THE COLUMBIAN, BLOOMrSBURO. Pa. l m Aonqnopor tr THE COLUMBIAN. Hl.OOMSBURG, FA. TJIUKSDAY, NOVKMIiUUUl, l!MJ7 fcittfrril at the I'uat Opla; MoomtUurg, fa, it nt'imd clam hiattt r, March 1, lsss. A fine new line of Wedding in vitations just received at thisotfiee. The erection of a new church building by the Ilaptist congrega tion is one of the talked of im provements that may materialize before long. Miss Minnie Pollock who has been employed in this office for a number of years, has been confined to her home on Fifth street by ill ness, this week. Having clipped "In God we trust" from the national coin, the next thing Roosevelt will be up to, will be to cut out pluribus utium from the National Flag ! Thoso Delicious Lemon Pics. The kind that "make your mouth water" are easily made with no fussing and at least possible expense if you use "OL'R PIE" Preparation. Don't hesi tate. Try it and tell your friends. At grocer, to cents Everybody is pleased with "OUR-PIE." Il-l4-4t. John V. Lamed has made some extensive improvements to his prop erty on Fifth street. The building has been raised, repapered and painted, and concrete walks laid. . . St. Margaret's Guild of St. raid's church will hold a pie and cake sale Wednesday morning before Thanks giving at 10 o'clock in the Parish House. 10-31 5t o H. Clay Hartman has been in town the past few days, being brought bere by the death of his aunt. Manv vears aeo he lived here, and clerked in the store of II C & I. W. Hartman. He is now residing in Philadelphia. The following letters are held at the Bloomsburg. Pa., post otnee Isador Boeuslam. Miss Medrith Groff. B. McDonald. Mr. N. B Mears. Cards: Mr. Edw. H. Frve. Miss Sussie Gerton, Miss Grace Long, Mrs. R. Rungou (2.) Dr. J. C. Biddle has resigned as superintendent of the Miners' Hos pital at Ashland, after a service of twenty-four years, lie win prou ablv snend some time in Europe and then practice in some large city. He has a national reputation as a surgeon. illtmen are to be commend ed for gracefully dropping the fight tor nigner prices 1 uc jmuuv the winning hand, and it wa9 wise not to carry on a fight that would have meant a loss of business to the dealers and great incouvenience to the consumers. Samples of Calendars for 1908 1 . .... rr o 1 are now ready at mis omce. ocuu ir i.nur nrrlpr now. Don't Wait until the end of the year when the choicest lots are all gone. The calendars are for sale only, not for free distribution. Pbnrles Drake and Theodore thi town have bought Warner's moving picture theatre ... t V.1rtU in the Danville opera nuuw u., and took possession on Monday. They intend making some improve ..,.,.,. TVioco vnnmr men formerly had charge of Acheiibach & Moore's bowling alley in uanvinc. The pocket diary issued this year by C. A. Snow & Co., Patent At torneys of Washington, D. C, s one of the most useful and complete books of the kind we have seen. It contains beside ample space for di ary memoranda and cash account, information about patents and other data of value to the business man, the mechanic and the general pub lic. Nowhere that we know of can uch a complete memorandum book be obtained for so little. Copies may be had by sending a two-cent stamp to C. A. Snow & Co., Pat ent Attorneys, Warder Building, Washington, D. C. i? EVANS' SHOE STORE FALL SHOES. The assortment of EVANS' Shoes provides a shoo for every need, a style tor every taste, a fit for every foot. Until you have seen these new mod els, or better yet, enjoyed the luxury of wearing one of them, you can not real ise what shoe perfection means. You are cordially invited to come in aud see these new fashions. The Progressive Shoe Store CHAS. M. EVANS. John D's Big Pile. Shows Ailonlihed Banker $100,000,000 U. S, Bonds and Stocks ol Gilt Edged Securities. For several years John D. Rock cfeller has kept the greater part of his securities in a vault which was especially constructed for him in the safe deposit department of the Standard I rust Company 111 New York. According to a story told in Wal' Street, Mr. Rockefeller made three visits to his strung box during the recent financial distutbances. On one of these visits he is said to have met the president of a big corpora lion just as he was about to open his vault. "Ccmc with me," said the head of the Standard Oil Company, "and I will show you some of my rainy day savings." It required four keys to open Mr. Rockeleller's vault. Mr. Rocke- lel ler snowed the astonished man gnat stacks of U. S. bonds, St. Paul, New York Central, New York, New Haven & Hartford, and other gilt-edged securities There was at least $100,000,000 in U. S. bonds alone, according to this interesting bit of gossip. . . Enter "The Toymakers." 