THE COLUMBIAN. BLOOMSBUR&, UA. IN HIS III DAVE SHAVED Now When Tired Rest, No Mat ter How Many Customers Are Waiting for Him OLDEST BARBER MAKES COMMENTS l tn' Facet, Ht Say. Art Lotlng Strong Masculinity that Formerly Marked Them iy bartering It not a Trade, it a Profettion. Cleveland. Ohio. f.lgiit oppotltt the Cuyahoga Kali Hotel Is Dart Berkhelmer'i barber ffcop. wbote pro prietor works wherj be fee.s like it and at do other time. Ad evening or to ago. at an hour when business usually gets brisk, be turned the lights low, carried a chair out to the sidewalk, and, seating himself, lighted a pipe and as puffing away contentedly when he bad a call. It was Jake Boo ron. wbo came in from the farm with a bunch of hair on bis face, the crop of a full week, "n bis buttonhole was a Cower and be wore a pale blue neck tie, for It was the night he always set apart for his girl: "Guess I'll try one of your shares, pop," he remar'ced. hesitating at the doorstep. "Not this evening, you won't," ob served Dave. "What's the reason 1 won't? AlD't this a regular barber shop, and aln t you a regular uar'jer. and ain't veil gotta shave anybody that's got tna price? And If that's al! that's wron of you. I kin show I've sot that all right." "My boy." said Dave. "I want to work when I want to and not waun other people want me to. I'll tell you something. I started in this busing when 1 was thirteen years u'a. I'm seventy-three cow. That makes sixty years at the strop. I'm the eldest barber in the United States. And all this time I've ben working, thinking I bad to. Well. I've just decided that I don't have to and I ain't goin to. Good night." Has Dave retired? Not a bit of It That's merely his declaration of Independence. Actual ly he's working harder than ever. "But," he says, "I've saved a bit of money, and I'm beholden to no man. And from now on I'm going to work ' I get tired, and when I get tired -. going to lay off If the whole shop's i of people. "Yes, you bet I've shaved some : cn In my day. I figure that I've - : ked on about 6,000 faces and heads . year on an average for sixty years. That makes It run upward 360,000 for my sixty years, don't it? "Has the human face undergone any changes? Well, I should say It has. And not for the better, elUie., It seems to me. You don't see any rugged, strong faces any more, like you used to. "Men's faces used to be hard and big, and tbe hair on the top of the head was as thick as It was on tbe chin and jaws. Men are getting to be more like women. Their faces art big enough sometimes, but they're soft and kind of flabby that old hardness Isn't there any more. Tbe hair's all od the face and not on the head. "There has been a change in the cheek bones. Most young fellows now adays seem to have kind of high cheek bones. They don't look no more like their grandads than a cat does like a tiger. "I've figured that we can blame the hats for tbe bald beads. Men didn't used to be so careful about covering their beads up with air-tight straw and the like of that in the hot sum mer. They used to wear bats that let plenty of air In, and that's what tbtlr bair needs mor n anything else. Hair'll never come out if you keep it clean and give it plenty of air." There's no unsteadiness about Dave for all bis sixty years at the strop. One of bis favorite jokes Is to get a man that he can not hold a pin In hit hand, arm stretched horizontally, for ten minutes. It sounds easy, but did yo-i ever try It? Few men can do It Dave can. Dave smokes a good deal. Also be drinks two beers a day. "My own Idea about this drink busi ness," he says, "is that the more you say to a man that he mustn't take it, tho harder he'll go after it Now I was going to say that I'd drink all my lift, but never had been drunk bat 1 was once. "Let's see it was after Lincoln'! second election tbe time be was at Hudson. I went over there with a lot of other fellows to see Lincoln go through. And I recollect wt took a bottle along. Yes, I was pretty well eorned up that time. I had the bottle when Lincoln came In. "'How're ye, Abe,' I yells, waving both bands, one holding the bottlt, too. "He waved back, laughed and said something, I don't know what though I've studied over it Iota of times. I wish I'd heard it, for I bet you a cookie it was something good. Ht used to gtt off aomt prttty rich things. "Bartering Isn't a trade It's a pro fession. I learned my trade In Ger many, and I can do surgery. Why, I can bleed a man with the bttt of doctors. And I know all tht dlstattt of tbe fact and what's good for them. How many barbers do nowadays? But they ought to." Tbe Mexican National Exposition la to be held In Puebla In tut spring of 1910. $ HUMOR ? OF THE. HOUR Why Ht Mourned. O'Flanairan came home ont night with a deep band of crepe around his tit. "Why Mike:" exclaimed his wife, "what are ye wearin' thot murnful thlc? for?" "I'm wearin' It for your first hus band." replied Mike firmly. I'm sor ry he's dead." One Reason. "That house that you finished a few weks aso is the biggest of the lot," said the real estate agent "Perhaps that's why It's so hard to find a ten att." "Yes." answered the builder, "It's last but not leased." THE IRONY OF FATE. "How is Bogg's new life preserver project progressing?" "He has been unable to float It" Potential. Tbe country parson was condoling with the bereft widow. "Alas!" be continued earnestly, "I cannot tell you how pained I was to ; learn that your husband had gone to j heaven. We were bosom friends, but weichall never meet aealn." I Why He Knew. "Do you know," said a Sunday school teacher addressing a new pupil ' In the Infant class, "that you have a soul?" "Course I do," replied the little fel low, placing his hand over hit heart "I can feel it tick." All Was Well. He had lent her his stylographlc pen and she commenced to write a letter. She Oh, It writes beautifully. I de clare I'm in love with this pen. He I'm in love with the holder. She saw the point Drawing-Room Gossip. Lady of House Have you been lis tening to what we were saying, An na? Servant You do me an injustice, madam. What you were telllDg I al ready knew a long time ago. Infant Terrible. Nephew (to aunt who has come on a visit) You have a grip and two packages In each hand, auntie." Aunt Isn't that all right? Nephew Yes; but papa said you always came empty-banded. Telling Bad Eggs. "What's the best way to tell a bad egg?" "I don't know, but I would suggest that If you have anything really Im portant to tell a bad egg, why break It gently." Getting Him Classified. "What sort of an after-dinner speak er Is Bllggins?" "One of the kind who start in by saying they didn't expect to be called on, and then proceed to demonstrate that they can't be called off." Not Political Talk. She You never hear of women speaking from the rear platform of a car. He Oh, I don't know! I've heard 'em saying things to the conductor, all right!" YOUR OBEDIENT 8ERVANT. Mistreat I thought I toll ytn aot to let the clock run down. Maid Servant I didnt lot It run down, Mum, I stopped It Everything In tht Tobacot Lint. Joker Do you keep smoktltss to banco? 1 Clerk Sure we do. Joker What kind It itT Clerk Chewing tobacco, of coursa TRAFFIC IN SACRED OFFERINGS One of tht World's Coarsest Vocation j It that of Dealing In Second J hand Fyneral Emblems. ! One of the coarsest vocations ts : traffic In second hand floral offerings I to the memory of the dead, says the New York Press. The men who art , engaged In the cold-blooded business ; drive from cemetery to cemetery and i load Into the trucks faded and rusty gates ajar, broken columns, lyres, j wreathes, hearts and pillows. Hun- dreds and thousands of them art tossed Into the trucks as carelessly and rudely as if they never had been bedewed with tears, embalmed with sighs and hallowed by sacred memo ries. The foundation of all elaborate and expensive floral designs tor funeral purposes Is a wire frame. Enormous sums are spent annually by New Yorkers for such offerings to ba placed upon tht graves of relatives or friends. In specia. Instances, where tht designs are large and heavy, steel rods are used in their construction. Those frames cost good money when tbe florist buys them and after he has covered them with flowers and trail ing vines be Increases the price sev eral fold, knowing that In time of grief mankind Is not prone to hag gle about the coi;t of flowers. Second hand frames ire loSnitely cheaper thaD new ones. Cleared of the faded flowers and leaves, stripped of tht fine wire and string which were used to bind the stems, and then dipped In green paint, the old frames are as good as new ones, and no one knows the difference. Tip saw a wagon after it had made a tour of cemeteries out in Queens. It was a two-horse truck. From the top of Its body standards ran up five or six feet Within that large space hundreds of second-hand funeral of fering frames were packed. On top was an especially large frame. On its apex was a vhite dove, tbe wings flapping violently to every lurch of th truck as It rattled over the cob bles. Curly Hair f.'eans Abitinacy. The curly-baired man uttered an exclamation of amazement "Strange." l.o said, "I have been drawn for juries time and again, but have never served. They always chal lenge me. I wonder why?" "Is Is your curly hair," said a law yer. "A curly-headed man kills a jury. He always causes It to disa gree." "It is the Gospel truth," the lawyer persisted. "Curly-heads are as ob stinate as mules. They think they know it all. They disagree with every body. "It Is because," he hastened to add. "their curly hair makes them so good-V looking. In childhood they are spoil ed by their parents, and In maturity women spoil them, falling in love with them on every side. So they become conceited. They disagree with every body. Lawyers the world over recog nize that as jurymen they would nev er do." From Gold to Copper. There Is no clearer example of the mining of tbe new day than these great copper camps set down in the heart of the old time gold country. Gold mining meant fortunes to the few; the Argonauts came and gather ed their millions and left the land al most as wild and unconquered as they found It Few permanent towns and cities mark their trail. But copper enlists an army In its service; It sets big buildings rocking with the roar of machinery where the gold hunter pitched his tent and builds its rail roads where he packed his mule trains. Science steps down from a Pullman now where Romance tramped with blanket roll and rifle and gold pan, and telephone and telegraph wires follow the trails of tbe ex press riders. Out We3t Another Insomnia Cure. For sleeplessness fill a hot water bottle and place It under the ankles; it works better there than at the soles of the feet Put a rather small amount of very cold water In another rubber bottle and lay It on the head. The cold water it more comfortable than ice, which seems exciting, rather than soothing. At first, says a woman who has tried this cure, I would get to sleep in about an hour and wake again as the water heated. The cold water would have to be changed four or five times during the night; then onca changing was enough, and now if tht brain begins to spin after I lie down for sleep I put on the cold water bottlt and am asleep soon for the whole night Harper's Bazar. Characteristics of Dutch Painters. Perhaps this might be defined as a capacity for honest seeing and for honest doing, and certainly it was in this way that the moral character of the Dutch displayed itself. It waa equally a notable distinction of tht Dutch painters. As a school, they were unanimous In choosing for their subject life: the life about which they knew most and in which they were most Interested their own. They represented it with straight forward ness and sincerity. Thus, with few exceptions, their motive was Biinply and sincerely realistic, and at the same time their brushwork was ex traordinarily skillful. Charles H. Cat fin's "The Story of Dutch Painting" in Bt Nicholas. Very Touching. "I taw Mrs. Quiver this morning. Sht had rttcived notice to select an other abode on account of her chil dren, and she was a picture of woe." "Ah I A moving picture?" Notes and Comment Of Interest to V(omea Readers MADE WITH CHEESE. A Number cf Goo DUhsa for Lunch eon or Supper. Cheets and Nut Sandwiches. Chop pecan, hickory or English walnuts ssial!: n ix the nuts Into an equal bulk of cream or neufchatel cheese, add a dah of paprika, and use In spreading brrad prepared for lacdwiches. A heart leaf of lettuce, tipped In French dressing, may be placed between th" two pieces of b.eid. Cheese Relish. Cut "one-quarter J tojr.d of cheese lrito slices; put into a frying pan. pour over it one largo cap of milk Into which has been rr.lx ed one-half teaspoonful of dry mil turd and a pinch of salt; add a p'eco of butter size of a walnut; stir all tho tiue; have ready some cracker crumbs; sprinkle ther:i ir.to the above mixture; wh;n thoroughly mixed turn into a warm dl3h and serve. N.co io: luncheon. Chccie Patties. One pound cf chc?se. one-half cup butter, two tv. ; half curs cf f.our, one-h: '.f teiiroo ful salt two eg?s. beaten thoraugMy: then add other Ingredients. Hoi! o.:! tbout as thick as pie crust; rut out and bake in a hot oven to a so'.ilei brown. Ccalloped Cheess. 7t'.:e four riirei of bread, remove the cru3t, and bui.t." cich slice, and pn In a butiercd l."'. Ing dish In layers, then chop one-quarter pound chceFO and sprinVile over it foae salt and pepper. Mix four we'l beaten eggs with three cops of mi'.k, r.nd pour over the bread and ehto-e. Ua';e In a hot oven as you wou'. 1 bread pudding. Cheese Straws. One ci:p of flou ', two cups grated cheese, one teaspoon ful butter, pinch of salt, one scant ten spoonful baking powder; mix v.ith water and roll out like pie crur.t; tit !a str!p3 and bake a l'.gn. brown. Nice tvi'.h Falad. Cheese Fondu. One cup of grour.d crackers, one cup milk, three-fourths cup cheese, two eggs, whites and yolks beaten separately light; stir a l together and bake In a quick oven; serve Immediately. The "Oblong Woman." The decision has been arrived tt among certain makers of high-class ready-to-wear suits and dresses that "the oblong woman" Is to continue, and hipless dress forms will be tin feature of future wearing apparel of this class. Among Individual makers, however, practically nothing but th) princess dress obtains, but It Is sj varied that each ont seems to be i;l a class by Itself. Some are so severely simple that they really take the place of tha tailored suit Many are "oblong," but many, too, are fitted to the figuri quite to the hip line. She Learned Something. The "Talk to Mothers" was over, and the earnest settlement worker was having an Informal chat with tha members of her audience over a cup of tea. "I never come here but what I hear something real useful," said the moth er of six small Doughertys. "I'm glad to hear that." said the oettlement worker, cordially. "Was there really anything to help you to l3y? I felt so tired, and what I said r"ned very stupid." "Indeed, twas fine," Mrs. Dougher tv assured her. "And when you pnoke about the difference between children and the difference between Plants, you said, 'You put your helio tropes and geraniums In the sun to prow, but the fuchsia needs t shnde.' says you. And there I've pot a lovely fuchsia In a presont on " v blrthdny, nnd I rover knew whnt n(ld It to be RptUnc so noor-lnoMnfr, nn'l 'tis bpcr'isvl'v I'M It rl-hf out li the sun! You'll tiv--r find mo tniss Ine ono of the "'..!:.. u . Ichors' un !es I'm si:!- m "jt:." YcUh'a Companion. The Kind You Have Always In use for over 30 years 7 and rtff'J1. "ona! supervision since Its Infancy. Allow no one to deceive vou in thla. All Counterfeits, Imitations and M Jost-as-good" are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Children Experience against Experiment What is CASTORIA Cofitorla Is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare gorlc, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It Is Pleasant It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other NarcothV substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Feverlslmess. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates tha Stomach and Dowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children's Panacea The mother's Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYO JO Bears the The Kind You Me Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years. twi etirMun eeuMwr, Tt murr.v mrn ct. New vo.n cm. BIG OFFER To All Our Subscribers The Great AMERICAN FARMER Indianapolis. Indiana. The Leading Agricultural Journal of tha "Nation. Edited by an Able Corps of Writers. The American Farmer is the only Literary Farm Journal pub ished. It fills a position of its own and has taken the leading alace in the homes of rural people in every section of the United states. It trives tbe farmer and his family crrvotVi; w about aside from the humdrum Every Issue Contains an Original Poem by SOLON G00DE WE MAKE THE EXCEPTIONAL OFFER OF Two for the Price of The Oldest County Paper BOTH ONE YEAR FOR $I.OO This unoaralleled nffpr io -11 1 1 1 , 7, SiSeTfJSd"" THE COLUMBIAN, Only a litii.k ff.n i niaybfthe beginning of an obstinute cane of Nasal ('Htnrrh. invader with Ely's Cream Balm ap- pneu wiraigni 10 me inflamed Htuttea up air-passages. Price 60c. If you urefer to us an ntomr ,kIi f,,r I I... dv Ami will ri.l vn.. of nut.rPh i. fever. Noeoeain to IipkwI n i.POUllt'llI habit. No mercury to drv ud these. cretiou. Price 75c, with npraying ti.be. All druggists, or mailed liy El y Broo., 60 NVarreu Htreet, New Yo'rk. Treepass Notices. Card siens ,NoTresMssincr, tnr sale at this office. They are orint- ed in accordance with tbe late act of 1903. Price 5 cents each, tf 'A Dronhet U without. own country," nnoled the Wise Guy. , me nimpie JHUg, ' and the worst of his predicament is that he can se'doiu aiford to go abroad." CASTORIA For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of Bought and which has been has borne tho signature of has been made under his per Signature of 7 ""ii-liillir IU llllUaw of routine duties. One: THE COLUMBIAN and THE AMERICAN FARMER miA f n .. - i.v w an new suDscriDers, ana andrenew w,thin lhirty day' Bloomsbunr, Pa. Don't forget that Dr. Pierce's Favor ite Prescription, for woman's weak nesses and .delicate ailment, Is not a patent or secret medicine, being the j ''Favorite Prescriptiou" of a regular ! educated and graduated physician, en ! gaged in the practice of bis chosen I tlmt " Ingredient are primed IN HLAIN ENGLISH 011 everv hottlf-wran- J xr; that it is the only medicine espe. ciauy ucsigneti ror lite cure ot woman's diseases that contains 110 alcohol, and the only one that has a professional endorsement worth more than all the so-called "testimonials" ever published for other medicines. Send for these endorsements hey are kkek for the asking. A little book of some of the-;e en dorsements will be sent to any address, post-paid, and absolutely kkkk if you remiest same by tal card or letter, of Dr. It. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y. If you sutler from periodical head ache, backache, dizziness, palnordrag ging down sensation low down in the abdomen, weak back, have dissgrei-able and weakening, catarrhal, pelvic dralu, or are in distress from being long ou your feet, then you may be sure of Len rttt from taking Dr. J ierce's Favorite Prescription. Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets--the best laxative and regulator of the bow els. They invigorate stomach, liver and bowels. One a laxative; two or three a cathartic. A fine new line of Wedding in vltations just received at this office.