THE COLUMBIAN. BLOOMSBURG, PA. -UEl) lSCti. . A jtTAt'.i. ;:. CONSOLIDATED ISM). UUY i'HIDAY MOKMMt I'miniy siat ot Columbia . r '1'isylvaQla. VI HI. e-li Al Mloouih'iurs'i Gt. U. iuWELL EmroK. GEO. L K".N, Foreman. Tr: tn-iilc tUo l ouut) , 11.00 ft year In ad vane; 1' 11 '1- p.i'it 1" advance1 Outside the county. S'nr strtntly In advance. All cdiuiuun'.ciitlms should be addressed to TUK COLUMBIAN. Dloomsbuiy, ra. ' 'KIDAV, AUUVST 9, 1S95. Candidates. I CU SSOCIATE JUDGE, MOllDf.CAI MILLARD, C.KXTKE township. WASTING r h L L YUNrY Squandering Thousands lor Needless Supplies for the Departments of the State Government. Thjra W:is No Money For Many Worthy Ch.vitiet 01 The Stats. But Plenty For Luxuries For The Officials. The Ilarrisburg Patriot of last Monday contains the following : Thousands of dollars ot the people's money are to be squandered this year tor needless supplies for the various departments of the state government. Contracts have been awarded by the board of public build ines and grounds for an abundance of the best bay rum, fancy soaps, exper sive towels, rare flowers, chamois skins and Dresden china inkstands. The board has also ordered expensive furniture, silverware and cut glass for the executive mansion and costly furnishings for the new quarters of Lieutenant Governor Lyon on the second floor of the north wing of the capitol. It will be hard to convince the average citizen that the State is short of funds when he learns of this extravagance. Requisitions for all these things were made a year ajo upon the board, but Auditor General Gregg and State Treasurer Morrison, who constituted a majority, refused to al low them and they were stricken from furniture, &c, for the senate and house of representatives and the several de partments. But things are different now. Everything that was refused men win De supplied tins year, ana a great deal more. A new feature this year is the bulb and flower schedule, which indicates that the state is going into the floral business on an extensive scale. This schedule includes all of the finer varieties of roses, Dutch and Roman h--..-mf'-s. lilies, daffodils, Chinese sacred lilies, lilies of the valley, janonicas and the ixia crateroides, a fiery scarlet tiowcr of great beauty. the schedule also calls tor 200 strong: clumped japonicas to cost $4 a hun dred and the same number of japoaica com pacta multirlora, the cost of which is scheduled at 6 a hundred. Anotner new leature this year is two dozen leather ca?es for carrying postage stamps, one dozen real seal card cases, selected, and four German silvet itaJmg glasses with ivory han die. Kieven inclinometers are called for to keep the clerks and officials informed as to the condition of th mercury. In tue matter ot stationery there will be fancy wntmg paper, wu'i envelopes to match, in costly boxes. There will also be fine pocket knives, scheduled at $3.25 each and combina tion pocket knives at $4 each. Buck skin pocket knife cases will be sup plied to preserve the knives from rust and dirt. The schedule calls for three dozen of scissors and forty pairs of shears. Nine dozen of foun tain pens wi.i he distributed among the slate ofhcials and employees. Be sides hundreds of ordinary pens and penholders are scheduled, together with many ross of lead pencils and hundreds of quarts of writing fluid. 1 he board has contracted for two dozen inkstands, three dozen fine cut glass inkstands, some oak bases, six porcelain inkstands, a dozen Daisy automatic ink wells and several hun dred quails of Arabian mucilage. I tie principal items in the soap schedule are fifty dozen Colgate's olive palm, fifty dozen White Rose glycerine, twenty-five dozen Colgate's superfine and twenty-five dozen Cuti cura for the skin. There are also scheduled about 2,500 pounds of scrub and cleansing soap. The supply schedule includes hair, hat, clothes, shoe, nail, scrub and dust brushes, six dozen coat whisks and numerous uaUDcrs. ir.is schedule also calls for seven dozen waste paper baskets, ten dozen bath sponges fifteen dozen chamois skins, ten dozen china, nickel and stone cuspidors and twelve blacking cases of oak and walnut. In