1 nere are strange things 111 Toyshops" wa9 the wise and witty saying of the olden time aud Charles Felton Pidgin has brought out once more the force of the ad age in his new and wonderfully clever comic opera of "The Toy- makers, " a musical presentation of his book under the same title and for whose merry and always melo dious score the well-known Boston composers, Charles D. Blake and John A. Bennett, are sponsors. The action of the play takes place in England Merrie England of a certainty in this instance and the locale, the shop of the old toymak er, who has made a wonderful do'.l and endowed it with electrical life and whose fantastic performances in the village call out a laugh produc ing power and a sustained interest that is almost unequalled in one day. Few there are who have not either in book form or on the stage seen Mr. Pidgin's earlier and most remarkable success "Quincy Adams Sawyer, the greatest New Eng land play ever written," as it has been called, and this new work by the same author bids fair to equal its famous predecessor in populari ty. . "The Toymakers" will be given here at the Grand Opera House, tonight, under the manage meut of Charles F. Atkinson aud Tames Thatcher. The opera has been t very where received most fa vorably, the audiences have been large and the public are unanimous in its praise. The musical num bers, twenty-six in all, are unusu ally bright and tuneful and Mr Pidgin's lyrics find a worthy set ting. One may sum up in saying that in its all-around good qualities, of clever, witty and always whole some dialogue, its merry airs and the humorous surprises of its situ ations, the author has given us a play whose success is already as sured. -m STARS ON THE FLAG. Everv time there is a new state admitted there is a new star added to the flag. Every school boy knows that. Every time a new star is added it is necessary to rearrange the entire field of stars. Oklahoma makes the forty sixth state, and thp fnrtv-six stars will be arranged in six rows from left to right, the first, third, fourth and sixth rows of eicht stars each, and the second and fifth rows of seven stars each. It is quite likely that at the ap- Doth Arizona and New Mexico will be admitted as states, and the flag will be again arranged, the next time in six rows of stars, with eight stars in a row. H. W. CnAMPLIN M.D. EYE, EAR, NOSE AND 1HR0AT. 'in titular attention to examining and treat ing chlldxen'i eyes. Ent Building, Bloouisburg, Pa Fraternal Organizations. Membership Has Doubled In Ten Years. I A census recently made shows that the principal fraternal organi- zations of America now have a membership of 8,278,000, against 4,200,000 ten years ago, says tlie New York Sun. Here is an iu- create of eighty per cent., coinci- dent with only twenty-five per cent. ' increase 111 population. The joining instinct, which the atmosphere of America seems to develop, is rag-1 ing as it never did before. Once in the United States so great was the antipathy against secret orders that opposition to them became an iui- portant political issue. But Mor- same company, it is made up prin gan is forgotten and the prejudice cipally of the same people, with a has departed. It is no longer different organization. It is ex thought, because a certain group pected that the power plant at Nan of men get behind closed doors and ticoke will be completed before guard themselves with passwords, that they are necessarily iu conspir- acy against their neighbors. The saner view now prevails that, bring- ing together as they do the various elements of the population, theso organizations are valuable public and clown the West Branch Yalley. cement, increasing personal ac- J Such towns as Montgomery which quaintauce throughout the country , is directly across the river from the and training their membership into big dam Muncy, Allenwood, White capacity for co-operation and niutu- Deer, Dcwart, Watsontown, Mil al helpfulness. ton and Lewisburg are within easy A Powerful Light. The most powerful light ever produced from a single fixture, will soon illuminate the Hudson River from the tower of the new Lacka wauin Station at Hoboken. The exterior lighting of the new Station will include some strikingly novel features, as well as good ex amples of signs and outline work. The large sign, "Lackawanna Rail toad," on the water front of the building, is made up of letters 9 feet high. The arches of the ferry slips are outlined with incandescent lamps. The most striking feature of the exterior lighting, and one which will make this tower the most conspicuous object at night on the entire North River water iront, will be a cluster of 49 flaming arc lamps, which will be arranged in series within a single globe 6 feet in diameter, each arc consuming 16 amperes at 2,300 volts. It is esti mated that a candlepowerof 1,500, 000 will be reached. This will un questionably be the most powerful light ever produced from a single fixture. The globe will be sus pended from the upper part of the tower. Besides being a most im pressive spectacle, this experiment will prove of no little commercial value in demonstrating the possi bility of lighting large open spaces with exceedingly high candlepower placed at a proportionately great distance above the illumined sur face. The Price of Eggs. Eggs, and indeed all poultry pro uucts, nave been getting nigner 111 price ever since the cold storage and retngerator car business began to develop. Chicago is the centre 01 this Industry, which is now be coming an extortion. All this fall eggs have been abnormally high all over the country, and the reason for this appears in the statement that there are 100,000,000 more eggs in storage this year than last, and that some of the greedy crea tors of artificial scarcity are stag gering under their burdens. The evil results ol this business thus conducted are apparent. The high price cuts down consumption, and the deterioration of eggs in storage also cuts it down, all so that a few food pirates may prosper. Same Everywhere. An editor, relating his experi ence through the columns of a trade paper, says