The Columbian. (Bloomsburg, Pa.) 1866-1910, July 15, 1892, Image 4

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    Jltf Columbia pcmortiU,
TABtHHED O N"nLID.Ti:i)
- p:ji.:.ESt by
1LWILL EITTENEENDER
EVERY KH1DAY MOKNINO
At BJpotnsburs. tno county sit of toWikUa
C ounty, Pennsylvania.
Tsmii: ln:4 the enmity, tl .00 a year Id !
rn; li.M It not paid In advance outside
the county. t yer. s'rlctly In advne.
All comiULl.'6:ioci should be addressed to
THE COIXMBIAN.
BloomsburK, I'a
FRIDAY. Jl'LV is ,lSoJ.
Fur Prf.sidext
GROVER CLEVELAND,
of New York.
FOR VICE-PRESIDENT
ADLA! E. STEVENSON,
ol Illinois.
STATE DEMOCRATIC TICKET
FOR CONfiRIMMAS AT I.AROl.
GEORGE A. ALLEN. Erie.
THOMAS P. MEKKITT. rterks.
CHRISTOPIIEK I3EYDKICK, VenantfO.
rOR KI.ECT0R8 AT !.AR(iI.
MORTIMER Y. ELLIOTT. Tlosa.
4NO. C. BULLITT. Phlldlphla.
THOMAS B. KENNEDY, Franklin.
DAVID T. WATSON. All gheny.
FOR DISTRICT ILICTORS.
Samuel G. Thompson.
Adam Conway.
W. Redwood Wright.
John O. James.
James DuJTey,
S. W. Trimmer,
Azttr Lathrop,
Thomas ChaHan:.
P. H. Strubinger.
Joseph D. Orr,
Andrew A. Payton.
Michael Lelbel,
J. K. 1
C'lcm't It. Walnwrlsht.
Charles U. LatlertT,
neotve K. t.UNS
William Molan.
Charles D. Breci.
Samuel s. Lelby,
T. C. Hippie.
W. P. Illmmflreich
II. li. Piper.
Charles A. Fagan.
Inhn D. Braden.
Yhoir-A Mi Dowell.
. iia::.
C0TJ5TY C0MM1TTZE SILETIKO-
A meeting of the Democratic
Standing Committee will be held on
Saturday July the 23rd, 1S9J at a
o'clock, in the Grand Jury Room, in
the town of Bloorusburg, tor the pur
pose of making an apportionment of
Delegates to the several election dis
tricts in Columbia County.
Jno. R. Town send,
County Chairman.
J. H. Mercer,
Secretary.
We announce in the proper place
this week the name of Hon. S. P. Wol
verton of Sunbury as a candidate
or renomination for Congress from
: us district. He has made a very ac-
eptable representative, is one ot the
ablest men in the state, and Columbia
county will give him her endorse
ment for a second terra undoubtedly,
as no other name is announced in this
county, nor have we heard any one
mentioned in any of the other coun
ties of the district. It looks like a un
animous renomination.
While Mr. Carnegie rests in the
shade of Coworth Park, at his High
land summer retreat in Scotland, and
his partner, Mr. Phipps, revels in the
luxuries of Knebworth Castle and en
joys the society of English noblemen,
the managers of their works at Home
stead, this State, are building fortifica
tions around and laying hot water
pipes through their mills, preparatory
to a siege with their workingmen,
whose wages suffered another reduc
tion on the 1st of July. With Carne
gie and Phipps it is a question of great
er profits that they may make more
liberal contributions to the Republi
can campaign fund and lavish more
money on European homes and Euro
pean luxuries. With their men it is a
question of bread and butter for their
families and the simplest and cheap
est necessaries that human beings can
exist upon. Easton Sentinel.
Taxed From Head to Foot-
The American laborer in the most
highly protected industries goes upon
a strike against the lowering of his
wages, wearing a cap taxed 50 per
cent, a shirt taxed 80 per cent., and
a suit of clothes taxed 100 per cnt.
He talks the situation ever with his
wife, and until the SherirT distrains on
him for his rent he rests his feet, wear
ing shoes taxed 25 per cent, on a car
pet taxed fifty per cent. He cuts the
bacon produced by the unprotected
farmer with a knife taxed 100 per
cent., and if his wife cries over their
prospects she wipes her eyes with a
handkerchief taxed 55 per cent. If
she does not persuade him to go back
to work at lower wages his place is
supplied by the foreign pauper labor
of Bohemia or Poland, and he has
leisure to reflect on how protection
helps him. Jlaltimore JVeir.
Qood Ground for Hope ia Illinois,
When you come to think '.hat the
Democrats of Illinois have fourteen
Representatives in Congress in a Del
egation of twenty, a majority in the
State Legislature and a Democratic
Senator, and in 1891 elected their
State ticket by a majority of nearly
ten thousand vctes, it doesn't seem al
together unreasonable to put it in tlv;
list of JdcbataV.e States.
Fattison Will Visit the Troop.
THE CALL TO HOMESTEAD TAKES 1 ME
I LACK OK THE ANNUAL ENCAMPMENT.
Governor Paltison has receive.',
tie following telegram from Gen-jr.d
S".nvJen dated Homestead:
"The troops are all in camp and in
position. A strong provost patrol is
securing the town. J here js no troub
le and no prospect cf it at this time
6 P. M. Sheriff McCIeary has gone
heme but leaves a representative.
1 he liovernor expects no news
from Homestead, believing as he does,
that there will be no trouble. He
says he will visit the troops there
when inspection takes place, as the
present outing will take the place of
the annual encampment. The men
will be drilled and inspected as usual
on those occasions, so far as thei
duties as preservers of the peace will
permit.
The Governor said to-night in the
course of a conversation relative to the
impression which prevails at Home
stead and elsewhere, that the troops
will have nothing to do with protect
tr.g non union men, that the State
authorities will not concern itself with
inquiring wheather the men are union
or non-union men. 1 he troops are
there to preserve the peace and to
protect all persons in their rijht
Colonel Volkmar, of the United States
armv, is expected here to-niirht to
join the party of inspection as tne rep
resentative of the United States Gov
ernment. The party will go to
Mount Gretna first.
Cleveland Savs No
ins WIFE'S NAME MIST NOT BE USED IN
CONNECTION WITH CAMPAIGN CLIPS.
The following correspondence ex
plains itself :
New York, June 26, 1S92.
'Mrs. Grover Cleveland:
'Dear Madam : It gives us great
pleasure as representatives of that
great body of women of Democratic
sympathies to inform you that a
trances Cleveland Influence Club
has been formed by the mothers,
wives, sisters, and daughters of New
York Democrats. We have taken
the liberty of using your name for the
first of the many Influence Clubs
which we trust will spring up through
out the country, and after November
8 will confirm the judgment of that
Republican leader regarding 1893,
that 'the women did it.'
'We feel that this campaign is to
lift the burden of taxation from the
homes of the land, and we, as home
defenders, desire a part in the struggle.
"Yours respectfully,
"Mary Frost Ormsbt,
'President Frances Cleveland In
fluence Club, No. 1."
Gray Gables, Buzzards Bay, Mass.,
July 0, 1892.
"Mrs. Mary Frost Ormsby :
"My Dear Madam : Mrs. Cleve
land has referred to me your letter in
forming her of the organization of a
'Frances Cleveland Influence Club.'
"It is by no means pleasant to dis
sent from the methods which sincere
friends adopt, when their efforts not
only demonstrate their friendliness
but when they also seek to subserve
the public good and are, therefore, en
gaged in a patriotic service.
"It is, however, impossible for us to
approve of the use of Mrs. Cleveland's
name in the designation of clubs de
signed to do political work.
We trust you will not undervalue
our objection, because it rests upon
the sentiment that the name now
sacred in the home circle as wife and
mother may well be spared in the
organization and operation of clubs
created to exert political influence,
"Your3 very truly,
"Grover Cleveland."
The Situation.
Gov. Pattison called out the troops
at the right time and in the right way.
He waited as was his plain duty to
do, until it became evident that the
civil arm was inadequate. He then
ordered out the military in such force
as to render its simple presence suffi
cient, probably, to repress all disorder
without its actual use. Such action
was as humane as it was wise.
There is but one tiling for the
locked out men to do. They must
submit to the law. They must keep
the peace. Their quarrel is with their
employers. They must not make it a
quarrel with organized society. It is a
protest against wage reduction. It
must not be made a revolt against law
and order. They must not resist the
authority of the State. They must not
make war upon the community.
On the other hand there ought to
be a concerted effort to secure justice
for these men. Whatever law or logic
may say, it will be a grievous hard
ship if they are refused, as Mr. t rick
threatens, even the opportunity to ne-
gotiate for restoration to their employ
ment.
There is no reason for an attitude so
vindictive and no justice in it. So
ciety, which properly insists that the
men shall not by force exclude the
owners of the works from the posses
sion and use of their property, should
also insist by every means open to pub'
lie opinion upon an abandonment of
the intolerant attitude assumed toward
them by the Carnegie Company.
The case is one for negotiation and
arbitration, not one for the arbitrary
condemnation of men to a permanent
1 ...... f i li',,.;.)
WA9HINGT05 LETTE2L
Washington, July 9. 1892.
Representative Gates of Alabama,
who is chairman cf the House vm
n.ittcc which has z to Homestead
t lec'.n its investigation of the mur-
ders at that place by men in the em
hloymentcf the p'ir.kertons, is very
I much in earnest a!out getting to the
bottom ol the horrible affair. He
could have taken the committee to
Homestead sooner, but he wished to
give Carnegie's men an opportunity to
bury their murdered comrades before
calling upon them for testimony.
After getting statements from the
workingmen and from Carnegie's rej-
resentativcs the committee will return
to Washington where the two Pinker
tons have been summoned, to be put
through a most riqid examination as
to their share and responsibility for
the Homestead tragedy. A number
01 labor leaders, including Mr. Pow
derly, hive also been notified to ap
pear oetore the committee when it
returns to ashington. Congress has
mane up its mind, in advance of any
report from the committee, that the
I mkerton method of employing and
arming bodies of men is vicious and
un-Amencan and must co.
Upon being shown that more monev
would be needed during the current
fiscal year than had ben appropriated
by the House, the House conferees
agreed to Senate amendments to the
Pension Appropriation bill increasing
the total amount carried by the bill
nearly $12,000,000. The bill as it
now stands appropriates $1 46.71 7. t?o.
Senator Wolcott agrees with Senator
est and others of his colleagues in
believing that the U. S. Geological
Survey is of very little use aside from
furnishing snug berths for friends of its
Director, and, as it costs about a mil
lion a year, he has introduced 9 reso
lution authorizing an investigation as
to its usefulness and the necessity for
its continuance. The lobbying ex
perience of the Director will make it
easy for him to "hang up" this resolu
tion. For some time a sub-committee of
the House committee on Manufactures
has been engaged investigating the
numerous trusts and combines. Its
report to the full committee, iust made.
says that trusts, combinations and as
sociations are in control of the pro
duction, distribution and prices of very
many of the articles of most ceneral
consumption ; that prices to the con
sumers are increased, while wages of
those employed bv the trusts are re-
duced ; that all past legislation on the
subject is insufficient and impractic
able, recommends as a remedy the
placing of all articles which are under
or may come under the control of a
trust upon the free Int. This recom
mendation is neither new nor novel.
but it is good, hard, horse sense all the
same, and if carried out would throttle
nearly every trust now existing in this
country.
Ihe House World's Fair committee
presented a supplementary report con
taining additional reasons for making
that ?5 0,000,000 appropriation for the
rair. a minority report, signed bv
Representative Little, of New York.
and Wheeler of Alabama, declares
that the exposition is in no sense a zov-
emment undertaking and that no
money should be appropriated there
for, except for the expenses of the
national commission. Congressional
sentiment is largely in favor of the ap
propriation, and there is little doubt of
its being made.
senator Mills has gone to Texas to
take the stump against the third party
movement which, in the absence of
serious opposition, has been making
considerable progress in that State.
As indicated in this corresDondence.
weeks ago the House committee which
investigated the Pension Office has
recommended the dismissal of Com
missioner Raum from Office, on the
ground of his general unfitnesss to su
pervise and govern a large number of
employes, and because he has prosti
tuted his office for private gain and for
political purposes. The committee
also recommends numerous reforms
in the business of the Pension Office,
including a reduction in the Attorney's
fee to $5, without authority to stipu
late for more. This report which will
be approved by the House makes
pleasant summer reading for Mr. Har
rison, who is solely responsible for
Raum's continuance in office.
One day's record of the House, un
der a suspension of the rules : Passed,
the tin plate bill, the silver lead ore
bill, the bill amending the land grant
act of 1S90, the bill giving Utah home
rule, the bill limiting the quantity of
cioming mat may oe orougnt in tree
of duty by returning travelers, and the
bill providing for the use of automatic
car couplers on all freight trains.
The House committee on Rules
will report a special order for the con
sideration of the free coinage bill on
Wednesday and the succeeding legis
lative day. The bill can be passed
under this order if a majority of the
House so wills.
Eaglesmere Railroad-
The last rail on the railroad leading
to Eagle's Mere, the Summer resort on
the top of the mountains, was laid
Saturday. The first train steamed up
the steep grades, and the whistle of
the locomotive for the first tune
brokethe primitive stillness. Pas
senger trains will be ran .regularly
hereafter.
urw r.TJ 'yw ri "
kz Then-Whit?
General Snowden is in peaceful and
comp'cte possession of the Carnegie
Woiks at Home-tead. IVirg as dis
creet as he is courteous as a soldier,
lie declined the r.iockety of a welcome
to the storm centre of lawlessness to
the music of the band of the lawless.
There is peace now ; but when the
marrow of the issue shall be reached,
then what ?
Mr. Frick, who fully represents Mr.
Carnegie in this struggle, has never
misled anyone as to his purpose. He
has been bold and explicit in ex
pressing Jus intention to sever the
Homestead works from all control of
the Amalgamated Association, and to
employ men. either in or out of that
organization, who would accept his
scale and rules. Being now restored
to the possession of his property, he
will doubtless employ new men to
start his works, and then what ?
This is the very marrow of the dis
pute, and it was this violently disputed
right of Mr. Frick to employ whom he
preferred that led to not and blood
shed and that has brought the troops
to Homestead. It is idle to say that
the violence was solely against the
mercenaries of the Pinkertons. If the
workmen had not taken lawless pos
session of property in which they had
no pretense of ownership, to prevent
the employment of any but them
selves, the Pinkerton men would
never have been summoned there ;
and it should not be torgotten that the
troops are now there to do lawfully
just what the Pinkerton men were
called to do without authority of law.
When the new workmen come to
start the Homestead works, then
what ?
The crucial test of the willingness of
the striking men at Homestead to
obey the law will come very soon, 33
Mr. Frick has announced his purpose
to start his works with such new labor
as he shall find acceptable and such
of his employes as shall renounce
allegiance to the Association. If the
new workmen shall be permitted to
enter upon their service without mo
lestation or threat, the mission of the
military will be ended. But when
these new men come to work, and old
employes are invited to desert the As
sociation to retain employment, then
what ? Time.
Taa Con7ent:oa Ended-
CLOSE Or THE GREAT CHRISTIAN EN
DEAVOR GATHERING IN NEW YORK.
New Yosk. Tulv to. The Ut Axv
of the great Christian Endeavorers be
gan at q o'clock this morninu with a
prayer meeting in the Madison Square
uaruen, conducted Dy A. li. rennell,
of Boston. Tta thousand delegates
were present, and after several pray
ers ana mucn nymn-smging tne meet
ing adjourned at 10.15 o'clock to
enable the delegates to attend regular
services in the different evangelical
churches of this city.
The afternoon session at the G.ir.
den began at i o'clock, President
iiaric presiding, i-uily 15,000 dele
gates were in attendance, desnite the
intense heat. After the prayer and
praise meeting oriel reports were re
ceived from the committee conferences,
under the direction ot William Shaw,
treasurer of the united society, who
reported the greatest enthusiasm had
been manifested bv the delegates at
different denominational rallies held
during the convention. At one of
them $1,500 had been subscribed for
the completion of a missionary church
at sail iane City, ihe friends or
Quakers, he also said, formed a Chris
tian Endeavor Society at yesterday's
rauy 01 tneir delegates.
"Throw Out the Lifeline." wasunrr
by Mr. Stebbins, after which Ira D.
sanKey spoice on the subject ot Chris
tian Endeavor in Great Britain. He
had just returned, he said, from a six
months' campaign with Mr. Moody in
Scotland and, having attended the
National Christian Endeavor Conven
tion, held six weeks ago in the city of
Chester, he had an opportunity of see
ing something of the working nf rh
society in the old country, and he was
glad to say that it was making great
progress in l-.ngiand, Scotland and
Wales. Ireland, he said, was very far
behind, but if there weretmore Chris
tian Endeavor societies there it would
be the best kind of home rule Ireland
could have.
An address on irosDel temnerance
was given by John G. Woolley, of
Minnesota, followed by singing and a
paper entitled "Among the Northwest
Indians," by Eric Young, of Toronto,
Ont. The Rev. John Henry Barrow,
D. D., of Chicago, sooke on the "Posl
sibilities of the World's Fair."
JETHA'S FIR ANT) ASHES.
A VII.L.V'-K REDUCED TO RUINS AND
MANY THOUGHT TO HAVE PERISHED.
Rome, July 13 The eruption of
Mount -Etna is rapidly increasing in
violence. The fires in the crater show
great activity. Loud explosions arc
continually taking place. A severe
earthquake shock oecurred this morn
irg, which reduced to ruins the village
of Giarre, on the coast of Sicily five
hour's journey from the craters of Mt.
.Etna.
The population of Giarre is ahnnr
iS .000. No mention of luss of life is 1
made, but it ;s teared here th.it many
have perished.
Cyrus V, Tiuld D'.au.
DottPs Fekrv, N. Y. July 12.--Cyrus
W. Field died at 9:50 o !o.k
this morning at his home at Ar.lh'ey
Park. Those at the deathbed in
cluded David Dudley Field, Mrs.
Isabella Judson, Cyrus W. Field
Judson, Mrs. Dudley Field, Frank
Judson and the attending physician.
Cyrus W. Field was born in Stock
bridge Mass., November 30, 1819.
He was educated in his native village.
At the age of 15 he wtntto New
York to carve out his fortune. He
obtained a position as clerk in the
store of A. T. Stewart. Before he
was 2 1 years old he had saved some
money and gone into business on his
own account. He began the manu
facture and sale of paper, and within
a dozen years he was at the head of a
large prosperous business. In 1853.
having amassed a fortune, he retired
from active business.
For thirteen years Mr. Field gave
his time to the Atlantic cable. He
made scores of visits to Europe, per
sonally oversaw the laying of the first
cable, which parted in mid ocean and
was lost, but he mas not discouraged.
The out-break of war delayed the
project, but did not dampen his arbor.
When the war was over he went to
work and secured the co-operation of
the United States and Great Britain.
Both of the Governments loaned big
war ships to assist in laying the cable,
and the great work was accomplished
on July 27, 1867.
Two cables were laid in the effort to
make one complete, and both are in
operation to-day. Congress voted
him a gold medal and the thanks of
the nation. England would have done
the same had she not been prevented
because he was a foreigner, the
Chamber of Commerce of New York
a gold medal, thanks of the state cf
Wisconsin with a gold medal, a
decoration from King Victor Emanuel
of Italy and an entire service of silver
from George Peabody. He was per
sonally a man of striking characteristics
keen, aleit, vigorous.
A Chance for Composers-
In order to stimulate American
composition, The Lading' Home
Journal has just made public an at
tractive series of liberal nrizes for the
best original musical composition by
composers resident in the United
States and Canada. The prizes call
for a waltz, a piano comnosition. a
pleasing ballad and a popular song,
an anthem and the four best hvmn
tune3. The competition is open until
November 1st. next. Theonnortunitv
has an additional attractiveness since
the prize compositions will form part
of a series for which Strauss is writing
an original waltz, and Chirles fimmml
and Sir Arthur Sullivan each an origin
al song.
A "Flyer," Indeed.
THE FASTEST SCHEDULED TRAiv IV
AMERICA RINS FROM PHILADELPHIA
TO THE SEA VIA THE READING'S
ROYAL ROUTE.
That there is a streak of "snnrtintr
blood" in the veins of the most sedate
among us is evidenced by the uni
versal interest manifested in m;i.i
speeds and the delight with which the
average man hails e.irh
triumph of the locomotive over the
ww.Ui.,.v.u iieiucius 01 time ana dis
tance.
The much-vaunted '-Flvi no. Srntrh.
man" express train between London
and Edinburgh, in r.reit rtritam ;e
still regarded by many persons as the
lasiesi reguiany scheduled train in the
world. This, however, w a mU'ii-..
the speed of the "Scotchman" having
been excelled by several railroads in
this country, notably by the New York
vcmrai, whose "Empire State Ex
press" between New York and Buffalo
has, until within a few days, claimed
the title of the fastest regular train in
the world. This eelehratpH trnin nine
from New York to Buffalo, a distance
01 440 miles, in eight hours and forty
-!, wint.i is ai me rate ot seventy-one
seconds -to each mile, or fifty
and two-thirds miles ner linnr l in
ducting all stops the average running
- ui " m is nitv-two and
twelve one-hundredths miles per hour.
Mi: Chas. y, llauer
01 Fraderic. Md., suffered, terribly for oTvr
ten year with abioesjes and ruiaiiag iota 011
1 !. B' ,Ie ,r'Jre, "v'''t5-- Bw weak n,l
thin, unrt wai oWlce.l ti Me cv.0 am, 1
Kocrf'3 Sarsaparilia
!V;'.!:,i;!r',t,1r'J, PV'1 cur. Mr. Hiuer I,
- - - .? . !. ?'.""" I.JfU, Maf.
--.f.'o.-.
New, however, ror:e? a nov ra:
ant for high speed h-rors. it i"1'
been disanercd that tlie k,,,!,35
Railroad's 3.30 P. M. f :n
l'hil.uklphia t. Atlantic C-u . k,i0
as tile "Seventy.M.nu; !;ya n
actually the fastest regul.uiy si ht.lul,,'.!
passenger train in the Woild. nt
distance from Chestnut street wiia,rtl
Camden terminus of the rj;',roul U
about a mile and a half, and the ferry
boat trip and transfer of the passen
gers fiomj llhecars occupies tcn
minutes. Thisleave sixty minutes
for the rail.ride, and that is precisely
tin time allowed by the schedule to
cover the fifty-five and a half miles
which intervene between the Camden
depot and the station in Atlantic City
A little figuring will show that this is
a speed of sixty-five seconds to the
mile, or a rate of fifty-five and a half
miles per hour, beating the former re.
cord six seconds per mile and almost
five miles per hour.
It should be understood that tliis
refers to the speed of regular schedul.
ed trains over the entire length of
their scheduled runs, and not to mere
buits of speed or stretches of fist
running to make up for lost time or
delays. The rate of fifty-five and a
half miles per hour is exceeded every
day on the Reading Railroad, and
possibly on some oth-jr lines, but on
no railroad in the world, so far as
known, is there a train run from end
to end of its route at so great an
average st eed as that of the "Seventy
Minute Flyer."
When the latter was established it
was not with the purpose of breakin;
a record, but the officials were coiff.
dent of their ability to run a train
safely and promptly in the specified
time, or less if required. It was de
termined, however, to limit the train
to six cars in order to
insure quickness. This was found to
be impracticable, and for mote than
a week the train has been carrying
eight cars, including one cr more
heavy Pullmans, and making schedule
time on every trip.
President M'Leod can now con
gratulate himself that his road holds
the "world's record" for the fastest
mile (39 4-5 seconds, as timed Aucwt
27, 1891. by Ptesident M'Lccd, Mr.
William M.'Sirgerly, of the I hiladd
phia Recotd, and otheis). and (also
has upon its time table the fasti st
regular train in the world )
COPVRI6MT
IC flying in the far$
of Nature to take the ordinary pilL
Just consider how it acts. There's
too much bulk and bustle, and not
enough real good. And think how
it leaves jou when it's all over !
Dr. Pierco's Pleasant Pellets act
naturally. They help Nature to do
her own work. They cleanse and
renovate, mildly but thoroughly, the
whole system. Regulate it, too.
Tho help that they give, lasts.
They're purely vegetable, per
fectly harmless, tne smallest, easiest,
and Dcst to take. Sick Headache,
Bilious Headache, Constipation, In
digestion, Bilious Attack, and all
derangements of tbo Liver, Stomach
and Bowels are promptly relieved
and permanently cured. One tiny,
sugar-coated Pellet for a gentle
laxative three for a cathartic.
They're the cheapest pill you can
buy, for they're guaranteed to give
satisfaction, or your money is re
turned. You pay only for the good you
get.
This is true only of Dr. Pierce'i
medicines.
CANDIDATES CARDS.
List of On lutldftteg to ln vott d for at the il' l' -eat
etfctlon litM hmunlnv August Hili l.v
between thf hours of S ud T oVl.x-W - m.
Nominating convention Tuesday Aiiv'i"'
For C osgress.
S. P. WOLYERTON,
of Sunburv.
For Representative,
GUY JACOBY,
cf Blccmsburg.
For Representative,
ANDREW L. FRITZ,
of Bloomsburg.
For Representative,
R. G. V. KSH1NKA,
of Briarcreek.
For Representative,
E. M. TEWKSBURY,
of Catawissa.
For Representative,
CHARLES M-. BLAKER.
of Green weed.
SOCIETY CARDS-
Members 01 nny of the orders in
town can obtain appreciate car ls at
The C01 i mi ian office. Samples in
great variety can be scei.
w wr