THE COLUMBIAN, BLOOMSBURG, PA. Warm Weather 8 mm weae RUSSET SHOES AND OXFORDS at prices to suit all. W. & SEeEI Clarks Building, Main THE COLUMBIAN. BLOOMSBURG, PA. TOR SALE. Dratrablr vacant lots and number of good boniMa and lo's in Hlooinsburg, l'a The l'f t fcurtnewistimil In BlootnslmrR. A very deslrtt We property contiilnlntr 1 aert'8 and tlrnt cluss mildlnw.. : 'i ."il will In a business woitu tiauo to ir00 p r joar at Willow Wrove. Dwelling in KHpy, Oriintfi'vllle and Beach BaTnn. A larc number of farms In Columbia Uonntr, one In Uwrne County, one In VlrKtnln. Two Country store stands In Columbia County and ono In I.ti'-rne County, A water power planing mill, dry dock and lumber yard and beds In Beacli Haven, l'a. Also 10 acres of rood farm land at, game placo, by M. P. LL'TZ bON, Jno i anoe aud lteal listulo Agents, BIAOMbi'l Kti.FA. tf. SPECIAL NOTICES. CIIICKVHTXfJ I'lANO YVH 8AI.E. In fine cui' Hi I'm. tiiice reasonable, forms easy. Inquire n' till" oillce or address Lock Box A., Bl00insbi4!o. i a. tf. ALL I"-. i UP BLANKS YOU Jt'STICKS and ccnhtibi.es at the uolcmbian ot mce. tf. COINC TO CHURCH An active. I'l'e'llKent church member, mnle or female, wanted to represent, us for special work. Splendid inducement, to ilnht parry. No capita! needed. Hcfcrence required. iood pay. State iitfe and previous occupation, also name or .'hi'-'li and denomination. Address filohc Bible )'u"tHMnjf Co., V-IJ Chestnut fct I'biladelpl la. fa. -M-:it. ?ome Bargains. The stock cf goods of Jerry Saltier, lately sold at Sheriff's sale, and pur chased by Kstey & Bruce of Philadel phia, ir.clai'iiig Organs, Violins. Ac cordions, Banjos, Mouth Organs. Violin, Banjo & Guitar strings, Sheet music, &rc, is now offered at greatly reduced rates to close, at the old stand, iooo sheets of popular music at 3cts per copy. Estey & Bruce. 28-2t. 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 Phillips' Cafe. tf House to Bent. On East Reck street, Bloomsburg. Inquire at this office. Washable knee pants 15c. at Gid dmg's. Benton. Benton was deserted on the fourth, a large number going out of town to celebrate. Our Ball team was over to Cambra to play their team and at the seventh inning a dispute arose and our Leys quit the field while the score stood 13-18 in Benton's favor. Ira McHenry, Dr. Carey, H. A. Kemp and V. M. Kline attended the Knights of Golden Eagle Lodge at Central Saturday night. The second nine of this place will play Stillwater a game of ball here next Saturday. Miss Lula McHenry spent last week in Wilkes Barre visiting friends. Sheriff McHenry and G. M. Quick of Bloomsburg were up here on a hunt a few days last week. Geo. Hassenplug and wife of Jami son City were the guests of Geo. Mc Henry over Sunday. Miss Dot Crossley is spending the summer a I Lagles Mere. Miss Lizzie Heacock who has been visiting relatives at New York City for the past month has returned home much benefited by the trip. B. G. Keller gave his house and store a coat of paint, and now has as fine a house as there is in town. Jacob Fahr and wife of Jamison City were shopping here Thursday evening. Max Mamalen is doing a big busi ness in the clothing line and sells as low as the lowest. Clint Dewitt is the man that wears the apron in Crossley's meat market, as he is an experienced hand, he can cut your meat to suit you without any trouble. Lando McHenry has added a new veranda to his residence which makes a great improvement. Robt. Hess is working at Ricketts Wyo., Co. and expects to remain there all summer. Chas. Seeley who has been suffer ing with rheumatism all summer is able to be around and at his business again. Shorty Kelchner was unfortunate last week and sprained his ankle so that he can not play ball, Too bad for Shorty. Children Cri for Pitcher's Castorla. Street. THE STATE COLLEGE'S LOSS. FERTILIZER MANUFACTURERS GAIN $3, 500 A YEAR BY THE SURREPTITIOUS ELIMINATION OF A CLAUSE IN A HILL PASSED BY THE LAST LEG ISLATURE AND APPROVED 1!Y THE GOVERNOR. The fertilizer manufacturers doing business in Pennsylvania will save about $t, 500 a year at the expense of the State college by the surreptitious elimination of a clause in a bill pass ed by the recent legislature and ap proved by Governor Hastings. The act of June 26, 1879, requires manu facturers of fertilizers to take out licenses and file an affidavit of sales with the secretary of the common wealth. An analysis of each brand of fertilizers is filed with the secretary of agriculture and the license fee paid to the state treasurer. This ar rangement caused much confusion and in order to simplify the matter Secretary Edge had the legislature