THE COLUMBIAN BLOOMSBURG, PA. 8 THE COLUMBIAN. BLOOMSBURG, PA. FOB SALE. Dmtnble vacant lots and number of enort touiM and lo'a in Hlonmshurg, l'a Tha bent natnera stand In Bloomsburtf. A very deslru W property combining l acres and first class Buildings with good will In a business worth mi to tiMO per year at Willow urore. Dwellings In Kspy, urangnvlllo and Bpaelt A large number of farms In Columbia Covntjr, one In Luzerne County, one In Virginia. Two Country Htore stands In Columbia County tad one In Luzerne County. A water power plMDlng mill, dry dock and lumber yard 'and hMla In Beach Ilaven, l'a. Also 10 acres ot mod farm land at game place, by M. P. LUTZ BON. Insurance and Heal Kstate Agents, BUJOM8BUKU, PA. It. SPECIAL NOTICES. ViriDOWKR'8 NOTI.'B.-A RESPECTABLE j? widow of middle ago, a good house keener, and having a child three years old with lr, would be pleased to keep house for some iwwctMble widower In or near Bloomsburg. Heferenco given and required. Kor particulars address Columbian okkics, care ot 1. J. .1. lK-H-tl. A LL KIrtDH OP BLANKS POK JUSTICK8 J and constables at the ColcmbianoN lAl)OKt. K ARK PKRPAKED TO 8UOW X samples of metal, celluloid, woven and rbbon bailees for all kinds of orders and bo Mot.lt, and can .iave them mndo to order on abort notice. Wee samples and get prices. Address Tn Columbian. Bloomsburg, Pa. JUUT1CKS ANO CONSTABLES FKE BILL. Justices and constables can procure copies of fee bill under the act of IHicj, at Tub Coi.i m ViANortlce. It Is printed In pamphlet form, and Is very convenient tor reference. It also contains the act, of iHt concerning the destruc tion of wolves, wildcats, foxes and minks. They will be sent by mall to any address on receipt t cents In st amps. t f . riiYPItWlUTKK,-A HAMMOND TYPE-WHIT-1 INO machlDe. having the universal key board and being In rirst-class condttlon In fact nw is for sale cheap to a responsible buyer. Vou can save money by calling at the Colum bian office for name and address of owner. lii-ai-tf. Hotel for Sale, The owners of Proctor Inn, Jamison Gty, offer for sale the entire property. It is a four story building with porches entirely around first and second floors. The house is handsomely furnished throughout, and will be sold either with or without the furniture. If not old with the building the furniture will be sold at public sale. For par ticulars address Lock Box A., Blooms burg, Pa. 1 2-1 4-tf. Farm For Sale. The undersigned will sell at private sale, the farm located in Centre town ship, at upper Lime Ridge, containing in acres, good buildings, brick house and large bank barn, and fruit. For terms, address Geo. W. Hess, Forks, Pa., or J. A. Hess, Bloomsburg. 10-26-301. Land for Sale. The undersigned offers at private sale, thirty-five acres of land in Sugar loaf township, adjoining land of David Kocher, J. B. Hess and Joshua Sav age, partly cleared. Address YV. A. Kile, Guava, Pa. 12-7 31. Seoond-Hand Furniture. G. G. Baker, agent, has for sale at his store room a quantity of good second hand furniture, consisting of bedsteads, wash stands, marble top table, chairs, mattresses, desks, pic tures, and numerous other articles. They will be sold very cheap. Call early for the best bargains. Corner of Main and West streets. tf. Girl Wanted. An active girl 12 or 14 years of age, can find employment as a clerk in C. Columbus' candy store, on Market Square. Apply to him. tf. ' Houses to Bent Cheap houses for rent, apply at 217 West First Street, Bloomsburg. 