Told of His Selection to Head the New Indepen dence Party Ticket. NEW YORK THE: SCENE Crowd Within nml Without XoJy Approvnl f Attack en Predatory Wealth find Declaration That the Teoplo Arc Entitled to nnd Will Oft Their Itl.rliti. New York N. Y., Sept. 3. In ex clusive Gramerey Square, where more than thirty years ago, Samuel 3. Tllden transformed the Pemoeratlo party, the Independence party noti fied iti candidate for the Presidency of his nomination, roared denuncia tion of the older parties and made a aid for populur favor. Mr. Hlsgen, the candidate, was kissed by twenty women. It was a unique experience for the occupants of the gray stone mansions to witness the enthusiasm f 8,000 men and women gathered between the south end of the park and the Players' Club, faring It. Red Ore, bands and constant cheer tag awoke the echoes of the famous Id place for the first time in many. any years. The old Gerald man sion, where some of the most cele brated social functions of by-gone days were held, rang with cheers tor our next President." more beers for "that great leader, Wil liam Randolph Hearst, and cycloiiP;i of hoarse approval of the denuncia tion of Mr. Bryan and Mr. Taft, ut tered by Thomas Hlsgen, the candi date, and Mr. Hearst, the sponsor of the new party. John Temple Graves, the candidate for Vice-President, who was 111 and was unable to bo present, sent a telegram predicting access for the new movement BATTLESHIP PLANS O. K.'DBY PRESIDENT. Florida and I tali to lie in All Essen tlals Like Delaware. Washington, Sept. 2. Plans for the battleships Florida and Utah, came back to the Navy Department, tearing the approval of President noose velt. In all essentials they are like those of the Delaware and North Dakota, the so-called Dreadnoughts under construction. Some Improve ments In the way of ammunition Solsts not directly connected with he hanullng room, less top-hammer, fewer whale boats an 1 things like that are to be made, but to the lay man they will look like the pioneer big ships. Wire waste paper ' basket masks "trying the fire control wires, speak, fng tubes, &c. will be Installed, as veil as the kind of bulkhead tested with torpedo fire on the monitor Tallahassee, then the Florida. CALCUTTA REBELS SLAY BETRAYER. Gftaaans Revealed Widespread riot Against the British. Calcutta, British India, Sept. 2. Soawans, a native who was arrested with thirty others for complicity In zh recent bomb outrages, and who turned King's evidence, was killed by :wo fellow prisoners in a cell of the .all at Alipur, a suburb. The evidence given by Gossans revealed a widespread rebellious con spiracy, which included plans to as laaslnate the Viceroy, Lord Mlnto. cad other high officials. The revolvers with which he was tilled were smuggled into the prison W relatives of other prisoners. FIND PAPERS IN GRAVE. 'tig Estate Depended on Certificates Juried With Man Who Died in 1828. Wilkesbarre, Pa., Sept. 21. In an i-.fTort to establish her claim to an state of $25,000,000 members of he Rupp family of Columbia county "O-day opened the grave of John 2app, who was buried In the Old Reformed Church Cemetery at Nu- Sldia in 1828. The papers secured which are in a ?air state of preservation, show that John Rupp was 3 8 years old when he Usd and a son of George Rupp, who. it Is claimed, was the direct heir to !h estate. The property is in Ger many and the heirs now say they :aTe all the links in the chain of evidence necessary to prove their vlalm to It. VIotlHT Drowned Witii Two Children. Brooklyn, N. Y., Sept. 2. Mrs. Vnna Radernacher sacrificed her life ;a a vain attempt to save her little n and daughter from drowning at Droad Channel, on Jamaica Bay. More than two hundred persons wlt jessed her struggles, but before any one could aid her the mother and her wo children were swept away by the ids and drowned. The bodies of the fhtldren were recovered. Supper Late, Man Kills Wife. Westerly, R. I., Sept. J. Because His Wife' illd not have his sapper -ady when he reached home, John . Tsfft, a stevadore, discharged a thotgun at ber at close range, killing Ltr Instantly. i. m is ii PLOODS SVVEEPINQ THROUGH SOUTH. Water 81 Keet leep Flood Homes and Ituslnc Houses In Atlanta, On. Atlanta, Sept 3. As a result of the most destructive floods since 1887 In eastern Georgia and western South Carolina many lives have been lost, enormous damage has been done to property, railroad traffic is blocked and communication both by telegraph and telephone is cut off. A freight train from Ashevllle to Spartanburg ran into a washout near Baluda and Engineer Lee Londar was killed and the fireman badly In jured. The tracks of the Southern between Alston and Columbia are submerged, several trestles are down on the Charleston and Western Carolina road and many landslides and washouts are reported on the Ashevllle division of the Southern. While flood conditions prevail In all of eastern Georgia, by far the greatest damage has been done at Augusta, nearly all of the city be ing under water. Not fewer than forty lives are lost and property worth several million dollars has been destroyed. In both the Carolines heavy rains fell con tlnously for 4 8 hours on ground al ready water-soaked. At Camden, 8. C, 19 persons lost their lives. They were on a toll bridge watching the flood when the structure gave way. Hundreds of cattle have been lost by the river stockmen and practical ly every acre of bottom land, the richest in the state, is under water. Although conditions are serious all along the Savannah River, Au gusta is probably in the worst shape. At eight o'clock p. m., communica tion with the outside world was cut off with the exception of a single telephone wire and a telegraph line of the Georgia Railroad running partly Into the city. Over these it was reported that the entire city Is practically under water. In the downtown portion business houses, telegraph offices and news paper offices are completely demoral ized. The Union Depot Is under ten feet oi water, and In the residence dis trict on Green street the water is six feet deep. YOUNG CHILD DIES OF HYDROPHOBIA. Dying Child Tilt Her Sister Who Is Now Under Treatment. Trenton, N. J., Sept. 2. Following the death in the hospital here of Ger trude Homeir, seventeen months' old baby, of rabies, her sister Martha, 10 years old, whom the child bit on the arm a few days qgo, was sent to the Pasteur Institute, in New York City. The local physicians feared that the older child may have been Inoculated with the rabies germ, although the bite on her arm was very slight and has caused her no trouble so far. The children are the daughters of Gustave Homeir, a printer. Exactly a month ago the baby was bitten by a pet dog. She was lying alone In a room In a cradle when her mother heard her scream. Finally she developed convulsions, In one of which attacks she bit her sister while she was holding her In her arms. After the baby was removed to the hospital the dog was killed and clear evidence of rabies were found. When the babj; cried it was decided to bring Martha at once to the Pasteur Insti tute. ENDS LIFE IN CELL; MAD FROM REMORSE. Jealous Farmer Killed Wife Walking With Bon. Clay City, 111., Sept. 2. Unable to bear the biting pangs of remorse that had made him almost a nervous wreck since he was locked up In Juno last for having killed his wife and wounded his son In a fit of groundless Jealousy, Julius Turner, one of the wealthiest farmers in bouthern Illinois, committed suicide by hanging himself in his cell. His body was discovered by a Jailer next morning, who went to the cell to awaken Turner and tell hlra to get ready for breakfast. Olympic Athlete. New York, N. Y., Sept. 1. Nearly half a million people massed In two solid walls from Forty-sixth street down Fifth avenue and Broadway to the City Hall, gave a stupendous wel come to the American athletes who, In the Olympic games at London trounced the nations of the world to the glory of American brawn, muscle and grit. Killed in Hunday Baseball Game. Chicago, Sept. l.; Morgan Cun ningham, fifteen years old, while at bat In a baseball game between teams organized by employes of two Chicago business bouses at a West Side park was struck over the heart by a pitched bayy and Instantly kill ed. '(" 1'iwrtor Kills Himself With Gnn. Canton, O., Sept. 2. The Rev. O. B. MUligan, pasto- of the First Presbyterian Church and well known us a golf player, killed himself with shot 'gun It is not lenown whether the shoot fug was accidental 'or pre-mocltated. THE COLUMBIAN, WORLD NEWS OF THE WEEK. Covering Minor Happenings from all Over the Globe. DOMESTIC. Some of the sailors from the Presi dent's yacht Sylph, stationed at Oy ster Bay, failed to get admittance to a dancing pavilion at Oyster Bay, L. I., when they went there in uniform. Thomas W. Lswson, New York, announced that he would appear be fore the Stock Exchange Committee which Is Investigating the remarka ble transaction of August 22, which led to the suspension of the broker age firm of A. O. Brown & Co. Representatives of the Aeronautics Society were planning to lease the Morris Park race course. New York, for airship experiments. Mr. Slason Thompson, at the head of the Railway News Bureau, of Chi. cago, gave out statistics In which it was charged that the railway systems of the country pay $20,000,000 an nually because of restrictions im posed by federal and State commis sions. Governor Hughes designated Judge Garrett J. Garrettson to hold an extraordinary term of the Su preme Court so that the Mains shoot ing, case may be investigated by a Grand Jury, In Long Island City. President Roosevelt spok? in .Tor danvllle, N. Y., in praise of farmers' wives and on uplifting farmers. The marriage of Miss Bessie L. Kutcher to Jessie S. Bloom was thfl first wedding to be celebrated in East Orange Methodist church in the thirty years of Its existence. John J. Greenough, Inventor, sci entist, lawyer, student of medicine, philosopher, author of a book on the origin of superstition, and credited wttn having made $100,000,000 for other people, died at Brookline, Mass., aged 97. Judge Holt in the United States Circuit Court, appointed receivers for Rogers and Pyatt, Inc., largo dealers, and manufacturers of shel lac. Julius P. Llghtfoot, Assistant At torney General of Texas, came to New York In quest of testimony in State trust proceedings against the Standard Oil Company and the American Book Company. Railroads began five suits against the Interstate Commerce Commis sion to test the constitutionality of two of the latter's orders. FOREIGN'. Over two thousand men of the American battleship fleet attended services at the cathedral and church es of Melbourne. Emperor William in a speech at Btrasburg, said he was convinced that there was no ground for fear of a disturbance of the peace of Eu rope. A despatch from Teheran, Persia, says that all the provinces are In a state of anarchy and that the coun try is on the threshold of civil war. Dr. Martinoff. the surgeon In at tendance on Count Tolstoy, fears it will be necessary to amputate the writer's left foot at an early date, as phlebitis, or swelling of the Inner membrane of a vein has set In. The Portuguese Chamber of Depu ties has passed the budget, which es timates the deficit at $2,000,000. Emigration and arbitration treaties with the United States have also been made. The Government of Japan Is en couraging competitive cattle shows and will give prizes in money. Admiral Li of the Chinese navy, has captured sixty Chinese soldiers who mutinied and who were betray ed for a price of $17 each. Appeal to the Chinese Board of Foreign Affairs to petition the torone to negotiate for an alliance with the United States was made by the Viceroy of Canton. In view of the present financial depression in Japan there is some val4 of postponing the Toklo interna tional exhibition until 1917. The Dutch people believe that war Is the real purpose of President Cas tro of Venezuela. The failure of the Shah to subdue the revolutionists of Tabriz, Persia, Is having a bad effect on the people generally, and is encouraging resist ance to the authorities in other towns. Anarchy throughout the country is regarded as imminent. POLITICAL. Governor Hughes refused to dls-l miss the charges of neglect of duty) In not suppressing gambling made against Sheriff Beck of Albany Coun ty. Mr. Taft arrived at the Middle Bass Club, on the island of that name out In Lake Erie, where he will fish and play golf. William J. Bryan plans an attack on socialism in a speech to be deliv ered in New York in September. Speaker Cannon arrived in Boston and held a brief conference with Sen ator Crane over the Presidential campaign. The "popular subscription" plan of campaign adopted by the Demo crats has swelled Mr. Bryan's mail, which was rery targe before the 'campaign contributions began to come in, to enormous size. BLOOMSBURO. PA. VERMONT GOES 26,000 FOR REPUBLICANS. Vote of the Party Falls Off Per Cent, and Democrats Show 2 Per Cent Ijoss. Burlington. Vt., Sept. 3. With all Vermont's 24 6 towns huard from but thirteen small and unimportant ones the total vote of the different parties Is as follows: Republican, 41,519; Democratic, 16.161; Prohibitionist, 639; Social ist. 437; Independence, 1,012. This makes the plurality for Prouty, Republican, for Governor over Burke, Democrat, 25,918. In 1904 Roosevelt's plurality was 30.6S2. One of the surprises In the elec tion has been the large number of Democrats elected as Representa tives. The Legislature of 1906 had thirty-two Democrats In a total of 246 Representatives. This year there will be nearly sixty Democrats in the lower house. In the First district, David J. Fos ter of Burlington, Republican, was elected Representative to Congress by a large majority over Emlle Blais of Colchester, Democrat, and Edwin R. Towle of Franklin, Prohibition. A corresponding victory was won by Frank Plumley of Northfield, Repub lican in the Second district. These figures indicate a Republi can loss of 8 per cent, and a Demo cratic loss of 2 per cent. On this basis Prouty's plurality Is estimated at 28.. 000, compared with Bell's plurality of 31.667 in 1904. MR. ROOSEVELT IS FOR MR. HUGHES. As a Citizen of the State, President Taken a Stand. Oyster Bay, L. I., Sept. 3. "I have no Intention of trying to dictate the action of the Republican State Con vention. But I am a citizen of New Y'ork State and am therefore entitled to express my Judgment on such an Issue as the nomination for Gover nor, and my Judgment is that It Is absolutely necessary to renominate Mr. Hughes." President Roosevelt made this de cided statement to William L. Ward, of Port Chester, who Is a member of the Republican National Committee and also of the State Committee. SEVEN TOURISTS LOST FROM YACHT. Sudden Squall Upsets Party of Pleas ure Seekers N'eor Deer Isle, Me. Bangor, Me., Sept. 3. The open auxiliary sloop Minnie Belle of Deer Isle, Capt. Samuel Haskell, carrying a party of ten summer residents, was capsized by a squall between Oak and Eagle islands and seven of the party were drowned. The lost are Miss Alice Talro and Miss Eleanor Talro, Washington, D. C. ; Miss Kellogg, Baltimore; Miss Lutle Kellogg, Baltimore; Mrs. Lucy S. Crawley, Philadelphia, and Miss Elizabeth O. Evans, Mount Holyoke Seminary, Mass.; Jason Herbert Hutchings of Ballerla, Mass., a senior In Bangor Theological Seminary. FIFTEEN YEARS TO FINISH THE CANAL. Congressman Denby Says the Rain Is the Greatest Hindrance. Middle Bass, O., Sept. 3. Con gressman Edward Denby has Just re turned from a trip to Panama. He said: "Engineers on the Isthmus estimate the time within whlc the canal will be completed at fifteen years. Thja Is considered generally a very con servative estimate. The great diffi culty with which we have to contend Is the rainfall." NEGRO IS NOT GUILTY. Woman Exonerates Man About Whom Springfield Riots Centred. Springfield, 111., Sept. 3. Mrs. Earl Hallam has sworn to an affidavit that George Rlcuardson who she at first Identified as the negro who at tacked ber and whom the mob tried to capture on the evening of August 14, Is not ber assailant. In the affi davit which Is In the hands of State Attorney Hatch, she asks that Rich ardson who is confined in Blooming ton, be released. Mzerhenyi Baby Dead. Ixndon, Sept. 3. The Countess Biechenyl. who was Miss Gladys Van derbilt of New York,' gave prema ture birth to a child, according to a despatch to the Central News from Vienna. The child did not survive. The Countess is believed to be out of danger. 8,ftlW,S08,lfl7 of Real Estate. Albany, N. Y., Sept. 3. At a meet. In'g of the State Board of Equaliza tion it was announced that the total real estate valuation In this State for tb'e fiscal year Just closed was 18,- 553,298,187. A year ago It was IT- 133.067,917. Roy's Mood Saves Mother. Hartford, Conn., Sept. 2. Tha lfe of Mrs. John H. McFarland of Kvethersfield, has bem saved by the nrusion or blood from her son Hen ry, sixteen years old. Ill BY 1 C1III tlaffiiiff Wall of Water Over Eight Feet High Sweeps Through Folsom, N. M. TOWN BLOTTED OUT , A Prosperous Mining Camp of il.fiOO , . t . t t...... r.nn. !!. til.- n( Hip l'oot of Mount I anil- I lin, 40 Miles South of the Colo, rndo Line, Destroyed In In. ttnnt fjrent Suffering Entailed. Trinidad, Col., Kept. 3. Twenty three persons are known to be dead and scores are missing as the re sult of a cloudburst which sent a rag ing wall of water eight feet deep over Folsom, N. M., a mining camp cf thirty-five hundred people situated the foot of Mount Capulln forty miles south of the Colorado-New Mexico line. The identified dead: Wenger. Daniel It., proprietor V enper Mercantile Company, wife and daughter Daisy. Oalghton, Lucy, young woman living with the Wengcrs. Wheeler, Theodore W., mine opera tor, wife and two babies, and a sls-ter-ln-law and her baby, living with Wheeler. Hookc, Diillu, telephone operator, washed away while at duty. Edward Wright, president of the Trinidad National Bank, who wns visiting the Wengers, Is thought to be lost. y It Is Impossible to estimate the total loss of life, which will probably reach thirty-five or forty. Already nineteen bodies have been found bur led under the silt. The hotel in which five travelling men were stop ping was washed away and they were drowned. The register has been lost and their clothes were carried away. It may be impossible to Identify these victims. The town Is completely blotted out of existence. Hundreds of houses were carried away, and whe-e stood a' thriving coal camp now remain only desolation and waste. Hundreds of citizens are out of homes, food and clothes, and re lief is being rushed from all New Mexico and Southern California. FIVE ARE KILLED IN MINE DISASTER. Runaway Car Slides Back One Thousand Feet, Striking Train. Wilkesbarre, Pa., Sept. 2. Five men were killed, another Is expected to die and five others were seriously Injured In a collision at the Warrior Run Colliery, of the Iehlgh VtJ&;y Coal Company, six miles from this city. The men were being hoisted up a slope when a. runaway mine car struck a train of mine cars on which were twenty meh. Only six escaped Injury. The dead are James Gallagher, hrank Ostrosky, Simon Buscivage, John Torkarchack and Julius Mortz. William Nawaaeny was fatally in jured. Ostrosky leaves a wife and eight children. BUCKET SHOPS LAW. Prohibits Purcliuse or Sale of Securi ties Based Merely on Quotations. Albany, N. Y., Sept. 2. The anti bucket shop law has gone into ef fect. It prohibits the purchase or sale of securities when the contract is based merely on the public market quotations and there Is no actual bona-flde receipt of delivery of such securities. It provides that brokers must furnish, upon the written de mand of any customer, an order for the actual purchase or sale of securi ties, containing the names of the per sons or firms from which the stock was purchased and to whom it was som. KILLS WIFE AND SELF. Husband Angered Because Handsome Wife Stayed Out Late. Indianapolis, Sopt. 3. Mrs. Eliza beth Struckman, noted In her neigh borhood for her beauty, was killed by her husband, Henry Struckman. in their bedroom about 3 o'clock a. m., after they had quarrelled for an hour, Struckman then killed him self The weapon used was a repeat ing shotgun. Spofford's Successor Named. Washington, Sept. 2. The Libra rian of Congress announced the ap pointment of Appleton Prentiss Clark Griffin to the position of Chief Assistant Librarian, made vacant by the death of Dr. Alnsworth R. Spof- rora. General Stewart, Confederate, lh:td. Biloxl, Miss.. Sept, 1. General Alexandor P. fetewart, one of the last two Lleutenant-Generals of the Con leaeraie Army, died at his home here. He was in his eighty-seventh year. Havunu P. O. Iooter Caught. Havana, Sept. 1. Rlcardo Rodrl guei, chief of the bureau of stamps ana materials in the Havana post of nee, was arrested to-night ou the charge of having stolen stamps to the value of 153,135. SHERIFF'S SALE. By virtue of a writ of Levari Facia, issued out of the Court of Common Pleas of Columbia County, Pa., and to me directed, there will be sold at pulijc sale at the Court House, at Hloomslur Pa., county and state aforesaid, on SATURDAY, SEPT. 26, i9o8, at a o'clock p. m., the following describ. ed real estate, to wit : I All that certain tract of land situate in I the Town of Bloomshurir. h,mti.,; . nn jron ni jn t)le intersection of nic southern line of the D. L. fc W. R, u , . r ... ,v' r- v-ompnny s ngni oi way ana the casters me of land known ns the McClnre Tract, thence alone said Railroad smith fifty-two degrees thirteen minutes west three hundred feet and six inchest. post, thence by land of Eliza, E. Fourier south twenty-six degrees fifty-six min utes east two hundred nnd forty-four feet to a post, thence north sixty-three degroes four minutes east two luimlretl and ninety-five feet and six inches to n post in the eastern line of said MeClure Tract, thence along the same mirth twenty-six degrees fifty-six minntts west three hundred feet and six inches to the place of beginning, containing ONK AND 84-100 ACRF.S OF LAND. whereon is erected a certain building located at the intersection of the south ern line of the right of way of the Dela ware, Lackawanna & Western Railr.iai Company in the Town of Uloomsburg, said county, and the eastern line of i tract of land known as the McClure Farm, and is a BRICK BREWERY BUILDING four stories in heighth in front, an1 three" stories in the rear, with a fron ts of about fiftv feet and a depth of about one hundred and fortv-five feet parallel with line of D. L. & W. R. R. and was built for the purpose of a brewery for the manufacture of brewed and malt liquors and extracts. Seized, taken into execution at the suit of John Kcim vs. The Kloonisburg; Brewing Company, nnd to be sold as the property of The Bloomsburg Brew ing Company. CHAS. B. EXT, Sheriff, t red Ikelcr, Attorney. 9 3 4L REGISTER'S NOTICE. Notice is hereby given to all legatees. creditors and other persons interested in the estate of the respective decedents and minors, that the following Admin istrators, Executors and Guardian ac counts have been filed in the office of the Register of Wills of Columbia Coun ty, and will be presented for confirma tion and allowance in the Orphans' Court to be held at Bloomsburg, Pa., on Monday, September aSth, A. L., I'joS, at a o'clock p. m. of said day. in o. i . r irsi ana unai account 01 Al len Z. McHenry. Administrator of the estate of Theodosia B. McHenry, de ceased, late of Jackson township. Fo. a. hirst and final account ot Wil liam Beishlinc, Administrator of the es tate of Joseph II. Beishlinc, deceased, late of Greenwood township. No. 3- t irst and final account ot Wil liam Chrisman. Administrator of the es tate of Alvaretta A. Lockard, deceased, late of Bloomsburg, Pa. No. 4. r irst and html account of w. C. Vanllouten, Administrator of the es tate of Margaret Vanllouten, deceased, late of Berwick, Pa. No. :. First and final account of Ow en McCarthy, Executor of the estate of Mary J. Barry, deceased, late ot Centra lis. Pa. No. 6. First and final account of J. I Shoemaker and E. G. Dytnond, Execu tors of the estate of John Hufford, de ceased, late of Fishing Creek township. No. 7. First and final account of John R. Herring, Administrator of the estate of Sarah E. Johnson, deceased, late of Pine township. No. 8. r irst ana partial account 01 1. D. and W, K. Armstrong. Executors of the estate of David W. Armstrong, de ceased, late of Bloomsburg, Pa. No o. t irst and final account ot Ja cob W. Raup, Administrator of the es tate of David Kaup, deceased, late 01 Catawissa township, No. 10. hirst and final account oi Ella Harman, Executrix of the estate of A. F. Harman, deceased, late cf Cata wissa Borough, Pa. No. 11. r irst and final account 01 George W. Zimmerman, Administrator of the estate of Lewis Zimmerman, de ceased, late of Cleveland township. No. la. First and final account 01 John E. Welliver. Executor of the estate of Charles Haven Johnson, deceased, late of Bloomsburg, Pa. No. 13. First and final account ot v. P. Eves. Executor of the estate of Elis abeth McEwen, deceased, late of Green wood township. No. 14. First and final account of J B. Robison, , Executor of the estate of Phoebe Trump, deceased, late of Scott township. No. 15. r irst ana nnai account w Ralp R. John, Executor of the estate o' John Huffnogle, deceased, late of Fish ing Creek township. No. 16. First and final account of R R. Ikeler. Trustee of the person and es tate of Rebecca Fisher, created by the will of Charles Conner, deceased, late of Orangevi'.'.e, Pa. FRANK W. MILLER. Register's Office, Register Bloomsburg, Pa., Aug. ao, 1908. NOTICE. Notice is hereby given that the follow ing accounts have been filed in the Court of Common Pleas of Columbia Count? and will be presented to the said Court on Monday, September aSth, A. D. J'jo' and confirmed ni si, anil unless excep tions are filed within lour days thereat ter, will ba confirmed absolute. 1. First and final account of Amos and R. C. Buckalew, trading under n firm name of "Buckalew Brothers filed by Margaret C. Buckalew, Execu tor of Amos Buckalew and Mary Buckalew, Executor of R. C. Buckalew. a. First ond final account of i-r-Hyde. Receiver df the Bloomsburg, Lumber and Manufacturing Conipaio- 3. First and final account of Oliver C; Weaver, Committee of Peter J Weaver, a lunatic. C. M. TERWILLIGb.lv. Prothoiiotar- . '. Prothonotary's Office Bloomsburg. Pa., Sept. , 1908.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers