EANDOM EEMARE3. .'tswgMs on Various Toplci by Casual Observer. One drawback upon th profits :arned by the electric cars, we notice, i the damages frequently collected ix killing passengers and animals. Anew disease among horses, some :hing like paralysis, is now reported m certain sections of the State. Remove boils, pimples, and skin eruptions, by taking Aycr's Sarsapat iUa. Were all damages reported that re suited from the last heavy fall of snow columns might be filled in recording the injury to roofs, trees, animals, &c. What " the dogs " does the Phila delphia Times mean by putting at the head of its editorial column, on the uth. inst., a picture of two pups reading the Times. Country fishermen will do better by consulting the fish-laws proper, than by taking it for grated that the Pro tective Fish Association always get instructions correct. What this country needs and needs badly, in view of the unsafety of so called safety banks of deposit, is some scheme by which the Government secures the depositor. The proposi tion to make postmasters recipients of small savings for which the Gov ernment is responsible, is we think a "good one. Eventually something of the kind will be done. We have the usual report of the frost's destructive work upon the peach crop of Delaware. But some how we don't more than half believe " these reports any more. "When Greek meets Greek, then comes the tug of war. " The Moun tain Echo says : "Scranton hotel men have organized to oppose, and if necessary boycot, brewers who sell to speak easy propri etors. As it is possible to luxuriate too much t'.s an individual, so it may be with a town. Bloomsburg is away up front as a town. For instance, the servant girl who wears silk dresses to jpilk in needs tig yiy k feci dressed well on Sunday, and to meet her current or running dress expenses. So to meet running expenses we appre hend that Bloomsburgers should do a right lively business. . " Do I want to be President ? Why certainly," says Chauncey Depew. " But I have not as yet become a candidate for nomination. The candidate who begins running thus early vill lose his breath before 1896." Mr. Depew wants his best wind at the best time, don't you see. ' If the resolutions adopted by the Women's Protective League of Wash rngton as king for the expulsion of Congressman Breckinridge are refer red to the Committee on Privileges and Elections, the chances are the res olutions will soon be rocked to sleep, since members of Congress are in strong sympathy with each other in the hour of trouble. It is perhaps a little early to begin to speculate or sumise upon who will be our next President. It is being done all the same, however, now that the State Cental committees are pre paring for the business of President making. It has got to be quite a big task, and therefore both parties prefer to begin early and work late, but they never have the remotest idea who will be the nominees much less the suc cessful candidates. There is no denying the fact that old time prayer meetings and class meetings are about obsolete in the rural districts and towns. They have been in a large measure supplanted by the less spititual and emotional Epworth Leagues and Christian En deavor organizations. We fear the fond memories of class and prayer meetings are apt to live and die with the old folks Married While Drunk. Charles J. Krug has been granted an absolute divorce from Sadie Krug, on the ground of abandonment and unfaithlulness. Krug, who has just passed his majority, is the son of a prominent Baltimore merchant. In a bill filed by him he stated that his wife was a finger in a concert hall in this city when he met her. He had known her only a short time, when on August 5, i8q2, she got him drunk, and while in that condition persuaded him to go to Washington, she paying all ex penses. ar.il there married him. . After the ceremony the pair return ed to Baltimore. Knur tlun rlmruM 1 l 0 b" that his wile tried to extort money ! hi parents, and, failing in thii-. 1 ned him and went West. Since then iiiTn2JieaM otlng ot her. lie , claimed uThKe'.-n a linor the time of marriaiSLni!e "'e woman was then 1-1 vi-nrc i.fNfit. - htlaiUl I'tia 'J in 1 ex. rom aCSri IN CONGRESS. Washington's Reception of Coxey and Other Ann -1 arm Ketorm Boomers. THEODOBE DAVEHPOBTS SHORTAGE IN HIS POST OFHOE A000UNTS. Republicans 8tlll Filibustering. Prom our Regular Correspondent. Washington, April aj. President Cleveland was very much surprised when he learned, from a local paper, that there were people ignorant enough to suppose it to be his duty to issue some sort of a proclamation in con nection with the coming of Coxey's so called army. Every person ot suf ficient intelligence to read the Consti tution of the United States should know that the President has no more authority to issue a proclamation con cerning the coming of these men in to the District of Columbia than he had to issue a proclamation dealing with their starting from the State of Ohio, or their passage through the States of Pennsylvania, Wtst Virginia and Maryland. The District of Col umbia has a legally constituted govern ment, just as those States have, and until that government shall notify the President of its inability to deal with the expected unwelcome visitors the President has no authority to take any action, even were he disposed to think any necessary. The Coxeyites will find when they arrive in Washington that they are neither to be lionized nor made mar tyts of. As long as they violate no law they will be let alone, just as other visitors are. If they violate the law they must expect no mercy for they will get none. They are certainly com ing unasked and upon a fool's errand. They will find rigid the law stand ing between them and their program, so tar as marching up to the Captitol and holding a meeting upon the steps of that building is concerned. They will also find that Washington and the surrounding coutitry is a mighty poor place for a lot of men to be stranded without money or a plentiful supply of provisions. No trouble is expected from the Coxeyites proper, but from infoimation received by the police it is believed that they will be joined when near this city by a large number of criminals who hope to profit by any . 4 1.1 . TL. .l..f iruuuic mar, may arise. 1 nc auuiori ties are fully prepared for them. Another good Republican is in troub'e with Uncle Sam. The afore said Republican being " shy " just $3,841.01 in his accounts. The party referred to is Theodore Davenport, of Connecticut, who was disbursing clerk of the Post Office department under the last administration. Mr. Daven port was removed last year and a committee appointed to go over his accounts. His stealings were done through overcharging the amounts he paid out for supplies or work done for the department. His bondsmen, who are perfectly solvent, have been noti fied to pay the amount mentioned above, so the Government will lose nothing. Mr. Davenport is also liable to criminal prosecution, but his exact whereabouts-is not at present known. This is the second Republican de falcation in this office within a com paratively short period. The first one being Captain Burnside, who was one of the swells of Washington for a long period. He got more than $40,000, and by shrewd management went to St. Elizabeth's hospital for the insane, where he still is, instead of to the penitentiary. Senator Gordon quite unexpectedly sprung- the question with which the House committee on Banking and Currency has been wrestling for a long time upon the Senate by the in troduction of a resolution instructing the committee on Finance to repoit a bill repealing the tax on state bank currency. The resolution was referred to the Finance committee, a majority of which are believed to be opposed to the repeal of the tax. The appointment of ex Governor Jarvis to fill the unexpired term of the late Senator Vance, was very well re ceived here, where Senator Jarvis has many personal friends, among the warmest of whom is President Cleve land. The Noith Carolina delegation in Congress have nothing but good words for the new Senator. The Democratic party at large will hear some good news from the Senate in the near future. More cannot be said without violating confidence, but it tan be stated that it relates to the harmonious passing of the tariff bill by the votes of every Democratic Sena tor. The Pennsylvania manufacturers who paid out good money to send seven or eight hundred people, under thu high sounding title of Delegates from the National Workmen's Protec tive Tariff League, to Washington to protest against the tariff bill, made a very poor investment. The protest was very tame indeed -and did not create even a ripple at the Capitol. If sent by mail it would have been equally effective. Half of the " dele gates " showed their interest in the widely advertised btreet parade by not taking part in it, preferring to spend their time in sight seeing, not know ing wner. mey wouut again nave an opportunity to come, to Washington without cost to themselves. The new quorum counting rule having deprived the Republicans of the House of their favorite occupation. filibustering by -refusing to vote when there was no Democratic quorum present they have now started a new way of retarding business, by trying to 6tir up a bitter political discussion over unimportant items in the " regular ; appropriation bills. They wis.i to prevent an early adjournment of Con-1 gress. ' I It is only of late years that rheuma- , tism has been treated as a blood dis ease. But that this is a correct theory is proved by the extraordinary success attending the use of Ayer's Sarsapar- ; ilia, in this painful and very prevalent malady. It seldom fails of radical cure. I DEEDS RECORDED. Edward Buck to John E. Ebner, Millville. M. Forbes to F. J. Landon, Jam ison City. A. II. rhillips toT. L. Phillips, Madison. M. Hess to Noah W. Hess, Fishine- creek. C. W. Eves , to Henrietta Watts, Greenwood. T. J. Davis to II. W. Ungesser, Beaver. Joshua Fetterman to T. L. Richard son, Bloomsburg. l). J. Waller to E. E. Hears, Bloomsburg. E. E. Mears to Mildred Mears, Bloomsburg. Mildred Mears to B. & L. Associa tion, Bloomsburg. Franklin Bidler to T. M. Hartman. Jackson. J. M. Hartman to Franklin Bidler. Jackson. C. h. Kishbaujm to W. J. Knorr, Briarcreek. Isaac Brown to John F. Shultz, Fishingcrcek. Lucinda Seesholtz to M. L. Kline, Eloonisburz. M. L. Kline to Lucinda See: holtz. Bloomsburg. C. W, Miller to N. W. Barton, Bloomsburg. R. R. Little, Trustee to G. F. Shu- man, Beaver. v G. F. Shuman to I. Klinjrerman. Beaver. G. F. Shuman to Martin Tohnson. Beaver. W. If. Carl to Win, F. Kreiabaum. Cleveland. N. tt Hess to John McMichael, Fishingcreek. R. L, F. Colley to E'mira Kline, Benton. John L. Dillon to B. Land Improve ment Co., Bloomsburg. . Bloorr. Iron Co. to I. W. McKelvy, Bloomsburg. C. F. Hartzel to Jacob Bredbenner, Main. Chas. Haas to Elmira Benscoter, Berwick. Elmira Benscoter to Cora M. Search, Berwick. Luther Eyer, Attorney, to Mary Bailor, Montour. The following deeds have been placed in Register & Recorder Ent's office for recording, since the last pub- nsnea. Hiram R. Bower to W. C. White, Orange. Samuel II. Harman to C. W. Miller, Centre. C. W. McKelvy Jr., to Joshua Fetterman, Bloomsburg. The way she looks troubles the woman who is delicate, run down, or overworked. She's hollow-cheeked. dull-eyed, thin, and pale, and it wor ries her. Now, the way to look well is to be well. And the way to be well, if you're any such woman, is to faith fully use Dr. Pierce's Favorite Pre scription. That is the only medicine that's guaranteed to build up woman's strength and to cure woman's ail ments. In every " female complaint," irregularity, or weakness, and in every exhausted condition of the female sys tem if it ever fails to benefit or cure, you have your money back. Many people wonder how Spring Clothing, made o. the finest materials and in style and finish equal to the best custom work, can be sold at such remark? oly low prices, as those quoted by Messrs. Browning, King & Co. 910-912 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia. The explanation is that this concern, who are the largest ready made cloth ing dealers in America, were enab'ed, owing to the hard times last year, to make very largj cash purchases of cloth, at ridiculously low figures, and now the retail buyers are securing the benefits derived from these deals. RohbdJ aaJ Loz'ui 11 a. Bank Vault. Chadron. Neb, April 12. This afternoon while Albert Whipple, cash ier of the Crawford Banking Company of Crawford, Neb., was alone in the bank a stranger, attired "in cow-boy garb, entered, and shoving a six shooter in Whip. It's face, demanded money, Whipple pave up all the cash on the counter, about $2,500. The robber then compelled Whipple to enter the vault and locked him in, where he was foun.l twenty minute, later by the president. The robber es caped. According to the Philadelphia Times, Kings and Queens have rights in tlvs country (in a proker hand) even under the most radical interpretations tf the Monroe doctrine. f 1 910.912 CHESTNUT STREET. Warren A. Reed Plows E CLOVER SEED, ID. iTtllvitlff 1 llfl way which if followed leads to MtfTilriillM!IJ-U,!Bffiy,U?l Prof. HARRIS' X SOLUBLE MEDICATED. Pastille ITim hnan il nn I- . tmuirinliictf film , ,i,.n Lrci:i, UC'U Mnri hoa In nrlvntA ttpiu.i ...A I 4a . . . Coubtful reputation, but a Kenulne speclno ot a very prejnleut dienw). Thousands of men. ol all Hues, have at xiiue time In life brouxbt on neiroiii debility and exbuustlon, with omanla weaknom, by over brain work, exceaMis.tnofre. ouent liidulxeiica or Indiscretion and vicious habits, aud It Is to tbeae that we offer a remedy .that will, by Its direct action upon the soat of the disease, stop the druln and restore the Datlentta Tlnoroutliealih and strennih. " Our method of Introdnrlng ' Prof. Harris1 Pastille - " - - -awaiuw treatment la ona wblcn commends Itself to all eenslblo persons for the reason that we supply It upon their ludument of Its value. Waaskuf our patrons nothing In tho way of expense beyond a postal card and a two cent postae stamp. The postal card to be usod In sendlnn us their full ad dreBj and the postage stamp for the letter return ing the statement of their case for which we aupply thorn with a question blank, to be tilled out, and on envelope addressed to ourselves fur use In returning It when Piled. vu"""' 11' -IgTgi. Wn"n we receive the Rtnta. 1fl ment on blank we prepare MLC eluntdays treatment and for ItVT--nTi 'wur1 br "'"II and prepay S postane thereon and aloni A. TirYRrW wltntheelKlit days' treatment Mftfll" " "0 tull directions for UshiB. 'i he treatment lu no way Interferes with a person s attention to buulness, ana oatues no. pain or Inconvenience In any way. We ure so ioailtve that It will plve perrett BiitUluciluii Hint we leave the matter or semiinir orders entirely with those lining the free trial treatment. llavli.K satisfied those snndlnx for trial packairoa iiTi.,,t".,ity beneutuielr sexual condition we loel that they are more largely Interested than ourselves In continuing the use of tho l'astlllea. l.von then wo do notattemptto rob them bydo BianilliiK hlKh i prices. 0.1 the contrary, we make the prices u low as possible, and the :une to all. They are as follows : tjjiU.OO Tor one month; $5.00 for two months: v m.ir ur uircu mourns These prices secure) the delivery of tlio l'astlllesbymail. It desired by express wo leave the patient to pay thechames. For wTrnVt77Mi.rwi--;iJSTerwn years wa . fir . """""in ueutinent lor any Of the secret Ills which erne to mankind thron. h a violation of nature's laws to send us their ad dress m postal yard or by letter and allow nh u convlncothoni that PKOF. f A It It In ni.i merit and are what they need. uuva edrV0CTt,oUUCttllo'u, oouuauutlttl wil should bo The HARRIS REMEDY CO., Mfg. Chemists 89Bccman Bt, MEW YORK CITY NY """"""'''"JWTTTrrrc MsMyr. N. C. & Co. MECTuIC TELE'eKOfoE ' ani. ..... . . o 111 j, Mlluuo or Country. KmhIkiI In uvnry inii a. I l.n.t nelli. riiiipnrtli. AatiniK mnl,,. !.,, f,5 to fi.70 per (t. lliii. in it i. .,,!,.., , i i ,a, ,!, tjie neil,burn. 1 ln in.tninn'iit.-. l:o Unn work. iilinre, nny ilUu,,, ,,. 0,,,lei, r'H1't, ,,,, in wIibi, l,,,.,.,i. (., ,,e ,' u , , ' ,., iinvor i.ut of onli r, no n i iiirin. 1,.m. J. I,f,'. Muie. niirriinlril. A money mnkiT, Write W. P. Harrison & Co., Clerk iO, Columbus, 0. BBBBTEDft m-n mm m mm k .m fz t-I J mm m J- ' 3 S- uui how far a dollar will gr the JWnjf of Men's and Boys' SPRINO CLOTHES. Our ready Cash secured cloth at less than the cost of maklngi and everybody knowa how low wages were last winter, sou get tha benefit of other people's) misfortunes. 'DROWNING, KING U SCO. nun tin 1 i'ni ?as& Piaalessl TIMOTHY SEED, AGRICULTURAL "W. KITCHEN" THOMAS GORRtY CONTRACTOR AND .GILDER Plans and Estimates on all kinds of buildings. Repairing and carpenter work promptly attended iu. hi:: in HM b,:;, Inside Hrrdwood finishps a specialty. Persons of limited means w! o desire to build can navnartnnd secure balance by mortgage. PATENTS K Caveats and Trade Marks obtained, and aV FKKH buslue88 condutd lor AloPliUATB Ol!H OFFICE IH OPPOSITE Til R U. 8 PAT Scud model, clruwliiK or photo, with dfscn.. t lou. We i oclvlso it patentable or uot, free o charge. Our fee not 'due till patent is BP"ureS A 'V' .1,m,v wb,"ln I'alents " with i refer posiwmt,. w iwrin jn Cleans the rOTfffAM RkUt v,.,i r fei?CVa::"V.,:r" Vniu TO o. "fyi,VbUrc Allays Tain and M'HZ Inflammation, pAYFEVER iieals the Sores. Restores the Sense of Taste ami smell. We U.1A THY THE CURE-HWFEVER A particle Is applied Into eac'h nostril and Is BRiwuble. Price x cents at liiu'lst' by mall COPYRIGHTS world i fm m u J Hny nenuititlo work lu tha nisWnj Steam lyt on West St. between and and ,r now prepared to do all ki.Wls 1 of Mens Suits, Ladies' Dresses and Coats, Shawls, and every description of wearing apparel. Also 2 do scouring, cleaning and i, ing of goods that do not nood dyeing, and make them dean and sweet as new. Goods sent by express eliouM be addressed ttasforg Situ lyt ft. SALT, :-:-: ETC. J. R. Smith & Co. LIMITED. MILTON, Pa., Br the following- well-known makers: Chickcringf, Knabc, Weber, Hnllct & Davis. Can also furnish any of the cheaper makes at manufact urers' prices. Do not buy a piano before getting our pricea. ,o. Catalogue and Price Lists On application. rho Best Burning Cil Tha; Can ba Made Fmni Potroloun:. It gives a brilliant light. It i" smoke the chimneys. It will not char the wick. It has a high fire test. It will no explode, it Is ore-eminently a family afei oiK - Challenge Comparison with an) sther illuminating oil made. sWISJsj Wl.stniaus1jsm S,mil iilli'Si II" 1 We stake our Reputation, as Refiners upon the statement that it is The Best Oil IPS THIS WOlllI'' ASK YOUR DEALER FOR. Crown - Acme -O: PIANOS. BLOOMSBURG STATION', ui.comsi:i'';(:
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers