anjn us Ground Burns For Weeks or . Months on Catching Tire MACHINERY IN FARMING Agriculture Carried On I'mlrr Con (lit Ion not Matchrd Anywhere Mine In tin- World At Time. Yield Fortune, to It llumrt llounriiuii. Marked by Ilt-hi'. These delta lnnd. are an linlta llon of Holland In the New World. Tho Saerntnento and Bnn Joaquin aro wldpapreadlns atreani.. Like niHt Callfornlan rivers, they are wide, rushing torrents In winter and not much more than crooks In ginu mer. Toward their mouth thny used to nproad Irregularly ovor a dlntrlot twenty milen wide In some iilnn-s, finding a new chnnnol every wlntor. All over that district was a thick growth of tule a fat six foot reed. Here millions of wild ducks and arose usod to feed ou the seeds of the tule. It Is still one of the great ch( ducklDg grounds In tho rountry. Along In tho early '70s California capitalists brgnn to study those dol tns with a view to reclaiming them. It was found that the decayed tules bad formed a light, rich soil twenty or thirty feet deep on tho river bed. Tho needles of tho great mountain forests from which tho Ban Joaquin vIkpb had added to Its richness and eand from the placer diggings in tho Sierra had tied it down. They began to dike out Islands In the middle of the river, fending It back by heavy walls of earth and ruhblo. Tho first Inland carved out Rough and Heady, It is called was a gold mine. Those were the days when wheat prices were high, and tho crops ta ken off this land were Incredibly lurge. Rough and Heady, devoted at the present time to fruit and to the rearing of blooded dairy cattle. Is now ono of the most productive areas In California. The farmers went Into It on a larger scale. They carved out Union I!and and Llouldln Island, further down the river, and began work on the mouth of the Sacramenti Early In the game there appeared new trouble. Those lands, after they had dried out and before thoy were tied down by the first year's crops, would burn up on the slight est provocation. The tule reed packs In a mass something like peat. When dry It burns with a slow, sullen flame, like a Are In a aawdiiBt pile. The regular process of reclama tion Is to get the dike built hard and fast. leaving a kind of swamp,' and then to pump out the water. After that It Is left through ono dry bak ing California summer to get ready for the plough. A spark from a combined harvest er or from a distant grain fire would set tt going. Thon It would smoul der and smoulder, ndvanclng per haps only a few Inches a day, but burning down as far as hard pan. It was found to be n most persis tent kind of lire. In the early days they used to run lines of hose from the dredges and pump in water by the million barrels. After tho land Is thoroughly burned It Is left fallow until the TahH of two winters neve packed the ash. Then it is ploughed and plant ed like any other land. The days of dear wheat are over. There ia very little in tliut business now, even on tho broad areas of Cali fornia. It is only lately, however, that the owners of delta lands have begun to put their Incredibly rich toll to other purposes. A Chinaman, one Wong Jim, howed them the way. One summor le approached a Stockton landholder and asked permission to plant some delta lands in potatoes on shares. The American refused. Wong came back with nnother proposition. He would rent tho land, cash down, for Its average profit In wheat and an advance of a few dollars an acre. On that basis he went to work, much joked by the American farm ers. Next year the Texas potato crop failed and the East had a poor crop but Wong Jim dug out potatoes like Buggets and sold them at famine prices. He returned to China next year to live as a magnate on a for tune estimated at 140,000. Thon Bouldln Island found that the land was prime soil for asparagus. Small fortunes were picked up there from canned asparagus for the East ern markets. There are no fences; the landhold ers mark boundaries by ditches. There are very few houses. The Islands are not comfortable places for homes, and most of the owners, live on the mainland. When the grain Is yellow and drooping big traction engines come lu from the mainland, drawing those oninbined harvesters peculiar to a California harvest. The combined harvester la mower, threshing machine and sacker rolled Into one. It la a gigantic piece of machinery, almost as big as a Mogul locomotive. Among the Intricacies of lie beams and lever stand the tight men who run It. The machine goes along behind the engine nearly as fast as a man oaa walk. A twenty foot scythe cuts ue stalks Just below the head, and drops them on a canvas belt. I A. moment later a man on the other aide of the machine pulls a kver. Three sacks of grain and a iltu piu of chaff drop In the swath. ! Th atalki are left standing to be Woughx under for fertiliser la th "ting, Mmw Tork Bun. DRAINING THE EVERGLADES. Vast Areas In Florida Becoming Av.iil.ible as Garden Land. The department of agriculture is Bpo cl.illy Interested in the project now on f"l of draining the Kverglndes. These lKill'-flooded swamps to the south of the huse pond known ns Lake Okee chobee are to be converted Into dry and productive bind by constructing dikes and pumplm: out the water an nchievcim ,it v.hbli. when curried Into olTcct, will bi lni; about the shipment, a dozen years from now, of it.inien.se sup plies of toimitors, new potatoes, cab bages, string betuis and other frmh parden produce to northern markets all through the winter. It has even been suvL-ested that l.nke O!.e,,o holu e might be drained by con lie, ting it with the Atlantic ocean by a cintil fid miles long, thus redeeming One. con H.bliilonal acres of first class farming territory.--Outliif; Magazine. Men Arc In Majority In the U. 3. Taking it "by and large," the male sex Is in the majority :i our country by some l.fi;:s,3Sl, according to a recent C'etiMis bulletin. In some of the states, however, the women exceed the men In number, notably In the IHurlot of Columbia, Mnss-idiiretU and Kbodo Island. I'Minlly ni"ii are in excess In uparsely settled communities and wom en in thickly populated regions; cities, for example, as a rule have more fe males tuan males. In the Inter years of life ti e wom n reced the men, which Fcrms to indicate that they nro longer lived. In the period from 1'! to lit! years of age, also, the reports show them to be in excess. Success Mt;a zlne. King Alfonso's Body Guard. King Alfonso is perhaps more secure ly and carefully guarded during tho hours of darkness than is any other Kim pea:i monarch, except, perhapB, tnt- sultan or Turkey. 1'or four cen turies the slumbers of successive sover eigns of Spain have been watched all night by the "Monteras de Kspinosa" a body of men to whom Is relegated the exclusive privilege of guarding their monarch from sunset to sunrise. They must have an honorable military carter, and be natives of the town of Kspinosa. Ceremoniously, they lock the palace gates at midnight, opening them at 7 the next morning. London Tatlcr. Hospital Cars in Prussia. The Prussian ministry for railways has placed at eery Important railway center throughout the kingdom a mag niikeutly built and appointed car for the transport of sick persons. These cars have been specially fitted up from plans supplied by sanitary authorities, hprmg ueda and every mciiual device tor the alleviation of sufl'etliigs during transit have been utilised. There are ice safes, gas stoves for cooking, rooms for attendants and ingenious devices lor uiullliiig tho sound caused by the motion of the train. It is not intended to inaao these carriages pay; tney have been Instituted tiiicily ou the ground ot humauity. England's Best Known Church. The name of St. George's, Ilauivcr square, seems to bo well known to every American who cornea to Lhigla-d, says the London Chronicle, not so much because it is the fashionable "marriage church" In this country, a3 because President Huosevelt was mar ried in it. A few years back an Amer ican dropped Into the vestry and looked up the marriage register, in w hich, un der the date of Dee. 2, ISoii, he found tho signature of "Theodore Houscvtlt, ZH, widower, rauchnuin," and that of "Kdlth Koiiii it Carow." Till tlien even the clerk, J. Moicey, did not know that the American President's signature was in the book. Japs the Yankees of the East. The Japanese traders, ollieials, sol dins and workers are pushing Irreslsti bly into Manchuria, and now that the war is ended the Yankees of tho east will guide and instruct the Chinese and dominate them and their markets. It seems likely that, wlinout any Chinese boycott whatever, American Industry will be put to the test to compete ou fair terms with the Japanese before many years have elapsed. Philadel phia Ledger. Number of Feet a Second. Few men could tell If they were asked how many feet per second they walk. A picas photographer, whose work requires him to kuow all manner of speeds, said the other day: "Tho average man walks four feet per second. A dog on Its ordinary Jog goes eight foet a second. A horse trots 12 feet a second. A reindeer over the Ice makes 26 feet. A racehorse makes 43 feet. A sailing ship makee 14 feet." Chicago Chronicle. Large English Families. A report of the awards made by the Lincolnshire Agricultural Society to farm laborers who bring up the largest families without having received paro chial relief shows that eight men are fathers of 124 children. One of the men had 20 children born, brought up 17, and placed 12 out In the world. Lelnduu Tlt-Ults. London's Consumption of Ice. Ixindon uses In one way or another quite 200,000 tons of Ice a year. Al though a great dual or ice is made arti- fielally, most of that consumed here Is natural and Norwegian. The Norwe gian ice crop In an average winter varies from 600,000 to 600,000 tons. At least half of tills comet) to the United Kingdom, the rest going to the contl-nent.-Tlt-Blts. If you toll a woman that a 60-cent article Is worth $1.50 she will cheer fully give up 88 ceuta for It , THE COLUMBIAN, Mits. iiiniiAui) iv liAiuiAnon. Discovered! the Nssrauppee Indians and Nt tidied Their tomtoms. When In Juno, 1903, it was an nounced that Leon Id as Hubbard, no asslsant editor of a New York maga tlne, had left New York for tho pur pose of discovering tho Nascaupeo Indians, who had never seen a white man, and of exploring the wilderness of upper Labrndor whero no whllo man had ever been, little attention was paid to tho report. When six months later the story of tho ama teur explorer's heroic struggle, with tho wilderness, which resulted In his death, made Its way buck to civiliza tion, tho world he had left bohind him ranio to nn Immediate realiza tion of tho difficulty of his attempt. Iilllon Wallace accompanied Hub bard on tho expedition and when the latter could go no farther left him with their guide, George IClson, while ho went to seek aid. VVallnco never n;iln found the spot where he had left Hubbard nnd the head of the ex pedition perished of starvation. After tho publication of Wallace's book, "Tho Lure of tho Labrador Wild," no secret was made of the distrust with which Mrs. Hubbard Mrs. Leo n Idas Hubbard. regarded her husband's friend. Cer tain criticisms In the book In regard to her husband's lack of preparation for his last sortie Into the unknown was particularly resented. While Mr. Hubbard's family acknowledged pub licly the service Wallace performed for his friend on the 111 fated expedi tion and absolved him from all blame, he was never forgiven by Mrs. Hubbard for what she considered the desertion of her husband. When on May 30, 1905, Wallace told of his Intention of taking up the work of exploring Labrador where Hubbard loft It, the announce ment was made that Mrs. Hubbard had already mado her preparations for a similar Journey, not In the cnuse of science, but to substantiate her own theory of her husband's death. The first sign of tho rivalry of the two parties came In the report that George Elson, tho half breed Creo In dian who had acted ns guide for the first expedition, was going with Mrs. Hubbard. After four months of successful exploration she came back supplied with Information that will undoubt edly cnuse the Canadian govern ment to order its topographical hoard to draw up a new map of this wild region. She witnessed the nnnual migra tion of the countless thousands of caribou, a spectaclo which tho unciv ilized savages of Labrador only have before been privileged to witness. She saw tho rushing rivers coated with Ice in August and shivered be neath tho blasts of snow and Icy sleet that transform night Into day lu these weary solitudes. She discovered a new river which she may yet be given the honor of naming. She traced this river from Its source to Its mouth, nnd only she and the Intrepid Indian guides who accompanied her know the fearful perils that beset those who may In future attempt to navigate It. Mrs. Hubbard disproved the gen eral belief that the Indians whom she found near tho big lakes In the Interior never visit the coast, saying that they occasionally go out to trade and barter. She said both the Nascauppee and the band of the Montagnais tribe were startled when she appeared among them, but accorded her royal treatment. She says: "I have secured to the name .of my husband the honor of having been the first white person to traverse these rivers and furnish a correct map." A Matter of Title. It has been suggested that the Czar abandon one of his titles, "au tocrat of all the Russlas." Like many other high-sounding phrases applied to royalty It Is regarded as now out of place. The King of Eng land was until 1801 "defender of the faith of Prance." The word "cuar" Is nevor used In Russian so ciety. Czarina Is not Russian at all; cznrlta Is, but Is employed only In ecclesiastical ceremonies. The word used to describe the Csar means "lord." Americans speak incorrect ly of the German emperor a "the Kaiser," as If there were but one. Ho Is of, course, Kaiser WUhelm, Just as the Austrian emperor Is Kaiser Frauds Joseph, and the Brit- j ish sovereign King Edward. "Sub lime porte" does not correctly de scribe the Bultan of Turkey, any more than the "government" would describe the President. The "mika do" Is a term unknown In Japan. The mistake most common,- how ever, Is to describe Kaiser WUhelm as Emperor of Germany. He Is King of Prussia, Oermau emperor. Chi cago News. BLOOMSBURG, PA STERN CODE OF THE HINDU9. Ideal of Truthfulness Held High ana Carefully Practiced. Absolute self-mastery Is the Ideal of a Hindu, writes Swaml Abhedanamla In (rood Housekeeping. Kvery man and woman In India struggles hard to ac complish it by practicing austerities, fasting nnd various kinds of devotional exercises. The householder Is not sup- ' posed lo Indulge in the desires of the I lledi. Ho should practice moderation ! in eating and drinking. Ho should hold the Ideal of simple living and I practice it In his dally life. The Hindu I men and women are not allowed to drink liquors, ami the higher tho social rank the moro rigorous becomes the law of self-restraint, ''"he majority of the Hindus live I st-b-tly upon vegetarian diet, and do : not eat animal llesh. They do not kill nnlmals for food, and they train their children to practice this virtue of non filing. They do not believe that low er animals nro created to sustain lui man life; but, on the' contrary, they i hold that in the process of evolution the life of the lower animal Is as lav portatit as that of the human being. There are many families in India whose ideal is to sacrifice everything for the sake of truth, because they be li' ve that the eternal trul h cannot bo realized by one who is not absolutely tn hful. Feathers on Hire. Ostrich plumes ore as much of a ne ccsisty to the London custer girl on her outings as are the pearl button" to her masculine companion, and tho big trimmed hats with their drooping feathers are familiar i:i all gatherings of this class. Many of the girls cau not afford to keep their money tied up In useless plumes, and there thrives a brisk industry in the hiring of ''these feathers. The loan of a single plume for a day costs but Is., or for 4s. a gor geous trio may be had for an ou.lng, to bo returned promptly the next morning. Weather conditions deter mine the terms somewhat, since a wet, foggy day wi.. take the curl out o' the feathers and make recurring necessary, : for which " "Arriet" has to pay an cx Ira Is. on a hank holiday some shops rent out several hundred plumes, while on other occasions there Is a steady trade with young women who wish to adorn themselves for an outing. Lou' don Tit-Uits. Kaiser to Suppress Gambling. Drastic police action Is, on the Initia tive of the kaiser, being taken against the gambling clubs of the German cap ital, owing to the numerous scandals of recent years. The 11)00 Club Is enpe- daily the object of suspicion. It cost 60,000 to build, another 20,Cl'0 was- spent in equipment, and the club's com mission ou the stakes changing hands amounts to 5,000 a month. As this commlsion is small, the sum reveals that the money changing hands In the club In a year must be reckoned at hundreds of thousands of pounds. X systematic Inquiry has been instituted into the affairs of this and other clubs. the principal points raised being: Has any member lost his fortune by gam' bling? Are members suspected of be lug professional gamblers? Do guests take part in gambling? The London Globe. Ambassador Reid in England. It Is estimated that if Ambassador Whltelaw Held shall keep up the Facial pace he has set in England his term ns American representative there will cost him about $500,liu0. He is aylng plins for a social and diplomatic campaign such as none of his predecesurs thougnt of undertaking. Dorchester house the Ixmdon mansion whlcu the Kelds have" taken, cannot be fittingly maintained under $75,0(10 a year. West Park, country place he has engaged, will cost J25.000 more, exclusive of elaborate en-t tertainment3 planned there. Then there are the opera, trips to the contl neut, etei., which will bring the total up to or beyond the formidable figure mentioned. In Printing a Newepaper. In how short a time a tree con be converted Into a newspaper was tried recently. At 7:35 a. m. three trees were felled and taken to a nearby pa per factory. Dy 9:34 the first sheet of paper issued from the machines. The printing works of the nearest newspa per were about two miles distant. The paper was carried there In a motor car at full speed, the presses set to work and at exactly 10 a. m. the newspaper was ready to be printed. The whole' process from the forest to the reader thus only occupied the space of two hours and twenty-five minutes. The Steam Watering Wagon. The excellent results obtained with the steam watering wagon in the streets of Paris, have induced the Mu nicipal College to order an automobile combined watering and street-cleaning machine, In which all the motions are given by an oil engine, at a cost of 12, 0n0 fraucs (480). Trial have Bhown that 15,000 square meters, 16,666 square yards of road, can be cleaned mechan ically in an hour, thus accomplishing four times the work of a horse road cleaner. London Engineer. Bathing In Berlin. A Berlin landlord has not only sued a tenant tor loss sustained through her excessive use of water for bathing pur poses, but has promulgated the extra ordinary theory that "no respectable woman takes a bath every day." Poverty In Japan. Real destitution is rarely seen In Japan. Though some of Its Inhabitants are very poor, yet all seem to be fairly well fed, clothed and housed and are Invariably cheerful. Nearly all the Japanese are of cleanly habits and rarely untidy. Marion Qarlnnd in Beth lelu m Interesting Christmas Experiences In the tl'y ol Christ Dirlh The hale city of licth-leht m is set up'Hi a hill wlin.li is crowned by the Church of l lie nativity, writes Marion Harland in the Jicctmber l.ippincotts. TheOrotto, which all sects ol believers have agreed upon ns the birthplace of r.nr Lord, is directly tinder the church and en tirely dependent for liht upon artificial means. A silvtr star is let into the pavement of a semicir cular niche, auove which is an altar adorned with the usual church'y symbols. liy the light oi fifteen colored lamps suspended under the altar we tend the inscription in I.atin: l Here Jems Christ was Born of Hie I'irgin Jurj." The lour; line of pilgrims pros trated tin nis' .-Ives, one by one, nnd kissed the star, some with dropping tears all, silently solemnized be yond the range of speech. It did not add to our .solemnity to be shown the manger, decorated with lace and an embroideted altar-cloth, and defended from sacrilegious fingers bv a gilded railing. The really impressive things were oc casional glimpses of the rough stone walls and roof of the ancient stable, visible here nnd there be tween the gaudy decorations. The service of Christnias-Kve began at half-past ten at night and concluded at half-past two in the morning ! At midnight a lullaby from the organ preluded the su preme moment of the occasionthe sudden folding back of a curtain above the altar, revealing a manger cradle and a big wax doll. The exultant outburst of organ and choir in a magnificent Gloria in Kxcelsis accompanied the stately processional of the entire staff of priests and acolytes, chanting and swinging censers while they bore up one isle and down another, back to the high altar, the same doll, dressed in cambric and lace, nest ling in the embrace of the richly apparelled bishop. Kvery incident of our last night in Jamal's camp in Beth lehem recurs to me with peculiar distinct ness. How, as the darkness deep ened, the red, blinking eyes of the charcoal craters of the wonderful portable stove presided over by our accomplished chef in the door of the kitchen-tent the night being breezeless shone upon the under sides of the olive boughs over our heads, while our quiet talk went on of what had happeued in the old town behind us. We spoke longest of David's Greatest Sou, and of the Birth that was to draw the eyes and thoughts of all nations to the little city on the hilltop m the land of Tuda. At midnight, kept wakeful by the rush and burden of thought, I arose to look from the tent door upon the watchful stars that here have a conscious majesty I have never recognized elsewhere, and wondered anew where, amidst the glittering hosts "marshalled on the nightly plain" had flashed the Star of Uete-lehem. ror the last time in our eventful journeyings we saw the dawn redden the Mountains of Moab, the thin crescent of the wan ing moon dying, while we gazed, before the brightness of the coming sun. I shall always be grateful that that night of ineffable calm and the beauty of the new day are promin ent among the pictures conjured before my mental vision, as at the wave of an enchanter's wand, by the name of "liphrath which is lieth-Iehem." NOTICE. In Re Hie Aiipltvattim nf Maler Katt, for FunUm. To All Persons Interest nil: Not lee Is lierebv irlvi-n that an riimlli-at Inn win ur uiiuju iu uiu nouni fir i-araijUH, til its next rt'Kiilur mceiliiif nt. lliirrlsburir. on Wed nesday, December soth, iHi 5, t r a pardon for Mai.tr Kutz, who was convleted at. No. one. ,'-.. .-im..-, rrwiHi-B. im..,, in i no uure oi uyer and Terminer of Columbia County, of the crime or norse Hieming, ana senieneeu to mo Euslern i-euiieuiiury lorauirm or ren years. VtAl.TKK HITMAN, AttV. for Muter Kr1.z Nov. 85, 1905. 8.JS Market St., suubury, l'enn'a. Professional Cards. N. U. FUNK. ATTORN EY-AT-LAW, Em's Building, Court House Square BLOOMSBURG, PA. T. II. MAIZE. ATTORNEY AT LAW, INSURANCE AND RIAL EST ATI AGENT, Office, in Townsend'g Building, BLOOMSBURG. PA. A. L. FRITZ, ATTORNEY AT LAW. oraco Bloorasbunr Nat'lBank Bldg.,sd floor John o. fbbeii. Johns, barman FREEZE b ITARMAN V' ATTOKNEY8 AND COVNBILLOK8 AT LAW Office on Centre Street. 11 rfnnr hl Opera lloaaa. It. A. McKIi LIT, I lOKNKV-AX -LAW. Columbian liuiMini'. 2nd YA, l!1.00.M.SlU.k(,, A A. N. YOST. ATTORN KY-A 'I - I. AW T.nt Huilciin j Court Ilocse Square. ni,OOMSUURG.PA. RALPH R.JOHN, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Hartmnn Jiuilding, Market Sqnar Bloomsburg, Pa. I RK1) IKKLKR, AT lORNKV AT LAW. Oll;e I ivcr Pirst Nntinnil Hank. BLOOMSBURG, PA. CI.YIJKCHAS. YKTTER, ATTORNEY AT LAW, BbOOMSBURO, P Office in Knt's Building, W. H. HHAWN, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Office, Corner of Third and Main St CATAWJSSA, PA. CLINTON HERRING, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. Office with Grant Herring. lil.OOMSIiURG, PA. "MP Will be in OranKevil!e Wednesday each week. WILLIAM C. JOHNSTON, ATTORNEY AT LAW. Office in Wells' Buildinp over J. Q. Weils' Hardware Store, liioomsburg, Will he in MillviHe on Tuesdays. H. MONTGOMERY SMITH, ATTORNEY AT LAW. 1 Officei-Knt building, over Fanners Ms- flmnal ltn..L EDWARD. FLYNN, ATTORNEY AT LAW, CENTRALIA, PA. w-omoe Llddicot building, Locust svenne- MONTOUR TSI.SPnOHl. BILL TSLnm TI8 TESTED, GLASS." ItVid!" H. BIERMAN, M. D HOMEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN AND 8T7HGBX7 ornci hours: Office ft Residence, 4th St too. m. mp. m.,6:30to8p. m. BLOOM8BTJKQ, ft J- 2. JOHN, mTtI PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Office and residence, 410 Main 8 J. J. BROWN. M n THE EYE A SPECIALTY. Fva tnr..l 1 No 3ii Market St., Bloomsburg, Pa. Hours:-,o to 8 Telephca rR. M. J. HESS. DENTISTRY IN ALL ITS BRANCHES, Crown and bridge work A SPECIALTY, Corner Mam and Centre Streets CCumbta . Montour Tce 2J IR. W. H. HOUSE, 8UKGBON DENTIST, Ofllce Barton's Btidin?, Main below Xark BLOOMSBURG, Pa. all w orK warranted as represented TEETH EXTRACTS To be open all hour, during "Eda C WATSON McKELVY, ITTD V Iu0T,n . .nouKAHei AGENT. w "eM0rt0 B' r- Dartmaa V. a an . .41. N. Anierle. . ,'.',' . ?"u't", J,7M.S07 "IDltiJt'HIr'r N V "1""l'0 Office-Firs, Nafl Bank Bldg, ad fl All claims promptly adiu J i ' J , .864 AI. P. LUTZ & SON INSURANCE AND RE ALESTATF AGENTS AND BROKEnV V. W. Corner Main.nd Centre. Street. Bloom sktjr,-,, pA Represent Seventeen as good Com Dames 9 n,- ... .8a ton' and .11 i C lhe W'ld and all losses promptly adjust ed and nan at ,w. J -v "i.ii wince. SADET. VANNATTA. ( Successor to C. F. Knapp.) GENERAL IXSTTj, iVL Office a38 Iron St., BLooMsrmao. Oct. 3'i 1901. tf CITY HOTEL, W A W b Ft 'Jul No. 121 West Main Street TLarge and convenient sample roon-. h. uul u co,Q water, and modrra eon veniences Bar stocked with Ust "e liquora First-class livery att.chfd EXCHANGE HOTEL I. A. Snyder, Proprietor. (Opposite the Court House) BLOOMSBURG, Pa. l arge and convenient sample looms, U roomi hotttH ecld w.ter, -vVJ in tT Jtriinectfc.