pass a bill changing the time of taking out the licenses from August 1 to January 1 and providing that all pa pers should issue from and be filed in the department of agriculture. When the bill was under consider ation in the house of representatives on second reading an officer of the State college had inserted a proviso that the certificates could only be ex tended after the payment of one-third of the license fees of the previous year. This was done because the college receives the license fees for making the analysis of samples of fertilizers furnished by the department of agriculture, and if the licenses were extended, as was at first pro posed without any additional fees, the institution would lose about $3,500 a year. The bill was sent to a conference committee to eliminate some object ionable features and was reported with the State college proviso all right, but in some manner the proviso was eliminated before the measure reached the governor. The college officials have not been able to learn how the proviso was taken. The pos sibilities are that it was secretly stricken out by a friend of the ferti lizer manufacturers during the con fusion at the closing hours of the( session. Deck and leather belts 25c. at Gid dings. Lawyer You will get your third out of the estate, Madam. Widow Oh, Mr. Bluebags ! How can you say such a thing, with mv second hardly cold in his grave 1 Judge, Paterfamilias What on earth makes that young man stay so long ? Doesn't he know how to say good night ? Edyth Of course he does. That's what makes him stay so long. J'uck. A good, healthy wholesomrneM will tnnka even a homely face attractive. There are many reasons why women should take care to be healthy. One very strong reason is thut beauty and illness are very seldom found together. Illness and especially the kind peculiar to women makes tile complexion bad, the eyes dull and sunken, the manner listless and the intellect dull. No woman in this condition can be at tractive to htr friend. Personal ap pearance counts for much, but comfort amounts to even more. What's the jjood of living if one cannot enjoy anything f If headaches and backaches and dratr- jnng weariness and pain accompany even slight fatigue? If the system is constantly subjected to a debilitating drain, where is the energy to come from to make enjoyment possible? Personal comfort and a consideration for the feelings of others are two of me incentives to an eiiort to secure health. If the illness Is in any way connected with the purely feminine organism (and the chances are ten to one that It is) Dr. IHerce's Favorite Prescription will cure it. Dr. Pierce haa used the " Prescription " in his practice for thirty years with un broken success. A large book written by him entitled " Woman and Her Dis eases" will be sent ( securely sealed, In plain envelope) to those who will send this notice and ten cents to part pay postage, to World's Dispensary Medi cal Association, No. 663 Muia Street, liuuaio, n. v. 1 v usi . wry r WW. V' Interlined "Celluloid 'Collars and Cuffs turn water like a duck's back and show neither spot nor soil. They arc not effected by perspiration, and always look as if riglit out of the box. When they get soiled you can clean them in a minute by simply wiping off with a wet cloth. These are but a few of the advantages of wcariugthe "Celluloid" Collars and Cuffs. There are many others that you will readily discover the first time you wear one. Thev are the onlv waternroof inter lined collars and cuffs mnrtc. Be sure to get the gcuuiuc with this trade mark w TRAOf .... stamped inside, if yon desire perfect Baiismcui'ii. iuaui- in 1111 mcs aim mi styles, if yon can't get them at the dealers, vc'will send sample postpaid, on receipt of price : Collars, 25 cents each. Cuffs, 50 cents pair. State size, and whether you waut a staud-up or turucd-down collar. THE CELLULOID COMPANY, 4i7-'J! Brondwar, NEW YORK. Resolutions, The following resolutions of condo lence upon the death of William M. Kitchen, which occurred June 19, 1805, were adopted by the Kitchen's M. E. Sunday School. Whereas, Our Heavenly Father has seen fit in His infinite wisdom to call from this earth to his heavenly home our brother William M. Kitch en, and Whereas, In view of the loss we have sustained by the death of oui brother and Classmate, his parents, brother and sisters have sustained a still heavier loss, therefore be it, Jiesolved : While we deeply de plore the loss of our brother, we sub mit to him who doeth all things well. Jiesolved : lhat it is a just tri bute to the memory of our departed brother to say, that, in regretting his