V Highest of all In Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report. ABSOUTELV PUBS THE COLUMBIAN. - 1 1 entered nt the Post Ofllec nt. HlnoituDUrg, i"a , ..'cond claas mattor. March 1, ms. BLOOMSBURG, FA. KKIUAY, AUGUST J5, 1S93. NEIOllBOSHOOD HEWS. Interesting Items From Various Points in the County, Reported by Our Staff of Correspondents East Benton. Thursday afternoon of last week, a thunder storm swept over our locality accompanied by heavy gales of wind and hail. A terrib e downpour ol rain caused great washouts along the hill sides. Growing crops corn and buckwheat were badly cut and in some places nearly ruined by the hail. Hail fell as large as shucked walnuts. The hail storm was particularly severe in a line from Hamiline church to New Columbus, traveling in a south easterly direction. During the storm lightning struck Bowman Crawford's house near by Hamiline church. The electric cur rent entered the flue, followed the stove pipe into the stove, burst out the isinglass, thence took its course to an outside door, setting fire to window curtains draping tiie floor, burning patches of carpet in its line and char- ring the cages ot niopDoards. 1 he top of the window facing was charred from which the curtains were burned. No one of the family was at home at the time of the storm. It was the most severe storm ot the season for our lo cality. It can hardly be said that the drouth has yet been broken. We have had light showers since and threatens storm all the while but the ground is j et dry. Central. The Republican caucus meeting Saturday afternoon was quite exciting The rain on Thursday ndir. in the afternoon with a heavy shower made the gardens and buckwheat patches put on a bttter appearance. Water has come back in ino:;t all the runs. Jamison City experienced a sad ac rident on Thursday afternoon in the killing almost instantly of one man by the name of McCabe, and seriously injuring another. The circumstances are as near as follows : There was a large lot of lois called a "rough and tumble', and it was in this that the men went to start the logs, when they came down by the hundreds some times the men could be seen and then again they could not. McCabe leaves a wife and two or three children. The other man is single. This makes eight men that nave been killed since the lumber in terests were started in this section. Lera O'Maley in attempting to get on the renticost engine was thrown under the cow catcher. The engine was running very siow and was stopped just in time, so O'Maley came off with some sirious bruises. The sportsmen', have commenced talking deer again. ' Messrs Yorks and Hummer in com pany with W. E. Kocher went to one of the Ponds. They seemed satisfied wun tneir trip. , 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. Hartzell, Proprietor 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-iy If you want a box of that Splendid Soup you had better call at once, as it is nearly gone WHAT SOAP ? WHY ? Rishton's Witchhazel Skin SOAP. It is the Purest and Best Soap ever offered and at a very low price. 10 Cts per CAKE, 35 Cts per BOX. OPPOSITE POST OFFICE. RISHTON'S DRUG STORE. ting . Commm,on,.rI.F. F.dgat if .ulfer. M,b " 111,1 uuui.it; uu ma ink iiuiui. Tax collector's receipts for sale at this office. School Boards should consult our prices on unruled tablets before plac ing their order. The Bloom nine was defeated at Jeansville last Friday by a score of 13 to 5. Misss Martha Mover entertained a number of her young friends on Tues- lay evening. Renovo and Bloomsburz will play base ball at the Park this Frjday after noon at 3 o'clock. J. G. W.ells has rented half of Mrs. Smith's double house on Third street, and will move in soon. The contract for plaster and cement at the new Normal building has been awarded to Lasey & Dawson. A boy aged about 1 6 years can find an opportunity to learn the printing trade at this office. One who resides in town preferred. tf. Peter Mellick whose hearing took place before Judge Savidge last week Thursday, was held in $500 bail for his appearance at court. builder and nerve helper is Hood's sarsapanna. insist upon iiooa s Dc cause Hood's Cures. A reunion of the Kellar family was held in Neyhard's hall, Orange ville last week Thursday. Quite a number were present. William C. Shaw is a painter and paper-hanger of many years experience and he is prepared to nil all orders promptly, and guarantees satisfaction. His card appears in this paper. A child of John Lewis on Iron street was so badly scalded on Friday, by pulling a kettle of hot tea over, that it died on Sunday. Its age was one year. Demorest beat Bloomsburg at Williamsport on Tuesday by a score of 6 to 5. Our boys claim that they ought to have had the game, and say that the umpire beat them. All that honesty, experience and skill can do to produce a perfect pill, has been employed in making De Witt's Little Early Risers. The re sult is a specific for sick headache, biliousness and constipation. W. S. Rishton, Druggist. io-i4-iy. The trial trip of the steamei Colum bia took place on Tuesday afternoon. The new machinery worked very satis tactorily, and the run to Espy took only twenty minutes. The boat will run to Rupert to-day, and carry the M. E. Sunday School. The new stack at the Water Works is an immense affair. It is made of iron plates riveted together. The new boilers were fired up last week. The grounds about the residence of Super- . . l? 1 A. C lnienueni vveiuver are kcjji in nnc condition by him. Work at the Car Shops is slack just now, and a number of men were laid off last Saturday. The orders being filled now are for cars for South Amer ica and Cuba. They are also building a hundred portable houses for a Cuba plantation.) We could not improve the quality if paid double the price. DeWitt's Witch Hazel Salve is the best Salve that experience can produce, or that money can buy. W. &. Kishton, dru0- gist. 10 14-iy- F. A. Dennison, the general agent for the Smith Premier or Type Writer who visits all the Business Schools of the United States, places Wood's Col lege of Business and Shorthand at the head of all similar Schools in the East. The Grangers' Intel state Picnic will open at V illiama Grove, Cumberland county, on Monday, August 18th, and continue during the week. For a si 1 ic 'Mh. and inrnid liver. , co 1 1 nothing can surpass Ayer's Tills. They contain no calomel, nor any mineral drug, but are composed of the active principles ot the Desl vegetable cathar tics, and their use alwiys results in marked benefit to the patient. 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. II. Brooke Si Co. have a very large a d elegant stock to select from. Oil and see and get estimates. V3-tf. About forty Hungarians arrived in town on Tuesday morning, with their packs on their backs, and went out to the new reservoi' to work for the con tractors. In these hard times when so many men. are out of work, it is to be regretted that this labor cannot be performed by our own residents in stead of paying money out to foreign ers who live on ten cents a day, and send most of it to the old country. Lehigh Valley and Beading. On the subject of the restoration of the Lehigh Valley Railroad to its original control the Wilkes Bawe Ilecord has this to say : The annul ment of the lease between the Lehigh Valley and the Reading companies was brought about by the failure of the latter company to keep its money engagements, and it is "enerally be lieved it is for the best. It has been known for some time that the Reading could not keep the contract alive and that the parting of the companies was only a question of time. This being recognized, the abrogation of the lease was an amicable proceeding and there is no ill feeling on either side. The selection of John Lowber Welsh to be a receiver of Reading in place of Mr, Wilbur is certainly advantageous to that company. 1 he Reading will en dea'or to get on its feet financially by lopping oil expenses and by getting rid of non-paying properties. The friends of the Lehigh Valley are con fident of the future of that company, but it is well known that a period of recuperation is before it. i here is a floating debt of some dimensions to pay off, and it would not be surprising if some of the Lehigh Valley Coal Co.'s assets and credits turned out less valuable than they look on paper. Dividends are believed to be out of the question for a time as the coal trade must be expected to be bad and the iron ore and grain traffic on the lakes will not be as remunerative as usual in the near future. Gcneral'y speaking, the company is in good con dition. There is no car trust anil the compary has a Urge and profitable coal, freight and passenger business, The condition of President Wilbur's health has led to unco.ifn.ned rumors that he would resign. Mr. Wilbur has teen closely identified with the Packer estate interest, which controls more than 200,000 shares of the Lehigh Valley, or 25 per cent, of the out standing stock. Mr. Wilbur was Judge Packer's confidential man for years before the latter's death, and he is one of the executors of the estate and a manager of the Lehigh Univer sity and St. Luke's Hospital, the great benefactions ot the late judge, lne only living representative of Judge Packers family is Mrs. Charles H, Cummings, whose interest in her father s property is now $200,000 per annum, she having signed off her right to the greater income she was entitled to under Judge Packer's will when she married Mr. Cummings. The course of president Wilbur, whose hold on the estate is secure, has not been in accordance with tne wishes of Mrs, Cummings, and he has alienated a great many friends of the Packer fam ily, who are old holders of Lehigh Valley stock. It has always been held by these people thak Mr. Wilbur made a mistake when he made the lease to the Reading Company. The management of the estate and the Lehigh Valley Company may be a question of interest in the future. Jf you can afford to be annoyed by sick headache and constipation, don't use DeWitt's Little Early Risers for these little pills will cure them. W. S. Rishton, Druggist. 10-14-iy. Queer Facts About Money. There are 1 19,900,000 old copper pennies somewhere. Nobody knows what has become of them, except that once in a while a single specimen turns up in change. A few years ago 4,500,000 bronze 2 cent pieces were set afloat. Three million of thee are still out standing. Three million 3 cent nickle pieces are scattered over the United States, but it is very rarely that one is seen. Of 800,000 half cents, which corresponds in value to English farthings, not one has been returned to the government fm- re coinage or is held by the Treasiu. A lot of new notes of" the sharpest kind have just been printed and are for sale at this oltice. Also common receipts, estate receipts, and collec tors' receipts, neatly bound in books of 25, 50 and 100. ' tf. Deeds, mortgages and note books of all l-inds at the Columbian otiice j CORNER OF MARKET AND MAIN STREETS, BLOOZ&SZBTTIRCa-.. GNEHAL NEWS. At a meeting of the creditors of E. J. Gaynor & Company, held at Will iamsport, it was decided to proceed legally against the Williamsport and North Branch railroad for the recovery of claims under the contract. Gaynor & Company assigned recently. Americans in Paris and London say the weather is worse than the hottest spells at home, because while the days' temperature is from 95 and 100 the nights are almost as bad. The news papers say that in twenty years Eng land has not had another such a peri od of midsummer suffering. Queen Victoria has been affected by the weather as in no former year. She has spent hours trying to find in the summer house in the Osborne Park relief from heat. Punkahs and other tropical appliances for cooling the air have been in constant use around her. In the evening she has driven in the most densely shaded parts of the grounds. ... A reaction in the business depres sion, which will soon put at least 1 000 of Allegheny county's citizens to work, lias surely come. From all quar ters reports came thick and fast of plants which are to be started, and they cr.-ated happiness in thousands of homes where of late the shadow caused by the doubt of an indefinite interruption of employment, with all f lat it implies when the prospect of a severe winter is just ahead, his been deepening and deepening. Iron and steel plants, several of them and big ones, which have been idle will start on Monday, and before the end of the week, or at most of two weeks, will be running full. Oth ers which have been running in part will increase the number of depart ments in operation. The outlook is most encouraging. The Schuylkill county delegates to the Republican State Convention were instructed to vote for Judge Arch bald for Judge of the Supreme Court says the bcranton Junes. All the mining disiricts will certainly vote for Judge Archbald, but we fear that the ma chine politicians of the state, with the wily Quay at their head, will succeed in keeping him off the ticket. The machine rules in republican politics. . A Qlance Ahead. The Eighty-seventh Volume of Harper's Magazine will close bril liantly. In the October number will begin Mr. Edwin Lord Week's ar ticles' describing his journey from the Black Sea to the Persian Gulf by caravan, during the season of a chol era epidemic, and the narrative will be embellished by illustrations from sketches made by Mr. Weeks along the way. The October instalment will treat of the journey through the country of the Kurds, across the frontier of Persia. Mr. Richard Hard ing Davis's studies pf English life will be continued during the autumn with a paper on "Undergraduate Life at Oxford," and two articles on London. Timely articles will be a feature of the forthcoming numbers. Following Mr. Sidney Webster's article on "Isthmian Diplomacy" in the September Maga zine, Mr. Carl Shurz will write for the October Harper's a paper on the "Manifest Destiny" of the United States, and in the November number, Mr. Frederick R. Coudert. who re cently was so prominent in the Ben ring's Sea controversy at Paris, will be represented by an article on "Arbi tration" as a means of settling inter national disputes. Short stories by Brander Matthews, Richard Harding Davis, Harriet Prescott Spofford, Charles Egbert Craddock, Owen Wis ter, Ruth McEnery Stuart, Howard Pyle, William McLennan, and Wal ter Pater will appear in early numbers of the Magazine. fiuckien s Arnica Salve. The Best Salve in the world for Cuts, Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum, Fever Sores, Tetter. Chanced Hands, Chilblains, Corns, and all Skin Eruptions, and positively cures Piles. or no pay required. It is guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction, or money refunded. Price 2 cents uer box. For sale by C. A. Kleim. Married. By J. M. Ammerman, J. P., at Forks, Aug. 15th, 1801, Mr. George Gilbert, of Fishingcreek, to Miss Lydia Mourey, of White Deer, Lycoming Co., Pa. SCHOOL SUITS - IN ENDLESS VARIETY Bring the Young Chap in and have him try one oa $3.90 For Boys' Knee Pants Suits that formerly Hold for 5 and Q dollars- No wonder they've been selling fast. You'd buy one too if you saw them. They're suitable for Fall wear. Are Stylish, Neat and Tasty. For an excellent Boy' Knee Pants SCHOOL SUIT, competitors ask 3 arid $3.50 for it erior grade,. Odd Knee J ants to mr.x up with the Youngster's Coat Excellent ones from 50i cents to SI. OO. QlBDINB & ousts zEexcis CLOTHIERS, HATTERS & FURHISHEBS. BUSINESS LOCALS. 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. iyr Window curtains and fixtures in gaeat variety at W. H. Brooke & Co's. Estimates furnished for wall paper. Contract work solicited. Competent workmen sent anywhere. W. H. Brooke & Co. Go to Mercer's Drug and Book store for Hammocks, prices from 90 cts. to $3. jO. Wall paper and window shades at lowest prices. W. H. Brooke & Co. Hammocks from 90 cents to $3.50 at Mercer's Drug and Book store. New edition of Episcopal Hymnals at W. H. Brooke & Co s. Call at Mercer's Drug and Book store for Croquet sets, prices from $1.00 to $3.50. Are you going to paper your house ? Give us a call. Get estimates and prices. W. H. Brooke & Co. HARVEY'S LAZE. Lake Grove Hotel, located at this popular resort, has been enlarged, re modelled and refurnished, ami is now the largest hotel on the lake. All modern improvement, (jood 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. 623-iot. fSALSBUBO, s Croquet sets $1.00 up to $3.50 aft Mercer's Drug and Book store. AT THE TOP We are at the top in the list by general commit And why f Because we strive to please, wa give honest values, and while our system of Duylng enables to sell low, we ore content with lulr protlt, and give ovr patrons a share In thin advantage. v mi.' i viiik niitMTi (u lllllliueiueuui uniu ine Inst, ot August In the wuv of nrieua on nur iina Watches, Clocks, Jewelry and Silver to show yrfu that we appreciate, the very liberal pat lona'tii you have given ustliusfar, to in duce) 011 to come analn and also to re duce our stock to make room for our b all and Holiday goods, dune now II you aui bargains. Personal at tout luu given to repairing ol line Watctic &:., a nd warranted sutktacloiy at HESS BROS, .1KWKI.KKS AND STATIOXEIIS. Sign of big watch, Main St. Bloomsburc, Pa. GKT YOUR JOB PRINTING DONE AT THE COLUMBIAN OFFICE.