THE COLUMBIAN. BLOOMSBURQ, VA. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF llXiOOMSBUKG, JL"A THE OLDEST AND STRONGEST. Capital 8100,000 Surplus 8150,000. With the Largest Capital and Surplus in the County, a Strong Directorate, Competent Officers and Every Mod em Facility, we solicit Accounts, Large or Small, and Collections on the Most Liberal Terms Consistent with Sound Banking, and Invite YOU to inspect our NEW QUARTERS. i Per Cent. Interest OFFICERS: AC. W. M. Low, President. Myron I. James M.Htaver, Vice President. DI RECTORS; TS.W.M.Low. K.O. Yorks, Iioui? dross, M. E (Stockholm. fames Fred H. C. Creasy, Clinton Herring, THE COLUMBIAN. ESTABLISHED 1866. THE COLUMBIA DEMOCRAT, -"SsTABLtsiirn 1837. Consolidated 1869 UR1.KHED EVBRY THURSDAY MnRNINO, At Bloomsburg, the County Seat oiJ Columbia County .Pennsylvania. GEO. E. ETAVELL, Editor. GEO. C. ROAN, FoRt.MAN. TtKMs: Insid t the county $ 1.00 a year lo advance; 1 .501 f not paid in a lvance. utsidethecounty, $1.25 a year, strictly in vace. Al! comTmnicntions should leaddrcsed THE COLUMBIAN, Uloomsl.urj;, Ta " HURKDA Y, FEBRUARY 11, 1909 Creasy Hits Exemption. Satirically Demardi That Auditor General Disclote Slate Loiset . How much revenue the State has lost on account of the trust com pany tax bill enacted two years ago is what "Farmer" Creasy wants to know from Auditor Gen eral Young. That loss, however, since the law took effect, is author itatively estimated to have been about $350,000. The bill enacted came from "Representative John P. Moore, of Allegheny, and changed "ie taxing of trust company stock om the market value or actual Ire to the book or par value. There are 300 trust companies in '.;e State, and the larger ones have .-eu the principal beneficiaries of tile Moore law, but one of the chief two is in Philadelphia and the other in Pittsburg. The stock of the Pittsburg concern has had a sel'ing value 20 times its par. Representative Creasy presented, on this subject, in the House, the following satirical resolution of in ,uiry. Whereas' Robert K. Young, Auditor General, in his last report submitted to the Governor, has urged a tax on bank deposits, fav ors more rigid assessment of per sonal property and a levy on trust funds, and also seeks other meth ods of imposing additional taxes: and Whereas, The last Legislature passed the act of June 13, 1907, which was entitled "An act to pro vide revenue by levying a tax up on the shares of certain compan ies," etc.. and which act relieved certain trust companies from the payment of taxes which they had heretofore been liable to pay under the general law, und which act was passed by that Legislature and ap proved by the Governor, notwith standing the fact that the Depart ment of the Auditor General, after making a thorough, painstakinr and complete report on the loss of me revenue previously derived from such taxes, and which report Jound that in the opinion ef the Auditor General, if that act pasf-ed, me Mate would lose :n revenue in the neighborhood of $300,000; .Resolved, That this House be lore passing any law to increase taxation requests the Auditor Gen eral to furnish it with information as to how much revenue has been lost to this State by reason of the passage of the aforementioned act and that this information be fur nisnea Dy mm as scon as he can conveniently do so. There is hardly a member of the oenerai Assembly at Harrishnro- who has not up his sleeve some measure involving a new drain on the treasury. Yet this is a time when all business and employment as going forward at a slackened gait, and when the chiefest con cern of men and women is to adjust expenditure to lessened income. The real task before the legisla ture should be to devise economies chat should help the people to bet ter bear the burden of government, but this is a labor for statesmen which political buccaneers disdain to even consider. Phi? a Record. Paid on Time Deposits Low. Vice Preslilont. Frank Ikeler, Cashier M. Staver, Myron T. Low, Ikeler. H. V.Hower, Frank Ikeler. State to Pay Teachers. Bill Introduced Carries $23,000,000 Salaries. 9 (or A bill providing that from and after June 4, looy, the State will assume and pay so much of the operating expenses of the common schools as is compris-ed in the items ot teachers wages was introduced in the House by Walter S. Rey nolds, of Lawrence county. Twenty-eight millions of dollars, or fo much of the annual revenues and surplus fund of the State as may be needed to carry the act into eltect is appropriated by the bill. The computation of the amounts to be paid is to be made upon the cost of the i;ems for the school year ending June 1, 1909. Consumptives Can't Marry. Marriage of persons affected with consumption and other diseas es such as would affect their off spring is prohibited by a bill intro duced in the House by H. A'. Mc Clung, of Allegheny county. It provides that before a marriage li cense shall be granted the appli cants must produce a certificate from physicians that they are not afflicted with pulmonary tubercul osis, epilepsy, venereal disease, in sanity, imbecility aud idiocy. ' For a Water Commission. Expressing the belief that the purification of the State's water supply can best be carried out by the State in cooperation with the counties, a resolution was present ed in the House by W. A. Magee, of Allegheny county, authorizing the appointment of a commission to investigate and report on the mat ter of the water supply of the State. ine commission is to be mmnns. ed of five citizens of the State an- pointed by the Governor, who shall report before Anril r tr tVw Legislature upon their' ilndiugs. Disinfection ol Houses. Dr. Samuel G. Dixon. f,tat commissioner of health, has issued circular calling attention to a npiv feature that has been inantrurnted by the State tuberculosis, which is nothing lc than a svstemaiic hons riiinfe- ion. It is believed that d occupied by persons suffering with luoercuicsis uecome infected the same as in the case of many other diseases. It is to protect others, especially families that mav imonn. sciously move into such houses after being vacated that the depart- uic.ii 01 neaun nas nrnmr oi rr fumigation in a'.l cases of tubercul- osis. The letter, reads as follows: "Dear Ductor:-The c -....iiiVVlHII of houses that have been occunied by persons suffering cf tuberculosis is such an important feature of our campaign against this disease that this department has decided to ex tend somewhat its services for this purpose. District health officers through you will be authorized to perform House disinfection tor tu Dercuiosis onlv. within th Umitc of a borough or first class township under the following conditions; A statement in writing must be made by the chief burcrpM dent of the board of commissioners setting forth the fact that the bor ough or township is financially un able to do the work and asking that it be done by the board of neaun. Upon the receipt of such a communication you are authorized to instruct the nearest available dis trict health officer to disinfect the house in ques.ion. Instruct the officer tjiat in rendering the bill for this service he must state on the voucher that the work was done under special orders from yourself. By order of Dr. Samuel G. Dix, on, Commissioner." OAS TO XIX .A.. Bsan tl ,? ins MDO uu Hava Always Bought hi8 Kind Yw Bifuuwa of WASHINGTON Fiom our Regular Correspondent. Washington, I). C, Feb. 9, 1909. Congress which has now but lit tle over three wf-eka forthp nassao-e of many important measures before inauguration continues to diwdle and waste its time. This week it has spent manv hours nnniintr over I - - " O a twelve thousand appropiiation for automobiles for the White House Representative Sims of Tennessee and twenty-seven of his friends are sternly opposed to the introduction of automobiles for the President and he with a number of his col leagues have made speeches against this their pet aversion. 1 heir ar guments have been futile in the lower House though and all of their gory pictures ot the dead and wounded who are left in the trai of the gasoline machines succeeded in securing only twenty-seven votes against the appropriation to 185 in in its favor. Mr. Taft will have a machine. Mavbe he will have two and he is to have a chauffeur aud a footman and if the ordinary man is a judge of such Miings he will get all of the punishment that Mr Sims and his liiends wisii him The horse is a known and tried luxurv but the automobile is a fit tul, unreliable thing as yet and no man can be the possessor of oue, much less two or three without having as much trouble as his en vious Inends and enemies can wish him. And if the automobile is a care there are no mild terms for the description of the load of troub le he has undertaken in a chauffeur If the automobile is still far from perfectionlthe average chauffeur has just emerged from the nether re- gious. Probably Mr. Taft will not be so unhappy in his automobiles as the average man. His chauffeurs will be responsible to some one be sides the PresiJent who will hot have to find out that his car is left to stand in oil to weaken the tires; that tacks are recklesslv sprinkled in his carage for the same purpose and that gasoline is soaked into the inner tubes with the object of hav ing them blow up. The chauffeuJ has a rake off on all the suoolies and repairs for his machine and it is up to him to see that the car which would ordinarily oehave like an angel on wings does not pursue its peaceful career. Presumably there will be some one to see that when the cars are turned in at night the chauffeur does not take Ivs family and friends out for moon light drives aud it is to be hoped that there will be some adequate in spection of the car before it starts out on a long trip so that Mr. Taft may not find himself stranded miles from a car line on a lonely road. Still if all of these safeguards are provided there will doubtless be many times when the President elect and his family will wish for horses and when Mr. Sims and his twenty-seven friends may indulge in "I told y;u so's." It is probable that the friends of the movement for the conservation of our national resources will see Congress adjourn without having made provision for that purpose. So far that body has appeared con tent to let the movement d:ift and it is not likely the enemies of the movement will allow an appiopria tion to be made for it in the last hurried month that remains. The President has done his bi;st and there may be other messages dis patched to Congress with the ob ject of prodding it on to its duty in the matter. The enemies of con servation led by the Speaker of the iiouse are so numerous and power ful tnough that u is not likely any thing will be accomplished and the nity tnousand dollars that the President has asked for the hpo-in. ning of the work will probably not be forthcoming. Mr. Pinchot, the national forester has returned from his trip to Canada and Mexico for the purpose of interesting those countries in the movement nnH rv. ports informally that these govern ments are in tull sympathy with the proposed work and that they are eager to join the international conservation commission that will meet in Washington by invitation of the President, February eigh teenth. At this conference many important questions will be discus sed, among them the boider forest fires which mav originate in nni country and carry devastation into Tml""i iiimi miiiiniimniiBMiiiiini, M 1 iii Not Cotsghisng Today? Yet you may cough tomorrow! Better be prepared for it when it comes. Ask your doctor about keeping Ayer's Cherry Pectoral in the house. Then when the hard cold or cough first appears you have a doctor's medicine at hand. Your doctor's approval of its use will certainly set all doubt at rest. Dn a Hp nvc u i. ... ' diconoi in inis cougn medicine. 12EXZXy& L2f f&aM .. troubles, but' the next and also the question of the tariff on lumber and how its removal would affect the matter o the conservation of forests. The thrilling incident of the res cue of more thau oue thousand tier sons from the steamer Republic through the agency of wireless tel egraphy has inspired Congress to take some action aith regard to equipping of all passenger carrying steamers wit 11 tne apparatus, naa the Florida been so equipped the accident by which the Republic was sent to the bottom would not have occured for the two vessels would have been able to exchange signals in the fog. It appears that the French Assembly has alreidy taken ltn tlie snhirrt and it is nrob r j 1 able that England will follow with laws requiring vessels to carry the wireless eniiinmetit. Its cost is slight ranging fiom three hundred to one thousand dollars and its maintenance is not exorbitant, and it is proposed by the Committee on .Merc iatit Marine 10 ur?e mat nil ocean steatmrs carrying more than fifty passengers shall carry the ap paratus. The Chances of Local Option. Hearing For and Against on Law this Month--- Advocates Ara Not Sanguine. Local option now in the centre of the stage will be given a full hear ing on the floor of the House on Februarv 2. This announcement was made by Speaker Cox, who al so set February 25 for the hearing of the opponents of the bill. The Law and Order Committee, which has consideration of the bill, will report it out without recommenda tion. Conferences which Representa tive Fair has cilled of the local on- tionists has brought together about So members who are willing to openly defend the bill. This num ber will be increased to 70 or 75 when the bill comes to a vote, but even the most ardent local option advocates are not sanguine of its passage. Fleet is on Way Home. With a booming farewell from the guns of a dozen foreign war ships, the American battleshin fleet sailed from Gibraltar for home last Saturday. It has been "sailing for home" ever since the ships turned their prows from the Orient, but as long as there were intervening stops aud ports 'of call, the sailors hardly considered themselves home- bound. The next laud they will see will be their own, the next flag the Stars and Stripes. I he ships weighed anchor at nine o'clock though they remained with steam for several hours before sailing. The home voyage will probably be made with reduced speed often knots an hour, as there is no occasion for hurry. The ves sels will uot raise their homeward bound penants until they enter the Virginia capes. Editors Want Laws Published. The State Editorial Association Wednesday adopted a resolution asking that the legislature enact a law requiring newspaper publica tion of certain laws, especially those relating to the Departments of Health, Dairy and Food, Fish, Game, Factory Inspection and Ed ucation, under the direction of the heads of these departments. The association believes that such a course will make for a bet ter public understanding of new laws. In order to obtain the passage of such legislation, if possible, the State Editorial association and the Western Pennsylvania Associated Dailies each appointed a committee to work iointlv for this law Tr was proposed that the next annual excursion of the association should take in a trio to the Isthmus nf Panama, which would bring the canal under editorial inspection. The proposition is a good one. and if it should be carried out a flood of light would be thrown upon that great national undertaking by the rennsyivania editors that might eclipse the result of Taft's investi. gation. This highly interesting trip wouiu come on next tail, and tak ing in Havana, could he plished in about fifteen days. At Havana me editors could arrange iur me raising ot the Maine. J. C. Ai)et Co.,Lowell7Mi ' - mvmm. w yuur uocior aoout Ayer s Pills The February Sale of FURNITURE AND LINENS Began at PursePs Monday, February ist. In this Sale we have "buzz-siwed" Furniture prices and "torn" a good bit off Linen prices ! But then you extkcted that, and we only mention it to emphasize the importance of this Sale to every person having a home to furnish. Your main interest will center 'round the values. You already know that Pursel Fur niture, like Pursel Linens, is of "first" quality that goes without saying. Linens of all Kinds BLEACHED TABLE LINENS. 56 in. bleached table linen Reduced to 22c, was 28c 56 in. bleached table linen reduced to 49c, was 59c 72 in. bleached table linen ' reduced to 60c. was 7?c ' 72 in, bleached table linen reduced to 72JC, was 85c 72 in. bleached table linen' reduced to 85c, was $1 72 in. bleached table linen reduced to 90c, was $1.15 72 in. bleached double dam ask reduced to $1.15, was Si. 39. 72 in. bleached double dam ask reduced to $1.25, was JS1.75. 72 in. bleached double dam ask reduced .to $2.00, was $2.50. 72 in, bleached double dam ask reduced to $2.19, was $2.75. UNBLEACHED TABLE LINEN. 56 in. unbleached table lin en reduced to 20c, was 28c 62 in. unbleached table lin en reduced to 35c, was 45c 72 in. unbleached table lin en reduced to 39c, was 50c 62 in. unbleached table lin en reduced to 49c, was 60c 66 in. unbleached table lin en reduced to 85c, was $1. F, P. BLOOMSBURG, We Have Ten Styles of Envelopes and Paperto Match FOR Invitations, Acceptances, Regrets Announcements, &c. Full size Wedding with two Envelopes, down tc Billet-doux size with Card to Fit. Twenty-Four Styles of Type FOR CARDS AND INVITATIONS. We Do All Kinds of Printing Columbian Printing House, BLOOMSBURG, PA. at Bi? Reductions. MERCERIZED TABLE i DAMASK. 58 inch' mercerized table ' damask reduced to 39c was 50c. 58 inch mercerized table , damask reduced to 49c was 59c. 70 inch mercerized table ' damask reduced to 59c was 7 sc. ' TOWELINGS. These prices are merest hints of the prices, but should suffice to eonvince you that now is the time for buying all the towel ings you will need for months to come. Best Cot ton Toweling- 4JC yd. Brown linen crash reduced to 8c, was 10c Stevens' 22 inch crash reduced to I2$c, was 15c Stevens' 20 inch crash reduced to 11c, was 14c Bleached Russian crash reduced to 11c, was I2jc Unbleached Russian crash reduced to 10c, was I2jc Red border bleached crash reduced to 10c, was 12c ' READY MADE v TOWEL BARGAINS. Plain all linen Hucka back Towels, 18 x 40 inch es, (very heavy) reduced to 22c, regular value I2jc PURSEL. - PENN'A. 1