KAILKOAI) TIME TABLES. I'ENN'A It. K. KAST. WIWT 7.11 A. M. » u A. M. 10.17 " - M. 2.21 P. M. 4SI " S.SU " '•&' " SUNDAYS. 10.17 A. Jl. P- M. I>. 1„. >V \V. It. . KVST. WKHT. 8.57 A. M."». 0» A. M. 10.19 '• 12.17 I*. M. 2.11 P. M. *.SS " 5.51 '• «40 " HU » U.VVS #.57 A. M. 12.17 I' M . 5:51 I' >1 i<lo " PHI I(A .% It RAI> 1N U It. K. NORTH. SOUTH. 7,-ti A. M. 11.84 A. M. 4.00 t\ M. 0.05 I'. M. BUK'" fcTKKKT. 7 II A. M. 11.2*2 A. M. »Oi i\ M. H. 04 P. M. J. J. BROWN, THE EYE A SPECIALTY Eyes tested, treated, fitted with c« and artificial eyes supplied. Market Street. Bloomsburg, Pa- Hours—lo a in.to sp, m Telephone 1436. MARITIME EXPRESSIONS. t ••d In a Metaphorical Sfmr, Ther ire lliillr Common. Maritime expressions, used meta phorically. are. In fact, very common. We say a couple are "spliced, h young man is the "mainstay" of Ids faudly. an Intruder "puts his oar In."the mem jvpy from Wayback "steers through, a man Is "hard up." sometimes "taken aback" or has "the wind taken out of his Balls," a toper is "slewed." n loafer 'JCBfe*" iSci', ar, U'ia 50 4 ,, ?t)® efl steers the ghlp of state" through troublesome times. This last metaphor Is extremely an Cient, by the way. Horace refers to Rome as a ship at sea. and Plutarch •ays the Delphic oracle referred to Athens In the same way. A Tamil •aylng embodies a like metaphor, "The ■oul Is the ship, reason Is the helm, the oars are the soul's thoughts, and truth Is the port." An old collection Of English proverbs contains this one: "The tongue Is the rudder of our ship." A Malay maxim says."The boat which Is swamped at sea may be bailed out, the shipwreck of the affections is final." Aristophanes. Plautus and others use an expression wldeh comes down to Os as an English saw, "To row one way and look another." An old Eng lish proverb (1(514) was,"lt is not good to.have an oar In every one's boat."— Urnt (Expectations. "George has an automobile in view." "Who, George? He couldn't buy the tire for one wheel." "It belongs to the girl he would like to marry."—Cleveland Plain Dealer. Lockjaw From Cobwebs. Cobwebs put on a cut lately gave a wo man lockjaw. Millions know that the best thing to put on a cut is Bucklen's Arnica Halve, the infallible healer of Wounds, Ulcers. Sores. Skin Eruption. Burns, Scalds and Piles. It cures or no pay. Only 25c at Panles & Cos. drug store. 4RTISTS' BLUNDERS. •»m« Odd Mlatakrt TLat Harp Been I'frprmalrd on Canvas. In a letter from an artist and art writer of London he speaks of the absurd mistakes made by some of the old masters. In the very pretentious and also very large portrait of Queen iVlctoria executed by Benjamin Con stant the well known French* artist painted the ribbon of the Older of the Garter of a wrong color, and the art Ist was much chagrined by the evi dence of his own carelessness. Queen Victoria told him he was using the wiong color, but he was not convinced. There la n landscape by a famous English painter In which a rainbow is depleted behind the sun, and a picture of Eden Is In the gallery of the Gesu, In Lisbon, where Adam and Eve are represented as watching a procession of monks. In the famous galleries of Antwerp are certain pictures by old masters in which the Jumble of Ideas Is as re markable as the technique Is fine. In one picture of heaven the archangels are armed with bows and arrows, and tn a painting of the "Murder of the Innocents" the massacre Is represent ed as taking place In a city of Holland. The parents of the children are stout burghers, the Roman soldiers are Dutch poHcemeu armed with muskets, and tho Innocent Infants are trans formed Into solid schoolboys In bulgy tronserß and Jackets and hobnailed The effect is droll. Tklnfi He Didn't I'nderitand. At the table on an incoming liner on a recent trip one of the first cabin pns •ftigers found In nn oyster one of the tiny seed pearls which look alpioat exactly like bird shot. Apparently the formation of pearls was a mystery to trim, for he examined the thing curious ly, picked It up gingerly and laid it on