4 jp.. ESTABLISHED 1866. Columbia Democrat, ESTABLISHED 1837. CONSOLIDATED 1869. PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY MORNING Bloomsburg, the county seat ol Columbia - County, Pennsylvania. GEO. E. ELWELL EDITOR. D. J. TASKER, LOCAI. EDITOR. GEO. C. ROAN, FOREMAN. TlBKS:—lnside the county Sl.ooayearln ad vance; $1.50 It not paid In advance Outside the oounty, $1.25 a year, strictly In advance. All communications should be addressed to THE COLUMBIAN. Bloomsburg, I'a. "THURSDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1898. DEMOCRATIC STATE TICKET. GOVERNOR, HON. GEORGE A. JENKS. of Jefferson county. LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR, HON. WILLIAM H. SOWDEN, of Lehigh county. SECRETARY OF INTERNAL AFFAIRS, PATRICK DELACEY, of Lackawanna. JUDGES SUPERIOR COURT, WILLIAM TRICKETT, of Cumberland. C. M. BOWER, of Centre. CONGRESSMEN-AT-LARGE, JERRY N. WEILER, of Carbon. F. P. lAMS. of Allegheny. DEMOCRATIC) OOUNTY TICKET FOR CONGRESS, RUFUS K. POLK, Of Montour County. FOR STATE SENATOR, J. HENRY COCHRAN, Of Lycoming County. FOR PRESIDENT JUDGE, 26TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT, ROBERT R. LITTLE, Of Bloomsburg. FOR ASSEMBLY, WILLIAM CHRISMAN, Of Bloomsburg. W. T. CREASY, Of Catawissa. COUNTY SURVEYOR, BOYD TRESCOTT, Of Millville. "I have been a Republican since iB6O but our party now stinks in the nostrils of any decent man. If the people are willing to uphold this cor ruption and dishonesty, God save the country ! —Ex-Postmaster General John Wanamaker." NOTICE. We have opened Democratic Headquarters in Bloomsburg, cor ner Main and Market streets,on the second floor of the Peacock build ing. where we will be glad to have all Democrats and their friends call at any time. Everybody welcome. Very respectfully, JNO. G. MCHENRY, Chairman. R. G. F. KSHINKA, Secretary, WJLL THEY RETRACT? Mr. Jenks, in his speeches, has clearly shown that he is unalterably opposed to Quay and Quayism, and never had and could not have, the re motest sympathy or connection with either. In a letter, over his own sig nature, and in the sturdiest of speech at Chambersburg, he has declared that he never was professionally affili ated with the Standard Oil company or any corporation of any kind, except once, when for a few months he was attorney for a railroad company whose road was established to market the coal to the county where he lives. In view of these facts, which are or ought to be known to all men, Dr. Swallow, Dr. Swallow's hired stumpers and the Machine organs who do not publicly and prominently retract the charge that Mr. Jenks is a Quay man and a Standard Oil man, convict themselves in the eyes of all honest men, of wil ful and deliberate falsehood. Polk is a sure winner. VOTE THE STRAIGHT DEMOCRATIC TICKET, FR OM TOP TO BOTTOM. Democrats, don't trade. There is no occasion for it this year. Vote the straight ticket and be in the swim. Senator Cochran is going to be re-elected beyond any possible doubt. No Democrat can have any reasonable excuse for not vot ing for him. Don't be buncoed by the Phila delphia limes , which is trying to make it appear that the fight is be tween Stone and Swallow. Mc- Clure knows better than that. VOTE FOR ~~LITTLE FOR JUDGE. Who Suffered Because Expenses Were Not Higher in 1883, When the Democratic Party Was in Control b Exhibit of Increase in Department Expenses, as per Appropriations. Ap propriations are for Two Years. Departments. 1883. 1897. Increase. Governor's Office .$ 42,800 $ 57,800 $ 15,000 State Department. 50,600 79,600 29,000 Auditor General 48,600 94-3°° 45,700 Treasury.... 29,050 59,200 30,150 Attorney General 15,400 29,100 13,700 Internal Affairs 67,200 129,809 62,609 Public Instruction 33,400 42,400 7,000 Adjutant General 34,400 47,400 13.000 Librrary 15,400 40,000 24,600 Grounds and Buildings 11,800 91,000 79,200 Board of Pardons 7,000 9,600 2,600 Judiciary 967,000 1,342,689 375,682 Senate 133,800 170,045 36,245 House 388,065 474,572 86,507 Schools 2,000,000 11,000,000 9,000,000 Mine Inspector 66,000 132,000 66.000 Agriculture 7,800 177,820 170,020 Danking Department Uncreated 124,000 124,000 Factory Inspector Uncreated 80,000 So, ooo $3>9 18 >3 1 5 $14,181,328" $10,263,013 What do the people of this State think of this increase of over Ten Millions, and taking into account the increase of $9,000,000 allowed to schools, would still leave an increase in the expense of running the above de partments alone under Republican rule as compared with Democratic, of one million two hundred and sixty-three thousand dollars and thirteen cents for expenses for two years. The departments were run better in 1883 than they are to day. George A. Jenks alone has a chance to beat Stone. Vote for Jenks and restore honest government. VOTE FOR SOWDEN FOR LIEUT. GOVERNOR. All the Democratic candidates in this Congressional, Senatorial and Judicial districts, and in Columbia county, are going to be elected. Democrats who want to enjoy the pleasures of victory after the elec tion is over, will not cut the ticket. Swallow's candidacy elected Quay's nominee for State Treasurer last year. Had the votes, other than Prohibition votes received by Swallow, been given to Brown, Brown would have been elected. As it was, Brown had more than twice as many votes as Swallow. Why should any Democrat vote for Swallow ? What could he do as Governor that Jenks would not do? Men who are really in earnest about trying to redeem the State from the hands of political corrup tionists. will vote for Jenks and the whole Democratic ticket. Alec. McClure is now, and al ways has been, a Republican. His paper, the Philadelphia limes , is doing all it can against the Demo cratic State ticket, by repeating, day after day, that Jenks is not in the fight, and by endeavoring to give Swallow great prominence. Don't be deceived by it. The Democratic party is united this Fall. There is no division among them on the money ques tion, and all are determined to drive Quayism, and all that it represents, from the State. Columbia county is going to redeem itself, and give the whole ticket an old-time major ity. What's to hinder ? For some years past the Democrat ic majorities in this county have been growing smaller. Last year a Repub lican Associate Judge was elected. This has inspired the Republicans with the belief that eventually they can capture this Democratic strong hold and put it in the Republican col umn. Our small majorities have been the result of factional fights. Now there are no factions, and no split on the silver question. Let us give the enemy such a set back on the Bth of November that their hopes ot ever capturing this county will be blighted. Every Democrat should vote and vote straight. We have elected Pattison Governor twice under less favorable circumstances than now, and we ought to contribute a plurality of 2000 to wards the election of Jenks, and the same for the county ticket. It can be done if every Democrat will do his duty. Matt Savage don't want people who are honestly for reform and who want to turn the rascals out to throw their, votes away on Swallow. He says- that "it is believed by many of Dr. Swal low's friends who have been watching, his waning campaign ever since. George A. Jenks was nominated that when the time grows nearer to election day and the Dr. sees for himself that he cannot approach his vote of last year by a half, he will withpraw and throw his forces to Jenks, or if he does not withdraw will pass the quiet word 'to vote for Jenks.' The fact that Jenks starts with over 400,000 votes and is as much a Christian and as much a reformer as Dr. Swallow is making many ot the Doctor's friends think him too much a selfish politician with a vulgar hankering after office— much more, they say, than he ought to be sincere. As the Swallow men and the Wannamaker men approach the election they will see the necessity of combining on honest George A. Jenks it the Quay-Stone machine is to be defeated. All the taxpayers who want reform should remember that 'United they win; divided they fail.' " VOTE FOR JENKS FOR G O VERNOR. I THE COLUMBIAN, BLOOMSBl)RG. PA VOTE FOR POLK FOR CONGRESS. Captain DeLacey. The following letter written to the Scranton Truth , by a comrade of Captain DeLacey, candidate for Secretary of Internal Affairs, is a worthy tribute to a worthy man. MONDOVI, WIS., Sept. Bth 1898. —I see by your paper that P. De- Lacey has the nomination for Sec retary of Internal Affairs in your State, and I gladly avail myself of this opportunity to pay my tribute of respects to the sterling character of Captain DeLacey. As boys we were neighbors, and later entered the army together, en listing in Company A. of the grand old One Hundred and Forty-third Pennsylvania Volunteers. We stood shoulder to shoulder on many a bat tle field, we tented together, ' and we marched side by side until* the sth of May, 1864, when I was bad ly wounded at the battle of the Wilderness and but for Captain De- Lacey who risked his own lite to save mine, I should have died where I fell. Often have I seen him volunteer to stand guard or picket for a com rade who was unable to perform the duty himself, and on the march he would frequently carry the knap sack of some sick soldier. His honesty or his bravery have never been disputed. His record as a member of the Assembly, was all that could be de sired. Honest, true, brave and loyal, a respected citizen of the old Keystone State. Let all parties unite and give Captain DeLacey a rousing majority in November. H. M. NAGLE. Late Sergeant Co. A 143 d Pa. Vols. Do Not Forget. That the next Governor will be a member of the State Capitol Building Commission, known as the Board of Public Grounds and Buildings, and that it is of the greatest importance to tax payers that no $20,000,000 steal like the one in Philadelphia is carried through. There should be a minority member on this Board—vote tor at least one honest member—vote for George A. Jenks. Federal Patronage Bold by the Quay Machine- You can use the Federal patronage for what it is worth. Your district being Democratic, all patronage under a Republican administration would be controlled by the United States Sen ators. M. S. QUAY to HON. D. R. HORNE, Allentown, Pa. Tiie. World's Great Blood Purifier is Hood's Sarsaparilla, Which absolutely Cures every form of Impure blood, from The pimple on your Face to the great Scrofula sore which Drains your system. Thousands of people Testify that Hood's Sarsaparilla cures , Scrofula, Salt Rheum, Dyspepsia, Malaria, Catarrh, Rheumatism, And That Tired Feeling. Remember this And get Hood's And only Hood's. FALL AND WINTER OPENING -.Ess—sat;. The New Fall Suits and Overcoats at this store beat all records for style and price—mar vels in beauty and style. n EN'S SUITS BOYS' SUITS Children's Vestee Suits —AT— FROM FROM $4.75 $2.50 $1.48 That Will Please Will Surprise You. Will Astonish You You. AT THE STAR CLOTHING HOUSE. FBOGBAMME PHILADELPHIA'S PEACE JUBIiiFiE- Special Rales and Special Trains by Phila delphia and Reading Railway. , The program as arranged by The Executive Committee for the The Peace Jubilee at Philadelphia is proof of itself that the celebration will far surpass any demonstration of the kind ever attempted 011 this Continent. It is as follows : Tuesday, Oct. 25th. Grand Na val Display on the Delaware re viewed by Hon. John D. Long, Secretary of the Navy. The Battle ships, Cruisers and Gunboats will be under command of Commodore John W. Philip, among those as signed are the Texas, New Orleans Mayflower, Marblehead, Topeka, Dolphin, Winslow, Gloucester, Dixie and numerous others who have attracted public attention. Wednesday Oct. 26th. Imposing ceremonies, Re-dedicating Indepen dence Hall, restored to its Colonial condition, Oration by the Mayor of Philadelphia, and singing by a chorus of three thousand children. The great feature of the day will be the grand Civic Parade, with floats, etc., illustrating the progress of the nation in Industry, Art and Science. Thursday, Oct. 27th, (which will be proclaimed a day of thanksgiv ing) Great Parade of Military and Naval forces, commanded by Maj. Genl. Miles, and reviewed by Pre sident McKinley, with members of his cabinet, and also the Governors of many of the Eastern States. Among those parading will be offi cers and soldiers who fought in Cuba and Porto Rico, Commanders Sailors and Marines who have seen service in Cuban waters, the Ma rines who landed at Guantanamo, and the Crew of the Merrimac ; there is expected to be at least 25- 000 men in line. The Philadelphia and Reading Railway has placed on sale special Excursion Tickets to Philadelphia from all principal points on its lines, including the Atlantic City R. R., and all leased or allied lines, at the low rate of Singly Fare for Round Trip with a minimum of fifty cents, good going Oct. 24th to 27th, in clusive, and good to return until Oct. 31st, inclusive. Good service afforded by regular trains. For full information as to rates, time of trains, etc-, consult any Philadelphia & Reading Ticket Agent, or address Edson J. Weeks, Genl. Passenger Agent, Phila delphia. Corrupt and Rotten- The whole of Quayism is corrupt and rotten, not only in dollars and cents, but in the principles that un derly it. The government of the whole State by any one man, or by 50 men, is a violation of the Con stitution of Pennsylvania. It is a discredit to your citizenship, it is a brand upon your fair name, and I ask that you do yourselves the jus tice of freeing yourselves from these injuries. GEO. A. JENKS, at New Castle. Situation Wanted- Young man, 17 years of age, grad uate of Girard College, wants situa tion as clerk in a store, or in any other position where he can be useful. Well recommended. Address Geo. F. Gower, Sonestown, Sullivan Co., Pa. AUTUMN BEAUTIES. Merchandise Beauties, beautiful conceits of foreign and American birth, beautiful styles that invite at tention in bountiful assortments, that make unequalled choosing, and the beauties of economy are not miss ing. The inexpensive prices make them all evident. Dress Goods. Judge the Dress Goods stock by its size, judge it by the ex tent and variety of the assort ments, judge it by the price, judge it by whatever standard you may set. It is not sur passed. The best looms of Europe and America have sent their worthy production here for your inspection and your buying. Let these few items illustrate the values that await you: All-Wool Poplins, 4 inches wide, 75c. Fancy Mixed Suitings, 36 inches wide, 28c. All-Wool Coverts, 38 inches wide, 50c. Blankets. We have never had so many Blankets in our store as we can show you now. Cotton Blank ets, from 35c. a pair to $1.50 a pair. We can show a full as sortment of Ail-Wool Muncy Blankets from $3.25 to $lO.OO a pair—in white or colored. F. P. Pursel. Ex Governor Fattison's Views. The belief of Ex-Governor Patti son, as expressed in his speeches and interviews, is that Swallow will bring up in the rear of the proces sion when it comes to counting the vote, and that the situation general ly is very much like that of 1882 when the Democrats elected not only their State ticket but a ma jority of the House and a majority, on joint ballot, of the two houses. Mr. Pattison is no superjubilant enthusiast but a cool, calm and careful reasoner. What he says is said only after mature reflection and is always based upon an intelligent 1 review of all the facts. Many Pennsylvanians are guided by his judgment. He is a clean man; twice, as Governor, did magui Ladies' Ribbed Underwear. We get them right from the most reliable makers in this country. All cotton fleeced lined, full size vest or pants, 25 cents each. A better grade, finished in silk, with pearl but tons, at 50 cents each. Ribbed- Wool goods at $l.OO each. Combination Suits, from 50 cents to $2.25 each. Hisses' Ribbed Underwear. One lot we offer you will find special value. All sizes in vests, pants and drawers, heavy fleeced, from 12 cents to 35 cents each. Flen's Underwear. We have never shown as good value in men's underwear as we have on our counter now. Men's shirts and drawers, 65 per cent, wool, all sizes, worth 75c. each, we will sell, for a short time, at 50c. each. Men's Fleeced Goods, in three different weights, at 50c. each. Natural Wool Goods, worth $1.25, sell now at $l.OO each. Striped Wool Shirt and Draw ers, so soft and fine you can wear with comfort. $1.40 each. ficent reform work for the State and is now making, by his telling sen tences on the stump, many converts to the Democratic-reform cause. RUNNING SORES, the outcome of neglect, or bad blood, have a never failing balm in Dr. Agnew's Ointment. Will heal the most stubborn cases. Soothes irritation almost instantly after first application. It relieves all Itching and Burning Skin Diseases in a day. It cures Piles in 3 to 5 nights. 35 cents.—33 Sold by C. A. Kleim. yOTF. FOR H. A. M'KILLIP —FJOR — State Legislature. advt— #-acte