LIVE QUESTIONS. t-r'-r of Artlelea Contrlbntfd to ThM Column by Advanced Thinker. THK PEOPLE AND TIIR roUTlCUSS. Between 1801 and 1805 our people expended billions of treasure and sacri ficed hundreds of thousands of lives to ate the Union and to keep onr flag fly lug. Eat a more subtle and a more dan gerous crisis menaces free government today. Democratic government in this country is endangered, and there is much reason to believe that it may be destroyed. Our people are being deluded by the idea that they live under a froo form of government ; that they are the rulers ; that they make laws, elect candidates to office and control publio affairs, wfcile in truth aud in fact the forms of democratic government are today being employed by artful and designing poli ticians to delude them into the belief that they are shaping legislation and controlling government A boss in New York and a boss in Pennsylvania as completely control all lawmaking is those states as does the emperor of Ger many control the making of law in Ger many. But power is conferred upon the emperor of Germany with the consent of his peoplo, while the boss in New York is a private individual, owing no allegiance to the people and under no obligation to perform their will. Much more can be said in favor of a monar chical form of government than can to said in favor of boss rule. The constitu tional monarch in Europe has every in ducement to preserve his people and to create and perpetuate them in prosperi ty to his son as their uler, but no such inducement exists with the boss. He cannot hand down his power to his eld est son. There is no inducement upon bis part to give the people good govern ment If the American people are to relinquish to the boss their right to froe government, a right purchased by a struggle lommenclng with Runnymede and carfied on continuously until our own dayj why in the name of common sense should they not moke the boss ship a hereditary institution in .order to create some motive in the a for glT- ing them good govern men DO THK PEOPLE r, We are not overstating e case when we maintain that the condition of gov ernment which we have reached in the last few years is more grievous than an actual monarchy. When men who do not bold official positions select the members of our state legislatures, dio tate the candidates who fill executive offices, secure for their henchmen offi cial positions and completely control states and even the nation, and dictate every law, throttle all legislation and the interests of the people, is it too much to say that democratic govern ment is ceasing or has ceased in this country? In 1860 about 80 per cent of the wealth of the country belonged to 90 per cent of its people. In 1890, 80 per cent of it belonged to less than 10 per cent of its people. In the city of New York alone we have to exceed 1,100 millionaires. In the whole country we have upward of 4,000 millionaires. Never in the history of any country during a like period of time has the wealth so 6peedily changed from the hands of the many into the hands of the few. Legislation in the national legislature and in the state legislatures is almost completely controlled by political boss es, or, as too frequently occurs, pur chased by great corporations. A careful examination made in the state of New York in 1893 showed that over 2,000 corporations in one year paid tribute to a political boss who controlled the legis lature either for legislation favorable to their corporations or immunity from hostile legislation. WHT PEOPLE AP.E DISSATISFIED. There is throughout all the country a state of unrest The people have long known from grievous experience that the shoe pinched, but they have been slow in finding out why it pinches. Unrest among the common people al ways means injustice, wrongs to be righted, property wrongly diverted from the handd of the many to the hands of the few, unequal and unfair legislation. Never has so much apprehension ex isted as to the future as exists today among intelligent men. Every student of history, of political economy and of finance knows that the policy of legis lation pursued in this country during the last. few years has Dot only tended to divert the weath of the country from the hands of the many to the hands of the few, but has brought about a terri ble condition of degeneracy and corrup tion among publio men. Does any intel ligent man for one moment believe that you can safely place in the hunds of the congress of the United States the right to transfer tens of millions of dollars from one part of the community to another and not at the same time subject it to temptations beyond the power of man to resist ; With all the legislation for the pro tection of home industries which we have had during this period of 80 years, are the farmors of the country hnppter or more prosperous than in the good old dnys when our grandmother at their wfteels were our only manufacturer? Have the people the confidence iu their publio servants which they felt in the days before special legislation came to be the rule in congress and in our state legislatures? The fact is that every in telligent man knows that our publio mon and our politicians are neither sin cere Republicans nor sinoere Democrats not sincere in anything except to keep themselves afloat on the tide of money making at the expense of the taxpayer. The Fifty-first congress cutoff $50,000, 000 of the publio income by the passage of tariff measure which kept foreign iirjports out of the oouutry. It added $&0,000,000 to the expenditures of the cokutry. It borrowed $30,000,000 of WW 1 ma- Kafh the national banks by turning the re demption fund into the treasury, nud it added over $160,000,000 of legal tendor notes necessarily redeemable in gold, while it diverted an eqnal nmonut of publio revocte to the purchnso of pig silver at don bio its real value to be stiicked in the troat;ury vaults. . The last Democratic congress, although the Dem ocratio party had pronounced itself as strongly as words would allow in favor of the unconstitutionality of special legislation for the benefit of the few and to impose burdens upon the many, nev ertheless passed a tariff bill which con tinued the sugar trust aud other trusts in power. The present congress was opened by the prayer of the chaplain to tho effect that the Lord would mnko us "quick to resent insult. " He has con tinned his praying by asking tho Al mighty for "additional protection to American manufacturers, so thpt they might put an end to the privations of the American workiugmen. And it now appears that ho ought to close the session with the general confession: "We have done those things we ought not to have done ; we have loft undone those things which we ought to have done. Spare us, good Lord, miserable sinners." ' But the worst feaiuro of the whole situation is that our people rightfully conceive the idea that their rulers are dabbling in unclean things, and the cor ruption of the people themselves is bound to follow this belief, for they will reason thAt, if purity in office does not pay, then purity at the ballot box does not pay either, and every citizen may as well sell his vote for what it will bring. Out of these conditions have come a class gf publio servants who do not corn man respect because they are not re specable, who do not command confi dence because they are neither honest nor intelligent It was only the other day that the Hon. Julius Caesar Bur rows, who represents the state of Mich igan in the United States senate, actu ally introduced a bill to restore to the dutiable list the articles that were taxa ble under the McKinley law, but which had been placed on the free list by the tariff act of 1894. He did this in igno rance of the fact' that the constitution expressly provides that all bills for rais ing revenue shall originate in the boase of representatives. A few days later Senator Tillman of , South Carolina, in an outbreak of pulmonary eloquenoe and noisy declamation, so vilified President Cleveland and Secretary Carlisle that even the sensational newspapers did not repeat his language. It was while view ing this senate that a traveler from oth er climes has recently said that "if the American people can stand that they can stand anything." With these humiliating spectacles be fore us, it is not strange that there is a general diminution of attachment and reverence among the people for a po litical system which betrays so many grounds of infirmity and disappoints so many of our flattering hopes. BIGHT WILL TRIOIPn AT LAST. Although the outlook is dork, I be lieve in the ability of the American people when they are face to face with these evils and recognize in them a great danger to our free government to remedy them. We must, however, ap preciate the fact that every law passed for the benefit of a few men or of a cor poration, that all species of special leg islation are dangerous and destructive to honesty and purity in publio legis lators. We must step out of our inac tion and do our duty fearlessly if we would avert the danger. Courage, abne gation, virtue and patriotism made our country, and these qualities will alone preserve it. In fact, before a remedy is effected, we must become conscious that we have been recreant to our publio duty in these days of money making, and solemnly vow to atone for such recreancy. The spirit which will redeem the people in the breast of a few courageous men must be that which Otway, in his "Venico Preserved," gives to Pierre: Pierre Yet, Juffler, for all this I am a vil lain. Jaffler A villain? Pierre Yes, a most notorious villain. To boo the Bufferings of my follow creatures And own myitclf a man ; to see our senators Cheat tho deluded peoplo with a Bhow Of liberty, which yet they ne'er must fauteof. They Bay, by them our hands are free from fetter, Yet whom they please they place in basest bonds; Bring whom they please to infamy and sorrow ; Drive us, like wreck, down the sough tido of power, WhilHt no hold is left to save us from destruc tion. All that bear this are villains, and I one Mot to rouse up at the great call of nature And check the growth of these domestic spoil ers. That make us slaves and tell us it's our char tor. Fkanklim Pierce. New York, Feb. 1. TnE New Editor. We hoar much of the new woman, the new man (und even sometimes an echo of the "old man"), the new edu cation, new books, eta., ad infinitum. Why not discuss the question of the new editor or tho new newspaper? The new editor is a man (or woman) who is not only up to date, but is even anticipating the future. He is both a man of theory and practice. "He stands' four square to all the winds that blow." He is'iu touch with every interest of his community, state and nation. He be longs generally to Borne political party, but is larger than any or all parties. He sees things with his own eyes and writes what he thinks or doos not write at all. He kuows men and books, and urges evory good move that looks to tho better ment of the community in any sense. Ht can muke a speech, tell a joke well, laugh ul one thut you tell poorly, on joy the bost plays, musicales, lectures and ser mons. Ho has great power for good and uses it for noble ends. Ho is a reputa tion maker, for hundreds of men every year soar into prominence on tho wings of the newspapers. He is all this and very much more. Along with the new woman let us all hail the advent of the nev editor. CuabLeb Marshall. THE COLOMBIAN, -t THE JEWISH PAS30VEB. A Religious Observance of Importance In yicbrew Circlet. The anifual observance of Tassover began last Saturday evening. For eight days the Hebrews carefully eschew leaven, although seven days covered the original proscription. During the captivity a doubt arose as to the Jewish calendar, and in order to avoid the possibility of abbrevia ting trie prescribed time, for some time subsequently they consumed two days in special opening services and the same in the closing observ ances. While the calendar is now well understood, the orthodox Jews follow the old custom, but the reform ed wing consume but one day in the opening and one in the closing of ob servance. The feast is commemorative of the deliverance of Israel from the bond age of Egypt, and the passage through the Red sea. The ceremonies are elaborate, and each house is a temple in which service is held. The ortho dox Jews observe the commemora tion with much more detail than does the reformed wing. Pure, rich blood is the true cure for nervousness, and Hood's Sarsaparilla is the One True Blood Purifier and nerve tonic. The New York World, thrice-a- week edition, 18 pages a week, 156 papers a year. Is larger than any weekly or semi-weekly paper published and is the only important Democratic "weekly published in New York City. Three times as large as the leading Republican weekly of New York City. It will be of especial advantage to y ou during the Presidential campaign, as it is published ever) other day, except Sunday, and has all the fresh ness and timeliness of a daily. It combines all the news with a long list of interesting departments, unique features, cartoons and graphic illustra tions, the latter being a specialty. All these improvements have been made without any increase in the cost, which remains at one dollar per year. We offer this unequaled newspaper and the Columbian and Farm News together one year for $1.75 The regular subscription price of the three papers is $2.50. Drug envelopes, Nos. 1, 3 and 3 nianilla, white ot colored, coin envel opes, and shipping tags, with or with out strings, always in stock at this office. tf. Removed ! SCHUYLER'S HARDWARE, TO MAIN and IRON STS. Wh3 Sells tho list EhI! That's the question. It is not the roan who Is scouring the country around to tlnd some old toothless cows that have done good service tor their owners, but being a little aed now, they tlnd It Is cheaper to sell them than to have them die upon their hands. The beet you know must be tough. It can be bought low, but what you save then you will need to pay dentist bills iater on. We buy nothing but Heavy Steer Beef. This Is raised upon corn, aud killed when the meat la good and tender. Vie have the finest class of trade In Hloomsburg. our customers are pleased with the meat we sell. LOUIS LYOKS. Mais St.. BLOOMSBURG. 8 I 0 4P 8S a 1 5 ox .-3ii.y.?.Y..Y.1 Feet jwet again? You 11 die some dav. ISeforeCn long, too, if you don't take enre of those feet. Some of thej newest, most desirable things Jgj: It! Ut U'e.ltVtT tliniG n 1 a linra C)J? Bloomsburg immimmmmmmki The Leading Consenratory of Amerlca-"o CaklFahlten, Uirecior. 0'0Zi'fW Founded la Iw by wrDV Alu K.Tourie. CcMSV" . f .uioi- ivin lu" inI NL-tivinB full iafonumtion. Frank W.Hals, General Manarer. BLOOMSBURG, PA. CM a He will tell you that been endorsed by the C twenty years. This is ar 1 ci 1 c 1a li J wiiiiwun - - - J 5S the purest Norwegian Cod-liver Uil and Hypophosphites. You should in IS sist on Scott's Emulsion, with trade mark of man and fish. Put up in 5o cent and $1.00 pizes. The small size w may be cnougn to cure 1 1 . But in no cast IS "just as pood A6KF0R THE KfcKLET ON TIGHT AND GIVES ""BEST IKHT IN THE ALEXANDER BROTHERS & CO. DEALERS IN Cigars, Totacco, Candies, Fruits and Nuts SOLE AGENTS FOR Henry Maillard's Fine Candies. Freeh Every Week. SOLE AGENTS FOR F. F. Adams & Co's Fine Sole agents for the Haniy Clay, Londres, Normal, Indian Princess, Samson, Silver A3 Bloomsburg Pa. Our Spring Styles of Slices are r early all. 25 years experience in shoe buying puts us in the tront rank of shoe dealers. Comfort, style and durability are combined in our shoes. Cor.irrs Iron axd Main Sts. What brings relief from dirt and grease? Why don't you know? APOLIO B. F. Sharpless, Pres. N. U. BLOOMSBUR LAND' IMPROVEMENT COMPANY. Capital Stock, $30,000. Plotted property is in the town. It includes also part of equal in desirability tor residence purposes. CHOICE LOTS are offered at values that will be doubled in a short time. No such opportunity can be had elsewhere to make money. Lots secured on SMALL MONTHLY PAYMENTS- Maps of the town and of plotted property furnished on ap plication. Call upon or write to the Secretary, or J. S. Woods, Sales Agent, or any member of the Board of Directors. BOARD OF DIRECTORS. B. F. Siiarple3s; J. L Dillon. C. W. Neal, A. G. Briggs, Dr. I. W. "Willits, Dr. H. W. McReynolds, N. Xj. Funk. 11-19- ftite$ Iov and Grood Woifk. For the finest and best stoves, tinware, roofing", spouting and general job work, go to W. V. Watts, on Iron street. Buildings heated by steam, hot air or hot water in a satisfac tory manner. Sanitary Plumbing a specialty. I have the exclusive control of the Thatcher steam, hot water and hot air heaters tor this territory, which is acknowl edged to be the best heater on the market. All work guaran teed. W. W. WATTS, IRON STREET. Kloomsburg,, 10-Sf-lx 1 nH doctor Scott's Emulsion has medical proiession for & because it is always p 1 your coug-n or r- 1 ScottS &muf sicrL &a VvoMS ".TABSSiyrEiySMt Cut Chewing Tobacco following brands ot Cigars- W. H. floore. Funk, Sec, C. H. Campbell, Treas. coming business centre of the the factory district, and has no f FOFUUia f&GAZIKES 3 rim itit uurcE, FRANK LESLIE'S OOPULAR ii MONTHLY Contain encfi Month I Original Water Color Matter: IOO Maw and High. data lllu,tra tlonni Mora Lltrrarjr Matter and llluitra. tiona thaa any other Maiiarln In America. 23 eta. $3 a Vaar. Ftank Leslie's Pleasant Hours FOR BOYS AND CIRLS. A Tlrtffht. WholMome. Jurantln MonthW Fullv Illustrated. The bent writer for oun people contribute to It. 10 ota. : tl a year. SEITO ALL SUBSCSIPTIOIS TO THE COLUMBIAN, Bloomsburg, Pa. CI.CB RlTlg. The rOM'MniAN and Frank 1j.un: rvinilnr Nunlhlv on year for f.'I.V, or ths pnner and I'trataitt Umivt for itr,.. and Cilrln, lorll.W). ' Undoubtedly the Best Club Offers1 trSrid to rmnk IsilU't PublUhinp JTohm, r.TL , THE MARKETS. bloomsburg markets. COBHICTID WIIILT. BITAIL FBIOII. Butter per lb $ ,24 Eggs per dozen 14 Lard per lb , .10 Ham per pound u1 Pork, whole, per pound .06 Beef, quarter, per pound .... .07 Wheat per bushel 80 Oats " " 28 Rye " " 50 Wheat flour per bbl 4 ao Hay per ton ra to $14 Potatoes per bushel, .30 Turnips " 25 Onions " " .50 Sweet potatoes per peck a 5 to .30 Tallow per lb 4 J Shoulder " " u Side meat " " 07 Vinegar, per qt 07 Dried apples per lb 05 Dried cherries, pitted .10 Raspberries 12 Cow Hides per lb .3 J Steer " s CalfSkin 80 Sheep pelts , .75 Shelled corn per bus .50 Corn meal, cwt s.oo Bran, " x.0o Chop " 1.00 Middlings " 1.00 Chickens per lb new .12 " " old .10 Turkeys " " 12 Geese " " 10 Ducks " " 08 COAL. No. 6, delivered a. 40 " 4 and s " 3.50 " 6 at yard a.aS " 4 and s at yard 3.25 E. A. RAWLINGS. DKALER IN All Kinds of Meat. Beef, Veal, Lamb, Mutton, Pork, Hams, Bacon, Tongues, Bclogna, &e. Free Delivery to all parts of the town. CENTRE STREET, QLOOMSBURC, PA. 86TTelephone connection. PATENTS Caveats and Trade Marks obtninprt. and aK Patent busluess conducted (or ilobmUT FEES. Ot'H OFFICE IS OPPOSITE TtlB V. 8. PAT KNT OFFICE. We have no gub-aenoles, all DURlnesH direct, hence can t ranniu't patent busl' nenti in letta time and at Leas Cost than those re mote from Wuahlatfton. Send model, drawing or photo, with descrlp tlon. We advise If patentable or not, tree of charge. Our fee not due till patent Is Becured A book, '-How to Obtain Patents," with refer ences to actual clients in your Htate.county, o town sent free. Address C. A. SNOW & CO,, Washington, V. CI (Opposite U. 8 Patent oaioe.) Bring tho Babies. INSTANTANEOUS PROCESS USED. Strictly first-class guaranteed photograph, crayons ami cops at reusonahle prices. We use exclusively the Collolion ArUtntype f pers, thus securing girnter 1 eantv of finish anil permanency of results. C.M'WELI, MARKET SQUARE GMiERt H-2Jly. Over Hartman's Store. GET YOUR JOB PRINTING DONE AT THE COLUMBIAN OFFICE