the tablecloth for further investlga tlon. ICow, It Is a habit of cooks at eea to tarry fishhooks in their pockets, and on this trip, by a carious coincidence, part of a small hook got caught In a pleee of beefsteak that was served to tfii» particular passenger. As soon as his knife encountered the hard object h» started, picked It out carefully and laid It beside his other find on the Cloth. Then he beckoned to the waiter and confidentially whispered in his ear. "I don't want to be impertinent," he ■aid, "but would you mind telling me where you shoot your oysters and why you catch your steaks wtth a hook and fln«7" —New York Post. Kill l b»• I'liM* With Good. The improvement to come in any life from the "turning of a new leaf is not to be based upon the turning of the leaf ho much as upon the constant and resolute tilling of the new page by dint of unremitting nnd often strenuous ef fort. An evil habit is not changed in a moment, but is supplanted by the good which is cultivated into a hubit.—Nash ville Banner. ('«»»«• The sap of the sugar cane produces from into 'JO per cent of sugar The Vice ofNagging. Could the happiness of the home, but a nagging woman often need help. She may be so nervons and run-down in health that trifles annoy her. If she is melancholy, excitable, troubled with loss of appetite, headache, sleeplessness, constipation or fainting and dizzy spells, she needs Electric Bitters, tho most wonderful remedy for ailing women. Thousands of sufferers from female troubles, nervous troubles backache and weak kidneys have used it, and be come healthy and happy. Try it. Only ,W. Panles Co guarantiee satisfac tion MAPLE SUGARING. Hovr Tliey I>o It Tn Vermont—From «i«n (lathering l<» SuKartnii Off. Maple sugar and sirup are favorite swells tlie country over, and this fact gives a general interest to some infor mal ion about the maple sugar industry which Las practical value also for the sections where this particular kind ot sugar making prevails. An American Cultivator correspondent supplies the following details: Some sugar places in tlii>* immediate vicinity number over 7.000 trees. Tbe evaporator is the first find TTlo3t important consideration, 'i he point to be considered in an evaporator is the » ctt«»U HOKSR. one that can make the licet sugar in the least possible time with the least amount of fuel. Evaporators are made of galvanized iron or steel, copper or tin. They are usually supported on iron arches lined with brick, but sometimes the arches are made entirely of brick. Storage tanks, draw tanks, sirup tanks, buckets and pails are of galvanized steel, tin or wood. We consider galva nized steel the superior article because It will not rust. Bucket covers can be of wood or tin: spouts, steel or tin. Take a sugar place of 3,000 trees or, rather, one that uses .'>,ooo buckets. When the "boss" thinks it is time to "sugar," the men are set to tapping the trees. A three-eighths or one-half inch bit is used, and in large trees the hole is bored about two inches deep, in smaller trees only about one and a half inches. Spouts are driven or screwed in, buckets hung to each spout and covers, if they have them. Home trees ar« tapped in two or three and oftentimes four places, hanging a bucket to each sjxiut of course. Then, the weather being right, the sap runs, and the teams are started as soon as possible, for the quicker the sap is made into sugar the better the sugar is. Men with pails holding sixteen quarts goto each tree, collect the sap and empty it into the draw tank, which is being hauled about on a "sugar sled" by a pair of horses. These tanks hold anywhere from twenty five to fifty pailfuls. When a load is se cured, the team is driven to the sugar house, and the sap, by means of font inch pipes, is drawn from the draw tank to the storage tank. The storage tanks are placed on a staging on the outside of the sugar house and connected with the evap orators by rubber hose or iron pipe, the (low of sap front storage tank to evaporators being regulated by