THE COLUMBIAN. BLOOMSBURO. PA. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF UI4UOMSIIURG, 1A. THE OLDEST AND STRONGEST. Capital 8100,000 Surplus 8100,000. With the Largest Capital and Surplus in the County, a Strong Directorate, Competent Officers and Every Mod em Facility, we solicit Accounts, Large or Small, and Collections on the Most Liberal Terms Consistent with Sound Hanking, and Invite YOU to inspect our NEW QUARTERS. 3 Per Cent. Interest Paid on Time Deposits O F F I V K.W.M. Low. President. Jainex M .Stawr, Vice President . 1)1 RECTO UH: Initios M. Stnver, 1'rcil koler, S. C. Civiwy. Clinton Honinpr, E.W.M.Low, V(l. York, 1oiiin Gross, !M. K Stnekimusc THE COLUMBIAN. K.sT.iu.ismin 1S06. TMS CSU'MSIA DEMOCRAT, 1? 1AIII.ISIIH1 I S37. O'NSol lllAIKIl I St"9 P' I'l.ISIIKI" EVKKV Tli! R-l'AY MoKNINO, A' niojnislmrjr, llie County Scat 01 Columbia Count v , Pennsylvania. era. k. I'.t.wki.!.. r.nnoR. (WO. C. UOAN. IVuman. 1 r.KM : fnsiil c t he county $ 1.00 a yenr t nlvance; . I . J r i f not jiaut in aivaticc. 1 v sie'e t Ill-county, 5 1. 2 J i year, strictly in i Vl':c(-. All communications should Iicnli1resecl Till". COI.'JMP.IAN, P-loomsbtirK, Pa THUUSDA Y, JANCAHY C, l'.UO WASHINGTON. From our Regular Correspondent. Washington, 1). C, Jan. 3, 1910. There are indications that the situation in Washington will be suflici-.mtly interesting soon after the holidays. The rinchot-Ballin-ger controversy will be considered by a joint Senate and House com mittee and it is given out tht the President will aid Congress in the most rigid inquiry. If this is so the joint committee will have be hind it all the weight and power of the legal machinery of the United States and witnesses can be sum moned and compelled to teitify. Usually in such investigations the testimony of witnesses is voluntary and they have frequently been re calcitrant and havejivithheld impor tant evidence. Democrats in both houses are anxious to have the most searching investigation of the General Land Office records believ ing that good political capital will be the result. Independent onlookers are of the opinion that where there is so much smoke there must be fire but on the other hand Mr. Bal linger's pose is one of serene assur ance and his friends expect his complete vindication. The hearings of the committee will be public and your readers will be fully advised of the progress of the investigation. Apropos of this question the public will recall that the Reclamation Service as it is called has been un der the inspection of several Sena tors who investigated the projects in the West last summer. Some at least of the Senators think that the Reclamation Service has undertak en a bigger task than it can accom plish and it is intimated that the Ballinger investigation and an in vestigattjn into the Reclamation -uterpri.se are so closely related that they should be carried along together to avoid the expense of a separate inquiry. It is probable, however, that this plan will be ob jected to on the ground that it will confuse the issue and mix problems. At present there are only skir mishes between the insurgents of the Republican party and the old stand-bys such as Aldrich, Hale, Lodge and the so-called "Me-too" Republican Senators who vote as Aldrich indicates or dictates. There have been indications that the Pres ident is disposed to flock with the Me toos but there is also a pretty well authenticated rumor that he has decided to oppose Speaker Can non which must finally mean his opposition to Aldrich for iu a polit ical sense Cannon and Aldrich ore Weak Throat Cold after coM; 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 uui uutior ior nis opinion, lie knows all about it His approval is valuable. Follow his advice at all times, io diconoi in tnw cough medicine, UUSX-K HW u1n Takiauewhcn yourcoldiirstcomwon. What U Uo. Lest IJMil'tlu (..!,. Ayer's Pills. Ask your doctor his opinion. Let him decide. E II H : Myron I. Low, Vioo President. Frank Ikeler, Cunhier Myron T. Low. U . V. I lower, Frank Ikeler. brothers. The President it is un derstood is at work on special mes sages to be sent to Congress and it is said that if Speaker Cannon shall show his opposition to the '-hip Suhsidv Hill and to the amendment of the Interstate Commerce Laws and to Postal Saving Banks as i I expected, the breach which has I long been anticipated by some will be known to all. The Secretary of Agriculture as sisted by a force of experts nttach td to the Agricultural Department and scattered throughout the coun try is carefully investigating the costs of food stuffs and seeking to probe the reasons for the greatlv j increased cost of the necessities of ; life. It is indeed time that some j thing distinct and definite shall be i known in relation to this subject. ; Mr. Wilson, the Secretary of Agri i culture has hundreds of fidd em ployees at his disposal and thrcu h them he is seeking to learn what is the difference between wholesale and retail prices of foodstuffs. The inquiry is directed toward the in creased prices of eggs, milk, but ter, potatoes, apples and other arti cles of diet. The Secretary is of course favorable to the farmer so called "honest" and does not be lieve that he is getting any too much lor either primary or secondary products of the larm. He suspects the middie men and has intimated that there were too many of them When one sees the number of gro ceries scattered throughout a city there appears to be ground tor the contention that there must be great profit iu the business. If there was only a ay for the consumer to trade more directly with the farmer without the transmission profits de rived by these officious intermedi ate helpers, doubtless our tables would be more bountifully and per haps more economically supplied. Senator Clapp of Minnesota, in an interview, gave it as his opinion that the Aldrich-Payne Tariff Bill was at the bottom of the increased cost of everything that the Ameri can people use internally, external ly and eternally. This tariff bill, in spite of the frantic assurances of its apologists and among them the President of :he United States, it is now known, is the excuse for the higher price that the user or con sumer has to pay. Senator Clapp aptly puti it that one cannot raise the cost cf living to a man who is producing something to sell, with-, out giving that man an excuse to correspondingly raise the price of, his product. According to a recent computation, taking sweet potatoes' as an example, the grower gets ' $1.50 a barrel; the freight and com- j mission is 25 cents; the retailer pays $1.75 a barrel; the consumer I pays, buying usually jjy the peck, 3-85- This makes the retailers' profit, $2.10 on the barrel, which is a profit of 120 per cent. It cannot be denied that the grocer is secur ing a place in public estimation closely analogous to that long held by the plumber. Precisely at midnight on Satur day an employee of the Navy De partment pressed a button in the naval observatory at Washington. Instantly there leaped from it a spark that encircled the globe. New York got the word a few seconds later after it had encircled the globe. Weak Liieigs .C.AyerCo.,L ,owel, A STATE HANGMAN. There is no accounting for tastes, though of course almost anything may be expected of Pittsburg, where Edward Swartwood, a depu ty sheriff aud one time a well known ball player, has made it known that he would take the job of state hangman if he could get it. Swartwood is not what one might call inexperienced. He has shuffled 2 1 men out of the world by the gallows route and thinks but little more of it than he would of execut ing a gobbler the day before Thanksgiving. In one way, the appointment of a state hangman would be productive of good, for Swartwood says he would have all executions at night and restrict witnesses to the very few authoriz ed by law. Less publicity, he claims, would decrease crime; and in this he is probably right Not so very long ago, tests of newspaper circulation wee made in New York and it was found that with every paper the greatest stim ulant w;ts a hanging. There is no rensrti to believe that the same con dition would not be met everywhere else, deplorable as it may seem. If the details of executions are so ca getly sought by the reading public it st: mis to reason tint they must ha'-e some eflect. "As a man thinkcth, ,'o is he." If bethinks crime, he stands in danger himself, or at least will find it easier to get in the way of it. It is a terrible thing to think of a human being being killed, even by the law. and it is worse to think that making an execution public stimuhtes a train of criminal thought or action in anv person previously law abiding. .'.v. LEE'S STATUE TO REMAIN. But Congress Will Not Be Asked to Formally Accept it. The marble statue of General Robert K. Lee, clad in the uniform of a Confederate soldier, now stands in Statuary Hall at the Na tional Capitol and probably will remain there until the end of all things, despite the protests of those who dislike such honor being con ferred on the great leader of the anti-union forces. It has been definitely determined that no effort will be made to have the statue formally accepted by Congress and no ceremonies will be held in connection with its unveil ing, that having been Jone long ago without services of any kind. This has met with the approval of General Lee's relatives, who real ized that in the House there would be a resurrection of wartime bitter ness, aud they preferred to have the slight go unnoticed rather than to revive all the prejudices of the civil war. State of Uncle Sam's Purse. December's fiscal operations of the Government showed a balance on the credit side the first time during the fiscal year 1909-1910, and the first time since the Payne Aldrich tariff law went into effect. The receipts aggregated 59,827, 536 and the disbursements $.57, 7l3 795. leaving a balance of $2, 1 '3,741- Exclusive of the deficit for the past six months on account of Pan ama Canal operations, amounting to $16,311,978, and that on ac count of the public debt transac tions, the loss to the Treasury thus far this fiscal year is $23,919,910, as against $51 ,755,572 ior the same time last year. The largest increase has been in customs receipts, about $30,000,000. Now that the Christmas season is over, the working balance in the Treasury is again increasing, being $30,100,583-33 per cent, more than it was 10 days ago. The total balance in the general fund is $84, 048,865. Big Customs Increase at New York. An increase of $41,800,502 in customs receipts in ryog over 1908 for the port of New York is shown in Collector Loeb's annual report. The total duties collected for 1909 amount to $127,620,897. Gold imports for the year show a decrease of approximately $8, 000,000. They were $19,291,152, compared with $27,367,241 in 1908. Exports of domestic gold on the other hand were $138,030,554 in 1908, and $96,085,301 in 190,8. Exports of foreign gold for 1909 were $3,851,741 and $1,680,370 during the previous year. Total imports of merchandise in 1908 were $885,002,775 compared with $650,201,792 in 190S. Do mestic merchandise exported a mounted $612,898,647, a decrease of about $12,000,000 from the fig tires in 1908. TESLA PLANS TO LIGHT ALL WORLD BY WIRELESS. Inventor Perfecting Apparatus He Declares aa Effective at 12,000 Miles as at 12 Feet. Nicola Tesla, who has been at work on a "wireless electric light" for 20 years, announces that he has practically brought it to a state of perfection, and a plant for its pro duction is now nearing completion at his laboratory. "It would be possible by my powerful wireless transmitter," said Mr. Tcsla, "to light the entire United States. The current would pass into the air and, spreading in all directions, produce the effect of a strong aurora berealis. It would be a soft liht, but sufficient to dis tinguish objects 'J My present plan is to distribute this light trom a central station, which is the most economical and also t'.'o best method of obtaining l;gt t of highest quality. My lamps will last forever, there being noth ing in theiu to bum out. They are simply tubes or bulbs of glass her- ! nietiea'.ly sealed nnd containing j nothing but rarefied gas. J "One advantage is the economy i of ptotluction which is greater than in any other light so far obtained, j A grt-at saving will be effected by. wireless distribution. I am intend ! ing chiefly to supply isolated dwell- j itiLts which cannot be conveniently reached by wires, and in this sys tem of distribution there is abso iutely no difference where the dwelling is located. The force of the current is the same whether the house is 12,000 miles from the plant or 1 2 feet." NEW CHILD LABOR LAW Went Into Effect Last Saturday. New Certificates Required for all Work ers Under 16 Years Old. Pennsylvania's new child labor law, passed by the Legislature of 1909, went into effect on January 1st throughout the state. The laws prohibit the employment of any child un:ler fourteen years old about the industrial establishment or coal mine iu the state and pro vide that persons between fourteen uid sixteen may be employed only when they are provided with cer tificates setting forth their age and the fact that they can read and write English intelligently. No one under eighteen may be employ ed in certain occupations deemed hazardous. The new laws will be vigorously enforced by the state factory inspection and mine inspec tion departments, the chiefs of those divisions having issued instructions to their inspectors to dismiss all children under fourteen found at work and to require that certificates l.e displayed by those between four teen and .sixteen. The issuance of the certificates has been in the hands of the department of Public Instruction which has sent out ful ly 150 000 blank certificates iu the last iew weeks. These certificates have been sent to school officers for distribution to those qualified to re ceive them upon application made in person . . THIRD TRIAL FOR FISHER. Twice Convicted of First Degree Mur der, Supreme Court Again Intervenes. The Supreme Court of Pennsyl vania sitting in Philadelphia, has granted the appeal of the counsel for Henry Fisher a new trial for their Hient, who was twice con victed at Sunbnryof the murder of Mrs. Sarah Klinger, at Shamokin, over two years ago. The decision of the court was based 011 the contention of the law yers that the jurors in the case were separated at times during the trial and that they had communi cated with other persons contrary to lasv, and that the prisoner was therefore entitled to a new trial. The first time a new trial was grauted the court based their de cision on the fact that letters from Fisher to his wife, which were ad mitted as evidence, should have been excluded. The crime of which Fisher is without doubt guilty, was the most atrocious that was ever committed in Northumberland county. He crushed the head of the aged wom an with a stove taker. The official term of Tom L. John son, for eight years Mayor of Cleve land, closed last Friday night. As Mayor of Cleveland, he gained a national reputation. This is based first upon his single tax theories, being an adherent of the ideas of the late Henry George. Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S C ASTORIA CHRISTMAS Shopping is Under Way! Foresighted people are doing their Christmas shopping NOW before the rush begins and when the best selections are to be had. You will benefit by following their example. Make out your list T0 DAYbring it here, and later on you'll be thankful that you acted on this suggestion. We are ready to solve each of your gift-problems with rare sat isfaction and economy. This j store has become derland of toys, dolls and beauti ful gift things forfolk of all ages. Our Christmas displays this year surpass anything ever attempted in this city before. F. P. TOGS !BIL(QJWrSlI5UK(K, PA. An Irresistible Bargain. $1.75 Value for Only $1.15. ALL EOR ONLY jAnv 15 - $1.15 I The McCALL'S MAGAZINE Is a large, artistic, handsomely illustrated hundred-pa-c monthly magazine. It contains sixty new Fashion Designs in each issue. Every woman needs it for its up-to-date fashions, entertaining stories and complete information on all home and personal topics. Over one million subscrib ers. Acknowledged the best Home and Fashion Magazine. Regular price, 5 cents a copy Worth double. McCall Patterns So simple you cannot mis understand them. Absolute ly accurate. In style, irre proachable. You may select, free, any McCall Pattern you desire from the first number of the magazine which reach es you. Regular price, 15 cents. DON'T MISS THIS EXTRAORDINARY OFFER Call at our office or address your2order to The Columbian, Bloomsburg, Pa a veritable won One Years Subscription fcr McCall's-Magazine Cent McCall Pattern you may select One Year's Subscriotion for Columbian. The Columbian is the oldest newspaper in the county. It is not sen sational, and what it prints is reliable, and rit;jto be read by anybody. Regular price $1.00 per year.