8 THE COLUMBIAN, BLOOMSBUSa 1 J It n n I) THE COLUMBIAN. BLOOMSr.URO, I'A. THURSDAY, AUU'ST litOU 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. APPRECIATION Ol' IJtU.l'TlNS. Prof. II. A. Surface, the State Zoologist, is in receipt of many let ters of approbation concerning the bulletins of the Division of Zoology of the Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture. The following words of encouragement from Mr. George H. Eisenhart, a successful farmer of Skippack, Mcntgotnery county, Pa., are greatly appreciated: "Your Bulletin for June on 'Plant Pest Treatment' is at hand. I wish to say that it is the best bulletin that I have received from you. It treats of every plant on the farm, and in a concise manner, so that it takes but a few moments to find out the remedy for any pest, in stead of being compelled to wade through a mass of literature. "I am more pleased with this number than with any of the previ ous ones, although I received much instruction frow the others. I trust it will be received with enthusiasm by all the farmers of the State, as it is an encyclopedia condensed." THK jiki.on Arms. The Melon Aphis is one of the many species of plant lice concern ing which State Zoologist Surface, at Harrisburg, has received an un usual number ol inquiries this year. It is a little dark green insect, suck ing the sap from the under sides of the leaves of the melons, especially cantaloupes, and stunting the growth of the vines so that the crop is destroyed. The insects mul tiply with such remarkable rapidi ty that when one has started on a plant it will soon produce enough offspring to cover all the leaves of an infested plant or vine. They start in a' colony or group, and sometimes it is a good plan to cut off and destroy the infested leaves or vines. One of the best practical measures to get rid of them is to turn the vines over with a fork, so that the leaves lie upside down, and then spray with a good nozzle and high pressure, applying Whale Oil Soap in solution, in the proportion of one poun.i of this ma terial to five or six gallons of wa ter. A "Knapsack Sprayer" or a "Compressed Air Sprayer" is very good for this work, and it can be carried among the vines without damage to them. In some cases ;he operator can succeed very well jy using a short extension rod that .vill permit him to reach the ground without stooping, and carrying an jp-turned nozzle, In order to throw :he spray liquid up under the leaves o strike the pests. Thorough spraying in this work is essential. vVhere the leaves are so curled as o effectively protect the aphids, .hese should at once be picked off ind destroyed, either by burning or y crushing under foot. Some persons have succeeded in umigating for melon aphids by lrawing the vines together on a hill ind turning a washtub over them, ust after pouring a half teacuptul if carbon bisulfide on the ground iround the plants within an area ;hat will be covered by the wash :ub. To make it air-tight, earth an be thrown around the lower ;dge of the inverted tub. Let the umigation continue for at least me-half hour. While this is a slow irocess and can not, therefore, be ecotnmended on an extensive or :omtnercial scale, it will be found o be a good meansjof protecting a ew vines of melons or cucumbers vhich may be grown in the home garden. $100 Reward, $100. The readers of this paper will be leased to learn that there is at -.iast one dreaded disease that sci- nce has been able to cure in all its tages, and that is Catarrh. Hall's latarrh Cure is the only positive ure now known to the medical fra gility. Catarrh being a coustitu- onal disease, requires a constitu ipnal treatment. Hall's Catarrh ure is takeu internally, acting irectly upon the blood and mucous urfaces of the system, thereby cle troyiug the foundation of the dis ase.and giving the patient strength y building up the constitution and ssisting nature in doing its work 'he proprietors have so much faith l its curative powers that they ffer One Hundred Dollars for any ase that it fails to cure. Pond for ;st of testimonials. Address I. J. Cjienky & Co., Toledo, O Sold by all Druggists, 75c. Take Hall's Family Pills for con ;tipatlon. THK CARBAGR APHIS OR PLANT LOUSI5. At this time of year State Zoolo gist Surface, at Harrisburg, is re ceiving an unusual number of in quiries concerning a destructive pest of cabbage, which appears to be working in practically all parts of Pennsylvania and makes itself manifest by curling the leaves, stunting the growth of the plants, and causing them to look as though covered by mildew. A close ex amination of the infested plants shows lhat they arc covered by hundreds of little gray plant lice or tphids, which especially crowd close together in the curled parts of the leaves and live by injecting a poison into the leaf and sucking out the modified sap. They are true sticking insects, and can not be killed by the pois ons such rs Paris green and arsen ate of lead, which can safely be ap plied for the common green cabbage worm. They are the cabbage aphids or plant lice, and are killed, ei ther by fumigation with some gas like the fumes of carbon bisulfide in a vessel turned over the plants; or, far better, by spraying with a contact insecticide such as one pound of whale oil soap in five gal lons of water, or ten per cent, ker osene emulsion, or strong solutions of soft soap, or very strong tobacco decoctions. It is necessarjin applying the spray that a side-turned nozzle be used on the end of a short exten sion rod, and that the liquid be ap plied with considerable pressure, 111 order to throw itwell in among the curie leaves, striking the bodies of all the pests. Those which are not touched by the spray liquid at tie time of spraying will not be injur ed and will increase in multiplica tion at an alarming rate. The leaves that are so badly curled as to pro tect the plant lice effectively from contact with the spray liquid sbould be cut or pulled and and at once destroyed, either by burning or by stamping under toot. If the spraying is effective the results can be seen within twenty four hours, and if there should re main any pests alive at the end of that time, it is advisable to repeat the operation with a little stronger material. It is important that all hopelessly stunted, sickly or feeble plants should be gathered and burn ed by throwing them onto a hot fire: or fed to stock at once, in order to get nd of the pests which they con tain. To Be Remembered, There is one fact that every Democratic voter, and particularly every Democratic Register or tax Assessor should remember, and that is, that young men who voted on age last fall MCJS7 be Registered or they can not vote under any circum stances. Others who have paid a State or County tax within two years may be able to swear in their votes, if they are not upon the Registry, but the voter who cast his first ballot in 1908 has no possi ble chance to do this. He is not upon any duplicate, has no tax assessed against him, and conse quently cannot qualify to having paid a tax, as is necessary where voters are left off the Registry. By failing to register he practically and effectually disfranchises him self. There is no way by which he can vote, and Democrats should remember and see that every young Democrat who voted on age in 1908, is upon the polling list of 1909. And this must be seen to before the evening of September hrst. Don t forget this. PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD ATLANTIC CITY, CAPE MAY ANGLESEA OCEAN CITY New Jersey. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 1909. $4.75 ROUND TRIP $4.50 ROUND TRIP Via Delaware River Bridge. Via Market Street Wharf. FROM EAST BLOOMSBURG. Tickets Good Returning Within Ten Days. Stop-over Allowed at Philadelphia. Covers Labor Day at the Seashore. BEST BATHING IN THE SEASQN. Eor full information concerning J. R. WOOD, . Passenger Traffic Manager. Woman's Home Companion for Sep tember. A big section of the unrsually big nnniher is devoted to fashions. Experts in Paris and famous tailors and milliners in the United States have, with Grace Margaret Gould's knowledge of the American wom an's tastes, made the issue one that women will preserve for many months. Not only gowns, coats, hats and waists, but the important little things, shoes, hosiery, fab rics, trimmings, coiffures all are exhaustively handled. There are plenty of good stories in the issue for these last hot days stories by Octave Thanet, Mrs. John Van Vorst, Katharine Hol land Brown, Mary Heaton Vorse, and others, illustrated by such ar tists as James Montgomery Flagg and Alice Barber Stephens. Kate Douglas Wiggiu's serial story of the Shakers, "Susanna and Sue," is also in this issue. For the theatre-goer, Valter Prichard Eaton's article, "The Decent Stage," will prove a splendid guide, giving a list of the good, clean, successful plays that will appear outside of New York this fall. In "Reluctant Parentage" Dr. Woods Hutchinson startles us with new ideas about the "Race Suicide" question. He shows all the aspects of this big problem and eventually proves that it isn't really a prob lem at all. Marion llarland, in her pilgrim age through Europe, has met "Lit tle Boy Blue," and tells his sad lit tle story. William II. McElroy contributes a number of stories about Edward Everett Hale that have the charm, humor and sweetness that pervade everything connected with Doctor Hale. We hear constantly the cry that our daughters are being taken from home, but seldom a practical plan to bring them back. Katharine Eggleston's article in this issue suggests a plan and a good one. There are a number of articles that should be cut out and pasted in set ap books: "The Successful Aquarium," "How to Make Candle-Shades," "Furniture Made at Home," "Small Fruits." The children's department is even bigger than usual. There are many pages devoted to embroidery and other hand work. Fannie Merritt Farmer's cooking pages are full of new ideas, and all the other regular departments are as good as they always are. Free Scholarship. Any young man or woman who is a bonafide patron of this paper may secure free instruction in Mu sic or Elocution. The Rochester Conservatory of Music, with the desire to stimulate the study of these arts, offers schol arships to applicants from the State of Pennsylvania, valued at $100 each, and good for a term of twen ty weeks beginning with the open ing of the School year, September 15, 1909, in any of the following departments: Voice, Violin, Piano, Public School Music and Elocution. These Scholarships are awarded upon competition which is open to any one desiring a musical or liter ary