THE COLUMBIAN. BLOOMS BUxoi. K I B Mil Covering Minor Happen tags from all Over the Globe. HOME AND rOREIQN Compiled and CondVnied for the Buny Header A Complete Record f European Despatches and Im portant Events f com Everywhere Loilod Down for Hanty rerusai. Fenate loaders Insist on giving In urtnee CommlsBlonor Otto Kelsoy a hearing In cotnmltteo. Representative John IS Reybura, moi-hlno candidate for Mayor of Phtlcdelphla, wag elected, over Will iam Potter That the River and Harbor Ap propriation bill and Ship Subsidy bill will be talked to death In the last hour of Congress Is the fear li Washington. Japan does not like tho amended exclusion law, bnt will accept It with resignation, despite protests from the Hawaiian Japanese. president Rooupvclt sent a letter to Governor Guild saying he would give a serious consideration to Mas sachusetts' petition for a tariff revis ion. Missing papers In Ico Trust prose cution were taken from tho deni of Julius M. Mayer In Allmny, N Y., when ho was Attorney General, evi dence adduced In the Inquiry did net warrant accusation agnlunt any one. Senators annulled tho Forestry I'u reauas extravagance and rut request ed f 1,000,000 appropriation down It 1000,000. To abolish the large Canal Advis ory Hoard the Senate Finance Com mittee will Introduce a bill In ths Legislature at Albany. Commissioner Bingham ordered n rigid Investigation of charges that detectives take mo:wy to protect pick pockets. Governor Hughes of New York, Cave Superintendent of Insurance Kelsoy a public hearing and obtain ed his admission that he had done nothing to place responsibility l'or abuses revealed in his department. The Senate committee reported the Naval Appropriations bill, pro viding for two now 20,000 ton battle hips Six seamen were drowned as two barges of the Philadelphia und Head ing Coal Company went to pieces off Highland Light. Mass. Detectives learned that William F. Walker, the missing banker of Con necticut, lost $350,000 to wire tap pet's In New York, who promised him profits of a million dollars. After u hard battle, counsel for Harry Thaw succeeded In reading In evidence the will and codicil execu ted by tho defendant on tho evening of hlh marriage to iCvtlyu Nesblt In April, 1&05. Liberal leaders In Cuba openly threaten to fight the United States If It remains In tho Island. Governor Hughes of New York, tent a sharp reply to Superintendent Kelsty'a letter uuklng reconsidera tion of the Executive's request to re sign, and will ask Senate to remove Mr. Kelsey at once. Theodore P. Shonts' recent speech Is regarded In Washington as Indi cating that corporations are disposed to co-operate with President Uoose velt In his trust policies. The secretary of the Union Bible Society of Worcester, Mars., declared the American Bible Society was a trust and bolstered up prices of Bibles. In Its final report tho special com mittee of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company vindicated the company's officers and employes as loyal aud efficient. The "Two Billion Congress" Is at hand, appropriations In the present short session being more than $1, 009,000,000. Mrs. Lottlo Wallnu, accused of murdering her mother, was remand ed to tho Tombs In Now York city to await the Inquest. Nearly all the securities stolen by William P. Walker, the missing New Britain, Conn., banker, have been found, but the names of the holdur.3 are withhold. John D. Rockefeller, Jr., In dis cussing herldity and environment told his Bible class that the respon sibility for the acts of tho child rests upon the parents. Judgo Kltts decided In Albany that Attorney General Jackson should not be restralnod from trying to oust Mayor McClellan of New York and that Mr. Jackson was not iu con tempt of court. Captain George McVey, of the wrecked steamboat tho Lurchniont, defended his courso In an official re port of the disaster. Mr. and Mrs. Georgo W. Morton, of New York, committed suicide to gether In a hotel In Tampa, Kla. Washington hotel men declared their opposition to nntl-tlpplns measure now pending before th9 House. House committee ugreed to favor ably report bill limiting train men's consecutive hours of duty. , Professor Brashear, of Pittsburg. Pa., announced the discovery of an noimous sun spot and predict-.-! eb-cti leal dl.turbunces. Of Interest To Women. To such women as aro not seriously out of healtlAbut who have exacting duties to perform, either In the way of house Ix Id curtsYir in social duties and tunc- 'oot!x'iV,!r'ous'y tax t'",,r "fciigth, ss weTfirTkourslng mothers, Dr. Pierce's Favorito PrvVrlptlon has proVcd a most valuable 8iiytltig tonic and Invigorat ing nervine. Hy Its . timely use, mneh serlnus slrknes and aullcriim may be .voided. The operating table und the surgeons' knife, would. t, Is lielievuT. Seldom have tn be employed If thin Mi""t, Vubmbh; woman's" remedy win; n -nrlid Lnlri trood time. Tho " Favorite Prescrip tion" lias proMMiu great boon to expectant mothers hy preparing the system for the coming of baby, thereby rendering child birth safe, rnsy, and almost painless. Bear In mind, plriisn that Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription Is not a secret or patent medicine, against which the most intelligent people, aro quite naturally averse, because of the uncertainty ns to their composition and hnrtnlcM character, btlt IS a MKMCINK OP KNOWS COMPOSI TION, a full list of nil Its ingredients being printed, In plain F.nullsh, on every bottle wrapper. An examination of this list of Ingredients will disclose the fact that It Is non-alcoholic. In lt composition, chemic ally pure, triple-retlncd glycerine taking tho place of tlin commonly used alcohol, in Its make-up. In this connection It may not be out of place to state that tho "Favorite Proscription" of Dr. Pierce Is the only medicine put up for tho cure of woman s peculiar weaknesses and ail ments, and sold through druggists, all the ingredients of which have the un animous endorsement of all the leading medical writers and teachers of all tho several schools of practice, ami that too as remedies for the ailments for which "Favorite Prescription" Is recommended. A little look of these endorsements will be sent to any address, post-paid, and absolutely free If you request same by postal card, or letter, of Dr. K. V. Pierce, Buffalo. N. Y. Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets cure con stipation. Constipation Is tho cause of many diseases. Cure the causo und you euro the disease. Easy to take as candy. James Farley, tho strike breaker, caused the arrest of hU discharged oflico manager, W. H. Cole, alias Thomas Hardy, accusing him of grand larceny and attempted black mailing. Lewlston, Me., lawyer bejran search for Miss Viola Atkins, to whom Charles A. Proscott, an Inmate Of tho Matteawan Asylum for the Criminal Insane, willed ? 16,000. Representative I.owden lauded In the House for speech urging public ity for corporations. Tho House declined to change tha prarent law regarding the purchase of coal for tho navy In the Philip pine?. Decln: rtlon.i were mado to Gover nor Hughes, of New York that tho National Guard of tho State Is in control of a cabal self-governed and Ignoring all higher powers actually In power over tho organization. Peculations of William F. Walker, treasurer of the New Britain, Conn., Savings Bunk, amount to $565,000, supposedly lost In Wall street. FOREIGN NUW3. In the debute In the French Cham ber of Deputies tho government's policy as to church leases was sus tained by a large majority. Honduran troops attacked Nlca rai:uans on tho frontier, says a de spatch from Managua, but were com pelled to retreat after six hours' lighting. That tho British Cabinet Is united In supporting the tentative home rule plan was the assurance given by Mr. Asquith In the House of Com mons. In announcing that fifty-five per cent, of tho shipping was "lost" dur ing the recent British naval man oeuvres the Admiralty explains that the "enemy" was crippled by these operations. Or. tho eve of a critical debate In tho Chamber of Deputies the mem bers of the French Cabinet have patched up their differences and will pretent a united front. Speedy execution of General Para des and his "army" by the Vene zuelan government Is reported by a cable from Caracas, which likewise tell of President Castro's critical condition. Count Van Byinndt, a well known sporHsman of Tho Hague, was acci dentally killed on the Cresta tobog gan run, says a despatch from St. MoriU. in discussing tho theft of Wer theimer urt treasures a London de tective, according to a cablo, de clared many missing European pic tures wore In the galleries of Ameri can millionaires. Crime Is bo prevalent In Franco that tall; Is cent ral about a return to tho Euilloltno says a a cable from ?uii.s Ilciiarhiblo "..urea" of cancer by tvo Weir.li her!) doctors are reported In n cable from London. A (able from Paris snys that street ro'wlles f polled the festivities of Jlaiill finis in Paris. Prince Paul Dolgoroiikoff , expelled from tho Russian Imperial Yach: Club for his revolutionary propa ganda, has, according to a St. Peters burg dispatch, ehi'lletiged each mem ber to a duel Individually. The British bleumshlp Hellopolis, off the Welsh coast, sank tho Oilau dn, fourteen persons being drowned. Charges that German authorities have fostered tho slavo trade In East Africa have been found to bo false, accoidlng to a despatch from Berlin. V. H. Mullock, a British sociolo gist lecturing before un nudlenco at Columbia University under the aus pices of the National Civic Federa tion, declared that the noturo of muu is such that socialism can novo' be rer.llv.ed. IIIIB1 Boundary Lines MnkcLaw Enforcement Hard MEANS OP EVASION. Few Itenll.e How Lnrjre Toxns P.enlly Is Four Inhabitant of One County There Wntcrtown, N, V,, lln the frfinxcst Block und Clil cngt) the Iongest Street. The following collection of po graphlcal peculiarities about tho United States embodies in-iny unique facts which aro worth rtmemb"rltir.;. A novel way to demonstrate the enormity of tho State of Texas Is to spread out a map of tho United States and stretch a fit ring ncros-.s Texas the longest way. Then placins, one end of your measure on Chi cago you will find that tho other eni will extend Into either tho Atlantic Ocean or tho Gulf of Mexico, fays the New York Sun. The two largest counties In the United States are Custer county, Mont., and San Bernardino county, Cal. Each of these Is a little more than 20,000 square miles In exten?.. and the States of Masmchusctt;,, Rhodo Islnnd, Doluwaro and New Jersey could be put Insldo tho bound aries of either of them. Tho smalles county In the Union Is Bristol county, R. I., which ha.: only twenty-five square niikv.. 7!.; county in tho United States bavin? the largest population is New Yoi l , which has more than 2,000.000 pet pie In It. At the time of the lost cen sus Bailey county. Tex., which Is about us large as Rhode Island, had only four inhabitants. The longest block In any American city Is In Wutertown, N. Y. This mu nicipal freak Is a row of business houses nearly five squares long. It contains tho offices aud stores of W't different firms, forty-llvo tenants and a hotel with eighty-live rooms. Tiio total valuation of tho property In. this block Is almost $1, Out), 000. The longest street In the I'.iltc-l States and in the world ns well Jg Western avenue, Chicago, which is exactly twenty-two miles long. Its nearest rival Is Halsted street, uls: In Chicago, which Is two-thirds of a mile shorter. Halsted street Is s i much more closely built up that It la usually spoken of as the longest street In the world. By traversing Us length one may see all the Indica tions of the vnrylng phases of Ameri can life, from the hovels of outcast sin to the palaces of pork pucl.lajr millionaires. Interspersed with tho native Americans on this one street are id:t distinct colonies where the people? speak other languages than English namely, Germans, Italians, l;,is slan Jews, Bohemians, poles and Greeks. Halsted street is crossed over and under by twenty railroads. It is estimated to bo the chief busi ness center and lounging place tor 175,000 people, more than there are In Arizona, Idaho, Nevada or Wyom ing. About fifty miles from Duranpo. Colorado, there Is a point where four States meet. At this place by stop ping a few feet In either direction one can walk In four dlfforcnt Com monwealths In as many seconds. These States are Colorado, Utah, New Mexico and Arizona. A nearly parallel case Is at Harper's Ferry, where the train Btops a few minutes to allow the passengers to alight und enjoy a view which permits them to look Into three States Maryland, Virginia and West Virginia. The highest and lowest elevations In this country are In California, within 100 mllos of euch other. Tha loftiest Is Mount Whitney, 14,499 feet high, and the lowest Is Death Valley, about 450 fot below the level of tho s;ea. Two Oceans Pass, In Yellowstone Park, Is so named ba caure whenever there Is a shower In fit vlcl'il'y and a certuln small cre;k overflows. Its waters spread out over the edgo of the continental divide and pass Into tributaries of rivers which flow to the Atlantic and to the Puclflc. There are a number of cases whore unique situations huve devel oped In cities that happened to be di vided by State line:). These oddities are the result of differences In law. The boundary between Texas und Arkansas runs alon the main street of Texarkana, and formerly If a fight occurred on one sido of the street the combatants hud only to cross to the other sidewalk to bo out of the Jurisdiction of tho authorities gov erning tho territory where the dis turbance had tukon pluce. The two sides of Texarkana did not develop equally, because tho administration of one States was more enterprising than the other. Bristol Is located on the State line between Tennessee und Virginia. Ono of these States has a regulation preventing colored people from oc cupying the xame street cur scats with whites und tho other has not, consequently tho colored people may stay on ono side of the car on tho boundary street and sit where they please. The dividing line between Missouri und Kansas Is State street In Kansas City. Missouri Is wet und Kansas Is dry, so ono side of that particular avenue Is literally lined with "First" and "I.nst Chance" sa loons. This locality is supposed to have been tho birthplace of tho this original form of saloon advertise, cicr.t. England's Hig Investment k, in Insane Asylums CAUSES OP INSANITY HnMe nnd Ileal lesanrM rf MoIer.i Life li Htrong Parlor V,." I T Cent. Due to Heredity Slreimos. Hy of Body and Mind IViirllcKii Prescribed iu Some IVse. Lord Rosebery, In pri'fldlns ns Lord Lieutenant of the County of Linlithgow at the oponlm; of nn asy lum for the Insane at Bnngour, in stituted nt considerable expense by the city of Edinburgh, delivered an address which calls for more than parsing attention, says the Pittsburg Qn.ette, He remarked that a sum of no less than $160,000,000 has been In vested In these public asylums for the Insane In the United Kingdom, which he has described as tombs for Intellectually dead. He added that $lf,000,000 was ppent annually for their malntalnonce, bnt pointed out that all this enormous amount of money Is expended by the nation, not for those for whom It can have any hope In tho future, but for those who represent their waste and de cay In short, that It was of all pub lic Investments the most unproduc tive. Lord Rosebery did not condemn this expenditure ns extravagant, nor did he Intimate that the lot of tho Insane should be rendered more cruel by the dlmlntshment of their comforts. But ho nrgned that some steps should be taken to arrest the altogether phenomena! Increase of Insanity. During the last fifty years, while the population of tho United Kingdom has Increased by 75 per cent, the- number of lunatics had augmented by 230 per cent. With regard to the causes of this growth of lunacy, which Is by no means confined to England, but which extends to all the clvtlf-'d countries, he was unable to speak with any degree of assurance, end save for the fact that 2." per cent of Insanity Is medically ascribed to he redity, ho was compelled to rest let himself to the expression of opinions of his own. Thus Lord Rosebery Is Inclined to attribute much of the spread of de mentia to the haste ml restlessness of our modern twentieth century life, which show themselves In na entire nbsencp of ropo.ie and In the development, of a perfect mania for sp 'd. not onlv where motors aro concerned, but also In Hteunmhlp nnd ni!l:-ond travel. To thi. many will bo disposed to tal.o exception. In no country of the wo-Id Is hurry developed to such a der :ee as In the United States. Yet staMstics po to show that the ratio of insanity to the population Is not in any sense larger, but, on the con trary, rather cmaller than that iiiron;? many European nations, where more leisurely ways and meth ods prevail. If people are kept so busy hero In America that they have but little time for thought nnd quiet reflec tion, they likewise have no time to brood upon tho subject of their real or Imaginary wrongs nnd miseries, and tho result is that wo find here much less of that morbid introspec tion which when allowed free rein too frequently doveloi Into mona mar.Ia. Strenuoslty of mind and body are to such a degree regarded by tho lending alienists as beneficial In cat.es of diseases of the mind that we find them endeavoring to cure Queen Sophia of Sweden of her religious melancholia by compelling her to perform the most arduous ktnd of housework and of gardening, while chess, the most Intellectually absorb ing of games, was prescribed with some success for the late sovereign. Prince of LIppe, who spent the greater part of his reign under re straint. Leisure exists to a much greater extent In the Old World than in America, where everybody Is led by necessity, by heredity and by cus tom, to labor for the sake of fame or of wealth. Where leisure Is applied to philanthropy, to study, etc., It ceases to be leisure. But when not thus employed it becomes Idleness, and the latter Is one of the chief pro moters of insanity. There Is ono remark, however, of Lord Rosebery with which everyone will be disposed to agree. It In this: That Is tho public U willing to do vote such enormous sums of money to ilio housing and the care of tno Intellectually dead It should not bo so careless with regard to tho housing- of the Intellectually living that Is to say, of the sano poor. Wherens, lunatics who can be of no further use whatsoever to the com munity, nnd who uro destined to re main forever a totally unproductive Investment of capital, are provided not only with greater comforts but likewise with the most up-to-dnte, commodious and even luxurious habi tations, regardless of cost, the labor ing clases that Is to say, useful citi zens and their children, who are des tined to become factors In the na tion's prosperity are permitted to live among tho most appalling r.iir rouudlugs. In frightful tenements, under tho most unsanitary and de moralizing conditions. Tho New York pollco department costs the city $31,252 a day. O -SH. ,3 r.Z 0 ITS. 3! . Bar tn lii '""J i'" llf.'.8 '' "O ' Effect of I'lfru-Vlolet Hii. Tho discovery by Professor Elmer Gates, of Wushington, that cerial.t wave-lengths of ullra-violot light and certain frequencies of elect rl 3 undulations will pass through a dead animal body morn completely than through a living ono. The result is, It seems, that tho living body under the.-o rays will cast a shadow; a dead one not, Kays Harper's Weekly, Tho opaqueness of tho living bodies Professor Gates finds to be due to tho presence of electric currents la the nerves and muscles. While alive the body Is a bundle of 'electric, cur rents through which electric waves cannot pass. As described It seems a very pret ty discovery, and it Is taken with sufficient seriousness to be discussed as n prnctlcal mean of determinating whether ll To has gone out of bodies that seem to bo dead. There are cases of catalepsy where ordinary tests of death fall nnd In which a new test would bo useful, and In some cases of disease where it Is Important to know how low the vital forces have run at a given time. Professor Gate's discovery, If It turns out to bo authentic, may be of prnctlcal use. But whether of Immediate prnctl cal use or not. It Is very interesting C i f true), ns are all discoveries that push forward the limits of human knowledge. One effect of the curious things that scientists nowadays are constantly finding out Is to Impress upon thoughtful persons the incom pleteness of the present state of knowledge. Our world knows enor mously moro about many things than the world of our fathers did, yet. the more It knows the loss in clined It Is to believe that It knows all. Discovery follows so fast upon dis covery In these days as to make us realize more acutely than In slower times how vast a mass of nature's mysteries are still unexplored, and how much our views of what Is cred lblo and ,what Is not may be af fected by discoveries still to como. As a scientist said In commenting on this reported discovery by Pro fessor Gates, "It is not safe, in theso days of rapid advancement in scien tific achievement, to deny anything." Cotton Loss in the South. It Is estimated that at least 2,000, 000 bales of cotton are lost through out the South every year, because of tho frost and scattered cotton left In the Hold by the pickers. According to a correspondent of the Manufac turers Record of Baltimore, a ma chine has been invented which will save nearly all this loss. Maori Riillways. Tho Maorlland Idea of building a railroad Is the British idea of taking the Tugela position climbing over obstacles regardless of cost or of tho possibility of finding a way round. Maorlland has been making f.-eak railways for forty years. Sydacy Bullotln. Queen a Linguist. Queen Wilhelmlna of Holland Is an excellent linguist, for she speaks French, German and English as flu ently as her native Dutch, and she knows something besides of Italian and Russian. ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE. Etlule of Martin Kline, late uf Orangt Tountshtp, Dfcranett. Notice Is hereby given tliat letters of admin istration on th e. taie of Martin Kline, late of Orange township, deceased bave been granted to Hi undeislitned administrator, to whom all persons Indebted to said estnte aro requested to make payments, and those having claims or ue uiauds will make known the same without de lay to JOSKI'H A. HENRIK, Administrator Orangevllte. K. F. I). No. 1. Clinton Uerrlng, Atty. 2-. 1-81. ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE Ktate of Slaroiiret M. Smith, late of Greenwood '1'utmnltlp, Deceased. Notice Is hereby glvnn that letters of admin istration on the estate of Margaret. M. smith, lute of tireeuwood township, deceased, have been granted to 'he undersigned administrator to whom all persons Indebted to said estate are renuesied to malt- payment, and those having rliilma or demands will ma&e known the same without dcla) Ui WKSLKY MORKIS, Adnilnlst ml or. Mlllvlilo, K. P. D. A. L. Frlti, Attorney. --Gt. ADMINISTRATRIX NOTICE. nutate ofjonefh Kalirti h, late of lite Borwgh of Cmiralia, DeeeafeO. In the nutate of Joseph Kiilwl' h, deceased, Letters have been duly untiiied by 1 tie HeiHter of Wills upnr the estc.te of Joseph Kalwlch, late of the Horoiigh of Cenlrslln, I'ouniy oft'olti.Ti bin .nd Slate of .'eiiest Ivanln. rti-ceaseil lo KHz-obi-lh Kalwlch, residing In the Hoi-nugh of Cen. trulia, i oluinbl cocmv, ataie ef IVnnsyvatila to whom all persons who are Indebted to sa d estate are reqiicHfrd to inaho payment, and all persons having any leyal cIhIhi nKHlnt or de mand upon h ii lil etate, i-lmll make the same known wlihou' duluy. KLIZABKTH KALWIim, Administratrix. Kdwnrd .1. Flynn, Attorney. . feetialla, I'a , Jun. 14. 1007. 1-17-ftl. ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE. Kxtatt of Sullie Sloraan, late of Moutoin' limm. ship, ieoeafed. Notice la lierenv given I hut leitersot admin. Iti ul Ion on the est ale of Millie MO'tfun, late of Montour lowiihlilp, deceased, Iihvh been granted lo tae uuiIcinIki d ntl tnnilbt rui or to whom all pemnria Indm ted to said -stateare icipichled i make tmvii ems, and those having cl'iiniHor dcnmndb will irao known the same WlUioul delay In I'liAS II. Mllai.lN, .Ions li. lltxuAK, 11 (inert. yu. ."W Atty. AitininlHtrator. ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE. Mutate of Sarah K. Api'lnnaii, hue of Mmtii. buro, aVceti it. Notice Is hereby given llmt 1. ile-Rof ndmlnls trui l'iu on tin- eat at v of Sarah F. Appli-miui, nte of iiloimi-t)iiK, deceased, linve be n inuntoii to t ne ui i r-liit eo udmlnlHi i iiior to whom all p Hoi Indebted to talitl Hi 'C nrr replies' ed 10 in k p- no nt h, ami t liose lm n k cim a or di inuriU will lunkv k' own the hit""-w IMiuiit de lay to 11. KKilHIl VK4KN. V-7-liu Aduli.tat ratur. Prolciujii Cards. II. A. McKlLLIP. ATTORNEY - AT-I.Aw, Columbian limMirg 2nd Floor liloonislmrtt, Pa. A. N. YOST, AT'IORNKV AT I, AW, Ent Building, Coubt House Square. BloonisLurg, Pa. RALPH. R.JOHN. ATTORNEY AT LAW. Hartman liuildmg, Market Square Uloomsburp, Pa. RKD IKKLER, ATTORNF.Y-AT-LAW Office Over First National Bank. Bloomsburg, Pa, CLYDE CHAS. YETTER, ATTORNEY AT LAW. Office in Wirt's Building. Eloomsburg, Pa. W. II. RH AWN, ATTORNEY-AT LAW. Office Come r of vd and Main Sti. CATAWISSA, PA. CLINTON HERRING. ATTORNEY AT LAW. Office with Grant Herring,, Bioom&burg, Pa. T Crangeville Wednesday each week A. L. FRITZ. ATTORNEY AT LAW. Office Moomsl.urp; Nat' I nnk Bldg. Bloomsburg, Pa. J. II. MAIZE ATTORNEY AT I AW, INSURANCE AUD EAL ESTATE AGENT Oflice in Townfend's liuilding Bloomsburg, Pa, N U. FUNK ATTORNEY AT LAW Knt's BuiMinp, Court House Square Bloomsburg, Pa. SADE T. VANNATTA fSiieeepsor to ' V. K tipp) GENERAL INSURACE Oflice 238 I on St., Meomsburg, P. Oct. 31, 10,01. il M. if. LVIZ & SON, INSURANCE and REALESTAT1 AGENTS AM) Hl-OKKkS. N. W. Corntr Main and Centre Sts. Bl.OOMSIHJRO, I'A. Represent Seventeen as rood Companies u. there ate in the World mrl all loses promptly adjusted and paid at their office. DR. W. H. HOUSE SURGEON DENTIST Office Iiartun'a Huilding, Main below Market Bloomsburg, Pa. All style of wotk dorr in n ni etior manne All work warranted ns represented TEETH EXTRACTED WITHOUT PAD by the use of Gns. mid fice of charge whe artificinl teeth are inserted Open nil hours during the day DR. M. J. HF.SS DFNTISTHY IN ALL ITS BRANCHES Crown ard bridge work a specialty Corner Vain nnd Centre sueets Bloort'sl-irrori pa Columbia A Montour Telephone connectlM J. J. BROWN, M. D. THE EYE A SPECIALTY. Eyes tested and fitted with glasse. No Sunday work. 311 Market St., Woomshurg, Pa. Hours ro to 8 Telephom J. S. JOHN M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office and residence, 410 Main St. 7-3Q-"' BLOOMSBURG, PA EDWARD. FLYNN, ATTORNKY AT LAW, CENTRALIA, PA. "Office Llddlcot bonding, Locust avenM- H. MONTGOMERY SMITH, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Office : Ent building, 11-16-99 WILLIAM C. JOHNSTON, ATTORNIY-AT-LAW. Office in Wells' uilding over J. O. Veils Hardware Store, Moomsburg, Will be in Millville on Tuesdays. EXCHANGE HOTEL, I. A. Snyder, Proprietor. BLOOMSHURG, Pa. Laree and iot.rr i.-r t s:.ni 'e n oma, batb rooms hot ami told wa:er and all mod rn ronveniences CITY HOTEL, VY. A. Uartzel, I'rop. No. 131 West Main Street "Large and convenient sample roc an, b rooms, hot and cold WKter. and rrodcra co ventence. Bar stocked with fnt wfnea and liquors. First -claia livti) Attached, MONTOUR TBI.KPI10NK. BULL VII Irin IVKH TKHTKll, ULABUKN riTTID, H. BIERMAN, M. D. llOMCEOPATBICI'lI VHI' IAN AND BUUB1 cici hours- Office Sesldeucc, 4th St. in a. ni. to 5 p. ni.. 5.nn to p. m. HLouiiblH fG, PA. C. WATSON McKKLVY, KIKE INEl K.vM K AGENT. Itcpresents twelve el the sirn,,,iM fen pam III the MjWI, 1 11 c l I, ti eiv: i '"S I 1' 't H Ct ! ti Ai- 'I r 1 KrankltnM I'hlU i" vm 1 i s x.s ,aa I'min'a I'liHa rnin) ;.-. iwi 141 Oueen, of N. V. 6:HV"I 1 v.t, j,o w'eHtenefiler, N. . it: .,' (. i,JM,sij ia N. Amei'leit, l lill-i. l.'t-' .e'Hi r,n ,3
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers