THE COLUMBIAN, BLOOMSBURG, PA. 8 THE COLUMBIAN. BT.OOMSDURG, PA. 10 a SALE. txwlrabb- : i" bounro an-'- '" ' hntlnpfw H 11 I'Mh mid number or Knvl Hl'inimhiirK. 1' Tim 0'f", ,1-dHivw;. A very dcalra- L nmnir: i cm" i ' -? I'.' CI' s and tlrst class kfliin:rjU-tih l'o.i.1 Mll in biHini4 worm lJoo to iiMO p.T yenr t Willow orove, DwelUnKfi In JW1': Orantfevlllo and Bosch 'Vrnt Two COUD ud one planing mod farm land at mime place, by M. r. IAl BON, Insurance aud lteal Estate Agent, IOOMSBUMU,i'A. il SPECIAL NOTICES. ROOMS FOB YorNO MBN.-M. M. PHILLIPS baa rery desirable furnished rooms for tt young men. Hat h room adiolning, for use ofoocupauta of the rooms. Call and examine. A BiCH LL Kl.-JrtS or BI.ANKH FOB JUSTICES and cokstables at the colcihiai of- loe. I BADOK WE AKn PBEPABBD TO SDOVt aamples of metal, celluloid, woven and Tlbbon badges for aU kinds of orders and so rtetles, and can invp th'-m made to order on hart noi : - !-' iih-Vm and p-t prices. Address The Colikbian, Kloouisburtf, ra. tr NEW FOBM OF LEASH IN ha been printed, and Is for sale at this Imv. covers everything. Scents each or 40 cents A dozen. tf. TUSTICES AM) CONSTABLES FEE BILI I .lattices :ind coiwt able can procure copl"S of fee bill under the art of lens, at Tub com m. biam office. It, Is printed In pamphlet form, and Is very convenient for reference. If Bls0 contains the act of lssu eonce-nliiL the desfruc tlon of wolves, wildcats, foxes ahd minks. They will be sent by mall lu any address on receipt of SO cents In stumps. tf. MEU WASTED ii ii - -1 lecllng. txper'nee not nece-a-v. uteadv employment. Best terms. Write at .n.-" auil v liolce of territory. Aixi nihm:rv co.. BZIGilBOSHOOD NEWS. Interesting Kerns From Varioui Points In the County. Reported by Our Staff of Correspondents. East Ukxton. The ' Quarto Centennial," or twenty-fifth anniversary of Rev. A. Houtz's r.vtoratc of the Orangeville charge c; d Ki'U.;iail Church will be observed on Ju'y i6th anJ 27th. The occas-ion will he a reunion of the member-, hip .ft!1 entire charge. On the 26th. services will be held in the Creasy catniiir.etliiig grove, formerly Conner's. 111 Centre township, and on the 27th, in F.lias Laubrxh's grove, at or near the TV.rks, FLhingcreek town ship. This was so arranged to facili tate the convenience of everybody within the charge. All the Reformed Ministers and ciders of the Wyoming classes are especially invited to at tend, while a general invitation is ex tended to everybody. Several promi nent ministers trom abroad are expect ed to be present. The occasion promises to be an auspicious one, for the reason that but few ministers labor so long in one field, and at which time Rev. Hout.'s record as Pastor of the Orangeville charge for a period of twenty-five years will be reviewed and identified with the history of the charge. Children cervices will be held at St. James on Saturday night, June 23rd, and at Zicn Sunday afternoon, June 24th. There will be interesting pro grams arr.-vigeii and the occasions pro mise to be entertaining, interesting, instructive ri'd profitable. The child ren will Le v.e!) drilled and parents naturally take a pride in their children when they perform their part well to which they arc assigned. Children services will also be held at the Han-.'ir.e M. K. Church on Sun day nigh:, Jun-e ith. Usually this place has very qw exercises on such occasions. Protection and hig lumber alike. It floats rent of both, ar.ci runs h water boom upon the cur away with the TOUR MONEY IS RETURNED If you receive no benefit from Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription. This fair and buhinens-likc offer is held out to all women who suffer from the diseases and derangements peculiar to their fcx. 10 weakly woman hood no prize could be more secure, nor the benefit more lasting, than that to be derived from the purchase of a bottle of this famous M Prescrip tion." Its success in curing all the functional derangements, painful dis orders, and chroma weaknesses of women, warrant its makers in gxtar anteeing it. What this medicine has done for thousands of delicate women, it will do for you. At the two critical peri ls in woman's lifoj the chang" from girlhood to woman hood, and, later, the "chnngo of life," it's an invahiablo tonic and a soothing nervine, whieh can produce only good rest hs. It cures nervous prostration, ir.f.crnnia, or inability to sleep, and many nervous disorders due to derrtfi(i'nert of the functions. An invitation to I consumption is what a tiad case of Catarrh means. J Wt take the risk ! The lakers of Doctor Saizo's ??r8l Otarrh rk-modv acreo to cure your Catarrh, or they'll pay you t o)0 ij cash. r. on- Hi l.u.' i 'i i .imty. oiif in Irglula. niry worn !'ms m nuuinun vi-umj in Hwnii county. A water power ml 1. dry oock enu iuiuix;r . u.....i,'ii.v..i. in- Also 10 acres of K A flood. In the latter it robs the seller, and in the former the buyer. Mrs. Judge Krickbaum visited her brother Edward at Jamison City week ago last Saturday. " Decoration Day" was highly seasoned with a soaking rain. We hear tnat the fly is also in the rye. Never before did we know that the fly worked in the rye. Well, anyhow, could the people pos sibly select a better man for Congress than Charles R. Buckalew to represent the 17th district. It looks as though Governor Patti son was facing towards the " White House." Senator Hill is dodging about in a zig zag line, and no telling into what corner he may tumble. Senator Gorman undertook a big pill when making his speech, and now he is complaining ill. Perhaps it was to heavily sugar coated. The crows commit depredations in corn fields. It is said that a spoonful of coal tar mixed with half a bushel of seed will prevent the crows from pull ing up the corn. Judge Krickbaum took his wool to market last Saturday. He was caught in the rain and but for his umbrella would have got a complete drenching. Lee Roy Bender, who met with a serious accident week ago last Friday is reported as doing very well under the sad circumstances. It is a difficult task to work the roads while it almost continually rains. But it seems to pay both the tax-payer and the public. The roads are so much more easily worked and to bet ter advantage while the season is wet, 1 here is quite a considerable corn yet to plant at this writing, June 4, m this neighborhood. I. M. Giddinc & Co., the clothiers of our county seat, have a great trade from this olaee. Everyone seems to go there for their clothes The terrible floods from which Pennsylvania seems to have suffered most are of course calamitous and deplotable. And while York State was comparatively exempt from these ravages, she seems to be in sackcloth and ashes about female emancipation, as witness the following : "Just wait till sweet emancipated woman, unshackled and enfranchised, claims her own, then poor, defenceless bachelors will never dare venture forth without a chaperon." JVeio York Herald. A little more New York eloquence anent female suffrage versus her do mestic relations, we quote herewith for pity sake : " w hat l most prize in woman is her affections, not her intellect. The intellect is finite, but the affections are infinite and cannot be exhausted The world of the affections is thy world, not that of man s ambition. In that stillness which most becomes a woman, calm and holy, thou sittest by the fireside of the heart, feeding its flame. The element of fire is pure burns as brightly in a gypsy camp as in a palace hall.' Montour Delegate Convention. On Saturday the 2d inst., the follow ing persons secured nominations as follows : For Congress, W. D. Steinbach; for State Senate, Hon. J, K. Gear inger ;for Representative, C. Welliver; for Sheriff ,jichael Breckbill ; for Reg ister and Recorder, W. L. Sidler. The Congressional conferees are for C. R. Buckalew, and the Senatorial conferees are for J. II. Cochran. There was quite a close contest between Gearinger and Chalfant for the Senatorial nomination. Mr. Gear inger winning by 15 delegates as against 13 for Chalfant who was loaded down with the Danville post office. DEM00EATIo"o0HVENTION. On Wednesday, June 27th, 1S94, tne Democratic Convention ill as semble at Harrisburg and make nomi nations for the following offices. A Governor, Lieutenant Governor, Rep resentatives at-Large in Congress, Audi tor General and Secretary of Internal Affairs. The floods of British Columbia have rendered two thousand families homeless. The Frazer river rose three inches above the highest recorded mark, with the flood still rising. The valley of the river was inundated for about 100 miles. The loss is estimated at about $3,000,000. The Canadian Pacific Railroad Co. ha 1,000 men employed making repairs ; but tle flood is reported to have broken it away faster than they could make re pairs. It is said that Congressman Breck inridge has repented, and that he has taken the stump to apprise his con stituents of this important fact. This reminds us of a little poetry we learn ed in our youth. It runs somewhat as follows, as near as we can recall it : " The devil got Hick, anl die devil a saint would bo ; The devil got well, and a dnvll of a sulut was he." A clothing dealer, in Boston, adver tised. aU wool pantaloons for $a, ad vising the public to make haste and secure the great bargain, saying : " They will not last long." Piobably they would net. Strikes and Strikers. CRtrpLE Creek, Col., June 4. The strikers have spent the day in perfecting their defenses. Their forces were inci eased to day by three hund red men, who came from the direction f Pueblo. Women and childien have been streaming towards this place from Victor and Altmcn. The miners have loaded beer kegs with dynamite, scrap iron ano railroad spikes and have placed them on the crests of Globe Hill and Battle Mountain. The defensive movements of the sttikers have been decided upon, and are about as follows : Mounted scouts, who are spread out in all directions, upon discovering the advance of the deputies, hasten to camp with the in formation. A prearranged signal will be sounded on the steam whistle at Pike's Peak mine, when the strikers will take their designated positions. FIGHTING FORCES INCREASED. The ceneral belief is that the de puties will advance against the strikers on Bull Hill tonight or tomorrow. It is reported that General Palmer, who built the Denver and Rio Grande Railroad, and has an established re putation as a fighter, will be in com mand of the deputies' army, with Charles Adams in direct charge of the cavalry. The hgnting force on Bull Hill was increased to-day by the arrival of seventy eight coal miners from Fre mont county, and now numbers about 1,300 men. It is reported here that over 1,000 deputies have taken a train at Divide for Midland, the terminus of the Mid land Terminal Railway, and will pro ceed at once to Bull Hill. Huntington', Va., June 4. At Kenova, eight miles west, where the Norfolk and Western Road crosses the Ohio river, many threats have been made regauhig the destruction of one ot the spans by strikers, who desire to stop the coal from coming out from the Pocahontas Mines. To night every , bridge along the road is guarded by an immense force and suspicious looking characters are not allowed to approach. The two local military companies have assembled ready to proceed to either Kenora and Winifred, as these are the points where about 1,000 striking miners have been gathering. The railroad has abcut a hundred guards stationed at the Ohio river bridge alone, all armed with Win chesters. The men are expected be fore morning, and will be given a warm reception. The Drum house at the Davis Mines on Morris Creek, thirty miles above Charleston, was burned by strikers, and the Mann's Creek trestle, on the branch line of the Chesapeake and Ohio, between Gilkinson and Sewell, was burned Saturday night. Charleston. W. Va., June 4. As a number of Powellton men were coming from work at 6 o'clock this evening they were fired upon from ambush by strikers and four of the number killed. The excitement is in tense. The persons who did the shoot ing are unknown and the names of the killed are unobtainable. Sheriff Hinman is on the way to the scene witu a posse. All is quiet at other points along the line. The Governor said to-night that he is determined to use every means to prevent violence and that he is deter mined to maintain the law at what ever cost. He has ordered three com panies of military to be ready to march at a moment's notice. Those in readiness are the two Huntington companies and one at Milton. I'hila. limes. WOfJNDED AND EOMISIQK SOLDIER. Bv I. J. Jamison. Wounded, In sorrow, far from my home, Sick, auinnR strangers, unrnred for unknown, Even t he birds lime used sweetly to sin,', Have quickly and Bllsnily taken the win. No onu but mother could cheer me today, No one for me could so fervently pray. Kindly she'd say to me be of good cheer, Mother would comfort me if she were here. Left on the field 'midst t he groans and ttii cries ur me neroii; aynitf, wno unite their nag mes Bt 111 In the face of the arch traitor's zenl, Who'll pull clown our Hag nud our llborty sell o, iniiv the Uod of our wushl ngton brave, Have the dear lliu that our fore fui hers gave ; Have It for freeiui-n, save for Its worth, Have It for loved ones 1 lert In the north. Off to the hospital soon I must go To witness more agony, Buffering and woe j To live or to die, as the fnts muy decree, Hut to live or to die for my land of the freo. No one but mother cun cheer me to-Uay, No one for me cun so fervently pray, Kind; V she s:ivs to inn. " be of ihkhI cheer Mother will eomOri you, mother Is here." POOE MAN'S TARIFF. " Liberty," an organ of organized labor, prints the following as a speci men American rauroaj passenger tantl : " I'oor men, three cents mile : men who nave money, one thousand miles for twenty dollars, or two cents a mile; very rich men, judges, legislators and other officials, free." This tari.T is not hung in con spicuous places for the accommoda tion of the traveling public, but it exists all the same . It is not likely the " industrial arm ies " so -called could have taken a niore unfortunate time than they did to pretend th.'t work was nowhere to be found. There was not a wing of the Coxev armies but, what was given repealed tests of their earnestness by being offered work which they refused The plague of their lives was offers of work. Like other who are pro vided lor, they did not need it. RANDOM REMARKS. Thoughts on Various Topics by a Casual Observer. Wanted, scientific great deal worse than makers. rain-stoppers a scientific rain- Of all the helpless people we ever heard of Kensington has a dependent ; female who recently asked her neigh bor to hoM her breath. It begins to lo.A, in f.ict it feels, ns though the excessive hot wave that our weather prophets intimated would wilt us from the 3d to the 61I1 inst. had first struck an iceberg before it reached us. Pretty soon, at this rate, we will begin to believe in false pro phecy more than we do in the scien tific kind. It is not only better to be right than to be President, but, because there are so many people who think there is room for them at the top, it is just as easy to be right as it is to be Presi dent. If anything it is a little more so when the Presidential bees get to buying which they will pretty soon. But for rainy weather Bloomsburg ndustries, building, &c, would put er poor, tied-up neighbors to shame. We rather think she does it any how, in spite of wind or weather. Wait till the tariff bill passes and you will see our pensioned industries smile in the sunshine of protection. There is a romantic case now on the tapis in Londoo in which a man courts his own wife. As an attractive head line for the reader it is called A queer romance in which a hus band finds his boy-hood spouse." Thai's enough to start almost any one to reading. We can easily take it cool when 5 some 50 the theomometer regi decrees above zero, as it did here about the 1st of Tune, in the face of all weather prophecy to the contrary. And the tinae it has given the tender corn is decidedly oft color in the eyes ot the farmer who planted early. The latest sensational elopement is the case ot a 16-year-old cirl ol Egg Harbor City, Miss Josephine Schweiber, who recently eloped with a young man from Brooklyn whom she knew nothing about except what she could know through surreptitious correspondence. The father of the young lady struck the trail quickly, but perhaps too late after all. It is said that our recent downpour of rain beats all past knowledge of the weather bureau, and no doubt it has completely discouraged our scientific rain-makers, along with a good many other folks. Those not professing to be weather prophets, and therefore relirable, say we had more or less rain for thirty one days. During this period the rain was frequently more than less. In fact it was generally so. While earnestly preaching of the coming of death Rev. J. W. Langley, of Philadelphia, was recently stricken with paralysis and fell to the floor in his pulpit. As a subject upon which to preach he had chosen the fifteenth verse of the seventeenth Psalm : "As for me, I will behold thy face in richt eousness ; I shall be satisfied when I awake with thy likeness." Having been only partially paralyzed, time alone will tell the result of this stroke. Rheumatism Cured in a Day. 'Mystic Cure" for Rheumatism and Neuralgia, radically cures in 1 to 3 days, its action upon the system is remarkable ana mysterious. It re moves at once the cause and the di sease immediately disappears. The first dose greatly benefits, 75 cts. Sold by C. A. Kleim, Druggist, Blooms- burg. 11-io-Sm. Marriad, On the 2nd inst., at the Reformed parsonage in Orangeville, by Rev. A. Houtz, Mr. J. It. Poust, of Benton township, and Miss Sadie Paydon, of Fishingcreek township. DR.KI LM ER'S tHaBtT KIDNmiVERtfS Blc4uD&R Dissolve! (travel, Gal! rtono, brick dust In urlno, pnln In urethra, fit i uuil:"(jr alter uiinutlon, ulu iu t li.j back and ulj. buciIisi Mopi'i'so of wiitcr with pleasure. T-.i'.r 1 ants In urine, stnnty urlno. itvin.j-JJoot cuicw miiio'-y troubles ur.cl kidney dllllcultlea. T'r;il.l orenlnrgud liver, foul breath, tiilluua. iK'fcn, MMnus li' UilucUo, poor AiKcalion, gout. Catarrh of tfeeEKncMer, Inllnmmatinn, lrvtUitlun. ulceration, dribbling, f reciunnt. cnlla, pu l.lorxl, mucus or pua. ;uurunt(i-r' ('ditt'titr tf Olio r-oUU1. lr uut bencntud, Di .'xtiu hi;, rri'inil u y.m tbu in-lfi i.M. At LrUinii-' 50c. '!,.,, ,00 Size, "lnvalltjj'Uui'lutolluiilUi' trot1. ('oniillHlitn frew. lUU KltJIEa Ii CO., UlKOUAMTON, N. V. for Infants and Children. C utoria ; so wH (u'nrtod to children that I reoou.i:icnd It as miperior to any jirwcrlptlou known to rr.e." tl X Aixrncn, St P., Ill 8a Oxford EL, Brooklyn, N. T. MTh oss of 'Cart oris Is no universal and Its merits so well known that It seems a work of supewofatlon to endorse It. Few aro the Intelligent families who do nut keep Costorla within easy reach." CU&LOt Mabtth, T). D New York City. IF YOU ARE CARPET. or OIL YOU WILL FIND w. M. BIROWEE'S 2nd Door acovo A large lot of Window Curtains in stock. ALEXANDER BROTHERS & CO. DEALERS IN Cigars. Tccacco, concuss, iruits SOLE AGENTS Ilenry Maillard's Fine Candies. SOLE AGENTS FOR F F. Adans& Co's Fine Sole agents tor the following brands of Cigars- Homy Clay, Londrcs, Nomal, Indian Princoss, Samson, Silver Ash Bloomsburg, Pa. Strikes and Strikers, 1 The pending coal strike is the larg est in the United States. I he distur bances and dangers in consequence have been so great in several States as to necessitate the calling out ot troops. Up to the present writing both sides stand firm, the operators being rather the more determined to win in the end if reports be true. Some of them declaring that they will work their mines with the aid of rules if need be, and that they will concede nothing to strikers. In the meantime, however, the mines are not turning out enough coal to meet the demand for it, and consequently wood is being used in stead in many cases as a very poor substitute. The striker no doubt has the right to quit work if he wishes and also to use all peaceable means to persuade others to do the same. But his pre sumptuous right to enforce the willing worker from the premises is the arbi trary act that can find no justification in law or equity, and the act that generally starts the fight, first among laborers and then between the opera tors and the laborers. It frequently happens that the intimidated men who prefer to remain at work are the first assaulted and consequently the first to resent assault through conni vance and encouragement of em ployers who know when best to court peace or war for their own pecuniary advantage. WHAT TEE BOY THOUGHT. The elaborate and hiehly polished dude fisherman, armed with the latest anu most improveu tackle ana ap purtenances, was scouting along the stream when he met a boy with a pin hook turn-out. " Oh, I say, boy," he called to the youngster, ' is there any good fishing about here ? " " What kind uv fish ? " inquired the hoy, dropping his jaw in amazement at the vision before him. " Trout, of course." "Do you expect to ketch 'em?" asked the kid in a tone of the most supreme contempt, as he looked the dude over trom head to heel. " Of course ; why not ?" " Cause you wont, that's why not. Any kind uv a fish that'd let you ketch it, don't make no difference wliai kind it is, is a sticker," an 1 the boy, utterly unable to conceal his feelings, dis appeared in an adjacent thicket. Jhtroit J'ee J'ra'j. Speaking of pauper labor reminds the more thoughtful that, when there is no restriction, even paupers try to better their conduion ; and that they reaaiiyni so when Auiencan protected lmlusKies otter tu ui fiee transporta tion. anon Castorist cures Ootle, Constipation, Bour Stomach, lilarrlura, Kructatlon, Kills Worms, gives sleep, Mid promotes d gentlon. Without Injurious medleat loo. "For sorrml years I hare recommend your 'OiKtorla,' and shall always oontlaue t do so ns It baa Invariably produced bonefkl results." Enwnt F. TARnn, H. D., 125th Btroet and 7th Ave., Mew York City Tits Csmtacti CcrAirr, 17 Mtnuur Btukkt, Nrw Tons Cm. IN NEED OF MATTIITO, CJLOT1I, A NICE LINE AT Court House. FOR Fresh Every YTecL Cut Chewing Tobacco Almost every other girl is now looking for a suitable buckle, generally of silver, for her summer suit. The girl without a buckle will not be happy. The buckle fastens the belt in front. A few favored ones will wear gold buckles; but, as they cost from $40 or $50 up, there are not likely to be many of them. The envy generated through debate over the precious metals will be as nothing in compari son with that felt by the fashionable lady whose buckle is of the baser mental when thrown in contact with the wearer of a gold buckle. T. F. Anthony, Ex-Postmaster of Promise City, Iowa, says : '"I bought one bottle of 'Mystic Cure,' for Rheu matism and two doses of it did me more good than any medicine I ever took." Sold by C. A. Kleim, Drug gist, Bloomsburg. n-io-Sm. TinePHOTO GRAPHS and CRAYONS at McKillip Bros., Bloomsburg. The best are the cheapest. NOW !!! IS THE TIME TO BUY - CHEAPS - AT i w. urn B00KSTATI0NKRY STORK. hm Hotel Mfc Bloomslmrii Don't Cost anything to look. Wall Paper
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers