The Columbian. (Bloomsburg, Pa.) 1866-1910, September 10, 1908, Page 6, Image 6

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SHOT A 1H
Roosevelt Narrowly Es-i
capes Missile Fired
by Miscreant. j
A SUSPECT ARRESTED
OTt Brrvlrp Ounrd IhxiMpd
SnniiK re Hill, ()jn(4T liny Mnn
Caiilit In (JroumU With I'nlonclcd
rixtol nnd a Dirk Knife Tnlks n
If Ho Minlit lh Insnno.
Oyster I!ay, L. I., Sept. 10.
TbrouRh the srrpt of an armed man
at Sagamore Hill and the doubling
of guards about the home of Presi
dent Roosevelt, It became kdown
that an attempt was made to shoot
the PreBldent when he was out rid
ing. The bullet was fired from be
bind a hedge which bordered the
road. It passed a few Inches abovu
the President's head, and he and a
friend who was riding with him.
heard the whistle of the leaden mis
lie clearly. If It had been a volley oi'
hot the explanation might be piven
that a careless and law dffyln.;
sportsman had done the shooting r
bit In advance of the opening of thu
game season.
There Is no question, however, ii
was a bullet from a pistol or a ri.le,
and that It came perilously near end
ing the career of the President, X i
glimpse of the would-be assassin c
the careless handler of a firearm I
caught by the President or his friend,
oecause they were riding hard to,
ward W. Emlen Roosevelt's plae-i
when the shot was fired, and befon
they could pull up their horses ant
tarn about, the shooter had ampl'i
opportunity to get away. After tho
shot had been fired and the Presi
dent and his companion had succeed
d In stopping their horses they de
elded It would be useless to ride back
and look for the man who had done
the shooting. If rumor be true, tho
President's friend Insisted it would
be the height of foolhardlness for
Aim to do so, unarmed as he was
Mid with his assailant concealed in
ihe bush.
Edward Fisher, an Oyster Bay
back-man, says he heard the shot. He
was driving a man and a women and
was passed on the road by the Presl
stent. A minute afterward he heard
ihe report of a firearm. Fisher saya
no was driving Mr. and Mrs. Ca
aille Weidonfield.
- The President was anxious thai)
the Incident should not be known be
yond the members of his family and
the Secret Service men whose duty it
s to guard his life. He consented,'
Sowever, to having the guards dou
bled about 'the sagamore Hill prop
erty and to subject all strange call
ers to the closest scrutiny and ques
tioning. Not until John C. Cough
tin, an armed crank, who at first in
sisted he was "St. Patrick," was ar
rested by the Secret Service men, did
the story of the attempt on the Pres,
Uent's life leak out. Coughlin, who
a&ys he halls from Boston, wa l
caught near the tennis court of Saga,
more Hill when he was seeking an
interview with the President. In ft
small hand satchel which he carfled
Vuey found a six-shot pistol, unload,
4, and a dirk knife.
LEAPS INTO NIAGARA;
HERO FAILS TO SAVE.
Ctfrl Plunges to Death Over Falls,
Eluding Rescuer's Grasp.
Niagara Falls, N. Y., Sept. 10. A
icoman who sought and found death
ia the wild waters of Niagara, made
it hero of Harry Sehafer, of Hoboken,
S. J.
The woman who was not mora
rhan twenty, strolled through Pros
jct Park to Prospect Point, where
jie plunged Into the river.
Sehafer saw her leap. He climbed
ver the railing close to the brink,
&e woman drifted toward him
Stretching his legs he placed one foot
jar out on a water gauge and, as thu
oman came down on the current ho
Tried to reach her. Ho was unsuc
cessful and the current hurled her
ver the brink. It was all over In
. 1 few seconds. When willing handi
fcelped Harry Sehafer back to shorn
ie trembled like a leaf.
550,000 PACKAGE LOST.
trusted to WHN-Fjirgo ICxpres'4
Co., It Disuppeiim nt I'ortltiud, Ore,
Portland, Ore., Sept. 10. A pack
ge entrusted to the care of tin
Vells-Fargo Express Company, nl
Salem, Om., by J. H. Albert, Prtul
lent of the Capital National Banli
,t that city, and addressed to Joseph
J. Meyers at tho Portland Hotel lq
rhl city, containing notes and othoi
valuable papers representing ovei
(50,000 la strangely miffing.
Woman HIaiu; Cast lnt lUver.
Wellsvllla, a. Sept. 10. Tin
shrunken, nud bleached, body of
woman, purnod by Quicklime, hat
en found on tho Went Vlrginit
hore of the Ohio P.iver, ncr.r tUI
. rlty. A blood-stained rope was als
tound and It la bf.lievcd that thi
woman was murdered,
SPRING WHEAT CROP
SHOWS AN INCREASE.
Estimated Yield of S240,H.0,OO0
Huftlirlx, or 22,000,000 More
Than Imnt Veir.
Washington, Sept. 10. Figures of
tho Government crop report indicat
ed a total yield of wheat of 666,796,-
000 bushels, 2,595,597,000 bushels
of corn, 825,908,000 bushels of onts,
80,921,000 bushels of rye, 169,434,-
000 bushels of barley, and 283,662,
000 bushels of potatoes. Of hay a
crop of 67,743,000 tons Is promised.
Good average yields of flaxseed and
buckwheat are also Indicated by the
figures published.
While the crops of wheat and corn
and oats are fair, disappointment was
expressed at the deterioration re
ported by the Government In spring
wheat and corn. During August corn
deteriorated from a condition of S2.5
to 79.4, which reduced Into bushels
means an Indicated loss of 120,000,
000 bushels of corn. Spring wheat
deteriorated from a condition of 80.7
at the beginning of Angust to 77.6
on September 1. This decrease In
percentage conditions means an in
dicated reduction In the rprlng wheat
yield of 9,000,000 bushels. The In.
dtcated crop of spring wheat Is now
240,856,000 bushels. The total
yield of wheat amounting to 666,796,
000 bushels now indicated, exceeds
last year's final yield by 30,000,000
bushels, but falls short of the crop
of 1906 by 7,000,000 bushels.
WRIGHT'S MACHINE
A REAL WONDER.
Aeroplane Soars Aloft With tho
Grace of a nird.
Washington, Sept. 8. Orvlllrf
Wright at 5.30 started his aeroplane1
on what proved to be in many ways
the most remarkable public exhibi
tion by a machine of the type ever
given In this country. He glided off
the starting track and Into the air
as gracefully as a swan would swim
out on a park lake, made five and a
half circuits of the cavalry grounds,
remained aloft four and a half min
utes and came to earth at the en
trance of the tent in which the ma
chine Is started as easily and as
lightly as a feather.
Watching the performance Intently
and applauding each time the aero
plane came near the spectators on Its
rounds was Glen H. Curtis, inventor
and navigator of the June Bug, the
most formidable rival of the Wright
machine. Curtis made no comirent
afterward other than to say that It
was a splendid feat, but is was plain
that he was puzzled -and enthused.
For full 200 feet the skids grazed
tne weeds and grass. The navigator
pulled the rl.-rht lever ever so slight
ly and the La lancing planes were
seen to tilt upward. By easy stages,
but sailing swiftly, the great machine
rose to a height of twenty-five feet.
Another pull at the same lever and
Wright had It sailing on an even
keel.
Approaching the housing tent he
guided to the left, circled the lower
side of the parade ground, flying
close to Arlington Cemetery, and
headed for the starting point. At
times he sailed as high as fifty feet
and as low as twenty-five. The
wobbling which he spoke of after
ward was not perceptible to the nak
ed eye,
Lieut Lahm and Major Squires, in
charge of the trials, had given orders
that the crowd should be kept far
back from the parade ground but
when the great airship swept by cav
alrymen and artillerymen had to bat
tle with 600 enthusiasts.
BROTHERS REUNITED
AFTER 45 YEARS.
Jacob Gould of Aberdeen, Wiudi., and
T. 15. Gould, His Hrother, Meet.
Middlotown, N. Y., Sept. 10. Af
ter forty-five years, Jacob Gould of
Aberdeen, Wash., and Thomas B
Gould, formerly chief of police of
this city, have been reunited at the
home of tho latter here.
The brothers had not seen each
others since 1863, and until a short
time ago, each had supposed the oth
er dead.
Through seeing each other's name
in the newspapers the brother's
learned of the addresses, a corres
pondence followed and a joyous re
union Is the result.
THE SULTAN YIELDS.
Kuitaii of Turkey Will TIiiim Guaran
tee the Xew Loans.
Constantinople, Turkey, Sept. 10.
Tho newspaper organ of the Young
Turkey Committee states that tho
Saltan litis announced li is intention
to surrender the Crown domains,
yielding a yearly revenue of $2,000,
000, as a guarantee for tho forthcom
lug lonna for the treasury and civil
list.
Dinned Himself t Death.
itlr.bura, Sept.-8. Albert Hultbu,;
oung mulatto, danced himself to
th. i(lIo paid tho operator of a'
.ly-Srdy, to which he danced,
a crow. I thr.t catlierod contlnuod
i cyncntn. The police finally In.
I
o y
dra
h-.'r
an:
tliO
u-n'
rca.
eutn
jvI, a;ij llullou roll rod to his
i, where ho died from heart (lls
, uo to over-exertion.
nniiiu
Like a Flaming Comet,
Charles Oliver. Jones
Falls 500 Feet.
WIFE SEES TRAGEDY
With Their Mttle Child, She I One
of First to Kneel ltetlde Dying
Man on Maine 1'nlr Ground at
Watcrvlllc n IStig Took Fire
In Mid-air.
Portland. Me., Sept. 10. As the gas
bag of his airship burned Charles
Oliver Jones, the aerial navigator of
Hammondsport, N. Y., dropped five
hundred feet to his death on the fair
grounds of the Central Maine Fair
Association at Watervllle, and 25,
000 people for the first time In their
lives were watching the manoeuvres
of an airship as Jones steered her
this way and that, bucking the wind
and then running before the wind.
In the crowd were the wife and
child of the daring air captain, whom
less than fifteen minutes before he
had kissed good-by, '
Jones stood on the framowork of
the machine Just before starting and
explained its merits to the crowd and
then, tilting the gas bag, shot Into
the air. As he was working tho
Boomerang about 600 feet above
the heads of the throng every one
seemed to notice at once tongues of
flame licking their way about tho
gas bag Just ahead of the motor and
shouted as one person, a warning to
the aviator. The people started
across the field In pursuit of the ship,
Mrs. Jones leading, and crying to her
husband.
Jones was seen to crouch In tho
framework to get as far as posslblo
away from the flames, and then,
rolling over and over In the air, tho
monster mechanism plunged to the
ground and fell, with Jones pinned
underneath it.
About a q-iarter of a mile from;
the fair grounds the crowd came up
to the frame beneath which Jones
was pinned. He was rushed to a
hospital, where It was found his
spine' was broken and that he had
sustained internal Injuries. He sur
vived the accident an hour and a
half. The gas bag alighted a short
distance from the frame work and
the Are was extinguished but the
machine is ruined.
FOREST FIRES BURN
MINNESOTA TOWN.
Wind Dies and Endangered Villages
Are Saved Cliisliolm Destroyed.
Duluth, Minn., Sept. 9. After de
stroying the town of Chisolm on the
Mesaba. range, and burning over
thousands of acres In St. Louis,
Carleton and Itasca counties in Min
nesota and in Douglass county, Wis
consin, the many forest fires which
have been raging in these regions
were checked.
The subsiding of the wind enabled
the Inhabitants of Buhl and Nash-
wauk to save those towns.
Chlsholm presents a scene of ruin
and desolation. . Blackened and
smoking piles of charred wood.
scorched, gaunt skeletons of brick'
comprise what was one of the most!
flourishing towns on the great MeB
abo Iron Range. The only remain
ing buildings are the new $125,000'
high school, a grade school, a Catho
lic church, the Italian church and a
dozen dwelling houses In the south
ernmost part of the town.
The damage to real property Is now,
estimated at $1,000,000, and that to)
personal property, $750,000. The In
surance carried by Chlsholm mer
chants was about $500,000.
FATAL BARN RAISING.
Farmer Dies of Fractured Skull Af
ter Friend Drops Maul on Ills Head
Newton, N. J., Sept. 9: His skull,
fractured by a twelve-pound wooden!
maul dropped from the top of a barn
by a friend who was assisting In
"barn-raising" on the farm of Lynch
D. Wyker, In Wykertown, Samuel1
Ernest Hough, a prominent farmer ini
Frankford township, is dead. That
such a tragedy should have attended
a "barn-raising" which had been
planned by the farmers to bo one od
their Important social gathering
Bpread gloom In the community wheu
the news was circulated. Jacob N.
Van Auken, tho mnn who droppef
the maul and unwittingly caused thJ
death of his friend, is almost frantlo'
from grief.
66 SUICIDES IN WEEK,
Many St. I'eter.sburu; Working Girl I
Ectween IN and 2.1 AmoiiK Them.
i)t. Petersburg, Sept. 9. Therfl
wore CO Buirlde cases In this city"
last week.
A large proportion of that numbed
wero working girls between the ukcs
of 18 and 25 years,
France will appeal to the Powers
to decide whether German's inter
unitlon townrl recognizing; Mulal
Hnilg as Sultan of Morocco without
flip, run tees in justifiable; tho French
l'rosft shows' great Irritation; tha
tou. of the German papers Is com
WORLD NEWS OF
THE WEEK.
Covering Minor Happening from
all Over tha Globo.
DOMESTIC.
E. H. Harrlnian. speaking to 400
business men In San Francisco and
replying to Lleut.-Gov. Porter, said,
tell us your wants; nothing will bo
turned down until It has received
our consideration."
Mrs. Sage's gift of Constitution Is
land to West Point, N. Y., was made
possible, It was disclosed, through
the patriotism of the owner, Miss An.
na Bartlett Warner.
Orvlllo Wright made two success
ful flights at Fort Myer, Va., break
ing all American records.
W. K. Vanderbilt. Jr., on his re
turn from Europe, announced that ho
would give up automobile racing.
C. W. Trlckett, Assistant District
Attorney General of Kansas and lead'
er of tho recent liquor reform cam
paign, was fined $500 In the City
Court at Kansas City, Kan. Trick-"
ett was convicted of accepting an Il
legal fee in a Joint case.
Sheriff Chanlor tried to get Harry
K. Thaw removed from the Dutches
County jail, Poughkeepsle, N. Y. but
his application for removal was de
nied.
The water In the Ohio River be-
tweon Pittsburg and Cincinnati was
reported to be the lowest In twenty
years, tying up navigation for thd
first time In five years.
Governor Fort of New Jersey ap
proved the proposition to build 4
state road bordering the ocean from)
Atlantic Highlands to Cape May.
There was a boom In telephone
bonds as the result of the report that
E. H. Harriman would Introduce the
telephone in place of the telegraph
for dispatching purposes on his lines.
Mr. J. Pierpont Morgan, who hart
just returned from a trip abroad said
that business showed indications of
Improvement.
The Public Service Commission of
Newark, N. J., which for years has
enjoyed the lighting monopoly of
Newark, Is being fought by a new
concern which It accuses of having
built a secret tunnel.
FOREIGN.
The Trade Union Congress at Not
tlngham, England, adpoted resolu
tions regarding an Inquiry Into the
Held of Industrial assurance and
changes in parliamentary procedure.
M. Plchon, the French Foreign
Minister, announced that France and
Spain had agreed on the terms of
the Moroccan note to the powers.
The Porto Rlcan House of Dele
gates met In extra session at San
uuan.
Mrs. Marshall Field, Jr., of Chic
ago, was married to Mr. Maldwin
Drummond In London.
France and Spain will Insist that
Mulal Hafld give full guarantees to
Uphold the terms of the Algeclras
ronventlon before recognizing him as
Kultan of Morocco.
Rear Admiral Sperry denounced,
In an interview at Melbourne, Aus
tralia, a studied effort to traduce the
t baracter of the men of the fleet,
which he said had preceded the bat
tle ships at their ports of call.
A dispatch from Pekln says that
the government Is alarmed over Jap
anese encroachments in the Chien
Tao boundary region.
Zaylsta and Mlguellsta factions of
the Cuban Liberal party have agreed '
to nominate Jose Miguel Gomez for
president and Alfredo Zayas for
Vice-President.
Leading officials of the Chinese
government denied that the recall of
the Minister, Dr. Wu Ting-fang, has
been evencontemplated.
The two factions of Cuban liberals
have united upon General Miguel
Gomoz as a candidate for the presi
dency. The British National Rifle Associa
tion, Impressed by American per
tormances, has appointed a commit
tee to consider Improvements In arms
bud ammunition suggested by the re
cent exhibitions at Bisley.
POLITICAL.
State Senator Owen Cassldy, who
bpposed Gov, Hughes's anti-gambling
legislation, was beaten for renomina
tlon and announced that he would
J-un Independently.
Mr. Taft made sixteen speeches,
iiiticusslng among other topics, Bry
en's heirship, prosperity, panic, rail
Vuud regulation and the Philippines.
Mr. Bryan, conferring with Demo
cratic National Committeemen In
Chicago, recelvod many assurances
cf victory. It Is probable that ho
will upend a week on tho stump in
New York.
Eugene V. Debs, Socialist Presi
dential candidate, spoke at "Dej
Woiiu'H, Muscatine, Iowa City, Grin
nell and Newton.
Tho official notification of Prof.
aron S. Watklns of his nomination
:y tho Prohibition party as candi
late for Vlco-Presldent took placo
.t Ada, Ohio. The city was bodeck
id with Hugs and banners.
Reports of a bargain between Mr,
'Tuft and Mr, Forakur regarding tha
Ohio Sc-natorship were denied a
Mlddlo IJass Island, where Mr. Tafi
tej5tw:j., -
Hi BR HI
I IB
Intended to Throw Torso
Overboard, But Suspic
ions Ualkcd Him.
ri)i!M7V
KILLED IN A FRuNAY.
Chester Gordon Strip I-ieii 1 rum
lliic nnd Park It In Trunk.
ttn.lv ,i lie Scnttered on Ocean
Between Htvn mid Xew York
Confession Fellows Arret.
Boston, Mass., Sept. 10. Mr. Hon-
ors Jordon. wife of Chester S. Jor-
don, a brother-in-law of Jesse L.
l.lvermore, the cotton speculator of
New York, was murdered by her
husband at their home at 59.". Me 1-1
ford street, Soniervllle, her
hodv ills-1
memliered and Its flesh, found In a
trunk In a room 0:1 Hanroc!: street.
this city, whittled In pieces from the
bones.
The head and upper leg bones wero
found in the furnace of their home
In Soniervllle an1 tho hair and s-'olp
in the kitchen stove between tho rear
rovers and the oven top. A part of
the entrails had been burnej.
Jordon was arrested l:i a room he
had hired on Hancock street, and r-t
the time was sitting coolly besl le the
trunk containing the woman's fkin
and flesh, smoking a cigarette.
He says he knocked her downstairs
after she had accuse I him of Infi
delity and called him a vile name. I
but ho pleads a period of aphasia,
during which he went to sleep In his
own bed, woke up. went to his kit
chen, where the murder was done,
and found his wife's nude body cut
clean around the vertebra at the
neck.
He then began to dismember the
the body, got tired, went out and
transacted his business as if nothing
had happened, returned, finished his
work of dismemberment, then slash
ed the flesh from the frame and plan
ned to dispose of It at sea by sliding
it piece by piece over the side of the
steamer Vale, which he would have
taken to New York if he hnd not ar
rived too late.
Such In brief is the crime which
a suspicious cab driver disclosed to
the world when he notified Sorgt.
Crowley of station 3 that he believed
that he had been carting about for
hours a trunk wnlch he thought had
been stolen.
Gordon Is a giant 6 feet 4 Inches
In height, weighing more than. 200
pounds and only 29 years old. His
wife, formerly Irene Shannon of tho
old Howard chorus and the Mario
Arwrtght company on the road, was
small and some years older, prob
ably about 3S, though she said she
was only 30.
DROUTH RENDERS
5,000 MEN IDLE,
Situation Critical In Western Penn
sylvania, Eastern Ohio and W. Va.
Pittsburg, Sept. 9. A serious wa
ter famine exists in Western-Pennsylvania,
Eastern Ohio and Western Vir
ginia. The drouth extends from as
far east as Johnstown, Pa., west to
Bteubenvllle, Ohio, and South to the
West Virginia State line. From this
district aiarming reports are being
received, indlcatlnjc that unless a
0-,t.l U. J . nrlCIDI lit.
u- , l ...
mines nuuii me Keeueni nunenng win
result
It Is estimated that over 6,000 men
re iuib uecause oi many lnuusiries
Having to suspend operations on ac-
count of no water, while the damage
to crops and live stock Is heavy.
FIVE ARE KILLED IN
MINE DISASTER,
Runaway Car Slides Hack One
Thousand Feet, Striking Train.
Wllkesbarre, Pa., Sept. 8. 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 Lehigh Valley
Coal Company, six miles from this
cl'.y. The men were being hoisted
up a slope when a runaway mlno car
struck a train of mine cars on which
wero twenty men. Only six escaped
Injury.
The dead are James Gallagher,
I'ranK Ostrosky, Simon Buscivage,
John Torkarchack and Julius Mortis.
William Nawaaeny was fatally In
jured. Ostrosky leaves a wife and
eight children.
Jud'io Charles Field.
Athol, Muss., Sept. 10. JudKe
Charles Field, 93 years old, died of
general debility. He was probably
the oldest active Judge in tho Unite I
States. During tho latter purt oi
his lllneBS the business of the coin:
wus transacted in his sick chamber.
Ho was an Intimate friend of Lincoln.
Ho was a delegate to tho Republican
Convention in 1S110 which nominate !
Lincoln.
Leo Dltilchsteln is Held f;r Trial.
Stamford, Conn., Sept. 10. Tho
case against . Leo Dili ii hstein, thu
playwright and actor, who was ar
restod charged with violating thu
State statutes. In s::i!ln!' a challonsfu
to Major Frederick Schavulr to lU,li'.
a duel, came up and he was held for
the Superior Court under tho nauia
bonds of 13,50.0,
Bv virtue of a writ of Levari Facing
famed out of the Court of Common
Pleas of Columbia County, Pa., nnd to
me directed, there will be sold nt nublic
sale at the Court House, at Hluomsburg,
ra., couniy nnu sinie aiorcsnui, on
SATURDAY, SIU'T. 26, 1908,
at a o'clock p. m., the following describ.
ed real estate, to wit :
All that certain tract of land situate in
the Town of HloomsburK, Columbia
County. Pennsylvania, le.inninR nt
an iron bolt in the intersection of the
southern line of the I). L. & VV. R. R.
Company's right of way anil the eastern
line of land known as the McClure
Tract, thence along said Railroad south
fifty-two degrees thirteen minutes west
three hundred feet and six inches to a
post, thence by land of Eliza K. Kowlur
south twenty-six degrees tifty-six min
utes east two hundred and forty-four
feet to a post, thenco north sixty-threu
degraes four minutes east two hundred
1 . ... f r . ,
ana iiinciy-nve icci nnu six menes to n
post in the eastern line of said McCluru
Iract, thence along the same north
iweniy-six ciegrccs imy-six minnies west
tnree Hundred I ett and six inches to tnu
place of beginning, containing
ONIi AND 84-100 ACRKS
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 Railroad
Company tn the Town of Bloomsburg,
sum county, aim me eastern line t a
tract of land known as the McCluru
Farm, and is a
BRICK BRKWERY BUILDING
four stories in hcighth in front, and
three stories in the rear, with a fron'age
of about fifty feet and a depth of about
one hundred and forty-five feet parallel
witn line ot u. u. oc w. k. k. ana 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 Keim vs. The Bloomsburg
Brewing Company, nnd to be sold as
the property of The Bloomsburg Brew
ing Company.
