OJ CANDIDATES. . r Ox vi 1 iCSJ A STAso:ng menace A Tart IIIII Lark Rrhin4 tbe Rpat- lirso Candidate. There is on fjuwtion depending on the election of tb cert president which, in its notn-Lt'jus iinptrrtance and vital Imperativeness, tanrt seia to every phil wophic observer to eiceed every other political qnertkm that the people are now called ripr-n to determine. All dileri:i of opinion respecting admin istrative reform, or silver coinage, or free trade or protection, or the personal qualities or antecedents of candidate, in short, the whole ordinary array ef electoral controversies, are. in compan ion, of inferior, indeed of almort tririal, XDOCttsDt. We mean the qnerrku whether those southern stav which have inherited negro population narpastis the num ber of their white citizens shall, by federal law and federal military force, be subjected to the political domination of th negroes, to nevro lei'Iatnr-, negTo governors and n"srro jodipn in their court, or whether they ehall con tinue to be governed by whit znen as now. Now it Uiak's no difference who may be the president whom the Republican party elect. That party is by its natnre and traditions under the nec3rity of enacting and executing an election law whose purpose and effect will be to pat the negrix?-) in control of several of the aoathern state-". There will be some unwillingness on the part of a i-atriotic minority amona tlie Republicans who will revolt :it the confluences of sich a measure, but t':..-.r opposition cannot avail. The ne"ev-ity of the situation will sapprer force bill U Vw. result of a tw in Novemtxr. On tlie otl.- r snch t, and ret-tance. A the inevitib!'- f.r :s.g Republican victory i:.d. and bv the nature and urctWy of the ideas involved, the buccws of t;jo ly.:uy;racy is death to tlie force bill ; r j-ot. Kille-1 in thw election, it can never be reive. In thi view .-f the content, what con scientious Democrat can hetate aVjut his duty? Better vote for the lilrty and the white government of the south ern states rather than consent to the election of respectable Benjamin Harri son with a force bill in his pocket. New York Sun. The Embodiment of Democracy. From the instant that Mr. Geveland was declared it nominee by the chair man of our national Democratic conven tion he ceased to be a private citizen and became the representative and embodi ment of the success and the principles of Democracy, so it is our duty as Demo crats to bnry in the grave of oblivion all past differences, and with a nnaniiLity of purpose and in unbroken ranks bear onward and to victory the banner of our party. The man who seeks to revive old differences or attempts to create a breach in the Democratic ranks of this or any other state is a traitor to his party and an enemy to hU people. There are but two parties known in the ffreat contest now npon us. Republicanism, as represent' in Benjamin Harrwon, and Democracy, m represented in Grover Cleveland. Columbia S. C.) Register. Cleveland Can Carry Xtw York. It is almost certain that the candidate at the Democratic party will be elected. If there is a Democrat living who can carry the state of New York that man is Grover Cleveland. As a strong can didate, as a safe candidate, as a popular candidate, he was the most available man to be found in the ranks of the Democracy. One thing which the Chicago convention has detnontrtrated beyond any question is the marvelous popularity of Mr. Cleveland with the voting maaaes. No ex-president has been so conspicuous a figure as has Mr. Cleveland. No a tn teaman has ten ac corded greater deference by thinking men. Buffalo Enquirer. Tli I'reaideot'a Apology. Mr. Harrison made a characteristic speech to tho friends who gathered to congratulate hi:.n on his nomination. He apologized humbly for not having offices enough to go around among all who had "deserved" them by working for his election, but insisted that he did the best hecould. We think the president's apol ogy should bo accepted. Memphis Com mercial (Dew.). Tariff Reform and Victory, The feature of tlie platform which will mark the fighting line of the cam paign is its tariff plank. The nomina tion of Cleveland on this platform draws the issue sharply between the parties. Cnder tlie banner of Cleveland and tariff reform the ueuiocracy of the na tion, if it opposes a united front to tho enemy, march to certain victory. Boston Globe. Contribution Thankfully Received. Mr. FLirrison'H administration hoo no rebuke for Mr. Wanamaker's assaults on civil service reform. Contributions to the campaign corruption fund will be thankfully received in every federal building. Civil service reform, like one cent postage, is only for platforms. Louisville Courier-Journal. A FromUIng Outlook. Today no true Democrat can say that a different result in Chicago would have been hotter for the party. It is a proud day for the Democracy of the nation. The skies are bright with promise. Bjtfalojriines. A CCVING GOVERNOR. 1: 11a Carr. CaadLlat ml tb Drmorrata ef In Tar IleH Mate. Eliaa Carr. the pibernut'irial candi date cf th? Democrat of North Caro lina, is a practical farmer who has male m'wy at t'je Lupine. He U well educated un, and ha 1 no idea that he would be so hiably boaored ly Li party. The only Carr who w.s a candidate be- trxis CARR. f -re the convention was Jul S. Carr. the wealthy tobacco rcan-farturer of Durham. Mr. Elia Carr ha n pre ident of the North Carolina Farmer' Alliance, and hi held minor elective of fices ia his county. He will be the next governor of North Carolina without d-jubt. In his i-ech accepting the nomination Mr. Carr said: "I know how to do only two tbin1-: One is to super intend a farm, and the other is to rote the Democratic ticket." An ImprrrtinMe Candidate. For the third time the Democracy of the nation summons Grover Cleveland to lead it azain-.t the hot of Republic anism The third time he is summoned from private citizenship by the almx-t unaidnjous voice of his party, with the approval of hts of independents and amid the applause of patriotic cirizens generally, whf.e ir.teret in g'Xl gov ernment and honest alministration if not helgel in by party line. It was the de.ire aye, the demand 'A his rarty that the brave, courageous, hon est president who suffered df-ht in the firt battle for the people's cause should lead them on in the final and decisive battle. whn prnmies of victory are so abundant. The forces that cotnjiel the nomination of Cleveland wiil V pitc-nt in the election. Grover Cleveland will be chfen to the presidency ry the larg- i est pc)pulir majority and by the largest electoral vote ever given to any candi date. Utica Observer. r.MOX, UAH MOW, OKMOCKACY. Iiifferences of opinion and Judg ment ia Democratic conventions arc by no means onwholnotne Indica tions, hnt it Is hardly conceivable, in view of th" importance of our kucccm to the country and the party, that there Khotild lie anywhere among Democrats any lack of harmonious and active effort to win In the cam paign which opens before us. I have therefore no concern on that sute. Ject. It will certainly be my con stant endeavor to deM-rve the sup port of every Democrat. Grover Cleveland' Curd to the Public. Stevennon a Strong Man. Adlai E. Stevenson, the nominee for vice president, is a man of education, ability and hizh character. Unlike his Republican competitor, Mr. Steven.son has held an elective office, having served in the lower house of congress. Mr. Stevenson is exceedingly popular at home, as the record of his candidacies shows. He lives in a state which Sena tor Palmer is confident can be carried for the ticket. New York World. The White IIoum Chair. Air "Ills tml li marching on." We have nominated a lnoer t it tut vote la We're picked a man to lead the van, ud think that Le'll talt yon. He waa tried before in M and pulled the oous try tLrouKb. bested in the White House chair. CHUM'S. O ClevelaLd, we will meet you. O Cleveland, we will greet you. In triumph we will Kt yoa In the White Kotue chair. The tariff U the iwae, and the voters uuder utand, A candidate t'j rneDd it U tM iMpulur demaud, A beiriocrntic ruler i the tuititarllf bruiid. Weated in the White Horo chair. CuonM. We know the foe with heavy blow stands ready orKanixed, We know that yon, with courage true, have never temioriyl With patriotic duty tiora public trust diu-pUed, While filling the White House cbatr. Chorus. Io the battle next Voveinber we will Dutit the people's cause Under Grover Cleveland's haniier of Jut and enual laws. We'll never lower hlf standard, nor after light ing' iaue Till he's in the White House chair. Chorus. We arc bunting up a relic far the fair In VJ A likeness of the fnn.iT,er who came across the sta To pay the lots of turlffou tilings which should be free. With Ilarrinon la the chair. Chorus. Another thing we ouLt to have, and for it we'd tie praised, And eight of It would pliaM us all and make us uiu -lj amazed A picture of the workingmnn who had his wages raised. With Ilarilsoo in the cluiir. Chorus. HarrUou's men will court attain the tariff plu twrat. And wheme to carry their ticket through by "frying out the fat;" But what the people favor Is the hort Dt-nv o rat Beated In the White House chair. Chorus. With Cleveland as a leader, pure, strong aud undented. We'll go before the maaaee wtth our lasoes reo oncllad, d4 when the votes are counted the Uoenae shall be aled Giving him ths Whits Hons chair. -X. TwTfcWorM. EAT KHTER9, Tbr ar 4r farcically ao Lf 0 Eiai4 t Dlmitlkii Oikrra. Macy races of men lire nt.r;.r ca an i si si f x i sni thn are the roMt hardy and. from all I have been able to father on the subjsct, the ratsl free from diseases of all kindt S:r Francis IleaJ says of the Pampas Indent: They are all hormen cr, rather, pass ti.ir lire on horMback. Ia spite of the climate, which Is borninr hot in summer and frestio( ia winter. tl. brave meo, who bare oerer yetbeeo subdued, are entirely caked and bars not even a covering for their head. Thy live tott: er in tribes, each ef which is governed by a cacique, bat they htTtooCxed p!sce of resideoce. Where the pasture is Rood ther t!:ey are to be found until it is consume! by their horses and they then instantly move to a more verdant spot. Thrr have 'either k tread, fruit cor refutable, but they sub set entirely on the fWh of their mare. Dtsctibirf the effect co hirr.sr'.f of this diet. Sir Francis says: 'After I had been riding three or four months sod hai lived 03 beef and water I found myself in a condition which I can only describe by ssyisc that I felt no exertion could kill me, although I constitutor arrived so completely exhaustel that I could not Sak;yeta few hours' sleep upon my saddle on the ground always to com- J pletely restored me that for a week I could daily be upon my horse before sun j rise and ride till two or three hours after sunset and have really tired ten or 1 twelve horses a dsy. This will explain i the immense dittai.ces which people in 1 South America are said to ride, which I am confident could only be done on beef and water. " The G 'uaclios of the Ar-1 tine Republic lire eutirely on rcitt beef j and salt, scarcely ever tasting farinacious , or other vegetable food, aud their sols j beverase is mate or Paragusy tea, taken j v. ithout sugar. j Rates. Old as the history of the world itself is , that of the queen of Cowers. The ancient Greeks and Romans revelled in roses ; they were used lavishly at their feasts. In the time of the republic the people had thtir cups cf Faleinia.i wine swim ming with blooms; and the Spartau soldiers after the battle of Cirrha refused to drink any wine that was not perfumed with roses; while at the regatta of Baiae, ths whole surface of ths Lucrine lake was strewn with the flowers. Nro at his baoquetiogs showered rose-water npon his guests from an opening in the ceiling; and when honoring ths house of a nobis with his presence, the host is compelled to have his fountains playing rose-water. Ia the repast itself rose found place in the form of a rose pud ding. The Sybarites slept on beds stuffed with rose-leaves: the tyrant Dionysiui had his couch filled with them; Verus would travel with a garland on his bead and round his neck, and over his litter he had a thin net with rose-leaves Inter twined. Antiochus luxuriated uron a bed of blooms evsn in winter days and ! eights; and when Cleopatra entertained Antony, she had roses covering the floof to the depth, it is said, of an ell. We arc told that Heliogabaius supplied so many at one of his banquets that several of his guests were suffocated in the endeavor to extricate themselves from the abundance victims of a surfeit of sweet odors. Doubtless the immoderate use of roses by the ancients led in after days to their be ing relegated to their proper sphere in the garden ; for although we have had the wars of the roses in our modern times, the flowers were only plucked as a symbol. First and last, the rose has been the theme of countless poems; there is no poet worthy of the name who has not consecrated it in verse. la Itsal Life. "Jim the Penman" is perhaps a moro picturesque figure on the stage than la i real life, but he and bis kind exist, nev ertheless. The story of a "gentleman burglar" recently arrested in London furnishes the material for a sensational novel. After running a career of vice in England, this fellow, who was bat thirty, and handsome in face and figure, came to America and introduced himself to New York society as a lieutenant of the Royal Engineers. So well did ha play his part that within a year he mar ried the daughter ef a lady of means, a pretty and accomplished girL His mother-in-law soon pressed him to intro duce her to his fashionable relatives in England. Yielding to her solicitations he returned there and took a residence In a quiet country town, where he soon be came a social light, and entertained lav ishly. By-and-by mysterious burglaries began in the neighborhood, but no one dreamed of suspecting the elegant and wealthy "lieutenant" of complicity in them. Ultimately he was caught, how ever, and accused of breaking into resi dences and stealing various articles. By this time the family of his unfortunate wife had been stripped of nearly every penny and left in an almost destitute condition plus the burden of his liabili ties. Even after his marriage the plausi ble rogue kept up a correspondence with ladies with a view to marriage, and paid personal attention to others. He was indicted for burglary, and found guilty of receiving goods well knowing them to have been stolen, and was sentenced to twelve years' penal servitude. The history of his various love affairs points out the moral which girls so often forgot that a wooer should have more relia ble passports to their favor than a hand some face and ingratiating manner. What Is Kan wit Abont risk. Pliny, the great naturalist, who lived at about the time of Christ, reckoned the whole number of known species of fish at ninety-four.- Lin metis, the great Swedish investigator of the eighteenth century, could classify 478, and he is known to have been the greatest ichthy ologist of the age in which he lived. The progress made in that particular branch since the time of Linnams seems all the more wonderful, for now, since the ex. peditions of the Challenger and others, 13,000 species shew up In the catalogues of the mk ipoclalUUI-et, Louis Jit-publio. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Acts in perfect harmony with the laws thit govern the fcr.a!e system under all circumstances. Its suc cess in quickly and penr.Er.ently curing all forms cf Female Complaints, Is unparalleled in the history of medicine. Is almost infallible. Use it with confidence in cases of paw trt-m T :t W ril ll m I rf u. r , 1 1 ff -..r ! v I - Tnmt &rr 4 i Orrt I'ftTMa f M limt Wane. Jl m sl t CS,-.rj ,f L 1:k- T erj ttM turn at a r'.J aiar. ,c4 ,r , ia, te C i ''- H r tr.wt-r. .m rv-.a. s aa.r:?. K Cc9 t-c-, ig uit S-oawh a : T'nmm a, a mm y ain. Urm of nil ar LVtu (. nXtJaAJl MtD tO,LV.). MASS. ffE COT 1 SWATH in the RINKS Sli leering .ftiaieii gteel li&ta is the CHEAPEST because it is the BEST. The Beerhx MMEK S are Light Strong, Durabie and have Don't forget we give good value for your money. We are busy, but have time to wait upon vou. 3D. "W. KITCHEN, P' s are still on Earth and at present in BL003ISBURG. RELIABLE Comes to the front with the LARGEST ASSORTMENT AND MAKING AND FITTING .'.OF THE.-. Best, tlie IVewest ami Most Stylish, Lowest hi Price ; and to prove Satisfaction is our Endeavor The best value for Money is to buy your Clothing, Hats, Shirts, Neckwear, Trunks and Valises of Cornerj of Main and Centre Streets, BLOOMSBURG, PA. UNEXGELIiEB CLOTHING MADE TO ORDER. 4 Largest Clothing and Hat House in Columbia and Montour Counties J. R.Smith &Co. uvntv. MILTON, Pa., tiEALEliS IS PIANOS, Br trie roi'.owicg trtit-kcown msken : Chickcring, Knabc, Wcbcr, Uallct & Davis. Can also furnish any of tlie cheaper makes at manufact urers' prices. Do not buy a piano btfore getting our prices. o Ctlcgue i-d Price Lists On application. TjEEZEj -aw CLOTHING m THOMAS GORREY CDfTUCTGR iESL m iumj auu &aiuiiaics on M anrl rarnontpi- i . hlsria Euili.r's b:z T.rj.. t r i i r . . ijiMui: narunooQ linishce specialty. Persons of limited meant desire to build can pay part and secure balance by mortgage PATENTS. Caveats sod Trfido Mark fh'jirtii, Kh ,. Patent bunlncKS conduetwJ fur u,ini,.l' FEE. """"I "t'K OFFICE IS OPPOSITE THE V. a KN'T oFFIt'E. We bnf no .,.!... s; 1 AT- bulnillrH-t. hn cn trn.i. i (.,i(.,(t, in i.-Tv. mm- aim at km K Tluin lhr mete (mm Waiiiinirti.n. "wre n nd nintjrl. drnwloif r pbrito. wi-h ,t. . tlon. VS aitvi f .Mteniubln , "m rrr. w 'i-nui cwiill pMm l wnJr l.onk. "How to Olilaln l-alVr.t. ..UT1' erjwa to aiHual cllrnt In vour !t.i-- , . nV' town, sent trw. AUdn-si ' ' 1 ' C. A. 8XOW CO.. WHh!ni:ton D c lOpposlte I. K l't-nt oriirr.) OF COMPETITION. A? AT IIODSE T 1 .. iai'il