THE COLUMBIAN, BLOOMSBURG, PA. MY PHILOSOPHY. ullin arcy thHt a jwxn Who does about the best he can la plenty Rood enough to suit i This lower mundane Institute, :o matter f t his dally walk j Fdl.J"ct fer bis belabor' tnlk, And rrltlo mind of ev'ry whim Jest all Kel up and go for him. It's norhiiral enoui;h, I ruoss, When some Rets more and some Rets lest, Fer them that's on the Bllmmest Bid To claim it ain't a fair divide, And I've knowed some to lay In wait And pet up soon and sot up late To ketch some fellow they would hate Fer goln at a faster gait. The f!?ns Is bad when folks commence A-flndin fault with I'rovldence An'i r.alkin 'cause the world don't shake Ax i-v'ry prancln step they take. No man Is great till he can see How less than little he would be Ef stripped to self, and stark and bare Ho hung his sign out everywhere. My doctrln' Is to lay aside Contentions and be satlHtled; Jest do your best, and praise or blame That fullers that count Jest the same. I've alius noticed Ki'eat success Is mixed with trouble, more or less. And It's the man who does the best That Bits more kicks than all the rest James Whltcomb Ulley. STORY OF A STATESMAN. He was a dashing young Congress man, who came to Washington on the tidal wave from one of the districts in the Souiu. But he had not been at the Capital more than six months be fore tuose who had known him at homo and came here on business scarcely recognized him as the same man. A great change had come over Al&ernone Smith lirownleo, M. C. At home he hud never amounted to much, eucially. He came of very poor pa rents "white trash" the colored ver t.ict said though his relations had ;iever been Indicted by the grand Jury. Jar. iirownlee's pedigree, however, be gan with Mr. Brownlee, and what he lacked in aristocracy of blood he made up by his prodigious hustling abilities. (With his keen energy ami upward ten dency of mind, he had the good for tune to combine an affable disposition, an accommodating manner, a pleasant smile and a certain good address. When he entered the race for Con gress, none imagined for a minute 'that he hnd the slightest prospect ot success; but the average political wea ther prophet has a dangerous tendency to pin his faith to the infallibility, ot bis own opinions and standing pat upon them; and that is why it hap pens so ofien that young men like Mr. Brownlee beat out an old race horse and go to Congress on a tidal ware. Unlike the ravens who croaked his doom, Mr. Brownlee did some char acteristic hustling, snatched the nom ination from a tired old campaigner and was elected. When he reached Washington, ho wore the conventional soft black hat and long black skirt coat, a Southern Idea of a Prince Albert; but before he had been here six months he looked like a copy of the latest edition of one of Jim Bell's Broadway swells, with a silk hat, black cutaway coat and gray trousers. And that's why his constlturents scarcely recognized him. It's strange how these things hap pen in Washington. The rich and thoroughbred Miss Daisy Vernon, who had smiled with icy scorn upon the suits of a dozen society men cast ing themselves at her feet, together with their fortunes and pedigrees, felt her heart dissolve beneath the In sidious attention of Mr. Brownlee, M. C. There may have been something In that M. C, a mistaken idea, per chance, that a man who is sent to Congress must be the cock of the walk. Jn his district an idea that some per sons have and that, altogether, the suit of a member of the Hodse, who combined as many attractive qualities as her Brownlee, was preferable to that of any other mortal. And so, to cut things short, after & dashing courtship, they were mar ried at one of the fashionable churches, with a great display of pomp, the attendance of her distin guished relatives, and his Congres sional frierfds, members of the press, etc. Then, after a brilliant reception, they departed on their bridal trip, but not to Brownlee's home. On the con trary, he purchased tickets over arall road that look him in a diametrically opposite direction, just as far from his district as he could go. The trip came to an end and then Brownli's find his wife returned to Washineton, 'installing, themselves at ouo of the leading hotels. Brownlee had nen enough of the world to dis cover tho secret of making an Impres sion In Eociety. With the aid of his wifs'3 social standing and his 15,000 ineoir.e. the way was open to him, and he made the best of his chances. He was received everwhere with open ar::n, and If one man ever hit it rich it was that &anio energetic young mem be.' cf Ooncress. On the whole, Brownlee deserved It, lis hnd no Influential friends to thank for his rise In the world; no family lin:i-n"e had stood back of him to dirr-st his efforts; no money had been us: I to buy him a seat in Congress. Ho hid jurt invested what mother wit nature had endowed him with, and whn fortune, In her timid way, had I: necked at his door, as she is said to do at every man's door once in a life time, he had said, "Come in!" in his Irjiteit tone3. And he was honest and sincere. He hr.d not deceived Miss Vernon aboul b'.a pedigro. She had taken him for better cr worse, and the fault was her3 If she should feel disappointed. Prownlee wa3 a good working member t.f Congress. He made friends rapidly v.'ith the leaders, and watched thai thay never lost sight of him a slngM tfny. All this young man wanted was c;;pcrtunlty. He would rise to the. c;o?.slon, for that he vouched. Tie EQs'.son came to an end. The cVKtlon was near at hand, and every r.i":-!:ber hastened home to look after b.i f:n:3. It was the hardest strug gle cf hl3 life to decide upon a course cf rction with regard to his arlsto wifo. Take her home? Leave h:r h?re? He suggested the Utter CMTJ"1, "I have been thinking a great deal It." remarked Mrs. Brownlee. "I till sk I shall accompany you. Yoi) know, dear, I have never recn your Papa and your mamma. 1 have form ed my own ideas of theui aud am real anxious to see them. They must be Jdst charming people to have a sou like my Ally." 'Ally" is what tlie always called him. But there waa no music In the B-jund of the sweel diminutive as she uttered it on this fateful luorulng af ter breakfast. Brownlee had a head ache and was not ns rerponntve to hie wife's affectionate caressed as usual. -Well, I'm not ashamed of 'em any how," he replied in des-ptratlon. They packed their things and loft town the next evening. If Mrs. Brownlee, in her buoyant trustfulness, anticipated scenes of greeting in which mingled residence on the banks of Lake Couno, as de scribed by Claude Melnotte, with the other details of romantic stage Illu sions, which beguile the sense of a girl who has seen only the fashionable side of life, her anticipations were some what dampened when they stepped off the train in the dark and found them selves on a platform where some rougbj looking men were lounging about un der the canopy of a projecting roof that was sheltering them from a drearj) rainfall. They seemed to recognize the mem ber of Congress, despite his disguise, for he wore a fashionable overcoat and) a closely rolled umbrella, though he . had exchanged his silk hat for a der- by. After some whispering the knot of loungers gravitated toward them. "Dog my cats, Bill!" called one, "if this ain't Smith Brownlee. Hello, Smith; got back, have yo'?" slapping him on the back. "My, but yo' look : putty! Come 'ere, Jim, look at 'Im. Would ye know 'im if yo' met 'im on j a dark road? Say, Smith, yo must a ; struck it rich when we sent yo' to, Congress? When yo' loft yar yo' j didn't have an overcoat to yo' back, an ! I'll leave it to the crowd, now did ! ee?" Smith tried to take It as a Joke, I He laughed softly, and introduced his wife in the Ill-lighted waiting room, i whither tho delegation of his constlru- ' ents had followed. They removed their hats and stared ; at the lady like a lot of bumpkins; but ' this diversion continued only until the most loud spoken constituent could think of saying something that was intended for a compliment to Mrs. Brownlee, but which rlcochetted upon her husband in the form of another rude sally at the metamorphosis of , his condition, when they all "haw-haw- j ed" in chorus. Mrs. Brownlee was beginning to feel shocked. The smell of the coal oil made her 111, and she pinched her hus- j band's arm as a Blgnal to break away, and hie to the bosom ot his family. Brownlee cursed himself and the crowd, and for the first time in his life felt sorry that he ever married. Outwardly, however, he gave no token of his chagrin, but smiled and crack ed Jokes and clutched at every straw that promised him relief from the mer ciless persiflage of his Ill-bred con stituents. He finally managed to get his wife and himself into a foul-smelling country 'bus that carried passen gers, and a hoarse shout that sounded half derisive to the well-trained per ceptive faculties of Mrs. Brownlee went up from the platform through the darkness and rain as they drove away. Brownlee told the 'bus driver to stop at the hotel. He did; but the owner was tearing down that part of the building where the rooms for guests were located to rebuild, he said "agin court time," and there was no place there for them. So there was nothing to do but what Brownlee. in the most desperate calculation of his chances had never contemplated even as a last resort stop at his home. "Daisy," said he In a hoarse voice, as the 'bus splashed through the mire of the road; "Daisy" softly taking her hand in his "are you prepared to make a sacrifice for me; greater, I hope, than any I shall ever ask you ta make for me again in all our lives." She said "yea" wearily, with her head swaying loosely on her shoulders like a sick child's. "What do you ask me?" "That you will not hate and despise me when I Introduce you to my fatties and mother," he said tendefly. "They are poor, then?" she asked In the same weary tone. "They are the commonest people In the State. They are so common that when everybody in town had the cholera it passed them by as hot worth noticing." "My!" she exclaimed, "how did you ever get into Congress?" "By my own efforts and not with the help of anybody in the world. I Just simply hustled for it." i "Well," she said, "let it come." ' What she meant by "let it come" is something that must be left to the solution of the reader, but the resign ed tone in whloh she uttered that dic tum implied that as nothing worse than meeting the commonest people in the state could come to her, it was as well to let it come then as any time. The parental Brownleea lived In a plain, yellow, frame house, colonial In style, in that it shot upward on four sides like a big box, but without any ornate adornments under the eaves and without even a veranda, except a small one that afforded a view ot the cabbage patch and a pig sty in the farther perspective at the back of the house. Brownlee's mother smoked a corn cob pipe and had whiskers. Brown lee's father ate his supper in his shirt sleeves and wore cowhide boots out tide of his pants while he was eating It. The wonder was that he didn't go to bed with them. The furniture was wcant, and they rented the house. That Is, they rented it, but Brownlee, M. C, paid the rent. The greeting that the Brownlees, first edition, extended to the Brown lee, second edition, was cordial to de monstratlvencBS. The maternal Brown ie was something of a cook, and Boon had a repast steaming on the table. It wasn't a bad supper, but Mm. Brownlee didn't have her Wash lj;:cn appetite with her, and her slight headache had grown worse, and she asked to be Hhown to her room. The room had no comforts except a patched carpet, a pine bedstead and an upright packing box with a curtain drawn around it tor a waslmtand and. a portable mirror of the species often scon at cheap auction stores. And this was what her Lake Como illusion had shrunk to! When she arose the next morning her headache had not abated. The smell of fried pork and coffee that struck her olfactories whllo she was dressing was too much for her deli cate nerves, and Bhe never