that an old farmer came to him and requested him not to print a certain item of news in his paper, as its publication would tend to make him ridiculous. As the old man had been a good friend and patron for a number of years he consented, the item not really be ing of general interest, anyhow. The other paper in the town print ed it. A couple of weeks later the same farmer came in and paid his subscription in full, and stopped his paper, saying that he was going to try the other one for awhile, and that he really liked the other one the best, because its editor was not afraid to print the news. Shaving a Luxury wheu executed with a Safctv Razor that " 7he Philadelphia Press" offers with the daily edition of their paper one year, Paper and Razor both for $3.50 (the value is $8.00 ) If you need a Safety Razor and ire tired borrowing your neighbor's paper to read, here is a f.ir and generous offer you cannot afford to gnore. THREE DOLLARS AND FIFTY CENTS MAILED TO DAY. NO OTHER EXPENSE TO YOU. Muncy Dam Sold. A Company Will Use It lor Electrical Pur- poses. It is reported 011 good authority that the Pennsylvania railroad has sold the Muncy Dam to a party of capitalists who will utilize it for power purposes. For some time emrineers have been exiww over the site apparently lor the purpose of estimating the hon-e power that may bo developed. The capitalists who purchased Muncy Dam are the same who pur- chased the Nanticoke Dam, and are now constructing a power plant at Nanticoke. While it is not the work is commenced on the plant there. The plan is to utilize the full stupendous hor-e power that can be J obtained from the d un with which to make dectrL-ciirro..t fnr s.dp un delivering distance for the product from the Muncy dam power station and beside these possibilities it is probable that the building of the new power station will draw to its immediate vicinity important man ufacturing concerns to which power can be served at a minimum cost. The Susquehanna is regarded as one of the best streams for the de velopment of water power in the United States. It is without doubt onlv a question of time before the dam tl ere will be used for this pur pose. Rheumatics Escape Cure by Bee Stings Hakkiski'kg, Pa. The demon stration of bee stinging as a cure for rheumatism, by State Zoologist Surface of Pennsylvania, was post poned, at the closing session of the National Bee Keepers' Association today, until next year, because of the death of several bees which had been selected for this purpose. Medical authorities now agree that Rheumatism is caused by uric acid, which is the source of most liver, kidney and blood diseases. If we remove the uric acid (caused by indigestion) we stop the other dis eases. After all, the best known and surest prescription to drive out this deadly poison is that favorite remedy of physicians, introduced over thirty years ago by the skilled physiciau and surgeon, Dr. David Kennedy, and now familiarly known as Dr. David Kennedy's Fa vorite Remedy, and sold by that name generally in at least 40,000 drug stores. Turkeys Scarce Prices High. As Thanksgiving approaches the fact becomes pretty apparent that turkeys are scarce. Practically none are seen in market. Few farmers are found who have turkeys for sale and these have no definite informa tion to give as to what prices may prevail about Thanksgiving. A few townspeople have already engaged their turkeys at 20 cents per pound. Such a price is nearly prohibitive. Food stuffs of all kinds are so high in price that most per sons of ordinary means, it is feared, will be obliged to eschew such a luxuiy as turkey at twenty cents per pound and try to be thankful and happy on plain chicken, if not on a still humbler bill of fare. No Posters on Freight Cars. Freight cars must not be trans ferred into moving billboards. The National Association of Trunk Line Railroads has notified all freight agents that hereafter freigtit cars must be stripped of all adver tising matter. This rule, of course, does not apply to the cars owned by transportation companies which paint their names upon the cars, and therefore do not need to pla card them. A general cleaning up has been in progress since the order was issued several weeks ago and signs pasted, tacked and otherwise attached have been removed. The order was not issued 011 aesthetic grounds, but because the numerous posters were sometimes so affixed as to cover car names and numbers. Three Double Holidays Next Year. Sample copies of 190S calendars show that next year Washington's Birthday, Memorial Day and the Fourth of July fall 011 Saturday, giving the public three "double holidays." Ordinarily these do not fall on the same day, but by the intervention of Febrmry 29th next year Washington's birthday falls just fourteen weeks earlier than Memorial Day, which regularly comes five weeks before the Fourth. That Little Green Ticket Which has been placed on the Suits, Coals and Children's Coats at the Garment Department of The Clark Store, makes you a NICE SAVING on your purchases of these goods. Its just so much money in pocketbook, and they are the great est Coat, Suit and Children's! Coat VALUES NOW OF FERED. Your inspection invited. THE CLARK STORE. Furs of all kinds at Bulletin. PIM YLVANIA II THE NEW UNION STATION AT WASHINGTON. All the passenger trains of the Pennsylvania Railroad will enter and depart from the new Union Station at Wash ington on November 17, 1907, and on the same date the present station at Sixth :.nd U Strtetswill be closed to traffic, The date is singularly fitting. In 1807 both wings of the Capitol were completed, and now a centurv later a build ing even larger is opened for a great public utility, which did not exist at that time. The railroad terminal facilities at Washington have been inadequate for years, particularly at inauguration periods and on the assemblage of other large gatherings at the CapitoL T..eir Improvement was imperative and so it has come about that, by the combined effort of the railroads and the United States Government, one of the largest and unquestionably the handsomest railroad station in the world is now provided not only for the convenience of the citizens of the United States, bnt as a notable architectural addition to the great public buildings of the Capital City. It is a monumental edifice and a worthy type of the future structures, which will make Washington the municipal beauty spot of the world. The station including the Concourse is longer than the Capitol and nearly as wide. The waiting room is larger than the hall of the House of Representatives. The con course, which is the train lobby, is longer than the interior of the Capitol building, if it were one continuous hall, and half as wide. It is the largest building ever constructed for a like purpose. Within this great structure there is every convenience the traveler can desire, so grouped about the central hall as to serve his purpose to the best advantage, The lofty arched entrances face a plaza as large as an or dinary city park, which will be laid out as a plaza and adorn ed with shrubbery and fountains. The trackage is sufficient for all demands upon it and as the entrance to and exit from the trains are separated, the confusion and jostling of hurrying crowds moving in opposite directions will be obviated. The bigness of the station is impressive; its utilities ob vious. it-14-ai-jt. PHILO REUNION. The Philologian Literary Society of the Normal School will hold their annual reunion Thanksgiving Day. For the evening's entertain ment they have secured the cele brated "Colonial Octette" accom panied by a pianist of high repnte. The Society earnestly ask the generous patronage of the public, as they are at great expense in se curing this superb company. Diagram opens at Bidleman's Saturday, November 23rd. 2t. Pennsylvania Society Banquet. The Pennsylvania Society in the City of New York is making arrangements for a notable banquet to be given to Governor Ldwin S. Stuart of Pennsylvania at which Governor Hughes of New York will be the chief guest of honor, together with many other disting uished men from Pennsylvania and New York. The dinner will be given on December 12th, and will be the ninth annual dinner of the Society. It will be held iu the Grand Ball Room ot the Waldorf Astoria, where the whole of the nrst floor will be required for the dinner and the guests of the Society. Like the Society s banquets in former years the forthcoming one promises to be one of the foremost dinners given in New York during the coming season. Editor Gets $7,000 Verdict A verdict ot $7,000 was returned in tavorof J. B. Kraft, city editor of the Hazleton Standard, at Scrau ton last week in his suit agaiust the United States Kxpre.ss Company for $20,000 damages. Mr. Kraft based his suit 011 permanent injur ies sustained June 4, 1906, by being struck by a horse and shaft of the defendant company while leaving the runuing hoard of a Lehigh Traction car to enter within, the horse having been left untied. the prices to suit. II10M FACTS OF INTEREST. A cannon report hss been heard m far as 140 miles. There are 44,000 abstainers in the English army. French mints coined $894,000 of wbm coins during 190B. Spain leuds in the production of lead. Germany is second. The average cost of maintaining a prisoner in an English prison is aboat $125 a year. Dover, England, will have a new harbor, which will be completed ia 1910, when it will accommodate 60 men-of-war. The salamander looks like a lizard, but its character is that of a frog. The old story that the salamander can en dure tire is unfounded. Bulit early in the eleventh century, th ere are great clucks appearing in the north and south transepts of the cathe dral of Southwell Minster, England. Buttery Park, in New York city, is school ol languages. A French visitor in the city who can speak in nine tongues heard every one of them there one day last week. In Kamchatka there grows a mush room called the false oranre, from which is niuile Honor that produces de lirium and convulsions. .Nevertlie less, it is a favorite beverage. In the old miracle plays the -'Adora- tion of the Three Kings" was always represented by members of the Jewel ers (1111I1I, each act or scene of the plays being given by a separate corpo ration, which defrayed nil expeuses. When the United States Immigra tion Commission visited a certain spot near Marseilles reeentlv it was found rnpossihle to ascertain ''the average price of land" in that locality, becau a no transactions ever took place, other than by Inheritance. Physician-, chemists and physiolo gists (iiiuny of tin-in Miiokeis theiu- vesi agree that smoking before ma turity is reached alwuys leads to waste of nerve power midbrain forte- anil thus stjimudcr. lile by weakeuln the very cento ' of strength.