HSflKI I Homes loiuul on I -'arms in I !k West anJ a New, Useful Lile. CHILDREN ARE HAPPY 85 Per Cent of TI1033 3;nt West Crow to Bo Respected and Useful Citi zen, While Only 25 Per Cent of Those In City Turn Out Well. Not All Homes Aro Cood. While much in ha ill about thu steady lnilux of young men mid women to tliu grout cities, a movement which Is es timutcd to add nunc thiiu onu hundred to this city's population every duy, little is said of the counter current which Is taking tho wuifs of the met ropolis to good homes in tho Middle West. The Institution which does this work is tho New-York Juvenile Asylum. In tho last fifty years tho Juvenile Asylum lias placed six thousand of Its wards In private lionies in the West, and this work is regarded by Superintendent llllles und the di rec tors as the most valuable that the in stitution performs, for It has been found that tho children placed in -wholesome homes in thu West over 85 per cent grow to bo useful and re spected citizens, while of those who remain in the city only 25 per cent turn out equally well. I There are ninny thick volumes at ' the Juvenile Asylum made up of let ters from youngsters who, on Western farms, are gaining a firm foothold and j a new outlook upon life. Of course ' mistakes sometimes occur. Not nil ! tho homes are good, not all the chil dren thankful. Tho asylum depends 1 on its visitors, who inspect several times each year tho condition of its wards, to discover any case of ill- j treatment mid to remove any onu who Is not properly taken care of. Last year five such instances were brought to light. Two of these sprang from a deliberate attempt to induce tho wards, young men nearly eighteen years old, to desert and consequently abandon the $50 and new suit of clothes which were due to each of ; them on his eighteenth birthday. The J boys wrote that while they had hith erto been treated well, recently thcro bad been a complete change. A vis itor discovered the reason for this and the wards were taken from their homes. In one case tho farmer was compelled to pay the boy $12, besides letting hi in take away $11 which ho bad put in a toy bank. In the other instance the farmer paid $21 and the sale of a pet calf formerly given to the boy brought $;!G more. A third case was that of a boy who was so badly clothed that his feet were froz en. The man who had charge of him was sued by thu asjlum authorities and Judgment of $50 was secured agalast him. Tho asylum's official visitors sco that the ward is well treated, but there is no sure way of seeing that the ward treats his guardian well, in the majority of cases, however, tho children are anxious to please and as Rrateful as could bo asked. Not In frequently one comes on pathetic let ters as self-accusation. The follow ing is from a fK'leen-ycar-old girl: "I have never regretted coming West, and I think It Is the most beau tiful part of the country. I can do nl most all kinds of housework, except nice pastry cooking. My guardians bave lived In tho samo house nearly thirty-eight years. I shall stay in my borne after I nm of ago If my guar dians are willing. I hope I shall get to be a, better girl soon, but it seems doubtful; tyid I make so much trouble that I sometimes wish I hail never come West. It Is a trying ordeal for my guardian to keep me, and I some times think that I will never como to any good, but I will promise you to strive to do better. Mrs. Warren thinks I am very slovenly, and she gets out of patience with my work and my tongue. I was always left to run loose In New York, and I think I was put in the asylum." Mrs. Warren's view of the case was not quite so black. She wrote: "Annie has Improved in ability to work, and I live in hopes that she will do better as she grows older. She has a good education, and can write a very good letter, but she has a saucy tongue that is very trying to endure." Instances of asylum boys whose names are now well known In many parts of the country are frequent. For example, in the last contest for the Illinois Governorship John J. Brown, County Judge of Vandalia County, was prominently mentioned as a can didate to run against Governor Yates. Mr. Brown was sent to Vandalia Coun ty by the asylum in 1S61 and placed with NVlllIam Ilemmlnger, a prosper ous farmer. Mr. Hemmlnger's two sons declined their father's offer to aend them to college, and Instead he sent young Brown. After graduating Mr. Brown studied law and became active in State politics. Tho rector of one of the largest churches in Brooklyn Is an old asylum boy, and one of Chicago's best known lawyers declares that be got hla start In life when six years old by stealing apples from a pushcart on the Bowery a ' crime for which he was sent to the ! asylum. Rooms to Let in Paris. A white card on a Parisian dwelling kouse indicates that furnished apart ments are to be let. A yellow card Informs pedestrians that unfurnlshel rooms may bo had. The objeot is to save passers-by the trouble of trussing the street if they chance to fce on the opposite side, in case sueh looms as they desire are not adver tised. Exchange. Well MEN' OK , M('Tlf. How Home Suddenly Acquired I or tmicN llnve Iteen HqiiHiidei-ed. Tho sudden Requisition of nnnc cuslomod wealth Is responsible for initny str.hige freaks on the pari of the newly enriched. Thus, a Durham oilier, lifter Inheriting the sum of 2. not) from an undo who had Ptnl fctnted to Australia, purchased n inal! nnd female elephant, from n traveling menagerie, had a large nnd gaudy carriage built, to which ho harnessed them, and then drovo out with his wife mid children till stopped by the police. Ho spent his money In six months, chiefly at raeo meetings, and Is now oneo more a humble collier, glad of tho compara tively scanty wnge that he receives each week from tho clerk In the pay shed, The case of a once popular French novelist Is still remembered In Pa risian literary circles. Heaping a harvest from two or three capital books that took all Paris by storm, thu author purchased a palace In Italy, a villa on the Hlvlern, a castlo In Scotland nnd a town house on tho Champs Klysees. It seemed his nm bltlon to possess ns many residences as a prlnco of tho blood. Although all these properties were henvily mortgaged, the smash came within a year, and tho novelist, loaded with debts that ho would never be able to repay, calmly disappeared, and was afterward recognized ns an Arab tra der nnd lord of many caravans ply ing between Harrar and Jibutll. Tho novelist, who had adopted a suitable Arab name, stood high In the favor of the Kmperor Menellk. Consumption cut short a career that for variety nnd adventure far exceed ed nnv romance that the novelist himself bad ever penned. Another "freak capitalist" was a Spa nl ih Indy of Madajoz, who, win ning 10,0(10 in the Manila lottery, collected the money and set out se cretly for Pnrls, leaving her husband and children In complete darkness ns to her whereabouts. Fight months later she returned to her home penniless, but accom panied by thirty huge trunks, the contents of which accounted for the vanished thousands. The exploits of the Into Marquis of Anglesey are paralleled nnd exceed ed by those of the son of a wealthy Hungarian sugar refiner. The young man not only had a replica of tho Roman Colosseum erected on ono of his estates, but would himself de scend into the nrena, in imitation of the Fmperors of old. Dressed ns a gladiator nnd nrmed only with the short Homan thrusting sword, he would engaue Hons, tigers und bears In single combat, often paying as much ns 1,000 for tho specimen that furnished hlni nnd his friend with a half hour's entertainment. The Hungarian authorities put a Etop to these savage exhibitions, and while the remainder of his wealth lasted he had to content himself with nn ordinary circus. He died dramatically, when on the verge of being declared a bankrupt, taking poison at the close of n farewell feast, to which he had Invited his neighbors and tenants. Tlt-I!its. A (Jovernment Pawnshop. One thousand watches a day, one thousand wedding rings a week that Is the ordinary course of busi ness the year round tit thegreat pawn broking establishments of France. The wctches and wedding rings which dally make their way to the Mont do Piete are, of course, the last resource of the poorer classes, but the borrowers from this government pawnshop, with Its twenty-five branches In Purls, are by no means druwn exclusively from the masses. It Is indeed, the women of the upper classes who are the most reckless In thedr expenditure, und who are, therefore, the most exposed to sud den pecuniary difficulties. Women In society, when driven to the Mont de Plete, carry their Jewels In their dainty handbags, and they encoun ter many a poorer sister on the way, dragging heavy sewing machines or shabby bedding across the court yard. Whisky Drinking in Scotland. It is reported that the Highland Scotchman Is ceasing to drink whis ky. A visitor to Scotland says that tho typical Highlander, as ho saw him this season, takes an occasional "nip," as before, but that beer is gradually ousting usquebaugh from Its supremacy. Ho saw many High landers take their "meridian" a ceremony still religiously observed and in the majority of cases beer wus tho drink. Beer as a drink for Highlanders is a new thing. In tho old days claret was drunk all over Scotland. It came smuggled as a rulo from Fiance, and In the es tuaries of the west coast a big trado was done with claret laden gabberts from the continent. After claret, whisky; and now beer. The Jupniieso Parliament. Perhaps the greatest sign of the westernization of Japan was when It formed its parliament, only sixteen years ago. The first meeting, a somewhat Btormy one, took pluce In the winter of 1890-1. Japanese niem bors of parliament are paid about 80 a year as salary, In addition to traveling allowances, which they are not at liberty to refuse even if dis posed to do so. The number of quali fied voters in Japan amounts to lit tle over 1 per cent, of the total pop ulation. All electors must bo twenty five years of age, and must pay fif teen yen (about 80s. in English money) direct national taxation. Era Magazine. COLUMBIAN, lino PTAiimnn'o rmsr. who. oifliuunud wai i Wealthy but Endured Privation ; for Leland Stanford College. MONUMENT TO THEIR SON When Central Pacific Brought Suit , Against Hor Estate She fiold Jewels anl Works of Art, and Liv ' ed on $100 a Month In Order tho University Would Not Suffer. A writer in ' Collier's Weekly" un der the caption of "A Komunco of i'hilanthrophy," reviews the work of the late Mrs. Iceland Stanford and her famous husband, who died a dozen years ago. Among other things tho writer says: "In tho early 80's Leland Stanford and his associates, Crocker. Hunting ton and Hopkins, were classed tog' th cr in the public mind of California as 'soulless plutocrats' and tyrants. Stanford was nominated by the gover nor ns Hegent of the State University. Tho Senate, controlled thu nomina tion. It Is generally believed that but for this action there would have been no Stanford University, and eventual ly a great part, If not all, of the Stan ford millions would have gone to the University of California. "The Stan fords had a son whom they Idolized. Ho seems to have been really a remarkable boy, one of thoso line souls oppressed by the burden of the world. He wove plans for the benefit of other boys and girls, and on his deathbed he begged his parents to carry them out. He died in 1881 at sixteen, leaving his father and mother crushed by a loss whose magnitude almost unsettled their minds. Tho world was blank to them; wealth bad lost its savor, and they had no thought but to devote themselves and their fortune to tho realization m their boy's wishes nnd to tho lmmor tali.atiou of his name. They canon ized his memory, nnd when the Kev. Dr. Newman in his funeral sermon compared the dead boy to Christ among the doctors, the parallel which scandalized reverent strangers seem ed to the bereaved parents only a Just appreciation of his merits. "The next year the Leland Stan ford, Jr., University was born. Its queer name was a touching reminder of Its real founder. In its museum, as in a shrine, were displayed odd little relics of the worshipped boy his clothes, his intimate personal be longings Incongruous little things that made casual visitors laugh. The whole university was his monument. Its welfare became, the absorbing pas sion of Stanfords' life. A substantial endowed was deeded to it at the start, but for the bulk of its support it depended on the continued generosi ty of its founders. Leland Stanford was elected to the Senate, and In lS'Jo ho died. Although it has been unlerstood that his portune would ul timately go to the university, tho greater part of It was left unreserved ly to his widow. This marked no change in tin; original plans. The two had worked out their Ideas to gether, their desires were one, and Stanford knew that there was no way in which their execution could be so thoroughly assured as by leaving ev 1 erything In Mrs. Stanford's unchecked control. There had been a board of trustees from tho beginning, but its functions hud been purely ornament, il. i As loug as a Stanford remained a! o ! there would be no other govern. g j body. "The Central Pacific Railroad owed the government over $000,000,000. For many years the corporation, under the guidance of Collis P. Huntington, at tempted to evado tho payment of that debt. Whllo this contest was going on it occurred to the government that an advantage" might be gained by bringing suit against the personal es tates of the men who had incurred tho debt, and by an Inspiration of geni us, the estates selected for the test case was the particular one that had been devoted to public purposes. A suit for $15,000,000 was brought against the Stanford estate, the whole property was tied up in the courts, and Mrs. Stanford was left to bear the entire expense of defending an action In which Huntington and his partners were the chief parties In interest. "She told President Jordan that she could live on $100 a month, as she bad done before, and that the university cot Ul have all the rest. She shut up her great houses, discharged most of hor servants and lived In one wing of her I'alo Alto homo. The profes sors were asked to wait for part of their salaries and did so. They wero still getting more than the woman who furnished their money. The uni versity scraped along. Mrs. Stanford sold some personal effects of her own to meet this deficit, and prepared to sell her valuable Jewels and works cf art. At last the suit was decided In her favor, and times became easier. "Thus one of the richest women in the world voluntarily reduced herself to the position of a person of modest means. But In doing bo she won a distinction all her own. There aro plenty of rich women, but there Is none, or any man either, who has de liberately given others a fortune com parable with that sacrificed by Mrs. Stanford." Eastern capitalists are preparing to construct an electrlo line which will traverse the entire Grand Valley, whioh is one of the most import tnt agricultural and horticultural dlstr'cts In Colorado. The line will carry both passengers and freight The Chesapeake, famous for her en counter with the British shop Shan non, in the war of 1811, U still In caisttp. BLOOMSBURG, mOKFSSIOXAfi WOMKX fit IDI S. Three nl 1'ieient Follow this Calling In the Maine Woods. First, the Indians, then the white pioneers and their descendants hunt ed the deer nnd moose, tho henrs nnd the bobcats of the Maine woods, nnd In recent veins have como thousands of sportsmen from other States, while now, with Pullman cars running to the very cilire of the forests, women have Joined the chnse for big giitno. ! It Is no uncommon thing to see, In ' the lists or lucky hunters, tho names i of Mis. So-and-So or Miss Ho-nnd-Ko us hnvlnr killed a deer, a couple of 1 deer, or even n big bull moose. With tho coming of the modern Dianas, : with their short corduroy skirts und repeating ritles, tho woman guide has appeared, and that she Is a most i useful nnd valuable aid In tho now ' fashlonnble sport of big game hunt ing Is shown by the fact that the three women guides of Maine nro In constant demand at pay equal to or better than that received by the 1,7 97 male guides who make a liv ing by piloting city sportsmen to success. There nre only three women who make a business of guiding now, but the number Is bound to Increase, for the demand for their services la great, nnd there nro hundreds of wo men In the backwoods of Maine who are well equipped In every way for this sort of service. These women, reared In the woods, know every lake and stream, nnd every forest path nnd woodland trail, as well as their husbands and their brothers. They have been from childhood schooled In the use of the rifle, rod nnd pud dle, and their practical knowledge of .fishing nnd hunting Is us complete, their skill and courage ns great as long experience and tho spirit of the Northern pioneers can mnke them. The first woman to nttiiln promi nence as a hunter nnd guide In Maine is Miss Cornelia T. Crosby, of Phil ips, Franklin County, who is known to sportsmen all over tho country who have seen her skill tried In tho woods and on the trout streams, while to ninny others she Is known through her connection with sports men's exhibitions In tho largo cities, and through her writings over tho nom de plume of "Fly Rod." In early childhood Miss Crosby whipped the trout pools of Franklin County with a success that excited the envy of city anglers with costly tackle, and later she won at the Rangeleys nnd elsewhere such success with tho square tailed trout and tho big land locked salmon as to arouse the ad miration of men who thought they knew the wholo book of fishing. When the railroads found their way into tho Rangeleys and to other sequestered spots In the sportnien's paradise of Maine, "Fly Rod" began to find money where before she had merely enjoyed sport. She was em ployed to point out good places to , fish and to tell newcomers nnd green anglers how to make and cast a fly. In a canoe she was ul-.vays perfectly at home, und the way s'.io would send her birch or canvas boat through the rough nnd quick waters would win npprovul from n Penobscot Indian. Tall and straight us a pine tree, strong and athletic from constant development of a fine constitution by out of door sports, "Fly Rod" Is a marvel of physical endurance, and she is a very bright woman as well. When It comes to shooting Miss Crosby Is almost as export as she Is with tho rod and line, and It Is said she Is tho only woman who ever killed a caribou In Maine. The deer sho has killed nre without number; those sho has pointed out. for other people to kill would stock a forest, nnd she tins not been without luck In knocking over bull moose, the king game of the forest. Over In tho Dead River country every one knows how to shoot and fish for shooting nnd fishing, next to logging, are principal Industries of that far backwoods region. Miss Ethel Harlow, a bright and pretty young woman now in her twenties, has always had the reputation among the Dead River people of being a smart girl. She has none of the ap pearance of a backwoods woman, and, while fond of fishing and hunt ing, which take tho place of golf and bicycling on Dead River, she Is not at all lacking in the various refinements common to other young women. Re fore she was out of short skirts she could paddle a canoe, shoot true with a rifle and cast a fly as Bkllfully as any boy In her neighborhood. With advancing years her skill in these sports Increased, nnd finally when tho registered guide system was In troduced she applied for registration and received a license. She Is quick and sure with the rifle, and has killed more game of all kinds than most malo hunters ever saw, while in all the arts of wood craft she is an adept. Mrs. J. S. Freese, of Rlverton, Ar gyle, takes a buck seat for no man on the Penobscot River when it comes to paddling a canoe, catching a trout or salmon, bringing down a partridge on the wing or getting all the big game the law allows. More than that, she can do, with great skill, what few of the men can do she can tan the skins of all the deer and moose that she or her party may . kill. Strong and active, with the knowl edge of an old woodsman and the skill of a veteran hunter. Mrs. Freese goes through these campaigns much as the ordinary woman would a shopping trip, getting as much en joyment out of It as any of the party, and also more money than most men , in the woods can earn. New York Times. An electrician Is always posted on current topics. PA WEIGHT OF A PIECE OF ICE. How It May be Easily Datermined by Measurements. "Humph! It doesn't look as If there were 2." pounds In that pteco," exclaimed a housewlfo on the fourth lloor of u Hurlem Nuthouse, tho oilier day, ns she pulled a dripping pluco of loo from the dumbwaiter Into her apron. "It doesn't feel as If It weighed that much either. A person's right In tho grip of these Icemen. If that's tho way 'trusts,' ns my husband calls 'em, do business, I say the men ought to inuko Bomo laws that would stop the trusts, , "I tell tho Iceman that I don't thlnn ho Is giving me what I order, and he says, 'Well, madam, If you don't thln'i you urn getting what you order, why weigh It yourself.' Ho knows as wo., as I do that I haven't any scales that I can weigh Ice with. Most people don't have 'em, and that's tho way he gets around 'em." This, doubtless Is the soliloquy of many, now that tho Iceman Is again making his dally rounds. It Is not necessary to have a pair of scales to determine If the p'eco of Ice served Is lhe amount ordered or not. For the convenience of those who would llko to fasten on tho side of their refrigerator a table of tho dimen sions of a number of different shape! pieces of Ice of the weights which are ordinarily sold this year at retail for 6 nnd 10 cents 15 pounds and 1!0 pounds, the followng Is given, the first figure In each caso being the thickness of the cake of Ice: 15-pound piece 30-pound pleca 9x8xGV; inches 0xllx9Vi lnche.1 10x8xCV4 Inches lOxllxS'i Inches Hx7xG Inches 21x1 lx"H Inches 12xCxGVi Inches 12x11x7 Inches 13x6x5 inches 13xllxG'3 inc'ies 14xGx5V4 Inches 14x11x0 inches TRUSTKK'S vSALK. OK VALUABLK Real Estate. My vlr ue of an order of the orphans' Court of Columbia County, tho undirsignrd, trustee of the estate ot Henry C. Hart man late of the town of Hlorimsbiirfr, deceased, will spII at public sale on the premises la llloomsburg on SATURDAY, NOV. 18. 1905, at. two o'clock r all that certain messuage. Int. or ground situated In the Town of Blooms hurjr County of colurrbln, aod State of Pennsyl vania. Bounded on the Knst by lot of K. K. "art man, on the South by Main or second Ht. on the Went hy lot of T. L. Gunton and on the North by lot of the Y. M. C. A. being twenty, two feet more or less In width and sevetit.y-one fet more or less In depth whereon Is erected a ONU STORY FRAMR STORE I BUILDING. Tkrms ok sAlk: Ten per cent, of one-fourth of the purchase money to be paid at the strik ing down or Iho property; tne one-fourth less 'he ten per eent. nttli confirmation of Bale; and the remulnli g three-fourths In one year 'herearter, with lnlorest from continuation ntsl. I C C. PSACOCK, ' A. N. Yost, Aity. Trustee. AUDITOR'S NOTICE. In the iHfUtt'V of the distribution of the fnttds In the tittri'W hititds arising frtmi the stile 0 the Real Estate of Kent ecu A l.rtttntuid Stephen Lertin. deceased. The undersigned, auditor appointed by the (! tin, of common Hlcas of col co , to make distribution of the proceeds of the aule of tho mal estate of the said l!"bceea A. I.cvin and Stephen I.evan to and among the part lea legal ly entitled thereto, will sit at hlsortlo at No. 41! Main St. Bloonmbuiy, Pa. on Wednesday, November the Wnd, at to" o'clock a.m. to per form t lie duties of hla appointment,, when and where all parties Interested must, appear and present their claims, or be forever debarred from any share of suld fu.id. WILLIAM C. JonNHTON, Auditor. 10-86, 4t AUDITOR'S NOTICE. Kutate of Margaret Stwart, Into of Cleeelani tuwntiMl), (trtieiiwd, Tho undersigned auditor appointed by the Orphan's Court of Columbia County to pass up on exceptions tiled to the aoeount of Charles V. Stewart, administrator of said estate, and al so to the account of Charles C Stewart, guard ian, will sit to perioral the duties of his ap pointment at his olllee In Hloouisburg. Pa. on Thursday, November Sitrd lttjS. at 10 o'clock A. M. when and where all persons Interested In Raid estate should appear and present their elalms. Andrew L. Fritz, Auditor. ll--4t EXECUTRIX NOTICE. Kutate of : 11 Purman, lale of the town of Bloomsnurg, deceased. Notice is hereby given that letters testament ary on the estate 1 f W. II. I'lir.nan, Ule ot the town of Bloomsburg, Columbia County, l'a., deceased, have been grained to W'ardle Keller Purinun, resident of sai l town of Bloomsburg, to whom all persona Indebted to said estate are requested to mako payment,, and thorn having claims or demands will make known tho same without delay. WARDIK KELLER Pt'HMAN, Jons CI. HARM an, Executrix. Attorney. lo-iaat Professional Cards. N. U. FUNK. ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Ent's Building, Court House Square, BLOOMSBURG, PA. J. II . MAIZE, ATTORNEY AT LAW, INSURANCE AND RIAL ESTATE AGENT, Office, in Townsend'i Building. BLOOMSBURG. PA. A. L. FRITZ, ATTORNEY AT LAW. Offloe Bloomsburg Nat'l Bank Bids,, td floor BLOOMSBURG, PA. JOOHO. FBIIIS. JOHK S. HAMAD FREEZE & IIARMAN, AUtlM-itAM) COUNBBLLOK8 AT LAW BLOOMSBURG, FA. Otlke on CentieJ Street, it door below I pus llonM. 1 1. A. McKl! UP, ATTOKNF.V-AT LAW Co!unihmn liuiiiiiin;, 2nd I loct, BLOOM SBL'KG, I' A A. N. YOST. ATTORNEY-AT I AW f.nt liuildin; Court Floune Square. CLOOMSBURK.PA. RALPH R.JOHN, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Hartman Tiiilditg, Market Squsr Bloomsburg, Pa. I RKI) IKKI.KR, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Ottict Over I' iist Nutionil Hank. BLOOMSBURG, PA. CLYDh CHAS. YETTKK, ATTORNEY A T LA W, Bloomsburo, P Office in Ent's Building, W. H. lillAWN, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Office, Corner of Third and Main Stt CATAWISSA, PA. CLINTON HERRING, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. Ofllce with Grant Herring. liLOOMSBURG, PA. " Will he in Orangeville Wednesday each week. WILLIAM C. JOHNSTON, ATTORNEY AT LAW. Office in Wells' Building over J. Q. Wells' Hardware Store, Bloomsburg, Will he in Millville on Tuesdays. II. MONTGOMERY SMITH, ATTORNEY AT LAW. . Office: Ent building, over Fanners W 11-10-99 EDWARD. FLYNN ATTORNEY AT LAW, CENTRALIA, PA. Office Llddicot building, Locust avenue MONTOCB TKLKPnONll. BSI.I. riLlraCI Tla TISTID, GLASSES FITTED. H. BIERMAN, M. D HOMCEOPATIIIC PHYSICIAN AND 8UKQ . owes hopm: Offloe Kesldence, 4th St. 10 a. m. to p. m., 6:30 to 8 p. m. BLOOMSBCHO, J. 2. JOHnTlK, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Office and residence, 410 Main I 7-3Q-i BLOOMSBURG, t J- J. BROWN, M. D. THE EYE A SPECIALTY. Eyes tested am' :.Cu with glasses. No Sunday worlc. . 311 Market St., Bloomsburg, Pa. Hours:,o to 8 Telephoeu DR. M. J. HESR DENTISTRY IN ALL ITS BRANCHES, Crown and bridge work . SPECIALTY, r-orner Main and Centre Streets. Dr. w. H. HOUSE, SUHUBON DENTIST, Office Barton's Building, Main below Hart BLOOMSBURG, Pa. All .tyjca of ork done in a superior mautt all work warranted as represented. TBKTH EXTRACTED WITHOUT PA1M by the use of Gas, and free of charge whe artificial teeth are inserted. 9rTo be Pe" H hours during the day. C. WATSON McKELVV, "RE INSURANCE AGENT. (Successor to B. p. Hartman' .esrw Cep. CASH TOTAL ICBFIDI Office-First N.,'1 Bank Bldg., 2d floor. All clarnis promptly adjusted and paid. M. P. LUTZ & SON, INSURANCE AND RE ALESTATJ AGENTS AND BROKERS. V. W. Corner Main ad Centre. Street. Bl.OOVSEUR.,, Pa. Represent Seventeen as eood Cnm P-' there are in thE WoST and all losses promptly adjust- Cu and nairl k: -vn. SADE T. VANNATTA. f Successor to C. F. Knapp.) GENERAL IXSUKAXCB Office s38 Iron St., Bloomsbu.o, Oct. 31, 1901. tf CITY HOTEL, W. A. Hartxcl, Prop. No. iai West Main Street T Large and convenient sample rooms, t rooms, hot and cold water, nnd mode co. veniences Bar stocked with best wine 7m liquors. First-class livery attiched EXCHANGE HOTEL I. A. Snyder, Proprietor. (Opposite the Court House) BLOOMSBURO, Pa. Large und convenient sample rooms, fee rooms, hot tn- cold wafer, and) lb 9 ST SUHtt"ttk.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers