THE COLUMBIAN. BLOOMSBUKU PA. PASSING OF THE CHINESE. In Fifty Years Will Be Extinct Under" Pres.-rt Laws. In iifty yt-iirw it;i :,ii;iH lesH than filly. It tho present laws rrmiiin In ill'i i-t unil arc r,,idly i c cnicd .)io Cliinosu nil,ii inn nf I.H' I'liiicil St.iti.-s will In conic 1 Tactically exlinet. Klniir 4.s: tj r.HiO, tiny Icll away fniiii ll'ii.TVS to ll.i.n.Mt, a (Ii-iti-iimi; of near! cllit tliniisaiiil, or niorc than six per ci nl. In tin! fiscal yc:ir ending Junu Hit, liMC!. more tliaii lour Hum mini voluntarily left the port of San KiuucIhco lor the land of their birth, the total deported and retiirtiini; vol untarily hciiiK .l.ojn. A very large majority of these Milnnmiii were ad vanced In jears, and w.nt home to die. A jtencrath.n ko, th ie were in Snn Francisco from thirty to forty thousand Chinamen. The Chijiestj CousulCOncral thcro told me that, counting men, women and children, there are now not In, nun. The samo proportion a )( decrease is mii in olh cr places. It should he home In mind that the total numlier of Chinese now It) l ho t'nitcd States liirlinles LTlTOT In Hawaii and .t.lUi in Alaska, so that, at the lii-KiimiiiK of this di nnial period there were livia:; in the Cnited States proper only mi, (urn. ;v genera tion no, thcro were at least I'.O.onn. Accordlni; to the most liberal esti mate, thcro are not more than one hundred mid fifty legal Chinese wives In San Kranelsro. Hut the number ii Chinese women Is et:tim:iiel at be tween one thousand and two thou sand, or such female children as are torn to the lowest class, a lnre pro portion are sold for Immoral purposes by their Jiarcnts, thus still further re ducing the possibilities of an increas ed population. The. main adult population M male; to unmarried, or, at 1,'ast, wifeless In America ; anil is rapidly approaching old age. Thus by or 1340. the main Chinese life In America will have becomo extinct. World's Work. Mining for Rubies in India. The system practiced lor obtaining rubles In tho mining districts in JJur man is of the most primitive doscrip. lion. The mining sliatts are simply holes about two feet scinare sunk to a depth varying up to filly or sixty feot. The. shoring up of the walls of the shaft Is most crude, the sides being supported by posts at the corners and brunches of small trees secured care fully against the sides by means of stout sticks. The miner carries a tin pot similar In Bhape to a blunt-edged cone, on his head. He squats down In one corner and digs between hls.kneos In the opposite corner. The earth or byou, as the ruby-bearing earth is called, is conveyed to the top, as fast as it is excavated, iu small buckets lot down irom above. The apparatus for raising uud low ering the buckets is simple in the ex treme. A stout bamboo post about twenty feet high, called a mating dine, is fixed upright In the ground at a convenient distance from the pit or dwin, uud a long, thinner bamboo pivoted horizontally into iho upper eud of it so as to project an eighth irom the mine and the long arm to ward the mine. Search Light. Vicissitudes of Paintings. Many and strange have been the vicissitudes of some of the world's fjcatept pictures, and a fine painting which now graces Lord Leigh's resi dence In Warwickshire. KngUnd, litis an Interesting history. This remark able picture, which for t.omo years consisted of a painting of flowers, was pronounced by uu urt dealer to be merely a mask for some other picture, and on his receiving permission he gradually cleaned on the llowers, dis covering underneath a very fine por trait of Charles I by Vandyke. It la supposed that the portrait was thus disguised in order to save it from de struction by the Roundheads at the time of the commonwealth. Feminine Guile. Some women when staying at hotels do not cure to exhibit to the passers along the corridors the exact size of their feet, so they carefully carry with them a couple of pairs of tiny, delicate shoes, which, Instead of the ones they aro wearing, they place out sido their doors for the servants to take down and clean. All the big hoot shops In Paris now make a spe cialty of this