrlnl, usually a Spanish ro mance, add (ievotes the next half hour to this. Then conns nnother rest. In which the workmen discuss with their Immediate working partners the mer its of the story, the probable fate of the hero or the villain and also the au thor. Light literature occupies the next half hour of the reader's time, short Mori' s fiom manalne3, Joker, conun drums, comments and fol-de-iol. History is then taken up, Cuban hls-toi-y, -'panlsh history, the histories of various European countries, and espe cial attention Is paid to tlue history of the Fnlted States. In the afternoon reading half hours the reader presents selections from the writings of world famous men of let ters. The course has been mapped out by the committee npisiinted for that purpose, and the reader must follow the committee's selections. How tne factories came to be provid ed with readers for the workmen is of Interest. It Is a well established fact that people of the Latin races will use their hands, arms, shoulders or beads when they talk to emphasize their re mnrks. The Cuban or the Spaniard cannot talk two minutes without wav ing his hands and shrugging his shoulders. It is second nature to him, and he can't help it. Now, a clgarmnker has to use both hands In making a cigar, and, aa a clgarmaker cannot talk nnd work at the same time, a rule prohibiting talk ing in the factory In working hours is nn absolute necessity. Tradition has it that shortly after the first cigar factory was established In Havana, the owner, seeking to get as much work as possible from the em ployes, and knowing their fondness for stories, hit upon the happy Idea of hav ing a Rood reader read to the men an Interesting story In the working hours, Then the managers stopped employ ing readers. Strikes followed, and fi nally nn agreement was reached that the managers would Install reader' stands In convenient locations and the workmen would select the readers and pay them and have a committee to so led the class of literature. This plan has been carried out for a century oi more and works admirably. The readers selected are all well edu cated, and their reading has, as a rule, good effect. It has encouraged many workmen to take tip courses of study and thus become well Informed upon all matters of Interest. New York Tribune. Trees and Pyramids. Tradition has it that Napoleon en couraged his soldiers before the battli of the pyramids with the picturesqu phrase, "Forty centuries look down upon you," and yet the span of a slngl sequoia about equals that to the Bibli cal chronologies of Napoleon, seemed the Unit of time. Many of those still vigorous and growing trees sprouted about the time that Christ was born at Bethlehem In Judea. Most of those still standing had commenced to grow at least before the fall of Home. We can count the annual layers In the wood of those which have been cul down, and calculate with considerable accuracy their age and varying rapid ity of growth. For example, In our oak or chestnut the spring wood consists largely ol pitted ducts of large size, which are prominent and In marked contrast with the much smaller-celled and more solid additions formed by the slowei growth later In the season. In cone bearing trees like the sequoia the dif ferences are almost entirely ot size the transition being abrupt from th very fine wood cells formed at the clone1 of the season to the much larger cells of the vigorous vernal growth. It fol lows that under certain conditions 1 tree might add more than one ring Id a year, but for our purpose, and gener ally speaking, It Is proper to deslgnaU these rings as annual. Year after yeat the sequoias have been adding layei after layer to their girth In ever-widening circles. The thousands of tonl of bark shed by each tree during Its long career, the tens and hundreds ol thousands of tons of sap that havt coursed through their venerable trunks, and the innumerable progeney of a single tree in the older, more propi tious days a contemplation of these' facts assist us in realizing the true pro portions of theee forest monarch!. Popular Science Monthly. Cool rooms Cold storage. in nil i Ex-President Cleveland Does Not Approve WomenlVoting. A MENACING CONDITION Votes of Thoughtful Would Be Out weighted by Those of Disreputa ble and Iflnorant Trials Have Shown No Uplifting of Politic. "Thoughtful and right-minded men base their homage and consideration for woman upon an Instinctive con sciousness that her unmascullne qual ities, whether called weaknesses, frail ties or what we will, are the sources of her characteristic and especial strength within the area of her legitimate en deavor," says ex-l'resldent Cleveland. "They know that if she is not gifted with the power of clear and logical reasoning she has a faculty of Intuition which by a shorter route leads her to abstract morai truth; that If Bhe deals mistakenly with practical problems It la because sympathy or sentiment clouds her perception of the relative value ol the factors involved. "They know she Is loving, long suf fciing, self-sacrificing and tender be cause God has made her so, and with It all they rralizo that whatever she has or lacks the influence nnd ministra tions of woman give firm rooting and sure growth to man's best efforts. "None of us can deny that we have unhappily fallen upon a time when doctrines are taught by women and to wo.nen, which tend with more or less directness to the subversion of sane and wholesome Ideas of the work and mission of womanhood, and lead to a fanciful insistence upon sharing in tne stern, rugged and unwomanly duties and responsibilities allotted to man. "A3 is usually the case when a radi cal and unnatural change Is the object of effort, those most extreme and pro nounced In opinion have forged to the front and assumed leadership. "In outspoken discontent with tho station and opportunity American women now enjoy, theso clamorous leaders openly demand their equal par ticipation with men In the right of suffrage and In every other political rlfcht and privilege. "Many other women, more consider ate and conservative, who refuse to In dorse these demands, nevertheless, by amiably tolerating them or by advocat ing other less direct attempts to en large the character of women's endeav or, encourage and aid, perhaps uncon sciously and unintentionally, female suffrage radicalism. "I am willing to admit that it was only after a more thorough apprecia tion of what female suffrage really means that If I became fully convinced that Its Inauguration would vastly in crease the unhappy Imperfections and shortcomings of our present man-voting Butfruge, and that It was only after a bettor knowledge of the spirit and disposition that stand behind It, gained from recent experience and observa tion, that I was entirely persuaded that Its especial susceptibility to bad lead ership and hurtful Influences would constitute It nnother menacing condi tion to those which already vex and disturb the deliberate and intelligent expression of popular will. "The most active in pushing the de nruul for woman suffrage point In Its vindication to what they deem whole some legislation accomplished In the few states where such suffrage hoe been granted. I am nfraid, however, that In dealing with this feature of th question these advocates occasionally tal:e a mlsfiken view of the relation ship between cause and effect. "I belieo It will be found that ir the wise and progressive legislation In these woman suffrage stales is weighed against such legislation In states where woman suffrage is withheld, the balance will certainly not be found against the latter. "As bearing upon the credit due tc woman voters for legislation, where full female suffrage has been adopted. It Is worth nothing that the male vot ers exceptionally outnumber the fe male voters In all these localities. "It Is sometimes claimed that woman suffrage would have the effect of ele vating and refining politics. Neithci Its short trial in four states, contain ing In the u'j;i-egate a population very slightly In excess of one-third the pop ulation of tho city of New York, nor our political experience or observation, supports this claim. "The stares in which full female Ritf fraqe prevails are Colorado, I'tah, Ida ho and Wyoming. In the first two ol these states the proportion of female voters la considerably greater than In the others, and yet, the voters of Utah have lately elected through their legis lature to the United States sennte a man whose fitness Is now the subject of a pending senatorial Investigation, and not long ago they elected to con gress another man whom that body rejected." St. Louis Republican, Tons of Silver In a Monument. What probably is the costliest mon ument erected to the dead in recent times is placed above the grave of Mrs. Margarita Alvarado, wife of Pedro Al varado, the peon mining king of Mex ico. The monument is of Italian mar ble and solid gold. Two tons of silver from Alvarado's famous I'almllla mine was used. A steel frame will be built around the grave to guard against the theft of silver. The output of Alvarado's Palmllla mlue is now $100,000 a week. When he discovered the I'almllla vein Alva rado was working as a mine laborer for 75 cents a day, Now he is worth at least $30,000,000. He has offered Beveral times to pay the national debt ot Mexico. J GOLD AND SILVER OUTPUT. Total Output of Silver Was a Little More Thau Eighty Millions. The Output of Silver Was Fifty-Seven Million Ounces valued at Thirty-Three Million Dollars. The estimates of gold aiKj silver production in 1904, just issued by tho Director ol the Mint, show that the United Slates is more than holding its own in the production ol the precious metals. Our gold output last year was valued at $8o, 723,200, a g.iin over 1903 of $7, 131,500. vSilver production increas ed in amount from 54,300,000 to 57,786,100 ounces, and in commer cial value from $29,322,000 to 33,-5'3.93s- 1 he closing of the mints to silver has not, in fact, materially checked the actual mining of that metal. The silver total for 1904 is greater than that for nny other year since 1890, and falls only 6, 000,000 ounces below the high record output of 1892. In com mercial value there has been, of course, a sharp decline. The silver mined last year, worth $33,515,938, would have brought about 556,000, 000 in 1890 or 1891. Production continues active chiefly because the metal is handled as a by-product, three fourths of last year's output being smelted out of lead and cop per ores. Montana, Colorado and Utah are the chief silver states. Montana yielding 14,608,100 ounces. Colorado 14,331,600 and Utah 12,484,300-in all a little more than two-thirds of the total product. In gold mining Colorado leads, her gold product having three times the value of her silver product. Colorado's yield was val ued at $24,395,800. California came second with $19,109,600, a gain compared with 1903 of more than $3,000,000. This is'tbe largest gold yield the state has had since the 6o's, and the increase is attri buted to dredge operations, which are expected to yield $7,000,000 a year for some thirty years to come. Alaska was the third largest gold producer, with $9,304,200. Next in order came South Dakota, Mon tma, Nevada, Utah and Arizona. The yield for 1904 makes a new record, exceeding that of the best previous year 1902 by a narrow margin. Compared with a decade ago, our gold product has more than doubled in value. The United States is therefore doing its share and more than its share in re plenishing and widening the stock out of which the nations of the world now coin their money of absolute redemption. The Local Faper- t A few years ago when David r i i . , . . . . , , IT .. . uavis, tne ia-e distinguished United L i...n , c . . . . . , i T 1 1 : . Mates Senator from Illinois, was called on for an expression as to the value of the home newspaper, he delivered tne following tribute: "Every year every local paper gives from 500 to 5,000 free lines for the oenefit of the community in which it is located. No other agency ci-ii or will do this. The Publisher . .1 n. proporuon 10 S means aoes more lor the town than any other man. lie ought to be supported 0--- rj 1 not because you happen to like him atise vou hannen to like him or admire his writing, but because a local newspaper is the best invest ment a community can make. It may not be crowded with great thought but financially it is more benefit than can easily be computed. Today editors do more for less than any men on earth. Patronize your home paper, not as charity, but as an investment." For the benefit of our readers who have trees infested with the San Jose or any of the scale insects, we publish the Lime-Sulphur-Salt (California mixture) as given by Prof. II. A. Surface. M. S., Econo mic Zoologist, Ilarrisburg, Pa.: Sulphur (either flour or flowers) seventeen pounds; quick lime or fresh lime, twenty-two pounds; salt, ten pounds; water, fifty gallons. Slake the lime finely, add sulphur ana salt while slacking; cover with water and boil briskly tor at least three-cjuartersof an hour; add water to make fifty rallons and apply as a wash or spray while warm. This wash is both an insecticide and fungicide, but should be used only on dormant trees, as it has a tend ency to burn the foliage, but it will not harm acv kind of a tree and cannot be applied too freely. This is the cheapest good remedy tor scale insects, neaeh leaf curl ptp Larger or smaller quantities may be made but the proportions should not be varied. No housebreakinps or theft9 were reported in town during the fair, the first time there have been none in some years. There were no fights on the street, and the only arrests made were for common drunks. There was ati pxtrA police force on duty and good order was maintained throughout the week. Mitchell Expects No Strike, Miners' P'c.'donl Siyj Lvorylhing W irk Out Haimor.iously. Will John Mitchtl!, president of the Unitei Aline U 01 kers ol America, rcgardi,'-' the probability of a strike next snt iiikf. recently said: "As far as I can juds'e, after be ing in the atitli: ::cite he'.d lor some time, everything will wrk out h.n monintisiy in the end. I can see no rca.ioii why there should be a general coal sttike tiext spring. "I have been on a most success ful organizing tour through the two great anthracite coal hekls. In three months, as a lesult of this tour, we have added more th in 50. 000 anthracite coal tinners to our organization." Will Ce rJo rxttsi.ciuu. Superintendent Moiintney, of the Lewisburg, Milton and Watson tewn Passenger Railway company, who has spent the greater portion of the past year in trying to secure the right of way for the extension of the trolley line from Kast Lewis- burg to Northumberland, and the passage of an ordinance granting them the right of way through the sfects of -No'-thuinberland, to the bridge, took the ordinance passed bv the Northumberland Council to New York with him and submitted it to the officers of the company. The attitude ofanum ber of property owners along the proposed line was also discussed. The officers decided that it would rot be expedient to pursue the en terprise further, and nassed a reso lution to abandon the proposed ex tension altogether. Lnvelopes 75.000 envelopes earned in stock at the Columbian Office The line includes drug envelopes, pay, coin, baionial, commercial sizes, number b, b!i, bl, q, 10 and 11, catalog, &c. Prices range from $1.50 per 1000 printed, up to $5.00. Largest stock in the coun ty to sele:t from. Entrance through Roy's Jewelry store. tf KXECUTRIX NOTICE. nutate of W. It. Pimnan, lat of th fowil of Klomnthnrg, deceased NnHw la hnrwhv trivnn ttint ary on the estate of W. 11. Huranin, lute of the 'miui iiMMiiuurtr, fnuiamn I'ounty, i"a., deceased, have ben Kmiited to Wardln Keller rurnian, remuetit, or sill t.iwn of Hloonidburif. tn Wlinin nil n.ranna I ..I n au. requested to make pnvnient. nnd those liavlntf wuuuut uouty. WAItDIEKF.LI.EK ITKMAN, John O. IUkm an, Executrix. Attorney. 10-UBt SHERIFF'S SALE. By virtue of a writ of Lev Factaa Issued out of the court of Common l'leas of Columbli county, ana to me directed there will be ex i of the court of common l'leas of Columbia lllcomsburtf, l"a., on SATURDAY, OCT 2ISt, I905, at s o'clock d. m. All that certain ii!cce, or parcel of land situ ate on the southwaidly side of Cemetery street In tne Borough of Berwick, Columbia County, ra., DounJcd and described as follows to wit I Beginning at. a polr.t on the southwardly sldo ; OI8um cemetery Htreet seventy one and one naif feet dl-t ant from MulbHry street; thenco e..8twar(1Iy alljnOTe,ery street a distance of nrty-two feet to a sixteen foot alley; thence southwardly along thesu.iie a distance of fftiy 1 't to lot number forty-seven; thenco west- wardly along same a distance of Ufty-two feet to a corner; thenco northwardly and parallel with Mulbury street a distance ot iirty feet to Cemetery street the placo of beginning, con taining two thousand Hlx hundred square feot or land, whereon Is erected a LARGE, NEW TWO-STORY FRAME DWELLING HOUSE, a&d out-bulldlngs, with all modern Improve ments. Also, all the right, title and Interest of the de fendant In all that certain lot of land situate on the southwardly side of spring (larden Avenue, 111 inn inroiign nt west tierwicK in tuo county of Columbia, Pennsylvania, bounded and des cribed as follows: On the east by lot No. 41, on tho south by a fifteen foot alley, on tho west by lot No. 42,'and on the north by Spring (larden Avenue, being tort y-tlve feet In width by one hundred and seventy feet In depth, containing seven thousand six hundred and tlf'y square feet of land and being numbered and.deslgnated as lot No. 41 of Vtoodln, Ka'on & Dlcksons addl t Ion to the Borough of West Berwick, l'a. The game being a vacant lot. Seized, taken In exacullon at the suit of The Berwick National Bank vs. O. C. lless and to be sold as the property of o. C. Hess. C. C. Evans, Atty. W. W. BLACK, Sheriff. Professional Cards. N. U. FUNK. ATTORN E Y-AT-LA W, Ent's Building, Court House Square, BLOOMSBURG, PA. J. II . MAIZE, ATTORNEY AT LAW, INSURANCE AND REAL ESTATE AGENT, Office, in Townsend's Building, BLOOMSBURG, PA. A. L. FRITZ, ATTORNEY AT LAW. Office illoomsburif Nat'l Bank Bidg., id floor BLOOMSBURG, PA. John a. rassia. johns. babmam FREEZE & IIARMAN, ATlCIili'EPANDCOUN8ELLOH8ATLAW BLOOMSBURG, PA. Office on Centre Street, isl door below Orr J limit. II. A. McKILLIp, ATTORNKV-AT-LAW Columbian liuilt irig, 2nd Moot, BLOOM SI. I Kti, IA a. N. Y OST. ATTORNEV-AT-LAW Knt liuildin j Court House Square, CLOOMSUURG.PA. RALPH R. JOHN, ATTORNIV AT LAW, Hartman l.,.l.i;.. 1 1 u 1 1 1 1 1 1 r. , Market Square Bloonisburg, Pa. I'RKI) IKKLKR, ATTORN KY AT LAW. Office Over l'iist Natinnil Hank. BLOOMSBURG, PA. CLYDKCIIAS. YETTER, ATTORNEY--AT LAW, Uloomsburo, Pa Office in Knt's HuilHinR, W. if. II AWN, ATTORNEY at law, Office, Corner of Third and Main SU CATAWISSA, TA. CLINTON HERRING, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. Office with Grant Herring. I1LOOMSISURG, PA. T Will be in OranReville Wedneiday each week. WILLIAM C. JOHNSTON, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Office in Wells' Building over J. G. Wells' Hardware Store, Bloomsl.urg, Will he in Millville on Tuesdays. H MONTGOMERY SMITH. ATTORNEY-AT LAW, Office: Ent building, over Farmers N J 11-16-99 EDWARD FLYNN, ATTORNEY AT LAW, CENTRALIA, PA. WOfflce Llddicot building, Locust avenM- MONTOCB TSI.IPHON1. BSI.t mimtl TS8 TISTID, OL1S8IS P1TTBD. H. BIERMAN, M. D. HOMtEOPATIIlC PHYSICIAN AND 8UBOBO orrios hours: Offloe Residence, 4tn Bt. 10 a. m. to p. m., e.-ao to 8 p. m. BLOOMSBtJHG, FA J. S. JOHN, M. D., PHYSICIAN AND SUROIOK. Office and residence, 410 Main 8t 7-3- BLOOMSBURG, PA J. J- BROWN, M. D. THE EYE A SPECIALTY. Eyes tested anr t.ou with glasses. o Sunday work. 311 Market St., Bloomsburg, P. Hours: 10 to 8 TriA . DR. M. J. HESS, DENTISTRY IN ALL ITS BRANCHES, Crown and bridge work SPrrui Corner Main and Centre Streets. Columbia Montour Tetephow oot2uLPA Dr. W. II. HOUSE, BUKQKON DENTIST. omce Barton's Building-, .Main below If ark Elocmsburg. Pa. All Myjes of work done in a superior maimer r warranto as represented, TBBTH EXTRACTED WITHOUT PAIN by the use of Gas, and free of charge mhm mm-T t. .. . c uacrieu. o be open all hours during the day. C, WATSON McKELVY, FIRE INSURANCE AGENT. v . 11 ni tuieVQ KppreBenta twelve of the Btn riirent rAnk ie in tne world, among which arm ComP A BIT siasi . Franklin of Thlli'iffi" I'enn a. I'hila tiw.oen ms l'JJS1' Ouen,of n. Y. .. 5110 w sS ,, i'SK Westchester. V v ,in nn ' li"!." America, PhiiS.s.SS:; tfjffi Office-First Nat'l Bank BIdg., ad floor. All claims promptly adjusted and paid. M. P. LTTT7. r cnu INSURANCE AND RE ALESTAT nut'5 AINU BROKERS, O V. W. Corner Main and Centre. Streets Er.ooMsKURu, Pa. Represent Seventeen as good Com. panies as there are in the World and all losses promptly adjust ed and paid at their Office. SADET. VANNATTA. (Successor to C. F. Knapp ) GENERAL INSURANCE Office 238 Iron St., Bloomsbuko. Oct. 31, 1901. tf CITY HOTEL, W. A. Bartiel, Prop. No. lai West Main Street WLarce and convenient sample rooms, ba rooms, hot and cold water, and modem cm venlences. Bar stocked with 1 liquors. First-class livery attached. EXCHANGE HOTEL I. A. Snyder, Proprietor. (Opposite the Court House) BLOOMSBURG, Pa. I.arpe and convenient sample looms, room bot cx-l.t utter nH)
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers