8 THE COLUMBIAN.-BLOOMSBUa fr. THE COLUMBIAN. BLOOMSBURG, I'A. THURSDAY, AUUU3T 5, 1909. The Zoological Press Bulletin of the Division of Zoology, Penn sylvania Department of Agricul ture. Timely Topics of Plants and Pests Discussed Weekly. By II. A. Surface, State Zoologist. CONCERNING STRAWBERRY PESTS. State Zoologist Surface received many inquiries recently concerning strawberry pests, Hnd to these has replied that the best general means of suppressing them lies in a novel method of summer treatment of the strawberry plant, which many per sons would hesitate to apply, but which they will find so effective that it will become a regular feature of their mode of culture after its benefits have been observed. This consists of nothing more nor less than mowing the strawberry leaves as low as possible shortly after the berries are picked, throwing these together with a little straw between the rows, dryiug them quickly on a. hot, sunshiny day, and then burning them at once. The strawberry leaf rust and leaf spot are among the diseases that are very destructive and contagious. They can be partially prevented by the use of the Bordeaux mixture, but the germs causing the leaf de struction remain in the old patch from one year to another. Also, the aphis and several other insects pests attack the leaves during the summer. It has been found that if the leaves are mowed closely on a warm, dry day, and slightly dried and mixed with just a little straw and then burned, the pests are practically all destroyed, and the plants themselves escape uninjured. Consequently, this is the time of year to give such treatment. Good new runners will be formed at once; especially, if a little com mercial fertilizer or finely-divided manure from the stable or poultry house be scattered over the roots of the old plants and these be cultivat ed in the regular manuer. New leaves will yet be formed this sea son, and the plants will be put in good condition for bearing a much more abundant and a healthier crop next year than if the leaves had not been burned. Persons who doubt the efficiency of this treatment should mow the leaves of some of the plants, and see the results for themselves. BORERS IN MAPLK TREES. Former State Senator Henry D. Saylor, of Montgomery County, wrote from Lis home in Pottstown :o State Zoologist Surface, of the Department of Agriculture, Harris jorg as follows: "I write for information about .n insect that has just attacked ome Norway maples belonging to ne by boring holes in the trunks nd large limbs, the holes being lean cut about the size, in circum erence, of a darning or steel cro .-net needle. I have been unable to ee the insect that is causing the nischief. My attention was first ailed to the matter by the droop ng appearance of the trees, and he presence of white spots on the .ranks and limbs where the boring jccnrred." This letter was answered by the itate Zoologist as follows: "Replying to your letter, I can ot say with certainty what the .estisthat is infesting your Nor ay maple tree without seeing it. lowever, it is evidently a borer, nd perhaps a bark borer or engrav r beetle. If it be this, it shows a it the tree is declining, and this -orer practically attacks only de lining or injured trees. I would dvise digging about the trees, aulcbing them, pruning off dead ud dying branches, and watering .-ell with water containing a tea poonful of nitrate of soda to each tlOO Reward. $100. The readers of this paper will be leased to learn that there is at ast one dreaded d isease that sci lce has been able to cure in all its ages, and that is Catarrh. Hall's atarrh Cure is the only positive ire now known to the medical fra rnity. Catarrh being a constitu onal disease, requires a constitu onal treatment. Hall's Catarrh ure is taken internally, acting irectly upon the blood and mucous irfaces of the system, thereby de royiug the foundation of the dis ise.aud giving the patient strength building up the constitution aud listing nature in dolug its work, he proprietors have so much faith i its curative powers that they ler One Hundred Dollar for any ise that it fails to'cure. ' Send for st of testimonials. Address F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O. Sold by ail D;uggits. 7 sc. Take Hall's Family Pi!!:; forcon s.ipaticn. I -5 gallon of w ater. If the borers be large enough that you can find their holes and insert the tip of a small machine oil can into them, you can easily kill the pests by in jecting a little carbon bisulfide into each hole, and then stopping this with clay or mud. For this partic ular tree, I would recommend prun ing, watering, cultivating and try ing every means possible to stimu late it to vigorous growth, in order that yon can make it outgrow the effects of the pests you mention. If you will send me some for exami nation, I shall be glad to reply promptly concerning the same." THE ANGOfMOIS GRAIN MOTH. Throughout the southeastern part of Pennsylvania there has for some years been au annual destruction of hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of wheat in the bin by a lit tle pest very commonly called the White Weevil or Moth Weevil. As a matter of fact it is not a weevil but a moth, the larva of which lives within the grain of wheat and hol lows it out to such au extent that it Decomes a mere hull of bran. It is ruined for milling purposes, and, of course, badly injured for domes tic use. The Angoumois Grain Moth is so named from the province of France where its ravages were first most noted. The mature moth lays its eggs on the grains of wheat while in the head or straw and as it feeds voraciously and but a, short time, it multiplies rapidly, giving several successive broods. Where the wheat is left in the straw, as in the stack or mow, it has been found far worse infested than when threshed and kept in a bin. Sev eral farmers have replied to State Zoologist Surface that they have acted upon his recommendation of threshing the grain soon after har vest, and have found the results quite satisfactory. One farmer re ported that half of his crop, which was threshed shortly after harvest, was entirely uninjured by the pest; while the other half, that was not threshed until the latter part of fall, was nearly all destroyed. The remedy, therefore, is one of the simplest, and at the same time one of the most effective, that could be applied, and consists in merely threshing the grain as early as is possible and storing it in the bin, rather than keeping it in the straw unthreshed. In the grain bin the moth weevil will work only in the top layer of grain, if at all; and, if it should be found there, as would be indicated by the heating of the grain, it can easily be killed by pouring carbon bisulfide into shal low dishes, and placing them on the grain under cover of wet blankets. Employment for Boys. Should Not Be Allowed to Grow Up in Idleness. We heartily agree with an argu ment advanced by the Altoona Tribune that parents who permit their boys to grow up in idleness make a grave mistake. That paper says that most of the petty robber ies which are occurring in various sections of tae country are traced to boys of various ages. Some have reached the time in life when they want to cut something of a figure among their comrades or with the opposite sex. They have no useful employment and their parents either decline to furnish them with spend ing money or have none to give them. Having no inclination to provide it by honest toil, the lads soon yield, to temptation to rob somebody. Others are small boys who have very poor home associa tions or bad street companions. Perhaps the blood in their veins is not of the best quality. Some per sons sneer at the notion of heredity, but there's something in it; not as much as faddists claim, but an in clination, a tendency, a weakness or a strength, as the case may be. Parents are not always responsible tor the ill-doing of their children. The home and its training usually have much to do with human des tiny, but it's an admitted fact that some of the world's noblest men have come out of very unpromising homes, wLile devout meu and worn en have sometimes gone down in sorrow to their graves because of ihe perverse conduct of children who were carefully trained in the way of virtue aud given every chance to make excellent meu or women out of themselves. There is a disposition to righteousness in some which is quite as gratifying as it is unexpected; there is a tend ency to criminal or vicious deprav ed conduct winch is no less de pressing. But when the exceptions are eliminated the rule remains that the child is father 10 the man, which is the same as saying that the man is the product, in most instances, of his early environment. - Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S 1 C ASTORIA That Murder Secret Man Who Knowt cf How Woman Wat Killed, Escaped From Snyder County Jail-No Effort Being Mae to Find Mm. ' Why an escaped prisoner, who claims to know a nineteen-years-old murder secret, and got out of jail at Middleburg Sunday two weeks ago, as he was being held to tell his story at the October term of court, should not be at least searched for, cannot be understood by Snyder county folk. Some of them are anxious to see Alfred F. Thomas take the witness stand and reiterate his alleged explanation of the mysterious disappearance of Mrs. Robert Hassinger in 1890 from her mountain home near Beaver Springs. Thomas declared that he was so harassed by his conscience that he could no longer eat nor sleep, thinking of the crime he was keep ing secret and unatoned for. Two mouths ago his pangs became so desperate that he told before many persons repeatedly that he saw Mrs. Hassinger whipped iu her home the night of her disappear ance nineteen years ago, and that in a fit of auger the flogger struck the aged woman on the head with the butt end of the whip, felling her to the floor, dead. Thomas said so many things that Robert Hassinger, the strange ly absent woman's husband, caused his arrest on a charge of slander the latter part of May. Wh?n Sheriff Hackenberger caught Thomas at Selinsgrove the prisoner greeted him heartily and remarked: "You would not need to have come for me. I was just going to Middleburg to give myself up. I want to tell the judge my story." Thomas was thereupon incarcer ated in the snug $40,000 county jail to await trial. Sunday after noon a week ago he packed his kit of clothes, strolled out into the jail yard, across the lawn to a gate in the big stone wall, leisurely smashed a padlock thereon, swung open the heavy doors and walked away. He was missed 'about "sup per time," but that was all. No searchers went after him, no alarm was spread by telephone; nothing but announcement of the fact by gossiping men and women on their way to church that night. Some had seen Thomas early that afternoon unconcernedly strolling along the public road; others passed him on their way to worship. Now the indifference of the Suy- PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD Bulletin. FORTY PLAYGROUNDS BY THE SEA. This is seashore time. The dog days call to the worker in home, office, and mill and the answer brings up thoughts of the many resorts be side the sea where comfort, recreation, and pleasure alike await the coming of the holiday-maker. Along the shores of New Jersey from Cape May to San dy Hook lie forty beaches, each offering delights for outings long or short and each easily accessible by the splendid train service of the Pennsylvania Railroad. Atlantic City, with its myriad attractions for young and old, needs no introduction, for its charms are known from the Atlantic to the Pacific. Cape May, for a century the summering place of satisfied thousands of seekers after cool breezes, fine bathing, and the refined amusements of the seaside, is more attractive than ever in its new life. Ocean City, Wildwood, Sea Isle City, with their smaller neighbors, Anglesea, Holly Beach, Wildwood Crest, Avalon, and Stone Harbor, afford summer pleasure to thousands. To the north lie Beach Haven, Seaside Park, Island Heights and the other resorts about Barnegat Bay, where the lover of fishing and sailing finds the choicest sport. Asbury Park, Ocean Grove, Spring Lake, Long Branch, Sea Girt, Point Pleasant, Allenhurst, Elberon, an 1 Btlmar on the Upper Coast where the country meets the' sea right on the beach, appeal, with mighty force to the vacationist. Any Pennsylvania Railroad -Ticket Agent will be glad to give full information regarding excursion rates, time of trains and arrange your outing whether it be for a day, a week or the whole summer. 7-22t. ! der county officials in this matter is causing much comment. Wiy should Thomas have absconded, when even during his short itnpris; onmeut he expressed eagerness to tell his stoty under oath ? Mrs. Hassinger's body was never found. Calvin Wells, financier, steel manufacturer, and former editor of the Philadelphia 'rest, died sud denly from heart failure at his home in Pittsburg, Monday night. DIVORCE NOTICE. Freda Rabb Hall T In the Court of common Pleas of Colum bia County, Pa vs. ' Knhnnpnfl in I divorce. Walter Townsend Hall No: 161 May J Term, i9oq. To Walter Townsend Hall, Respond ent in the above cited case. You are hereby notified, in pursuance of the or der of the Court of Common Pleas of the said county of Columbia and State of Pennsylvania, to be and appear in said Court on or before the Fourth Mon day of August, I909, being the 23rd day of said month, to answer petition here tofore preferred by the libellant. Freda Rabb Hall, your wife, and show cause, if any you have, why the said Freda Rabb Hall should not be divorced from the bonds of matrimony entered into with you, agreeably to the Act of As sembly in such case made and provided. Hereof fail not, under the penalty of having the said petition heard and a de cree of divorce granted against you in your absence. CHARLES B. EXT, Sheriff. Clinton Herring, Attorney, 7-22-4t. CHARTER NOTICE. In the Court of Common Plea of Columbia County. Notice is hereby given that an appli cation will be made to the above named Court on Monday, the 27th day of Sep tember, 1909 at 10 a. m., under the Act of Assembly of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, entitled "An Act to pro vide for the Incorporation and Regula tion of certain Corporations," approved April (). 1S74, and the supplement thereto, for the Charter of an intended Corporation to be called "Orthodox Catholic Brotherhood of Saint Nicholas of Centralia, Pa.," the character and object of which is to provide funds to as sist the members in case of sickness, ac cidents, or death, and for these purposes to have, possess and enjoy all the rights, benefits and privileges of the said Act of Assembly and its supplements. The names ef the subscribers are Ja cob Broda. Andrew Hudick, Michael Onushkawich, Wasyl Oryniak and Dem itry Kosack. and others. The proposed Charter is now on file in the Prothonotarv's office. EDWARD J. FLYNX, Solicitor, 7-22-3'- Centralia, Pa. The R, E. Hartman Store Bloomsburg, Pa. Summer Goods Greatly Reduced In order to open our Fall Stock with an entirely changed store, we are clos ing out everything in Sum - mer Goods at prices most interesting to every buyer. Our new plan of doing bus iness is to sell to every buy er at the same price and to open every season with en tirely fresh stocks. No old goods at any time. Dime Stamps With Every Purchase The R. E. Hartman Store Bloomsburg, Pa. Alexander Brothers & Co. DEALERS IN Cigars, Tobacco, Pipes, and Confectionery. Fine Candies. Fresh Every Week. Penny Goods a. S2Eci.&.r.T"3r. HAVE YOU SMOKED A ROYAL BUCK or ASK YOUR DEALER FOR THEM. ALEXANDER BROS. & CO., Bloomsburg, Pa. IF YOU ARE IN NEED OF Carpets, Rugs, flatting and Draperies, Oil Cloth and Window Curtains You Will Find a Nice Line at W. M. BBQWBB1 BLOOMSBURG, PEN2PA. Pennsylvania Railroad PERSONALLY-CONDUCTED EXCURSIONS NIAGARA FALLS August II, 25, Sept. 8, 22, and Oct. 6, 1909 Round-Trip ch -7 rr - Rate 4f .o(J Frorn EA?T BLOOMSBURG. Tickets Roml KoiiiR on train leaving 11:4$ A. M.. connecting with SPECIAL 1 RAIN of Pullman Parlor Cars. Dining Car. and Day Coaches runmug via the PICTURESQUE SUSQUEHANNA VALLEY ROUTE. ofuSsm tr;lins withi" days, including date v., . ; Tu T; , 1 1 W,thm lm,lt allowed at BufTal returning. -L.ustrated Booklet and full information may be obtained from Ticket Agents Passenger Traffic Manager. B-24-15t GenSrKwiSJTicnt. JEWEL CIGAR?! 3 t) 1 TO t v