THE COLUMBIAN. BLOOMSBURtt . I a 0aturday,QighlJ I Professional Cards By R. F. E. DAVISON Rutlnnd, Vt II. A. McKILLIP ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. Columbian Building an Floor Bloomsburg, Pa. hi Em The Sultan of Morocco Is a Direct Descendant from Her. HAD GREAT BEAUTY Davlu Win Only Seven Years Old When Her l-ather Obtu'ncrt I r', loni on Condition That He Should Leave Her in tbe Sultan's llut-itii. THE KING OF THE NATURAL WORLD. International Bible Lesson (or M.ir. 13, '10. (Matt. b:zj-34). c who bears klnfrly credential j must not only have power to coii.,ut ! (1k licarts nml the bodies of men. lip n,i;st be Urn muster of life's envii-ui- icnt ns well. Christ must prove MM I divinity by Hlfl power over the tones i,f nature. And this Ho ilid In the : marvellous story of this lesson. The j stdMtiK of a tempest on the Sea of j (i;ili!e j Tempest on the Sea. j CrosslliK Hint land lorkc d. imo' :; ; (mil guarded liody or water Willi lln ,, :i iples In nn open boat, oni' of the s.jl'leii storms for which tVat se:i l f.i::ioiis swept down through the mni:n t i 'ii ijiii'tros upon them, and the Utile , , , r was almost rovered with !! v The disciples were old (',.'.,. n, drought up on the t dmivs n!' :h ,t ., i. uettlim their llxltil; Km' yeai:' ( "it ,, ii.-i crystal depths, nu ki d i' ; ' ",1 often by teivpr-;' i" is wind;, , .r easily frightened M the h:',y ; , : a i;ale. Hut till;! tii.f h. y - '.;: r ' ::;pcst such as they bad iiee- . ; , -. : lered ami they wpi-c :. f:il-! t' .,.it would K to pi"ei a ia the -.p !. 'I'l ev did their utmost to l;ee I er ;..,!. but when till y ie a if- p ed that they could !."' ' :' ,. i;ale they K;.ihiei;'v r. ; ;.. f: it they eart'leil the Kite:, am'. !.:ey , : v , out to 1 1 Itii for h !p. Master cf Nfptunc. Worn out with the day's L. '.,- Christ was fast a.-Ieep, I lis I a:i"ire l,o more dis'iit'hed th;.'l by the liielJti:; of a i ladle. : ,: :it the first cry of alarm, the Ma"'ir nie.-e. First, He quiets the tempi" r i i tl'o disciples hearts, n-!::Iin;.r their 'i l.eliet' and ealiiiitn; their fears, tie n lie stills the storm without, te! :'.;:l, ,' tl.e winds iind the sea. "and there v n a (Treat calm." It was all done with out effort, naturally, calmly, as a C.nd. It reads like the .story of ( Tea A n. Here Is one amotiK men who wens (lie crown of kindly authority over the lerces of nature. No wonder the :is tnnlshed disciples exclaimed, "What manner of man Is this that even the winds nnd the sea obey Him?" .so wonder that John writing h'tiK alter of this wondering beliiK, said. "In ti e lni:innliiB was the word, and the wo-d was with God, and the word was fe d. Ail thing were mnde by Him and without lllm was not anything made that was made." He who in the be. Kinnlnii hud let slip the winds of hrav It Is not generally known that tho ' .Sultan of Morocco Is partly of ; French descent, but sin h Is the l case; and strange was the fortuno ; tii.it placed n young French ni rl I on the throne of Morocco within ', oompanitUe recent times. Tho j present Sultan of Morocco Is of lineal deaei.t from a beautiful French slave girl, I ia I i. ; A'aoiit I THo a Cm: lean men liant named l-'raneliesinl, p turnl the island of Sardinia ly made bride, was i Ali;erine eot.-air. I'h pie were taU.-n to for sale, iiitd i i-ih;. !i. due. I'raneh' inl fort tile Hot to lie M-i tug 'ti ill a wife, and s'.n rood r;r.'iei ; I of the I'ash; and w as ev turn to Cor t'itoiA. To;; ate! n uin. run . Ine l'a- ha. I'l'an bis ii.it i e land , o et ta 1m ii ! a I Of tile (-few Wop the ship set i-n w i t h aptnr e you;::' :!:, , ..-I by had tie fat. I Id coi,t ; i ed 'tli of his ataa.se.l I'.fa.nh all from his new si by an :::; cou epo e,l a rich r,oo- in ids o w iii the r;e ter and a fortune. Wed to !- a, Jieti l-'ri t cli ter t her with 1: is I. ti.ily ;.;ft.s H o:a tl . ,; -.-r- li". ,ai set ail for hat I. is e:.el ,as a id a ry pirate, most I'aii'.in overboard, lire, and the un ite ky Frenchman :;t:d ! is whole family carried off to .Morocco. Aitain the family of Christian slaves were put to public auction and p'ircha-e l h; a powerf il Tun isian noble. once ncaill l't atich.es lni obtained the ta .er of not be iuz repiil'ated Iroi.i Ills vile and U'aiu ho gained the .ami will of bis master, so much to that he was tak en before the Sultan himself, who , treated him Kractonsly and asked to see bis family. His daughter HavU was then only seven years old, but ; the child's extraordinary beauty I must have Impressed the Moorish , (sovereign, for lie loaded the Fretich i man with Klfts. Franchesinl, how- ever, yearned to return to his own I land and Implored that favor from ; the Sultan, who grunted It on rondi ! Hon that Davla should be left be I hind to he reared in the seraglio. The condition was a hard one, but hnoiiiift nun hi piiji .... ... .. i . ... v, v, fc.u., .. u.. ....... " - en out of His flnRers cnnld easily drive was accepted; he sailed and with his them hnrW Into their caverns. He. out of whoso palm had dropped all the H ' cis, and all the seas, and all the oceans had only to speak the word of command and the boisterous w:ies crouched at His feet in humble sub mission. This was not tbe only time iti the career of the King that He proved Himself tnnster of the natural world. V.'liile there was never any out-;oini; of His power to meet His own per sonal needs there was never any diminution of His power to help those who were In peril from the elements. Mo was in His world, the Master fiid Kir.K of It, always, and everywhere. Ruler of the Invisible. Hut visible nature Is not man's only environment. There is an unseen uni verse besides to which man is mote or less subject. We are all conscious id an invisible world. su;'rii'aiuir.s' us mi all sides, mysterious. in otapr-. a. n siti'.e, yet exerting an induon: e ov r us which we cannot escape. We just as much moved upon by ihi: vorbl as we are by this. This ''' ' M affects our physical na'.ur;', that v oral iiffects our moral nature ami we etc rait escape It. Whatever may be lat'int by demoniac possession, the old-fashioned statement that a'' people are possessed of the devil bodies a Kreat tru.li. There ::e storms In the spiritual word, be dreaded than elec'rlcal storm the material world, I aore terribh far than any cyclone that ever r over a western prairie town. Hat King of men is Master even here Demons Own His Power. The disciples had no sooner caned the neril of one storm they came ui) against another in person of two demoniacs men v':o were under the power of nn aw e.l brain storm. These men were set free from their peril and suffering by a word of power, the demons which possessed then being hurled into the deep by the Hat of the King. Mysten ous? YeB. Incomprehensible? l'os- Kihlv Dot llo .,.! remnlns that V. la li ill by d wife and sons reached Corsica in i sufetv. Once In Corsica he brood ed over the humiliation of leaving j his beloved young daughter in a ; Moorish harem, and conceived the 1 project of equipping nn expedition to j kidnap one of the Moorish princes and obtain his child by way of ex i change or ransom. He chartered , a vessel and landed at Sallee, but was struck down with fever and died a tew days siibseciicntly. The i expedition, deprived of its leader, re ' turnd to Corsica. For a long perlo 1 nothing was heard of liavla until in ITmi, agents of the Saltan of Morocco arrived in Corsica to trace the Francheslnl ' family. The little Mavla had grown . up and was now empress. Her mother and brothers returned to Morocco where they we-e received . with rual honors, and a palace with five hundred slaves was set apart for their use; as a special mark of favor, Davla was permitted '. to Join them. She had unbounded Inlluetice over the aged ruler v. bo recognized her ability as well as her beauty; this monarch, however, was poisoned In one of the many palace revolutions by one of bis sons, who succeeded him. Davla remained un ; molested by the new Sultan, and died of the plague 111 1SU2-. H-ir 1 mother remained in Morocco with ' ore of her sons, Augustin, and the 1 other son became consul-general for Morocco at Genoa, where he died about IS 21). h m Skeptical About It- ! "I didn't see you in church Sun : day morning." said Mrs. Oldcastie. "No," replied her hostess ,toy ! ins 'with a 2,f.00 solitaire, "I was ! sonervous I knew I couldn't sit still j if I went, so I gave up and laid In I bed nearly the whole morning." ! "That was too bad. You ought ' to have been there. Dr. Mlggs 1 ...-. h ovenrlated Bevel al of our sibly. But the fact remains tuai v, i.i n "' . ,) considerable men aBk for the credentials of Him leading nnanc - and who comes claiming to be the King or i anger was exhibited by some all Kingdoms, this Christ of the New the.m" Testament can produco them. His Is .bdi so. i u u word Is power. His look is authority, could iuch " ur c huIt His attraction Is universal. He Is In s'pewed only the I ope had that world, but not of It. Great nature. power." Chicago Hecord-Herald. which Is the master of ordinary men rw-ncntjao win oiitVioi-ltv "the wind "tjniiivn i no and the sea obey Him," and "the I'rlnce of tho I'ower of the Air," and all his legions, ground the weapons of their rebellion at His feet, and retreat in abject terror to their subterranean abodes. Therefore, whenever tho Kins of the Invisible world came In rontait with the powers of darkness, one look, one word of command from lllm was "11 that was nocessary to evict the lemon that had camped upon the ter 'Hory of the human body. The pow ers of darkness recognized His author 'y and retreated before Ills Kiu0'ly lueier.ee. Lincoln Knew He'd Grow Old. Venerable Ira Haworth of Katmas City recently exhibited to friends t'ho came to ,ee him on his 90th birthday u black walnut cane, whit flld out nd presented to him by Ab aham Lincoln In 1860. 'The cune." said Umoln, "l to use w hen you B't "1J- 1 k"0W )0U "'J' "n0 S be old. bocauHu the rood die young" ,B Windsor Castle King Kdward heejs 112.500.000 worth of gold plate. LACKAWANNA RAILROAD. "THE ROAD OF ANTHRACITE. ' It you contemplate spending the Win ter months in Florida or California, call upon our local ticket agent for particulars. . . o PRINTING . . . MUCH of the work that is done in this office is of kinds that can be done by hand only. Xinc-tenths of all job printing done in any country ollice must bo done bv hand. It can't be done with a machine. This ollice is fully equipped to do all kinds of print ing at the lowest prices consistent with good work. A Large Stock is Carried in ENVELOPES, LETTER HEADS, NOTE HEaDS, BILL HEADS, STATEMENTS, SHIPPING TAGS, BUSINESS CARDS, VISITING CAUDS, INVITA TIONS, ANNOUNCEMENTS, CAM) BOARD, BOOK PAPERS, COVER PAPERS, &c. And Everything in the Printing Line If you have been a customer of ours, you know the character of our work. If not, we shall be glad to fill a trial order. Among other things in our line are Dodgers, Posters, Sale Bills, Pamphlets, Books, Re ceipts, Orders, Check Books, Ruled Work, Half tones, Line Cuts, Engraved Work, Stock Certifi cates, Bonds, &c, &c. No trouble to show goods and give estimates. The Columbian Printing House, GEO. E. ELWELL, Proprietor. Entrance First Floor, through Roys' Jewelry Store. Next to Bloomsburg National Bank. BLQOMSBURG, PA. A. N. YOST, All ukNF V AT LAW. Wirt Building, Court IlouscSqut I Bloomsburg, Ta. RALPH. R.JOHN, ATTORNEY AT-LAW. Knt R jilding, next to Court House Bloomsburg, Pa. FRED IKELER, ATTORNF.YATt.Aw5 Office Over First National Bank. Bloomsburg, Pa, W. II. RHAWN, A TTO R X K V - A T-1, A W, Office Corner of 3rd and Main Stf. CATAWISSA, PA. CLINTON HERRING. ATTORNEY-AT LAW. Office with Grant Herring, BlornifLurp, Ta. hi Crangcville Wednesday each week A. L. FRITZ. ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Office Bloomshurg Nal'l Panic Bldg. Bloomsburg, Pa. J. II. MAIZE ATTORNKY-AT-LAW, INSURANCE, AND RHAL J-STATR AGENT Office 116 North' Street, Bloomsburg, Pa, N U. FUNK ATTORNEY AT LAW Ent's Building, Court House Squart Bloomsburg, Pa. EDWARD J. FLYNN, ATTORNEY AT LAW, CENTRALIA, PA. Office, Liddicot Building, Locust Ave. II. MONTGOMERY SMITH, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Office : Ent building, 11-16-94 WILLIAM C. JOHNSTON, ATTORNKY-AT-LAW. Office in Wells' Building, over W. McK Reber's Hardware Store, Bloomsburg. J. S. JOHN M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGION. Office and residence, 410 Main St 7-3-y BLOOMSBURG, PA M. P. LUTZ & SON, Insurance and Reai, Estatb agents and ufgkeks. N. W. Come Main and Centre SU. Bi.ooMsnuRG, Pa. Represent Seventeen as good Companie as there are in the World, and all, losses promptly adjusted and paid at their office. DR. W. II. HOUSE SURGEON DENTIST Office Rarton's Building, Main below Market. Rlontnsluirrr Pa All styles of work done in a superio manner. All work warranted as represented. TEETH EXTRACTED WITHOUT PAW by the use of Gas, nnd free of chart when nrtificialtci-th are inserted. Open all hours during the day DR. M. J. HESS DENTISTRY IN ALL ITS Ii RANCHES Crown and bririye work a specialty (Corner Main and Centre street! Bloomsburg, Pa. Columbia & Montour Telephone. J. J. BROWN, M. D. THE EYE A SPECIALTY. Eyes tested andfitted with glaise. No Sunday work. 311 Market Bt., Bloomsburg, Pa. Hours 10 to 8 Telephot Montour Telephone. Bell Telephone H. BIERMAN, M. D. Homoeopathic Physician and Sutoao Office and Residence, Fourth St. Office Hours : ! ' fmpto a P- m 5:30 to 8 p. m. BLOOMSBURG, PA C. WATSON McKELVY, Fire Insurance Agent. Represent twelve of the strongest 00m panles In the world, among which are Franklin , of Thila, Penna. Pblta. Queen of N. Y. Westchester, N.:Y. North America, l'hlla. ' Office: Clark Building, and Floor. -