THE COLUMBIAN, BLOOMSBURtt, I A. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OFBWOMSDUKG, I A. THE OLDEST AND STRONGEST. Capital 8100,000 Surplus 8160,000. With the Largest Capital 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 Banking, and Invite YOU to inspect our NEW QUARTERS. , 3 Per Cent. Interest Paid on Time Deposits OFFICERS: R. W.M. Low, President. Junes M.Staver, Vice President. DIRECTORS? James M. Staver, Fred Ikeler, H. V. Creasy. Clinton Herring, E. W.M.Low. F. G. Yorkd, Louis Grow, M. E tackhouge. THE COLUMBIAN. ESTABLISHED t866. THE COLUMBIA DEMOCRAT, Kit ABListim 1837. Consolidated 1869 Pt RUSHED EvKIY THURSDAY MoRMNO, A Bloomsburg, the County Seat otJ ColumbiaCounty Pennsylvania. GEO. E. EL WELL, Editor. GEO. C. ROAN, Foreman. rtK.MM Inside the county $1.00 a year l-i nlvance; $l.$oif not paid in advance. Ltstdethecounty, tl.25 a year, strictly in a vat c . All communications should bea Uressed THE COLVMBIAN, FlocmsUro fa. HUK.SDAV, JULY 15, 1909 Bryan Will Go Abroad. Plant Australian ard English Lecture Tour, Friends Say. William J. Bryan is contemplat ing another foreign lecture tour. He will leave America in a short time, his intimate friends say, to spend three years abroad. He told newspaper men that a carefully planned trip through Australia and England is now being arranged for Hm, and he was enthusiastic in mimenting upon the field for his Hires which exists in those two untries. He is getting all his af .irs in readiness for this tour, and f -.ople close to Mr. Bryan say that i. will leave America for Austra lia lite this summer. He will go to Sydney and remain there for several days. His trip will include all the large cities of Australia and he will spend almost two years in that country and the other English-speaking islands of the Pacific. Then he will go to England and tour the whole of Great Britain. Several of his lectures are now being translated into French and German, to enable the Nebraska orator to spend a few weeks in France and Germany. He plans to return to America in the summer of 191 2, and there may be another gigantic reception for him in New York at that time. -New Pennsylvania Law. Pennsylvania has recently placed herself in line with other states in the matter of progressive legisla tion affecting the horse. An act went into effect May 6, making it unlawful to offer for sale or to sell diseased, lame, or worn out horses. Provisions are made for its enforce ments by policemen, constables, or agents cf any anti-cruelty society incorporated in the state. This law was secured by the united ef forts of the societies in Pennsylva uia, working through the Federat ed Humane societies of which Thomas S. Carlisle is secretary. The first prosecution and convic tion under the new law was made May 12 by an agent of Pennsylva nia S. P. C. A. Out ot 472 employees at the immigration Station at Ellis Island, New York Harbour, more than one fourth have been found to be below the standard of efficiency, according to an announcement made Tuesday at the Department of Commerce and labor. Of these, some will be dismissed, some reduced and others reprimanded and warned. Weak Throat Cold after cold; cough after cough! Troubled with this taking-cold habit? Better break it up. We have great confidence in Ayer's Cherry Pectoral for this work. No medicine like it for weak throats and weak lungs. Ask 4 your doctor for his opinion. He knows all about it. i His aDDroval is valuable. Follow hU advlrp f all timpc I No alcohol in this cough medicine. J.C.AyerCo.,Lowcll,MaJ. Always keep a goot! laxat f vc in the house. Take a de when yourcoldfirstcomeson. What is the best laxative for this? Ayer's Fills. Ask your doctor his opinion. Let him decide. Myron I. Low, Vice President. Frank Ikeler, Caauier Myron T. Low, H. V.Hower, Frank Ikeler. Crops Menaced by Lack of Rain. Secretary of Agriculture Issues a Warning to Farmers. Deputy Secretary of Agriculture A. L- Martin has uttered a serious warning to farmers on account of the drought conditions which are prevalent all over the State to a greater or less extent. "This has been fine harvest weather recently," said Mr. Mar tin, hut it has been corrispond ingly bad for crops not yet ready for the harvest. "Corn and potatoes are at pres' ent in the greatest danger from lack of rain. I want to give this warning to the farmers: Cultivate your crops in time of drought. No matter how busy you are with the harvest run your cultivator through your corn and potatoes and keep it up. SYSTEMATIC CULTIVATION'. Mr. Martin explained that this systematic cultivation is the only safeguard against drouth which is available to the farmer who lacks an irrigation scheme which a 1 Pennsylvania farmers do lack. Coutiuued breaking up of the hard crust on top of the ground tends to draw moisture Irom below and spreads it among the roots. In some sections of the State, says Mr. Martin, who spent last week on the northern tier, the drought which has prevailed here for the past fortnight has lasted for six weeks. This is especially true of counties in the valley of the North branch of the Susquehanna river. The wheat crop has been har vested in good shape and is an av erage crop all over the Common wealth. Hay is not so good in yield, but the quality is excellent, a ton of this year's timothy being worth half as much again as in a rainy year. RECEIVED COMPLAINTS. Complaints have been received from some sections that paris green is sola this year at much higher prices than formerly, but that the stuff is so adulterated that it doesn't poison potato bugs. "If that is true," said Mr. Mar tin, "let the farmers who have been swindled send the department of agriculture samples of the adul teratea poison. we have our chemist for just such work and if the adulteration is proved a fine or imprisonment for the guilty manu facturer or merchant will follow. In sending such samples the Tann er should be careful to keep an ac curate record of the brand and the place and time at which it was pur chased." The Demand for Jig Saw Puzzles. The demand for jig saw puzzles in:reases every week. Every Sun day The Philadelphia Press awards 200 of these fascinating games to solvers of the puzzles printed in The Sunday edition of The Phila delphta Press. Hundreds of keen witted readers have expressed their appreciation of the amusement these puzzles afford and write that they mean to try to solve the puz rles every Sunday. Interesting to grown-ups as well as the little ones Get lhe Press early next Sunday. Souvenir Post Cards are printed at this office. Half tones supplied. Weak Lungs I WASHINGTON From our Kegular Correspondent. Washington, D. C, July 12, 1909 The Senate has made such rapid progress in its consideration of the tariff bill that it now looks as if fi nal adjournment would Le reached by July 24, which by a somewhat curious coincidence is the date on which the Dingley bill was signed, after a special session which con vened on March 15, the same date as saw the beginning of this session. Senator Aldrich. chairman of the Finance Committee, is having pre pared a tabulated comparison of the House and Senate bills, by which he hopes to show that the increases made in lhe upper house have been neither as numerout nor as great as is popularly supposed. It is true that there have been a number of decreases from the bill as oiiginally reported from the Fi nance Committee, many of which, because they were effected with lit tle debate, attracted comparatively little attention. Despite this fact, however, even a casual study of the measure as reported to the Sen ate from the committee of the whole shows an appalling number of increases which even the inge nuity of Mr. Aldrich will find it difficult to explain, and which arc certain to merit and to receive the censure of the great army of con sumers. The one feature of the Senate bill cn which the leaders are rely ing to mitigate popular censure is the substitution of the tax on in heritances, together with the adop tion by a unamimous vote of the joint resolution submitting to the several states a constitutional a mendment authorizing Congress to impose a tax on individual iucomes. Great as is the disappointment to the Democratic leaders over the failure of an income tax this ses sion, they are, like true philoso phers, finding no small degree of comfort in the fact that President Taft has permitted it to become known that the special tax which he prefers above all others is a graduated income tax. In view of the fact that this has long been one of the chief planks in the Demo cratic platform, it is strikingly il lustrative of th 2 influence exerted by the minority and of the adapta bility of the majority that this con stitutional amendment is now given its first real impetus by a Republi can President and such staunch ad herents of old-school Republican ism as Nelson W. Aldrich and his associates on the Finance Commit tee. It was perhaps to be expect ed of a President so wedded to the law and who enjoyed so long and eminent an experience on the bench as Judge Taft that he should re gardless of bis views of that decis ion of the Supreme Court which pronounced unconstitutional the in come tax ef the Wilson bill, hesi tate to promote the reeuactmeut of a similar law. It must be taken into consideration in judging of his course that the more pronounced was his conviction . that the court erred in its former decision, the more loath would he be again to present to it the same cause for adjudication. Like all great law yers his respect for the Supreme Court of the United States at least approaches the sacrisant, and be lieving as he probably did that the Supreme Court would be compelled to reverse its former decision, or else purely as a matter of consis tency again to err, he was loath to place it in that position. By means of a constitutional amendment he is convinced that the greatest tribu nal in the land can be saved from that embarrassing position, and it is an earnest of his sincerity that he has so iar won over to his view that conservative of conservatives, Senator Root of New York, that Mr. Root in public debate pledged himself to work and vote for the adoption of the constitutional a mendment by his own State which has generally! been assumed least likely to approve it. V The Navy Department is about to undertake a series of experiments which will be attended with the ut most interest, although every effort will be made to guard the results from publicity. To an extent hard ly conceivable to the uninitiated the whole system of ordnance, in eluding projectiles, armor resist ance, torpedo attack, and a large part of the science of balistics is purely theoretical, being built up from a series of experiments with minimum sizes and distances from which are calculated the effects, in creased in arithmetical ratio. For instance, the experts fire a two hundred pound projectile at a six- inch armor plate, at a given veloc ity, and from' the results they cal culate by rule of three, what effect a thonsand pound projectile, fired at a proportionately reduced veloc ity, at a twelve-inch armor plate, would have. With a materially in creased appropriation, secured at the last session ol Congress, exper iments arc to be made with full sized projectiles, at actual war dis tances, and at actual thicknesses of armor plate. For instance, a tar get covered with twelve-inch plate will be subjected to the fire of a twelve-inch gun, at distances of three, four or five miks, which will closely approximate actual battle conditions and serve to prove the accuracy, or the reverse, of the mathematical calcnlat oris which heretofore have been the sole gu'de of the ordnance experts. Experi ments will be unde, also, to deter mine the actual explosive force of twelve-inch shells against given thicknesses of armor plate. The North Atlantic Fleet. Skirting the inner tip of Cape Cod there lies in the harbor of Ptovincetowu and nearby waters the largest and moat notable fleet of warships ever assembled for active duty under the Stars and Stripes. Every vessel of the half hundred is in readiness for practice maneuvers which will tax the in genuity and skill of the foremost naval minds of the couu'.ry for the next month. The vessels, including battle ships, cruisers, torpedo boats, sub marines, refrigerator ships, tenders and supply ships, numbering 54 are drawn up in two parallel lines extending around Race Point along the cape of Truro, four miles below, standing at the head of the line being Rear Admiral Schroed er's flagship, the Connecticut. On board the vessels are 15,000 men. Shore leave was granted Sunday, as it will be every Sunday for the coming month during the niaueu vers, when the fleets will return to Proviucetown for the week end. Ensign J. Boyd Rutter is as signed to duty on the Wisconsin battleship, one of this fleet. Judge Clothes Jury. Realizing that it was very un comfortable for jurors to sit during a trial in a hot, sultry Court room. Judge Harris, in the criminal ses sion of the Superior Court . sitting in Boston on Tuesday ordered 12 alpaca coats for the jury. His Honor wore a thin, light-weight coat and felt none too comfortable, though an electric fan was perched on the bench. Now and then he turned to the jury and saw its members mopping their brows with handkerchiefs and nervously twitching in their seats while the evidence was being put in. The Judge called Court Officer Paine to the bench and told him to get 1 2 alpaca coats for the members of the panel. His Honor paid for the coats. As the jurors arrived after the recess they were taken into a room and given a light coat to put on in place of their own coats and waist coats. All the jurors appreciated the kindness and consideration of the Judge and when Court came iu after 2 o'clock, the jurors were sitting in the jury box each wear ing his new coat and a smile. Shippers May Use Paper Cases. Faced by the assured extinction of box lumber within a few years at most, representatives of big shipping interests appeared before the meeting of the Southern Class ification Committee Tuesday to se cure specifications under whhh they will be allowed to ship goods in cases and boxes made of paper pulp. Thomas W. Ross, of Cleve land, the principal speaker, quoted figures to show that shippers with in a few years would be left with out means of packing their goods unless some new method similar to th .t proposed is adopted. Permis sion to use the paper boxes which are made from old newspapers and such other waste products as can be turned into pulp has been granted and the present meeting will specify the exact weight and other details necessary to protect shippers against loss. Pennsylvania Prosperous. Pennsylvania is in the position of being "practically out of debt, the only State in the Union so sit uated. This was demonstrated at the meeting of the Sinking Fund Commission Tuesday, when it was shown that the net debt of the State is $2,684,614 and to pay this there was in the sinking fund $2, 666,379, the net State debt being figured at $18,237. In the next few months there will be due the sinking fund $26, 486, and that wipes out the State debt. Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S C A SXO.R.I A New Spring Suits! Spring Suits have arrived! There's magic in that simple an nouncement for where's the woman who is not all eyes to see the new garment fashions ? TI19 New Spring Soils Are Low Priced. A most remarkable feature about these handsome new models is their extremely lew 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 of choicest correct styles. Prices $10 to $35. Spring Suits (t,- cn Regularly $2000 p 'JJ Suits of hard twisted serge and striped worsted in black, blue, green, tan and gray. 36 inch hip less coats; slashed back, patch 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 $12.75 Of shadow stripe chiffon panama in navy blue, elect blue, green, tan, ashes of roses and gray. "Coat 40 inches long, semi-fitting hipless cutaway front forming points on the sides, new small sleeves, lined throughout with satin: gored flare skirt with trimming of straps and self covered buttons. SUIT at $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 11 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 taffeta 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. F, P. PURSEL. BLOOMSBURG JUST A REMINDER! Here is a list of some of the printed goods and blank stock that can be obtained at the GoIumMan Printing Some Perhaps it may remind you of something you need. ENVELOPES TjnilTVTMAq Letter Heads. Note Heads, Bill Ieaas, State kiklWu ilxWw ments, in many grades and sizes. PADTAQ Business, Visiting,. Announcement, Admission, ImULlJ Ball Tickets, Etc. PADUQTPNQ Admittanct Por Rent, For Sale, Post ViJ L)lullL No Bills, Trespass Notices, 6- TM ft A AIT Q Administrator" s, Executor's, Treasurer's Receipt ill DVviVaJ Books. Plain Receipts, with or without stub, Note Books, Scales Books, Order Books, Etc, HAND BILLS BOOKS AND PAMPHLETS MISCELLANEOUS 1 Our Stock Includes : Cut Cards, all sizes, Shipping Tags Round Corner Cards, Manila Tag Board, 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 o7 Minting Columbian Printing House, BLOOMSBURG, PA. PENN'A. All sizes, Commercial, Professional, Insur ance, Baronial, Pay, Coin, Printed in any size from a small street dodger, up to a full Sheet Poster, WILL BE PLEASED TO SHO W , SAMPLES OF THESE AND ALL OP OUR WORK.