12-7-61. Liquor Licenses. Blank petitions for hotel, restaur ants, wholesale, bottler's and distiller's licenses can be obtained at this office. The last day for filing petitions in the clerk's office is December 29th. tf. Boarding And furnished rooms to rent on Main street. Steam, gas, hot and cold wa ter and bath. Apply to Mrs. M. M" Phillips, at Phi lips' Cafe. tf NEIGHB0KH00D NEWS tterestlng Itoms From Various Points In tha County, Reported by Our Staff ol Correspondents. East Benton. Mrs. Aaron Bender, of Bendertown, was last Sunday lying at the point of death. jhe has arrived at the ad vanced age of 80 years. There will be an entertainment at St. James week from next Saturday night, under the auspices of the Christian JEndeavor. There was a Christmas tree for the benefit of the .Sunday school at Hani iline last Satuciay night. The exer cises consisted in the distribution of gifts. The most remarkable of all winter months, December of 1894 beats them all for moderation. Winter graiu shows every evidence of uninterrupted growth by reason of the mildness of the winter. For the last week robins were chirping in the woods, thus reminding us of the first notes of summer birds. Farmers have been plowing right along all winter preparatory for spring planting. Auother plant of industry has fully developed at Jonestown in the form of "Roller Process Milling Co.," Kimble & Thomas, proprietors. We are informed that the paper mill at Stillwater is now ready for operation. The upper end will soon rank with any other locality in point of market and industry. Originally there were three impor tant events in the history of a man's life birth, marriage and death. Now there appears to be five birth, mar riage, divorce, remarriage, abscond. S. P. Krickbaum is still sorely afflicted with rheumatism. A little daughter of J. F. Ashelman is complaining ill. Evidently our public schools are running smoothly, as we hear no com plaints from any quarter. The old gum boots hunter did not make his appearance this fall, but the tortoise hunter did. All the signs of a hard winter have thus far proven futile, but there is another coming, viz ; "Ground Hog Day," which is equally as great a humbug. A person's honor consists in the manner he disposes of the obligations that devolve upon him in all the vicissitudes of life. And in the man ner and to the extent he disgorges the duties he owes to a community, a society, a neighbor, a family, an in dividual, or any other, and all objects that may have a claim upon his atten tion as a part or parcel in common for the welfare and advancement of the common interest of one and all, individually or collectively. The shirking of responsibility, the neglect ing of the payment of honest debts, are index boards by which a commu nity have a right to judge the honor and character of any man among their number. A Tear With Popular Authors. Nearly all the most popular authors seem to have been drawn upon by the editor of The Ladiei Home Journal to insure for his readers a particularly interesting year during 1895. Jerome K. Jerome, for example, will resume his role of an "Idle Fellow" for the benefit of American girls and women in a series of articles; Bret Harte will have a new love story, while Frank R. Stockton has given the Journal not less than three of his quaintest and drollest short tales; Mrs. Burton Harrison will write on correct deportment and usages of good society, while Mrs. A. D. T. Whitney is to write to girls on mar riage and dress; Madame Nordica and Jessie Bartlett Davis will tell of the care of the voice ; Mr. Howells will continue his successful literary autobiography; Dr. Parkhurst, the famous New York preacher, will write his first series of articles for women on the questions of the day which women are thinking about ; Edward Bellamy will add a chapter to his "Looking Backward" ; Eugene Field, Bill Nye, John Kendrick Bangs and Robert J. Burdette will supply the humor; Conan Doyle will give his views of "The Literary Side of Amer ica" ; Frances Hodgson Burnett, the 1 late Jane Austin, Julia Magruder and Elizabeth Bellamy will supply novel ettes ; Kate Greenaway is to draw her quaint little tots of women for the first time for a magazine, while Pal mer Cox will supply some new "Brownies"; a unique article on "Mrs. Shakespeare" will present all that is known of Shakespeare's wife ; Margaret Deland, Sarah Orne Jewett and Mrs. Burton Harrison will discuss "When Lady: When Woman," when those terms should be used ; E. S. Martin is going to tell "Where was theGarden of Eden ?" ; Reginald de Koven has given his new sor.g, while other famous composers will also be represented by songs, marches and waltzes. And in this representa tive manner, The Ladies" Home Journal will really cover every inter esting phase of contemporary life, especially that of woman. The mag azine will indeed be worth having during the new year. Too Great a Gape. Mary Nichols, an aged woman, of Philadelphia, recently dislocated her jaw while gaping. Others considered, there seems to be something unusual the matter with this woman's jaw. When taken to the hospital where her case was properly diagnosed, it was suggested as a means to prevent the danger of lockjaw that the old lady be muzzled in such a way that she could take a half a gape instead of a whole one in the future. Ladies with open countenances will please take warning. The Shortest Say. The 2 1 st in st. was the shortest day ot the year, the actual time between sunrise and sunset being 9 hours and 20 minutes. The days will increase in length but slowly for some time A month hence, on Jan. 21, the sun will come in view but one minute earlier, and sink beneath our sight 34 minutes later, making the difference only 35 minutes, ihen, nowever, daylight will rapidly lengthen. Two fashions ne'er together come To charm us with their rustle How strange a girl would look, ly gum I In bloomers and a bustle. ' New York Press." (0 " Cklloloid " Collars and Ccpfs re made by covering a linen collar or cuff with "celluloid," thus making them strong, durable and waterproof. When soiled they can be cleaned by simply wiping off with a wet cloth. No other waterproof goods are mndo with this interlining, consequently no other goods can possibly give satisfac tion. Do not forget that every piece of the genuine is stamped as follows : TRADtr MARK. Insist upon goods so marked and re fuse anything else if offered. If your dealer docs not keep them you can procure a sample from us direct by enclosing amount and stating size and whether stand-up or turned-down col lar is wanted. Collars 25c. each. Cuffs 50c. pair. The Celluloid Company, 427-429 Broadway, New York. THE DINING OAR. A modern dining car says Kale Field, is of the most approved pattern and costs $15,000 to build. Next comes the kitchen utensils, the table furniture, the silverware and linen averaging about f3,ooo worth to a car. Each car must have a steward, who usually gets 1 100 a month, and a head cook who values himself at $75 a month. There must also be one or two as sistant cooks and three or four waiters. Three hundred dollars a month is the very smallest outlay for wages, while the cost of raw food material, break age of dishes and the board of em ployes is about $3,000 per month ad ditional. An average days' run costs very nearly $600 for food and service, so that it would take 400 persons at $1.50 a meal on the run to pay .the daily expenses, without allowing any thing for interest on the investment or for wear and tear on the furnishings. I he kitchen of a dining car con tains every convenience except room. This is a range capable of doing all the boiling, broiling, baking and stewing for hundreds of people, yet occupying comparatively no space at all. There is a board for the carver, a bin and table for the baker and a sink for the dish-washer, with shelves and cupboards innumerable for dishes and imperishable supplies all in an area of five by twelve feet, at most. Every inch of space is carefully uti lized. Under the car is the cellar or refrigerator, where ice, beef, mutton, poultry, milk, butter and other perish able supplies are kept. 1 he steward, who is in charge of all this, must be a good guesser. To be sure the dining car is run on the prin ciple that no money will be made anyway ; that one road must run it because a competing road does ; that the traveller must, therefore, have the best in the market, for a fair price, and that it is better to throw away un used and spoiled material at the end of a trip than to run out of some nec essary on the way ; yet I imagine that the steward who has the lowest aver age of wasted food stands highest in his employer's regard. The first thing he has to do is to make out the bills of fare for the trip. These must be approved by the head of the commissary department. The chef buys the necessary supplies, but the steward has to turn in an inven tory of them at the starting point, and also a statement of what has been used en route, and what is left at the end of the run. There is ro method of estimating the exact number of meals that will need to be served dur ing a run, particularly if it be a short one. Suppose it is to be made from Washington to New York. Individual methods of economy are very different. While some prefer to pay $1.25 for the extra comfort of a seat in a parlor car, there are others who think the common coach good enough and prefer to spend their dollar ir the dining car Again, there are some who frequent both parlor and diner, and others who care for neither. For a long journey, every berth in the sleeper may be occupied, and yet the dining-car may be practically tenant ess, or the sleeper may be nearly empty and the diner full of people from the day coach," or it may be crowded with the occupants of both. As the steward goes through the train on a tour of inspection or in giving his first call for a meal he must note the number of lunch boxes and guess from the faces and dress of the pas sengers how many orders he will have. But even his best judgment may be far out of the way, for the lunch box may be fur a next day's light repast, or some of the best dressed passengers may not have decided whether to pa tronize the dining car or not. EIGHTH PAOE ESSAYS. no. 4. In the last campaign the record of Columbia county remains to be made up. The chairman, Wm. Chrisman, or ganized and arranged for a series of meetings m the county as follows: Light Street, Millville, Rohrsburg, Centralia, Locust Dale, Elk Grove, Diltz's School House, Numidia, Jer seytown, Grovania, Mill Grove, Main ville, Montana, Mifflinville, Bear Gap, Waller, Shuman's Hotel, Orangeville, Dcrr's, Catawissa, Iletlerville, Swamp School House, Stonytown, Canby, Espy, Bendertown, Benton, Jameson City, Miller's Hotel, Stillwater, Forks, Eyers Grove, Buckhorn, Tine Sum mit, Mid Valley, Berwick and Blooms burg. The following named gentlemen comprised the corps of speakers who addressed the meetings, to-wit : Wm. Chrisman, Thomas B. Hanly, Fred. Ikelcr, John G. Harman, R. G. F. Kashinka, A. L. Fritz, E. M. Tewks bury, Grant Herring, Wm. H. Rhawn, C. A. Small, E. J. Flynn, C. R. Buck alew, B. Rush Zarr, Robert Bucking ham, John G. McIIenry, W. H. Sny der, W. T. Creasy, W. A. Evert, John G. Freeze, and at the Blooms burg meeting James B. Beck, of Philadelphia. The meetings were, in the main, well attended, and the audiences were attentive and enthusiastic. Banners decorated and drum corpi enlivened the gatherings; and it must be said for the young men that they gave fair promise of good and useful work in the future. The disaster that over took us is not to be laid to the charge of the persons named, who through darkness and storm met every appointment, and by their presence made the meetings successful. They worked cheerfully and enthusiastically and are entitled to the support and consideration of our people. Two years preparation will still more fit them to battle in the campaign of 1896, and to deserve the victory which will then perch upon our banners. SENTENOE SUSPENDED. Friends of John Bowman of the Muncy Bank Petition the Court Successfully. Judge Joseph Buffington, of the United States District Court, has made an order suspending sentence in the case of John M. Bowman, the ex president of the First National Bank of Muncy, Pa. He was convicted of making false returns to the Treasury Department. Several petitions were presented to the court asking that sentence be suspend ed. Une was signed by all of the jurors who rendered the verdict against Bowman, another by all the witnesses who appeared against him and a third by thirty seven of the fifty stockholders of the bank, and' still another petition signed by 362 of the 473 registered voters in the town of Muncy. In the case of Dela Green, cashier of the same bank, who was convicted at the same time, a new trial has been granted, on the ground that there was not sufficient evidence to convict, which practically ends the case. Eliza Donald of Greenwood town. ship died recently at the Bloom Poor House, aired 70 vears. She was the 1 D , j - - third one of the same family who have died there. DR. K I LMER'S tf O O KIDNEY LIVER 55 Dissolves Gravel, Gall Btono, brick dust in urine, pain In urethra, training after urination, pain in the back and hips, sudden stoppage of water with pressure. liright's Disease, Tube casts in urine, scanty urine. Svranp-uoclt euros urinury troubles and kidney diniculties. Liver Complaint, Torpid or enlarged liver, foul breath, bilious ness, bilious headache, poor digestion, gout. Catarrh of the Bladder, Inflammation, irritation, ulceration, dribbling, frequent calls, pass blood, mucus or pus. fjuarantee-l.'M content of una DotUe, If not frtnJlfltdi lniKtf tat wtU rufund to the price paid. AiuruKclKtu, 50c. Size, IJl.OOSIr.e. "Innlid' (lulde to Health" free- Consultation tree. DB. KlLUttU & CO.. IllNOHAJaTON. N. Y. NOTICE. Farmers and Fruit Crowers. llftrrtrA nrrlArincr fnp finplnct a aani ... cafUotfue, wUtcU we will mull pkvb on applU AnploatiOt$ir per ino;Peare. mums and fMrnrrlna nt. tlK tn hap irwi ina..hua . ..... .... .. r w v uhvuuo V CIHJ 1AJ tlOO per 1,000, etc., etc Address mi mi a . md Kocnesier nursery 10., t; l-ab-4t. d. BREAKFAST SUPPER, EPPS 9 GRATEFUL-COMFORTING. COG BOILING WATER OR MM.K. lil-itt-lU fl a ajj' -S- r ha for Infants Caatorls la so well adapted to children that I recommend It as superior to any prescription known to me." It A. Aacrmta, M. D., Ill So. Oxford SL, Brooklyn, N. Y. "Tha ue of "Cantorta b so untarmt and Its merits so well known that it seems a work of supererogation to endorse it. Pew are the Intelligent families who do not keepCastorta within tasy reach." Caalos Habttm, T. I)., Kew York City. Tb Carrxm FOR ALL Tina is the Year TJCTclVe .Tewelrv Store, in iewelrv. watches, docks. tWnrnto.f china, cut glass, silverware, tc. 1 i 1- t.-ii. : goou goous hi rocs uuuum prices x cn uccomiuousue you. Don't fail to call in if you need glasses. No charge tor luting glasses. Our shoe sales this season ever before, and much larger than we had any reason to expect And it has been almost impossible to get the shoes fast enough to leep up the sizes, but we now have our stock in shape to suit our increased sales and will Good bhoes at liight Prices. All our other lines are complete and prices right. Corner Main ard Iron Streets. IF YOy ARE IN NEED OF CARPET, MATTING, or OIL CLOTH, YOU WILL FIND A NICE LINE AT 2nd Door above Court House. A large lot of Window Curtains in stock. MAKING NOTES OF SHOES PAYS, 'ZZJT for every one wants a good article for a fair price. FOOT often contain the most valuable information especially if they tell where to buy the best shoes for the least money,' "We take pains to secure the best goods and have marked them down to the hard time prices. Our stock cannot be excelled either in quality, variety or price. M)NES & BLOOMSBURG, 300 STUDENTS- sis A DA US A VH. J: IISVBS ST., vrrn D Sjy .jmF fJijifr J and Children. CaatorU cures Colic, Constipation, four Rtomach, Diarrhoea, Eructation, Kills Worms, girt sleep, anil promotes dS gout Ion, Without Injurious medication. Tor avnrnl years I hare reoommtadal your 'CaKtoria,1 and shall always continue m do so as It tuts Invariably produced beneficial result," Enwnt f. runn, M. IflBta Street and ?th Are., Now York City. Cokpawt, 17 Murray Btriit, Kew'york Cm. caslr buva a bnrp-nin nr T- ft I want cash now; if you want t i .i. .. have been much larger than be able to please all wanting TAKE NOTES OF JONES & WAL TER'S boots, shoes, and rubber goods. Note their variety. Note their quality Note their prices. NOTES WALTER PENNA. in. ft. l IN LESS THAN ilsa-S THREE MONTHS. Thnt's our record. We're proud of it. I'rcud tif our college, too. We've got a thoroughly competent corpnof leathers, hndsonie building insnle and out fine enui nicnt, and the gooj will of lot of people. Send us your address. Buck, Whitmore & Co.. 8CKANTOS. ,7-27-ljrr.