removal from our midst we mourn for one who was worthy of our respect and regard ; whose courteous deport ment and zeal in promoting ta high standard ot membership ot the diner- ent branches of Christ's Church, have endeared his memory to every member of the same. Resolved: That we will ever cherish his memory and endeavor to emulate his example. Jiesolved : That we tender our heartfelt sympathy to the parents, brother and sisters of the deceased, assuring them that we sincerely mourn with them, the loss of our kind friend and brother. Be it also Jiesolved ; That a copy of these resolutions be piesented to the family of the deceased, and also be sent to the Millville Tablet and Bloomsburg papers for publication. His earthly talks are o'er, His work torever done ; But if we think a moment, They have only just begun. He like the tiller of the soil, Has sown for worthy gain ; But Eternity alone, Can reap the golden grain. We as his listeners, Recall his thoughtful brow ; And may we as children, Await the Saviour's call. One l y one we're crossing over, Soon we'll leave this timely shore ; And we hope to meet our brother, Who has just gone on before. Alvah Kitchen, filTCHEN, r Utt, v Heii.man, ) Earnest Com. Robert The Schools Elect So Delegates Governor Hastings began his ad ministration with a notice to the leg islature that economy must be prac ticed, and he has been harping ever since on a decrease of revenue, the fear of which caused him to veto cer tain appropriations. But while the Governor managed to deprive import ant educational institutions of money needed for their maintenance, he neg lected to guard the treasury against the place hunters and spoilsmen. He is not to be regarded as a particularly good watch dog, but a watch dog with vagaries. His alarm about the con dition of the treasury is probably not well founded, but if it is he should have kept down the expenses of the Executive Department instead of in creasing it more than $800,000. The Governor's course in this matter must be regarded in the light of practical politics. The schools that his econ omy may have wrecked will have no voice for either Quay or Hastings, but the politicians whom he has ap pointed to new offices, or whose sala ries have been increased, will all be for Hastings. Public Ledger. , Call and see the typewriter paper at this office. tf. in w m DUNHAM AND SITTSER. a nice legal question has arisen since judge rice has been ele vated the contest. The Dunham-Sittscr judicial con test court at Laporte, Sullivan County, adjourned last Saturday evening to meet again at that place on the 12th. The commissioner to take testimony will sit again in Tunkhannock on the 10th, and it is now thought the work in Wyoming County will be completed in the two days given it there. The Sittser side made an effort to reopen its case to add further to its bill of particulars, charging more bribery, but after considerable discussion, was refused by the court, and the Sittser side is in consequence closed, except such matters of rebuttal as it may have to bring. This makes it look as though the end might be reached by fall. From the best reports obtain able it appears that the Dunham side has been making substantial gains in Sullivan County. It is the general opinion that it has certainly gained decidedly in Wyoming. With the retirement of Judge Rice as a member of the contest court to assume his position as president judge of the Superior Court, there is a great legal question as to the status of the court constituted to hear the judicial contest. It seems generally conceded that he cannot finish his work on the commission to which he was appointed in this judicial district. Then can the other two judges go on without him and make a report of their find ing which will be legal ? It seems to be the general opinion that Judge Woodward as president judge of Luzerne County will be commissioned by the governor in his stead, but to this the respondents will object. The governor and attorney general seem as much at sea as the other parties con cerned and whatever action shall be taken it is evident that if the finding of the reorganized contest court should be adverse to Dunham, the case would have to be reviewed by the Supreme Court. There is no precedent to throw light on this puzzle. Hood's Sarsaparilla Cures. Almost every neighborhood con tains some one who has been helped by Hood's Sarsaparilla. Mrs. J. Tin ley Mullen, of Clearfield, Pa., writes under date of Nov. 28th, as lollows : " Last winter our oldest boy had the mumps after which he got cold and it turned to diphtheria. We did not think he could get