CUAS. 13. ENT, Sheriff,
Fred Ikeler, Attorney. 9 3-4L
REGISTER'S NOTICE.
Notice is hereby given to all legatees,
creditors and other persons interested in
tne estate ot tne respective decedents
and minors, that the following Admin
istrators, Executors and Guardians 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 a8th, A. D., kjoS,
at 2 o'clock p. m. of said day.
No. 1. First and final account of Al
len Z. McIIenry, Administrator of the
estate of Theodosia B. McIIenry, do
ceased, late of Jackson township.
so. 2. r irst ana hnal account ot 11
liam Beishline, Administrator of the es
tate of Joseph II. Beishline, deceased,
late ot Greenwood township.
No. 3. first and hnal account ot w u-
liam Chrisman, Administrator of the es
tate of Alvaretta A. Lockard, deceased,
late of Bloomsburg, Pa.
No. 4. r irst and final account of v.
C. Vanllouten, Administrator of the es
tate of Margaret VanHoutcn. deceased,
late of Berwick. Pa.
en McCarthy, Executor of the estate uf
Mary J. Barry, deceased, late ot Centra
lis Pa.
No. 6. First and final account of J. II
Shoemaker and E. G. Dymond, Execu
tors of the estate of John Hufford, de
ceased, late of Fishing Creek township.
No. 7. First and final account ot Jotin
R. Herring, Administrator of the estate
of' Sarah E. Johnson, deceased, late of
pine township.
no, 8. f irst ana nartiai account ot 1.
I D. and V. K. Armstrong Executors of
I the estate of David W. Armstrong, d
1 ...
I ceasea. ate ot uioomsDurir. ra.
I M , c , "',,( i..
y. i nab nuu uuHi nkbuuiuv. j -
(nh W. Kann Ariministr.atnr of the es
tate of David Ratio, deceased, late of
Latawissa township,
No. 10. First and final account of
Ella Harman, Executrix of the estate of
A. F. Harman, deceased, late cf CaU
wissa Borough, Pa.
No. it. First and final account of
George W. Zimmerman, Administrator
nf tha iula. nf T uni'a 7immprmin. de-
ceased, late of Cleveland township.
No. la. First and nnal account ui
John E. Welliver, Executor of the estate
of Charles Haven loheson, deceased,
late of Bloomsburg, Pa.
No. 13. b irst and hnal account 01 v.
P. Eves, Executor of the estate of Elu
abeth McEwen, deceased, late of Green
wood township.
No. 14. First and final account of J.
B. Robison, Executor of the estate ot
Phoebe Trump, deceased, late of Scott
township.
No. 15. First and final account of
Ralp R. John, Executor of the estate t
John Huff nogle, deceased, late of Fish
ing Creek township.
No, 16, First and final account of K.
R. Ikeler, Trustee of the person and es
tate of Rebecca Fisher, created by tlie
will of Charles Conner, deceased, late ot
Orangevi'.'.e, Pa.
FRANK W. MILLER.
Register's Office, Register.
Bloomsburg, Pa., Aug. 2j, i9oS
NOTICE.
Notice is hereby given that the follow
ing accounts have been filed in the Con' t
of Common Pleas of Columbia County
and will 1(0 presented to the said O'Uii
on Monday, September aSth, A. V. '')"'
and confirmed nt si, and unless t.xtvi'
tions nre filed within tour days theivai
ter, will ba confirmed absolute.
1. First and final account of Ai;'
aud R. C. Buckalew, trading under
firm name of "Buckalew brothers
filed by Margaret C. Buckalew. Exe
tor of Amos Buckalew and Mary
Buckalew, Enccutor of R. C. Buckalew-
8. First ond final account of l-''-Hyde,
Receiver of tho BloonisbiuK
Lumber and Manufacturing Company-
3. First and final account of Olive'
C. Weaver, Committee of Peter J
Weaver, a lunatic.
C. M. TERWILLIGKK,
Office
'Bloomsburg, Pa., Sept. 3, 1908.
1
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