THE COLUMBIAN, BL00M56URCJ, PA. CHAS. M. THE COLUMBIAN. Hl.OOMSBURO, FA. ""THUIWDAY, MAY 21. 1SKM "itiYl ai Ui rout Oflif, ninomt'mrg, (U auwcon&t'lii" matter, March 1, IMS. Co to the rarish House supper tonight. A floating bath house on the riv er is talked of at Danville. The circus reason is here, but there is no circus in sight yet. The new fire alarm system is completed, and has been tested and accepted by the towu. m In the case of Yetter vs. Longen berger on trial last week, the ver dict was for the defendant. I. H. Hagenbuch, of Danville R. F. D. 4, was a recent visitor to Bloomsburg, and favored this office with a pleasant call. The class of 1908 at the Normal has decided to give as a class me morial, the sum of $450 to beautify the grove on the school grounds. The residence of Fred Ikekr, Esq., has been repainted, and a new porch larger than ihe old one is being erected on the lower side. Every Woman Will 6a Interested. If you have pains in the back, Uri nary, or Bladder. Kidney trouble, and want a certain, pleasant herb cure (or woman's ills, try Mother Gray's Austra-liin-Leaf. It is a safe and never failing regulator. At Druggists or by mail 50 cents. Sample package FREE. Ad dress, Tho Mother Gray Co., LeRoy, N. Y. 5-i4-4t. N. U. Funk, Esq., is attending the sessions of the General Synod of the Reformed church in the United States, now meeting at York, Pa. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Eyerly re turned from their wedding trip on Thursday. They spent a week in Washington, and a week at Old Point Comfort. Chas. O.' Skeer fa;s decided to close his studio, and will abandon the teaching of voice culture for the present. He will resume his vocal studies in New York in the fall. A large audience gathered in the court house on Tuesday to listen to Dr. McCormack's very in teresting lecture. Many physicians were here from neighboring towns. For headacho Dr. Mile' Anti-Fain nils. Judge Evans has granted a change of venue in the case of Peter Die trick of Danville. The case has been ordered to Luzerne county, where it will be tried before Judge Lynch next December. There is no decision in the Krick bauni election case yet. Evidently this case is giving the Supreme Court food for thought, as it is now more than a month .since it was ar gued. Some needed repairs are being made to the Episcopal property. A cement stairway and walls to the basement of the Parish House have been built, and the pointing on the Main street side of the church and tower is now going on. - Dr. Baker, superintendent of the Matteawau Insane Asylum, where Harry K. Thaw is confined, says that Thaw is insane. Dr. Evans, nother expert on insanity, says he is not insane. This is an illustra tion of what expert testimony is sometimes worth. AlbraW. Baker, M. D., HOMEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Diseases of Children a Specialty Corner of Third and West Streets, .BLOOMSBTJRG, PA. Hours s-UntU 10 a.m. 1 to 8 and 6 to 8 p. ni. Both Telephones. $-7-6m EVANS' SHOE STORE Ready for Spring Business. Great 1908 Spring line of Shoes and Ox fords. Every Shoe or Oxford in our Spring- line will carry with it ALL l1lE QUALITY it is possible to put into a shoe consistent with price. Prices $1.50 to $6.00 ALL SIZES. THE PROGRESSIVE SHOE STORE EVANS. Mrs. h- P. Sterner was removed to the hospital on Monday, the at tending physician having pronounc ed her illness to be typhoid fever. Only a tew days before, Mrs. Ster ner had buried her mother. Prof. Sterner and family are having their full share of trouble. It is feared now that his son Robert, who is staying with Mr. and Mrs. S. R. Bidlenian, has typhoid fever. Alfred S. Ilawley, of Northum berland, father ol Robert Ilawley of this town, died at his home on Tuesday morning from paralysis. His age was 74 years. The funeral was held this morning. He was for many years the agent of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company at Northumberland. Towandi stands a very good chance of getting a new post office building. Congressman Kipp has introduced in the national House of Representatives a bill to provide for a site and public building in the county seat of Bradford. The bill has been referred to the committee on Public Buildings and Grounds and will be considered in the very near future. Mrs. Ellen Donahue died at her home on East street last Sunday afternoon. The funeral took place at St. Columba's church on Wed nesday, morning at 9:30 o'clock, conducted by Father Murphy. Her age was 80 years, and she was a native of Ireland. She came to this country when 23 years old, and settled in Bloomsburg, where she has always resided. A Certain Cure tor Aching Feet. Shake into your bhoes Allen's Foot Ease, a powder. It cures Tired, Ach ing, Callous, Sweating, Swollen feet. At all Druggists and Shoe Stores, 35c. Samo'e FREE. Address, Allen S. Olin sted, LeRoy, N. Y. S-4-4t. Although incorporated for forty years, Jeddo stands alone as the only borough in Pennsylvania that is free from crime. It has no jail, no police, no saloons. The popu lation is composed exclusively of John Markle s office and official em ployes. He enacts the law without expense to the taxpayers, and he who attempts a violation of the rules cannot live in Jeddo. Baseball News. Everywhere you go you will find people talking about baseball and anxious to see the scores of the different leagues from day to day. The Philadelphia Press has arranged to print all the latest news and gos sip of the baseball diamond and will have the best reports cf all games amply illustrated and accurately and fairly wiitten. Ask any man what newspaper is the great base ball and sporting authority and he will tell you quickly it is The Phil, adelphia Press, both daily and Sun day. You can get Ihe Press from your newsdealer or carrier, or the paper will be mailed direct to your home for $3 00 per year daily edi tion. A list of handsome premi ums given to subscribers, will be mailed to you if you write for cata logue. ADMINISTRATRIX NOTICE. Estate of Kaltus A White, Deceased. Letters of administration c. t. a. on the estate of Baltus A. White, late of the Township of Scott. Columbia County, Pennsylvania, deceased, have been granted to Luanna H. Terwilliger resid ing in. tho Town of Bloomsburg, Pa., to whom all persons indebted to the said estate are requested to make payment, and those having claims or demands, will make known the same without de lay. LUANNA H. TERWILLIGER, Administratrix C. T. A. Wra, C. Johnston, Attorney. 5-21-6t A glut in the strawberry market is the prediction of fruit dealeis in neariy all sections of the country. Reports from growers of berries in Virginia, Delaware and New Jer sey indicate that the coming crop will be better than for many sea sons and shows much larger acre age. It is predicted that lovers of this succulent fruit in many north ern cities will be able to eat all the good berries they want at six cents a quart, or perhaps five. OASTOXIIA. BM tt. Ihe Kind You tta Always roORKST, nt'T THE nAITtEST. People of Naples May Ho Half Stnrt lug, Yet Itcndy to Dance and Sing. It Is estimated that a quarter of a million people In Naples live from hand to mouth; and there are hun dreds of children who subsist out of the garbage boxes, and who sleep In churches and on doorsteps. The taxes In Italy to provide war ships and to keep the nation on a war footing with the other powers are really stupendous. There Is a tax on everything, says the Delinea tor, grain In the field, fruit on the vine, old bottles. Fuel and food stuffs are very dear only labor Is cheap. For the very poor, meat is a luxury unheard of, and even maca roni Is too dear to be Indulged In of ten. There are any number of perambulating street kitchens, whore various kinds of soup, cakes and fruit are sold In portions costing one cent. And yet these people seem very happy. Bands of musicians are always playing In the streets; the guitar and mandolin are to be heard everywhere on the boats, in the ho tels and the stranger is lulled to sloop by a soft serenade under his balcony. The story teller thrives in Naples, as there are so many idlers thero. Ho collects a little crowd around him and proceeds in the most dramatic way, gesticulating wildly and work ing his face Into the most excruciat ing expressions, to relate stories of adventure or other events, much to the edification of his bearers, who, to bIiow their appreciation, are often betrayed Into giving a sou which might have been better spent for bread or polenta. The public letter-writer is another street dignitary of importance, and In great demand, especially with timid and buxom maids of all work, who have themselves neglected to learn the art of writing. Of such the public letter-writer holds all the secrets of their lives and is often their adviser as well as amenuensls. Wind and Flsli. A singular correspondence bas lately been brough'. to light between the prevailing direction of the wind on the coast of New South Wales and the average catch of fish. The winds Influence the ocean currents, which in turn Influence the course of the fish. These Influences have periods of three or four years. Thus In 1898 there was a general scarcity of fish, but afterward they became more and more abundant up to 1901, In 190S there was another scarcity of fish, but the next : ar they began to return In Increasing numbers. The cause of tLese variations was a mys tery until the coincidence with the prevailing direction of the coastal winds was noticed. Now It is thought that by the study of the winds the prospects of the fishermen may be predicted two or three years in ad vance. Youth's Companion. A Snake Bite Knife. The British government has been actively fighting snakes in India for a dozen yean or more, and still these reptiles kill many thousand natives annually. Sir Lander Brumton, a little while ago, devised a neat pocket Instrument for handy use in caae of snake bite, and the Indian government has decided to distrib ute the apparatus widely among the natives. It consists of a small knife In the handle of which is a cavity. This is kept filled with permanganate of potash, a powerful antiseptic and caustic. When a person is bitten he Immediately cuts the wound open widely, and rubs the permanganate upon the raw surface. If the bite Is in the extremetles, and this oper ation is performed without delay, the treatment la very effective. When the Huckster is Most Zealous. "I never buy anything from a huckster who makes a great outcry about his stuff or seems very anxious to sell," says a Sorth End housekeep er, "for the chances are ten to one that there is something tbe matter with whatever he has to sell. "When two men with one wagon come up the street roaring 'appools' bo they can be heard for four or five blocks, I know that some cold stor age man has a big stock oh hand Just about to spoil and that the hucksters know that condition of the apples as well as the cold storage man, heitce their seal and energy to get rid of their stock." St. Louis Globe Democrat. The Cu re-All. Are you fat? Walk. Are you thin! Walk. Are you nervousT Walk. Have you no appetite? Walk. Or do you gormandize? Walk. Have you lost Interest In life? Walk. Maybe your poor stomach won't work. Walk. Or perhap your liver has gone on a strike. Walk. Cupid may have put a kink in your suffering heart Walk. In short, walking seems to be the remedy for all Ills, save, perhaps, broken legs. Room Enough for All, The national Government author ity on milk says that there are 85, 200,000 microbes in every cuble cen timetre of the lacteal fluid. If we accept this statement as one of fact, why should we continue to protest against overcrowding in the Subway cars. N. Y. Press. As a rule there's nothing in a di me but sometimes everything a runn has is In his wife's name. Tms orrm of bxcklsioh. Ten Thousand Acres of Timber Sacri ficed to That Stuffing Every Year. Excelsior seems to tbe average man a trifling product, and one that by reason of Its lightness cannot rep resent a large consumption of tim ber, yet there are so many uses for it that the total annual production for the country requires 60,000,000 feet of timber, or the growth of 10, 000 acres of forest land. Besides the constant use In general packing, excelsior la In demand by upholsters of furniture and carriages, by mattress makers, occasionally for stable bedding, and by steamships to Alter salt water. A richly uphol stered chair and a mattress which a customer fondly supposes to be filled with hair contains nothing but ex celsior beneath posbtbly a layer of cotton. Thus we sit and sleep on wood as well as read wood pulp newspapers, and at the mortal end of things we are likely to repose In a oollln upholstered with a choice grade of excelsior. One New York mattress factory uses a carload a day. Teddy bears owe their rotund ity to a special quality of fine excel sior. Loss must bo perfectly dry for the manufacture of excelsior. They are genorally seasoned for six months In sheds and then cut into 16-Inch lengths and quartored. These block are fastened in the ma chine and are automatically fd thereafter. A serleB of sharp spursr eight Inches wide and placed a trac tion of an Inch apart, rapidly scores tho surface of the block to a depth that is leBS than the thickness of a match. A knife follows, planing the block to the depth of the scoring, and a bunch of curly excelsior falls on traveling belt One excelsior machine turns out hnlf a ton a day, and the total an nual production Is estimated at 25, 000 carloads, averaging 16 tons each. There is not much wood left on 10, 000 acres of land when the excelsior machines have had their year's ra tions. YiTicre Morcy Is Uacless. Now and then one hears of out of the way places where the conven tions of life as they are understood, do. not exist One of these is where money is useless. This la Ascension Island' in the Atlantic. The Island Is the property of the British Admiralty, and is governed by a Captain of the royal navy. There is no private property In land; so there are no rents, taxes, etc. The flocks and herds are public property, and the meat killed is issued in ra tions. So are the vegetables grown on the farms. Hero, It would seem, la real social ism. When a fisherman makes a catch he brings It to the guard room, where it U issued by tbe sergeant major. The only private property Is fowls and pigeons. Even the wild donkeys are under government con trol. They are listed on the books of the paymaster and are handed over at stock taking. The population consists of a few bluejackets, a company of marines, and Borne Kroos from Sierra Leone. There a marine can do anything. The muleteer Is a marine; so are the gardeners, the shepherds, the stock men, the grooms, the masons, the carpenters, and the plumbers. Even the island trapper who gets rewards for the tails of the rats Is a marine. Diamonds Harder Than Steel. Tbe diamond is the hardest min eral In existence although metal tantalum, used for electric lamp fil aments comes very near It Although so bard, the diamond Is very brittle, sc that a sharp blow will often frac ture it. But Sir William Crookes who has devoted much time during many years to the scientific study of the diamond, has shown that if a good one Is placed between the steel Jaws of a bydraullo press, and the pressure la applied without jerk, so as to avoid fracture due to brittle cess, the Jaws may be made to meet without the slightest injury to even the edges of the diamond, the hard s eel closing around it and taking an luipresuton of the much harder dia mond Just like so much wax. This experiment, no doubt, In the bands of a Bktlled scientist would be all right, but we would not advise read ers to try it on with their diamond rings. Tlt-Blta. Wliut Ue Was Waiting For. A mysterious stranger with lower ed brow and menacing glare stood alongside one of the shoemakln ex hibits In a department store and watched the shoemaker at work. For a long time he stood there, never shifting bis glance, staring steadily ut the bench workman, watching him put handful after handful of tacks In his mouth nd gradually empty each maw load Into a shoe sole. Fin ally a store detective became susplc olus, and after keeping an eye on the fellow for a while went over to him and asked him what he meant by his actions. "Oh, nothing," answered the man. "I'm Just waiting to see svhat will happen if that shoemaker should sneeze while he has a mouth ful of tacks." Philadelphia Record. Improved Diamond Drill. Australian mining men rejoice in tbe possession of a new diamond drill weighing ony 400 pounds, while '.he weight of the machines now in iso Is three or four tons. Ever notice that almost everyone rou talk with gives you some Infor mation that Isn't of any earthly use IPyjouJ Clipt Prices in Your Favor. MANY LINES REDUCED. $20.00 Tailored Suits " Dip Fronts . $15.00 50c Priestley's Black Mohair, Bright and Crisp . . 37jc 50c Plaid Dress Goods 35c $1.20 Black Taffeta Silk, yd wide . . 95c 45 White French Lawn Fine and Sheer . 20c Best Apron Ginghams 7c Seamed Bleached Sheets regular 65c now . 40c Covert and Cloth Jack ets . . J3.72 $1.00 Colored all Wool Dress Taffetas . 85c THE CLARK STORE 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 Ushed. It fills a position of its own and has taken the leadinf place in the homes of rural people in every section of the Unite States. It gives tbe farmer and his family something to thinl about aside from the humdrum of routine duties. Every Issue Contains an Original Poem by SOLON 600DE WE MAKE THE EXCEPTIONAL OFFER OF Two for the Price of One: THE COLUMBIAN The Oldest County Paper and THE AMERICAN FARMER BOTH ONE YEAR FOR $I.OO This unparalleled offer is made to all new subscribers, and all old ones who pay all arrears and renew within thirty day Sample copies free. Address : THE COLUMBIAN, PENNSYLVANIA MILIUM) Bulletin. THE SUMMER VACATION GUIDE. The summer vacation is the bright spot in the dull rou tine of the year's work. It breaks the monotony of the daily round, and cheers and invigorates for the strenuous life ahead America abounds with delightful summer resorts in valley, on mountain, and beside tbe sea. The Atlantic coast line from Labrador to Cape Hatteras contains the greatest number of resorts devoted entirely to the pursuit of pleasure and health in the world. One may purchase from Pennsylvania Railroad Ticket Agents, excursion tickets to over eight hundred of these re sorts, covering all the desirable places, from the rock-bound bays of Newfoundland to the gentle, sandy slopes of tho Virginia beaches; from the White Mountains of New Hamp shire to the Cumberland Mountains of Tennessee; in the wilds of Canada; along the shores of the St. Lawrence and the Great Lakes. The famous seacoast resorts of New Jersey Atlantic City, Cape May, Wildwood, Ocean City, Sea Isle City. As bury Park, Long Branch, Spring Lake, Seaside Park, Beach Haven and others, so well known that description is super fluousare among the most popular and the most easily ac cessible resorts in the country. The Pennsylvania Railroad Summer Excursion Book to be obtained of Ticket Agents at ten cents a copy or of the General Passenger Agent, Philadelphia, by mail postpaid for 25 cents, describes them all and gives the rates and stop-over privileges allowed on tickets. r $12.48 Prince Chap Suits Pleated Skirts , $9.96 $l 00 Broad Cloths, Black and Colors . 80c $1.00 Colored Taffeta Silks, 27 in. wide . 85c $1.75 Herringbone Crav enette, Priestley's price . . $1.25 15c Printed Voiles . 11c Yard Wide Hill Muslin 10c 45c Striped and Plaid Linen Suitings 40c $1.00 Black Voile . 85c All Dress Trimmings at Big Reduction in price. Bloomsburg, Pa.