education. Anyone wishing to enter the competition or desiring information should write to Mr. James S. Shaw, Business Manager of the Rochester Conservatory of Music, Rochester, N. Y., before September 6, 1909. SPECIAL EXCURSION TO WILDWOOD SEA ISLE CITY leaving time of trains.Jconsult small 8 19 26. The Evolution of Clothe. The! appearance of civilized man, his hniulH and herd protruding from rylln (!;'! of cloth, as a turtle's from be rt;;lh Ills cr.rnnrire, lin'mes the sav iiv.c liifJist with furiosity, envy and fear. "You lived, sir, In the Victorian i!.;" - 11 crlod eHueiitliilly cylindrical." say.', n tailor to the hero of Mr. Wells' "When the Sleeper Wakes." Neverthe less, nil these unmeaning cylinders iin.l rolls of superfluous cloth we car ry upon our hacks once had some meaning. For Instance, the two but tons p.nd the rudimentary tails of the imvnlng cont, and the vestlgal tails of tlio sack cont, nre reminders of the tlriitf when the long tails were looped up to enable the wearer to ride with out sitting upon his clothes. Similarly the buttons upon the sleeves originat ed with the time when the coat and shirt formed one garment, whose sleeves were tucked up when the wearer "got busy." Men's clothing burtons over from left to right; women's from right to left. Hard Working French Schoolboys. French children nre often on their way to school a little after seven o'clock In the morning. If they huve concluded their lessons by nine o'clock in the evening It Is only by dint of great application. Voting men studying lor the higher piofe.snkms have appointments at live o'clock In the morning In summer lime; otherwise they cannot accom plish the mountain of work that lies before them. In nil branches of art the labor of the tyro Is Immense At the Conservatoire the strenuous life la carried to a point which provokes the astonishment even of laborious German Btudcnts. Overwork. Overwork seldom kills anybody but farmers' wives. The few men in the world who drive themselves Into over work thrive on It and write their names ou the roll of fame because of It. When the world says that a man has broken down from overwork It tells a polite falsehood, usually. People break down from overworry, overhurry, overdrinking, oversmoking, overeating and overfoolishness of many other kinds, but seldom from overworking. The energy needed to do an ordinary man's dally work is In significant 'alongside the energy he devotes to secondary things. Newark (N. J.) Hews. NOTICE IN PARTITION. In the Orphan' Court of Columbia County. In the matter of the partition of the real estate of Abraham Stine, late of the Town of Bloomsburg. To the heirs, Mary Stine, Bloomsburg, Pa,, Sarah S. Billnian, Liverpool, Perry County, Pa., Isabella Mourey, Mount Carmel. Northumberland County, Pa Edward Stine, 36 North 8th Street, Reading, Pa., Jane Chrisman, Blooms burg, Pa., Hattie Yeager, Bloomsburg, Pa., Mary Jones, .Sagan, Northumber land County, Pa., Jessie E. Stine, Bloomsburg, Pa, Description of the premises in question is as follows : All that certain house and lot situated in the Town of Bloomsburg, Pa., beginning at the northwest corner of West First street, and Murry Alley, thence westwardly along said First street eighty-six feet to a corner, and land of J. II. Geiger, thence northwest along the said land, one hundred feet to the eastern bank of Fishing Creek, thence eastwardly along said creek one hundred feet, to the place of beginning, whereon are erected a Double Frame House and out-buildings. Take notice, that in pursuance of an order of the Orphans Court of the Coun ty of Columbia, aforesaid, a writ of par tition has issued from said Court to the Sheriff of the said county, returnable on the 4th Monday of September Term of the said Court, being September 27th, loot), and that the inquest will meet for the purpose of making partition of the real estate of the said decedent on Fri day, September 17th, 1909, at 10 o'clocK in the forenoon of said day, upon the premises, at which time and place you are requested to be present, if you see proper. CHARLES B. ENT. Sheriff. Sheriff's Office, Bloomsburg, Pa., Aug. 16, 1909. 8-ig-4t. HOLLY BEACH AVALON hand bills, or nearest Ticket Agent GEO. W. BOYD, General Passenger Agent. 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 Slim 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. o Fine Candies. Fresh Every Week. ' IPEiTiT-- Goods a. Sr'EoivXjTTr. HAVE YOU SMOKED A ROYAL BUCK or JEWEL CIGAR? ASK YOUR DEALER FOR THEM. ALEXANDER BROS. & CO., Bloomsburg, Pa. IF YOU ARE IN NEED Carpets, Rugs, flatting and Draperies, Oil Cloth and Window Curtains You Will Find a Nice Line at' W. M. BBOWER'S BLOOMSBURG, PENN'A. Pennsylvania Railroad PERSONALLY-CONDUCTED EXCURSIONS NIAGARA FALLS September 8, 22, and October 6, 1909 R0URatJriP $7.30 r"m "ST BLOOMSBURG. Tickets Rood Koin on train leaving 11:45 A. M.. connecting with SPECIAL 1 KAIN of Pullman Parlor Cars, Dining Car. and Day Coaches running via the PICTURESQUE SUSQUEHANNA VALLEY ROUTE. Tickets good returning on regular trains within fiftk.kn days, including cWe of excursion. Stop-off within limit allowed at Buffalo returning. Illustrated Booklet and full Information may be obtained from Ticket Agents' n J' RvVnV,V' GEO. V. BOYD. Passenger Trafhe Manager. G-24-15t General 1'asseuger Agent. mil wn OF i TO