aut< matic valves. Thus the sap enters one end of the evaporator, working back and forth through partitions and cor rugations till it reaches the other end of the evaporator, when it is drawn off as "sirup." The sap is not "handled" any from the time the men pour it into the draw tanks until it comes out a finished article—i. e., maple sirup at eleven pounds to the gallon. This may be put away in sirup tanks and allowed to cool and settle, and TREES TAPPED A>'D BUCKETS HCXw. then, if the sugar is wanted, this sirup is put into the "sugaring oft" pan on a eeparate arch and boiled down until the right pitch Is reached, when it is taken from the fire, stirred gently and allowed to cool and then put into tin cans or wooden tubs, and it is then ready for market in the form of maple sugar. Bavarian Hop*. Although hops have been grown in this country for a great many years, •hey have always been inferior as com pared with the best European hops, nud, as they bring a lower price in the market and are not so desirable as the Bavarian hops, cuttings of the best of the latter were imported last year. These cuttings hav« been placed in the hop growing districts of the United States and. according to the report of the secret arv « 112 agriculture, promise to be far superior to the ordinary va rieties gi »•. ii. i."ddition to maturing earlier and i :U« miing the picking sea son. A W H*|i'H »•!. The female wasp spends the winter In a torpid condition, and when spring arrives she hunts up some sort of sheltered spot appropriate for a nest. Having selected the retreat, she pro ceeds to lay within it tho foundation of a home. For this object earth will not serve her turn. The substance of which the walls and chambers of the house are to be composed must li»; none other than the finest paper, made of wood pulp, mixed with a sort or sizing, wdiked to a paste and linelj spread in sheets. Ocean Depth*. The ocean used to be considered about as deep at its deepest as the highest mountains are high. It has now been proved to be half as deep again—that is, 40,236 feet. Can't Keep it Secret. The splendid work of Dr King's New Life Pills is daily coining to light No such grand remedy for Liver and Bowel troubles was ever known before. Thons ands bless them for curing Constipa tion. Sick Headache, Biliousness, Jaun dice and Indigestion. Try them 25c at Parties <V Co's. drug store. J MARCONI'S SIGNALS. IIo» 1>«» Tilt'} Throuisli S|.a«-e From < nnl ineiil ' ° I'onlinenl t How diil Marconi's signals come across front Cornwall to the Newtound hiiul slums? There is a curving hill of water an J earth crust 11" miles high ii»|»«'iwe#n. 1 >id the electric waves K o over the hill or through it or how ' That is tlu- puzzle the electrical world is bottiPrinK nrrr at the moment. Some <;»ruiu>» experiments seem to that t' |P waves are absorbed l»y water, as they are by metals. I'ro fessor Fleming of London, who lias done an elaborate work on the seien tilie side of the subject. l»wl s the mat Receipts and Expenditures of Montour County, Pennsylvania For the Year Ending January 6th, A, D., 1902. - I VTI: M KM' SHOWING THE TAX ACCOUNTS OP THE SEVERAL COLLECTORS FOR THE TEAR A. D. 1981. , ; fvioct- ♦II I Tax abate- Collect-; abate rolk-rt-i .» uoiuu ment a ors com amount Balance Tux ments,% ors com amount Bal. return'd iuu».oii |,U * abseWd-exonVi mtelon. ■ paid. Due assessed exon's ; mission| pftid. Due^ I ittl 11 in °4 <sl 1175 J'.» 351 108 86, r » 1* •' ' ,O * * : ' i Antbonv Townshif ..<*.! Upl "J-J 1 2-1 (»• •» ' s IIS low 9:5 lfi f>2 - I W * " ,r> ** 51 21 00 ; 4:'. 24| * >'j 1 * Om»i- i Noah Knun. *'} ' ♦ • V;: ~ , |7 .j co2f» 7.*h; «;*> ilo :if, 67 42 22 04 10 041 70 48 105 50 1 H.'. ioj :V4 45, 68 .'«0 Danville Borough.. Kdw \\ iVtors.. '• - * °J' ' . ~ - jc yjy s;, :w M ;;">() 00 !•> 94 10 *'»J 3-3 4 ! 66 00 2 X"» 2 J»7« 60 W Derrv Township David <\ Join son •• -•» * - ■' ~ .|.» 4 4 IHOS 155 00 71 92 261 47 «i»> 81 *4 50 1 36} 7*; 25 34 5/00 l.iU-'rtv 1..1«n Koudeinan - { £ J.-j " ;i r, Itt |:M >5 IS 10 »f»l «2 'ss 4 32] 139/2 :!5 50 100 ;•< J* Wls d 0 l.imeston. « A. Warner 3 ., y5 815 w ,0, 3* 4l« 34 1 96 tg 6<» 377 • 109 26 64 J8 00 Mahoninu Nathan Fetustennachcr j®" "» X g 097 611 :024 12 19 51 »' #57 211 IS 00 56|l .'•» 114." 850 Mavln rrv C. .[. Heaver y , h0 2 75 * M »« -"'I 00 237 206 40 5, ...... Valli-\ I- 1' A|'l>lciniili 1 99 < ? ;1 "I -»■ r. I ;•> 75 :-T, |", 775.1 3 t',l 2:5:5 <1 -'<> ... 700 20 1»>; 461 200 WnoliiiiKtimvilU 1 Mnnrtißli Wlll. C. Rutiyan.. J.'l * ,',l uhh ".js 7s 36X0 20 77 104 r.'.n 19 11 22 W 37 W; 11 04 750 W.-t Hemlock Township <le .r K e Irvin •>'« •' j * I m. J s i; r:»J ~>:i Total tax account for 1901 ; 1..524 w..i 10, n99 K2 1 \ II | 1 75 2 * Taxes received for prior yen rs " ! li una nal I|—7- —~~ i <joia uj, ! ... | 477 65 _ Total taxes received during the year A. D. HOI — : —— I iujswl - "" f.V i 591 j ~ ■ i J w 51 iTntMiiiKliiiK tax. sin liivnr i.t <»nnty j SO 50|! Estimated exonerations and coßMataraona on »me It ] —--— Actual amount of outstanding t;ix<* in fav >r of county.. .■■■•■..... ■■ ■• • *••■ • • * "-- - - : , , , ,„ r ~r i, ,r ...... rs ~s . .[lows- Cyrus E Bardole. Collector of Anthony Township for 1X99: Countj- tax 8186 70: Dox tax $18,16: Total 8204.86. Kdwarti W '"" J »»'l »*-•"•»V"nii«y Tax on Or„hana S e_for-lx9. J «tMV,«nty Tax for Tax for 1903854.07 ¥otal81« 03 P. C. NEWBAKER, TREASURER, IN ACCOUNT WITH MONTOUR COUNTY. Or To Cash Received from the Following Sources: I by Disbursements as Follows: Cr. 4 JQQ3 oj , Amount pit id on County orders during the yearn 1901 «« per the he (ialance on hand at last si'ttlcinent .. r{ r 51 ' ' ovv classified account «>f expenditures $21152 05) County tax received for 1901 'j go | Amount paid Coimnonwealth for Siat< j tax of 19o] for which there County tax received for prior years 2015 07 j was no order issued $2214 51 State tax received for 1901 !02 41 Treasurer's commission on same 22 36 Dog tax received for 1901 Dog tax received for prior years 'j,»' rn ' \r oi Treasurer's Commission, viz: < Viuuty tax ree'd in 1901 on unseated land* hih to i r jgfio 88 2A per cent on disbursement of $21152 09 Reimbursement of State tax for 1901 912 oo ; Less County's portion of Hotel Licenses, commission on Hotel Licenses for 1901 county s portion ... "'{r'ni > same having been allowed in Treas. License account. 912 00 Commissioners of NorlhumberlaiKlcounty lor one-half of expen.ti , - tures on Danville River Bridge 97 g7 j Commission allowed on 20240 69 506 02 Commonwealth costs, lines ami jury Mini qq Balance in hands of I*. C. Newhaker, Treasurer, January Jackson Rillmeyer for ohl luiiib r ....... ; ; R'>: 6th A D.. 1902 1215 72 Reimbursement by Comninnw* altli lor extinction or forest . .... •-| From issue of short term county bond " . $2511130 . $25111 3C P. C. NEWBAKER, TREASURER, IN ACCOUNT WITH LICENSES RECEIVED DURING THE YEAR A. D„ 1901. „ „ ..... . ,tiio 1 if>Pti.es 1401 67 By amount paid Commonwealth 4532 04 To amount of Retail and VV bo^lesa e . - 70 00 Bv amount paifl lor advertisinir Appraiser's li-1 ami post <:<• 140 15) l'o amount of Billiard and 1"" 6400 00 By Treasurer's coin mission 439 41 To amount of Hotel Licenses.. •..... , 1400 00 By amount Hotel licenses applied to county fuml, county's port ion 912 00 'I o amount of Brewer* anil 1 )i>t 1 »i-» .a » n«* 100 00 By amount Hotel licenses paid borough of Danville 3078 0(1 To amount ot Wholesale Li«|tioi Lu.enst By amount Hotel licenses pai»l borough of Washingionvilie 228 00 By amount Hotel licenses paid Anthony Township 57 00 By amount Hotel Menses paid Derry Township 114 OfJ By amount Hotel licenses paid Liberty Township 57 00 By amount Hotel licenses paid Valley Township 114 0(1 $ 9671 07 $ 9671 67 CLASSIFIED ACCOUNT OF EXPENDITURES. ... „ , Election Expenses. ' Court Expenses and Commonwealth Costs. . ... r .i*• a v »* £7 is 71; spring election 43/ /.I '■rand Jurors 2438 32 (leneral election 4(!1 38 Travel's Jurors. • • W 60 The Record Publishing Co., of Milton for official and spec- Constubhs making quarterly letuinsnii' ip lUifi 93 ' imen ballots for Spring and General elections.. 70 00 Cieorgi" J. Vanderslice, Court Stenographer ™ - Kiwlion blanks and supplies 32 25 K. K. Hale, Court Cryei an.l Janitor '>oo du $ 1001 36 Thomas C. Welsh, District AOoiney Assessors Pay. J. C. Miller, oerk «T O.urls mh! l'ro.lm,.o.»ry • „ r , * m 00 Mii-1.m.) Ilrtfkliill,Sher.H H2 •''» St»f 1..x asnwment »0 00 Justices - _ 218 83 Registry of voters 313 00 < onstaMes 02 Registry of birth and death 57 30 - . Jas. C. Hcdden-. meals f,.,r jurors ;; J Br,d «' und Road E^enses ' , Costs «nd damage in ease of Wrtshingto.iville boro. vs. ( 0 »b > U (m ,| views and surveys $ ; »2 <0 (Jeor<re W". West survevine and diaft in Moser case 97 Lumber and material for bridges 3910.) - General repairs < r »63 87 ' t" 5 County Commissioners, Auditors, &c. Sew Bridges. George W. Miles, Commissioner. 133 d:iys at $3.50 $ 46 ».j0 Curry & Vannan, iron bridge in West Hemlock township 210 00 Weslev I'orry Commissioner, 127 days at iO •' Sundry persons for lumber, stone, masonry, labor Ac. for I lira 111 C. Saudel, Commissioner, 131 days at $3.50 458 •>«> 22 4 23 John C I'eifer, Commissioner's Clerk. 140 00 Sundry persons for lumber, lime, masonry and labor for Edward Say re Gearliart, County Solicitor bridge in Cooper Township 11151 County Auditors and Clerk t;9 90 * Jury Cominis>ioiieis ■ —■•••-. ti , Danville River Bridge Expenses. Tn>velintf expenses necessanly m urred Uy ( ommiHsioners h 1 i- 1 .inici-il duties 24 4.1 General repairs filbobb it.the di-clnuge ol Hitn otticiaJ $2206 53 Electric light 130 00 Midi,,el Breckhill, Sheriff. Watchman 60 00 $ 508 05 * "" lloanlina I 1 1!-''"' '" 1 N. eimnly litil.le f..r one-half of nrawmß ~ml . I 34 45 ~x|„,„ii.„res .... Itiv,r Hri.Ue. W ashing for prisoners ik" 01 Conveying prisoners to E. S. Penitentiary, A'<*. >(| Miscellaneous. Reports to Board of Public Charities " g<]7 71 Redemption of county bonds S4OOO 00 Interest on county bonds 735 00 Court House Expenditures. 1940s Amount paid for sheep killed by dogs 92 00 Stationery and blank books - * ' Inquisitions on sundry persons and postmortems 84 95 County printing and sidvertisiog ■*" 47 County Teachers Institute 124 00 Coal.. - f j ( ' ( Support of convicts at E. S. Penitentiary IH2 21 (ias t;'» 70 Support of convicts at Huntingdon Reformatory 75 Water rent and water repair- J" Support of inmates in State Hospital 273 75 General repairs and supply's State tax on county indebtedness for 1900 84 00 Ex|wessage and postage— *>oo 00 Burial of indigent soldiers Insurance on Court House - "•><)(»"» J. C. Miller, Prothonotary, certifying judgments, Ac., to Suwelry persons for cleaning « <>urt House -• Commissioners office 46 80 Telephone rent - Wm. L. Sidler, Recorder, certifying mortgages. Ac., to Papf-ring <irand Jury Room '59 80 Commissioners office 13 30 Patoting and repairing roof ]q9q 10 Headstones for indigent soldiers 255 00 5978 76 Jail Expenditures. s'l9s 09 Total amount of orders issued in 1901 $2116119 Coal '3760 Amount of orders unredeemed for 1901 1° On (fitS J" - Water rent and water repairs o 00 Amount of orders redeemed for 1901 21151 19 Clothing for pru-otiors r ,u n o Amount of orders redeemed for prior years 150 Dr I. tfrier Bartier, metlical at tendance lor prisoners -,3 17 General repairs and supplier - j Total amount of orders redeemed in 1901 $21152 69 ! ~I NAN cIAI.HT.Mi:MENi OF THE Assi: is AN 1) LI&BII.ITIES OF MOKTQUB COUMTY. " 317X00 00 1 By amouut of cash iu hands of County Treasurer S 1215 72 To amount of bonded indebteduesH | 0 00 jjy outstanding County tax for 1901 • 1100 00 To amount id unredeemed orders for 3901.... 67 «4 By outetanding state tax for 1901 59 To amount dun, Commonwealth —tax on County indebti (Uit • • jj y outstanding dog tux for 1901 1 '•» To estimated fmtHtanding bills - ' Uy outstanding returned tax for 1901 and prior yeHts 149 68 jßy outstanding County and Dog taxes foriS99 and 1900 349 H'.t | Liabilities in excess of assets 15214 26 $18277 64 J #18277 (»4 P c NEWBAKER TBEASI ItKl:. IS VCCOVNT WITH •Jill: SKVKItAL MBTIUCI* FOB TAXES ABISINO FBOH UNSEATED LANDS AND COLLECTORS RETURNS. MA, il Treasurer's Commission of •> , Amount paid by IteuorertotfaeSev- IBalance still due the Dis- Taxes receive! In 1901. 4 u . on sanu . ra Districts. trlcts, Including balance on I : j ji jl * rom P r »° r years^ XnthonyTownAip .! 2N [IJ j I .®T" j 261 l CooperTownahip I 1—:: "21; "V«ii Il' it or. 101 II ~l ' " " Danville ' J 44| I 118 I J'7« in I | :..•••• 23> 1 ">i 2 «<'; , Deny TViwnabtp 1 47] 1 621 2 84| I.•»»• | .J |j |.«....| If i liberty Township, 880 5 25| ■< 40: j —I. - ,J | I ... ! ••• 1..1 :t,> ." 0.. II T I MahonineTowmUi ■ l 43j •» .'>-1 **l '***"' *• ** ' ~.-,1 ipt ,h, 1...... ! 14 9® IWI3 .1 ; .... v:,nevTownship • J .H«; I*. «jo. \ : ;.... SJIJ- _ 47 T.»r:.l ; Kr 'f3J l M ll * # — 1 w ~ , , rtiiv tl.ai the foivgoii.R statement of an.l ex|«n.litun- ..I said county for the year endin K January 6th. l»., 1902 \\# 'h« 111« I* i>iwiiii*«i i..mill. M«nn ts ol Mf>ni<)nr onnty, la. <lo Ihw? « nii> •. . . rtl! IkiimK :in<l seal of otllcc thl> 111 li «lav ot .lunnary, A !>.. IJOI. is true and correct to the of our IcnowledstLMWl lieik el In witnew whereof we l»a\e b< r. uni > ■ t;EO. W. MILES, i Cummimhmeci HIRAM SAN DEI- • Of Attest IOHN < . I'EIKEK, Clerk. WKSI.EY I'EKHY, j Montour County, • ..I w. (ivtiiv <■< iTTNTY OK MuXTOI K -Welheun.lerM«n.Hl Auditors ot Montour County, suite ..' r. nnsvlvania, alter hav- I" ril E IHiNo|:.\Hl.i rilEJl l«H- Id IIIK'O niT OF COMMON I LEA. I"E«< nts(lM ,„. Treasurer :iud ( ominiKMoneT-. ..f«ai<i county, and tlmtthe lorcKOiiiK is a true and eorect state in< t»"eu duly neenrtliiiK to the law , re?«|)eetlull> •" rejort that we hare audii * ( N'eu l.ak.r. Treasurer, of T\v. lve Hundred and I-11 teen I». .1 an.l >e\ent> 1 »o, ( ent(Bl2ls. inont f't thr same, ami find it l»aianc«* «lnc t n«* I count 'lay of •lainu y, • •-• ; ',« •»,» j j n witness whereof we have herewith set our hand and seals this lith day ol Janniry, 1 - Also aiQinncc due them districts of o*«e ll.indre.l aj -0 Thirty Nine Dollars and F«m thnf (#nt (»•• DANIEL DIKIU., [sf.ai.l 1 WILLIAM HI U K [skai 1 ("ocntv Ai'DiTOßs. M««t .tOUNV PEfFE. I' OKANT Ot'l.l' K. ) ter a little differently. His results would make water opaque to these electrieal waves, as it is, in large quan tity. i<> light. Kit her way, it seems as if tli ? signals didn't come straight through. They went round the hill. In tliis ease they must somehow have followed the curving earth. But how? The accepted idea is that the vibrations Marconi uses are just long, invisible light waves. And light goes straight. Professor Fleming thinks the waves might bend, or, it may be, the upper air, being highly rarefied, is also opaque to them, like water, 'this would form a shell round the earth, in which the signals might travel any where. Would they go clear round? I And if they did would they stop when they got back to where they started or i keep going round and round? Evi- I deutly, until they had been absorbed j by substances like the metals, i But what becomes of the waves | then? Do they set up a current of or ! dinary electricity? If that he true, I then they could transmit power. There | was.l Kansas- professor named Blake who had this idea some years ago. He was quite sure the falls of the Nile could be made to run London and Ni | agara to turn corn grinders and run I mowing machines out on his native j plains. This matter of long distance trans | mission is the great electrical problem i of the day, and it may be the Hertz , waves will hriug the solution. If they should, coal mines could shut up shop. Here is a wide field, and, inasmuch as about every nation in Europe has been : ahead of us in perfecting the wireless telegraph, this is a chance to even up. i —Harper's Weekly. I.aat Fate Worse Thau Ills First. Smith—Poor Wederly Is having a hard time of it. His first wife got a divorce from him, you know. Jones—Yes, and he has a hard time paying her alimony, I suppose. Smith—Worse than that. She is his present wife's dressmaker.—Chicago i News. AXM'AI. STATKJIKM' UK TIIK DIRECTORS OF THE POOR OF Danville and Mahoning Poor Dis trict for the Year Knding Jan. I, 1902. J. I' BARK, Treasurer. In account with The Directors of the l>an- I viileand Mahoning i'oor District. I) It. To balance due Directors at last settle ment ♦l7»ii» til I To cash received from I). Kuckcl on on duplicate for 1896 :.ikm»o | To cash received from Nathan Fen stermacher on duplicate for 1900 ... 05 lti 1 To cash received from Nathan Fcnster macher on duplicate for 1901 .">ls 00 To cash received from E. W. Peterson duplicate for 1898 1306 To cash received from K. W Peters on duplicate 1*99 51 »i I | To casii received from E W. Peters 011 duplicate for I!MMi 42500 To cash received from E. W. i'eters on duplicate for 1901 . 479S 10 To cash received from J. P. Hare, com mitteeman of Samson l'icklns.... 100 00 To cash received iroin (Joiner Thomas... *0 00 cash received from Thomas Hrislin 10 00 cash received from Montour Lodge.. 0125 cash received from Wni.N. Roberts 32 25 cash received from Wm.Kvans.... V: 00 cash received from Emma Woods 30110 cash received from State for 3 cows TO 00 cash received from Chan. Hunt— 15 75 cash received from other Districts.. t;4 30 cash rec. from (iregory Itonsey... 28 1K) cash rec. from Mary Kennel Est 2.>7 ca>h received Mrs. Christ Tooley.. IK 00 cash received from Steward for Pro duce sold 50117 ♦ 9020 25 VII. By whole amount of orders paid by the Treasurer during the year lstoi 6851 82 Hal due Directors at present settlement 8*2171 43 Directors of Dancille and Mahoning I'oor District in Account tcith the District. Dli. To balance due from Treasurer at last settlement. 17#9 1 i To balance due fror. D. Kuckel at last settlement on duplicate for 1896 54930 To balance due from Nathan Fenste niacher at last settlement on dupli cate lor 19J0 (is 53 To balance due from E. W. Peters at last settlement 011 duplicate for the year 1898 13 71 To balance due from K. W. I'eters at last settlement on duplicate for the 1899 8-"> 8(i To amount of duplicate issued E. W. Peters for the Borough of Danville for the year 1900 5 w 40 To amount of duplicate issued to E. W. I'eters for the Horough of Danville for the year 1901 5719 97 To penally "of 5 per cent on sr>o4 88 on duplicate for 1901 24 21 To amount of Duplicate issued to Nathan- Fenstermacher ior the Township of Mahoning for the year 1901 710 51 To 5 per cent penalty on >(157.06 on dupli cate lor 1901 7 87 To cash received from J. P. Hare, com mitteeman of Samson I'ickens IqO Oil To cash received from dorner Thomas.. so 00 cash received from Thomas Hrislin 10 0 1 cash received from Montour Lodge.. 9125 cash received from Wm.s. Roberts :rj 21 cash received from Win. Evans 420(J cash received trom Emma W00d5.... :ioo< I cash rec.fromStateforcows killed 7ooc cash received from ('has. Hunt.... 15 75 cash received from < ither Districts... 01 80 cash rec. from (iregory Doweny 2s Oil cash rec. irotn Mary Rennet Est.. 287 casii rc<- from Mrs. Chris Tooley .. 1809 cash received from Steward for pro duce sold 504 17 * 1058141 CD. Hy commission allowed D. Kuckel of 5 per cent 011 8315 79 on duplicate for the year 1896 15 79 By balance'due from 1». Huckel on du plicate for 1890 23351 By commission allowed Nathan Fenst macher of."> per cent on $ 6863 on du llcate for the year 1900 34:; By abatement allowed Nathan Fenster macher of 5 per cent on %402 S(j on du plicate for 190 i 20 11 By commission allowed Nathan Fenster macher of 3 per cent on £lB2 72 011 du plicate for the year 1901 114 s Hy commission allowed Nathan Fenster macher of 5 per cent on t15129 on du plicate lor 1901 7 ."■«> By amount returned by Nathan Fenster uiacher on duplicate 190! 2 30 By exonerations allowed Nathan Fens terraacher on duplicate for the year 1901 2 17 By balance due from Nathan Fenster inacher on duplicate 1901 165 i:t By commission allwwed E. W. Peters ol 5 per cent on sl3 71 on duplicate for IS9B 68 | Hy commission allowed E. W Peters of 5 percent on 851.35 on duplicate for year 1899 2 72 Hy exoneration allowed E. W. I'eters 011 duplicate for the year 1599 :!1 50 Hy commission allowed E. W. Peters of 5 j>er cent on BH7 30 on duplicate for year 1900 22 36 Hy exonerations allowed E. W. Peters on duplicate for year 1900 <4 20 Hy amount returned by E. W. i'eters on duplicate for year 190'— 8 49 Hy balance due from E. W. Peters for 190 in as Hy abatement allowed E. W. Peters of 5 per cent on 81570 90 on duplicate for year 1901 228 si Hy commission allowed E. W. I'eters of 2 percent 011 tWIS-OO on duplicate for 190 86 96 commission ullowed E. W. Peters of 5 per cent on 8505 01 on duplicate for the year 1901 28 28 exonerations allowed E. \V. Peters on duplicate for the year 1901 65:12 amount returned by E. W. Peters on duplicate for the year 1901 ... 730 By balance due from E. \\ . Peters dupli cate 1901 530 80 By orders paid by Treasurer during the year 1901 0854 82 By balance due Directors at present settlement 2171 l.'i « 10584 41 Statement of Orders issued during the year 1901. Paid and outstanding and purposes for tchich the same were issued. Directors Salaries ♦ :!00 00 Steward :, 00 0° Physician 140 00 Attorney 80 00 Treasurer 75 00 Clerk 75 00 Auditing and Duplicate 19 00 Transient Paupers Ex. in settlement of cases I*2 65 Justices 12 00 Miscellaneous Items IS 38 Printers bills WOO Kent 25 00 Nurses ... 53 50 51219 53 Outside llelief as Folloics: | Medicine i 13 55 ; Coal and Wood 90 so I Shoes and Clothing 39 05 1 Undertaker 7 00 I Insane at Hospital 2550 00 | Paid other Districts _ 62 58 • (leneral Merchandise 585 88 Children's Aid Society 4900 For Maintenance of I'oor House and Farm. \ Seeding drain and Plants ♦ 41 90 Lime and Manure 145 80 Shoes and Shoe Repairing .... 17 85 Blacksmith bills 87 09 House and Farm Hands 351 3> Farm Implements and Hardware 145 90 Clothing 11291 Meat bill 113 14 Coal 236 73 Improvements and repairs 328 41 (leneral Merchandise 28119 Tobacco 58 40 Flour and Feed 150 71 Drug Store bills 1565 l.ive Stock 112 45 Sleigh 17 00 Veterinary 10 50 $2231 37 t trdcrs issued during the year 1901 B*>Ssl s2 Paid by Treasurer during the year l!«i *6851 82 JOHN ATI! AN RUDY. I THE* 1 HOFFMAN, Directors P.M. KERNS, * We, the Auditors of the Horough of Danville and Township of Mahoning have examined the above accounts andtlnd them correct l». 11. WI 1.1.1 A MS,) KDW. PCRI'CR, Auditors. H. 1.. DIEH 1., \ Statements of Deal Fstate and I'n Honal Property on hand at date of •Settlement. Real Estate $22225 00 House and Kitchen Furniture 798 .V> Hay and drain 1035 80 Vegetables ... 217 |7 Meat and Lard 12150 Farming Utensils 120 l s5 Clothing and Material 54 40 Fru It. Preserves, fcc 7 10 Vinegar 35 00 Flour 6 10 Tobacco 13 80 Coal 168 00 Coflee and Tea 16 50 Molasses 3 50 Sugar 27 50 Separator and Scales 93 80 Lumber 64 00 l.ive Stock 1374 50 $28058 53 Produce of Farm. hli bushels of Wheat ♦.H7tfbO 102 bushel* Oats "ltioßo JHO bushelgPotatoes jjg .'1 in bushels Corn ears 7;;7 50 12 bushels Onions 300 2 bushels < >nion sets li 00 I.M bu-hels Beets 77 Oil » bushel* ofTornlpi )l ou >0 Tons Hay 750 0U 1100 Bundles Corn !o<lder a;) Ou IVX) IJ>si Cabbage 1125 <2O lbs Butter liH 00 W0 Do». K«i{S 52 «) $2603 '6 Stock United. 2 I'lks t woo oo Chickens 25 uo .Calves 25 (hi ouoo '6 Mucks 38.: i0 Colt ... :i5 00 *IW 50 'Cumberof Haui>er» a<!mltte<l ilurln»? the year IKOI 4 •eft anil discharged 4 rota I in House Jan. 1, IWOI 17 " " " "1, 1!)02 M VlealH furnished tramps 17a UwlljingH 101 We want to do all Ms ot Prating fi A P I ll'S M. II 111 PIB. Ill'S Bill. s :'i i ;^isasj; If A well printed, tasty, Bill or Let W / ter Head, Poster 1)a Ticket, Circular, yj< Program, Stale [K] ment or Card (y ) an advertisement for your business, a satisfaction to you. lei Tip, Hew Presses, Best Payer, M Skilled Wort, " Promptness \ll you can ask - ~~ A trial will make you our customer We respectfully that trial. I 111« No. it F. Mahoning St. DANVIL.i<B,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers