mmmmtms&m PROFESSIONAL CAMS. h. Fiurz ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Okkiok Front Room, Oyer Postoffio. BLOOMBflUHO, PA. J 11. MAIZE ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, insuhanob ana jiBAt estate agent, Okfiob. Room No. 2, Columbian building. HLOOMSIIUltO, lA. I Jan. soth 1SS8, tt. N. u. vvlui, ATTOllNIT 5T-AT-LAW. omoe In Knt'B Uulldlng. BLoomiuma.Pj, J OlIN M. OI,AHK, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW AMD JUaTIOE OF THE PEACE. Office over Morer llroa. Drug Store. c V. MILLER, ATTOUNBV-AT-LAWi Offlcoln Brower's buUdlng.socondnoor.rooDi No.l Bloomsburg, Fa. B. FKANK ZARK, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. Bloomsburg, Fa. onico corner of Centre una Main streets. Clark a Uulldlng. Can be consulted In Gorman. G EO. E. ELWELL ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Ofllcc on second floor, third room of Col- dmman ijuuuinit, Main street, below &i chango Hotel. JpADL E. WIHT, Attorney-at-Law. nice In Columbian Bcilowo, Third floor. BLOOMSBURG, PA. JJ V. WHITE, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, DLOOMSBURQ, PA, Onico in Wlrts1 Building, 2nd floor, may 1-tf 8. BNOKR. t, 8. WIMTIESTIIN, KNOBB & WINTERSTEEN, Attorneys-at-Law. Office lu 1st National Hank building, second floor, nrstdoortotheleft. Corner ot Main and Market strootsuioompturg, Fa. ViFl'etmani and Bounties Collected. P. BILLMEYER, (DISTRICT ATTORNEY.) ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. 3"Offlco over Dentlcr's shoo store, Bloomsburg, Pa, apr-30.8e. y. H. RUAWN. ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. Catawtssa, Fa. omoe.oorner of Third and MalnBtreeU QUANT- HERRING, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, BLOOMSBURQ, PA. Offlco oyer Kawllng's Meat Market. -yj-IOUAEL P. EYEHLY, ' Conveyancer, Collector of Claims. AND LEOAL ADVICE IN THE SETTLEMENT. OF , ESTATES, tar. W Offlco in Dentler's building with P. P. BUI meyer, attorcev-at-law, (rent rooms, 2nd floor Bloomsburg, Pa. (apr-s. D It. HONOIU A. ROBBINS. Office and residence. West First street. Bloom. Dure, Fa. noW88lr.- JB. McKELVY, M. D.,Burgeon andPhy .siclan, north side Main treet.below Market D R. J. 0. BUTTER, PHYSICIAN ASUKOBON, Office, North Market street, Bloomsburg, Pa DR. WM. II. REBER Surgeon and rnrelclan. Office corner ot Hock and Market treet. ESTABLISHED 1870. J. J. BROWN. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Offlco and residence on Third street near Metho dist church. Diseases ot tho eye a specialty. JQR. J. R. EVANS. Treatment of Chronio Diseases made a SPECIALTY. Office, Third Street, Br.ooMsmmo Pa J. HESS, D. D. S., rnriimtn ot the PblladelDhla Dental CollMro. Having openea a uenuu uuiro m LOCKARD'S BUILDING, corner ot Main and Centre streets, BLOOMSBURG, A., s prepared to receive all patients requli og pro. cttloual services. KTI1EU, OAS, AND LOCAL ANAESTHETICS administered for the painless extraction ot teeth free ot charge when artlflclal teeth are inserted. ALL WOHK QUAIIANTBKD AS RKl'ltESK.NTED. octsMy. m n. HOUSE, DENTIST, .Si OOM811UBO, COLUMBIA COUNTY, Pa wllstylesof work done In a superior manner .work warranted as represented. Tbitb Eztbaot bd without pain by the use of Qas, and tree of ohargewhenartlflclalteeth arelnsertod. Offlco In Barton's building, Main street, below Market, live doors below Klelnva drug stoic, first floor. 7p be open at all kourt during the dai .Novss-ir T . HARTMAN airsBSBNTS rat TCLiowma AMERICAN INSURANCE COMPANIES North American or Philadelphia, Franklin, " Pennsylvania, " ' York, of Pennsylvania. Hanover, or N. Y. Sueens, ot London, orth British, of London. Office on Market Streot, No, , Bloomsburg, oot.. 1- Bloomsburg Fire and Lifs Ins. Agency. ESTABLISHED JSfSo. Jfl. P. LUTZ (Successor to Freas Brown) AGENT AND BltOKBK COBrAWBS RraBSBNTBDJ Assets .fltna Fire Ins. Cd of Hartford,., f 8,sss,sss.H lUrtford of Hartford 6,2x8.609.67 l'boenlxot Hartford. 4,7J8'4.1J Hprlngneld ot sprtnzfleld. , 3,0W,oS.8 Plre Association, Philadelphia.,.,., isn.TS'i.W ouardlan of London - 0,603,S!171 l'hconlx, of London ,24,&SS.48 Lancashlreot EnglandtU. ti. branch) l,Wi,iea.w Itoyal of Kngland 4,863,44.00 Mutual lieneat Life Ins. Co. ot New. ark, N.J 41,T,W8.53 Losses promptly adjusted and paid at this office. KIRK INSURANCE AGENCY OF J. H. MAIZE, Ofllco 2nd floor Columbian Building, BLOOMSBURG, PA. Liverpool LoLdon ana Qlobe, largest In the world. ASSETS. IMPERIAL of Ii)ndon, t,6S8,47 00 CON'l iNKNTALof New York, 3,iW,Ml S3 AMERICAN ot Philadelphia, ti,40i,A.ll NIAGARA Of New York, n,two,4m.M une i, tess, tr. O.a.StWIILL. 1. J X BITTEHBBNMB, J THE A Sultan sat by Danube's tide And sore distressed aloud he cried; While like the waters to the sea His tears ran down both fast and free. A passing stranger said : " My friend, Why do those tears so fast descend?" "Alas 1 " he sobbed, "I've lost all hope ; I've lost my cake of Ivory SoAp. No more in pride through town I'll go, With garments clean and white as snow; A WORD OF WARNING. There are many white soaps, each represented to be "Just as good as the 1 Ivory' i" they ARE.NOTf.but like all counterfeits) lack the peculiar and remarkable qualities of the genuine, Ask for "Ivory" Soap. and Insist upon getting It, Copyright 1SSG, by Procter & Gamble. QUICKEST REMEDY KNOWN For bdcb4. tid alt Bad den, shirp, or lonf-itindinf p&lns or wMknepnea of trtry kind. Virtues of fresh bopi, hemlock and pin btlMo oombiiMd. It It wonderfully SOOTHING, PAW-KILLING, CURATIVE and STRENGTHENING. it sautnea every time. TRY ONE NOW. 38 Cts. s for .oo. Sold .TerrwbeM, or m&Uod for prlo. Jwt for tlgnature e tht proprietor, .'CLOTHING ! CLOTHING :o:- O. W. BERTSGH, THE MERCHANT TAILOR. to: Cents' Furnishing Qoods.B&ts & C&ps OF EVERY DESCRIPTIONS Suits made to order at short notioo and a fit always guaranteed or no sale. Call and exatnino the largest and best seleoted stock of 'goods over shown in Columbia county. Btore next door to First National Bank, MAIN STREET, Blootnsburs: Pa WILLIAM HART BLOOMSBUBG, PENN'A., AGENT FOR THK KEYSTONE DYNAMITE POWDER CO. manuf actruers of the celebrated Keystone Dyna mite. This explosive Is glTlng umreraal sstlafac tlon Quotations cheerfully given. (Aug 117 J.R. SMITH & CO. 'LIMITED. MILTON) Pa., DEALXRS IN PIAN0S By the following well known makers; ChickcriiiK, Knulic, Weber, Hallet & Davis. Can also furnish any of the cheaper makes at manufacturers prices. Do not buy a piano be fore getting our prices. o Catalogue and Price Lists On application. 8epu-st. r,J.N.J,B.HQENSACK I 1' M.dlJVii'urglo.l,Ome.,- ' 206 Nt!H SECOND '8T;, PHILADA. Xiitisuiii: 'n,th.l...rm.nf nf v.mthfnl ImDrtul.nee. AVuiofTltcor.M'arvou. n.Wllly PcUl IHhiim, OininltAtlon by mill fro. orcturg., li.iohB.nt.rr. Omeohomi from Aix.toa r.x;,fc from e to u r.u Mayll-P--Catr J. B. WILUAilB, AUCTIONEER. BLOOMBIlDliO, I'A. Bal Estat Bought and Sold. Parties desiring to buy horses and wagons Xould do well to call on tho above. yfAiNwiuanT & co., WHOLESALE OROCERS, PillLADILriHA, Pa. 1KAB, STItDrS, COFFBB, HU0AI1, MOLABHEb 'pxs '-on 'vaos uuvom 'sioi.is 'som M. B. Corner Kcoondind Arch 8ta ibt orders will reoelve prompt stwntuoi QKT YOUR JOU PRINTING DONE AT THE COLUMBIAN OFFICE PUAOI US lie BLOOMSBURG, PA., FRIDAY, FEBRUARY SULTAN But in disgrace must move about, By scornful lingers pointed out." "Not so," the noble stranger cried; "I have a piece and will divide;" And from his coat-tail pocket drew A cake and broke it fair in two. Then rose in joy the Sultan gray, And made that man a Turkish Bey, With servants kind and Viiicrs sage, And fifty wives to cheer his age'. MY BACK! out for one ofthota llOV BBBBBt. BBBBBBBl Hop Plaster Co., Boston, on the genuine good. -L ' K BOWN ACUIJE THE BEST BURNING OIL THAT CAN BE MADE FROM PETROLEUM. It gives a brilliant light. It will not smoke the chimneys. It will not cbar the wick. It has a high nre test. It will not explode. It Is pre-eminently a family safety oil. WE CHALLENGE COMPARISON With any other Illuminating oil made. We Stake Our Reputation, As refiners, upon the statement tbat it Is THE BEST OIL IN THE WORLD. Ask ycur dealer for ASM E OIL M. ANVIIXE PA. Trade for Bloomsburg and Vicinity supplied by MOYER BROS.. Bloomsburg, Pa. EepMy. Cures Liver Complaint, Bilious Affec AXADOR AXADOR tions, JjOSS 01 ' Apetltc, Sick Headache, Sick Stomach, Gid- dlness,Costivo- ness, Dyspepsia ' Kidnovtroublo I and all delicate Female Com plaints. Sold everywhere. Trice 25 cents. Fragrant! &0 Lasting 1 . The Leading Perfume for the Toilet and Bold by all doalora. Price 25 ots. Salvation Oil Print only 15 cti. Soli by alldruggliti. Will relievo Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Swellings,Bruis6,Lumbago,Sprains, , Headache, Toothache, Sores, Burnt, Wounds, Cuts, Scalds, Backache, Frostbites. Chapped Hands and Face, Gout, or any bodily pain or ailment. fttitme tltee.-Prlei 10 Cti. LANQC S HUBS. Tk$ Oriat lobaeco Ait- At ail aruggtin. EXCHANGE HOTEL W. R. TUBBS, PROPRIETOR BLOOUSBUEO.PA. OPFOBITBOODUT I10UHK Large and convenient Bample rooms. Hath room hot and cold water; ana all modern convooloooi MADE WITH BOILING WATER. E P P S ' 8 pRATErUL-COMFORTING. COOOA MADE WITH BOILING MILK. V b -d-t. OUB rUTDEE. nBAD HKronB TUB FAHMKIts' 1NSTITUTR AT MILI.VILI.r. COLUMMA CO. I'A. JAN1. 11 1889 lit B. II. 1'AIKTER ESQ. OP TUnilOTVlLI.E I'A. Mn fnnt in mnrlorn historv so fullv chnilcngcn our admiration as tiio growth of tho American' Republic Tho child of rovolntion, cradled in adversity, yet proof aaainst tho hato ot Alonarchies, it has outstripped all its competitors; defied nil its enemieuj realized all the expectations of its friends, nnd to day, in every thing mat makes a is niton grand and noble, stands without an equal on earth. What it teas, is now, ana may yet be, nro the tbemos of this paper. Nor is it strango that I should discuss theso topics beforo a Farmcrrt' Institute. For of tho men who havo -contributed its stability,Nationnl grandeur, nnd integ rity, thoy challongo comparison with all others. When lis foundation was lnid in tho blood stained soil of LexinC' ton, Monmouth, nnd Valley orge, not one, but a thousand J'utnams rushed from tho green hills of Now Hampshire to tho Swamps of South Carolina in defense of liberty. And when Indo- pendenco was achieved and this child republic doffed the swadlini! olothes of infauoy and demanded a wider field for its energies, it was tho tonant of the soil who responded. He leveled the forest, pushed the (Jar ot Utilization Westward over the Allcchanios, across the Ohio, beyond the Mississippi into the hoart ot tho great JNorth West; and in the eighty third year of its young life, with his feet planted, midway, in tho fertile basin of tho Mississippi, ono hand rested on the rooky shores ot the Atlantic, the other touched the golden sands of the Pacific. Ho had domina ted the Continent. Hero his work was not coupled, nor tho power of his hand staid, when treason demanded tho surrender of tho fruits of our civili zation all that was Rood, free, and Godlike in this government and the lurid fires of civil war bim.t upon us, truo to his fame in the past and firm in his convictions of duty to tho future, from everylhill top.valloy, nnd plain of every Commonwealth ot a determined North from the tall pines of Maine to tho golden gates of tho Pacific, ho swept iu regiments, brigades, and divisions, at tho bugle's blast, into tho fifteen hundred thousand heroes who went forth in defenso of liberty and Union; as brave and gallant an army as ever shook tho earth with martial tread singing, "Wo aro coming rather Abraham, Three hundred thousand strong." The farmer has always been tho most important factor in the growth, mental, moral, and material, of this government from the hour ot its conception to the present moment of its most wonderful achievement, it is not, however, any class of citizens, but the nation itself I would eulogize. We are nearing the closing years of the nineteenth ceutury. The bun that rose upon it in doubt and gloom a hundred and one years ago, is now go mar down upon it not as then ou feeble, struggling band of patriots, but an enlightened and powerful Repuplio with out a rival in agriculture, mining, manufacturing, Science, learning, and all the graces of a well organized government on tho Western Continent and soon to be the supsrior, if indeed, she is not already, of any on tbo East ern, lint UH beginning was teoulo. Thirteen states clnng, most of them, to the shining shores of tho Atlantic. Tliey had tho name of states, but only enfeebled Colonics. Though protected from Arotio blasts by the unpenetrated foresU of Maine, thoy yet felt not the warm; life giving currents of tho Gulf Stream turning winter into spring as it brushes its warm breath on tho shores of Florida. The band of Spain held the key that opened tho gate to tho delusive fountain of perpetual youth. The Alleghanies and tbo Ohio marked their western boundary. Beyond theso was the "wilds ot tho west." Threo million of people still felt tho horrors of war and the burden of oppresslvo taxation. Love of liberty was in every heart, but grim poveity sat enthroned at every hearth stone. Scienco for them, had not opened her treasure house. It was rnascl eagainst the forces of nature. Toil wih the wooden shire and tho sledgo hammer won tho vic tories of tho steam-plow and tho iliamond-drill. Her rivors flowed as majostio thou as they do now, but their utility awaited, till 1807, the brain of a Stevens; and, her cotton fields till near tho samo period, tho inventive genious of a Whitney. Lightuings Hashed on every hill top, thunders reverberated in every valloy; but thero was no shriek ot tho steam whistle, no click of tho elcctrio telegraph. These elumberiuggianU awoko in 1830 and 1814. Mountains of wealth, as a distinguished wtiter has said, "Shut up in liod H grantto sates set with lime locks" refueod to reveal her seoreis till the approach of the locomotive. Only the pack mule, on an Indian (nil, dared cross tho Alleghaniss. Westmorland Countv iu our own grand old Commonwealth was tho limits of her western civilization. No mills, factories, or furnaces. No Commerce, no navy nothing to export, nothing to defend. But the National heart beats grew stronger. New blood thrill ed her young life. Inrention loanod hor its energies. Forges, spindles, and wheels echoed tbo hum of industry on every hill-top, in every valloy. With two narrow boundaries she grasped tho hands of Florida and Louisiana on tho south securing tho key to tho Mississ ippi and then turned her face westward, Texas lay in tho lino of hor conquest and she welcomed her to tho Sister hood of States. Tho axe of tho pio neer still filled tho forest. On tho clearing, besides tho log cabin, roso tho littlo school and tho spirelees church. And in thoir work followed an irrepressible civilization railroads, canals, mills, furnaoes, fao torica, villiagcs, towns,oilUs, and broad acres of golden grain, jt teas the tread of empire, 8Ql oame nn the world stood amazed at tho fruits of seventy four years of Constitutional government. Now 33,000,000 people tho best fed, and tho best olothed iu tho world thirty-sir Sovereign Com monwealths, all in tho Zone of tbo strongest and most progressive people on Eiitb, with linked hands strotohing their sinew arms from ooean to ooean, and all living under ono organtio law the wisest, freest, and best over devised by tho brain of man of railroads 81,220 miles about tho combined mllago of Asia, Soutli America; Australia, Africa, and Central America in 1880 telegraph lines more than thoso of tho oldest country of Europe cotton crop 3,050,000 balos manufac tures not what thoy might havo been because unprotected against tho pauper labor of Europo, but awaiting a hotter day under a wiso protcotivo system whioh opened up wnoio mines ot wealth which hitherto had been un touched because fifty cents in England nnd Belgium in woolen, cotton and other fabrics, discounts a dollar and a quarter in freo Amorica. But wo havo grown strong nnd self reliant. Our graliaries wero overflowing and might have delighted tho oyes of tho eons ot Jacob. There oame the first great test of our freo institutions which tried tho vory ligaments of government, the civil conflict of 18G1, tho most cxhaustivo of modern times. This we sustained in spito of foreign hato, tin Union of thirtv-six states was restored to its proud position in tho gallery of nations, and two as bravo ana gallant armies as ever trod fho earth returned, amid tho npplaudits of Christcndom,to peco- nil vocations as it nothing had occurcu. since then a now era has dawned and the nation has awoko to new lifo and new energy. It is a significant fact, eavs a wtiter, that tho vast region ijoyond the Mississippi has been px plored and settled almost wholly with' in tho last thirty-five years, and. at least threo fourths of it sinco tho close of our civil war. Never before did wo mako suoh strides in material develop ment. Scarcely had tho roar of artil lery died away among tho hills of old Virginia till the golden Bpiko was riveted that united tho Central and Union Pacific railways spanning tho continent with iron bands. Busy bumming cities havo settled all along their track. Forests havo been trans formed into blooming gardens, and mines of nntold wealth forced to yield their spcrets. The locomotivo and steam engine have broken tho seats of secrecy stamped upon them since tho dawn of Creation, and manufactures havo lit up oyery plain, hill and valloy faom Maino to California, and from tho Lakes to tho Gulf; and now tho music of toil hum its notes throughout every inch of our broad domain. Science too has been lavish of her gifts, nnd inven tion lias conquered the forces of nature. Mountains no longer offer obstacles to engineering skill. Rivers are spanned in a day. Tho harvester gathers tho wheat in the morning. Good houso wives prepare it for supper. Tho old oinal boat and the eraigraut train over tho plain aro relics of tho past. In seven days, by tho former, goods wero transported from Philadelphia to Pitts burg. Now by steam thoy leave Now York on Monday morning, and in seven days aro in the hands of consumers in San Francisco. We havo outstripped the world in patents, annually issuing four times as many as tho country that gave us birth. At a late Electric expo sition in France fivo gold medals wero offered for tho most noted inventions and discoveries. How many camo to Araericat Only five. Education hero, too, is abreast of tho tim.'S. Our freo school system is tho glory ol our Re public, whilo wo havo colleges and universities, all over tho land, with proffessors earnest, devoted, and as eminent for their scholarship as any in Germany. From these are issuing an nually a stream of young men and women who, if thoy aro lea skilled in the subtle refinements of Philosophy, havo less of its blighting infidelity. To sum up tho past and tho present; Tho sun of 1776 roso in gloom. It now shines upon a great and prosper ous Republic. Once we wero an in- tant, now a giant. Then thirteen dependent Colonies, now thirty-eight, Sovereign and independent states all directod by oar Constitution and all bound together with inseperablo ties; crowned with tho sheaves of plenty, blessed witli peace, hands and hearts united in love and fraternity and linked in tho bonds of union across a coili- nent In 177G three millions; 1801, thirty-three million: and now 1889, sivty-three million po pie! But what of our future! Patrick Henry said, "I know of no way of judging of tho futuro but by the past." Tho strength of the giant oak lies wrapped iii the little acorn. Tho boy is father to the man. To solvo ono olo ment of our destined supreraooy wo have but to look at tbo vastness of our territory. An ablo writer says; "It may surpnso some to bo told thnt if our llepublio were petitioned off it would form seventeen states as largo as Spain; or thirty-one each as largo as Italy; or sixty-four, each as largo as tMiglnnd or Wales: or that you can tako a map of six of tho leading pow ers of Europo France, Germany, Aus tria, Great Britain and Ireland, and Italy, attaching as an annex Switzer land, Portugal, Spain, Greece. Holland and Denmark, and lay them all down on the map of tho United States West of tho city of Now York, and you will cover littlo more thau one third of tbo territory. What an Empire!" Or as Gladstono says "tho greatest continu ous empire ver established by man. Now for some facts and figures start ling but none tho less truo. The threo crowning elements in our supremacy, presont and prospective, are in our un- equaled agricultural, mining, and manufacturing resources. A bnof consideration of eaoh will close this papr. The same writer puts it forcibly when ho says: "Has it over occurred to you to ask how tho Empire of China Hiipports a population of 850,000,0001 we know thoy aro not a oommerotal or manufacturing poople. Tho con- clnsioi) is, that they derive their support maiuiy iron; mo sou. now on What do they do this! Her area is littlo less man t,'iuu,uuu square miles. Tho area covered by mountains is about 300,000 Bquaro.mlles. Taku anothorr 100,000 tor her barron plains, and tho oalcu a tion shows her arablo laud to bo about 1,000,000 equaro milos. Off this hor swarming minions support themselves and the government. ' Wo boast that in 1880 wo fed a nonulatiou of AO.OilO. 000 and cent to the hungry firesides of Kuropo, of all kinds of cereals, 383,000 000 bushels. Nothing about it ta boast of. On what did wo do it. By our last census the area of land in the United States, leaving out Alaska, is about 2,970,000 squaro railoa. Of this 1,500,000 aro arable. On this wo pro duced that great crop of 1879. But wo cultivated only about G,$,00Q square miles, or 105.0Q0.000 aoroa. This is only one niutu of tho whole. 8, 1889. Now uso your mathematics. Multiply tho population and tho exports each by nlno and you havo tho astounding fig ures 450,000,000 for tho first, nnd 2,557,000,000. That is, if tho plow fiharo wero to run over all, wo could sustain a population of 450,000,000 souls, nnd ship 2,557,000,000 bushels to starving Europe, lint, hear what tho statistician, Atkinson says. Instead of this 50,000,000 which wo now sustain ono hundred million could bo supported without increasing the area of a singio farm, or adding one to their number by merely bringing onr products. up to our average standard of reasonably good agriculture." Multiply again by two and you have tho sustenance for 900,000,000 people nnd a surplus of 5,114,000,000 bnshols for famished months abroad. Think, then, of tbo marvelous possibilities of our soil, my farmer friends. Take theso facts homo with you, and ponder them well. Bnt thero is still greater wealth under tho soil. Twenty years ago but ono Nation, England, led us in mining. In 1880 wo passed her by threo per cent, and every year only widons tho gap. To day our raining operations aro more oxtenslvo than all those of Ab'io, Africa, Continental Europe, South America, Mexico, and Canada. Be tween 1870 and 1880 we produced of precious metals, $730,000,000. Half the gold and silver in tho world's market comes from tho mines of America. Look at tho univirsality of our valuable ores and minerals. Twenty-thrco states of tho Union, it is said contain iron. Ono of them enough to meet the world's demands for hundreds, if not thousands, of years. Uur coal measures aro witn out limit, and moro easily mined than tho deep mines of England. The sta tistics of 1830, then tho greatest in crease between 1870 and 1880. Hero aro about tho figures : lav. itou. ron oro.tons.4.000.000. 9.50O.0O0 Increase 10 per ct. copper " n,too. ai.soo " eo " Petroleum, gal. a,ooo,ooo. 8CO,ooo,ooo " so fold. It is said that iu twenty years one western State mined over 438,000,- 000 of precious minerals. That was Novada when famous Comstock Lodo with its twelvo small holes in a moun tain side, yielded $37,000,000 in ono year. All the wealth, says a writer, of tho corn fields of Pennsylvania, New York, New England, Wisconsin, Miehigan and Minnesota, in that year 1877, scarcely equaled it. It is claim ed, by good authoritrity, that tho min eral out put west of tho Mississippi for isao was i,ouu,uuu,uuu. a sum equal to almost one half of the agricultural yield of tho cntiro United States. This is not all. Tho area of our wt-stern coal fields is somothing like 200,000 Bquaro miles, and, with the exception of Minnesota, coal there is found in overy western Stato and territory iron in nil of them. Missouri has it in every county. Minnesota, Nebraska, and the Indian .territory alone havo no lead, but 500 square miles in Miss ouri are lead producing, in tbo year 1877 yielding over 70000000 lbs. All havo copper excepting two, Nebraska nnd Kansas. Salt deposits, too, in the west are inexhaustible. Also sulphur. Ono mountain in Idaho contains it three per ct. pure, whilo Louisaca has n bed almost as 'big, 112 feet thick. Sulphate of soda aro found n lakes in Wyoming about ninety per ct. pure, and from eight to ten feet in the vein. How about tiui tornwal, wo havo been told, must supply the world. No need to put it on tho "freo list" if tbo United States geologist for Montana is correct, who says that tin bearing rocks aro found thero which can be quarried from tho surface, veins more than hfty feet thick surpassing the famous English mine, and which, he thinks, will never bo exhausted. Tar iff "reformers" should look at this fact n arranging their schedules. In theso two departments then, Agriculture and Mining, wo lead tho world. But thero is another in which we lead it. That is manufacturing. From 1870 to 1880 the manufacturers of Franco inoreascd 225,000,000, of Germany S430.000.000, of England igfiao.OOO.OOO, while thoso ot our coun try increased ovor 1,000,000,000. Tho eulogy ot that "grand old man of England is pertinent right hero. She the U. S.1 will probably become what wo are now, tbo bead-servant in too great household of tho world, the employer of all employed, because her services will bo the most and ablest. Wo aro that to-day Mr. Gladstono. In this department of our industries tho elements of our superiority lie, 1st in tho superabundance ot oar raw material, especially coal. Every year adds to the cost of coal in Eng land becauso of tho depth of her mines. Here its production on ao count of the competition in labor and in other directions, is annually less ox potiBlvo. Think ot England having to uiuna tut, uv.edu. uuwv ujucb, iui uvery 1 r . . . 1. . . l. . . i 1 , , . 1, -nnnn onnn uieui ouuuii vimv mie spina, wnuo uero wo grow tho cotton and bavo in abund nnce all the requisite for its manufao ttiro. See what is beginning to tako place in a now South, in Alabama, rennessee, Virginia and IN orth Uaro lina. Thero cotton, coal and iron have craved for voire, tho inspiring touch of homo enterprise and capital in their development. It was tho plea of common sense ana pride. Now . thoss States aro beginning to bo lit up with mills, taotories, and forges, whioh throaten serious competition to tho iron masters and other manufacturers of Pittsburg whioh has tho advantago of natural gas- Why should thoy buy abroad what thoy can manufacture at homo for nearly tho samo cost, and time givo employment to their own laborers at a remuneration, too, which puts out ot sight the degradation of :uo pauper muor 01 1'-uroptiT 1 believo 11 r. . .. a now era Is breaking upon this sec tion, and that under tho Atu,erioan, and not tho Cobden idea, thev will soon swing into tho line of manufac turing Statos. I say, God Speod the davl Our 2nd element of suproraaoy ia in our machinery and in tho Biioorior in. vontivo talent of tho American mecha nic Hear tho testimony of a few dis interested witnesses. Of us tho Me. ouanioai uoriu 01 London saysi "The Uuitod States has the best maohinory mm youiB ,u VUB worm. Aim uor- beit bpenoert "Beyond question in re- spoot of meohanioal appliances, tho ........ v..a - uuau u, a i, uuuuo. A'ranoo, too, mrougn an ogonU sbiiv uero uy per Alinister ftl uqujmorce, aims, uer testimony to Uo naiuuwivub wi'u sue says iua,i i no Bupenonty 01 our maouuiery and tools THE COLUMBIAN, VOL, XXIII.NOO COLUMBIA DEMOCRAT, VOL. Lll, NO 44 llos in tho lino of dinger to tho indus tries of Kuropo. Superior tools, su perior genius, and you have superior mechanics. Tho valuo 01 our mono factored products in 1880 exceeded thoso of our agriculture by $1,812,000. Steam nnd electricity have locked tho nations in friendly commerce. Tho markets of tho world nro open to us. It is said that wo are almost at tbo door of competition with Sheffield in steels, Manchester in low grades of cotton tcxtilos, Birmingham in electro plate, and Geneva in watchci. Wo must havo tho trade of South Ameri ca. The bullet Bent by tho hand of a mad assassin only delayed it. Bnt look nt '.ho heathen world with its 1,000,000,000 population, 200,000,000 of them littlo above tho beast, Thoy aro all to bo clothed, fed, educated, nnd lifted up to n higher plain of so cial existence Civilization must do this. From the millions of equatorial Africa comes tho Macedonian cry: ''como o or and help us." Asia longs to bo Bet freo from the prison houso of her ignornnco and degradation. It will como. W hero more cheeruuy, wl'ero more effectively than from America? H'';hcr wants to the crea tive act of civilization. With tho missionary's bible must go tho plow, tho harvester tho stoam engine And they aro. 500 of tho first American make, wont to ono of these countries in a singio year. Will not these, and similiar necessities, follow tho footsteps of Livingstono and istanleyT Why hot India take, in ono year, of America $12,000,000 worth of iron manufac tures, and of cotton fabrics $100,000, 000 as sho has of England! America must and toilhorasn these golden opportunities. To conclude with her ngrioulture, mining and manufactur ing in their infancy, yet all three lead ing the nations, what do yon ask, will bo her future! Washed by two ocoans, lapped North by the lakes, South hy tho gulf, safe from foreign invasion, in the belt of God's most di versified gifts to man, holding in gra nite vaults twenty-fivo times tho con dreto wealth and power of Europe, obedient to one organio law, over it waving an untarnished flag tho flag of Bunker Hill, tho flag of Lundy's Lano, tho flag of glorious Gettysburg, and now the nag of sixty-two million people, intelligent, virtuous, brave, and bound in our holy purpose, tho uplift ing oj man, and wo trust in our invio lable union tho union of hearts, tho union of hands, and tho union of States! What, must be her future! Free, unequaleil, christianized Ameri ca! God speed it. Worth Telling Again- AN 0I.D STORV WITH A UEI.IOIITFUL TOUCH OF HUMANITY IN IT. Twenty years has passed sinco a certain Bath sea captain, entering the port at Now York, telegraphed his wilo at liath to 10m him at tho metro polis prepared for a sea voyage. Ac cordingly a day or two afier tho ar rival of the message saw tho wifo em barked upon tho through train from liatb to iiaston. accompanied by an in fant child Bcarccly two years old. This car was shunted on to the end of tho Portland train at Brunswick, and, leaving the child asleep, the Cap tain s wile seized the opportunity to fill tho baby's bottlo with milk iu tho depot restaurant. Whilo tho mother was intent upon her errand tho train slipped quietly out of tho station, and when tho. mother emerged from tho restaurant door it was fast disappear ing under tho Spring Street bridco. Hagerly sho explained tbo situation to the sympathizing group ot railroad men who gathered around. Baby and purse, containing all her money and ticket, were in the tast disappearing train. A hurried council followed, and a plan was instantly formed. Old No. 23, "Tho Brunswick," was side-tracked, waiting the passage of tho train just gone. Undo Thomp son, tho station baggage matter at that time, ran hastily to this engine asked her aid to overtake tho flying train. The genial Charles, ever ready to aid tho cause ot any female 111 dis tress, volunteered to catch the robber. Hastily filling the firebox with wood trom tho tender while ihompson was assisting tho woman to mount tho on giue, with a command to the switch man to "givo us tho main hue. with hand upon tho throttle, No. 23 flew quickly over tho switches and com menccd her run, An empty engino chasing a heavy tram up "Oak Hill grade," which ox tends four miles straight away from Brunswick, has an easy task, and bo fore thev had covered moro than half of that distance they could seo tho ob ject ot their pursuit. To sound his whistle, calling the attention of tho train men to tho chase, ami thereby stop tbo tram, was not part ot tho programme, fearing that ho might run over them should they Buuueuiy stop, oo quietly runuing along, tho roar of tho train doadeniug tho pursuit, ho is soon immediately be- h'1" them. Then his tender for they arQ running backward rubs against . r r . . 1 1,10 rear piauorm 01 me train, and while tho engineer holds her thero J-nompson assiBts the woman over tho tender, down upon the platform of the car containing tho babv. Etill fast asleep, tho mother clasping tightly tho Dome 01 milk. Wavtrley Jilaga An Exchango Bavs if morohauls think advertisements nro not read by 1110 people, inst let bira advertise givo something away and see how soon his stook is exhausted. Adver tisomeuts aro always read by tho people, for they aro on tho lookout for bargains, and when one is offcied they aro not siow 10 tako advantage 01 it. It has just been discovered that the shrowdest New York bootblacks aim to become tho owners of several oom pieto uootuiacKing outnts. i liev can not, of courso, uso all of these them selves, but thoy loaso them to other boys, charging usurious rales therefor. it ho rents his brushes to ono bov an his box nnd foot-rent to another ho o nets from each one-quarter of his dailv I earnings, ji no ren,ia mo wnoio con pern to erne my, that boy must give litra, half of his gains evory day. Not Infrequently tho thriftiest, of the youngsters make as much as $10 per 1 day by this scheme Frrp' tndl Motion. TUB CL'NNlHfl CONTRIVANCE OP . A NKW TOItK ORNlUS TO RUN I'ORBVEIt. A city man who had bcon Informed that thero was n pleco of mechanism purporting to bo a perpetual motion in oxistonoo at Jjyons, wayno county, made n visit to tbo town a day or two ago to satisfy hts curiosity on tho sub ject. On his return no saiti: "x can not say, '1 oame, 1 saw, 1 conquered, lor to tell you tho troth I was nnnblo to discover how tho machine docs what I saw it do, but thero is some triok about it I am satisfied. Still as mechanloal curiosity tho conlnvanco ought to pay in a dime musenm. 1 went down to Lyons nnd after a littlo searoh found David Jennings, a man about 40 years old, tho inventor of tho motor, or whatever you would call it. I madn known mv wish to see his ma chine, and after a littlo parloy be con sonted to givo mo n view of it, pre facing his consent oy stating tnai, it wn taken ansrt and would havo to bo connected beforo it would work. Wo went to his houso, in tho yard back of hioli stands a workshop containing tho motor. Every tioor of tho shop was locked, and as its owner produced kov to tho front door ho aavisea mo that I could go in the back-way with less trouble than by tho front, as I would havo to climb a ladder in tho latter case. Ho opened the back door from tho inside and I was ushered in to a room twenty feet Bquaro, fitted tip like a carpenter shop, with various tools lving around. Tho apparatus I camo to seo was attached to a bench and consisted of a chain about hvo feet long mado of a peouliarily shaped links that oould not easily be describ ed without a drawing. Ono of tho links w.13 out of plaoo and tho inven tor proceeded to put it in order. When that was done the contrivance was ready for exhibition. Tho chain ran over threo rollers tbat formed a vertical triangle, ono side of which was perpendicular. Tho chain was so constructed that in running botween tho rollers that were vertioal tho links had a movement by which they closed together bo that in tho spaco of a foot there would bo one or two more links than in tho same distanco when tho links wero extended. There would consequently be a groater weight in tho vortical lino iu an equal distance than in any other place in tho obain. It was on this dilterenco in weignt that Mr. Jennings said the power of tho machine dopunded. One of tho pulleys over which tho chain ran was connected with a brake-wheel by which the mi tion ot tbo chain could bo stopped by applying tho brake. After tho chain was connected and tho brake taken off, tho chain began to run around tho pulleys as though it had an inherent motion. The pulleys over whioh it ran were set on rollers that reduced tho friction to the mini mum, but the force of tho maihmo was only a trifle, as I could stop it with my lingers. Tho cnain seeraeu to carry itself around tho triangle con tinuously; but 1 noticed mat .lonnings would not lot mo take hold of the brake, and I half suspooted that it had omething to do with tho constant motion of the chain, which, apparently moved in debance of the laws ot grav ity. If I had been allowed to closely cxamtno tho whole ining 1 am sausnea that I could have discovered the secret of its action. I admit that it is a well contrived devico to catch tho eye apd deceive tho unskillful into tho belief that it is perpetual motion. Jennings told mo that ho had spent $50,000 on tho invention, and had been working at it for twenty-ono years. The mo chino ho has in Lyons is the 102d ono o has built, and ho is not sausnea with it. "If von ask Jennings for an expia tion of tho working of tho contrivanoe, his answers are not clear. Ho talks about tho 'surplus power' in tho double chain' and the 'mechanical con struction of tho links' in a way that makes me think he is not informed on tho laws of mechanics or is trying to deceive the visitor by tho ue of jar gon that sounds learned but me ins htng. ' Jiochestor lJost-J!J.epre$s. The four daughters of the Chief Justice of tho United States in society are the most artistically gowned belles of tho season. At Mrs. Jleyelaod s drawing room Miss Grace, a petite and blonde strongly resembling her father, wore an art gown of old pink bro cade heavily braided with gold thread. it consisted of a straight, lull Mexi can skirt, laid in plaits, and short Mex ican jacket with vest nnd foil sleeves in white crepo du chine. Miss Maud, who is very retiring, prefers sombre hues and plainer styles by way of con trast. Miss Alary lias all her toilettes after tho styles of the Empress Joseph ine. Sho has a nnmber of theso in different shades and all very elegant iu cut and material. This young Tady bears a striking resemblance to the beautiful and affectionato Empress. She has jet black hair, cut short, which clusters about her head in most classic and beautiful curls. Tho youngest of tho society quartette of tho Chief Justices family, Mildred, has a particular fondness lor tho Direotoiro gowns, which are very becoming. The Chiof Justico h vory proud of his daughters and society is full of admir ation lor tbem, Thoir first season in tho social whirl of Washington has been a pleasant triumph. The Troubled Bamoan Islands. The Samonii, or Navigator Islands, aro a' group in tho raciho Ocean be tween latitudo 13 degrees 13 seconds and 14 degrees 30 seconds south aud longitude 108 degrees and 173 de grees west, comprising nine inhabited isiuuus, wuu Boverni iiueis. Aoeioiai area is 1,125 square miles, and the population is 36.800. Tho soil is rich and the surface densly wooded. Tho products oorapriso ooooauut oil,arrow root, cotton, castor beans, ginger, coffee, tortoiso shell and vegetables. The in habitants aro superior in bodily ami raonlal endowments to those of many other parts of Polynesia, They aro Christians and mostly Presbyterians. Tho country, by treaty, is under tho protection of the United States. Tho ports aro Apia, tho capital, and Pango Pnngo. Troy Press. Happy and Hungry. For over five years I was a constant suffer with that most terrible nnd an nouymous disease, dispepsia. After paying out hundreds of dollars, tbo only medlcino I found that would do mo any good wai Sulphur Bittors. Six bottles cured me, Now I can eat well and am happy nnd hungry. Kinion. Feb. 1.2t. A married man in Pennsylvania can uo longer borrow money trom his wtf witli impunity it is staled, as tho Su preme Court has deoided that tho marriod persons' property act of 1887 gives tho wito the right to take hor husband's property in execution and without his content.