the book schedule there are sixteen Harrisbure, fifteen Phila delphia and eight Pittsburg directories. There are also six dict onaries, a set of Appleton's encyclopedia, a West cott's history of Philadelphia and a library of 500 volumes of standard 1 woiks for '.lie executive mansion. The towel bch(.dule calls for all sorts of towels. There are loo bird's eye Imck, hemstitchi-d, with the words. " Comnioi.weaUh of l'ennsylvania," woven in each towel, fifteen dozen snow drift " bath towels, five dozen linen bath toweU, twenty five dozen hemstitched tove's, three dozen bleach towels and 250 yards of crash. Strange to say, the schedule docs not call lor any cork screws, but it calls for about evervthinc else kept bv a first class hardware establishment. Some of the " useful ' articles provid ed for by this schedule are claw ham mers, monkey wrenches, carpet tacks, wire brads, cross and rip saws, chisels, jscratch awls, rivet cutters, gimlets, screw drivers, nail pullers, syringes, fumigators, hoes and rakes, trowels, sheep shears, spades, manure forks, pruning knives, lau mowers, axle bolts, red, blue and green paint, wal nut stain, harness dressing and glue. I he schedule 01 miscellaneous sup plies includes ten dozen baccarat and six dozen fine cut tumblers, one dozen Limoge pitchers, one dozen filters. t t.'.i f i nnii..H. -,r u.i KM. ........ filtered, twenty gallons of ammonia. iour uemijonns ot a cneaper grade 01 ammonia, a half barrel of lubricating oil, a half barrel of castor oil, twenty pounds of lump alum, ten pounds of camnhor, ten gallons of insect fluid, eighteen dozen of shoe blacking, nine alligator satchels and one refrigerator. The board has contracted for two $500 clocks with chimes and mantel decorations and three office clocks ranging in price from $15 to $60. There is a greater variety of clocks now on Capitol hill than in the largest establishment in Ilarrisburg. After every session of the legislature one or two of these expensive time pieces disappear and it becomes " necessary" for the board to purchase new ones to take their p aces. Lieutenant Governor Lyon will have in his new apartments five pairs of curtains to cost $100 each, a cover for a grand parlor piano to cost $100, although no arrangement is made in the schedule for the piano. These apartments will be furnished with mahogany furniture and costly carpets and rugs. The schedule provides lor six hre sets at $12? each. 62 s yards of the best Wilton carpet and a great many rugs, rancing in price trom $2.50 to $60. Many of the de partments are to have new furniture of mahogany, quartered oak, walnut or cherry. The carpets will be used for the lieutenant governor's rooms and the departments of internal affairs and public instruction. 1 he executive mansion will be re furnished at an expense of about $30,000. The parlor will be Louis XIV style and the study Moorish. mere will be expensive portieres, curtains, overdraperv and wall and window hangings. The schedule also calls for a " tea service, six Dieces. latest designs," to cost $400, for the mansion, and an entire equipment of silverware, including a, marquis set of tea, cessert and table spoons, forks. dessert and eating knives, sugar spoons and tongs, oyster forks, coffee spoons, punch ladle, gravy ladle, orange spoons, lettuce forks and soup ladle. Lestdes, there are fruit knives, fish sets, salad spoon?, ice cream spoons, tomato server, iellv server. Trilbv berry torks, pickle forKS, grape scissors. cake knife, bon bon dish and spoon: ;ese scoop, butter plates and spreaders, suar sifter, pepper and salts, candelabra?, chafing dish and cnahne spoons and flazon. 1 he special cut glass schedule for the executive mansion comprises bowls, trays, water pitchers, carafes, cheese dish, bv.it dishes, vase, sugar bowl, cream pitcher, cruets, tumblers, goblets, spoon holders, finger bowls, knife rests, ice tubs, cracker jars and iruu saucers. .Much ol the furniture. carpets and drapery now in use are in good condition and will stand the wear for ten years. To make room for the new furnishing for which the board has contracted it will be sold at public sale in the corridor of the capi toi to the highest bidder. t first it was reported that the reason why the Koaringcreek dele gates to the Republican County Con vention did not appear in their seats was that they were under the influence of liquor. This is now denied, and the story is that they dared not come in the convention and vote, becausj they had accepted money from bot 1 sides. Who handled the money we don't know, but we do know when and where and to whom thev told that they had been boodled by both factions. It would not have changed the result, but this little incident shows that all parties employ the same means for accomplishing politi cal ends, and the boasted honesty and purity and integrity of the G. O. P is a myth and a delusion. In the Republican factional fight the Hastings combine is losing ground, and Quay is caining every day. Should Quay control the convention it would be a humiliating thing either J for the Governor to be defeated as chairman of the convention, or to ac cept it through the courtesy of Quay. It may also make a difference in the nominees for Superior Judges. There is a nice fight on hand, and Demo crats can afford to look complacently on, ana smile. OOS'SOLIDATED COMPANIES. TO MAKE LOCOMOTIVES THAI WILL CO I50 MILES AM HOUR. The Baldwin Locomotive works i Philadelphia, and, the Westinghou : Motor Company of Pilt"bur? have cnt 01 ed into an agreement for the manu facture of electric encii.es. W. 1). Updegraff, private secretary to George Westinghouse, Jr., in ex plaining the scope of the afliliation ot interests of the two companies said : The combination is to develop the possibilities of the Tesla motor as applied to the railway service. I intend to make it possible to rule from New York to Pittsburg in three hours. With the Tesla motor we are assured power to draw a car fit the rate of 150 miles an hour or more. The only thing now is to get cars and car wheels that will stand the strain of traveling at that rate of speed. The Baldwin people assure us that this can be done." We now have this system working at our plant at Last Pittsburg, the only trouble being to get a car that will remain on the track. We believe that with this union of inte-ests we will be in operation between Pittsburg and New York. The present railway tracks cannot be used. We want air lines. The cars will be very light and on the principle of the air ships. We can run them on trestle woik that would not bear the weight of a Pull man coach. We intend to cross the mountains by lifts. It is only intended to use the lines for passengers, mail and express. There will be do engines, each car being provided with its own motor. A car will not stop until it reaches its point of destination." GENERAL NEWS, Trolley parties are being inaugurated on the Pottsville line. The Philadelphia & Delaware county trolley line has reached Media. Tumbling down a high precipice at Wilkes-Barre, little George Peterski was mortally hurt. Ex Chief of Police B. F. Meyers, of W likes Barre, has gone insane, and is in Danville asylum. The Colbert colliery, at Shamokir, employing 600 men, has resumed woik after an idleness of a month. Hotel Proprietor Amandus Rice, of Wind Gap, who shot the renders brothers, has surrendered. Judge Cyrus L. Tershing, who had long been ill, returned to his duties at Pottsville court house baturdav. The Shenango and Mahoning valley manufacturers have advanced wages of union puddlers twenty-five cents a ton. The Stewart iron company, of Sharon, have acceded to the demands of their employees by granting a ten and twenty-five cent raise. Assistant superintendent Alexander Bryden, of the Pennsylvania coal com pany, has been made superintendent, with headquarters at Dunmore. The employees of the Pennsylvania bolt and nut company, Lebanon, have received notices of a ten per cent, in crease, to go into effect August 16. While readjusting an arc light car bon, Curtis Shipp touched a live w.re at ahaniokin. Although lie received 2,000 volts, he escaped with a badly burned wrist. The employees of the Franklin cop- per mine at liancocn. .Mich, nave had their wages restored to the figure holding before the cut caused by the panic two years ago. llham Grundy x Co., proprietors of worsted mills in Bucks county, who took ten per cent, oft their several hundred employees a year ago. have added the ten per cent, again. lhe Christian Endeavor Slate Con vention, to be held at hne, beginning Thursday, August 22, and lasting four days, will be the largest meeting of the kind ever held in Pennsylvania. A tent is being prepared that will hold 7,500 people. A belinsgrove lady was startled the other day when she went to answer a ring at the door bell and found no one there. I he mysterious ringing of the bell, so the Sunburv Item says, was repeated at intervals during the day and in the evening the lady re Hood's Saved ' Ca8SyHT0hT."t,y fly Life "For years I was In a very surloui conditio With catarrh ol tbu atoiuacb, bowels and bladder, I sullered Intensely from dyspepsia, and In fact was a mlavr. able wreck, merely a skeleton. I seem ed to go from bad la wane. I reully wished I was dead. I had no rest day or night. I did not know what to do. had taken so much medicine of the wrong kind that It had poisoned me. nnd my finger nallt Mr. W. K. Young, black and some off. r-ousr's Mills, Pa. I began to take Hood's Karsatiarllla. I had faith lathe medicine, and It did more for me than all prescriptions. have gradually regained perfect health, am entirely free from catarrh ot the bowels, and pain In my back. Myreoovery Is simply mar velous." W. R. Youmo, Potter's MUls, Pa. Hood's-Cures Hood's Pllla reller diitrew after Mtlntb TOHN 1 m ik m fll am - S18.00. ceived the announcement of the death at Muncy ol her cousin. The Carbon County Game and Fish Protective Association received forty German hares, or Belgian rabbits, which will be carefully guarded until fall, when they will be allowed to run in the woods of Carbon county. Ger man hares multiply very fast. One buck and two does were brought into the country about five weeks ago by William V. Johnson. These three have already increased to over twenty, and pretty soon they will begin to multiply so fast that it will be im possible to keep count of them. As a number of young men were on their way to Hazel Dell, near Ell wood, Lawrence county, one of them noticed a peculiar hissing noise issuing from a large hollow tree near the road. An investigation disclosed the fact that the tree was literally full of snakes. The snakes showed fight, but the boys pulled off their coats and went to work. In an hour 45 snakes had been killed. The largest measured a trifle over 6 feet in length, and they ranged from that down to ten inches. They were of the blue-black snake variety. They fought desperately, but the boys escaped without being bitten. Sheriff Fulmer, of Lycoming county, is in a predicament owing to a mis take made by him a few days ago resulting in the discharge of the wrong man from jail. William Donley was committed for picking pockets during the Williamsport centennial, and was awaiting trial under heavy bail, when he suddenly and unexpectedly regain ed his freedom. The Sheriff had received an order for the discharge of a trivial offender whose name was somewhat similiar, and in preparing the order of discharge copied the wrong name from the docket. A messenger carried this to the jailer, who forthwith opened Donley s cell and astounded him by telling him he was free. Donley was so elated that he hung around Williamsport a day or two, and even paid a visit to some of his old cronies in the jail. When he found out that he had been discharged by mistake he lost no time in getting away from the city, and no trace of him has been obtained. Wood's Oollege of Business and Short hand, Vr:'. Earre, Fa. Wilkes-Banc will eclipse all former records in Business College organiza tion. 300 purchased Charter Membei Scholarships in 40 days. 1 73 day school. 1:7 night school. The Scholarship ivuluuts both the Business and Shortnand Courses, does not limit the MU'ieni to lime and is ood in both sessions at the price of one Scholarship, 50. I he home of the College in Memor ial Hall is almost a palace, the equip rncnt is superb. 10 of the Charter Member Scholar ships reseivcd for Columbia county. Alter August the regular rate of tuition will be charged. Write for College Journal. 1". E. Wood, 8 0 4t. President. KOUBI, V4 size. Pries FOTOGRAPHS ALL SUES, . NEW STVLES. Ralph G. Phillips, Ground Floor uallorr, opposite Central Hotel, BLOOM SBURC, PA, IH1L.I,11 HCllH tlie KOMIII. 7-iiy. E. A. RAWLINGS. DEALER IN All Kinds of Aleut. Beef, Veal, Lamb, Mutton, Pork, Hams, Bacon, Tongues, Bologna, &c. Free Delivery to all parts of the town. CENTRE STREET, BLOOMSBURG, PA. ffcTTelephone connection. 1 11 IT j FROM R. T0W3H mm CORNER LIMIT L MARKET Sts. BLOOMSBURG PA. In the tfhee of b, We are offering you now and wool dress goods, that we cannot commence to buy at tne figure as they cannot be manufactured for it. Why do we do thk? Kpmnse we believe in frivinr our patrons the benefit of our experience in buying before the goods advanced. You reap the beneht ol it, and so do Wool Dress G:ods. We place on sale to day some Henriettas that we used to sell at $1.00 the yd. To day we cut the price in half and offer it for 50c. yd. Skirt Lengths. In our spring cleaning we found a lot of goods that would make a lady a nice skirt. We proceeded to tie them up in bundles for that purpose and to-day they go at ust about one-halt the cost when new. Will make you an elegant skirt for mornings. Remnants. There is always to be lound in this box lots of useful things, some long enough to make a skirt, some a waist, and you can always find some thine that will be of use to you. FUMSEL & BLOOMSBURG, huptuhe can be cured. Grateful Testimonial From One Who Has Been Cured. Thi new ni t lirxl of iMiri'it; rupture. nrai'tlcPd liy lr O'.Miillcy, Ml Soul li W.-isiiliiKton alreer, w iiKen-Hiuif, is Di itiuiL' niosr excellent r- Biilts. An ntW'liite cure lHt-iifiruntPcri In ninety out of the htimlreil cns"H mm under treutHicnt. There Ik 110 discomfort or annoyance of wear hm' a truss afterwards. No ruttlnir. 110 pal 11 and no operation Many ti Mimc nlal.s from grateful putk'iitti, out; of which In (riven by pcr- John VMliiKor, at Division str vt. employed at Nicirmaler'H brewery. IlKc-t-HuiTe, says: "1 had been ruplunil In. 111 liiiintr heavy weights and hard work. I tiled many physi cians, '!io pro'iiiuiiccil ui.v case Incurable. No truss was ot any use to me mini I consulted Dr U'Malley about three months nifo I am now well I Imvc no p no runt lire, and am dcllKhti-d to liilorm my fellow suffeiers. I now won; mini at tne weweiv every nay ana nave thrown away my hush, haying uo occasion to use it " N H. We make no rhuvge when we Uo not euro. Exaiuluat Ion five. DR. A. P, O'MALLEY, So s. Wahin-tnn St. Wilies-Earro, Ta, Do your walls need paperiiig ? If so, call 011 Willikni ft. 0Me, Exchan'ce Motel Bldu., 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 B. Slate, Ii O OKS, 8TA TIONER Y A ND WALL PAl'lili. HATTER. TROUSERS FROM S5.00. Met ! thousands of yards of cotton we out in a atiiereni way. They are all of them marked at one-half the actual cost and some less. Shirts. We have just received a new invoice of unlaundried men's shirts. We are oflering them to you for 50c. each. While the quality of muslin and linen which is consumed in their manufacture cost more now, but we bought it some time ago. Can't be equaled in town for the money. Madras Cloths. We place on sale to-day one en tire stock of these gocds at greatly reduced prices. Some of them at less than half, some not quite so much, but they all go for one price 10c. the yd., used to be 25 and 15c. and well worth it. HAMMAN, Penn'a. Having procured the ser vices of K. H. Frodich, an ex pert watch maker and hand engraver, all goods purchased of me will be engraved free of charge. I am also better pre pared to do watch, clock and jewelry repairing than ever before, A new and complete optical outfit has been added, and glasses are adjusted and fitted iree of charge." J. Q. Wells, Jeweler and Optician, BLOOMSBURG PA. Borsons ta Travel. WANTED Several faithful gentle men and ladies to travel for establish ed house. SALA.EY $780.00 &ND EXPENSES. Position permanent if suited j also increase. State reference and en close self-addressed stamped envelope. THE NATIONAL, 316-317-318 Omaha Bldg., CHICAGO.