VOL 2S , BLOOMSBURG. PA.. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 27." 1SD3. NO 45 WAITING IPS THE CORONER. A false impression prevails that when a dead body is found, it must not be moved, until the coroner has viewed it. As the question was raised in the case of William Brewer, found dead at Irondale last Saturday, the following article on the subject from the Philadelphia J'rcis of Tuesday is timely. In answer to the question as to whether a dead body found on a railroad track could be removed be fore the coroner came, it says : As a general thing the safest course for the discoverer of a dead body is to leave it untouched until other witness cs have seen it, and, where convenient, until the Coroner appears. The rean on of this is obvious. The position and condition in which a body is found shed light on the circumstances attend ing his death, and it is important that this evidence should not be destroyed or rendered less certain by the hasty action of the first finder. Moreover, it is alwas possible that the officious meddler with the body of a man who has been killed may raise against him self an cmbarassing presumption that he had something to do with his death. It is both wisdom and prudence, there fore, for the discoverer of a dead body to disturb it as little as possible until others, and, if possible, the represen tative of the law, shall have seen it as it originally revealed itself. To this common-sense rule there are many exceptions. If the body discovered near Fallsington was lying on the railroad track, no rational per son, however ignorant, would maintain that it should have been left there to be crushed and mangled by succeeding trains, instead of being removed from the rails. Moreover, it is not always certain that life is extinct when a body, apparently dead, is first discovered, and by leaving the body untouched while waiting for the Coroner the op portunity to resuscitate it may be lost. We know a case where a son found his father's body in a stieam of water. With filial energy he secured the body, fastened a rope around it which he se cured to a tree, and then in obedience to the superstition that the Coroner must view the body before it is re moved from its original environment he waited and watched for hours his father's floating body until the Coro ner arrived. It there was life in the body when discovered it had fled be fore the Coroner could pass judgment upon it. In the same spirit the crew of a tugboat which plies in the Dela ware recently hauled through the wat er to the wharf a young woman still living who had jumped into the river from a passing steamboat. The boat's crew thought that she was dead, and that they had no right to take her body from the water until authorized by the Coroner, and because their brains were charged with this ancient piece of misinformation the young woman was drowned. "" ... ... . yur puDiic schools teach many things but it would be well if in some way information were given to the rising generation that when a suDoosed dead body is discovered it is not nec essary to assume that the body is cer tainly dead or to outrage all human instincts and natural feeling by leaving me body expos' d and subiect to furth er injury until the Coroner appears on the scene. The functionary is charged with the duty of inquiring into cases of sudden death, but until he arrives it is not necessary that the bystanders should be stricken with paralysis or rtiuse to act with ordinary common sense. :00UUTY INSTITUTE. The program (or the coming county institute to be held Nov. 13th to 17th nas been completed and printed. I he following excellent talent has been secured for evening entertain raents. Dr. Tohn 15. DeMott. Dr. Levin Irvin Herndv. Col. Georce. W. Bain, and the the Ollie Torbett Con cert Co. Col. Bain is well known to many of our people, the others are new. Dr, DeMott's illustrated lectures are su penor 10 anytning ot the kind ever given. Dr. Herndv. a relative of Patrick Henry, is a typical southern man and great prator, possessing many char acteristics of his illustrious relative. TL -hi ineuiiie iorbett Concert Co. is one of the finest and best musical or ganizations available. tickets for the course $1.50. The public can purchase tickets and re "ive seais at rentier s any time on and after Nov. and. 10 37 3t. Gidding & Salsburg have received another new line of Suits and Over coats at prices much below their real worth. The closeness of money has caused the itrop and their customers we oenent ot close spot cash buy' HALLOW E'EN CHARMS. OLD SUPERSTITIONS BY THE AIM fiK WHICH A MAM) MAY DISCOVER WHOM SHE Wll.I. WRU. .Many and slrance arc the rites and Sit iperstitions that cling to Hallowe'en. U ere are some ot them. I f you are brave enough to tempt s powers of darkness, sum osed to the be abroad on the last nisht of Octo- r, walk three times around a church midnight strewing hemiiseed. and repeating : Itcmpsced I sow, Moniscc(l I strnw, lie that ii my true love Corr.e after me and mow. On the third round your future hus band will appear behind you with a scythe. A favorite but chastly trick in the old countries is the throwing of a ball of yarn into the well. Begin to wind it up and say : I wind, I wind, My true love you to find. With the end of the yarn he will rise, seated in his coffin. Comb your hair before the parlor mirror, at the same time eating an ap ple, and he will look over your shoul der in the glass as the clock strikes 12. Leave soap, towels, brush and ra zor on the bureau, lie awake and watch, and at 12 o'clock he will enter, shave himself, and retire. If he fails to come you are doomed to be an old maid. If there happens to be a new moon on Hallowe'en, go out to the gate alone, and repeat the couplet : New moon, true moon, reveal unto me. This night who my husband is to foe. He will appear before you. It is recounted, that a lass who tried this was whipped up and borne away by a horseman in a black cloak. Less tragic was the experience of the girl who put a pan of ashes at htr bedside, expecting to see the name of her future husband written in it next morning. During the night her broth er stole slyly in, and this is what she found : Trying tricks is but a notion, ' Death and hell shall foe thy portion. If you would bring the absent love to your side, make a little rag doll and name it with his name. Wish that he will have neither rest nor peace until he comes, and bury it in hot coals and ashes on the hearth, where it will smoulder slowly. By the time it has burned away he will arrive. This seems to have originated from the melting of the wax image of an enemy before the fire, an old Scottish super stition embalmed in Rossetti's poem. "Sister Helen." Eat a thimbleful of salt, co to bed backward, and in silence, and the man you are distined to wed will bring you water in your dreams. If in a tin cup, you will be very poor 5 if a glass, com fortably well on ; but if you quench your thirst from silver, you will be wealth. In Germany, the fraulein goes into the garden backward at midnight, and pulls a cabbage. If earth adheres to the roots, she will marry rich. More pleasing, however, are the tricks that can be tried in cay com pany, such as the naming and burning of nuts, as having been blindfolded, to dip your hand into one of these bowls set before you, one empty, one filled with clean and one with dirty water. The clean signifies that you will wed a man never married before, the dirty a widower j and the empty one means you will not marry at all. It is also very amusing to drop melted lead in to a bowl of cold water, when it will atsume fantastic shapes, supposed to indicate the calling of the future part ner of your joys and sorrows. The press of Bloomsburg has done as much for the good of the commun ity, morally and temporally, as any other agency. It favors the enforce ment of all laws that are made for the suppression of crime, and for the wel fare of the people, and it is ready to join hands with any organization that will start a movement lor the enforce ment of laws that will be of some ben efit to the people, whether those laws apply to week days or Sundays. In such matters however the press does not "strain at a gnat and swallow a camel." The cpntract for printing the bal lots for the election next month has been awarded to The Columhian by the county commissioners, and the work is now going on. The change in the law makes a great difference in the number of ballots necessary. Last year it required nearly 40,000 inclu ding both official and specimen, and it took over a ton of paper. This year there will be but 16,400 ballots printed, requiring only about one fourth as much paper. FOUND DEAD AT IRONDALE. The body of William Brewer, a young colored man, was found in the casting room of the old Irondale furn ace last Saturday night, a little before six o'clock, by Frank Dictterich, who notified Guy Jacoby Esq. Word was sent to Coroner F. W. Rcdcker at Espy, but he was not at home, and so Esquire Jacoby went out and swore in the following jury : J. W. Sands, J. E. Jones, George West, J. C. Millard, William Drum and Jacob Stiner. After viewing thp body the inquest adjourned until Monday morning at Esquire Jacoby's office, where after hearing the testimony of several wit nesses they found that the deceased came to his death from drinking too much whiskey. The evidence showed that on Satin day afternoon Brewer was drinking with three white boys. They raised sixty cents among them and Brewer came in town and bought a qtl.irt of whiskey. At about four o'clock they went to the Irondale furnace, and there took turns drinking out of the bottle, Brewer taking considerable more than his share, lie soon showed signs of intoxication, and said he would lie down and take a nap. The other boys found a board and an old sack and he lay down on it, and they leit him there, lie was singing "I want to be an angel" as they came away. Nothing more was seen of him until after five o clock, when Frank Deiterich went to hunt him at the re quest of Mrs. Brewer, who lives in one of the Irondale houses. When found his feet and ankles were cold but his body was warm. A crowd soon fath ered and on the arrival of the Justice euorts were made to resuscitate him. After the jury had viewed the body it was removed to his home, when fur ther efforts were made to revive him, but on the arrival of Dr. Reber he pronounced life extinct Brewer was 23 years old. The young men who were with him were William Moore, Edward Deittcrich and Robert Jack son. BURGLARS CAPTURED. On Saturday night at about half past ten o'clock, the cellar of the St. Elmo Hotel was entered and a three gallon demijohn of whiskey and sever al bottles of case goods amounting in all to about thirty dollars were stolen. On Monday morning J. L. Girton went before Guy Jacoby Esq. and swore out a warrant for the arrest of Hiram Long and Jonathan Chromis. who were taken in custody by Officers Thomas and Woodward, and brought betore the justice and given a hear ing. J. L. Girton testified to the ureaking in the cellar and the loss of the liquor. The men entered by the back cellar door by breaking a pane of glass, and unlocking the door, and broke into the liquor cellar with a piece of gas pipe. John S. Williams testified that Long and Chromis told him they were going to get some of Girton's whiskey, and he watched them. They went down to the rear end of the lot and when they disap peared Williams called Harry Doak who works for Winner & Derr.and they watched together. Pretty soon the men came down through the lot one with a demijohn, and the other with a bag full of bottles. Williams and Doak followed them to Catharine street when Mr. Doak came back, tut Williams followed them to Chromis' house, where they were emptying the liquor from the demijohn into bottles. It was then late at night, and Mr. Doak told Mr. Girton on Sunday morning what he had seen. The thieves gavs Williams a bottle of whiskey and the latter stated that he took it to use it as evidence against them. Doak corroborated Williams' testimony. The Justice committed the men to jail without bail, the charge being burglary. Long and Chromis admit that they broke in the cellar and took the liquor, but allege that two other men planned the theft for them. Centralis in Danger. A telegram from Centra'.ia on Mon day announces that large cracks have again made their appearance on the main street at Centralia and the buildings in the vicinity have sunk several inches. The Episcopal church has been badly damaged and is doomed to destruction. The people are vacating their homes to night and the greatest excitement prevails. The cracking is caused by the old working of the Centralia Col liery. The timbers have become rot ten and as they fall they carry the sur face with them. Keller, the magician, will b? here on the night of November 3rd. Se cure seats early, as the house will be crowded. PARISH HOUSE CASE SETTLED. The suit of Jonathan B.mhman against the Rector, Wardens and Ves trymen of St. Paul's Church, tried at last May court, resulted in a verdict in iavor 01 me piaintiu lor 543. 00. ThouL'h the church proved that it hid o 1 - ----- made a contract for the erection of a Parish House for a certain amount with Thus. Gorrv. and held his re ceipt in full for the contract price, 1 i-t .. . . -.1 anu viorry nan a written contract witn Bachman as sub contractor for the stone work, and showed that he had overpaid Bachman on that contract, Bachman swore that he had a differ ent verbal arrangement with Gorrey for extra work, and the jury gave him all he demanded. The defendants feeling that thoy had been wronged, took an appeal to the Supreme Court, and the case would have been argued there next April. But a few weeks ago the chinch authorities concluded that it would be better to settle the case, because it would cost several hundred dollars to carry it to the Su preme Court, and by adding a little more to this, the workmen whom Bachman had not paid would get their money. Accordingly a propo sition was made, and after some ne gotiations, an agreement was reached, and the docket was satisfied by the plaintiff on the payment of $625 by the church. The full amount of the debt, interest and costs, was about $850. NORMAL SCHOOL NOTES. The most interesting place on "Normal Hill" at present, outside ol the class-rooms, is the gymnasium. Work here is progressing rapidly. The running track is almost com pleted or ready for the Narragansett people to lay their track, and it prom ises to be a fine one. It is now in mind to formally open the new gymnasium on Thanksgiving day. Many invitations will probably be sent out, and it is hoped that many former students and friends of the schoool will be present to show their interest in the growth and prosperity of our Normal School. A committee of the Faculty has been appointed, to prepare a suitable programme for the day and occasion. No report has been made as yet, but we doubt not that all who spend Thanksgiving day on the hill, will be pleased and glad to know that each new year marks changes and improve ments for the school. A large force of men and teams are now at work, under direction of the superintendent of grounds, grading the campus lying west of the buildings. To level up the hollow is a great big undertaking but the corps now at work make daily impressions upon the big hole, and with ten days more, we will not know the place. This when finished, will make an elegant ground for field sports. The authorities of the school de serve much credit in their zeal to make every part ot the school as it should be. Our citizens should not fail to hear that splendid entertainment by the Huston Ideal Jianjo, Mandolin and Guitar Club. They fill the first night of the Stud ents Lecture Course, for this season, on Wednesday, Noo. 1. The diagram is now open at Brooke & Go's, store. The second number comes Decem ber 4th, and is filled by that Prince of orators, I Ion. George Wendling. KILLED AT LIME RIDGE. A man named Thomas and two other men got on a freight train on the D. I & W. railroad at Danville on Monday morning to come to B oomsburg. and on reaching here concluded to go on to Lime Ridge , to see Thomas' brother. When they ar rived there the other two jumped off the train safely, but Thomas' slipped and fell under the train, and his legs were cut off and his head crushed in, killing him instantly. The remains were taken to an undertaker's and pre pared for burial, and were taken to his home in Danville on Tuesday morning. He was about 23 years ot age. Alexander Bros. & Co. have re cently placed in their store some beau tiful new show cases for the display of their goods. Among the articles shown by them is the finest line of meerscham pipes and cigar holders ever shown in Bloomsburg, in fact few of the inland cities can exhibit such an assortment. They also have some novelties in the way ot sweet briar pipes, in odd shapes with amberine stems, with neat cases. These goods are all new, und the latest in that line. It is worth the time of every smoker to call and see them. BRIEF MENTION. About People You Know. Dr. J. P. Welsh went to Easton on Wednesday to lecture at an institute. Mr. Dr. E. F. Smith returned to her home in Goshen, N. Y., on Tuesday. Elmer E. Mcars spent Thursday in Philadelphia on business. Mr. and Mrs. F. M. Leader were at the World's Fair this week. Mr. and Mrs. F. P. Billmeycr re turned from Chicago on Monday night. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Ikeler came home from their wedding trip on Mon day. R. W. Oswald was confined to the house several days by an attack of rheumatism. He was able to be out again on Tuesday. Warren Eycr returned from the west last Friday, after an absence of two years. He has been in South Dakota, and other western states. Miss Maud Patterson went to New York on Monday, and will be absent a month or more, visiting in that city and Washington. Mr. and Mrs. II. C. Harman of Downingtown, have been visiting rela tives in this county the past two weeks. Mr. Harman is a brother of P. S. Harman. Mrs. E. Jacobs had a stroke of par alysis on Wednesday afternoon, and is lying in a critical condition. She was conscious on Thursday, and was be lieved to be slightly better. Rev. Dr. D. J. Waller Sr. and L. E. Waller Esq. returned from the World's Fair last Saturday. The ven erable Doctor came home in better health than when he started. Rev. W. C. Leverett was prevented from attending the fall meeting of the Archdeaconry of Williamsport, which convened at Shamokin on Tuesday, by sickness. He was confined to his bed for several days. Mrs. Melick who has been visiting her parents here, returned home on Tuesday. She sang solos at the Pres byterian church on Sunday morning and evening, and her voice has lost none of its sweetness. The engagement of Miss Jessie Mann of Sunbury, and Mr. Horace Otto of Williamsport is announced, and it is said the wedding will take place next June. Miss Mann is well known here. W. C. Shaw and his men have re painted the house of T. B. Miller on Third street now occupied by Prof. F. H. Jenkins. It is very much im proved in appearance. Mr. Shaw knows how to do a good job. Mr. W. Keefer says we were mis taken last week in saying that he at tended the fair with his wife. As he is not married, we cheerfully admit the inaccuracy of the statement, and will call our informant to account at the first opportunity. Louis Bernhard Jr., is one of the youngest school teachers in the state. He has been teaching at Nescopeck, and recently passed an examination before the Luzerne County Superin tendent and now has his certificate. He spends his Sundays at home, and is one of the most faithful members of St. Paul's vested choir. Lizzie, daughter of Dr. D. J. Vvaller Jr.. has been seriously ill for several weeks. On Saturday last Dr. Mont gomery of Philadelphia was called in, and went to Indiana county to see her. After an exan.ination, he pronounced a surgical operation necessary, and on Monday Mr. and Mrs. Waller and Miss Petriken, a trained nurse, went with Lizzie to Dr. Montgomery's hos pital in Philadelphia, where the opera tion was performed on Thursday. The result has not been learned, 'lhe many friends here earnestly hope that it may result in the child's complete restoration to health. The Williamsport Saturday Evening Review is a new weekly paper recent ly started in Williamsport, devoted to the news of society, secret orders, bi cycle clubs, military musical and per sonal news, with humorous matter and handsome illustrations. It is edited and managed by W. H. Showers, a gentlemen thoroughly fitted for the success! ul conduct of such a paper. A Bloomsburg letter appears in the Re view each week. The price is 5 cents a copy or $2.00 a year. MEDAL AND DIPLOMA AWARDED, The Mears Manufacturing Company has been awarded separate medals and diplomas at the World's Fair on their washing machines, dog power and churn. They made a very creditable exhibit at the Fair. THE D. uiwnrji 1 ' 1J m S li CLOTHING POSITIVELY GOING OUT OF BUSINESS. WORTH OF ELEGANT Clothing, Hats, & Furnishings. MUST BE BEFORE THE Hlorc Clothing than any two Stores in Bloomsburg. The LATEST Styles and the Newest Goods all to be Slaughtered, Sacrificed. Elegant Suits at way below cost. COME NOW and get an Overcoat, LIGHT or HEAVY VVeieht. at almost your own price be tore the selection is gone. FINE SILVER WATCHES AND- JEWELRY at almost give away prices. PRICES SPEAK for them selves now at the LOWENBERG STORE 20,000 FIRST OF JANUARY i wmm STORE. 'II 1! il ;i! f w r i 1 : 1 ft. IS vv 1W i Mi It fj v 1.:b