well, and after he did recover he had not sufficient strength to walk. He had no appe tite and we got a bottle of Hood's Sarsaparilla and he began taking it. In three days he was able to eat as well as usual. My husband had catarrh of the throat and the doctors could not relieve him so he took Hood's Sarsaparilla and he has not been troubled since. Last spring I had a pain across my kidneys which troubled me a great deal and I was ;o afflicted with swelling in my trr.oat : I took two bottles of Hood's Sarsaparilla and a box of Hood's Vegetable Pills, and have no such troubles since. Huntington Valley Campmeeting, Huntington Valley campmeeting, near Shickshinny, will open Tuesday evening, August 20, in charge of Rev. E. H. locum, D. D-, presiding elder, er, assisted by the ministers of the Danville and Wyoming districts. August 21 will be Epworth League day, Rev. B. C. Conner, of Blooms burg, conference president, will be the principal speaker. Rev. G. Mur ray Klepfer, of Catawissa, the district president, will conduct the music and Epworth League meetings. Bishop Taylor, of Africa, and Dr. Reed, of Dickinson College are among the promised attractions. The grove is in fine order and the water supply is the best in the state. The boarding hall is equipped equal to a first-class hotel and the service is unexcelled. The rates are reasonable. Old folks day, a feature at the grove, will be on Monday, August 26th. DR.KI LM ER'S BLc4uD&R Dissolvent ravel, Gall stone, brli'k dust in urine, pain in urethra. straining after urination, pain in tho back am) hips, tuudtin stoppage of water with pressure. ISriglit's Disease. Tube casts ill urine, scanty urine. uxii;-itoot euros urinary troubles and kidney uilllculucs. Liver Complaint, Torpid or enlarged liver, foul broath, bilious- Hess, lillious uumlucliu, poor digestion, gout. Catarrh of tbeinadUScr, Iiillummution, Irritation, ulueratlon, drlbbliug, IrcqtiL'lit culls, piiHI blood, uiuitus or pus. 4JurantM-t'M) couU'Mn of Oua Uottlr, If uot beoefltad, DruiwMa will ivfuucl u U10 price inild. A l IruirKllK, fiOe. Mil', 1.00 Mze. "iDVHlitto1 Uultlc to Hunlib" two- CuDtmltaUun f rwfc 1IU K.IU1ICH & CO.. DlNUUAHTON, M. V. ''.""TKIDNEltlVERS JO for Infants ' Cmtorl In no wrll adiptorl to children that f recommend It as superior to any prescription known to m a.' H, A. Archicr, M. D., Ill So. Oxford Bt, Brooklyn, N. T. "Tha uss ot 'Cantoris Is no universal and Its merits so well known thut it seems a work of nipereropntlon to endome It, Few are the Intelligent families who do Dot keep Castorla, within eaiy reach." Caklos Maktttc, T. D., New York City. Th Ckxtavb SHOES CI IDDCD OXFORD TiES, ...ZfcTZE'W.. ER SPRING Largest County. Prices the Lowest. Jones & Main Street, IF YOU ARE IN NEED OF CARPET, MATTOG, or OIL CJLOTII, YOU WILL FIND A NICE LINE AT W. M. BIOWIM 2nd Door above Court House. A large lot of Window Curtains in stock. .They are here in all the newest and dressiest shapes select ed from the best shoemakers in the land. The very liberal patronage of my friends has enabled me to put my shoe stock in the front rank which makes your shoe buying a pleasure. Spring and Summer weight Underwear. ' Hosiery, corsets, etc. of the best makes and the best assort ment at the lowest prices. Cork"ER Iron axd Main Sts. on Iram Derr's land, near A. J. Derr's store, Jackson township, Fa. .hingks, fhslsring li Hemlock d h cut to Is. We have saw-mills on this tract running daily, and have there on hand and can cut timber &c. at any time. Bhlntflos, No 1, alls and t In. selected, $1.60 M No l.allaandHln. best plue, fi.M M PlaHterlnK lat li, 4 a. Uuik, M " 8 ft. lontf, i.& M Hemlock, common sizes, $H.UUM For special orders and for Terms &c, write or call at office of CREASY & ILLS, Eloomsteff. Fa. SUBSCRIBE FOR THE COLUMBIAN tVw' 'n2v-s.--v and Children. C&xtnrln cures Colic, Constipation, Pour etotnach, Diarrhtra, Eructation, , Kill Worms, gives sleep, and promotes dS gent Ion, Without injurious medication. "For sereml years I hara rraommendaf your 'CoKtorla,' aud shall always cent nun ( do m as It has invariably produced boncOcU result." Edwin F. Tardis, M. T), 125th Street and 7th Ave., New York Cltj. Comtawt, 77 MiTtiuT Stkkit, New Yomc Citt. m SUMMER Stock in the Walter BLOOMSBURG, PA. V. H. .TlOOrC. Do your ivalls nee! papering ? If so, call on Willie S. lkte, Exchange Hotel Bi.dg., and see for what a small amount you can have it done. Our stock is the largest and most carefully selected in town. The prices suit the hard times. William II. : Slate, B 0 OK, S TA TIONER Y A A' I WALL VAVJUl.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers