THE COLUMBIAN, BLOOMSBURG, PA. A THE COLUMBIAN. li LOOMS BURG, FA. THUUSDAY, FKHKUAItY 20, 1WH KiirrtX at Iht Pout Ofli v, Rlconittmrg, ra. nnnecimdchiiir mailer, March 1, 1K8S. The commission of George M. lhifilics has not yet been lifted, as he prefers to await the decision of the .Supreme Court before taking it out. . Frank Schncidman, clerk in Roy's jewelry store, who has been ill for the past two weeks, was able to come down from his home in ICspy on Tuesday. - Dr. D. J. Waller has been agreed upou by the representatives of the Republican party in this congress ional district as the candidate for Presidential Elector for this dis trict. The following letters remain in the Bloomsburg, Fa. postoffice: Mr. I,. G. Hrown. Miss Mary Mar ttnus, Miss Daisy Reigle; cards: Mr. Julius Block, Miss Gretchen Wilscn. . James M. Kline, proprietor of the Central Hotel, has undergone two operations at the Joseph Ratti Hospital, the second one being per formed on Tuesday morning by Dr. Laplase of Philadelphia. His condition is serious. Hero it Relief lor Women. If vou have pain in the flack, Urinary, Bladder or Kidney trouble, and want a certain, pleasant herb cure for woman's ills, try Mother Gray's Australian Leaf. It is a safe and never-failing rejfulutor. At iJrugRists or by mail 50 cts. Sample package FREE. Address. The Mother Gray Co., LeRoy, N. Y. 2-6-4t. The jury in the case of Miner Munson against Harman Breisch awarded the plaintiff a verdict of. $225. The suit was brought for damages for injuries received by a collision between the wagons of the parties on a dark r.ight in Catawis sa township, The plaiutifl alleged careless driving on the part of the defendant. A general break up on the river was caused by $he rains and conse quent high water on the river last Saturday. There was a nine foot flood at Danville. The water on the river here was reported to be 14 feet above low water mark. At T)anville the D. L. & W. tracks wte uuder three feet of water from the depot to the stove works, from Blizzard's Run, stopping trains most of the day. The water was over the station floor. To Break In New Shoes Always Use Alltn's Foot-Ease, n powder. It pre vents Tightness and Blistering, cures Swollen, Sweating, Aching feet. At all Druggists and shoe stores. 35c. Sample mailed FREE. Address, A. S. Olmsted. Le Roy. N. Y. s-6-4t Yale's Many Lawyers. The Bar Still Attracts One-Third ol the University's Graduatos. The statisticians at Yale have drawn up a table to show what oc cupations the graduates of the in stitution have chosen in the last century. From the table, says The New York Sun, it appears that the ministry has fallen oil greatly as an attraction. When the century opened about 39 per cent, of Yale graduates were ministers. Beginning with i860, this number took a great fall. Since 1885 the average has been 6 per cent. The average for law and medi cine have remained about the same. As a rule, 10 per cent, of Yale's Rradttates are doctors. In law the figures have been very steadily about 33 per cent. In teaching and science the fig ures have increased very gradually from about a per cent to 11 per cent. The strongest upward tend ency has been that of business. The fanner has fallen off ever since the Southern planters ceased to en ter Yale. Business now attracts about one third of the men, and the law about one-third. The other third is di ytded between the ministry, science, teaching, forestry and a few other f EVANS' SHOE STORE FALL SHOES. The assortment of EVANS' Shoes provides a shoe for every need, a style for 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 ize what shoe perfection means. You are cordially invited to come in aud see these new fashions. Th Progressive Shoe Store CHAS. M. EVANS. What Present Month of February Holds. There are seven holidays this month four Sundays, Lincoln's and Washington's birthdays and election day. Leap year lengthens the mouth but one day. Of all the months of the year none has been the victim of royal almanac makers as has February. Not only is it cut down to twenty eight days three years out of every four, but the mutilation of the year 1899 and again in 1900 which failed to be leap years, started the poor month limping away with only twenty-eight diys instead of twenty-nine. February was one of the two months, January being the other, introduced into the Roman calandar by Xtima I'ompilius when he ex tended the year to twelve of these periods. Its mme arose from the practice of a religious expiration and purification which took place at the beginning of this month February, meaning to expiate, to purify. Ntima let fall on February the doom which was unavoidable, for some one of the months having three times out of four a day less than even those which were to consist of thirty days. That is, he so arranged it that it should have only twenty-nine days exceptiug in leap year, when, by the iutercalcu lation of a day between the 23rd and 2 Hh, it was to have thirty days. But when Augustus Cresar chese to add a thirty-first day to the month he had named Augustus, that it might not lack in the dig nity enjoyed by six other months of the year, he took it away from February, which could least spare it, thus reducing it to twenty-eight days in all ordinary years. For headache Dr. Miles' Antl-Paln fills. Trespass Notioes. Card signs ' "No Trespassing" for sale at this office. They are print ed in accordance with the late act of 1903. Price 5 cents each, tf . Murderers Escape Death in Six Lands In six European countries capi tal punishment is not meted out to murderers, no matter how brutal the crime may be or how much pre meditated. These are Russia, Italy, Switzerland, Portugal, Holland and Norway. However, exception is made so far as the lives of the rul ers and the heirs to the thrones are concerned. The Canton of Zug in Switzer land .imposes the lowest minimum penalty in the world, three years' imprisonment for willful homicide, the maximum punishment being imprisonment for life. Of those countries which impose the death penalty but rarely carry it out Sweden is the most notable. Capital punishment is inflicted by decapitation, but the penalty im posed for premeditated murder is almost invariablv commuted to pen al servitude for life. Capital punishment is inflicted in Frauce for premeditated murder, but the crime is excusable wh?re a husband has moral grounds for murdering his wife. Germany distinguishes between two kinds of murder one, preme ditated and intentional, is punish able by death; the second, inten tional homicide without delibera tion, is punishable by penal servi tude for from five . to fifteen years. Dueling in Germany is a misde meanor of a special kind. Who kills his opponent in a duel is not charged with murder or man slaughter, but with dueling, the punishment for which is detention in a fortress lor fifteen years. Spain has a death penalty, but rarely imposes it, the customary sentence for premeditated homicide being penal servitude in chains for life. A parricide is punished by being imprisoned in chains "in per petuity until death." Hie Kind You Have Always iayk tfttn tiit Signature of HUNT FOIt TITE WHALE. Little Known Almut tlye Greatest ol Animals. Nothing Is too large or too small to ennipo the notice of man, nnJ noth. lng can ultimately hope to avoid de struction, provided "there Is money In It." The mnllpst known vertehrate, a little fish of the lnken of Luzon, Is a staple article of food, and the great est of hackhonedvjinlninls, the sulphur-bottom whale, I3 being syste matically swept out of existence, by the most approved methods of de struction. One Is more than three billion times as largo as the other, but neither can escape the all-grasping and all-powerful hand of man. The story of tho whale fishery Is an old one, and a long one, for whaling has been prosecuted for upward of a thousand years. At one time or an other, It has been pursued by every Important maritime nation and In ever part of the world whfre whales were tc be found in Important num bers. But the enpture of the larger whales as a regular thing Is undoubt edly a comparatively modern ocupa tion, for none of the weapons of primitive man Indicates that he ever attacked anything larger than por poises or the white whale, although the larger species have been taken oc casionally. It has been suggested and tho suggestion is very live ly correct, that whnlliig had It--Inception in the dead nnmals cnit i" on the beach. Thi vast store of o!' provided by one of these monsters naturally caused the fishermen t cast longing eyes on those Hpnn'tir at a distance, end to actually nttii-k thm was but a step, although a Io:ik one, for he was a brave man who fin t ventured to asall the largest of crea ture?. The whale fishery may be said to have traveled in a circle. It began with shore whaling, and after tho lanpo of centuries, has returned to this method under chnnged condi tions and with modern methods and appliances. Stations are being established njl over the world wherever the condi tion are favorable. Newfoundland and the Gulf of St. Lawrence are already dotted with them. They have been erected on the Pacific const and are to be placed on the Ber mudas. If not already located In the south ern hemispheres, they soon will be, and even now humpbacks are taken off New Zealand with wire' nets. It Is probable that here again his tory will repeat Itself, that In a few years whales will have become io scarce, that the majority of whalers will go out of business, and that here and there whales will slowly begin to Increase In numbers. Meanwhile, It la a curious fact that though whales are so common In many parts of the world and have beer, killed In great numbers for centuries, comparatively little Is known of them and good pictures and reliable Information of them are scarce. It Is a case where the very size of the animal makes its study difficult, and those brought la closest contact, have neither time nor ability, as a rule, to avail themselves of their op portunities, and naturalists have been obliged to depend on such speci mens as were washed ashore. As a result of this the numbers of alleged species of whales were great ly multiplied, for each specimen that came ashore seemed to be just a lit tle d'fferent from any other that bad been described, and so a new name waB bestowed upon it. And it is only within a few years that, as the result of many years oi patient labor, Dr. Frederick William True, head curator of the department of biology of the United States Na tional Museum, has been able to dis entangle the species found along. out shores from the web of names in which they were enveloped, and re duce them to a few good species. In the early days before a new naturo book was issued every other day and works: of natural history contained so much of fabulous ior that a conscientious llbrabrlan might be puzzled to. decide whether or not to class them as works of Action, w And much misinformation In regard to the leviathans. Even modern text books give th length of whales bb anything up to 150 feet, their weight us many tons and their shape as almost anything. The extreme length reached by th sulphur-bottom or "blue whale," th largest animal that lives, or for thai matter ever lived, is about 85 feet. Among the things modern whale fishing has, done has been to make 11 possible for museums to exhibit these huge animals so that visitors may ob tain a correct dea of their size auij appearance and really know them better than those who go down to the sea in t-lps and do business in great water. The species now being blotted out of existence are the humpback, v so called, not beeauBe he has a hump, but because he rounds over or bumpi himself when be dives; the finback, the greyhound among the whales, lean and slender, clad in the thinnest of blubber and Invariably sinking when shot, and the sulphur-bottom. The modern whaler is a trim iron steamer about 90 feet In length and 10 tons burden, capable of making IS knots an hour and powerful enough to tow In two whales at once. This craft, which jan relentlessly pursue a whale hour after hour, carries only two men more than an ordinary wbaleboat It can easily kill and bring home three whales in a day.. TVAlAi STRKKT OJT SUNDAY. It it 'an. Odd Place, Complete!) Transformed. Wall street on Sunday Is an od.l plnce. It Is as different from Wall street on a market day as Chestnut utrpet, Phllnde phla, on Sunday, Is different from any ptreet In New York any day. So It may easily be surmised hov very odd Wall street then g. W1.1 the clicking of tickers drown ed In the clang of the chimes of Trinity and with the streets broker AROUND THE STATUE less, tho week day picture Is Indeed changed. At the head of Wall street a quiet, sombre gabbed stream of prions Is entering the splendid old place of worship. In contrast a flock of happy young sters, for the most part children of the Janitors an., caretakers of the huge buildings are sliding down the legs of the statue of George Wash- CHIMES OP TRINITY. Ington In front of the Sub-Treasury. On the pavement, other youngsters, laughing, whistling and singing, are rtlllng hoops, roller skating, playing duck on the rock and "catch." The curb market Is not In their way. The traffic policemen are taking a day off. In front of several of the skyscrap ers are seated the Janitors, their chairs t-lted back against the build- THE JANITOR'S DAY. lngs. The Janitors are smoking their pipes Sometime, their wives may be seen sitting with them, knitting or look'-g over the colored supplements. It is the "home lllfe" of Wall street, Nc yelling, no "extra "dltlons," no Jumble of hansoms and delivery wag ons, no Shoestring Billy, no Red Bootblack. In some of the buildings a lawyer or business man may be seen at some of the windows doinj some work he ROLLER SKATING, coulln't finish the day before. It Is the only Incongruous bit In the pic ture of peaceful ness. Pearl Banks of Ceylon. Th Pearl banks of Ceylon date back to the sixth century before Christ. It Is recorded that Vijaya tho first Slngalese King of Ceylon, In the year 650 B. C, presented his father-in-law, the Panjyan King of Madura, "a gift of pearls," thus in dicating a settled fishery for pearls od the coast of his dominions prior to the historlo data. am m tfcT t PlliSi' 7 SEPARATE DRESS SKIRTS. We are now offering some of the 13 EST VALUES we have ever shown in these, and in the newest effects. If you have a Skirt need it will pay you to see them. A Regular $5.00 Panama Skirt . . A Regular 8.so ChifTon Panama A 36 in. Bla,ck Moneybak Taffeta Silk at this week, regular $1 95 yd. 40 in. all twool Taffeta Dress Goods 52 in. all wool Broadcloths . ... 90 in. linen finished bleached Sheeting Ladies' Fine Gauze Hose. Special ... New I4 Spring'Dress Ginghams . , A good full size Counterpane A fine satin MarsailleS Counterpane Black Silk Nets for Waists . Homespun Towels, Special Nemo Corsets, self reducing . . . NEW BELTS AND BELTINGS. THE CLARK STORE FLORIDA The Land of Summer Sunshine and Flowers is best seen by PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD PERSONALLY-CONDUCTED TOURS March 3, 1908 Two Weeks to Threo Months in the Tropics Round Trip $48.05 from East Bloomsburg Proportionate Rates from Other Points. SPECIAL PULLMAN TRAINS. INDEPENDENT TRAYEL IN FLORIDA For detailed Itineraries and full information, consult nearest Ticket Agent J. II. WOO D, GEO. VV, 1!()VI), I'iHsenger 1 ralMc Manager. General IWenger Agent. BIG OFFER To All Our Subscribers The Great AMERICAN FARMER Indianapolis, Indiana. The Leading: Agricultural Journal ot the ' Nation. Edited by an Able Corps of Writers, The American Farmer is the only Literary Farm Journal pub lished. It fills a position of its own and has taken the leading place in the homes of rural people in every section of the United States. It gives tue farmer and his family something to think about aside from the humdrum of routine duties. Every Issue Contains an Original Poem by SOLON G00OE WE MAKE THE EXCEPTIONAL OFFER OF W 1 I ll T . I V frlvw w s-k m .... v.. . . . 1 urn tnr tna trnt n iWU 1U1 U1W illtW Ul 1 Illy CULUItl 1)1 AiV The Oldest.County Paper and THE AMERICAN Farmer BOTH ONE YEAR FOR ST OO This unparalleled offer is all old ones who pay all arrears Sample copies free. Address : TIIE COLUMBIAN, Goaca In Pixie, la Dixie almost every third young ster owns a goat, and many have pain of them. t Is a common a'ght. In any of the fashionable streets, even of large cities, to see well groomed billies drawing miniature carriages w th Juvenile drivers. Many of the guats owned by Southern children are handsome animals The greatest cathedral at Cologne, although completed but a few years ago, has so deteriorated from factory emoke that ths body of tho ehureb will have to be renovated throughout now $4.00 . now $7.00 $175 yd . 1 .00 yd 1 .00 yd 35 yd 25c pr . I2icyd $i.co each 2.25 each $1,00 yd 2 for 25c $3.00 1-16-23-30, 2-6-13 1 11 a . i hl f ill uu iu made to all new subscribers, and and renew within thirty days. Bloomsburg, Pa. U. 8. Cemetery ta Mexico. "Though very few people are aware of tho fact." said an army officer th otner day, "the United States Gov ernment owns and maintains a nation al cemetery In Mexloo. It Is locate! at ban Conine, near the City of Mexi co, and was purchased and establish, ed In the year 1860 for the purpose of Interring the remains of soldiers of the United States who dled'qr were killed in that vicinity during thwar with Mexloo and aleo for in terring the bodies of clttiens of the ' United States who have died In that vicinity since that period." "inucnes.