8 THE COLUMBIAN, BLOOMSBURG, PA. We arc selling all Russet shoes at cut prices : Men's $3.00 Russet shoes now $2.25. $2.50 ' " " $2.00. " $2.00 " " " $1.50. One-fourth off on all ladies misses' and children's Russet shoes, button or lace. Clarks' Building, Main THE COLUMBIAN. BLOOMSBURG, PA. TOR SALE. Desirable vacant lota and number of good konseaandlos In Bloomsburg, l'a The best business stand In IHoomsburg. A very deslra ble property containing 19 acres and first clans buildings with good will In a business worm fim to 1600 per year at Willow orove. Dwellings In Kspy, Oranifevllle and Beach Haven. A laro number of laruia In Columbia (tonnty, one In Luzerne County, one In Virginia. Two Country tjtore Stands in Columbia County acd one In Luzerne County, A water power tuunlag mill, dry dock and lumber yard and beds In Beach Haven, l'a. Also 10 acres of food farm land at same place, by M. P. Ll'TZ BON, Insurance and Keal Estate Agents, BLOUMbUCKCl'Ai tf. SPECIAL NOTICES. CHICKEWXU riANO FOH SALE. In nno condition, price reasonable, terms easy. Inquire at this oluce or address Lock Uox A., UloumsbuiK. l'a. tf. ALL KIiDS OP BLANKS FOK JTTSTICK8 and con-stibi.es at the Coi.cmbian or ffloe. tf. i 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 Rent. On East Keck street, Bloomsburg. Inquire at this office. Found. A lady's gold watch chain was found recently, end has been left at this of fice. The owner can have it by prov. ing property and paying for this notice. tf. KEIGHB0KH00D NEWS Interesting Items From Various Points in the County. Roponed by Our Staff of Correspondents. Benton. Bark pealing up at the mountain is over, and many of the men have re turned home. A number of people of this place are preparing to take in the camp meeting at Mt. Grove next week. Cambra ball team came over here Saturday afternoon after the rain, and arranged to play five innings with our boys, and on account of a shower corning, two were played, the score being 2-7 in favor of Benton. There were two prisoners in the lock up last Friday night. Both were from Jamison City and were strangers in this place. Now they have a name for the Fort, and it will be called here after Fort McIIenry. Miss Minnie Seigfried expects to attend caaip meeting at Mt. Grove. Stanley McHenry of Cambra, was a Benton visitor Saturday afternoon. H. F. Kelchner of the Exchange Hotel spent Sunday at Berwick with his wife and daughter who are visiting their parents there. C. F. Marn spent Friday night in Bloomsburg and attended the Knights of Malta, of which he is an old mem ber. Rube Cole, who has been peeling bark for J. T. Brady of Jamison City, the past season has returned home. The chicken supper given by the Ladies' Aid cf the Christian church Saturday evening was largely attend ed. They are trying to raise money to complete their new church in May berry town. App'ernan & Colley are doing a rushing business in the wagon trade. Both are good workmen and send out good wagons. Tom Lrittain of Cambra, was in town on business Friday. Ira McIIenry and wife drove to Bloomsburg Sunday and spent the day with Sheiifi Mcflenry and family. Grand Pap McIIenry, who has been visiting relatives and friends here for the past two weeks returned to the jail ounday. Come again Grand Pap and stay longer for we like jolly peo ple. Robt Hess, who was working at Ricketts' Station, returned home last week and expects to remain here. C. L. Hirkman was elected princi pal of this school for the coming year. Stock Certificates, Corporations desiring stock certi ficates, are invited to call and see samples of lithograph work at The Columbian olT.ce. Workmanship and pi ices are guaranteed to compare fav orably with city printing. tf. Harried, At White Hall July 33d, by Rev. II. C. Munro, Mr. II. J. Shoemaker and Miss Ada Sladler, all of Millville, Pa. Street. A Letter From The West. Jewell City Kan., July 18th, 1895. Friend A. C. Achcnbach Orange ville, Ta. In my letter of May 14th I promis ed you that I would write you soon again. In the fulfillment of the same, I will add that we are all as well as usual with the exception of Boyd, my oldest son; he has something like the ague. The weather is beginning to get dry. Sunday morning July 21st. I have just come in from a stroll over the farm. I have better pros pects for a big crop of corn than I ever had, am counting on 4.500 bushels provided everything proves favorable from this on. The seed corn you sent me is fine. I call it the "Achenbach corn," a good portion of it is in silk from one to six on a stalk. I had 3 acres of Alfalfa north of my house. I plowed what little there was of it under the 20th of May and planted the ground with corn with a two horse planter. That has made the largest growth of any corn I ever saw for the length of time planted. All my other corn is planted with a lister. My Kaffir corn and Sorgum are fine. Most of the potatoes are made, the tops are green yet. Have had plenty to eat since the first of June. I mowed my oats weeds last week and stacked them up for hay. They were almost an entire failure; had 22 acres; I am listing the ground in corn and with favorable weather will make some soft corn. During the last week we have had four rains. A week ago last night one .half in Thursday night one-half Friday night one-half last night one-fourth. Yesterday we turned up dry dirt with the lister. The ground has not been thoroughly soaked sirce the Spring of '92. We could use one half in. of rain every day for the next 30 days to come. Wheat all died out last winter and spring. I don't know of but one field that was harvested in Buffalo Township. The wheat fields were mostly planted with corn. If we don't get a crop of coin the whole country will be busted Kansas, and Nebraska only I mean. Corn is reported fine all over the State except a streak from Concordia east some 50 miles. My boys, Boyd and Frank went to Belvit on the 4th, same as you, Bol ton and myself did years ago. They wanted to stay and see the fire works which they did. They say it com menced to rain about 8 o'clock and rained until 2 o'clock. The boys say they never saw it rain so hard. Every one that was there had to stay all night. Those that measured the rain fall say it was 6J inches. At Jewel City the rain fall was one seven-eighths inches, a pretty fair rain too. At Concordia it was but one-fourth inches quite a difference in a few miles. Have had no storms so far this Summer. There were lots of people Consumption kills more people than rifle balls. It is more deadly than any of the much dreaded epi- idemlcs. rully one -sixth of all the deaths in America are caus ed by consump tion. It is a steal thy, gradual, slow idisease. It pene trates the whole body. It is in every drop of blood. It seems to work only at the lungs, but the terrible drain and waste go on all over the body. The only way to get rid of consumption is to work on the blood, make it pure, rich and whole some, build up the wasting tissues, put the body into condition for a fight with the dread disease. The cure of consump tion is a fight a fight between sound tissues and the encroaching germs of disease. Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery fights on the right side. It drives the f ertiis back, forces them out of the body, t will cure 98 per cent, of all cases of con sumption if it is taken during the early stages of the disease. Its first action is to put the stomach, bowels, liver and kidneys into good working order. That makes digestion good and assimilation quick and thorough. It makes sound healthy flesh. That is half the battle. That makes the "Discovery" good for those who have not consumption, but who are lighter and less robust than they ought to be. A large book of 160 pages, telling all about this wonderful medicine, will be mailed free on receipt of this notice and 6 cents to cover postage by World' Diwrnsary Medical Association, No. 663 Main Street, Buffalo, N. Y. CAUTION.-Buy of reliable deal ers. With any others, something else that pays them bttterswill probably be urged as "just aa good." WW CcCCaJl. cmd nd do It too In a way that he will like. Every man that wears collars and cufli should know about the " Celluloid " Interlined. A linen collar or cuff cov ered with waterproof " Chllcloid." They are the only Interlined Collara and Cuffs made. They are the top notch of comfort, neatness and economy. They will go through the day with you in good shape, no matter how hot or how busy you get. You can clean one yourself in a minute, without dependence on busy wives, unskillful hired girls or un certain and distant laundries. Simply wipe them off. livery piece is marked as follows : Elluloio Von must Insist upon goods so marked and take nothing else if you expect satisfaction. If your dealer should not have them, we will send you a anmple postpaid on receipt of priee. Collars 25c. each. Cuffs 50c. pair. Give size, and specify stand up or turned-down collar as wanted. THE CELLULOID COMPANY, 437-39 Broadway, HEW YORK. here that I can't see how they lived through the past winter. The County had to help a great many. Will make our taxes very high. I have the grass on the Pratt farm to cut, about 125 acres, it is west of the Bluffs and one half mile North. T hid to rdant nil of my Alfalfa to come. It all died for the want of water. I don't take much stock in it. It makes the milk taste bad. We have had fine rains this summer but no heavy rains, to wet down to the subsoil. If we could Get an old soaker like the nnc Wl when you was at my place, the night me oia stable Droke clown. I had POns to Tant.1tr and wra c storm staid. Staid all night at Mike J-.ong s tne hrst night and the second night at Jeff Berr'y I could not cross the creek. Do you remember? A rain like that would make us feel safe from hot winds and drouth. Last Tuesday we had a light touch 01 not winds Dut done no damage. Monday morninir 10th was over to see Lewis Rockey. He lives 5 mues east, two north of Jewell City. Found them all Well nnrl dni nor urpll as & ..... can be expected he has 100 acres of corn. 1 win now close for this time with love and best wishes to one an all my reeards to F.sn. TTarmnn and the Fleckenstines and all inquir ing mends. Truly Yours, W. M. Runyon. WE LEAD THE WORLD- IN THE PRODUCTION OF METALS THE UNITEd STATES STANDS FIRST. In 1890 the United States produced one-third of the world's pig iron. In 1890 the United States produced over one third of the world's steel. Our copper production is more than two fifths that of all other countries. Every mineral and metal of value in the arts or industries is found with in the limits of the United States. The United States produced, in 1889, over one fourth of the entire amount of iron mined on the globe. In 1825 the United States became prominent as a lead producer, and has since enormously increased the world's supply. In the production of steel the United States stands first, largely exceeding the output of Great Britain, and being nearly double that of Germany. The United States produced in 1890 over two fifths of all the silver mined in the world, the next silver producing country being Mexico, with a product of $50,000,000. The United States produced almost one-third of the total product of coal mined during the year 1891. The total amount produced by all the coal mining nations was over half a billion short tons. The United States furnished in 1890, 28 per cent, or nearly one third of the total amount of gold produced by the world. Its leading competitors are Austria and Russia, the former in the same year producing about $30, 000,000 and the latter producing about $21,000,000. " CTA KTJ ERE D CHAIN. OrvK greed the rein and it will run Itself to death. IIopk'b best pictures are made for contented people. Every land that flows with milk and honey has giants In It. Tirana can be no such thing as tha right use! of a wrong thing. It Is eauler not to speak at aU than it Is to keep from saying too inucii. TiiKiut Is a touch of flavor in the garden truck that is only known to tha man who swings the boa,. Casabicrauka. The elrl set on the baseball stand All biit, her bean had tied. And he, poor chap, could not demand Keller from what she s iM "Why does the pitcher throw It SO?" Kite murmured In dlsmnv, Such actions violent, you know, Ills awkward moves display, why docs he so expnr tornte I'pon t he snow-white ball 1 Was ho not taught, until too lato That, that's not nice at all J Vi hy docs that fellow don a cage And lot his voice resound In cries of "strike!" awnk'nlng rage. In those upon the ground t why do the runners alwavs fall And slide upon their face j Or else they do not care at all l"pon snmo other place f Why do the people murmur 'Hank'T lie has no tank, 'tis plain; Why does that, player, lean and lank, Heem In such awful pain T Why does the catcher wear that pad liose to his bosom pressed T And why has not the other had Ills clothes cut like the rest f Why does that, player swing the wood In such a reckless wy And question, as no good man should, What those behind blm say T Why do the men such colors wear" Hut here she turned her head, And then at last became aware ller escort had dropped dead. Stttmwka Malt Journal. In Remembrance of John C. Hen dershot of Eyers Grove, Columbia Co, Pa., who died July 15, 1895, aged 25 yrs. 5mo. 12 days. Another happy home is broken, And the world seems dark and drear To the lonely wife, whom he has left, To mourn his absence here. Her dear husband now has left her, All this world to fight alone j But sometime she will join him, In our Father's blessed home. In the midst of early manhood, He was called from earth away ; And with 'esus he is singing Anthems, in that endless day. God was pleased to call him from us, To the world where all is love, But we hope to meet him later, In that blessed home above. We will miss him in the choir, Where his voice will ne'er he heard, In the church where he had listened To the preaching of God's Word. His father ami his mother Are sad since he has gone, For they nevermore shall hear on earth The voice of their dear son. His sisters, brothers, friends and all, Will miss him here below; l!ut we all will hope to meet him Beyond this land of woe. Gertrude Hileman. Printing in Colors. The prices of colored printing inks have gone down with everything else, and it costs no more to do printing in colors Man it Joes in black. The Columbian office is prepared to print in any ot the following colors : Black, orange, deep cherry, brown lake, light blue, ultra marine blue, bronze red, violet, dark red, green, jacqueminot, purple, garnet, peacock blue. Print ing in more than one color is done at a slight advance for the additional press work. tf. A good quality of envelopes can be obtained at the Columbian office, for S2.00 a thousand, with business card printed on the corner. tf. DR.KI LMER'S threat KIDNEY LIVERS W La Grippe. Cures the tiad after effects of this trying epi demic and restores lost vigor and vitality. Diabetes, Excessive quantity and high colored urine. ' Impure Blood, Eczema, scrofula, malaria, pimples, blotches. General Weakness, Constitution all run down, lops of ambition, na a disinclination to uii sorts or lubor. C uariiii tee-Urn content of One Bottle. If not benefit!. Drutfifuti wUi nrf uad to you the price idd. At Druggists, fiOc. Size, (1.00 Slzt "Invalid!' Guide to Health" tree- Ooniultatlon free. Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binobamton, 14. on Iram Derr's land, near A. J. Derr's store, jackson township, JFa. Shines, Plastering Lali, Hemlock li h cut to tills. We have saw-mills on this tract running daily, and have there on hand and can cut timber &c. at any time. Shingles, No 1, alls and a In. Bolected,l.S0M . . . D1"" neat nine, rise m Plastering latu, 4 ft. long, i.60 M " , " 8 ft. long, $1.25 M Hemlock, common sizes, $s.uo M For special orders and for Terms &c, write or call at office of CREASY & WELLS. Bloomstae. Pa. gjfif AIV 0) for Infants OwsVarlsi is so well adapted tochildren that I recommend it as superior to any prescription known to me." H. A. Aacrrica, M. D., Ill Bo. Oxford St, Brooklyn, N. T. "Th am of Castor! is so onlTorml and It merits so well known that It seems a work of supererogation to endorse It. Few are tho Intelligent families who do Dot keep Castori within eo7 reach. " Cuu09 Miim, T. I)., Hew York City. Tn Ckntacti iPJLtttSHUttl SLIPPERS, OXFORD TiE ...UEW.. im SPRING and SUMMER Largest County. Prices the Lowest. Jones & Main Street, IF YOU ARE IN NEED OF CARPET, JJ1ATTIIYG, or Olli CJLOTH, YOU WILL FIND A NICE LINE AT W. H. BMWEM 2nd Door above Court House. A large lot of Window Curtains in stock. orai Thev are here in all the newest and drpssiper cTiano ce-Urt. 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. ConuEn Iron axd Maix Sts. E. A. RAWLINGS. DEALER IN All Kinds of Meat. Beef, Veal, Lamb, Mutton, 'ork, Hams, Bacon, Tongues, Bologna, &c. Free Delivery to all parts of the town. CENTRE STREET, BLOOMSBURC, PA. fiSTTelephone connection. ansa .u.va'.Cv and Children. Castortn cures Colin, Constipation, Pour Stomach, Diarrhtna, Eructation, Kills Worms, girea sleep, and promote g prtrtlon, Without injurious medication. Tor several year I hare rooommendil jrour 'Castorla,' and shall always oontlnue M do so as It has inrarl&bly produced beneflcU reeulU." Edwin F. Tuwn, if. 126th Street and 7th Aire., New York City. ConrAirr, tf Mrnmt Strut, New York Cttt. WIFIIIilllHiBlllJXllJimwMiuiismiiiBiijiji.M Stock in the Walter BLOOMSBURG, PA. W. H. floore. SHOES, ALIL OUR GRADUATES GOT GOOD POSITIONS This year. In fact the demand for book-keepers and stenographers was greater than the supply and many students were given positions before they graduated. Every student has proven competent. The attendance was much larger than we had dreamed possiMe, and the outlook for the fall term is even brighter. THE SCRANTON BUSINESS COLLEGE ii an Emphatic Succesi. Write for the new College Journal. It is free. BVCK. WIIITJIORK & co Principalis, ADAMS A VJS. fc LISDHSST., BCHANTOM. KOMDI, FO'TO GRAPHS ALL SIZES, NEW STYLES. Rnlnli G. Phillips, Ground Floor Oallory, Opposite Central Hotel, BLOOMSBURC, PA, PHlIXII's sell tlic KOMBI. 7-iJ-iy- K3r Mb iji GET YOUR JOB PRINTING DONE AT THE COLUMBIAN OFFICE (
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers