THE COLUMBIAN, BLOOMSBURG, PA. GOWNS WORTH 8EEIN0. VMab Id.ai of Fmthlon for th. Atttr of Woman. IBrSpaolat Arrangement with tha N. Y.San.i Sklrti nre changing considerably, ttoth tn the manner of making and in tb Almenslous. Skirts nmdo of silk or woolen fabric aa Brmrccly ever lined now, lnt if nee anmcy are mounted on n foundation !klrt cut much the Mine, though not unite so full ns the outside skirt, nnd Joined to it only at the belt. Any ma- taritl that docs rot absolutely require a foundation N flnipurd with a false nn ten or twelve inches deep and In terlined with some stiff material. The gowns fit the hiim like a rldlnjt habit. Even If they are very full they are laid in pleats from the waist to the bottom ot tnc skirt. The thin gowns ore trimmed with four spaced flounces, the top one put on with n gathered head. One of the most fashionable bodjees now worn Is the short bolero or zouave jacket, of which there are many types. Que made with a tiny pleating of cream alia muslin Is a delightful finish to a tight silk or muslin gown. Kelts and sashes are all intiortant features of costumes. Closely folded belts as deep a a corselet are very graceful and most fit the wearer like a glove. When made of silk or satin such a belt can be worn with any gown, mohair, silk or town. Loosely draped sashes are cnaralng with muslin gowns on very alight figures or youthful wearers, and sro now almost a necessity for com plete toilet. If only the belt or wish, collar and bows to correspond, are well cnosen and made up with taste aud ele gance, the plainest dress can be con TCrted Into a toilet fit for any occasion. The J'olnt of View. In politics when a man on tho other side comes over to your way of think ing ho Is a "liberal-minded reformer." When one of your porsuaslou goes over to the other side be Is a "traitor." When your party holds a conven tion for nominations it Is a "great man ifestation of the people asserting their Hbcrtles." When tho other side nomi nates It Is only a "distribution of plums." When a speaker on your side talks m. public on the question at Issue be delivers a "centre shot" or a "learned and. eloquent setting forth of the great Issue." When the man on the other aide has his say he gets off "rank as sertions and stock fallacies." A Parrot's Dud Language, What on earth do you want with a parrot?" "I have to have something to remind mo of my husband while he is away." KNEW HIS TOUCH. 4 Bridget Aeu. awav wid ve. Donnii MoCorty, uu' let me sleep 1 It's ye, for 1 know the feol ay tbim pwuiskura. New York Herald. Mr (I " PINGREE nAS IDEAS. SAYS THE EFFETE EAST IS BEHIND THE WEST IN MANY THINGS. Tlg.ron Laos-nan from the Inventor el Detroit' Potato Patch... H Be lieve In Every Man' Bight to IJv a a Christian Should. The man who reformed Detroit at Its mayor, aud now proposes to reform the state of Michigan, was in New York the other day. To a reporter Gov, Plngree said: "I don't know anything except the hoe business, aud I don't know very much about thnt. Still, I've been In It thirty-one years. "I started in business wnen I was about 'i'i years old." be went on. "I hud ?ifiO, my partner had about $1,000. We didn't know anything about the shoe business. Now, the point I want to reach Is fills: With all my thirty one years of experience In the busi ness, If I wanted to start In the shoe H. 8. PIXCIRER. business over again, what could I do with (1.4(H)? What could I do with $14,1100. or with (140,000? I would need a million, at the least, to attempt to do now what 1 did then, nnd the thirty one years of experience dou't count. It is to this state of affairs that the strength of the discontented feeling In ilio Vi'i'M is due. A few men control everything nowadays; there's no show for the young man. The trusts and the corporations are the people I fight, and that's why the people support me. Tho free-silver people tell them that free silver will help them out. They will fight, fight like wildcats, for free silver until they have given It n trial. If sliver doesn't do What its advocates promise they'll throw It over aud try something else. And they'll keep on trying until they get some help some where. "The soil Is the source of all wealth, and it isn't supporting people as it should. Now, Liverpool sets the price for all our farm products. The Amer ican farmer comes into competition with IndiH and Kussi.a and all starva tion. There Isn't an American living In It for him. He works himself to death nnd only gets 20 cents a day out of It. He shouldn't be forced to com pete with the dirty heathen. He ought to be protected. He wants pro tection and he Wants more money. He wants some of the money that the sharks of Wall street are lighting with each other for. "You folks In the East don't appre ciate the Westerners' position because yon can't realize it. You dou't keep your eyes on the people who work with their hands. This country can't pull together until things are evened up. Our farms are mortgaged, aud they are not even worth foreclosing on, they bave depreciated so. Oats are eight cents a bushel and coal is (1.25 more than It was a year ago. We barn corn. We have got to have a market, and we want to be protected. Either tbe other Industries have got to come down to the farmer or the far mer must be raised up to them, or something's going to bust. I don't blame any man for making all the money he can, but for God's sake, let him give some one else a chance, too, when he can." Mr. ringree switched off here and began to talk of street cars and cheap faros, one of his pet subjects. "New York is away behind the times In street cars," he said. "This prejudice against trolley cars is all an ailment thai Detroit has passed through and gotten well of. They don't kill peo plo out our way. In Brooklyn they do, yon say? That Is because the corpor ations don't care whether they kill anybody or not so long as they can col luut five-cent fares. Make them carel Jump on them, by Harry, and hart them a little! Then they won't kill people so much. Now the street car franchises ought to pay all the taxes for the city of New York. Refuse the frandhlse until they agree to put the faro down to two cents. Every time you ride you save thre cents. There's your year's taxes in a month almost, Th road will be repaid by the increas ed number of passengers. "New York; has too many crowded spots. More street car lines would break them up. The Health Board, with the police back of It, lias full power to drive the people out of tho trcwdod districts, and make them give up crawling together like a lot of water bugs. Then your trolley lines, with two-cent fares, take them away out to purer air and cheaper, better homes, where they can live like Chris- "Well, Uncle ltasbury, how did you like thu sermon?" "It was a pow'rful aermon, M&rse John." "What was It about)" "It was 'bout de lulr'ele of seven thousand loaves an' five thousand Ashen beln' fed to de twelve 'poutleg." KILLING WEB) IN TEXAS, Grast Between the Tracks Grows Six Peel High In Two Weeks. In this section of the countrv it is hard to realize the conditions that prevail in certain parts of the West in regard to the obstruction of railroad lines by the growth of grass and weeds on the right ol way of railroads. The superintendent of the Gulf, Colorado St Santa Fe Railroad Company, writ ing from Texas on this subject to the Railroad Gazette, who is in charge of 1 200 miles of roadbed in that State. says that the necessity for obtaining some adequate means of destroying tnese growths will be appreciated when it is known that until lately it has cost his company $50 per mile of track per annum to keep it clear. The most troublesome vegetation met with, he says, is known as the " John son grass,"' which docs not grow out side ol the Gulf States. Tin's cn-.iss was originally brought from Venezuela I t . a. ana piantea 111 southern districts tor the purpose of nrovidinir fodder for a o cattle, inasmuch as it crows ranidlv and is very difficult to kill. Its roots are as large as a man s finger, and they go down to a depth of 15 ' fect if they do not find water nearer the surface. Generally, however, in the DiacK utias ana coast lands or Texas the roots run from one to three feet into the ground, and grow as thick as they can lie. Moreover, this rrass grows as high as six feet, and after it has been cut to the surface of the ground will be nearly ready to head again in two weeks. Various methods of destroying these weeds have been . ' . . tried, among others thoroughly sprink ling tha grass with common sea water obtained from the ocean, but this metnou lias not proved successful. Grass burners have also been experi mented with, but so far no standard type has been arrived at. Electric weed destroyers have also been tried, Dut with only partial success. The most effective means vet discovered , . m j - consists in sprinkling over the area to uc cieareu a poisonous solution which kills all vegetation with which it comes in contact. The exact composition 01 mis solution the superintendent roove reierred to docs not disclose. He claims, however, that the cost of maintaining the right of way tree from weeds will be reduced bv its use to one-fifth its present amount. Ayer's Sarsaparilla is not a secret preparation. Any physician may have the formula on application. The secret of its success as a medicine lies in its extraordinary power to cleanse the blood of impurities and cure the most deep seated cases of blood disease. The Presidential Outlook. The unsettled condition of public opinion, and the utter demolition of party lines renders the political situa fon extremely interesting. There ap pears to be an incomputable un known quantity which cannot be con fidently relied upon by any political organization. The claims set up by any parly are as uncertain as any wild i,oose chase. The fact that McKin lcyism as twice repudiated by the people, and that the administrations of Harrison and Cleveland were also repudiated and discredited, the natur al inference is, that the people will not return to the leadership of those representing the above factions who have only betrayed and disappointed them. Each in turn had the oppor tunity of running the government in he interest of the people, but each failed in turn to satisfy the people. All catered to the interest of pluto cracy. The question now is, will the people again trust those who betrayed them and give them another lease of corruption and robbery ? The proba bility is, that they will not. Notwith standing the opposition of leading newspapers to Bryan and democracy, those newspapers have no more in fluence with the rank and file of the people than a mouse has with a cat. The people propose to do their own voting, let the newspapers talk and threaten as they may. Hundreds of publishers will learn in the near future that the people will serve them as they have served corrupt political bosses ; and give them a wide berth. Bolting democrats all over the county will learn the same sad lesson. Because those men and newspapers have always led and drove the people, and now that they have bid defiance to them and refuse to longer follow their lead they turn their backs upon them and with might and main endea vor to deliver them into the camp of the enemy, like Arnold tried to de liver the army of Washington to the Brittish. But we believe that their attempt will prove as futile as Ar noM's did. Of course, Judas betray ed his Lord and Master for thirty pieces of silver ; but, the single cold standard men, to betray the people, ask the price of thirty pieces of gold. The philosopher who said that the pen 1s mightier than the sword wisn't acquainted with our American girls. The fellow who can mish a nen eets a smile or two, but the sword, with a few brass buttons thrown in, carries off the palm and the girl. TOOLE SAM'8 COINAGE- Facts and Figures Furnished by a Coiner In the United States Mini In Philadelphia. These statistics about United States coinage have been corrected for the Philadelphia Record by Coiner W. E. Morgan of the Philadelphia Mint : The gold eagle weighs 358 grains. The $5 gold piece weighs 120 grains. The trade dollar weighs 420 grains. The $ao gold piece weighs 516 grains. The 10-ccnt piece weighs 38.58 grains. The jo-cent piece weighs 77.16 grains. The bronze cent piece weighs 48 grains. The gold dollar coin weighs 25.8 grains. t The cent nickel piece weighs 72 grains. The half-cent copper weighs 84 grains. The silver 5-cent piece weighs 19-2 grains. 1 he 2-cent bronze piece weighs 96 grains. The common quarter of silver weighs 96.45 grains. The 3-cent silver piece weighs 11.52 grains. The 5-cent nickel piece weighs 77.16 grains. The fineness of our gold coins is about 90 per cent. The old-fashioned copper cent weighs 168 grains. The quarter eagle, or $2.50 gold piece weighs 64.5 grains. The cent nickel piece, now dis continued, weighs 30 grains. The standard dollar weighs 412-1-2 grains j the half-dollar 192.9 grains. The nickel 5-cent is exactly four fifths of an inch in diameter. The 2-cent bronze piece is compos ed of 95 per cent copper and 5 per cent of tin and zinc. The i-ccnt bronze piece is compos cd of 95 per cent of copper and 5 per cent ot tin and zinc. The silver half dollar was authoriz ed April 2, 1792, and coinage was begun in 1794. The 10-cent silver piece was au thorized by Congress in 1792, and its coi iage was begun in 1796. The nickel cent was authorized February 21, 1857, and its coinage was begun the same year. The $5 gold piece was first coined in 1795, by virtue of an act of Con gress passed April 2, 1792. The first regular silver coinage to be passed out in the order of business was in October, 1792. The $20 gold piece was authorized by act of Congress, March 3, 1849, and its coinage was begun in 1850. The $io'gold piece was authorized by act of Congress, April 2, 1792, and its coinage was begun in 1794. The quarter eagle, or $2.50 in gold, was authorized April 1, 1792., and its coinage was begun in 1796. The silver quarter was authorized by act of Congress in 1792, April 2, and coinage was begun in 1796. The bronzy cent was issued in ac cordance with a law passed in 1857, and its coinage was begun in 1864. The cent takes its name from the Latin word " centum" a hundred, this coin being a hundredth of a dollar. A copper half-cent is among the numerous coins authorized by Con gress, the law to this effect being passed in 1792, and coinage begun the following year. The first purchase of copper to be used in tne United States coinage was in 1792, September 11, six pounds. The dollar gold piece was author ized by act of Congress, March 3, 1849, and its coinage was begun in the same year. The general fineness of our silver coins is 90 per cent. Moses Brown of Boston has the credit of making the first deposit of gold bullion to be coined. In 1795 he deposited $5,276.72. "In God we trust first appeared on the copper 2-cent issue of 1864, and is the first use of the word "God" in any government act. " Five years ago, 1 was taken so ill with rheumatism that I was unable to do any work," writes Peter Christen sen, Sherwood, Wis. "I took three boxes of Ayer s Pills and was entirely cured. Since that time, I always keep them in the house." They are easy to take. What is a Railway Sleeper ? A sleeper is that in which the sleep er sleeps. A sleeper is that on which the sleeper runs while the sleeper sleeps. I heretore, while the sleeper sleeps in the sleeper, the sleeper cat ries the sleeper over the sleeper under the sleeper until the sleeper which carries the sleeper jumps the sleeper and wakes the sleeper in the sleeper by striking the sleeper under the sleeper on the sleeper, and there is no longer any sleeper sleeping in the sleeper on the sleeper. If VOU want to invest vnnr mnnpu in safe advertising do it in the V,OLUMUIAN. PI I "A Good Lay your foundation with BattSi Ax." It is the comer sjtotte of economy. It is the oft ttJbacco that is both Bl6 arw 30d. There is no better. There fi is no, c4icr 5-cent Tty it and see You will realize that "they .well who live cleanly," if you use To Tax the Churches. A Bill to be Introduced in the Legislature for That Purpose. A movement is on foot that will create a furore in Pennsylvania. A measure is to be introduced providing for the taxation of church property. J. Carson Mercer, county commis sioner of Allegheny, is having prepared a bill to be introduced at the next session of the legislature providing that hereafter all church property shall be subject to taxation the same as any other property. Commissioner Mercer will also bring the matter be fore the annual convention of the county commissioners of the state, which will be held in Reading proba bly next month. Heretofore church property in Pennsylvania has been exempt from taxation for any purpose. The hold ings of churches of all denominations, however, have increased to such enormous proportions that it is now proposed to tax them. It is contend ed that the properties of immense values held by rich congregations should be taxed because, otherwise, it is a discrimination against the small property owner, who is a member of the small congregation and has his taxes increased' because the more valuable properties are exempted. Don't think that your liver needs treating if you are bilious. It don't. It's your stomach. That is, your stomach is really what causes the biliousness. It has put your liver out of order. See what's the matter with your stomach. Sick stomach poisons liver and then there's trouble. Shaker Digestive Cordial cures stomach and then all's well. That's the case in a nutshell. Shaker Digestive Cordial is no secret. Formula's on every bottle. But its the simple honest way its made, the honest Shaker herbs and other ingredients of which it's compos ed, that make it so efficacious. Any real case of indigestion and biliousness can be cured with a few bottles of Shaker Digestiye Cordial. Try it. Sold by druggists, price 10 cents to $1.00 per bottle. The world is full of people who want to win by trickery and have the reputation of being pillars of principle at the same time. "The man who has no business of his own," says the Manayunk Philoso pher," usually finds time to take an active interest in his neighbor's. Foundation." plug as large. for yourself live L . FOR PEESJIDENT, WILLIAM J. BRYAN, of Nebraska. FOR VICE-PRESIDENT, ARTHUR SEVVALI , of Maine. DEMOCRATIC COUNTY TICKET. FOR CONGRESS, ANDREW L. FRITZ, Subject to the decision of the Con gressional Conference. FOR COUNTY COMMISSIONER, JOHN N. GORDON, of Montour township. WILLIAM KRICKBAUM of Bloomsburg. FOR ASSOCIATE JUDGE JAMES T. FOX, of Catawissa. FOR PROTHONOTARY AND CLERK OK THE COURTS, WILLIAM II. HENRIE, of Catawissa Boro. FOR COUNTY TREASURER, G. S. FLECKENSTINE, of Orange Township. FOR DISTRICT ATTORNEY, JOHN G. HARNIAN, of Bloomsburg. for representative, (North Sidt) Wm. CIIRISMAN, of Bloomsburg, WILLIAM T. CREASY, South Side. FOR REGISTER AND RECORDEK, CHARLES B. ENT, of Bloomsburg. FOR COUNTY AUDITOR, W. F. STOHNER, of Bloomsburg. BOYD TRESCOTT, of Millvillc. FOR COUNTY SURVEYOR, CHAS. H. MOORE, of Bloomsburg. It is said that there is no insert that will eat either root or stalk of buckwheat, and sowing it on any piece 01 ground two years 111 succes sion will kill the wire worms by fi nishing them nothing to eat. Major Thaddeus S. Clarkson has been elected by acclamation Commander-in-chief of the Grand Army of the Republic. o so