t THE COLUMBIAN, BLOOMSBURG, PA. 8 THE SUMMER GIRL'S LOVE. We are 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. W.0. darks' Building, Main THE COLUMBIAN. BLOOMSBURG, PA. FOB SALE. Desirable vacant lota ana number of good bonaes and lo s In Hloomsburg, 1'a The bem fcnalntw stand In Bloorasburg. A very desira ble property containing l acres and nrst class boiminKS wlib good will In a business worth tisuo to f 1500 por year at Willow Grove. Dwelling In Espy, Oranpevtlle and Benen Baven. A lurgo number ol Iiuius lu I'oliiinblu County, one lu Luzerne County, one In Virginia. Two Country Store Stands In Columbia Couniy la one In Luzerne County, A water power lanlng mill, dry dock and lumber yard and beds in Bcaoh Haven, l'a. Also 10 acres of nod farm land at same place, by M. 1'. Ll'TZ BON, Insurance and Heal Kstate Agents, JBLOOMSBUKU.FA. tf. SPECIAL NOTICES. CIIICKE'llNU i'lANO FOK PA I.E. In flne condition, price reasonable, terms easy. Inquire at. this onlce or address Lock Box A., Bloomsbui't. l'a. tf- LL KIWDS OF BLANKS KOH JUSTICES TV and constables at the Columbian ot ffloe. 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 Phillips' Cafe. tf House to Bent. On East Reck street, Bloonisburg. Inquire at this office. Pound. A lady's gold watch chain was found recently, and has been left at this of fice. The owner can have it by prov ing property and paying for this notice. . tf. NEIGHBORHOOD NEWS Interesting Items From Various the Cou.ity. Reported by Our Correspondents. Benton. Points in Staff of Forks. E. J. B. is back again at the Forks. The crops around here are turning out well. Wm. Unangst has parted with one of the finest cows and calf in this sec tion. Mr. and Mrs. Mears from Bloom, took dinner with Wm. Unangst family on Wednesday last. On Saturday p. m. last a picnic was held in the Laubach grove from Rohrs burg. At night, a grand festival held for the Zion Sunday School. Every body was there. The festival was a success. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Ammcrman and Mrs. Albert Smith of Berwick, have been visiting friends here and attended the festival. Albert Shives wife from Bloom attended the festival. Mr. and Mrs. Birt Freas and son Harold, of Scranton, have been visit ing the family of Wm. Unangst for several days, and have returned to Scranton. Mrs. P. A. Leisenring of Nanticoke, has returned after visiting fiiends here. Jas. Aiiimerman is the old fisher man of thi:i section. lie has caught some sp'endid black bass during the past week. Visitors coming here to hunt fish find a nice and convenient home at Mr. Ammerman's. Mrs. Ammerman and daughter know how to cater to the pleasant people that visit here for recreation. The people of this section are as tonished at a depraved act perpetrated by some om; who hadn't the fear of God before his eyes. He entered the barn of Wm Unangst and ruined the top of a splendid buggy, including the box and mutilating some of the run ning gear. The dash board, top, seats, &c, were cut into great gashes so that they can never be used again. It was one of the best buggies in the coun try. One would suppose that William Unangst had not an enemy in the country. There are people in this world who are capable of doing any thing diabolical. Jesse James would hardly be guilty of entering a man's barn, ham string a horse, ruin a bug gy, or burn the barn. Mrs. Maggie Zellemoyer and child ren of Wafciontown, and Mrs. Hiram Shaffer of Orangeville, are visitini; friends at Forks. Miss Grace Ammerman is paying a very pleasant visit among friends in Wilkes Barre and N. Y. state. We paid a short pleasant visit at Stillwater recently and found B. F. Edgar in full bloom. He has fine water power for his distillery ami run ning to full capacity j has a urge crop of swine, the best we have seen for many a day. His son has charge of affairs and McIIenry is still there as cancer anil Douusrnan. 1'.. J . lias a large market for his brands in New Street. York and Philadelphia. Cant. Gara is still a resident of Forks. He has completed a fine job of workmanship at Evansville for Silas E. Moyer, putting new machinery in the old mill there, The Captain is an accomplished millwright and bridge builder. Rudy Unangst, George Unangst, Frank Hill and Aaron Oliver of Ber wick, have had a fine outing at Forks, tenting and fishing during the last week. Had plenty of visitors on Sun day last among which lively Drum, the shoemaker, and companion from Ber wick. While other parties tenting here have not conducted themselves properly, the above young gentlemen reflected credit upon Berwick by prop er demeanor. The Bicycle in Japan. The all-conquering bicycle has in vaded Japan and is now a familiar sight in the land of the jinrikisha. The Europeans take to it kindly and the little brown men and women are equally enthusiastic. The government has equipped many of its postmen with roadsters, especially those who deliver mail in the suburbs or in the country districts. In each brigade a bicycle corps has been formed who are daily drilled in about the same style as similar organizations in the armies of Europe. The Japanese people themselves still regard the wheel as a great curiosity, but are beginning to both master and manu facture it. Some of the Japanese women have adopted a queer bicycle costume that is a combination of the bloomers with the native dress. It is neither Japanese nor European. Com bined with the upper part of the kamona costume the Japanese ladies clothe their nether limbs in what are neither knickerbockers, trousers, zouaves nor bloomers. The ludicrous effect is heightened by the girl having a national habit of turning the toes in developed to its largest extent. All that you see when she passes you is a pair of round and pretty heels wab bling in an uncertain manner and a little body coiled up that makes you think of a gay little monkey on top of a pole. The teachers elect of the Blooms burg schools are requested to meet with the Board of Directors in the High School Library on Friday even ing of this week. The matter of text books will be considered at the meet ing. Jas. C. Brown, Secfy. Women wearing Worth dresses and men wearing dia monds, are just as unhappy and uncomtorta b 1 e over stomach and bowel troub les as are those who have only calico and bone buttons. None of us live natural lives. We eat too much and are care less about our health. Abused na ture finally revolts. The rebellion Is slight at first, but it erows. Occasional constipation becomes chron ic. Bowels won't work. Stomach eets sour and generates gas. Liver gets full of bile. Bile gets into the blood. Head uches cotne, uuzint.-w, loss of appetite, loss of sleep, foul breath, distress after eating and all because Nature did not have the little help she needed. One of Dr. Tierce's I'leasant relicts would start the poisonous matter in the way it should go. If there's a good deal of it, better take two that's a mildly cattiurtic dose. Dr. I'ierce's Pleasant Pellets never gripe ami they cure permanently. Yon needn't take them forever just long enough to regulate the bowels then stop. In this way you don't become a slave to their use as with other pills. Unce used, tnev are nlwava in favor. Some designing dealers do not permit their customers to have Dr. Tierce's Tel- lets because inferior pills ufTord greater profits. Such dealers are short-sighted. They overlook the fact that next time you will go where yon are supplied with wnat you osit lor. Q J" CHH' tTY MFKO SUCetT V KS o'l VWl.Y.KN maUa 110.00 a in n-lllnff thu "Wuntl-.-rful Chrliity UreuJ i-1 leer Write cimck Tor t'lffiiiiry, tJiiaiitTr ilNir o., Fremoul, O. GET YOUR JOB PRINTING DONE AT THE COLUMBIAN OFFICE f S3 I 1 Waterproof collars and cuffs thnt will not wilt, arc not effected by moisture and look just like linen are all the fashion now. They are made by cov ering a linen collar or cuff with "cel luloid " and are the only waterproof goods made with en interlining, con sequently the only ones that will stand wear and give perfect satisfaction. Try them and you will never regret it. Al ways neat, and easily cleaned. When soiled simply wipe off with a wet cloth or sponge. Every piece of the genu ine is stamped as follows : Elluloid AfARK. W Ask for those so marked and refuse any imitations, as they cannot possibly please you. If your dealer docs not keep them, we will send a sample di rect on receipt of price. Collars 25c. each. Cuffs 50c. pair. Slate size and whether stand-up or turned-down col lar is wautcd. THE CELLULOID COMPANY, 437-430 Broadway, Ntw Vorta Harper's Magazine. David Graham Adee will contribute to the September Harper's the history of "Malbrouk s'en va-t en guerre." the song that Trilby sang at her Paris de but, and trace it down from a remote past through important historic move ments to a tune now familiar in every civilized country In the same number the third paper in Toultney Bigelow's German Strug gle for Liberty scries will describe the demoralization of Prussia through the cowardice and treason of the nobles, the revival of patriotism among the people through the efforts of Net telbeck, Schill, Gneisenau, and Scharn horst, and the famous conference at Erfurt, at which Napoleon alternately dazzled and insulted the Czar and the German princes. Everywhere We Go We find some one who has been cured by Hood's Sarsaparilla, and people on all hands are praising this great medi cine for what it has done for them and their friends. Taken in time Hood's Sarsaparilla prevents serious illness by keeping the blood pure and all the organs in a healthy condition. It is the great blood purifier. Hood's Pills become the favorite cathartic with every one who tries them. 25c. per box. Spscial Announcement In next week's issue of this paper, Gidding & Co., the clothiers, will make their fall announcement. Although a little early this step is necessary on account of having sold their summer stock down so low very little temains of it. To keen their salesmen busy they will offer special low prices to early buyers of fall suits and over coats. urug envelopes, rJos. 1, 2 and x manilla, white or colored, coin envel opes, and shipping tags, with or with out strings, always in stock at this office. tf. Tour to the North via Pennsylvania Railroad The Last of the Season. The last of the Pennsylvania Rail road Company's personally-conducted tours to the North will leave on August 20. These tours traverse more than seventeen hundred miles of tne most magnificent country, and a participant in tne last tour, an extensive traveler, states that in his -experience he has found no other tours of equal distance so replete in points of genuine inter est, every one of which is in itself well worth the trip. The stop at Quebec, a new feature, added greatly to the success of tne last tour. The names of the places to be visit ed are familiar to all and suggestive of wonderland. No matter how much may be expected, one cannot be dis appointed in Watkins Glen, Niagara rails, Thousand Islands, Quebec, Montreal, Au Sable Chasm, Lakes Champlain and George, Saratoga, or the Highlands of the Hudson. The round-trip rate of $100 from New York, Brooklyn, Newark, Trenton, Philadelphia, Harrisburg, Baltimore, and Washington will cover all neces sary expenses during the time absent. A beautiful descriptive itineray can be procured from the tourist depart ment of the Pennsylvania Railroad, 1 1 96 Broadway, New York, or Room 41 f, Broad Street Station, Phila delphia. A good quality of envelopes can be obtained at the L'oi.l.muun office, for $2.00 a thousand, with business card printed on the coiner. tf. The First Six Chapters of a seasonable Novel. CHATTER I. , " And will ymi loveme always ?" she mur mured, witli her head on his mnuly and throbbing bosom. " Always," he responded, kissing her rose- cat Hps. CHATTER II. "And will yon love me alwnys ?" she mur mured, with her head on his manly and throbbing bosom. "Always." he responded, kissing her rose- leaf liiis. CHATTER III. "And will you love me always?'' she mur mured, with her head on his manly and throbbinc bosom. Always." he responded, kissmcher rose- lent lips. CHATTER IV. "And will you loveme always ?" she mur mured, with her head on his manly and throbbinc bosom. "Always," he responded, kissing her rose- cm lips. CHATTER V. "And will you love me always ?" she mur mured, with her head on his manly and throbbing bosom. "Always." he responded, kissing her rose- leaf lips. llIAl'11'..K I. "And will you love me always ?" she mur mured, with her head on his manly and throbbinc bosom. "Always," he responded, kissum her rose. leal lips. ( 10 be continued.) A monotonous sameness may seem to per- vaue me cnapiers 01 mis novel, out we has ten to assure the reader that it is of thrilling interest in view ot the fact that while the young woman remains the same there is a different young man in each chapter. W. J. Lampton in Lite. One Mora Sea Shore Excursion. If any of our readers were unable to take advantage of the excursion to the Sea Shore on August 1st, they have another opportunity as the Pennsylvania R. R. Co. has arranged for one more cheap rate excursion on Thursday August 15th giving the ex- curstonists the privilege of visiting any of the following seaside resorts Atlan tic City, Cape May, Sea Isle City, Ocean City, Avalon, Anelesea, Wild- wood or Holly Beach. Tickets will be sold from East B.oonistmrg at $4 50 for the round trip, good going to Philadelphia only on trains leaving East Bloomsburc, 8:47 A. M. and 10:4s A. M. and will be good for return passage within ten days. Passengers may use any train from Philadelphia to either of the seashore points named above on day of excur sion or the following day. Tickets will allow stop off at Philadelphia returning within the lime. 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 than it Joes in black. The Columbian office is prepared to print in any of the following colors 1 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. DHItlblVIEH'S nnw Kidney, Liver and BladderCure. Kltciuiiatisiii. Lumbago, pain In Joints or back, brick dust In unne, ireqiionr. cans, irritation, ltuiainntlou. Kravi'i, uiuuntuou ur uuuinn ui uiauuur. Disordered Liver. I.Tinalrpd dlircstlon. trout, billions-headache. t.U'A.11 l-ltOOTcuiv kidney dillionltieo, xu urifjit, urinary irouuic, urigui a uiscaau. Impure Blood, Scrofula, malaria, tren'l wcnkneM or debility. flnamnt ennt.-nts of One TMtlo, If not Ujo DUxl, iirutftflitla will n-luud to you Uie price paid. At DrucglvU, 50c. Size, $1.00 Size. "Inritllda Guide to Htiaith'Yru Cunimltatlon free. DH. KlUlBU & CO.. UlNUUAMTON, N. Y. on Iram Derr's land, near A. J. Derr's store, Jackson towmhip, ra. Shingles, h hM d h cut is tills. Ve have sawmills on this tract running daily, and have there on hand and can cut timber &c, at any time. SliliiL'les, Nol.allB and In. B(lwted. 1 .ROM No 1, all Sand 8 In. best liluo. t M) M Plastering lath, 4 IX. Ioiir, ji.V) M " " 8 ft. loii(f, yi.!M Iii'inlock, common alxeg, fg.uu M For special orders and for Terms &:., write or call at office of CREASY k WELLS, ux Bloomslursf. Pa. B3XS for Infants M CaatorUts so well adapted to children that I recommend It as superior to any prescription known to me." II. A. Aacmtn, M. D., Ill So. Oxford St., Brooklyn, M. T. "Tie una of 'Castorla l to unlvonuil and lt merits so well known that It seems a work of sitpererORStlon to endorse It. Few are thn Intelligent families who do not keep Castorla within tasf reach." Caklos Marttn, T. D.t New York City. Tm CuMTAr HOES, SLIPPER OXFORD ...ZtsTKiW.. EOE SPRING Largest County. Prices the Lowest. Jones & Main Street, IF YOU ARE IN NEED OF CARPET, M. AT TING, or OIL CLOTH, YOU WILL FIND A NICE LINE AT w.'m. 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. Cornell Iron and Main St. SEED ALL THE BEST VARIETIES. Jones' Winter Kite. (Idld Coin. 1'iilouHter. Karly lted Clawson. Terry. Kueliry. loittsel. Uolck'U Cross. Also WINTER OATS. Seed from cron that withstood the rieors of last winter, and yielded 100 bushels from i J bushels MAHLON K-H-4W. Lafayette College EASTON, PA. Seven cmirsosln Artu, Philosophy and Rctcticc. uvll, Miuimr, r.K'eirii'ui r.uKiuwriiiK and CuuuUblry. ANNUAL OOMMUNCRMENT JUN 19TII. FM Term IxKlni S.pl. itlb. FM CTAl9iU(t AD9HIM THI RtOHlHAR. and Children. Castorla cures Colic, Constipation, Hour Btoniavh, UiarrhuMk, Kructatlon, Kills Worms, giro tlocp, and promote! A (Text Inn, Without Injurious medication. "For semrat years I hare rwsomrnendej your ' Caotoria,' and shall always continue h) do so as It baa Invariably produoed benoOvl roKulta." F.owik F. rAnmer, M. !.,' " i2Sth 8treet and 7th Ave., New York City. Compaft, 77 MmnAT 8tbkft, New Yorc Cm. MP SUMMER Stock in the Walter a BLOOMSBURG, PA. t t 1 1 1 TIES ALL, 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 position before they graduated. I'.very student has proven competent. The attendance was much larger than we had dreamed possible, and tin" outlook for the fall term is even brighter. THE SCRANTON BUSINESS COLLEGE is an Emphatic Success. Write for the new College Journal. It is free. I1HCK, WHITMOKK Hi CO., Principals, ADAtlSA VK- .1 USUKSST., 8CHANTOM EAT. of seed. SAGER, Orangeville, Pa. CL-anso the Bowels and Purffy the illoodl Pure Iiliirrhiin, Dvun'ry and I)y.-.i auu K've healthy action jw Iho entire ayleui. WE, jL!L