tiny footgear, and a pair or two form a portion of the trousseau of every up-to-date bride. Impurclal, Madrid. Slaves of Orthography. Perhaps wo make too much of ac curate spelling as an educational tst A century ago many oople of high Intelligence and considerable attain ments spelt very ill according to our standards. Hut there the standard Is; and I don't know who is daring enough to ask any convocation of schoolmasters to alter It. illustrated London News. Nature's Barometer. A Btnall stone has been lodged in the British Museum; it Is somewhat of a mystery. It has been named the emakulr; it Is a native of Finland, and the Finns tell the weather hy it. The explanation Is that the stone changes its appearance through ah ' sorblng the moisture In the air pre ceding rain, turning It black. Chic. Vaccination was made compulsory ' in the city of Madras In 1884. Be fore that date there were hundreds, often thousands, of deaths a year; now the deaths rarely exceed ten. A pig is usually kept In every stable to Tersla; it Is thought Us presence U beneficial to the health of the horses. , PUNISHMENTS IN CHINA. Many Cruel Forms Abolished Forever. Others Modified. Wn Tlng-fung, long Chinepn minister in Washington, has sun ceded In Induc ing the Imperial government at 1'r-Mn to abolish some of Its cruel punish ments An Imperial edict c.lve Wu and Short Chlapi n credit Tor suirrcsting the chancs and then proceed "At the beginning of the dynasty when our Rover. U-iit y extended within the great wall, the most severe punishment was beheading. In the year of Hsln Jul, lowrver, when we revised the laws, wo permitted the Introduction of these punishments which had been prevalent In the Ming dynasty, hence ling till (cutting to pieces) was allowed for cer tain crimes Now that we are once more revising the laws, therefore) wo hereby order that for all varlu'lnns of the crime, of taking life, beheading phtill be the extreme penalty In future; ling chl, exposure of the detachnl head, find mutilation of the corpse must bo abolished forever." The penalty of chau hslao, or what might, be termed compound decapita tion, or the (Tilire removal of the head and exposure of the same, must herc nfter rend rhan dutch or strangulation on sentence This Is supposed to be a far more honorable death than decnpl tatlon and was formerly reserved for princes and other grent men. Another Important reform Is th nh olllton of the "condemned" brand on the faces of prisoners. Hitherto all who hne been sentenced to banish ment for robbery and other serious crimes, have been tattooed on the faen, In order to marl; them as criminals for lif. FIRE WORSHIP IN SCOTLAND. Ancient Cu3tcm Still Practiced In Certain Sections. RemlnlFcences of the pre-Christian days of Haal worship and fire worship are still to be found occasionally In Scotland. A few years ago a traveler wrote: "On the last day of the year, old style, which falls on Jan. 12, the festival of 'the clavle' takes place In Bnrghcad, a fishing village near For res. On a headland In that village still stands an old Roman altar, locally called the 'duuro.' On the evening of Jan. 12 a large tar barrel Is set on fire and cat lied by one of the fishermen round the town, while th assembled folk shout and halloo. If the man who carries the barrel falls. It Is an evil omen. The man with the lighted bar rel, having gone with It round the town, carries It up to the top of the hill and places It on the 'dottro.' "More fuel Is Immediately added. The sparks as they fly upward are sup posed to bo witches and evil spirits leaving the town. The people, there fore, Fhout at and curse them ns they disappear In vacancy. When the burn tug barrel falls In pieces the fisher wives rush In and endeavor to get a lighted bit of wood from its remains. With this light the fire on the cottage hearth Is at once kindled and It Is con sidered lucky to keep this fianie all the rest of the year. The charcoal of the 'clavle' is collected and put in bits up the chimney, to procnt the witchea and evil spirits from entering the house. How to Cut Glass. Glass can be cut without a diamond, nnd the way is very simple. Dip a piece cf common string in alcohol and siiutcze it reasonably dry. Then tie the string tightly around the glass on the line of cutting. Touch a match to the string and let It burn off. While it U hot plunge the glass under water, letting the nrm go uudir well to the elbow so there will be no vibration when the glass Is struck. With the free hand strike the gluss outside the line of cutting, giving a quick, sharp sttoke with any long, flat instrument, such ns a stick of wood or a long-hlad-ed knife, and the cut will be as clean and straight as if made by a regular glass cutter. The Art of Tattooing. The master of the tattooing art In Japan is Chyo, who can produce such pictures on the human skin as are the envy of all rivals. He has photographs of nil his more Important works, most of the originals having been produced on the cuticle of English and American travelers. Two of the most remarka ble are a huge dragon in three colors, covering an American doctor's back entirely, while another is a life-sized fly, which was put on an Englishman's wrist to naturally that one would feel tempted to call his uitention to the fact if one were not told that it wua the work of the tuttoing needle. Chyo's work Is recognized by his countrymen at a glance, and Is looked uputt with much respect. The Nose and Deafness. Dr. Wallace Mackenzie of Welling ton, New Zealand, reports the case of n bealthv man who came to him be- . cause of deafness following an opera tion on his nose. Examination re vealed the fact that both nostrils had grown together. The niun was chloro formed, tho uostrils reopened with the ,1 ,,1-nv, inter! from orowillir tO- tvillic nnu - " 1 get her again by plating In each a little J cylinder of celluloid prepared from a ' photographic film. Two weeks after I the operation hearing was greatly im : proved and eventually almost com ' pletely restored. Japanese Economy In War. Japan's war department Is econom ical. Tho worn-out socks, stockings nnd other hosiery used by tho troops In Manchuria were sent back to Japan to be remade into knitting yarns. These are then given out to hosiery manufac turers and reknitted hy machinery into underwear, which was reshippod to the r.cat ;f war. 18 ENGLAND DEGENERATING? Statistics Taken from the British Army Confirm That View. Arnold White has written as follows In the London Chronicle of physical degeneration in England: "The Ger mans. drink nn enormous quantity of beer, but there Is no class in (lermany of drink-sodden, dirty and broken mothers such as we produce by tho thousand. When Talne was shown the' ne.iiuy side of Indon he said that the! rush of the Inhabitants of an east I.011 don slum Into a wide street when at-j traded by the spectacle of nn accident! was like ft human sewer emptying It self. Uerore the outbrenk of the Afri' inn war, of 1 1, flue men who w ished to enlist In Manchester, only a little ovet j l.ntm could be sent into the army. The Scotch highbinders and the Irish peas- , nn try are healthy, but English towns- , men can no longer vie In war with the Tyroleso and Itavarlan mountaineers tlie Inhabitants of east Prussia, tti( French peasantry, the Montenegrins ol the hardy Russians. ! "Iliii.iin's soldiers are born of moth ers directed by the normal condition of town life, both moral and physical. The averagf stay in hospital of soldiers affected by one preventable disease is "2 days. Thus In one year we have a to u i,,; s of 1,?:!S,fiS8 days army serv ice. Two hundred and three soldiers In the liritlsh home army go sick out of every 1,000; in the French conscript army only 13 become Invalids. 1 "In 1813 the standard of height for admission to the army was five feet six Indies; In 1S83 it was five feet three Inches, ami In 19u0 five, fed. There l a progressive decline In the average weight. As the British army Is ten times more unhealthy than the Gor man, It loses threo times as many by dotth." Customs In China. China, as seen with our eyes, Is gro tesque. She Is the antipodes of all the rest of the world. She seems the up side down of everything. The needle iu her compass points to the south, she says west north instead of north west. ) She enjoys her fireworks In the day time; her ladles use wheelbarrows when they are making calls; they drive cows Instead of horses; the necks of their prisoners are put in the stocks; their surname conies first, as Roosevelt Theodore; they mount their horses from the right side; the old men fly kites, while the small boys sit demure ly und watch them; they keep on their hats as a sign of respect; their ctim sou visiting cards must be a burden to them if they do much calling, as they are four feet long aud about two wide; their boats are drawn by men, their carriages by sails; they never drink milk and their mourning color is white or pale blue. Their young women, no matter how beautiful they may be, according to Chinese Ideas, are slaves, while the old mother of grown pons and the wrinkled grandmothers are querns, and the most respected and beloved members of tho household. Even the emperor's moth er ranks higher than he does. When a son Is fortunate enough to receive an honorable decoration, he brings It to his mother, who wears it for him. Sunset Magazine. Owls Electrocuted. THie temporary suspension of work at the mine and mill of the Graulte Bimetalllc Mining Co., at Pittsburg, caused by an, owl becoming entangled iu tut- wires, recalls the fact that since the transmission line was put In com mission, nearly four years ugo, 25 owls have been electrocuted by coming in contact with the wires, and since No vember of last year 12 fine specimens of the owl family have gone to owl land over this route. The transmission line is 11 miles in length and fur nishes a current of 10,000 volts to tho mine and mill, No. 4 copper wire being used. The line traverses a wild and unsettled country, the abiding place of all kinds of wild beasts and birds. Anaconda Standard. i Goats as Pilots. 1 In Switzerland uud other mountain ous countries goats lead long strings of animals dally to and from the moun--tains, but it is In Sout Africa that the gout is regularly kept and employed as a leader of sheep. Should a blinding storm of rain or hail drive the sheep before It, or cause them to huddle to gether In a corner, so that there Is a danger of their suffocating each other, the trained goat will wake them up, and, by a method of his own, induce them to follow him to a place of aafeiy. The Money-Mad Poor. It is a great mistake to suppose that every rich man is money mad, for many rich men are money sick, and it is a still greater mistake to suppose that tho only money mad people In the world aro rich people. A man who Is poor but bent on becoming rich Is much more likely to be mouoy mad than a man who has an Independent fortune, only he shows It In a different way. A man of large fortune who Is money mad shows It by his continued activity in money making. The poor man who Is money mad shows it by envying and hating those, who are more successful. Chicago Chronicle. Consumption of horse fieeh is largely Increasing In Berlin and Its suburbs, where 250 horse slaughter houses exist. Many dealers have become so opulent that they have exchanged the bumble cell us where they formerly carried -m business for handsome shops. In other large towns the same state of affairs obtains, especially in Hamburg, where the annual consumption Is computed to be 5,000 horses, much of which, how ever is used in sausage manufactories, j A grocer who sands his sugar has rn'itt L'rlt V.:?.n principle. COTTON FROM FIRWOOD. Difficult to Distinguish the Natural from the Artificial. CJiton, which used to be born, la now being made from flrwood which has been fried from bark and knots. The fibers are broken up by a special machine, and tire then placed In a lead lined copper cylinder having a capacity of 100 cubic centimeters. Into tills steam Is Introduced for ten hours by means of a pipe in the bottom. At Iho end of that time tiO cubic cen timeters of soda lye are poured In nnd boiled for 3ii hours under a pressure of three atmosphi tes. The material is then wn lnd and thoroughly crushed, nfier which It is bleached and dried. The pure ccllulofo thus obtained Is treated In an nutodaro containing a mixture of zinc chloride, hydrochloric acid, and nitric add, to which a lit.le castor oil. cnselno, nnd glycerine arc milled. Tho fibre, after being further reduced. Is passed through a weak so lution of carbonate of soda, and then between drying rollers. The necessary firmness Is given to the thread by finally putting it in a bath of diluted ammonia and then washing it with cold water. The sub stance thus made may be easily woven and dyed. When the artificial product la compared with tho natural it Is s:ld to bo difficult to distinguish the differ ence, nnd It Is even assorted that the former mny be so economically pro duced ns to ho able to compete with the latter. Chicago Tribune. Chinese Porcelain. Chinameu have been exporting their porcelain to tho west for at least a thousand years, and probably longer Mediaeval Europe could make nothing like porcelain, and therefore regarded it as a magical product endowed with uncanny powers. It was said, for in stance, that a porcelain cup would break If poison were poured into It Travelers declared that porcelain was composed of various substances which, ttfter being tempered, were hidden In the ground for ages before being fit for use. Even so erudite a man as Sir Thomas Browne, writing iu the later seventeenth century, was "not thor oughly resolved, concerning porcellane or china dishes, that according to com mon bolief they are made of earth.' The secret of the true Chinese porce lain was first discovered in Europe a generation later by tne German cbem 1st Hottger, the Inventor of what is now known as Dresden china. Unique Lighthouse. The most extraordinary of all Brit- lsh lighthouses is to be found on Am- ish Rock, Stornoway Bay a rock which is separated from uic Island of Lewis by a channel over 000 feet wide. On this rock a conical beacon is erect ed, aud on its summit a lantern is fixed, from which, night after night, shines a light which is seen by tho fish ermen far and wide. The way in which the lighthouse Is illuminated is this: On tho Island of Luwls is a lighthouse, and from a window in tho tower a stream of light Is projected on to a mirror in tho lantern on the summit of Arnlsh Rock. Exchange. Compulsory M. P.'s. The Norwegian parliament consists of lit members, many of whom sit In the house under protest. All Norwe gians over 25 years of ago who satisfy certain conditions of residence, etc., meet In the local parish church once in three years and choose one man out of every luo present to select the mem hers of parliament for the country. The men so selected are bound to serve, whether they like the honor or not, Immediately parliament meets oue fourth of the members are chosen to form the upper house, tho remaining three-fourths constituting the lower house. 1'uiladelphia Ledger. In a Glacier 28 Years. In an almost perfect state of preser vation, and easily recognizable, the dead body of a guide named Nagl, a native of Aosta, Italy, who fell Into a crevice in 1877 near the summit of Monta Rosa, was recently recovered from the Ice. Nagl was descending the mountain in company with two Milanese Alpin ists when he suddenly disappeared, anj the cord which bound him to the oth ers was cut by a sharp piece of ice. A search party made many vain attempts to recover the body. London Mall. How Birds Doctor Themselves. Certain birds seem to possess a re markable Instinct for surgery. The woodcock, the partridge and some oth ers are said to be able to dress their wounds with considerable skill. A nat uralist observes that he has shot sev etal woodcock that were recovering from wounds previously received. In every instance he found the injury nently dressed with down plucked from the stems of feathers and skillfully ar ranged over the wound, evidently by the long beak of the bird. In other cases ligatures had been applied to wounded or broken limbs. Exchange, Rich Americana Abroad. A cynical highland gillie thus ex plains a certain rich American's action in paying $25,000 as a year's rental for a castle in the north of Scotland: "He pays $5,000 for the house, $5,000 for the fishing, $5,000 for the deer, $5,000 for the grouse and $5,000 for being near Balmoral, where the king occasionally visits." It appears that spies In the form of nurses have been Introduced In con siderable numbers Into the families of French officers by some unnamed Eu ropean power. The government has Informed corps commanders about it. The largest flour mill In the British i empire la in Moutreal. It turns out 1 5,'Juy barrels of flour a duy. Vfccolne Law Valid Test Cmp Brought In Franklin County and Judge Rule that Child Cannot Enter School Inlil Vaccinated All casts in t lie Franklin County County Court were s-.t aside Tues day afternoon to hear argument on the application to make permanent a preliminary injunction to restrain Supetitiiendent J. II. Kther, Prin cipal Charles II Coover and Ches ter Geesaman, a teacher of the Sny der Avenue Public School, in Waynesboro, from refining to ad mit Grace Stull, daughter of lid ward Stull, to the school. ' Charles Walter aud A. W. Gil lan were allowed to intervene in behalf of the State Hoard of Health. The first witness called was Iidward C. Stull, ol Waynesboro, whose daughter is not vaccinated and be cause of that would not be allowed admission to school. O. C. llowers argued that the law (iocs not apply to townships, merely to municipalities, and is therefore special legislation and un constitutional. He made a strong plea and cited many authorities Charles Walter quoted Supreme and lower court decisions uphold ing the law, and Judge I). W. Rowe, in a long and careful opinion, took the view that the Legislature had power to pass such a law. The statute has been upheld by various courts, including the su preme tribunal of the state. The court dissolved the injunc tion, placing the costs on the plain tiffs. Tuberculusis is Nt Hereditary- Or, Dixon Says II Can Be Communicated By Contact Only. State Health Officer Dixon was shown a statement made by Arthur B. Reeve in ' Public Opinion," this mcnth. in which he says that "one seventh of the deaths in the cities thronehotit the world are caused by tuberculosis, and that in the face of the assertion of one of the most eminent specialists that when the people can be aroused to com prehend the truth and to do their dutv ' in two generations a case of consumption will be as much of a rarity as a case of leprosy now is." "I would not draw the line so close as two generations," said Dr. Dixon, "but I would say that if the people were aroused to the danger of coming in contact with tubercu losis, and were taught the methods to prevent contagion they would have it iu their power to eliminate tuberculosis in a very few genera tions. "Tuberculosis is not inherited, as I have always maintained, but it is only by coming in contact with it that the disease is contracted. I have made repeated experiments to prove this, and to my mind have succeeded in proving it to the satis faction of thoe who have made the subject a study." Election Dotice. The annual meeting of the stock holders of the Pennsylvania Copper & Mining Company, for the pur pose of electing a Board of Direct ors for the ensuing year, will be held at their office at Central, Col umbia County, Pa., on Monday, January Sth, 1906, at 10 o'clock a. m. Tolls will remain opeu until 4 o'clock p. m. J. P. Fritz, i2-7-5t Sec. Election Notice, The annual meeting of the stock holders of the Farmers Fationnl Bank of Bloomsburg, Pa. for the election of directors for the ensuing y ar will be held at their Banking room Tuesday, January 9, 1906, between the hours of 2 and 4 p. m. 4t M MlLLKISKN Cashier. CHARTER NOTICK. Notice is hereby Riven tlrnt an application will be liiudu to tli" Oovernor of I lie Htulo of Pennsylvania on the:trd day of January, A. I)., ....... w... 1 I l.iUull.l 1). I Invil. im'ii, i'v i. u'mu .n 11 i'i tj . ,li.T,.(, ... Max Kaiser, L. II. Yountr, K. H. Vau Horn, Oeoive W. Sterner and ot tiers under the Act, of lie Commonwealth ot Pennsylvania entitled "Ull ft! I lUirilVHIH I'M IU" n ui ,... ..... regulation ot certain Corporations," approved April siH, ls7-, and the supnlments thereto for the char er of an lnlinded Coi.oratlon to ho called tho Hemlock Mllllnit Company the .. ...... .. .-.A ,.hii,ni ie i.rl.i..l. Iu riii I In. ntirnonn unilini:i.-i nun wujdi.i' i . ii.i.i. . ...i....... of iiianuractiirlntf, buying, selling or otherwise. UlspoHIIlK 01 liuur, leeu, unu ut ut'i i:iiiiiiu.-i .i mlninir products and other materials known to .1... .....1 fn. In tlUV.4 111 lU 1 1 ir- ti 111111 uiiti 11. 1 unci' jiii a ... , , sess and enjoy, all tho rights, beneltts and privileges of Hie said Actot assembly and Its HUppluuent. CHRISTIAN A. SMALL, 'l!-M-4t' Solicitor. Professional Cards. C. WATSON McKELVY, FIRE INSURANCE AGENT. (Successor to B. F. Hartman Represents twelve ot tho st rongott Compos los tu the world, among which are: CASH TOTAL IDBFLCI CAPITAL. ASKBTR. OVIB ALL Franklin of l'UUa.. $-i0i,we $n,lw,S2 fi,ow,5 I'enn'a, l'hlla 400,000 n,K's,ti.o I,!9, Queen, of N. Y 500,000 3,Ms,V1s 1,01,8 UeHH-heMcr.N.Y. SuO.CcO l.VM.siff Ays, N. America, i'nlia. S.00MO0 H.THO.WH S,m Office First Nat'l Hank lildg., ad floor. All claims promptly adjusted and paid. II A. McKII.LIP. A I TOKnKV at-law Columbian Building, 2nd Floor, r.lnonisbiirtj, Pa. A. N. YOST, A t IOHNKV AT LAW. F.nt Ilinldirg, Count House Square, liioomsburg, Pa. KAl.l'H. K. JOHN, ATTORNEY AT LAW. Hartman Building, Market Square. Bloomsburg, Pa. 1 KKI IKKLKR, ATIOKNKY-AT-LAW. Office Over First National Bank. U'uomsburg, Pa, CI.VDK CHAS. YKTTER, ATTOKNKY CT t.AW. Office in Wirt's Building. JJ'oomsburg, Pa. 4- W. H. RHAVVN, ATTORNKY-AT-LAW. Office Corner of 3rd and Main Sts. CATAWISSA, PA. CM NTOnIi ERRI KG. ATTORNEY AT LAW. Office with Orant Herring, Bloomsburg, Pa. In Orangeville Wednesday each wee John (j. Vnrrr.r John (i 1Urma FRFFZIi & HARMAN ATTORNEYS AND COUNSELLORS AT IJ Bloomsburg, Pa. Office on Centre Street, 1st doer belo Opera House. A. L. FRITZ, A STORNEY-AT-LAW. Office Bloomsliurg NatM Panic Bldg Bloomsburg, Pa. J. H. MABZE ASUORN'EY AT LAW, INSURANCE REAE ESTATE AGENT Office in Townsend'g building Bloomsburg, Pa, fr. U. FUNK. ATTORNEY AT LAW Knt's Uuiliiing, Court House Square Bloomsburg, Pa. SADE T. VANNATTA (Successor to C P. K- app) GENERAL INSURACE Office 238 I on St., Bloomsburg, V. Oct. 31, 1901. If M. P. LUTZ & SON, : INSURANCE and REALESTAT A(i! N ' S AND BrOKhKS. JN. W, Corntr Main and Centre Sta. lil.OOMSIIURG, Pa. Represent Seventeen as good Companies there ate in the World nnd nil loses promptly adjusted anil paid nt their oliice. DR. W. H. HOUSE SURGEON DENTIST Office Barton's I!uildin(, Main below Market Bloomsburg, Pa. All styles of work done in a su) erior manna All work warranted ns represented TEETH EXTRACTED WITHOUT PAIN by the use of (las. and free of charge who artificial teeth are inserted Open all hours during the day DR. M. J. HESS DENTISTKY IN ALL ITS U RANCHES Crown and bridye work a specialty Corner Main and Centre streets Bloomsburg, Pa. Colnmhla A Montour Telephone connectlom J. J. BROWN, M. D. THE EYE A SPECIALTY. Eyes tested and fitted with glasses. No Sunday work. 311 Market St., Bloomsburg, Ps, Hours: 10 to 8 Telcphoae J. S. JOHN M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Office and residence, 410 Main St. 7-3-v BLOOMSBURG, PA EDWARD. FLYNN, ATTORNEY AT LAW, CENTRALIA, PA. "Offlce Llddlcot building, Locust avenue II. MONTGOMERY SMITH, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Office: Ent huilding, 11-16-99 WILLIAM C. JOHNSTON, ATTORNEV-AT-LAW. Office in Wells' Building over J. O. Wells' Hardware Store, Bloomsburg, Will be in Millville on Tuesdays. EXCHANGE HOTJ1.L I. A. Snyder, Proprietor. BLOOMSBURG, Pa. Large and convenient sample rooms, bath rooms hot anil cold water and ill mo 'em conveniences CITY HOTEL, W. A. llartzel, l'rop. No. iai West Main Street 3TL.art;e and convenient sample ruotrt, ba rooms, but and Cold wnter. and n-i'iter" con veniences. Bar stocked with best wine nd nUors r irst-class livery uiti ctd. MONTOVKTSt.KPIlONI. BILL TILIrBOMI YSS TSHTKIl, OLASBIB K1TTSD. II. BIF.RMAN, M. I) UOMCEOPATIIICI'IIYHICIAN AND olKOBOH Ofpicb boi'ks: uflleo A Residence, 4th HU 0 a, m. to K p. in., ti.ao to 8 p. m. BLOOMSiHTKO, PA
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers