4 THE COLUMBIAN. BLOOMSBURG. llA- THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK UP UX.U03IHIII7Kt, lA. THE OLDEST AND STRONGEST. Capital SIOO,000 With the Largest Capit.il and Surplus in the County, a Strong Directorate. Competent Officers and Every Mod ern Facility, we solicit Accounts, Large or Small, and Collections on the Most Liberal Terms Consistent with Sound Hanking, and Invite YOU to inspect our NEW QUARTERS. 3 Per Cent. Interest Paid on Time Deposits OFFICERS! F..W.M. Low, President. James M. Slaver, Vice President. . DIIlECTOllS: James M. Staver, Fred Ikeler, 8. C. I'rensy, Clinton Herring, K.W.M.Low, F.O. Yorks, Louis (Jross, M. K StackSinune. THE COLUMBIAN. ESTAIlLISMF.D iSfih. THEJJOIUMBIA DEMOCRAT. KsrAHHsiiFn 1837, C"Nsoi ipai rn 1869 'PI.'.SHED KEKV Tlll'RSDAY MoKMNO, A' B'o.imsliurg, tlie County Peat ni Columtii a County . Pennsylvania. CEO. E. F.TAVKI.L. EniTOR. GEO. C. ROAN, Forkm an. Tkhms: XnsiH c the county l.oo a year f advance; !f 1 . 501 f not pan! in aivnnce. iu ilt: thecounty, f 1.45 a year, strictly in lvi- ce. Al :ommunications should l enlilrefiseH T'TF. C'M "'MPI N. I'Iconist 1 .r. Ta. Hi;ii-4I Y. AIM! II. 'J!!, limit Governor Stuart Signs .Yew Laws. The Legislative Record Abolished $5000 Fine and Imprisonment for False State ments About Finantial Institutions Many Other Important Measures. Governor Edwin S. Stuart has signed forty senate and house bills, including the bill abolishing the "Legislative Record" and the bill making it a misdemeanor punisha ble by a 6ne of $5,000 and impris onment of not more than five years to utter any false .statement dero gatory to the financial condition of any financial institution in the C-m- ton wealth. The Keister bill regulating the of aldermen, justices of the ace and other magistrates, which i one of the Dauphin county : ensures, was also approved. Other important bills approved were: To quiet the title of real es tate and to enable citizens of the United States and corporations chartered under the laws of this Commonwealth and puthorized to hold -eal estate therein, to hold and convey the title to real estate which has been formerly held by corpora tions not authorized by law to hold real estate in Pennsylvania. Making it a misdemeanor, pun ishable by a fine of from $10 to $25 or imprisonment for from five to sixty days, to destroy, remove or deface any sign erected on or near by a highway for the guidance of the public. Extending the provisions of the dog' and sheep act, of May 25, 1893, to courties having from 150, 000 to 250,000 inhabitants. . Providing tbat banking corpora tions of this State which have not commenced busiuess within two years from date of their letters patent or which have failed to ex ercise their corporate privileges for two years after liquidation shall be proceeded against by the attorney general at the instance of the bank ing commissioner to have their charter rights declared null and void. Making it a misdemeanor, pun ishable by a fine of from $50 to $200 to use the word "bone" in connection with the mine of any commercial fertilizer unless the phosphoric acid contained in such fertilizer shall be the product of pure animal bone. Enabling city, county, poor. ward, school, boroueh and town. ship tax ollectors to collect taxes for the payment of which they shall during 1909 become personally lia. ble without having collected the same Dy the expiration of the m. thority of their respective warrants or terms of office and to extend the item for the collection of the same two years from the passage of this act. ' . Validatiag notarial acts htn fore performed by notaries within three months after the expiration ui mcir commissions. Requiring supervisors to main. tain foot bridges across streams wnere public toads cross such streams. An : n.uuwi--g mueage 10 assessors ana assistant assessors whose dii ties pertain to assessments fur Stat and county taxes when traveling to or from county seats. ' Amending the defeasance act of . June 8, i83i, by prescribing the Surplus $150,000. Myron I. Low, Vice President. Frank Ikolcr, Cashier Mvron L Low, H'. V. Hower, Frank Ikeler. method of signing and delivering such defeasance. Providing that opinions on relig ious matters shall not affect the credibility of witnesses. Prescribing stricter methods of disbursing and accounting for de partmental appropriations in the State government. Providing for the use of borough and township lockups and city prisons for the detention of persons arrested by shetifls, constables, State police or other ofiicers. Providing that the offices of jus tice of the ptace and notary public shall not be incompatible. Requiring all petitions laying out or vacating public roads to fix defi nitely the points of beginning and ending and requiring certification of the report ol a jury of view to the State highway department. Fixing fees of constables. Providing that soldiers, sailors or marines of the war with Spain or any preceding war who die with out sufficient means to defray their burial expenses shall I e buried at the expense of the county, such expense not to exceed 50. Providing that borough councils may fix by ordinance the salary of the burgees, such saiary not to ex ceed $100 per 1,000 for the first 5,000 population and $5 for each additional i.coo or majority frac tion thereof. Relating to acknowlcgemeuts of deeds. Permitting independent school l.-tncts to share in the distribution f appropriations to borough high schools. Making it a felonv to receive stolen goods and providing for the mposition upon a person so coll ided of felony of the same penal ties now by law imposed upon the person who shall have stolen the goods. Providing that all classes of pa- leuts, except those suffering from contagious disease, may be admit ted, to the Fountain Spring State hospital for injured persons. Providing that when a receiver f a corporation is appointed in any court on motion of the attornev general at the instance of either the banking commissioner or the insur ance commissioner such receiver hall supersede any leceiver previ- usiy appointed by decree of any court and also supercede any as signee or trustee previously ap pointed by such corporation. Ivmpowenng second class town ship supervisors upon petition of a majority ot the real estate owners to levy and collect an electric light or other lighting tax. Making it a misdemeanor, pun ishable by a fine of from $500 to $5,000 and imprisonment for from six months to five years, for any person connected with any financial institution to misapply the funds of such institution. Rural Mailbox Order. Rural mail carriers, thrustinir their arms through spoke wheels, ciimoing steep lulls and crossing dangerous ravines in order to col- ect the mails from the boxes alon-r their routes, ofte mcir jives, is aiscontenanced in an order issued by the Postoffice De partment. It has been decreed that rural lettei boxes perched high upon the uujbiues, otners almost on the ground, and still others in similar inaccessible places, must be remov ed and relocated in more conveni ieut places. This will be done to expedite the collection and delivery of rural mail, and at the same time, enable carriers to cover their routes with greater celerity. Postmasters have been directed to take a census of all inaccessible rural mail boxes with a view to instituting the proposed change. OA.a'1'oniA. U 0 1'w MM im Have Always Kind Viiii Have Alwaye Mtut State Free ol Cattle Plague. End ol Successful Fight by Stat md National Authorities. Announcement that the quaran tine restrictions had been lilted" by bo'h the United States and Penn sylvania authorities from all parts of this State for foot and mouth disease bring? to an end what cat tle men and state officials consider to have been the best campaigns ever waged against the cattle plague. It has cost the Stte and Nation al government possibly $300,000 to eradicate the disease, but the histo ry of the plague shows th.it never before in so short time has its spread been stopped. The disease was traced to Buffalo and eight shipments from that city caused it to spread into twenty counties, in cluding most of those in the south eastern part of the State, and a number on the Susquehanna valley. Because of it the cattle yards of Philadelphia and Lancaster were placed under restrictions and ship ments virtually ceased lor a time. The first case was noted on No vember 6 in Moir.Mir county, and within ;wo weeks the whole State was in federal quarantine. So vig orous was this action of State Vet erinarian Pearson and his staff, act ing in conjunction with the nation al authorities, howevtr, that 2000 head of cattle ol vat ions kinds were found to be suffering from the dis ease and slaughtered before the middle of December. Then, when the disease had been checked and 110 new cases found for some time, Iwo were discovered to have been suppressed in Lancas ter county, and it was only by the hardest work on the part of State authorities that the Ktderai officials would modify the quarantine. The tate is now free of restric tions because of the disease, and only tht farms where diseased cat tle were killed and new ones brought are under observation. Tin's will last but a few weeks long er. CATTLE EMBARGO LIFTED. Satisfied that the foot and mouth disease in cattle, sheep and swine has been completely eradicated from the United States, Secretary of Agriculture Wilson issued an or der, effective April 24, releasing the entire country from the Federal quarantine. Four States were quarantined be cause of the epidemic, New York, Michigan, Maryland and Pennsyl vania. The latter State was the last to have the embargo lilted. Crops to the Front. The High Prices Will Encourr.go Farmers to Plant More. Th? high prices of all cereals will encourage farmers to plant or seed more wheat, oats, corn and barley than ever before, and while the season is backward, the ground has been in such condition due to an open winter, that it could be ploughed and made ready for seed ing, and now favorable weather has Arrived the entire agricultural area is more or less occupied with efforts to plant. Ihe Wall Street Journal says advices from most of the spring wheat territory in the northwest show that there are good prospects of completing a large part of the seeding by May. The grain crops of Canada alone will this year fall little short of 20,000,000 acres. Another feature of the crop out look at this stage is the gradual improvement of conditions in the southwest. The dry area in Texas is steadily being narrowed and the degree of drought reduced. Seed ing and planting have not general ly awaited rains, but were done in anticipation of the requisite moist ure'. Another feature of the farm op erations at this dat: is the enlarged provision made for oats, already sown over a large portion of the winter wheat territory. Last year the country had an area of 42,344,- 000 acres. Corn acreage is likewise certain to be greatly enlarged. The combined area of oats and corn 1 1 . lasiyearwas 134,132,000 acres in the United States. The gradual increase in the area devoted to these two crops is indicated in the United States. Impossible It Is impossible to be well, bowels are constipated. You must pay attention to the laws' of nature, or suffer the consequences. Undigested material, waste products, poisonous substances, must be removed from the body at least once each day, or there will be trouble. A sluggish liver is responsible for an immense amount of suffering and serious disease. Ask your doctor about Ayer's Pills. He knows why they act directly on the liver. Trust him. ICAyerConwHlTMT. Governor Wants No Mistakes. He Will Know All About Each Appropriation That He Approves. 'According to the almanac I nm given thirty days after the legisla ture adjourns to consider the bills it passes and leaves with me within ten days prior to adjournment, but as a matter c.f la:t after the work of tabulating these bills and class ifying them, and going over them carefully is done, I really have but fifteen days." So spoke Governor Stuart sitting in his workshop at the capitol, knowing that he had 714 01 tis 10 consiuer, wnicu wnen placed on a heap made a volume over four feet in thickness. And that is what the governor will have to tackle in a very short time. Being a man of business, he relies solely upon hitnselt to see that there are no mistakes made and before he approves an appropria tion he will know all about it. Chairman James F. Woodward, 1 of the house appropriations com mittee?, returned to Harrisburg from Washington to finish up the work of tabulating the appropria tion bills for the governor. Out side of this tabulation Executive Clerk Lynch will also arrange a table of appropriation bills, and these will be compared with the original bills by the governor, to that a mis ake is safeguarded against at three p;ints. Chairman Woodward is not at all pleased with 'he wiy the senate raised the ap propriation Dills alter they were passed by the house, and after his committee had given them the most careful considerations. Before leaving with Secret try Lukens Mr woouwaru nied tlie expense ac count of the appropriations com mittee, which was given $10,000 with which to work. A Flood of Bills. The Legislature sent to the Gov ernor 79S bills and 51 resolutions as the product of its labors on about forty working days. Of course the session covered more than forty days, but the working time, except as relates to committees, did not. Nearly every measure sent to the Governor was passed in violation of the Constitution, a fact which nobody can disprove. But that is a matter of no importance, for in Pennsylvania the Constitution has been a dead letter for the last thirty years. Bills were passed at "high pressure" in order that they might be Jammed through without giving members an opportunity to study them and protest against their enactment, or to ascertain whether or not any snakes were hidden in them. With the exception of the char itable and penal appropriations, some of which could have teen dispensed with, many of these new laws were unnecessary. Among legislators there is a passion for making laws, and it has been well developed in Pennsylvania. It is better to pass wisely a few neces sary laws than to pass unwisely many that are not necessary. That does not appeal to the average leg islative body, however, and the more bills it passes the more it is praised for a "working body" and a business seasiou." It will always be so. The average human being loves to pass laws for the government of somebody else. Harrisburg Star-Independent. 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 betweeu 1 and 2. tf Royal Arcanum. The quarterly meeting of the As sociated Councils of the Susque hanna Valley Royal Arcanum was held at Jersey Shore last Friday, and a large number of representa tives of the organization were in at tendance. Prof. G. E. Wilbur rep resented the local council. The following councils are in this dis trict: Sunbury, Danville, Blooms burg, Berwick, Milton, Lewisburg, Muucy, Montgomery, William sport, Lock Haven, Rejovo, Belle fonte and Jersey Shore. to be VVeSI simply impossible, if the New Spring Suits! Spring Suit9 have arrived! There's magic in that simple an nutincement for where 's the woman who is not all eyes to see the new garment fashions The Hew Spring Suits Are Low Priced. A most remarkable feature about these handsome new models is their extremely low prices. Your spring outfit will give you a bet ter service a much finer appear ance and yet cost you a small price. Catering to every taste we've gathered an assortment cf choicest correct styles. Prices $10 to $35. Spring Suits ( Regularly $2000 J) I 7. sO Suits of hard twisted serge and striped worsted in black, blue, green, tan and gray. 36 inch hip less coats; slashed back, natch -MMMMSMSMWMMHBSHMMB pockets.' self button trimming, full satin lined; satin collar and cuffs; Skirt is Demi-Princess with self covered buttons down the front. All sizes up to 42. SUIT at $12 7; Of shadow stripe chiffon pan. una in navy blue, elect blue, green, tan, ashes of roses and gray. Coat 40 inches long, semi-fitting hiploss cutaway front forming points on the sides, new small sleeves, lined throughout with satin; gorsd llare skirt with trimming of straps and self covered buttons. SUIT al $26.50 A 4 button cutaway coat 40 inches long of striped worsted, slashed back and sides, inlaid bengaline silk collar; large flap pockets, trimmed with but tons, lined with taffeta silk; plain 1 1 gore demi-Princess skirt. .At $6.00 to $14.00 Junior Suits for the little Misses in sizes 11, 13, 15 and 17 years. Made of shadow stripe pan ama and fine serge in navy blue, gray and green,' semi fitting hipless coats, gored and pleated skirt. SUIT at $27.00 A strictly tailored suit of French Serge; 4 button cutaway; single breasted (just a slight cut away effect;) lined with taffnta silk; new small sleeves; Demi Princess Skirt with inverted plait at sides. SUITS at $20.00 Of chiffon panama in blue, green and black; graceful semi-fitting hipless coat 36 inches long, single breasted, new small sleeves and trimmed with satin piping; gored flounce skirt. p P. BLOOMSBURG, JUST A REMINDER! Hera is a list of some of the printed goods and blank stock that can be obtained at the Columbian Printing House Perhaps it may remind you of something you need. FWyUT ADUQ A sizes, Commercial, Professional, Insur. S fill V CiilUr fjt auce, Baronial, Pay, Coin, ( HEADINGS CARDS CARD SIGNS IN BOOKS Books, Scales Books, Order Books, Etc. WAN ft TT T T 0 tinted in any size from a small strett iiriWU PUjIjO dodger, up to a full Sheet Poster. BOOKS AND 'i PAMPHLETS MISCELLANEOUS: Our Stock Includes : Cut Cards, all sizes, Shipping Tags Round Corner Cards, Manila Tag Hoard, Card Board in Sheets. Bond Papers, white and colors, Ledger Papers, Name Cards for all Cover Papers, Secret Societies, Book Papers.' Window Cards. Folders for Programs, Menus, Dances, Societies and all special events. Lithographed Bonds and Stock Certificates Supplied. Wedding Invitations and Announcements, Printed or Engraved. Visitors are Always Welcome. No Obligation to Purchase. We Do All Kinds of Printing Columbian Printing House, BLOOMSBURG, PA. PURSEL. - PENN'A. Letter Heads. Note Jeads, Mill Aunts, State ments, in many grades and sizes. Business, l'isiting, Announcement, Admission, Ball Tickets, Etc. No Admittance, For Rent, For Sale, Post No Bills, Trespass Notices, &c. Administrator's, Executor's, Treasurer's Receipt Books. Plain Receipts, with or without stub, Note WILL BE PLEASED TO SIIO W SAMPLES OF THESE AND ALL OP OUR WORK.