wished her self farther away from the house of her husband's parents than at that moment. She sipped a little coffee find then withdrew again to her rootuv Just to be alone. When Brownlee, M. C, entered she was lying on the bed, fully dressed, weeping. What passed between them in the Interview that took place is a matter of conjecture. The result became evi dent when the 'bus drove up to the Brownlee mansion that evening, and Mr. and Mrs. Brownlee, the younger got in and rode to the depot. Brown lee saw his wife safely aboard the Pullman car, and then stood on the platform and watched the train dis appear in the distance. The same set or rufilan constituents who greeted him on his arrival were occupying their accustomed place on the plat form, and Indulged in their favorite pastime of heaving fossilized Jokes at their representative in Congress. Brownlee swallowed it all in good part and then turned his back to the sta tion and sauntered toward the paren tal mansion with the weary step of a man who had a load on his conscience. But that did not deter Brownlee from getting out and hustling. If he had worked like a Trojan the first time for his nomination, he threw his energy of double dose of Trojsn devtf tlon into his efforts now. All the voters In the district did not know what the loafers at the stAtion knew and what Brownlee himself knew, that he came of the commonest stock of white blood "In the State." They per haps didn't care. Brownlee had been a good member, and he could talk like a threshing machine, and his genial manners carried the day. and the re sult of it was that he was renominat ed and elected, and went back to Washington to finish his unexpired term of service In the House. His wife sat in the gallery one day unseen by him when a great debate was on. Brownlee had prepared him self for the master effort of his life. He had got the consent of the leader on his side to make a speech. He at tracted little attention as he arose and! with his genial smile glanced over the House, drew a deep breath and launch ed forth. But by and by he warmed to his subject, and here and there a Biember on the other side interrupted him. Then Brownlee's genius flashed forth in all its originality. Several members who had tried to trip him up found themselves mercilessly im paled upon the flery shafts of Brown lee's sharp retorts, and held up to the ridicule of the House, while Brownlee smiled In that fetching wy of his that made him resemble an expert conjurer when he contemplates the astonishment of the deluded victims of his craftiness. Before he sat down Brownlee had scored a triumph that insured him a place on one of the big committees In the House when the next Congress should organize. One of the doorkeepers handed him a note. He was receiving the con gratulations of his side of the House, and he did not open it for several min utes, holding it almost forgotten in his closed hand. When he opened it he read: "Dear Ally, I am ready to beg your pardon now any time. Come. Am heartbroken. DAISY." Washington Post. Bis Fad Restored His Health. It Is odd what turns the collecting mania will take. There Is a man In New York who never goes to the the atre, but has lor twenty-flve years col lected the programmes ot each New York playhouse weekly. Not only that, but he has clipped from each Tues day's papers the criticisms of the new plays. All this vast Quantity of data he has carefully preserved. It Is odd how he started In the quest of tha theatre programmes and data of the drama. In 1870 he was In very bad health. Ills doctor told him that he must exercise more. So he decided that he would walk around to the dif ferent theatres and ask for a program me. The walking he found of benefit to his health, and it Is an interesting fact that in twenty-flve years he has not missed a day to make his rounds of the playhouses. He is a very shy old man, and as he has grown older his walks have been lengthened out, since new theatres have sprung up all over New York at considerable dis tances apart New York Letter. Indiana Oil and Gat. Much interest is manifested through, out the Indiana gas belt over the pro position to dig deep wells for oil or gas. Capitalists will drill the well without the assurance of either gas, oil or water, but with hopes of strik ing a vein. Major Doxey believes that after passing through the hard rock at the base of the porous Trenton, a flow of gas greater than ever before dis covered in Indiana will be found. Ha is satisfied that natural gas and oil are in different stratas, separated by. hard rock. Jt salt water Is encoun tered, a pump will be applied, and, if necessary, ie salt water will be pumped for a month or more, Instan ces being or. record where the best oil fields have been discovered after the salt water had been pumped out. Major Doxey Is also of the belief that the Indiana gas field is similar to that in Pennsylvania, where the strongest flow Is obtained In the second strata of Trenton stone. It Is bis firm belief that the Madison county gas belt will yet become one of the greatest oil fields in the United States. Horn of the Tulip. Holland has never completely re covered from the tulip (ever ot tha seventeenth century. At Haarlem they are holding the seventeenth quinquen nial exhibition of bulb plants, hya cinths, narcissi, and tulips, wlhcb. aro again becoming popular In Burope. Among the flowers Is an almost Mack tulip. If a man has a great Idea of htmoolt It Is certain to be the only idea he ever will toT.j What is an Emulsion? Milk is a true Emulsion, and as milk or cream is easier to digest and assimilate than butter, so is the milk or cream of Cod-liver Oil easier to digest and as similate than raw Oil. This is why Scott's Emulsion ia much more useful and effective than the natural Oil ; why it accomplishes so much in arresting waste and building up the body. But it is much more than ordinary fat food. It has other constituents that have wonderful healing and strengthening power, and in addition we add the Hypo phosphites (or Phosphorus), another most important element in overcoming decreased vitality or loss of flesh. These are the reasons why Scott's Emulsion is benefiting to-day hundreds of thousands of consump tives ana anaemic persons, as well as being a food and remedy for sickly, wasting children that is surprising both to physicians and parents. Scott & Bowne, New York. All Druggists. 50c. and $, ALEXANDER BROTHERS & CO. DEALERS IN Cigars, Tobacco, Candies, Fruits ana Huts SOLE AGENTS FOR Henry Maillard's Fine Candies. Fresh Every Week. npTsnsr- a cods .a. Specialty, SOLE AGENTS FOR F.F. Adams & Co's Fine Cut Chewing Tobacco Sole agents tor the following brands of Cigars- Hanry Clay, Londres, Normal, Indian Princess, Samson, Silver Ash Bloomsburg Pa. "He that works easiy works suc cessfully." Tis very easy to clean house with SAPOLO B. F. Sharpless, Tres. BLOOMSBURG LAUD IMPROVEMENT COMPANY. Capital Stock, $30,000. Plotted property is in the coming' business centre of the town. It includes also part of the factory district, and has do equal in desirability for residence purposes. LiiUlUii. LiUla are ottered at values that will be doubled in a short time. ' No such opportunity can be had elsewhere to make money. Lots secured on SMALL MONTHLY PAYMENTS Maps of the town and of plotted property furnished on ap plication. Call upon or write to the Secretary, or J. S. "Woods, Sales Agent, or any member of the Board'of Directors. BOARD OF DIRECTORS. B. F. Sharpless; J. L Dillon. C. W. Neal, A. G. Brigos, Dr. I. W. Willits, Dr. H. W. McReynolds, N. I). Fuxk. 1 1-19- ' BWrilERS, 69 Wvron 8t., Hew York. IMreeoet.! ORGANIZED. THE SOUTH CENTRAL CONSOLIDATED GOLD MINING AND MILLING CO (INCOIU'OHATKD.) CAPITAL STOCK - 32,000,000. HIiarcH $l osch, Full I'ald ami Nu.AHi,ettnbIe. (Issued In payment for this rom nnnv'a Minna TREASURY RESERVE STOCK., $300,000. MAAAAAAAA .0 GOLD. JlmrHntHH T.min "f" n uk Jj'uio. mm n bKCKKTAKV Win. 1 .ftliw n lun Pt'.tu'l 7 r 1J.K.SiuXLoAu.8.F"H u"- Loan VVottgVltC(Ayuiul?& Capital, a 11 J!?J?'!!!l!Le9re PR.0DUCERS, and will be Worked for Dividends. Ui'iKiVrlveaf TtZV? o?"W Tm,8Ury W,U nW Ue S0,d t0 Rnt W' ijJ cV:nts a share. Certain to advance and yield ten to hundred fold on the par. . . t S25.00 Cash Buys S20O.OO Full Paid Stock. and In that proportion more or less. ' asNthe .',e!J'nr,!!;!u.M buy; .1Prtl!''l & advanced hy ax to S points at a time to f I en tor Hharo Snm. Wfc,"""l' ",B "''' The mock will be listed and I or ee advaae SLi! ,? i Jtl,nf','llf'kil,w mines have very lHrKe uro Keserves. w"ri u no un2 6umi.1lflUr'LU'foIdo'B- "'""'fa 10 erect a stump Mill, to reduce tue Company's ori to by ' 00-til N. U. Funk, Sec. C. II. Campbell, Treas. POSITIVE CURE. Owns a Rich Group of Ten Gold Mines, I.OCfitf-fl Iti rnrkjui . Owyhee County, Idaho; a district which has produced OVER $10,000,000,00 OFFlL'EKM AXD D1KECTOUH. r!5mi,nfwTf0iV 5; " ,'r?,he';s- Capitalist and lieal Estate Owner: and of W. II. Hi-otlims A Co., 1(ochih, Louis. J ICS I'HKa T-l'upt. J. A. Ware, Kallroud Coutraulor, St. I.ouls. ar," - W. V. Verne & Co., Investment nn1 .r.... ... ,H l. i ,7,. . : " w" ' n 1" 1 1 rt'M 1. 111 ii k-r it fimtwin mr 1 n uiwi 1 Tll'IH, of Will, Tlrre Rons, and Tlrrn Pnnl Pn St. a JLi u J.,vi V.: "" 0 .mums "., uom .nine. i1uw V-E'A,-Werime.CHHliler W. K Wei'iise & Co, ft. LouU ! hIho secretary Hunker's IMiijllsnlntf Co., ana Assistant Sooretury Uuuiuulee I.oun uiul MorttfHj.' t o. ' '"tor Nusb.uiu, Slerchnnt Tuilor, Cleveland Ohio. I) Ml A ... I. ... It 1 ... . ' . . ...... ILook SBcrc I Do you yxr.nt a 12 o ou want nit 11 o you want a $e wiii Vlildliie? Uo you want nnv kind of a MUSICAL, IN STRUMENT? Do you want SHEET MUSIC? If so, do not send your mon ey away from home, but deal with a reliable dealer right here, who will make things right, if there is anything vvrong. For anything in this line the place to go is to 3. Saltzer's. Ware-rooms, Main Street, be low Market. THE MARKETS. BLOOMSBURG MARKETS. COHRBCTID WSEELT. KITAIL FBIOIS. Butter per lb $ Eggs per dozen Lard per lb , Ham per pound Pork, whole, per pound Beef, quarter, per pound . 07 Wheat per bushel Oats " " Rye " " Wheat flour per bbl Hay per ton 12 00 to Potatoes per bushel Turnips " Onions " " Sweet potatoes per peck 15 Tallow per lb. . Shoulder " " Side meat " " Vinegar, per qt Dried apples per lb Dried cherries, pitted Raspberries Cow Hides per lb Steer " " CalfSkin Sheep pelts Shelled corn per bus Corn meal, cwt to .10 75 4$ .65 14.00 7S S z.oo to .30 Ai .10 .10 .07 .05 .it .14 -3i cS .80 75 7S 9.00 i.xo 1.35 I.IO .IS .10 S .10 .10 Bran, Chop " Middlings " Chickens per lb new " " "old Turkeys " " Geese " " Ducks " " Coal. No. 6, delivered 940 M 4 and 5 " 3 50 " 6 at yard 2.t$ " 4 and s at yard 3 a 5 CAN I OBTAIN A PATENT f For Rrooint answer and an bonust opinion, write to 1 1 N N v l.'O.. who have bad nearly ttfty years' experience In the patent buumuss. Comniunlua. tions strictly contldentlul. A llundbook of In. formation oonraruiUK Totems oiid bow to ob tain them sent free. Also a catalogue of meobao. teal ana sciuntlflo books seut true. Patents taken tbroiiKb Mmm ft Co. reoelrft special notloelntbe Hclentllle American, and thus are brouubt widely before the public with, put oot to the Inventor. This splendid laier. Issued weekly, eleitautly Illustrated, baa by fur the lamest rirculutloa of any scientific work la the world. 8.') a year. Sample oopiea sent free. Building Edition, monthly, tl.bua year, bingle copies, cents. Every number contains beau tiful plates, ia oolors, and pbotoKrapbs of new bouses, wltb plans, enabling builders to show tb latent desiims and secure contracts. Address JiuS A CU. MfcW VU11K. J 01 IIUUAilWAT. Glass! Quick! There's lots of snnpand vim In this IIihuh' Kootbkkr. There's lots of pleasure aud Rood health In It, too. A do. llvlous drink, a temper ance drink, a home made drink, a drink thut delight the old aud you uk- He sure and get the genuine HIRES'Rootbeer A tt sent psektgs saskss I islloas. Bold svsrywbsrs. THE 0HA8. E. HIRES COMPANY, PHILACJILPHIA, PA. 6-17-11. t COPYRIGHTS. tOOTBCEiq