Highest of all in Leavening Tower.--Latest U. S. Gov't Report THE COLUMBIAN. "rniprort at. tun Post omc-e at Hlnnmiiburir, ia .. wcond class matter, March 1, inn. BLOOMSBURG, FA. FRIDAY, JUNK 23, 1893. neighborhood Hows. Interesting Items From Various Points in the Oounty, Reported by Our Staff of Correspondents Light Street. The children's day services held at the Evangelical church on Sunday" evening last were well attended. R. V. Ent and wife returned from their wedding trip on Thursday las Mrs Kramer of Jerseytown visited Mrs. Geo. VV. Wertman the past week. Miss Anna McKamey of Espy spent a few days in town. Mrs. J. J. Keller returned last week from her visit at Pottsville and Hazle ton. Rev. J. W. hunlap of Nescopeck, paid a visit to this place recently. Mark Creasy is now at home, his school having closed lately. Jerry says we have a new way of sprinkling our streets and that the people of iJloomsburg will have to come up and take lessons. Mrs. Silas Young took a trip to Danville last week as delegate of the Epworth League of the M. E. Church. The dry weather has caused the farmers to commence making hay. Ex-Supt. Grimes is now at home after a sojourn of nine months teach ing at Shamokin. ' Tro f?mfiv(r irwi cn'n nr visiting at Wesley Kelchner's of Centre. G. M. 'Ikeler of Mt. Pleasant spent part of Tuesday in town looking up the voters. The sudden appearance of the storm Wednesday morning called a number of people of town out of bod on account of its severity. , ' Esiv. Children's l)ry was observe 1 in the Lutheran church on last Sunday even ing. The services were .very inter estinj-and were very creditable render ed. The M. E. services were held un the preceding Sunday. Messrs. J. II. Miller and William Milhes spent Sunday visiting friends and relatives in Kingston. The Evangelical church Children's Day services will be held on Sunday evening. Edwin Hummel visittd friends and relatives in Nantirokc recently. Bert Miller now his his carpet loom in motion, and with an experienced weaver is prepared to take orders. Sammie is in it these days. Will iam has purchased a new buggy, and in consequence Sammie is happy. . Mart Savage and family, former residents "of this place, weie visiting among relatives in town this week. Post Mas(er McKamey is spending a short tine visiting in Philadelphia. Orangeville. Hiram A. Shaefter is the proprietor of the Heckroan House. Mr. Shaeffer seems to be a pleasant and accommo dating land lord and runs an excellent house which is. appreciated by the public J. T. Evans of Berwick has been 'making quite a visit at Orangeville with his uncle Jno. Vance. Parties from Wilkesbarre have been here trouting with success. Glad to note thac Wm. Unangst after 10 years endeavor is drawing a pension under the new law. L. Drake proprietor ol the Orange ville hotel at Oruigeville, is an oblig 1 ing and efficient landlord i sets an excellent table and runs a fine house with good patronage. Wesly Bowman and his son Henry near Orangeville are running a fine milling business'; have all they can do with their first class water power. They have recently introdnced new and very fine machinery. JBenton. We advise people when they want to meet an obliging landlord and stop at a first class house when they go to Benton to stop at the McHenry house. We ate as fine a dinner there the other day as can be found in any hotel in the county. McHenry and house are No. 1. The McHenry Bros, are running a m fine mercantile business with a large stock of goods. They are fine relialHe business young men. Rhor McHenry & Son are doing a large distillery business, supplying the markets of New York and Philadel phia. They have enlarged their build lugs but have n.ct with serious loss with their live pork. Dr. Patterson is very busy with his large meilical practice. Forks. Mr. and Mrs. T. C. McHenry were the guest of R. Harrison's last Sunday. Mrs. G. B. Appleman of Rhorsbure visited her sister Mrs. D. D. Eveland last Sunday. Miss. Lizzie Jones who has been at tending a music school at Wilkesbarre returned home last wtek. C. B. Ent of Lightstreet was calling on friends in these parts last week. Mrs. Tames Harrison visited her daughter, Mrs. F. Fahringer in Nanti- coke last week. The Children'! Day exercises at Asbury tast Sunday were well attended, the church being filled and a large number were unable to gain entrance; the P. O. S. of A. of Jonestown, by special invitation turned out in full uniform 43 strong. The exercises were in keeping with the Columbus Annivcsary and were superbly render ed. The next preaching services will be held at Jonestown at 3 p. M. and As bury in the morning. The P. 0. S. of A. at Jonestown initiated 12 new members last Satur day night. Festival in Laubach's grove July 1st, for benefit of Zion Sunday school. II. O. Kelchner and wife of Still water, spent Sunday with the former's parents. The carpenters have Jes Runyan's barn about. ready to raise. Mrs. Lee and Mrs. Black of Light street were entertained by Mrs. Wm. Kelchner last Saturday. The Children's Day services at the Zion church last Sunday evening were wrll attended and the exercises sur p.i: s:! any former effort. The church was profusely decorated with flowers ami evergreens. It is rumored that Prof. W. W. Pealer, of Asbury, will be the orator of the day on July 4th, 1893. Capt. Gara is busily engaged draft ing a bridge of wire across the l'ish ingcreek to be erected leading directly to the depot 150 yards above merchant Ammcrman's. We find things over here nice and green, but rain is badly needed. If we dont get a baptism soon the crops will be short. The corn looks very young. Wm. Lewis has left Forks and has gone into a bakery at Wilkesbarre. Merchant Ammerman's sons are employed in the car shops at Berwick doing well Wm. Creasy and Miss Miriam Mc Henry were married June 5th, by Rev. Iloutz. This announcement is a little stale but many friends have not heard ofit. They are making large preparations at Jonestown for the "4th!' About 30 Sudnay schools are expected to be present and form procession with ban ners with lodges of. P. O. S. of A. Essays and declamations will be made with addresses from oldeij people. A festival at night Fashionable Livery. - The well known horseman has opened a fashionable livery in connec tion with his boarding stable at the Exchange Hotel Stables, where fine turnouts can be obtained, single or double. He has well broken and safe saddle and driving horses for ladies, all at reasonable rates. Orders left at the Exchange Hotel will receive prompt attention. Drivers furnished when desired. tf W. A. II artzell, Proprietor Something New for Children's Day. A Children's Day service, entitled "Christian Soldier" consisting of Rec itations, Dialogues, Tableaux, and other exercises, will be rendered in the Evangelical church, next Sabbath evening, at 7:30. All are cordially in vited. Benton would be a good field for a bicycle agent. The Argut says there is not one wheel owned or used in the place. ' One word describes it-"perfection." We refer to De Witt's Witch Hazel Salve, cures obstinate sores, burns, skin diseases and is a well known cure for piles. W. S. Rishton, Druggist. 10-14-iyr. See White Si Conner's new adver tisement this week. The Doty farm inFishing creek twp. was sold at public sale on Tuesday to J. H. Minier for4$f,8as. J. B. Robison Esq. delivered an address to the Grangers in Town Line, Luzerne Co. recently. Joseph Ratti's six .new houses on Sixth street are completed, and are for rent. They are very comfortable homes. Every family should have a box of Wright's Indian Vegetable Pills, ,the use of which will cure most of our ail ments, at. The Silk Mill is now provided with fans, which are attached to the shaft, ing by belts. They make a very per. ceptible difference in the temperature. - Rev. E. H. Yocum has been ap pointed Presiding Elder to fill the va cancy caused by the death of th; late Rev. John Donahue. The work ot excavation is about completed for the store room of James iViagee at corner of Fourth and Mar ket streets. Do you read the testimonials pub lished in behalf of Hood's Sarsaparilla? Thev are thoroughly reliable and worthy yourjeonfidence. Now the sweet girl graduates are agitated over their Commencement dresses. No costly silks or satins will be permitted this year at the Normal. The painters hav completed their work on the residence of J. K. Bitten bender . It has made a great im provement in the appearance of his home. The frame stable belonging to Frank Pursel and mother has been removed to th j.roperly of Mr. Fer guson. The foundation for a house has been laid on the site of the stable. Mrs. George Hartzell of Hemlock township, near the Wanick bridge, committed suicide on Wednesday by drowning herself in the creek. She was undoubtedly insane. Isaiah Bower of Berwick has be come the owner of a valuable thor oughbred mare, four years old. She is black in color, and of Hamble tonian stock. He bought of J. G. Swank of Mifflin, who has three more of the same kind. The annual picnic of the Pen-ia. Reserves will be held on the Island at Shickshinny on Thursday, June 29. Refreshments will be served by the ladies of Shickshinny on the grounds. Soldiers and others will be cordially welcome. The commissioners' appointed by the Court of Columbia and Luzerne Counties to report on the petition for the enlargement of the Borough of Berwick, will meet July 7th to hear argument. The little son of W. II. Rhawn Esq., has returned home. He had been working on a farm near Erie, and was getting good wages. He worked his way out there on freight trains. There is likely to. be an exhibition of fireworks here on the 4th of July. A paper is in circulation asking for subscriptions with which to purchase the necessary material. The Pennsylvania Editorial Assoc!, ation is in session this week at Read ing, their headquarters at Neversink Hotel, one of the mountain resorts near the city. On Friday there is an excursion to Atlantic City. This is the time of year when every, body begins to think about cleaning up and making improvements, and new wall paper is usually one of the first things to be done. W. H. Brooke & Co. have a very large a d elegant stock to select from. CH and see and get estimates. 3-31-tf. J. G. Swan is waking a personal canvas for the office of county com missioner. His claim that Mifflin township has not had a county officer since Samuel Snyder was sheriff thirty years ago, has weight, which with his personal fitness for the place, is making him a strong candidate. Howard R. Snyder of Philadelphia has purchased the Pursel lot corner of Market and. Fourth streets, and has excavated a cellar for a large building. It will be of stone, two stories high, and will be used for a general store. Mr. Snyder has also purchased two acres of land of the McKelvy & Neal farm, near the Carpet Mill, and will erect some houses thereon. HABVEX'S LAKE. Lake Grove Hotel, located at this popular resort, has been enlarged, re modelled and refurnished, and is now the largest hotel on the lake. All modern improvements, good fishing and boating, telephone connection, high elevation, pure air, no mosquitos. Steamboats meet all trains. , Terms reasonable. For particulars address S, Gottfried, Proprietor, Harvey's Lake, Pa. 6-33-io-t. I!! K'TOWHSEHD CORNER OF MARKET AND MAIN STREETS, BT-jOOIMISIBTTIRG-. Wanted. A man who will invest $700 and services in the phonograph business. Territory. Columbia County no op position. Business lucrative. Ad dress or call on Edward Gunster, Jr.. 52-53-56 Coal Exchange Build ing, winces-liarre, i-z. 0-941. Gidding & Saliburg have a new and. useful advertising medium in the shape of large thermometers, which they have placed at the post office, hotels, and other places. Mr. Julius Lindegren the piano tuner, has left town but will return again the latter part of July. He is agent for the celebrated Everett pi ano, which he sells on easy monthly payments, and will take old pianos in exchange. 623-21, All that honesty, experience and skill can do to produce a perfect pill, has been emp'oyed in making De Witt's Little Early Risers. The re sult is a specific for sick headache, biliousness and constipation. W. S. Rishton, Druggist. 10-14 iy. . Rev. P. A. Heilman, Pastor, of the Lutheran church, will return Friday evening after spending a month in Canton, Ohio, and Chicago, and will preach Sunday morning and evening. At the evening service he will recount the experiences of the past month. The following letters are held at the Bloomsburg, Pa., post office and will be sent to the dead letter office July 4, 1893. Mr. Henry Adams, Jacob S. Lape, Mrs. Susie Leiby, Miss Maggie Stan der, Mrs. Rebecca Summers. Persons calling for these letters will please say they were advertised June 20, 1S93. One cent will be charged on each letter advertised. A. B. Cathcapt, P. M. We could not improve the quality if paid double the price. DeWitt's Witch I Ia.el Salve is the best Salve that experience can 'produce, or that money can buy. W. S. Rishton, drug gist. io-i4-iy. TH." STUDY OF WORDS. Mow to Acquire anil Itrtu'n a Ouiid Vocab- . ul.iry. Nottiiwr is mure fascinating than the study of words; nothing more clearly indicates the scholar us opposed to the mere tyro thun the nice and fastidious use of these. In words we clothe our thoughts. Eloquent, subtle, poetical, tr thrill inff as thesu may be, they are Intangible and invisible until arrayad In language. Unspoken thoughts are like "unborn children. thety cannot come into the world or on the scene of human action till they are born of the spoken or tho written word. One way of acquiring a good vocabu lary is, of course, by habitually asso ciating with people who speak cor rectly, and whose choice of words is careful and elegant. To live With highly educated awl congenial people is in itself a liberal education in this regard. One sometimes wonders at the singu lar lapses into slovenly and illiterate blunders conspicuous in men and wo men who "should know better." True, they should, and probably do know better, but in daily praotlce few people rise very much above the ordinary level of those with whom they always ooo verse.N A city-bred girl went to live tn a part of tho country where provincial isms are the current coin ot dally talk. Returning a few years later to her home, no one would have supposed her to be the same person, so many queer little phrases and downright forms of speech, Inelegant and lacking in good form, had she, a very susceptible person, picked up and adopted. 'If we wish our daughter to be pro ficient in music we take her to hear the most renowned artists. Technique may be acquired by constant practice under the best Instructors, but she can gain fueling, appreciation of color and phrasing, sincere and genuine culture In music only by hearing it rendered well; and this Is truo of both vocal and instrumental performance. Ho it is true that a good vocabulary Is greatly augmented by habitually listening to eloquent and beautiful speech, to the polis)ed diction of the pulpit, to the rounded and rhythmic sentences of prayer and praise. The young person who always govs to church will gain something uot included in our usual thought of church-going a larger and more facile vocabulary. "Kor two years," said a student ot French, "I heard no English that I could help. I attended a Trench church; I went wherever French was spoken, in public undin private; 1 lived in a French atmosphere," This Is equally true of English. A vocabulary is not gained In a day or a week. It Is tho slow accretion of many days, the development of many weeks. lLrpr' Bssar. . . THE GLORIOUS M IS NEAR How about that heavy suit ? Are you still wearing it? Seems funny for us to make suggestions to you, but we're tat for business. $12.00 cent off. Well now, we've went so far we might as well tell you the rest. The fact of the matter is that we don't expect to carry but very few light colored goods over the 4th of July, and in order to make them go more rapidly, we are making a general cut on all our IiIO-ZE3CT G"OOIDS. The re ductions are any where from 50 cents to $3.00 on a Suit. De pends on the price. If you have'nt bought all your Summer goods yet suppose you l give us a HONEST is beyond question, and when we can back it up every time. Sole agents for SWEET, ORR & CO'S Working Clothes. GIDDING d, SALSBURG, ONE PRICE CLOTHIERS, HATTEBS & FUBHISHEBS. . BLOOMSBURG, - - PENNA. MAIN STRF.KT. BUSINESS LOCALS. Are you going to paper your house ? Give us a call. Get estimates and prices. W. II. Brooke & Co. A lot of new notes of the sharpest kind have just been printed and are for sale at this office. Also common receipts, estate receipts, and collec tors' receipts, neatly bound in books of as, 50 and 100. . tf. All the talk in the world will not convince you so quickly as one trial of DeWitt's Witch Hazel Salve for scalds, burns, bruises, skin affections and piles. W. S. Rishton, Druggist lyr. Croquet sets $1.00 up to $3.50 at Mercer's Drug and Book store. Flowerings and embroideries in end less variety at M. Ellenbogen's. New edition of Episcopal Hymnals at W. H. Brooke & Co s. Best ladies' vests for 15 cts.; ladies' vests 6 cts. upwards. Fine ladies' un derwear at M. Ellenbogen's. Hammocks from 90 cents to $3.50 at Mercer's Drug and Book store. Bucklens .arnica Salve. The Best Salve in the world for Cuts, Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum, Fever Sores, Tetter, Chapped Hands, Chilblains, Corns, and all Skin Eruptions, and positively cures Piles, or no payrequired. It is guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction, or money refunded. Price 25 cents per box. For sale by C. A. Kleim. Little vegetable health producers: DeWitt's Little Early Risers cure malarious disorders and regulate the stomach and bowels, which prevents headache and dizziness. W. S Rish ton, Druggist. 10-14 1 y 9 is a moderate price for a very fine Man's Suit isn't it, but supposing you can boy that $12.00 Suit for $9.98, a saving of over two dollars or in other words 20 per trial. Oi )ur reputation for DEALING we tell you about reduced prices Largest line of ladies' waists in town. White embroidered waists, 50 cts. at M. Ellenbogen's. Call at Mercer's Drug and Book store for Croquetjsets, prices from $1.00 to $3.50. Children's hats 18 cts. and upwards at M. Ellenbogen's. Estimates furnished for wall paper. Contract work solicited. Competent workmen sent anywhere. W. H. Brooke & Co. ' Deeds, mortgages and note books of all kinds at the Columbian office, tf. Window curtains and fixtures m gaeat variety at W. H. Brooke & Co's. Go to Mercer's Drug and Book store for Hammocks, prices from 90 cts. to $3.50. Wall paper and window shades at lowest prices. W. H. Brooke & Co. DRUNKENNESS, or ths LIQUOR HA BIT, Cured at Home in Ten Days by administering Dr. Haines' Golden Specific It can be given in a glass of beer, a cup of coffee or tea, or in food, without the know ledge of the patient. It is absolutely harm less, and will Meet a permanent and speedy enre, whether the patient is a moderate drinker or alcoholic wreck. It has been given in thousands of cases, and in every in stance a perfect cure has followed. It never fails. The system once impregnated with the specific it becomes an utter impossibility for the liquor appetite to exist. Cures guar anteed 48 page book of particular free. Address the Uoi.den Specific Co., 185 Kace Street, Cincinnati, Ohio. IO-2I-1 yr. GET YOUR JOB PRINTING DONE AT THE COLUMBIAN OFFICE, if i i. f 1 rr-' -if J i 11 1 ''XL 1 m . 1," N if f ft!1 V I' A