THE COLUMBIAN. tV..OOMSBiJKvt 8 to' . THE COLUMBIAN. BLOOMSBURG, I'A. THURSDAY, KEHIUJAUY 25, 1!I00. The Poultry Yard. Kerosene is our standard remedy lor miles. When lice come into the hen house profit goes out. Have your incubator stand level. Then it will heat evenly. Keep the temperature of the egg chamber at 1030 until the chicks begin to hatch, then run up to 1050. It costs more to keep a poor hen than it does a good one. More worry, more vexation, more dissat isfaction. About the first thing you had better do when there is anything the matter with your hens is to look for lice. Apply kerosene to the roosts with a cloth or swab every two weeks during warm weather to kill the red spider lice. Respect the hen. she may cackle foolishly sometimes, but she adds much to the comfort and pros perity of the larm home. Keep the poultry house clean and neat and your efforts will be amply rewarded by the egg basket and kind words from your friends. Test the eggs on the seventh day, and remove the infertiles, also those containing dead germs. Test again on the fourteenth day and remove all but those holding live chicks. After the chicks are three weeks old, there is very little danger of overfeeding. Then, if other condi tions are right, the more they eat of a variety of feed, the faster they grow. Next to pure air, water is the cheapest thing we can supply our poultry. Do not forget that it must be given in order to get eggs. Reduce the quantity and the egg yield will go with it. From March Farm Journal. MOM If You tVcr.1 best mm cuss yon will cs'i for IS and if you get it you will have a rcir.cJy fir coughs th.it will be satisfactory in every respect. 1 f you accept something else we do not know what you will pet, but it will not be the Host Cough Cure. At nil druggists', 25c, 50c. :tml M. Don't accept anything cine. This It An EaiyTest. Sprinkle Allen's Foot-Ease In one hoe and not in the other, and notice the difference. Just the thing to use when rubbers or overshoes become neo eosary, and your shoes seem to pinch. Sold Everywhere, 25c. Don't accept any substitute. 2-18-U. Nothing Better Than Work. Recently a man wrote to the New York Times that h-- was a lit tle more than fifty years of age, and having worked all his life to acquire enough money to make him independent, and having suc ceeded, he had retired, and was now trying to make himself happy with nothing to do. He passed five hours a day in reading, three hours in exercise and eating, which lett him eight hours, which he found it hard to dispose of. His letter was in the nature of a la ment. His bubble had burst A Deservedly Successful Magazine. IJppincott's for March is as fresh and vigorous as the month's brac ing winds. More than half its sub stantial bulk is given up to the complete novel "A Knignt Errant in Broadway," by Rupert Sargent Holland, whose book, "The Count at Harvard," was well received a couple years ngo. Mr. Holland takes as his theme the career of a rather commonplace and not par ticularly scrupulous young man who comes to New York from a small country town to seek his for tune. He finds "Tenderloin" life fascinating, and as he is in the em ploy of a rascally lawyer, he is rap idly succumbing to the evil influ ences which surround him when a young girl comes into his life a young girl who is sweet and pure. Somehow his old associates begin to seem tawdry to him, his better na ture asserts itself, and in the end he proves his manhood and his en tire worthiness to wed the charm ing Rhoda. The transactions of the crooked lawyer and the still more crooked "promoter" throw an interesting side light on one phase of life in the modern Gotham. Despite the vigilance cf the post office authorities, it is safe to say that there are still numerous enter prises as dubious as the "National Non-Reliable Bottle Company," and there probably always will be so long as there are people gullible enough to put their money into get-rich-quick schemes about which they have authoritative informa tion. There are some wonderfully fine short stories in this number. "As Played by the Orchestra," by Ma rion Hill. It deals with a troupe of playerfolk doing "one-night stands" about the country. "Be Woman's Home Companion for March. The March anion carries promise of a magazine in Woman's Home Com out the publishers' bigger and better 1909 It is a larjje, handsome isme, full of human in terest, and attractive in every way. A discussion of "What the Em manuel Movement Really Is" be gins in this issue. The importance of the subject and the standing of the writers make this article one of particular interest. Walter Trich ard Eaton contributes an article on the higher phase of acting, point ing out, with a sure hand, the greatest of our actresses and telling why they are so. Alexander Dana Noyes, Financial Editor of the New York Evening Post, has some thing very important to say about women's investments. There are a number of valuable articles on sub jects of peculiar interest to women. The March issue is a special spring fashion issue announcing the advanced spring stylos. Princess gowns, small hats and dainty shoes seem to be the leading notes. A most interesting feature is a discus sion of the colors and styles suit able to blondes aud brunettes, tall women and short women, stout women and slim. The stories are many and good, Irving Bacheller, Grace S. Rich mond, Ada T. Drake, Mary Ilea ton V orse, t lorence ley and Hulbert Fortner contribut ing fiction of a very high order. In addition to an exceptionally handsome cover design by C. Allan Gilbert there are one hundred and fifty illustrations in this number, several in color. John Cecil Clay, Alice Barber Stephens aud James Montgomejy Flagg are among the illustrators. WILL TAKE A VACATION. James Magee will sail on Satur day for a four weeks' trip to the West Indies, Panama, Venezuela, Jamaica and Cuba. This is the first vacation this busy man has taken in four years, when he .spent several mouths in Europe. His many friends wish him a pleasant journey, and n safe return. RED STARSTAMPSTORE CLOSED. Sheriff Ent has levied upon the stock of the Rid S'ar Stamp Store in the Ilartman building, and the nl.ire is locked up. The levy was made on a writ issued by C. C. Peacock, trustee for creditors of R. E. Ilartman, aud was based upon the non-navmeut ot rent, the ' amount due being $220. Very few of the stores arc hand ling the stamps, and it is likely that those who have books partly filled cdti keep them for souvenirs. The Peruna Almanac. The druggists have already been supplied with the Peruna almanac for 1909. In addition to the regu lar astronomical matter usually fur nished in almanacs, the articles on astrology are very attractive to most people. The mental charac- Morse Kines-! teri-ticsof each sign are given with . " ...... . 1 . 1 1 taithtm accuracy, a use 01 nicKy and unlucky days will be furnished to those who have our almanacs, free of charge. Address the Peru na Co., Columbus, O. 4t. Alexander urotners u. DEALERS IN Cigars, Tobacco, Pipes, and Confectionery. -o Pins Candios. Fresh Every Woek, JpElWX" QOOE3 SPECIALTY. HAVE YOU SMOKED A I I 8 I 1 I 5 ROYAL BUCK or JEWEL CIGAR?j ASK YOUR DEALER FOR Til KM. $ ALEXANDER BROS. & CO., KloomsburR, Pa. ;1t,.Hc..iie.a.ii..t.oei.oi;aci.csaitII r. 1 IF. YOU ARE IN NEED OF Carpets, Rugs, flatting; and Draperies, Oil Cloth and Window Curtains You Will Find a Nice Line at W. tt. BMQ WEB' 8; BL 0 OMSB UR G, VENN A. ) ) "I 9) ) C) 0) ) 1 ing Nice," by Dorothea Deakin, is of boiling water. Good Old-Fashioned Dishes. In the Woman's Home Compan ion for March, . Fannie Merritt Farmer gives some tried recipes for old-fashioned goodies. For Corn-Meal Crisps, pour slow ly one cupful of boiling water onto seven eighths of a cupful of granu lated yellow corn meal. Stir until perfectly smooth, and add two and one half tablespoonfuls of melted butter and one half teaspoonful of salt. Spread us thinly and uni formly as possible (using a long broad-bladed knife) on a generous ly buttered inverted dripping pan. Bake in a moderate oven until well Drowned, and cut at once into three-inch squares. It is absolute ly ne:essary that the water used in the preparation of these crisps should be poured from a tea kettle a deughttul story of a prankish girl. "For the sake of the Kid," by Theodore Waters, has to do with the "lower five" of beggar- dom. "The Tree, the Rope and the Man," by Will Levingtou Coin- fort, is a dramatic tale of the West. "Miss Tooker's Wedding Gift," by For Southern Spoon Corn Bread, pour two and one half cupfuls of fine white corn meal. Cover, and let stand until cool : then add one and one half tablespoonfuls of melted butter, one and one half teaspoonfuls of salt, the unbeaten yolks of two eggs and one and one What he had dreamed of being a- John Kendrick Bangs, is a spright- half cupfuls of buttermilk mixed ble to do all his life had come true, tnd was an empty vanity. Foolish man 1 The independ :nce that money brings with it is ;he least of all our independencies. From March Farm Journal. Finest Rug in the World. lilt to the United Slate Said to Be Worth Over $50,000. A rug said to be worth more than $50,000 and claimed to be the fin al in the world was presented to the White House as a gift to the lation and was accepted by Presi tent Roosevelt. It will be placed n the parlors of the president's tome. The donor was H. H. To akytn, a rich Armenian of New ork city. The rug is six and a jalf feet long and four and a half set wide, is of imperial silk, heav !y jeweled with rich pearls, tur juois, rubies and other Oriental tones. Mr. J. Ralston Ashleman, of Benton, and Miss Trellie C. Ash, eldest daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Pierce W. Ash, of Fishingcreck, were united in holy wedlock by Rev. A. Houtz, at the Reformed personage of Orangeville, on Feb. 24. The bride and groom expect to reside in Benton. ly story which incidently reveals with one teaspoonful of soda. Beat some unique publishing methods, thoroughly, and add the whites of "The Garden of Forgotten two eggs beaten until stiff. Pour Things," by Ella Wheeler Wilcox, into a well buttered pudding dish, is a charming sketch, and the same and bake in a moderate oven from might be said of "Kiss money," by forty to forty-five minutes. Serve Bolton Hall. "The Nerve of Joe," by spoonfuls and accompany with oy j. c. lawless, is anotner good putter. story. For those who have supper at ' Among the contributions not fic- night Sally-Lun Tea Cakes are al- tional is "A Plea for Less Coal," ways popular. They taste just as by George Ethelbert Walsh. Her- good for a breakfast or luncheon man Scheffauer pays his respects to bread to us who have dinner at "The Comic Supplement," hand- night, and therefore do not need to ing it some hard digs ; George L. plan for supper dishes. Put two Kuapp writes on "Get Rid of Your tablespoonfuls of butter, two table- Illusions," and a writer who signs spoonful of salt in a bowl, aud pour himself J. B. E. as his theme, "Is on one cupful of scalded milk. Present Day Fiction Quite Ephem- When lukewarm add one half yeast eral? A brief sketch called cake dissolved in two tablespoonfuls irees, py 1 nomas L. Mason, ot luke warm water, three well INSTRUCTION IN MUSIC. Chas. P. Elwell announces that he will be pleased to receive all former pupils on violin and piano forte, as well as new ones. Latest and best methods. Terms strictly cash by the lesson or month. Address Hotel Hidlay, Bloomsburg, or call up on Bell 'phone any afternoon between 1 aud 2. tf Old-Time Shoestring. In the old days we made strings of calf-skin. Every farmer was an ex pert. We should cut a disc of leather three or four Inches In diameter, stick the point of a sharp knlfeblade In a board, place the thumb nail the thickness of a match from It, and quickly draw the string through the opening, the perimeter being reduced the thickness of a match at every measure of the circumference. Pretty work! Then the square string was rolled between the sole of the shoe and the floor till perfectly round, after which It was greased with tallow. Such a lace would last for months, but their shine soon wears off, giv ing them a much worn appearance. WHY WE LAUGH. " "A Little Nonsense Now and 7ien, 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 time Address Judge 225 Fourth Avenue 3-21 mpany New York lit Thrice-a-Weet World. The Greatest Newspaper ol lit Type. IT ALWAYS TELLS THE NEWS AS ITJS, PROMPTLY AND FULLY. Read In etery English Speaking Country. $100 Reward, $100. adds humor to the number. There are some excellent poetry, and some sparkling epigrams. To ' top on with," there is "Walnuts and Wine," the famous humorous department. m More Go Than Come. Substitute for Irrigation. An Italian scientist has invented a novel substitute for Irrigation. He uses the fruit of the Barbary nopal, a fig tree which bears Ogs that are excellent reservoirs of moisture. In the spring the scientist digs a ditch about the foot of the tree he desires to protect from the coming drought and this ditch Is filled with figs cut into thick pieces. A dense layer Is made and beaten down. The m ctlaglnous pulp, covered with earth, stores up much moisture, which It gives off gradually, watering the tree sometimes for as long a period four months. It has invariably been the great effort of the Thrice-a-Week edition of the New York World to publish the news impar tially in order that it may be an accurate reporter of what has happened. It tells the truth, irrespective of parly, and for that reason it has achieved a position with the public unique among papers of its class. If you want the news as it really is. subscribe to the Thrice a-Week edition of the New York World, which comes to you every other day except Sunday, and is thus practically a daily at the price of a weekly. THE THRICE-A-WEEK WOK.L.ITS regular subscription price is only f i.oo per year, and this pays for 1 56 papers. We oner tins unequalled newspaper ana Thk Columbian together for one year lor i.G5. The regular subscription price of the two papeas is $2.00, tf , The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at ast one dreaded disease that sci nce has been able to cure in all its tages, and that is Catarrh. Hall's .'atarrh Cure is the only positive are now known to the medical aternity. Catarrh being a con itutional disease, requires a con ;itutional treatment. Hall's Ca irrh Cure is taken internally, act tg directly upon the blood and iucous surfaces of the system, hereby destroying the. foundation f the disease, and giving the pa rent strength by building up the constitution and assisting natnre in oing its work. The proprietors ave so much faith in its curative owers that they offer One Hun !red Dollars for any case that it .iils to cure. Send for list of tes imouials. Address: J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists, 75c. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation. Emigration of Aliens in 1908 Exceeded Immi. I iron gem pans yruiiun. beaten eggs and enough bread flour (.once silted; to make a stiff, batter, the amount required being about two aud one fourth cupfuls. Cov er, and let rise until very light. Pour into buttered tin or tins, a- gain let rise, and bake in a hot oven. This mixture may be baked in a sheet, in muffin rings or in Bloomsburc Souvenir Books. a8 The inward and outward move-1 half tone pictures. 2 scents, at the ment of aliens for the year ending Columbian office. tf. with November 1908, indicates that the emigration has been greater than the immigration. The figures are : Total arrivals, ;7l,28i : total de partures, 644,452. To this number of emigrants should be added the unknown number of naturalized citizens, who, during that period, have left the United States for per manent residence abroad. During January, 1909, as com pared with January, r9o8, the im migration from Austria increased 4428 ; from Hungary 791,1, and from Italy 4905. From Russia and Finland there was a decrease of 959, aud from Japan a decrease of 768. The immigration of Chinese increased 50. , -- , . 7 AND TRICIAN and M BCHAHIC a maiffczloa for everybody. . Learn about electricity, tht 1 coming telenet), and how to use toole. Simple, prac tical, full of pictures. Sam- F pie copy free If you name f thii paper. 91.00 a year. Sampton Pub. Co. I Beacon St., Boeton, Mesa. Photorrnpby Iniemtij everybody. AMERICA FHUTUUKAPHV teacne It. Beautiful plcturea, month ly prize contrite, picture criticism. queitloDi an- wered. Sample copy free If you mention thli paper. AmtrlotnFhotofriphy Beacon St., Uoitim, Mate, .PHOTO; 2-25-tf. e; v ','. 0mm '.he ligsatnra of Vi8 Kind Vun Hnve Always Strti' Pennsylvania Railroad SPECIAL SLEEPING CAR BETWEEN HARR1SBDRG AND PITTSBURGH DAIIyY, AS FOLLOWS: Leave XJaxrlsburg . , 11.50 V. M (Open 10.00 T. M.) Arrive Plttnburg .... .... . 7 J2 t m Leave Pltttiburg .... ..... 8.45 P." m Arrive I J arrluburg ........ 8.20 a! M (May be occupied until 7.00 A. M.) Connecting train loaves Kant liloomHburg (weekdays) 7.18 P. M. J. It. Wood, Qeo. W. Bovd. PiuiHenger Tralllo Manager. General PaBsenger Agent, SHERIFF'S SALE. By viVtue of a writ of Fieri Facias isr sued out ot the Court ot Common fleas of Columbia County, Pennsylvania, and to me directed, there will be sold at pub lie sale at the Court House in the Sher iff's Office in the Town of Bloomsburg county and state aforesaid, on SATURDAY, MARCH 13th, 1909, at 3 o'clock P. M., the following described real estate : All that certaiu lot, piece or parcel of land lying and being situate in the Township .. r ij : 1. t . ui ouuRinKi buiumuiu county, renn sylvania, bounded and described as fol lows, to-wit: Beginning at a point on the Northerly side of the Berwick and Bloomsburg Road, on the Southeasterly corner of lot of Charles M. Hess ; thence along said road in an Easterly direction fifty-five 5 5 ) teet ; tnence in ortn x our degrees fif teen minutes West one hundred and ninety (190) feet to a sixteen (16) foot alley j thence South eighty-eight degrees ioriy-nve .minutes west fitty (55) feet to land of Charles E, Hess; thence South four degrees fifteen minutes East along line of lot of said Charles M. Hess. one hundred and ninety (190) feet to the I"ui ucKiuiiiuK, vumaining square feet. Same being lot No. 4 in lots of William Ash, Having thereon eiewicu a iwo ana one-nait FRAME DWELLING HOUSE. Being the same premises which S. P Boston, by his deed dated Sept, 1, 1905 sold to Btanley N. Whitmire, as by refl erence in the Register and Recorder's Office in Deed Book 77. page 314. Seized, taken in execution at the suit of the State Capital Savings and Loan Association of Harrisburg, Pa. vs. Stan ley N. Whilmiro, and to be sold us the property ot Stanley N. Whitmire- , .t , CHARLES B. ENT' Swartz & Jackson. Sheriff. Attorneys. g.j8. :1 W. L. Douglas AND Packard Shoes are worn by more men than any other shoes made., Come in and let us Fit You With a Pair W. H. MOORE, Corner Main and Iron Sts., BLOOM SB lRG, PA. Our Pianos are tV lxn.lt.ro 1: v.va. uui lines m ciuae tne tollowmg makes : , Chas. M. Stieff, Henry P. Mm pp Brewer & Pryor, Kohler CAMPBELL, AND RADEL. IN ORGANS we hnnrllp tViA EsTEY, MlLLER.Il. LeHR & CO. AND BOWLBY. This Store has the agency or SING EH JUG II ARM SE W IG MACHINES and VIC7 OR TALKING MACHINES. WASH MACHINES Helby, 1900, Queen, Key stone, Majestic. J.SALTZEtf. Music Rooms No. 105 West MaiiA street, Beloiv Market. BLOOMSIWRG. PA