4 THE COLUMBIAN, BLOOMSBURO. PA. STRONGEST BANK Capital SIOO.OOO. Undivided Profits S30.000. First National Bank, ttF BIAtOMSIUJR, PA. MAKE NO MISTAKE BUT DEPOSITYOUR SAV INGS IN THE STRONGEST BANK. OFFIOKRBi W. M. Low, President. J. M. Btaver, Vice resident. E. B. Tustln, Vice President. E. F. Carpenter, Cnshler. DIRECTORS: S W. M. Low, F. G. Yorks, Frank Ikeler, Joseph Itattl, ri. B. Tustln, Fred Ikeler, J. M Btaver, M. I. Low, THE COLUMBIAN. ESTABLISHED 1866. THE COLUMBIA IOEMOCRAT, Established 1837. Consolidated 1869 I'urlisued Every Thursday Morning, At Blojmsbnrg, the County Seat of Columbia County, Pennsylvania. GEO. E. EI.WELI., I'ditor. GEO. C. ROAN, Foreman . Tsrmm Inside the county ij r.oo a year In aivance; $1,501! not paid in advance. Outside thecounty, $1.25 ye.-ir, strictly in Alva iice. All communications should beaddressed THE COLUMBIAN, HIoomsburR, Ta. THURSDAY, JANUARY 24, 1907 WASHINGTON From our Kent1'' Correspondent. Washington, D. C.Jan. 24, 1907. As there is not the slightest pros pect of tariff revision at the present session, one ought to be thankful eveu for such a thing as "near re vision." Secretary Root has ad vanced a proposal for a maximum and a maximum tariff that ought to prove something of a paliative measure while real revision is still lying dormant. Tnere is a meeting i 1 Washington this week of a coo- niioa for the encouragement of .'. ujrican foreign trade. This body .s meeting simultaneously with the .V-itioml Board of Trade, repre- itiug all the Boards of Trade and Chambers ol Commerce in the Unit ed States. Secretary Root deliver ed an address before this body this week in which he suggested a var iable tariff as a better thing for the country than reciprocity treaties. He poiuted out that with the pres ent hi?h tariff law no foreign couu try was given any inducement to treat the United States exports 011 a preferential basis. Other coun tries knew that no matter what they might concede us they would be no better off commercially in the end. He said, on the other hand, that if the President were given dis cretion in scaling down the duties on certain articles to a maximum of 20 per cent, of the present rates he would be in a position to nego tiate with other countries and offer them something tangible in return for preferential treatment at their hands. This contention was reason able enough and is quite true so tar as it goes, lacking a complete re vision of the tariff, it is a very ex cellent plan and one that ought to be adopted. But both friends and enemies of the tariff know that re vision ultimately will have to come. That the majority of schedules un der the Dingley law are now inor dinately high and work a hardship on the entire population when the need for them in fostering infant industries has long s nee disappear ed. Anything short of a decent and far reaching revision can be considered little else than a make shift, though even with a generally reduced tariff Secretary Root's plan for a maximum and minimum rate of duty is one that could well be considered. Coneress conterunlates an annrn tr 1 fyriation and nrnhahlv will unta rr r-- .j . v V V II it this week which is of interest to all southern states having swam lands within their borders. There are 6,000,000 acres of these lands and most of them are in the south ern states. The plan contemplated Is to drain them and reclaim them as agricultural land and the appro priation will be with a view to as certain just what this reclamation scheme would cost and how land values would be enhanced under it. Much of the work has been done in a tentative way by the Geologi cal Survey already. Topographi cal maps which are being made of the whole United States have been extended over these swamp areas and the drainage line indicate very accurately what an immense amount IN THE COUNTY Surplus $150,000 Geo. H. Bobbins, 8. C. Creasy, Louis Gross, II. V. 1 lower. of valuable ground could be reclaim ed at a comparatively trifling cost. The scheme officials have in mind is more or less on a par with the irrigation work which the national government is now carrying out in the west. The land would be drain ed at a comparatively small cost and sold to settlers at decidedly in creased value. The money thus gained would be used to drain nnd reclaim otlKr land which in turn would be sold. Thus the reclama tion work would be an endless chain till the whole of the six mill ion acrcshad been reclaimed. Work already done by private enterprise shows that the drained land is among the best of the agricultural land in the world and the plan looks very promising. Hope is rising among the friends oi ship subsidy over the prosp ct of getting such a measure to a vote on the floor of the House at the present session. A bill providing for an annual apnrop-iation of not more than $3 750,000 has be. 11 re ported out of the House Committee and will probably g;t a hearing in the House itself within the ext few weeks. The plan is volumi nous in detail and provides for many bouth American and trans pacific lines employing a total of about forty ships all of which will have to be built in American ship yards owned by American citizens and repaired in American dry docks. There is not much question that if such a measure ever passes the House it will go through the Senate with the greatest ease, for here is the stronghold of ship sub sidy. But the democratic members of the House promise tcf fight the bill uncompromisingly and have an nounced their intention to filibuster against it as long as posssb'.e. Quite a tempest has been raised in the s-ocial tea pot over the an notince:iieut that Chile contemplat es raising the rank of her legation j here to the dignity of an embassy. 1 here is now ouly one ambassador from South America, the one from Brazil. If Chile raised the rank ol her representative it will of course necessitate raising the rank of our present minister to Chile. Thia will entail some expense but is a social luxury which we probably would be willing to'pay for. How ever, the pinch comes from the fact that if Chile does raise the rank of her legation here she will undoubt edly soon be followed by Argentine and a number of the smaller Soutu American Republics. This would give a lot of the little countries' re presentatives in Washington equal in rank to those of the great powers of Europe and this is a thing which the great powers are very loath to see happen. Consequently there is much heart breaking and jealousy under the surface, not owing so much to the political, as to the social aspects of the case. More lions have There Is one thing that will cure it Ayer's Hair Vigor. It Is a regular scalp-medicine. It quickly destroys the germs which cause this disease. The unhealthy scalp becomes healthy. The dandruff disap pears, had to disappear. A healthy scalp means a greatdeal to you healthy hair, no dan druff.no pimples.no eruptions. The beat kind oi a testimonial "Sold lor over sixty years." A Mlby J.O. AynrOo., Lowall, Uus. wauuiiutunri 01 9 SARSiPiDII I 1 I iOYQ PILLS. ly W O CHtKltY PECTORAL. been discovered For that Dandruff in the path of the Panama Canal progress. Considerable ado is be ing made over a report that there are no. foundations where the great Gatun dam will eventually be lo cated. Now Wi Gatun dam will be the biggest thing of its sort in the world. It is the keystone to the whole structure o! a lock canal across the isthmus. At one lime or another covert opponents of the Canal scheme have intimated that borings on the south of the propos td d'tm show 110 rock foundation, but ouly a thin stratum of clay un derlaid by mud. Last week the Committee on the Canal called for a specific report on this point from the Isthmian Canal Commission. The report together with borings on the spot was transmitted, but the Commission a.-ked that this in formation be held as confidential. ELECTION REFORMS. Whatever may be the motive for the movement for an amendm;ut of the State Constitution doing away with the February election, it is one which will command the approval of many citizens regardless of party nlhltations. Too much time and money ate spent in the formalities attending the choice of public offi cers, and the disturbing effect of year-long electioneering campaigns is an economic waste that cannot but be harmful. If an arrangement could lie devised by which munici pal, on the one hand, and State and national elections, on the other, could be wholly separated, the chance of divorcing municipal from State and national politics would be greatly increased. Possibly this can be done, but it must be obvious that .vsclated at tempts to correct defects in our election machinery are liable to do more harm than good. A genuine ballot relorm, that will simplify the duty of the voter at the polls by eliminating duplication of names and abolishing the party square, is just as vital a feature in the pro gramme of election legislation. Then, too, the operation of the registration laws, and perhaps ;-f the uniform primary law, may re veal weaknesses and errors (hat will have to be corrected. A far tetter way of approaching the problem, and one in accordance with the new political regime, would be the appoiutment cf a non partisan commission to study the whole question and prepare a har monious and complete measure for the consideration of the people. By this means the suspicion of partisan advantage that is sure to attach to any project fathered by the "lead ers" would be removed, and the prospect of real and lasting reforma tion would be immensely greater than by any tinkering that can be doue by unrelated and inharmoni ous bodies of citizens. Phila. Record. - Envelopes 75,000 Envelopes carried in stock at the Columbian Office. The line includes drug envelopes, pay, coin, baiouial, commercial sizes, number 6, 6l2, 6, 9, 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 S'.or. tf Other Inaugurations in May. Honry Houck and Robert K. Young Will Take Placet Then. The inauguration of Henry Houck as secretary ot internal af fairs and of Robert K. Young as auditor general will take place in May. The time of Inauguration was made different from that of governor because of a desire not to rave too many changes at once and because of fiscal arrangements. The constitution in Article IV, Section 21, prescribed that the secretary shall serve four years and the au ditor general three, , the latter, like the State treasurer, not being eligi ble for re-election. Mr. Young win pe tne tnirty second man to be commissioned auditor general and the eighteenth to be electe , by the people, as from 1789 to 1845 the uuditors were appointed by the Kovenior . and after 18 so elected The constitution created the office of secretary of luternal affairs in 1871 and nine men have heen rnm. missioned as secretaries, although the office of survevor general which was merged into it, was the oldest in Pennsylvania being naturally me most important under the pro prietary government, formerlly es tablished under the commonwealth j in 1781 and kept up under the title I until 1075. OASTOIitA. Bears ( ) Tho Kind Van flaw lvw RomM - n OPPOSED TO REPEAL OF 1 VACCINATION LAW. Or. Dixon Says Legislature Should Let Act Alone. Hatrisburg, Jan. 