THE COLUMBIAN, BLOOMSBURO, PA- NO VACATION Fon TKOimoWX STOKK. Filleiii liable In Two Weeks To Six fort;ilt' Is Town's Frond Itcoord Town Creek, Ala., July 18. Hc- caiiKi? fifteen, babies have been born to ix couples hcru In tho last two Vfi petition hns been made to the pi''nl authorities at Wiishlngton to j pi.-i:il iMithorltleg nt WnsthiRton to h;'.c tlio nume of this village chang ed to Tuddytown. President Roose velt bus been notified of the trenien ri i'.s Inrreaso In tho birth rate. Hero 1.- the record: V.r. and iMrs. N. E. King, twlna i. y and u girl. -. i. and Mrs. Monroe Jeffreys, trlp ; two plrls and a boy. and Mrs. J. C. Hrackln, trlp two girls and a boy. Mr. and Mrs. Sam Terry, two boys. Mr und Mrs. John Jackson, trlp iivc all boya. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Shumate, twin boys. Town Creek has a population of 2 SO. M'CKICA OX WITNESS STAND. P. It. It. President Says Low I la ten Don't Muke Trs."lc. Philadelphia, July 16. James Mc. Cren, president of the Pennsylvania Railroad, stood up for the commuter called to the stand In the com pany's suit to test the constitution ality of the two cent a mile law. which goes Into effect October 1. lie paid that It Is unjust to make a person who uses the railroad two, JAMES MCCREA. ea or four times a day pay as j'.i a rate as the man who uses it cue e or twice a year. This statement caused the City Solicitor, J. Howard Oendell, in cross, examination to ask Mr. McCrea whether the company would raise the rate3 on surburban traffic If the new law Is sustained by the court. "Yes, that will have to be done," replied Mr. McCrea. He did not say what the extent of the Increase will be or whether It will approach the maximum figure of two cents a mile. EIGHT KILLED ON BATTLESHIP. Thirteen Others Terribly Hurt and Several Are Dying. Boston, July 17. Swathed in fin me that flashed from 200 pounds of powder, twenty-one officers and men of the United States battleship Georgia, shortly before noon Monday, were burned so terribly that six of them died on the way to Charles town Navy Yard, two died In the naval hospital and thirteen were dy ing or injured so dangerously that only skilled surgery could save them. The fearful flare of powder, a swift burning rather than an explosion, occurred in the after superimposed turret In the course of target prac tice with the eight-inch guns. A spark fell on one ot two bags of 100 pounds each which a loader was about to slip Into one ot the guns. The loader and two other seamen saw the bag smouldering in time to throw themselves on their faces and escape mortal hurt, but none of the others had time to make a step be fore the whole turret was a fiery furnace. In which they were wellnlgh Incinerated. For a time which none Of thorn could estimate the twenty one men were In a flood of flame that enveloped them from bead to foot. Those caught In the act of in-breathing were doomed as surely as if plunged Into a mass of molten metal. AH the others were so close to In stant death it amazed the survivors any single man ot thera got out of the place alive. Yet of the thirteen st 111 living In Chelsea Hospital it was believed by physicians several would outlive their Injuries, though science could not say any man was sure to recover. Immediately upon learning the de tails of the accident, Capt. McCrea notified Rear-Admiral ThomaB, who ordered a board to examine Into tho causes of the accident. One belief Is thnt a spark from tho dlnchargo of the after turret guns floated back Into the turret through a gun port and settled on the pow der eaBos. Another theory Is that thrt spark that caused the trouble came from the smokestacks of tho ship, and floated through the gun porB. That a floating spark caused the disaster seemed evident to nuvn! men, but there Is doubt as to whether It was from a euu or u smokestack, a u ;. i FIJKH KLKCTKOCVTlKn. Xovel Wnjr to Oct Hid of These Troublesome Insects. If you can't kill bugs with sticky flypaper or poisonous powders, try electricity. This electrocution of In Bects Is the recommendation of a New York man, und has been offi cially approved by societies to pro Veut cruelty to animals. He has lu- ELECTROCUTES FLIES, vented a contrivance entirely effi cient for this purpose, which Is "Im ply and durable, with no complicated mechanism to get out of order. Aa Ehown In the accompanying Illustra tion, the Invention embodies a grid or screen of parallel wires alternate ly postlvp and negative and charged with electricity. A fly alighting on th grid or attempting to walk upon and touching the adjacent wires will be electrocued us It were, and fall dead from the trap. The device la composed of two bars of wood, be tween which extend strips of brass. Live wires connect with a source of elect rlcley of bu Sclent power to effect the electrocution of insects. Th common house fly is readily at trncted to anything bright or shiny, avoiding dark and dull objecta. Hence It may be found advisable to plue the traps near a window. OhPTlmo Smokers. Although the present universal habit of smoking Is of comparatively recent date, the use ot tobacco waa carried on to a great excess when it was first introduced. The old time citizens smoked even in church. All such offenders were solemnly ex communicated by Urban VIII. In 1624 an again by InnooentXII. in 1690, when the practice seems to have extended to Rome Itself. There was William Breedonfl too, vicar of Thornton, England, "a profound divine and absolutely the most po lite person for nativities in that age," of whom the astrologer Lilly says that "when he had no tobacco he would cut the bell ropes and smoke them." Prohibitions of the custom were frequent. "Item, you shall not utter," enjoins an alehouse licence of the time ot James I., "nor willingly suffer to be uttered, drunke or taken, any tobacco within your house, cellar or other place there unto belonging." The rules of Chlgwell school (1629) provided that the master must be "no puffer of tobacco" and Charles II. sent a letter to the Uni versity of Cambridge forbidding the members to wear periwigs, smoke tobacco or read their sermona. A writer has recorded a visit to an Essex church about 1830, on which he saw not only pipes stowed away in various nooks ready for uae on the following Sunday, but also spit toons in many of the pews. Carrying Out Death Sentence. A correspondent is desirous to know which is the moat common form employed in the carrying out of the death sentence. The prob ability U that most people, If asked, would at once say the 'gallows; yet this is far from being the case, says the London Chronicle. The favorite mode appears to be the guillotine, which is employed publicly in France, Belgium, Den mark, Hanover and two cantons of Switzerland; and privately In Bava ria, and Saxony. The cheery gallows comes next in the running and Is favored publicly In Austria, Portugal and Russia, and privately in Oreat Britain and the United States of America. Death by the sword obtains In fifteen caDtons In Switzerland, In China, and Russia publicly; and in Prussia privately. Ecudor, Olden burg and Russia have adopted the musket, all publicly; while in China they have strangulation by the cord, and In Spain the garrote both pub lic;; and in Brunswick death by the uxo, and by the electric chair In New York. In Italy there Is no capital punish ment. Fertile England. Save grapes, tobacco, olives, and some other fruits we can grow In England all that can be grown in France with as good certainty, and o'ten in better quality. From our counties come beets that all the cuttle breeders In the world clamor for. Incomparable shire horses are nt 111 bred In the Cambridgeshire centers set up by Henry VIII. Scot laud and all over the north are tar mem whose peculiar knowledge, ex tending from tubers to trees, is, as one may say, a gift of the soil. Yet Roland, which Is over civilised, Is ti.it yet half colonized. National Hevlow. ALASKAN IKX38 HALF WOLF. Invaluable to the Inhabitant- Serve ns Draught Animals. The native Alaska dog Is known ns the "huBkle" or 'mnlamoot' and Is a mongrel one-half timber wolf. Bays a writer In Leslie's Weekly. He tins ClinracterlRtlcs which especially fit him for his work ho is heavy, set, with a thick coat of long hair, Im pervious to cold, tind with JiiBt enough wolf In his nature to make him restless, eager to go, and with a sufficient mixture of dog to temper a fierceness and treachery which might, and sometimes does, become dangerous. it Is a rare occurrence for them to bite a human being, but they will fight among themselves on the slight est provocation, and It Is not an un common sight for half a dozen "huskies" to hold a pitched battle. A bucket of cold water will generally put them to flight, but In the major ity of cases the miners pay no atten tion to tho melee and nllow the dogs to fight It out. The wolf nature manifests Itself In their thieving propensities, and all food must bo "cached" out of their reach. A hungry "huskle" will open a box of canned beef with ease by biting through tho tin. He will lie before the door of a tent or cabin, pretending to be asleep, when In reality ho Is waiting for a chance to ransack the klthchen One day I taw a miner's dinner wrecked by his own dog, a splendid Lis. wolllah fellow, who overturned a pot of beans, and In the most un concerned manner walked off with the hot bacon In his mouth. No matter whnt depredations they may commit, severe punishment, so pa to cripple or kill them, 13 out of the question on account of their great value In tho transportation of supplies. Tt Is on Inferior dog that Is not worth $40, and many of them, say their masters, nre not for sale. Two good docs can h:n:l n man forty or fifty miles a day on a good trail or carry from K00 to GOO pounds of freight about 20 miles In 0 hours. Weather ForcriiMs No Joke. A large majority of the residents of the inland cities look upon tho lorecnsts of the United States Weather liureuu in a spirit of fore bearance If not of levity. They ac cept the jokes of the paragraphers about the unreliability of the predic tions ns practically true und if called upon to pass a serious opinion on the bureau would in most enses de cide that It was primarily designed to furnish sinecure jobs to nrmy offi cers for whom no belter employment could be found. At the ocean and lake ports, however, where millions of dollars are Invested in shipping, a different view is held. Instances are too numerous In which the heeded warning of the weather observer bus averted the loss or damage of ships and cargoes of exceedingly large val ue. Here it Is recognized that the forecasts are not invariably correct and the officials themselves make no pretense that they are, but in the main they strike bo near the truth that the man who has life and wealth that Is subject to menace by weather conditions cannot and does not take chances. No shipping in surance is so cheap aB the freo ad vice furnlBhed by Uncle Sam. Rail roads, too, appreciate the value ot the weather service especially In the Northwest during the blizzard sea son and in the Southwest during the Spring freshets. At these seasons transportation officials keep a close watch on the bulletins of the bureau and gauge the movements of their trains accordingly. The losses thus avoided frequently are sufficient to put the balance on the right side of the ledger. Utilizing Pine Stumps. The denuding of the American foests is leading to many odd re sources to supply the deficiency. The government recently announced that owing to the rapid manner In which forests are being mowed down to socuro wood pulp for paper making a small army of exports were at work, hunting for some abundant material like swamp or prairie grass that would be suitable for paper making. Long ago the supply of wal nut lumber for furniture was prac tically exhausted and oak has large ly taken its place. For some time the turpentine makers have been puz zled to find raw material to meet the growing demands of their trade whtch threatened to make serious Inroads on the pine forests. The trees were being used much faster than they could be grown and this meant disaster. Then attention was turned to the refuse of the forests already used and experiments were made which demonstrated that the stumps of the pine trees, which hud orlgnlally been passed over as not worth the trouble of digging out, were saturated with raw turpentine. These stumps immediately took on u commercial value which will tar nish small fortunes to the men who own them. In some cases the Inter esting question has been raised as to whether the stumps were a part of the original timber right sold by he furmer to the turpentine maker or reverted to the owner of the land after the trees had been cut. Rapid Trestle lSulldlng. The rapid reconstruction of a trestle was rocently carried on at Galveston, Texas. Fire destroyed 4 00 feet of the long railroad trestle which extends from tho mulnlund to the city and stopped traffic. The con Htrnctlon froces und materials were Immediately started to the work, and l.y midnight of the same day tho trestle was sufficiently repaired to allow traffic to be resumed. WEAPONS ARK DESTROTTTD. An Unwritten Law, Hawed on Super stition, of Royal Houses. For obvious reasons it was nat ural that the Spunlsh police should be anxious to secure the bomb which CM not explode when thrown at tin) royal couple. There was a reason behind the desire to nip In the 1; id chance of further damage. There In an unwritten law In the reign: i,j houses of Europe, says the London Standard, that all rollcs of attempts upon royal lives, as well as the In struments used for treating t'J'J wounds caused in such attempts, shall bo destroyed. There was a solemn assembly In Geneva of Aus-tro- Hungarian officials to witness the destruction of the Instruments which caused the death of the Em press Elizabeth and of the surgical pjst-niortcm examination. The custom Is based to a certain extent upon superstition, but more solidly upon the determination to prevent the rollcs from falll.ig Into the hands of exhibitors of such traglctrilles. The custom In this matter once waa to grind to pieces the weapon which had been employed. Wh?n, howevor, tho dagger was Bocurud w ith which the pritst Mm tin Mer'ro attempted to murder Queen Isabella of Spain, rather more than half a century ago, tho blade was found to ba of Buch finely tempered steel thnt It resisted every efTort of file and stone. Something like a panic was caused when tho news got nbroad; the R tmlsh peasuntu Imagined that there must be magic In tho bludo. So u cabinet was specially summonod to deel with tho crisis, and It waa determined to submit the steel to tho Influence ot uclda. This proving successful, all implements used for the like foul purpose have under gone the like trentment knives, swords, daggers, revolvers and, pre sumably, bombs. It was cruel Irony that the bombs thrown at the young king und queen of Spain should be hurled by a man secreted In the only house In II id rld owned by Queen Christina. T.Ij, at first sight. Is surprising. Nd,-o-leon III., In the terror which Orsl.n's attempt Inspired, bid for safety by buying up the houses fuclnj; ho Tullerles, so that bombs should not le flung thence by his enemies. It U from places whose position should guarantee their safety that danper comes. Only a miracle pro vented Alexander II. from being blown to atoms in bis own winter palace. The Grand Duke Serge was assassinated outside the law courts at St. Petersburg; Gen. Bobri'.:ot was slain when entering the senr.te; M. Plehve was struck dead with his secret police all around him; the king and queen of Servia portaged In their own palace. Useful Cheese Cutter. A new Idea in cheese cutters for use in grocery stores has been pat ented by an Indiana man. In the majority of cheese cutters at pre sent, employed the cutting blade ex tends, the entire width of the cheese on the cutter. The operator Is thus CUTS ANY SIZE SLICE. compelled to cut the length of the choese, and where the quantity re quired is small the cut is naturally very thin. This objection Is overcome In the cutter shown here, as the cutting knife extends only one-halt the width of the cheese. The top of the tablo moves freely, the knife being station ary and pivotal to a frame at the bock. An arrangement for Indicat ing the size of the cut is secured to the" front ot the table. The ease with which a pound or two of choese can be sliced off will be apparent at once. In fact, the dividing mechan ism is so accurate that it is un necessary to rewelgh the cut, as is generally done. C'oMtly Wallpaper Desljjii. A new design in fm cy wall paper patterns come from Kansas City; also a way to utilize cancelled tucks. A firm has had all its offices pupered with old checks, placed neatly edge to edge. The face figures of the checks vary from $30,000 to $1,000 and the total for one room Is $8,000, 000. As a gilt moulding runs around the edges of each check-panel, the general effect rather pleasing. Liable to Discharge. M. Bovot, the director of tho post office at Lausanne, has addressed a circular to the postal employes in the town warning them that In future toothache will not be considered an excuse for absence from work. They must either get the tooth out or but out themuulvta. iiio Kind You Havo Always In uso for over 30 years, and Ly-z- soiinl supervision plnoo Hs Infancy, CUCAXfc Allow no one to deceive tou In t Id. All Counterfeits, Imitations and Just-as-pood" arc luit Experiment Hint trillo with and endanger tlio health of Infants nnd Children Kxpcrlenco against Experiment. What is CASTORIA Castorift Is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare goric, Drops mid Soothing Syrups. It Is Pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphliio nor other Narcotio substance. Its ago Is Its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Fevcrlshncss. It cures Diarrhoea and 'Wind Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates tho Food, regulates tho Stomach and Dowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children's Panacea Tho Mother's Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS Sears the The KM You Have Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years. TMI eiNTHUH COMMNV. TT Mil i. .t..M i i .i . .'. Tho lo.'chs like i;:.trii.;i Muck caterpillaiH. clii:r to slim rncda that protruded above tho v.u'.or l:i tho aquurlum. They vorJ torpid, m though hyp notized, but when tho dyulor put one on his flni;or It fc II tj work aa buislly as a Quriitartu iao.'quUo. It could be seen swelling nr.d flushing. -That'll do, you little ruscal." And the dealer removed the leech hurriedly, then tdsheJ. "Mite Is an extinct trudo," he said "like that of the armorer or the sundial maker, and I can't make a living out of It any more. Hut In the past why, great Scott. In Iho past leeches were so much used by doctors that a doctor used to be called a leech. "I usod to Bell to one hospital In this town 50,000 leeches a year. That hospital now takes fifty or sixty yearly. I had on my books 200 doc tors, each of whom I bu polled reg ulurly every morning' with a dozen leeches. They carried them about In little pocket cose, as they now carry hypodermic syringes. "My father had a leech farm for yean. He raised the HunRarlan speckled leech that's the best In a New Jersey pond out Mattawan way. He did fair. He got an annual crop of 25.000. "Leeches are no longer used be cause bleeding Is no longer believed In. Indln'llubber Trws In ltnly. The India-Rubber tree grows freely In gardens In South Italy as an or namental shrub, and we hear that steps are being taken to make an In dustrial business of growing It. The idea is due to Professor Bozzl, of the Palermo Botanical Garden, who exhibited specimens at Milan, con taining as much as 85 per cent, ot rubber. It Is a plant which will do with dry weather, but flourishes more with irrigation; and as most of the cultivated land of Italy Is Irrigated It should do well If tho climate is warm enough. "A Sociologist" writes in the Chi cago "Tribune;" "I once lived in good health for several weeks on an expenditure of three cents a day." The gentleman neglects, however, to state who paid his board bill. George B. Shaw declares that ho la a vegetarian because ho doos not wish to eat his fellow creatures. Tt It satisfaction enough for him wh'.-n he skins them in his criticisms. MAGAZINE READERS SUNSET MAGAZINE beautifully illiuliated, good itonrt tad articles about Caliloroia and A'3U all th. Fm Wert. ' CAMERA CRAFT deroted each month to die ar- tutic reproduction of the but $1,00 woik of amateui and proiewional ( veu photographer,. K0AD OF A THOUSAND WONDERS book ol 75 page, containing 120 colored photograph, ol picturesque apoU in Caliloroia and Oregon. Total,, . . S3. 25 All for . . . . $1.50 Address all orders to SUNSET MAGAZINE Flood Building Sac Francisco I Bonght ftnl wliith has lcca lias foonio tho t.lsnaturo of has been mado under Ills por- Signature of WURIM TI "tT. NIW TOU CfTV. Law Regulates FeRilina; iitull's. An act passed 1y the eiit-r 1! as sembly at its last session and aj) proved by the governor on the ;8th ilay of Ma' 1907 makes some im portant changes in the law regu lating the sale 01' feeding stuffs wiMiin the .State. It provides that wheat aud rye bran and middlings or any mixture thereof, except when sold at the mill where made, must be accompanied by the name and address of the manufacturer and a guarantee that the same is pure. Mixed feeds, except chop made by grinding whole grain, and all condimental feeds must be ac companied by the name and address of the manufacturer and a state ment of the several ingredients of which the mixture is composed. The minimum penalty for violating any of the provisions of the feeding stuffs law is raised from $50.00 to $100.00. An act to regulate the sale of Patis green, providing for the col lection and analysis cf samples of the same and punishment of frauds in the manufacture and sale there of, was also passed which was ap proved by the governor on the 29th day of May 1907. Tne secretary of agriculture who is charged with the enforcement of these acts will be glad to send cop ies of the same to any person who will write for them. Timely and Variable Suggestions. Many people, especially women who lead closely con Sued domestic lives, suffer from what in general terms is called "nervousness." Among all forms of treatment none has even approached in success the intelligent use of Dr. David Ken nedy's Favorite Remedy, of Roud out, N. Y., which promotes au easy and natural action of the di gestive organs and imparts tone to the nervous system. e Casey "Afther all. there's nothing thot beats a good woife." JCiloy (who bus Just had a scrap with his; "Ax cept a flood husband." The worries of u weuk uiidxiuk moth er are only begun with the birth of her child, lly day her work is constantly Interniiited and at nk'lit her rest is 1 . , . . . - . . ..1.1. broken by the wailiiur of the peevish, ptinv infant. l)r I'ieree'a Knvonta Prescription makes weak women st rout? and sick women well. It HMens all the burdens of nmU-i nity, giving to mothers strength nnd vijjor, which tlipy inipuit to their ehildivn. In tibotit forty years of practice Dr. l'ierce and his associate Htntf of physicians have trea;ed and cured more than half 11 million sutlering women. Sick women are invited to consult Dr. l'ierce by let ter free of charjju. All correspondence is strictly private. Address Dr. U. V. Pierce, Invalids' Hotel and Surgical Institute, Hullalo, X. Y. in a:i Its cUma. Ely's Crsr.ra B2lT.( cleans'', soothes und hitnld the i'LtM,..(i rit'iii'rnti.i. ltcuri caturrh .nut iVivi'M M -'':. fl0"' ' awuy a uilU lu 1)10 bead A ' -t"""s miliklv. ('renin I,ulm is filacfttl into lliu uoiiu il,: over Hie mciu'iritiiu and U 1jui " lid . medlutu und a euro follow b. Kit.'-' I J' j Hot jroducu im-exlti;. l.uri.c SUu, IW ceute nt gl.W or by luail; Triul bizu, 10 cunu. ' U.7 IW-TMito y wnw Butt, tiew irwul. A Drus- Ye 1