bvaws' smtm STOttlS. STYLE AND COMFORT WITH WEAR IN ... .M) U . ' -v. CHAS, THE COLUMBIAN. M.OOMSBURG, TA. 'rTfiTi isn a y , "h e ft k m i i rc i i 2, 1oo Kntrrnl at ttm I'unl OfliV, lllmmit'mrg, Yi. niiiiiiroii(Ii!(fiii(i matter, March l.lNHfc. The thermometer this morning. registered 49 Misses Dora and Martha Brown are at Ocean Grove. N. J. Mrs. W. S. Rishton is spending a couple of weeks at Kaglesmere. . . Mrs. K. B. Tustin and sons have returned from the sea-shore. Mrs. H. L. Gemberlingof Lewis town is visiting her sister Mrs. II. C. Jones in town. The Tudce Elwell property on West Third street is being thor oughly done over on the interior. The west wing of the l'arliament buildings at Toronto was destroyed by fire yesterday, the loss being $100,000. A laree crowd enjoyed the con cert Riven by the Citizen's Band on Sundav afternoon in front of the Town Hall. -- --- o Walter S. Brooke has relumed home from Lopez, where he ha been with a corps of the Mate Highway Department. There was a number of wagons in market this morning, and the assortment of vegetables was good considering the dry weather. Burelars broke into tlie l'etin fylvania depot at Kst Bloomsburg Saturday morning, but were fright ened away before they had .secured any booty. Silas S. Riddle, who has been with an engineering corps in the Maine woods since his graduation .at Lafayette College last June, has returned home. Dr. P. H. Freeze brought laree yellow lacket nest into ou office this morning which he found on his farm. It is an exceptionally large one, and well formed. The following letters are held at the Bloomsburg, Pa., .osi office Mr. Kail C. Moore, Mr. B. Rouns lev. Mr. L. R. Vipond. Cards Miss Clarissa Coxe, Miss JIagenbuch, Mrs. Knima Mr. G. II. Miller. A. M Hawk Two tramps who made them elves obnoxious in the lower part of town on Tuesday were put in the lock-up. They were given tearing before Guy Jacoby Esq vesterdav morning. One was sent to iail and the other back to the lock-up. By the will of the late Henry Streeter, Esq., of Towanda the Towanda Public Library receives fa.ooo, and the residuary estate after paying other bequests, goes to the mother of the deceased, for nse until death, when it will given to the Packer hospital Sayre. Columbia Theatre Notes. There will be moving pictures at Columbia Theatre on Saturda nicht. Admission five cents to all A long program will be given, and an orchestra win iurnisn mu&ie The season will open on Thurs dav. Sentember 16th. with "The Lost Trail." Tickets will be sold this season at Harman & Roan's shoe store on Center street, where the reserved seat board will be kept. Services Will Resume. Rev. J. W. Diggles and family have returned from Brentwood Long Island, where they spent the past month. Regular services in St. Paul church will be resumed on Sunday next. THE EVANS' SHOES. It isn't necessary for you to sacrifice comfort for style if you wear EVANS1 SHOES Because tlicy combine the highest de gree of style and comfort. Finest Oualitv Materials in EVANS' SHOES. PRICES ; WOMEN'S - SI. 25 to $.00 MEN'S - $1.25 to 7.00 Come in and let' us sell you a shoe that proves. MAIL ORDERS AND PEDDLERS. We reprint in this issue a short rticle on Shenandoah's war on neddlers. The Milton Standard contained the same article, and in commenting on it very aptly said 'We print this because we think the action is right. Because means protection to merchants and business men of the community nd protection in most cases to the public, which is often the victim 0 unscrupulous and dishonest can assers and peddlers. But belicvin 111 protection to home institutions we believe it should be general ant' not confined to a few classes of trades-people. For instance, if it is against the local business niter ests to have peddlers come in and go around the town and sell dry goods and rugs and soaps and toilet articles and spectacles and solici orders for liquors and groceries etc., it is equally against the afore said public policy to have men come 111 and sell job pr nting and station ery and to take orders for the same, when local institutions that employ local labor can do the same work. And we might state in this connec tion that there are a few business men who take an advanced stand against the outsiJer when it affects their c.wn business, whose job print ing generally bears the imprint of an out-of-town concern." The Cor.UMHiAN would add that what the Standard says is quite ap plicable to Bloomsburg. A large sum of money is sent away from here everv year for various articles that could be furnished by home dealers just as well. Nothing helps to build up a town so much as local pride, and local pride can best be manifested by patronizing home institutions . - UNUSUAL ECLIPSE OBSERVED. Observers who gazed at the east ern sky last evening saw an eclipse of an unusual nature. It was that of the planet Mars, which dodged behind the "..loon, and stayed there for nearly an hour during the early part oi the evening. This is the first eclipse of this kind which has occurred since 1892. Mars is extremely brilliant just now, rising shortly after sunset, and being the brightest body in the heavens throughout the night. On the eighteenth of this month it will be at its least distance from the earth. COUNCIL LETS PAVING CON TRACT. At a closed session held hist Fri day night, the Town Council awarded the contract for paving Main Street between Iron and Ivast Streets to George H. Keiter, the lowest bidder. Mack brick is to be used, and the cost will be $1.65 a square yard. Before any of the work is started, the unanimous consent of the abut ting property owners must be ob tained to pay their portion of the cost. Benefit Game for Hospital. A base ball team representing the Northumberland Lodge of In dependent Order of Odd Fellows will journey to Bloomsburg on Saturday, and will play a game with Bloomsburg Lodce No. 140 I. O. O. F. at Recreation Field in the afternoon. The proceeds of the game will be given to the Joseph Ratti Hos pital. Tickets will be fifteen cents each. Mr. Creasy in the West. Hon. W. T. Creasy is visiting his son in Western Canada. On his way out. he made several stops to attend Grange Meetings, at which he was scheduled for addresses. He was accompanied by his brother, F. P. Creasy, of Eighth Street. Otaltdrwa Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTORIA COLUMBIAN. BLOOMPB- "s AMERICAN DISCOVERS THE NORTH POLE. r. F. Cook, ol Brooklyn, Rcachot Iho Goal The feat which men have for cen times struggled to nccomplis 1 lias last huen achieved; the North Pole has h-en discovered, and that iv an American, Dr. Frederick A. Cook, of Brooklyn. l'he ol)eivatory at Brussels yes terday received a message dated f.erwick, Shetland Island, which read, "Reached North Pole April 1, 1908. Discovered land far north. Return to Copenhagen by Steamer Hans Ksiede. (Signed) Frederick Cook." Another message was received by Mrs. Cook, the wife of the explor er, in urookiyn, as touows: suc cessful, well. Address Copenhagen. Fred." Details are yet lacking, but the discovery has been confirmed by Esquimaux. Dr. Cook, who is a prominent physician and surgeon, is now on board a Danish vessel sailing trom Greenland to Copenhagen. Upon his arrival, which is expected to oe Saturday, he will be royally wel comed, and at that time the tun de tails of the wonderful discovery will be made known. The explorer left New York, July Fourth, 1007, traveled from Denmark up through Greeland and across the frozen Polar Sea in mid winter, and reached the Pole on April 2t of last year, since which time he has been struggling across the ice. on his return to civilization Only one white man started with him on the expedition, but he re- tnrtiprl nbout a vear ago, so that Dr. Cook was alone with a party of Esquimaux at the time of the dis coverv. Scientists throughout the world are delighted at the news, and Americans are rejoicing that one of their own explorers should be the first to plant Old Glory at the northern axis. A fine new line of Weddinr in vitations just received at this c.'.Sce. . . Leader Among Newspapers. Tho Philadelphia Record a Jourral That is Not Selfish as to the Nsws. One of the many traits that com mend tie Philadelphia, Record to t people who do not live in the great cities is that it is a newspaper mat is not selfish about its news, and is net city-centered in its ambitious. There has long been a well ground ed complaint that most of the great metropolitan dailies. are provincial, and take it for granted that city news is all that it is necessary for them to print. Th Record apparently takes a different view. While giving a faithful chronicle of all that occurs in its own city, it does not neglect nor skimp the news of any part of the wide field that it covers. Any issue of this big newspaper is full of proof that it prints full and reli able reports ot everything ot inter est that occurs in its whole t?rri tory. The Record is refreshingly differ ent from other big dailies in many wavs. It is steady and reliable, and not prone to get wildly excited over some spectacular muck-raking crusade of its own making. Instead of packing its columns with fren zied discussions, it simply prints the news, and, according to well verified claims, more items of news than anv other newspaper in the j 4 country. State Wants a Snake. So many stories have come to the Division of Economic Zoology of the State Department of Agricul ture of the finding of specimens of a so-called horn-tailed snake that Professor II. A. Surface, head ol the division, offered a reward of $50 for one. He says there is no such reptile. Statu op Ohio, City op gs Tolkdo, Lucas County, j " Frank T. Cheney makes oath that he is senior partner of the firm of F. J. Cheney & Co., doing bus- iness in the City of Toledo, County and State aforesaid, and that said firm will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for each and every case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by the use of Hall's Catarrh Cure. Frank J. Cheney. Sworn to before me and sub scribed in my presence, this 6th day of December, A. D. 18S6. , . N A. W. Gl.RASON, (Seal.) Notary Public. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken in ternally, and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Send for testimonials free. F' J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O. Sold by all Druggists, 75c. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation, The Zoological Presi Bulletin of the Division of .oology, Penn sylvania Department of Agricul ture. Timely Topics of Plants and Pesis Discussed Weekly. By H. A. Sur.'.ice, Sta'e Zoologist. TIIi: POTATO STALK HORKR. Three specimens of potato stalks were received by the Division ol Zoology (f Pennsylvania Depart ment of Agricultuie Ironi Chester county, which had been killed by insects, and information concerning the same was requested. Slate Zoologist Surface, in re porting upon them, said: "The potato strdksyou sent to us contain insects known as Potato stalk-nor-. . . . , ,.? ers. this pest cannot oe Kineci al ter it enters the stalk. The only thing to do is to pull and burn the diseased vines as soon as the insects are discovered. Do not let the vines lie around to wilt, but burn them as soon as they have become infested. This disposition of the vines may demand co-operation by other persons in the neighborhood, if their potato stalks have been at tacked, but it maybe the only way to prevent a serious outbreak ot t lie pests, and great loss in the next year. It is a comparatively new pest, and shows that such things are coming before us more anu more, and need our careful atten tion." THE GRAPE VINE LEAF HOPPER. A Lancaster correspondent wrote to State Zoologist II. A. Surface for information in regard to a "small, white greenish bug," as he described it, which is destroying the leaves on his grape vines. The Professor's reply to this let ter was as f jllows: "Replying to your recent letter, slating th -.t there is a small, white . . , . . , , . 1 .. r greenish b..g cn tne uiuier biues 01 your grape leaves, which causes diem to dry up, I beg to say that 1 should not venture a guess as 10 what this is without seeing it, as there are several kinds of insects that may attack the grape leaf. Al ways with such inquiries specimens siu iiKi Le sent to us dv man, as 11 becomes impossible to suggest the proper treatment without accurate knowledge of the cause, and this can not be ascertained without the examination of the specimens, and. in fact, the injured parts of the plants should also be sent. "However, in your case I think the pest is the Grape Vine Leaf Hopper, which can be killed by spraying with ten per cent, kero sene emulsion, or with one pound of whale oil soap in six gallons of water. Of course, this must reach the undersides of the leaves, where the nests live. It the material is used much stronger than the pro portions here named, it may dam age the foliage, but as the Leaf Iloppers fly to the ground or grass in an attempt to rub thi spray liq uid off their wings after they are sprayed, it is possible to spray them again on the ground with a strong er solution, -ind thus kill them without injury to the grape leaves, it is evident that these are sucking insects, and, consequently, must be killed by contact sprays. They can not be killed by arsenical or inter nal poisons such as we would use for the chewing insects. "You should also fertilize the ground around your grape vines and stimulate the growth of the vines by watering frequently. Soap suds from the wash tub, poured abundantly about the roots, would be good for it. Loosen the soil so the water will penetrate it well. A little commercial fertilizer or small quantity of nitrate of soda added to the water will be a help." WHITE SCALE ON RASPBERRIES. State Zoologist Surface, Harris burg, has had his attention called to the prevalence this year of a white scale on raspberry bushes, which has done much damage. In replying to one correspondent, who stated that a number cf his rasp berry stalks were killed by the scale, Professor Surface said: This pest is known as the Rose Scale, and is sometimes called the Raspberry Scale. It does not at tack trees, but it is quite injurious to rose bushes and raspberry bush es. It is no be killed by a good contact insecticide, such as can be used successfully for San Jose Scale. I have friends who have entirely cleaned it up in their fields by the thorough use of the lime-sulphur-wash spray. I should use either the commercial litue-sulphur-wash, diluted one to eight, or the home boiled, using the, formula of seven teen pounds of sulphur and twenty two pound of lime, boiled together one hour, with enough water to boil, and then sufficient water added to make fifty gallons, supplying most of the water after boiling. "This is the regular lime-sulphur wash as prepared for San Jose Scile. It is intended only for dor mant plants, or, in other words, to l e applied when the leaves are off; but it can be used on the trunks of trees and the stems of raspbti ries and roses, where it docs not get on the new growth of this y- ar nor on the leaves. You can apply it to all paits of the tree above gmund save those which have grown this year. It can be rppli.-d with a pdnt hrnsh, but it will iw (pucker and mere economical to use a spray pump, and a more thorough job can be done. "Instead of spraying the old raspberry canes for scale at this time of year, I recommend cutting U12111 out and burning thein at once. This gets rid of a great many ests. The canes have al ready done their duty by bearing fruit nn.l it will give more room for . . . . 1 j new stalks to develop. 11 wouiu be excellent practi:e to cut and burn old raspberry and blackberry bushes as sojii as the fruit is gath ered. You would not only kill in sect nests but also destroy disease cerms. To get the best passible results, one should have a lut brush fire built, upon which the newly cut stalks could be thrown, even burniiitr them before thev wilt, if all the pests are to be destroyed. If some of the young insects escape to the new canes they will not mum ply ramdlv enough to prove seri ous, and this fall, after the leaves hve rirormcd. vou can spray the stalks thoroughly with the lime sulphur wash, just the same as for San Juse Scale. Wilkes-Barre Discovers Grait. Now Court House Investigated. The Grand Jury probing the ch irges of graft in connection with the building of the new $2,000,000 Court House selected W. C. Shep herd, the largest general contractor in the city, to b'i thir special ad viser in the examination of the work on the building. Two plasterers, who were em ployed by a sub-contractor 011 the ornamental work, pointed out to the Grand Jury where plaster of Paris hid been substituted for Keenc cenunt. Their testimony confirmed the exposure previously made, viz : that lan;e amounts of plaster of paris (which costs only Si. 50 a barrel) had been substituted for Keeue cement, which costs $7-50. It is rumored that oil of the .sub contractors of the new $2,000,000 Court House at Wilke.s-Barre has made a confession to the Grand Jury in which he tells all about the alleged crooked work in connection with the building of the r.e v tem ple of justice. It is said he impli cates several of the county officials. It is said the new charges of grafting show that the county was defrauded out of $300,000. It is expected that it will take the Grand Jury fully two weeks to complete the investigation. SHERIFF'S SALE. Hv virtue of a writ of Fieri Fa.:ias is sued out of the Court of Common Pleas of Columbia County, Pa., and to mo di reeted, there will be sold at public sale at the Sheriff's Office, in the Court House at Bloomsburg, county and state aforesaid, on SATURDAY, SEPT. 25th, 1909, at 10 o'clock a. m., the following de scribed real estate: All that certain piece, parcel and tract of land situate in the Town of Blooms burg. in the County of Columbia, and State of Pennsylvania, bounded and de scribed as follows, to wit: Beginning; at a stone in Hue of lands formerly of B. K. Sharpless and C. R. Kressler, thence by land of C. K. Kress ler and other lands of the said B. B. Tustin, south seventy-eight and three fourth degrees west, seven hundred and twenty-nine and one-half feet to a stone in line of lands of the Rosemout Ceme tery Company, thence by the same south sixteen and one-half degrees east six hundred and twenty-five feet to a stone, thence south twenty-three degrees east six hundred and thirteen and eight-tenth feet to a stone in lino of lands of Lyrera Creveling, thence by same north seventy-one and one-fourth degre ;s east seven hundred and fifty feet to a stone in line of lands formerly of B: V. Sharpless. thence by the same north twenty-two degrees west eleven hundred and seventy-two feet to a stone, the place of be ginning, containing TWENTY ACRES OF LAND, strict measure. Seized, taken into execution at the suit of Permelia B. Hulshizer vs. B. B Tustin. and to be sold as the property of E. B. Tustin. CHARLES B. ENT, Clinton Herring, Sheriff, Attorney. o-a-4t. NOTICE. Notice is hereby given that the follow ing accounts have been filed in the office of the Prothonotary of Columbia County and will be presented to the Court for confirmation ni si on Monday, Septem ber 21, 1900, and unless exceptions are filed within four days thereafter, will be confirmed absolutely by the Prothono tary, namely: First and final account of the Berwick Savings and Trust Company, Trustee of the estate of Elijah Fullmer, dee'd. First and final account of M. C. Het ler, guardian of M. Alex. Lutz, dee'd. First and final account of T. J. Van durslice, Trustee of Jacob Mover, dee'd. FREEZE QUICK, Prothonotary. B'oomsburg. Pa., Sept , 1009. rj-a-4t. To New Subscribers Only. $6.75 worth of niag.-..ine? ai 1 newspapers tor oniy .2.oo, ai they consi-t of eleven leadin. magazines for tine months ar- The 'iladea Press, six days ; week, for six months. Just thini ol it, all for $3 00! It is a great op portunity for wholesome mstruc tion and entertainment, it is i within your grasp. The following, is a list of the magazines:- ' "Pictoral Review," " Irave Magazine," "The World To-Day,'- The Housekeeper," I'acib' Monthly," "Technical World, "Uncle Remus," "Smart Set' National Magazine," "The American Boy," "Fine Arts Journal." Did you ever hear ot such vaiu- before? How can we do it? Well, it is to introduce you to them all. Stop andj consider, for every mem ber of the family will enjoy II. Send $2.00, addressed to the Sub scription News Agency, Box. 1275. or to The Philadelphia I'rta Seventh and Chestnut Streets, Philadelphia. Our Pianos are the leaders. Our lines in clude the fallowing mukes : CHAS. M. STIEKF, J Hf.nry F. Miller, j Brewer & Pryor, Kohler ' , . 1-1 . ' : UAMPDEI.l., AM) KAURI., IN ORGANS we handle the Estey, Miller, II. Leiir&Co.' and Bowl by. o This Store has the agency Jor SINGER HIGH ARM SE ING MACHINES and VIC7 OR TALKING MA CHINES. WASH MACHINES Helby, 1900, Queen, Key stone, Majestic. J. SALTZEtf, Music Rooms No. 105 West Main Street, Pclow Market. BLOOMSPURG. PA FOR SALE! The fine residence prop erty of the late Judge El well is for tsale. Location : "West Third Street between Jefferson and West Streets. Description: Two story and attic, brick and frame. 13 rooms. Lot about 06 by 212 feet. FKAME BARN AND COW STABLE, large garden, abundance of fruit trees. The house has a Steam Heating Plant, Bath Koom, Stationary Bange and Wash Tubs; Water, Electric Light, and Gas. Will terms. be sold on Apply to easy GEO. E. ELWELL, Attorney, Bloomsburg, Pa.