23. When asked today what he thought of the azitation to have the Legislature re peal the vaccination law, Doctor Dixon, Mate Health Commissioner, said that the records of the pat two weeks in his department should convince the people of the State that the only thing they have to do to have smallpox run riot through Pennsylvania was to take down the barriers that are thrown against it by vaccination. "A few days ago," said Doctor D:xon, "we received word that a child that had never been vacci nated had been brought from Wat kins, N. Y., to Wells, Bradford County, and had attended a school in Wells township for three days and was suffering with smallpox. "The disease spread rapidly, and there were striking examples of the penalty for the unvnecinated. In one household all the members of tie family, except a young girl who had been vaccinated, were stricken down with smallpox. There was not much tiouble when that outbreak started to get the mi vaccinated in that community to submit to vaccination. "Another nnvaccinated child was recently brought into a small village in Cumberland Countv from Ohio. and three other cases was the re sult. Only the other day we re ceived a message stating that a resi dent of Columbia had gone to pay a visit to a neighboring State, and upon his return home weiit down with smallpox. When we have endeavored to have the vaccination law enforce, ia the rural communities we have frequently been met by the state ment that there had not been a case of smallpox in the community for years, and, therefore, the people saw no necessity ot beitis: vacci nated. But to quote the strong argum3iit of Chief Justice Mitchell, of the Supreme Court of Pennsyl vania, immunity for forty years in the past affords no guaranty of im munity for even forty days in the future, if a chance visitor from an ufected locality or a borough resi dent returning irom a visit to such locality should bring with him the germs of infection.' 'How true was the picture that Justice Mitchell drew has been, shown by the imported cases of smallpox, which the State Depart ment of Healln has been called upon to fight within the past few days. "Germany and Japan are mak ing smallpox in their empires al most a thing cf the past by vacci nation laws far more rigid and far reaching than the one we have in Pennsylvania, and which the anti- vaccinationists declare they are going to use their influence with the present Legislature to repeal. It the Legislature takes any actiou regaiding vaccination I can only express the hope that it will be a step forward toward making our law a more effective barrier to smallpox rather than to move back ward to such a prevalence of small pox as existed in Germany and Ja pan before those countres began to hght this horrible disease by com pulsory vaccinatum. " ANTHRACITE OUTPUT. Nearly Six Million Tons Lest Than In 1906. December shipments ot anthracite continue to show a decrease, and the aggregate for the entire year of 1906, 55)698,595. was the smallest in any year since the strike year of 1902, when the tonnage aggregated but 31,200,890 tons. Compared with 1905, which was the banner year in the anthracite coal trade, with its aggregate tonnage of 61, 440,201 tons, there was a shrink age in 1906 of 5,711,606. This was due in a large measure to a stoppage of the mines in parts of March and April, pending the ad justment of the miners' grievances, and later on to the lack of trans portation facilities. The . greatest decrease in tonnage is shown by the Lehigh Valley, with a falling off of 1,535,866 tons, and the Read ing next, with a drcrease of 1,324,- 207 tons. The Pennsylvania made the nearest approach to maintain ing its 1905 tonnage, its aggregate of 4,856,004 tons for 1906 being but 34,631 tons short. Get eV MEN'S (GOOD MEN'S GOOD OVERCOATS $18 for $10. $13.50 for $8 WE MOVE IH TWO MONTHS. TOWM M'TlUtfTflrllilfitfliffH Blanket Cotton Blankets 10-4 size in gray, white or brown start as low as 49c the pair. The 75c values for 65c. The &5c values for 70c. Fancy Stripe Cotton Blankets in blue and white, brown and white or pink and white combinations 10-4 size-regularly $1.00 the pair now 80c Extra size (12-4) White Cotton Blankets, regularly 1.60, now $1.25. Heavy Chester Gray Blankets, 114 size, regularly $1.75, now $1.50. - White Cotton Blankets 11-4 size, regularly $1.25, now &1.10. Silver fleece Blankets 11-4 size, regularly $3.75, now $3.15. White or Gray Wool Blankets 11-4 size, regularly $4.00, now $3.50 Gray 11-4 " " 4.75, ' 4.00 White or Gray " " 11-4 5,00 " 4.25 Gray " " H-4 " c.5o! " 5.25 Gray Beautiful White Wool Blankets 11-4 size with pink, red or blue bor. ders tho very acme of perfection In blankets from the very best people In the business bargains every one. Those marked $7.00 are now $5.08. Those marked $9.00 now $7.75 Those marked $8.50 are now $7.25. Crib blankets reduced proportionately. BED FURNISHINGS Sheets, Pillow Cases and Counterpanes all at a saving. COTTON COMFORTABLES Prettily covered with Silakline and Sateen $1.00 ones reduced to $ .85 1.25 ones reduced to 1.10 1.75 ones reduced to 160 2.39 ones reduced to 2.00 j D OWN QUILTwith covering ! $4.50 kind reduced to $3.98. F, P. BLOOMSBURG, Cut off that cough ana prevent pneumonia: ronchitig and The world's Standard Thmt A t wj2- r- mcuiuuc ior 75 yean it of your drogue and keep h 1 KStSSBSXZ&'if&TXfP syoTS mm Bargains! 11-4 7.00, 5.08 $2.08 ones reduced to $2.50 2.25 ones reduced to 1.98 2.50 ones reduced to 2.15 of the finest Sateen, beautiful colorings. $5.00 kind reduced to $4.60. PURSEL. - PENNA. with consumotion. ""e tfwtye readr b ti hoot.