8 THE COLUMBIAN, BLOOMSBURO. PA. v.; THE COLUMBIAN. BLO0..1SBURG, PA. THURSDAY, JULY 10, 1908. A BAD YEAR FOR UNCLE SAM. TM Deficit in tht National Trtasury it Third Greatest Since the Civil War. Only twice since the Civil War has the United States treasury had a greater deficit than the one which it faced at the close of the present fiscal year. The statement showed an increase of expenditures over receipts for the year approximating J6o,ooc,coo. In 1894 there was a deficit of $69,803,000, and in 1899 one of a little over $89,000,000, This last, however, was just after the conclusion of the war with Spain. The nearest approach to this year's figures was in 1904, when the deficit totalled $41,770, 000. The total receipts for the year have been about $599,000,000, or $64, 000, 000 less than for the fiscal year 1907, custom receipts having fallen off $46,000,000 and the in ternal revenues $19,000,000, mis cellaneous receipts alone showing a slight gain. The disbursements for the year have been about $659, 000,000, or $80,000,000 more than for 1907, and $54,000,000 than for any other year since 1855, not ex cepting the Spanish war period. These increased disbursements are very general and are shown in near ly every account except that of in terest on the public debt. Make Use of Your Leisure Time. If you have an hour to spend each day don't idle it away, for time is valuable. It will pay you to write to the Circulation Department of The Philadelphia Press, mentioning this paper, and they will send you an interesting book of advice, tell ing how to make use of your spare moments and how to make a con siderable sum of money for a little work you can do very easily. A postal card will bring this informa tion to you. Don't put it off, write at once, for it will mean dollars to you. Address Circulation Depart ment, The Press, Seventh and Chestnut Streets, Philadelphia. Just About Now. About this time the pesky mos quito puts in an appearance a nat ty appearance, we may add. .. About this time the amateur fish erman takes to hook and lyiu'. About now the young college graduate begins to see $5000 jobs looming up ahead in his mind's eye., About now last year's bathing suit is looked over to see if it can be worn any longer or any shorter. About now the matrimonial ang ling season begins. As with other sinds of angling, there will be more nibbles than catches. Just about now. Boston Trans eript. Two Wilkes-Barre men, Thomas Wilson and George Gotthold are developing a formula for making brick and wall plaster which, it is lielieved will revolutionize that bus iness. No cement or sand is used lot material which heretofore has Teen considered worthless and it is claimed that the cost of the plaster ill be $2 a ton and of the brick $2.50 a thousand. Market for Old Horse Shoes. Old horseshoes find a ready mar H Id China. One steamer alone irought 300 tons of this Iron from latnburg. Chinese Iron dealers buy no horseshoes and sell them to knife md tool manufacturers all over the rovlnce of Shantung. It Is clalm d by the Chinese that the temper of i his class of iron makes It the best btalnable for knives and cutlery and also good for other tools. The rea on ascribed for this is that the con itant beating the shoes have received nder the feet of torses has given them a peculiar temper absolutely unobtainable In any other way, aud that tools made from them are su perior to all others. Every father of seven or more .hlldren la practically exempt from taxation in France. Germany's colonies are five times if big as herself, thoso of France, 18 ymes, and Britain 97 times bigser than herself, Hannibal durliiK his campaign In Italy and Bpnln plundered 400 towus 40 d destroyed 300,000 men. New York city Is now spending on (jducatlon $120,873 lach, school day. unit, cr l,Jir-iniiklii(i. I'liriH 11 1 v IK 11 .iCdotiU ,or luce iH.tMi; 11 Ml cm broidery on tulle in fitii'iii ol which llnve-loiirllii arm i.mi:iiI tv i,,,Iih of til.: KiiiiimD (Uftitth. 1(18 Kind You Have Always Bought ilfnttora of TIIK LOXO ALASKA TRAIL. X-i Summer n Lonely, Flowery Way Mikity Different in Winter. Our trail still leads to the north r!oni; the great Government rond r-iun Whltehorse to Dawson, a Bold Feoker writes In Hunter-Trader-Trappnr. It is about 350 miles well timbered all the way with spruce, poplar and Cottonwood; some Jack pine Just starting in thick masses of many acres. Forest fires ten years ago drove most of the game and fur to other j'lirts, yet we see fresh signs of bear nn;l fox in the dusty road every day fur miles and miles. Some duck, mostly mallard, canvas back and black duck, geese and swan show up nearly every day's travel. This Is the middle of May the grass is four Inches high, blue and white flowers along the roadside, some strawberry blossoms, and yet a pane of glass frozen In our camp kettles each morning. Fruit is kill ed 1,000 miles south. This Government road is a soli tude In summer, not a person for a hundred miles, but In winter when the ice tops travel on the mighty Yukon River, then this road is a wide awake, thriving, bustling, hust ling, get there runway for the trad ers and miners. Great four and six horse stages slam through this road nlht and day from both ends. Change horses every twenty-two miles at hotels called roadhouses. Tho charges at these roadhouses are $1.60 for each meal, $1 for bed, $1 for handout lunch; bear, &c 25 cents per drink, hay and oats 5 to 10 cents per pound. The hay comes from Spokane and the oats from Manitoba, both points about 1,500 miles away. Both articles are first class. We were overtaken on this road by four droves of beef cattle of 125 head in each drove. They were ship ped from Calgary, Canada and Seat tle, Wash. 500 miles by rail, 1,000 by sea, then 120 miles by rail, 140 miles on foot, then by boat 250 miles to Dawson, 1,200 miles to Fairbanks. Feed, both oats and hay, averages $180 per ton. The first cost of cattle is about $70 per head. They are stall fed until three years old and weigh from l.GOO to 2,200 each, the best in the land. Tho freight on each is more than $100, the feed and care another J100 They sell in Fairbanks for $350 to $400 each. The man who works the pick and shovel pays for all. Chuck steak, 65 cents; T bone steak, 90 cents; best cuts, $1 per pound. One herd lost five head through the ice; the next day the next herd lost nine head at the same place. They went under the ice in twelve feet of water. The miner must pay for this loss also. The hay each herd of 125 eats costs about $200 each night on the road. One herd was short a man to drive, so the younger of us two gold hunters went for five days at $10 per day and ex penses to help out. IMPORTANCE OF SLKKP. The Rest, Cheapest and Most Effica cious Medicine. Sleep Is the best and cheapest med icine, and it 1b within the reach of everybody. We require as much sleep as we can procure. We may work at high pressure if we sleep enough, but If we overwork and un dursleep, irritability, insomnia and neurasthenia are almost certainly in store. One of the prime causes of Ill-health among men and women who have to work with their brains is neglect of sleep. The woman who curtails her sleep begins to worry. Insufficient sleep, in the first In stance, is a common cause of Insom nia. Rest and sleep are the only rat ional cures for brain fag and ner vous exhaustion. It is the highly developed mind that it liable to worry, the alert, highly strung In dividual who is prone to suffer from sleepiest ness. The country yokel can always sleep, and nobody ever saw a neurasthenic cow; but the higher the type the greater need for rest and a sufficient amount of sleep. Modern sanatoria teach us much about rest that is worth knowing. Disease 1b combated by putting the patient in such a condition as to en able him to cure himself, as it were, by letting nature do her beneficent work unhindered. One of the un breakable rules of a sanitarium day is rest absolute rest for an hour before and for- a short time after meals, says McCall's Magazine. See the common sense of this! How can food posBibly do anyone any good if taken into an exhausted frame? How is it to be digeste;!? How cun the bodily tissues be refreshed and nourished? In the big shops, at every change of season und at sales, It Is terrible to see the crowds of womeu, fagged and over-excited, who "rush" a meal in some cIobo room, most likely chatting or planning all the while, and then, without a break of any sort, go back to the fever of shopping, many of them with the prospect of a railroad Journey back to the suburbs as a wind-up. How many headaches will be the result? What proportion of these shopping ladles will go home too tired to sleep? Neglect of sleep is, perhaps, the most fatal error made nowadays by busy people. Sleep is the only rat ional cure of, as it is the natural tateguard against, brain-fag - and nervous exhaustion. It is always the highly developed, energetic individ ual who Is the first to suffer from worry and sleeplessness. hk.'ht tiAxn on nont rtAKns. Four-Fifth of the Unities 8nld to Re AtnhlilcxtrniM). Many reasons have been advanced for tho prevalence of rlght-handed-nes. It is by some said to be the result of nursing and Infantile treatment, to be due to early prac tice In writing and drawing, to bo the outcome of warfare, education and heredity, the result of mechani cal law and other remote causes, ac cording to The Strand. Sir James Sawyer declares that the preferential use of the right hand is due to the fact that in primitive days man used the right hand for the purposes of offense, so as to keep the heart the vital spot as far as possible from the aflfault of an adversary. Recent experiments and observation, however, prove that slnglehanded ncKs is merely the result of faulty or restricted education. It Is a curious Instance of huninn contrariness that should one eye, one ear or one leg of a child show signs of diminished vigor the parents would Instantly seek the cause of. and if possible, the remedy for that lamentable condition; yet for some Inexplicable reason or prejudice the left hand of the average child Is ruthlessly and deliberately neglect ed, until In mature years it is an undeveloped, useless and almost un necessary appendage. Careful observations have showb that out of every hundred persons born Into this world eighty are con genltally ambidextrous that Is to say, they will instinctively reach for an object with either hand and only require proper Instruction and train ing to develop both hands and arms to an equal degree of strength and skill. Of the remaining 20, 17 will be rlglithanded, while the other thr?? will show a natural bias toward the left hand. The cultivation of ambidex terity, therefore, offers no insuper able difficulties, and the economical, physiological and psychological ad vantages are enormous. It Is said that the Japanese sol diers can use their weapons wit!, equal skill in either hand, for they are tr.ilued ro bo ambidextrous from childhood. At school they are taught to write and draw with both hands. In drawing and painting no support ing device whatever is used, the en tire arm being employed. The German educational authori ties, too, are at present giving con siderable attention to left-hand work, especially in their technical and me chanical schools. The students are tqught to saw, plane and hammer as well with the left hand as with the right, and the economical and Indus trial importance of ambidexterity is firmly impressed upon the minds of young men and women. WATCH REPAIRING SEASONS. April to July the Ruxiest Time la This HusliieKg. "Are there seasons in the watch repairing business? Oh, yes," said the Jeweller, "there are seasons In thlB Just as there may be in any other business, and the busy season lu watch repairing lasts from April to July. "We are busy, to be sure, at all times through the year; there are always watches to be repaired, but our busiest season is one comprising the latter part of spring and the earlier part of summer, when people are preparing to go or are going away "At this season they want to be sure that their watches are in or der and to be relied on while they are gone, and so they bring them in. One might have to depend more upon bis watch when away than he would at home, and bo he wants to feel sure of it. "In winter, if a woman's watch, for instance, should stop she would probably simply put It away and not bother about having it repaired then; she might perhaps have other watch es that she could use, and In any event she would have clocks at hand by which she could tell the time; but if she were going away she wo.ild be very likely to b-ing in th& watch she was to carry and have it looked over; and the same would be true of many people, both men and women, who thus come to have their watch requiring done at this time of year. "foil say you thought that more mainsprings break in winter than in summer? I dare say that is tho common impression ; but it is my ob servation that more mainsprings' break In summer than In winter, and such mishaps may add to the num ber of watches that come in at this season, but the common reason that brings them to us In greater num bers at this time is tho desire to have them In order. "We always have some watches sent In to us from the country la summer for repair. Naturally the get rougher usage or are more liable to mishap there than they would b4 in their ordinary UBe in the city. Sometimes we get watches that have been dropped overboard, and water lu about as bad for a watch as fire. However perfectly constructed a watch case may be water will work into it around the stem if it is lonj enjuglt submerged. "Bo, while there are always watch es to be repalreJ, the months fro it April to July constitute what yoi might call the busy season in watct repairing, and on some days in this) sinuo'i we may- receive for repair1 twice as many watches as come 'to us In a day In the course of regular busir.ess at other seasons of thai Euontbs running round the year," LOYK OF Till: JKW'S HARP. Some Ils(tnfriilihel IVi'dirnii'i-s I li on the Instruini'iit. The Jewsharp has been n fas-ill'at' Instrument under that ttnme in tlili island for some 400 years, h Itself of much greater antiquity. In a Scottish witch trial In 1501 it was affirmed, says the London Globe, that a girl named Duncan played "upon a small trumpe called a JewBtrun.ii" before the unholy fraternity of witches on the occasion of their In vading a church; whereupon hlu Scot tish Majesty, before whom and hU Council the trial took place, called upon the girl to play before hlni a dance upon her "trumpe," which she accordingly did. Several writers of voyages and travels of the Elizabethan era men tion Jewsharps, with hatchets, knives, beads and the like, as suitable wares to be taken for purposes of barter w ith the American Indians and other uncivilized peoples. Sir Walter Ral eigh mentions that a Jewsharp would purchase two hens, which seems a fairly profitable rate of exchange. The Jewsharp has had Its Pader ewskl. The late Charles Godfrey Leland, best known to fame as Hans Ureltmann, In his "Memoirs," recall ing his student days In Germany, mentions a certain Dr. Kcrner, who performed on the single r.n l doulilo Jewsharp. Dr. Kemer, says Leland. "from this most unpromising Inrti'J ment drew airs of SiH'li exquhirr' beauty that one could not have Jw.11 more astonished had he lior.r i t:.e sweet tones of Oriel drawn iroin a cat by twisting Its tall." More extraordinary even then fie performances of Leland's Dr. Ker ner were those given some SO years ago In London by a compatriot of his named Eulensteln. The late Profess or Charles Tomllnson, wilting In 1S 95, gave his own recollections of some of Eulensteln's feats. This per former, he wrote, "excited wonder and delight by combining as many as 16 Jewsharps, Including two ac taves, In one frame, and he managed to shift them In his mouth so rapid ly as to produce what was called fairy inutile. A performance at the Royal Institution led to his being In vited to evening parties." One can hardly imagine a performance on the Jewsharp as one of the attractions at the present day Royal Institution. But the Jewsharp has gone down In the world. It is no longer play ed upon at the Royal Institution; no modem Dr. Burney composes music for it; nor will it as an article of barter purchase a single hen. AXTIQIITV OF AGRICULTI RE. Probably Originated in South and East of Europe. "The origin of agriculture," says Professor WIegend, of the Univer sity of Bonn, "Is lost In the mists of antiquity. We kno-w that in neoli thic times In Europe eight kinds of cereals were cultivated, besides flax, peas, popples, apples, pears, plums, etc.. At the same time, various ani mals were domesticated. Among these were horseB, short-horned ox en, horned sheep, goats, two breeJs of pigs, degs. "In all likelihood agriculture arose in the south and east of Europe, and spread gradually in the center, north and west. A hunting population is often very averse to even the slight est amount of worjc that agriculture requires in a tropical country. The same holds good, as a rule for pas toral communities.. In all cases a powerful constraint Is necessary to force these people into uncongenial employment. Fate Is stronger than will, and at various periods in differ ent climes hunters and herders have been forced to till the soil. "The desert," Professor Wlegand says in another part of his paper, "notwithstanding all difficulties of communication, offered more facili ties than the sea to early man; it had, in fact, three manifest advan tages over the Mediterranean: (1) The desert penetrates further into the interior of the country. It Is several tiineB larger than the Medi terranean, and can therefore, tap more countries; it reaches to pre cisely those richest countries that the Mediterranean does not touch. (2 The desert does not oblige the pastor to seriously modify his mode of life. In order to traverse the desert it Is necessary to arrange the Journey in stages; but these stages, once cre ated, the pastor can live In his own way. (3) A numerous troop can cross the desert. They travel In caravans for greater safety and de fense against possible attacks. 'Such are the reasons which caus ed early man to travel over the des ert before voyaging over and utiliz ing the sea." Ail-Propellers. Count Zeppelin, whose experiments with a gigantic airship over the Lake of Constance attracted world-wide attention some few years ago, has devised a novel form of propellers Intended to drive light-draft boats and launches. Instead of operating in the water Zeppelin's propellers, like those used to drtvo balloons, rotate in the at mosphere. They are speoially In tended for use in very shallow wat ers, and In tropical rivers which contain so many aquatic plants that the propeller of an ordinary boat be. comes clogged with them. Boats having a very light draft can bo skimmed along with such propellers at the rata of several miles an hour. Alexander Brothers & Co., DEALERS IN Cigars, Tobacco, Pipes, and Confectionery. o Fine Candies. Fresh Every Week. - JFet:n"2- Goods -a. Specialty. . HAVE YOU SMOKED A ROYAL BUCK or JEWEL CIGAR? ASK YOUR DEALER FOR THEM. ALEXANDER BROS. & CO., Bloomsburg, pP. IF YOU ARE IN NEED OF Carpets, Rugs, Hatting and Draperies, Oil Cloth and Window Curtains ( You Will Find a Nice Line at W. M. B ROWER & BLOOMSBURG, PENN'A. ( WHY WE LAUGH. "A Little Nonsense Now and Then, Is Relished by the Wisest Men:' Judge's Quarterly, $1.00 a year Judge's Library, $1.00 a year Sis Hopkins' Hon., $1.00 a year On receipt of Twenty Cents, we will enter your name for three months' trial subscription for either of these bright, witty, and humorous journals, or for One Dollar will add Leslie's Weekly or Judge for the same period of tinrr Address Judge Company 225 Fourth Avenue New York 3-21 I 1 1 5 a 1 B 1 t 1 SUSPENDERS 11 a WILL OUTWEAR THREE OF THE ORDINARY KIND More clastic, non-rum I na parte Absolutely unbreakable IrHtbttT OvaranUtd beet C0o aupebr vade t'n be had In light or hwjr weight for man or youth, filrt length hiim price, SUITABLE FOR ALL CLASSES If ynnrdpnler won't .npply yoa we will, inmipHid, for U) rnu. S4 for Ttlubl. frM boaklrt, " Comet Oral 4 lupoador fttylM.' HEWES & POTTER LartMt liipnln Hikon 1b Um World 1214 HI Llaoolatt KoMoa, looo. I :s3 W. L. Douglas AND Packard Shoes are worn by more men than any other shoes made.' Come in and let us Fit Yoa With a Pair W. H. MOORE, Corner Main and Iron Sts., BLOOM SB LRG PA. :ifi Visiting cards and Weddine invi tations at the Columbian office, tf i' : r Our Pianos are the leaders. Our lines in clude the following makes : ClIAS. M. STIEFF, Henry F. Miller, Brewer & Pryor, Koiilfk & Campbell, and Radel. IN ORGANS we handle the Estey, Miller.H.Lehr & Co. AND BOWLIIY. This Store has the agency Jor SINGER HIGH ARM SE II ING MACHINES und VICTOR TALKING MACHINES, WASH MACHINES Helby, 1900, Queen, Key stone, Majestic. J. SALTZEtf , Music Rooms No. 105 West Main Street, Below Market. BLOOMSBURG, PA ! s