(k olumbian. ESTABLISHED I860. tftu Columbia fleraorrat, STABi.lllKP m'ff. CONSOLIDATKn 1K9. fUBWStlK.) "KKT THUHHDAY MOKNINU rilootnsburg. the county seat ot Columbia County, Pennsylvania. GEO. K. KI.W'ELt, Kuitoh. I). !. TANKKK, LOU A I. KuiTOR. Gfio. c. KOAN, Fork an. tm: Inside the county f 1.00 a yeftrln sd nci; $1.M If not paid In alvnncn Outside ttte county, (1.85 a year, ntrletly In nrtvnnor. All communications should bo addressed to TUB COIAMHIAN. Ulooiusburg, Pa. THURSDAY, MARCH 30, 1899. POLITICAL CARDS. FOR DISTRICT ATTORNEY, C. A. SMALL, of Catawissa. FOR DISTRICT ATTORNEY, JOHN G. HARM AN, of Bloomsburg. FOR J- COUNTY TREASURER, K. SHARPLESS, of Catawissa. FOR COUNTY TREASURER, V. B. SNYDER, of Locust Twp. FOR COUNTY TREASURER, JERRV SNYDER, of Locust Twp. PROTHONOTARY AND CLERK OF FOR THE COURTS, WILLIAM H. HENRIE, of Bloomsbu-g. FOR COUNTY COMMISSIONER, J. W. PERRY, of Sugarloat Twp. FOR COUNTY COMMISSIONER, W. H. FISHER, from the South Side. FOR COUNTY COMMISSIONER, JOHN N. GORDON, of Montour. FOR REGISTER AND RECORDER, A. N. YOST, of Bloomsburg. FOR REGISTER AND RECORDER, J. C. RUTTER, JR., of Bloomsburg. FOR REGISTER AND RECORDER, DR. T. C. HARTER, of Bloomsburg. FOR REGISTER AND RECORDER, W. F. STOHNER, of Bloomsburg. tr The above announcement!) are all subject to the decision of the Democratic County v:on- tpumud, 10 oe neia Tuesday, June ISth, 1899. Prlmai y election, Saturday, June 10, to 7 p. m. A bill has passed the Legislature and is now before the Governor awaiting his signature, increasing me minimum scnool term to seven months. uetore tue bribery investigating committee, on I uesday, Represent ative Brown, ot Union county, tes tified that he had been offered $300 Dy lix-umgressman M. H. Kulo. of this district, if he would absent himselt from the first joint meeting 01 me senate and House, and much larger sum if he would vote for Quay. Kulp denies this, and will be given a hearing by the com mittee to-day. The editors of the Clearfield He. publican must feel proud of the fight tney macie against the Commission ers ot that county to compel the latter to open the county books for publication of matters of interest to the taxpayers. The Republican commissioners refused access to the books for such purposes, but Judge Gordon sustained the plea of the jepuiucan and its first search un covered an error of $4,496.96. The auditors nave since acknowleged the error and the Rtpublican neces sarily takes a very decided jump in popular estimation. It is not to say that the discrepancy ,,might not have been discovered through other agencies, out 11 is enougn to dem onstrate that there cannot be too much publicity of county business matters tor the good of both offiC' ials and people. Bellefonte Watch man. . It being apparent that the Filipinos prefer extermination to subjugation one ot our exchanges makes the luuuwmg calculation 01 tne cost in time and in lives, to say nothing of money : "Assuming that the FiliDiios number 8,000,000 all told, and that our lorces can kill at least 200 J It. 1 1 . u.ty, u wouia oe 40,000 aays, or neany 1 10 years, belore the native population was wiped out. Our own losses in tne meantime would not be insignificant. If the daily aver age were 20 men, including those who were killed 111 the guerilla war fare or died from wounds or disease we would, at the end of 1 10 years sacrifice the lives of 800,000 Atner ican soldiers before the Filipinos naa been exterminated. This is interesting, although without practical value, for it is quite likely that the Filipinos and Americans would both get tired ot UU-i exterminating process in a very Tj years. (7hy not get tired of it at once ? The Army Scandal- When one learns that Eagan tele graphed to Colonel Smith to accept a lot of old canned beef that one of the packing houses had at Liverpool unsold, there is no longer room for surprise at the testimony given last week by Major Shaw, surgeon of the Third Illinois, as to the sort of beef the troops had on the voyage to Porto Rico: "It was nauseating and stringy, covered with mold, and sickened the men. The cause of its condition? Ptomaines germs which develop rapidly in dead bodies. The ptom aines, I think, would develop in a few minutes when meat of this kind is taken from the can." As the mass of irrefutable, irresis tible evidence accumulates against General Kagan there must grow up in the public mind an increased res pect for the gallant fellows who were the victims of his maladministration. Neither regulars nor volunteers made any outbreak. On shipboard they threw the meat overborn d; on land they buried it; and nauseated, or with empty stomachs, did their full duty like the splendid soldiers they were. General Eagan has not et sailed from San Francisco to be gin the six years of vacation on full pay granted by his friend, President McKinley, and it is to be hoped that he can be recalled and confronted before the Court with this new and shocking testimony. New York Herald. STATE NEWS ITEMS. Governor Stone is so desirous of having the present Legislature elect a unitea estates senator tnat it is 1 not improbable he might be willing to withdraw his support from Colo nel Quay. -Dean William Trickett, of the Dickinson School of Law, whose name has been mentioned as a pos sible Democratic candidate for the Supreme Court judgeship nomina tion, says he is not a candidate. He says any use of his name in that connection would be not only with out his authority, but against his strong protest. The strike at Caibondale, where several hundred men recently gave up work because of grievances with the company, is still on, aud will continue until the officials come to some sort of terms satisfactory to the strikers. Joseph Snyder, aged twenty- nine years, a resident of Shamokin, while hunting for foxes along with some comrades Mondav. had his eft arm blown off by the accidental discharge of a gun in the hands of one of the party, who was standing about tweuty feet away. The trig ger was sprung by coming in con tact with some brushes. He. was taken to the State Hospital, at Ha zleton, Monday evening. It was found necessary to amputate his arm at the shoulder. If there is one general tendency against which any town needs to guard it is narrowness-narrowness of intellect, narrowness of heart and narrowness of business relations. Get out into the wide world and you are compelled to feel its broadening influences. If you cannot leave your native town occasionally, get into the world of books, allow yourself a little while each day to read the thoughts of other men. Yours may be better thoughts, but let vour mind rub against the mind of some other as it were. Let your imagina tion take you to far distant people, if you will, there are many to help you on the way, writers who speak of what they have seen and do know. In some way let your life widen out a little. The post office department at Washington has ruled that a writer his a right to regain possession of a letter providing he can prove to the satisfaction of the post master at the office from which it was sent that he was the writer of it even it a letter has arrived at its destination and before it has been delivered to' the person to whom it was addressed, it can be recalled by telegram through tne mailing office. The reason assigned is that the United States is only the agent of the writer of the letter while it is in transit. The boards of health in many places have served notice on milk dealers that milk tickets must be sold but once. Some medical au thorities claim that contagious dis eases are spread from house to house by the continual handling aud passing of the tickets. It is very often the case that milk tickets are kept in constant use until they become so dirty that the printing on them is undiscernable. The authorities on diet commend the free use of spinach at this time of the year. It contains more iron to the square inch than the most renowned ferruginous remedies. Like a taste for olives, the spinach habit grows on one, and it is a most desirable one to acquire. The Ape of Doath. SOME QUEER THINGS ABOUT SLEEP. One ot the most remarkable facts to be found in the history of sleep j consists in the utter inability to re- 1 sist its onset 111 cases of extreme fatigue. Several remarkable in stances are given in which persons have continued to walk onwards while sleep has overcome them, the automatic centres of the brain evi dently controlling and stimulating the muscles when consciousness it self had been completely abrogated. It is recorded that at the battle of the Nile, amidst the roar of cannon and the fall of wreckage, some of the over-fatigued boys serving tiie guns with powder fell asleep on the deck. Dr. Carpenter gives another instance of allied kind. In the course of the Burmese war, the captain of a frigate actively engaged in combat fell asleep from sheer ex haustion, and slept soundly for two hours within a yard of one of the biggest guns, which was being act ively worked during his slumbers. It is matter of common medical knowledge that extreme exhaustion in face of the severest pain will in duce sleep. Here the imperative demand of the body a demand implanted, as we have seen, in the constitution of our frames asserts its influence ; and even pain, the ordinary conqueror of repose, has in its turn to succumb. One of the most extraordinary cases in whichv the overruling power of sleep was ever exemplified was that of Dam pens, condemned for treason in Paris in 1757. He was barbarously tor tured, but remarked that the depri vation of sleep had been the great est torture of all. It was reported that he slept soundly, even in the short intervals which elapsed be tween his periods of torture. Among the Chinese a form of pun ishment lor crimes consists in keep ing the prisoner continually awake, or arousing him incessantly after short intervals of repose. Alter the eighth day of such sleeplessness, one criminal besought his captors to put him to death by any means they could choose or invent, so great was his pain and torment due to the absence of " nature's soft nurse." Persons engaged in me chanical labor, such as attending a machine in a factory, have often fallen asleep despite the plain record of pains and penalties attending such dereliction of duty, to say nothing of the sense of personal danger, which was plainly kept be fore their eyes. WHY WE CAN AWAKE AT A SET TIME. One of the most interesting phases connected with sleep is that iu which a determination, formed over night, that we should awake at a certain hour, acts true to the appointed time. In certain in stances with which I am acquainted the idea acts perfectly ; in others it acts occasionally ; and in other cases again, it fails completely. The ex planation of this habit depends on what one mr,y term a "dominant idea," or an Uec fixe, as the French term it. There is something akin in this waking notion to the " dom inant idea " with which a hypno tist may impress his facile subject. If we substitute for the hypnotist the individual himself, or mayhap tne idea ot tne mend who lias been impressing upon him the necessity for sounding the reveille at a given hour in the morning, we can dis cern the rationale of the action with a fair degree of clearness. The domiuant idea in the shape of the He That Stays Does the Business." All the world admires 4 4 staying power. ' ' On this quality success depends. The blood is the best friend the heart has, and 44 faint heart" never won anything. Hood's Sarsaparilla is the best friend the blood ever had; it cleanses the blood of everythinq. If you would be strong in the race of miuuiiu uo tno rjusmesi," you inurt "stay." Hood'a Sarsaparilla makes the (struggle easy. It gives clear, 6trong blood; hence perfect health ensues. Hives-" Tbe Itching of hives which imuDiua me inst summer blotches me mm summer was terrible; fame nil over mv br.iiv ii..h'. Harsaparllia and Hood's Pills cured me .UAKY iauoTT, a) South Wolf Baltimore, Md. bt., All Run Down "I was as tired In the morning us at nibi,t. had no ambition, weuk and run down. Three bottles of Hood's Harsaparllia built me up and cured me. tan eat well and sleep well." Mhh. Chas. Mou, 418 Madison St., Sandusky, Ohio. Female Troubles-" I would have wei. corned death any time as a relief from catarrh of the womb aud other serious troubles. The best physicians said my case was helpless. I stopped taking ever. tiling eise and took Hood's Sarsaparina. .110 i-aniB 10 me and I pained until I J. FlUHVR, ui imriwuy wen ana tronir " Mm ka Mood's. Pills urUv.rllU. th. nonlrritatlng ,nl , -"'r cathSTtlETiuk. with Hood'. Barniijl Star Handsomely made, in the latest s necessity for awaking at a certain tune is impressed oil the brain, and is probably transmitted to those au tomatic or lower centres which rule our mechanical acts, which are re sponsible for the visions of the night, and which are capable of carrying out, either in the entire absence of consciousness or 111 the exercise of a subconscious condition, many complex actions. Through the hours of sleep the dominant idea remains impressed on these lower centres. The head of the business sleeps on while the night watchman is awake ; and so, prompt to the time, or shortly before or af ter it, the desired result is attained, and the slumbering brain is awak ened to the full measure of its ac tivity. From the Ape of Death, by Dr. Andrew Wilson, F. R. S. E., in Harper's Magazine for April. Interesting Find Of Gold One of the most interesting of all Colorado's missing treasures troves is that for which systematic search has been quite recently going on in the neighborhood of the dividing line be tween Routt and Grand Counties, in the western pait of the state. In the stmmer of 1896 a party went into the Gore Mountains on a hunting trip, making their head-quarters in a valley about eight miles from the little town of Toponas. One of the number shot a deer one morning, and following after the animal in the hope of getting another shot, pushed on until roused to the fact that he bad become lost in the wilderness. In his wandering in search of camp he chanced upon an outcropping of rock that struck him as so peculiar that he broke off a few bits to keep as curious. At the time no thought was in his mind that this could be anything of value, bnt some time later he happened to show the specimens to a friend ;n Denver, one experienced in ores, who told him that the find was nothing less than rich rusty gold, while an assay revealed the fact that the queer, gingerbread looking stnff was worth no less than seventeen thousand dollars per ton. Hurrying back to Toponas, the young man undertook to make his way again to the wonderful find, but he had taken little note of his direction in following the deer, while he cor. Id only gauge the distance by his capacity of walk ing. He felt sure that he must recog nize the neighborhood could he once reach it; but the Gore Mountains are made up of the wildest and roughest country, much of it almost inaccessable and even though he engaged experi enced prospectors to assist in the search, his efforts came to nothing. Alary E. Stkkney, in April Lippin. cotts. School Directors' Convention. To the School Vlreclort of Colum'Ha County ; Gentlemen:--In pursuance o; the forty-third section ot the ct of May nth, IBM, you are hereby notltled to meet la convention, at the Court House, In Bloomsburg, Pa., on the flrBt Tuesday In May, A. D. 1-99, ac 1-80 p. m.t being tbe second day of the month, and select, viva vck by a majority ot the whole number of di rectors present, one person of literary and set entltlo acquirements, and of skill and experi ence In the art of leachiug, as county superin tendent, tor three succeeding years ; and certify mo result to the State superintendent, at liar rldburgi cs required by tbe thirty-ninth and foi-tlctn section of said Act. JOHN K. UILLEU, County Superintendent of Columbia County March 30iw. at BLOOMSKURG ELECTRIC LIGHT & POWER CO. Bloombbuho, Pa., Marcn SO, 1899. A spxclal meeting of the stockholders of the Bloomshurg Klecirlo Uifht and Power Com- K any will be lieM at the omce of Mr. R. U. lulien, President, No. Mitt Arch street, Phila delphia, Pa., on the 6th day ot June, lfttfU, be tween the hours of V p. ra. ana 5 p. in., for tbe Surpose of ratifying tbe action of tbe Pres ent and Secretary In exeoutlng a certain bond and mortgage, bearing date Che first day of Junnury, A. I). 191, recorded In the orhoe of tbe Henorder ot Deeds, In and for the County ot Columbia, In Mortgage Book No. Utt, at page No. 7 1 and for the transaction of such other bust dbhs as may properly come bet re the meeting, lot 1 II. M. FRANCIS, Secretary, Clothing House. A BIG DRIVE. AN ELEGANT All-Wool Spring Overcoat, ysss $5.00 At Townsend's Star Clothing House. VALUES! We wish to emphasize the word value, and define its true meaning, as it is employed in this announcement. The princi ple upon which this business is built is value giving the best quality and the greatest quantity for the lowest price, consistent with modern merchandising. Such has been our method of win ning the confidence of the public, and such will always be our plan of holding that confidence. Spring Silk A Furor. Not one bit too strong an ex pression. I he showing has created a furor among the women of this town. They ap preciate newness, correctness, prettiness and extreme values. A lot of sash silks, in neat, pretty plaids, at 50c. 24-inch wide dark ground, neat figure China, 50c. Taffeta, in all the spring col orings, at 75c. In striped dots and new spring effects we have never had so many, or such a pretty lot. rnces, from 75 c. to $1.60. A great many special patterns, in 4-yd lengths, for waists. Ladies' Shirt Waists. We show the Munson shirt waists. We have them again this season, because there is no waist made as nice, or that fit. so wen. it ts a satisfaction to sell them. We have them from 9S0 to $1.75. Shoes. You know this store. You know the perfection of fit and style of the Armstrong shoes. Our spring order has just been opened and put on sale the grade we sold before at $2.75. We bought a lot this spring. The quality and the new spring shapes we will sell at $2.29. F. P. SPECIAL SALE! Now is the time to get bargains. During the next 30 days we will give you many goods at and below cost. Wool Dress Goods that was 25c, now 15c. Dress Goods, from 50c, to 30. Do not miss these special sales. We have just received new sup ply of pretty Coats, Capes and Fur Collarettes for ladies. Fur sets for children. Ladies' Tailor-Made Suits, from $5.00 up. Ladies' Coats, Capes, Separate Skirts. Coats for misses land children. In this line our stock is large. Trices low. Ladies' Fur Collarettes, from $2.00 up. Our sales in Shoes increases daily. Ladies' Fine Shoes, from 79c. up. Gents' Fine Shoes, from 98c. up. Good Calicoes, 3c Good Muslin, 3jc. Our stock of Underwear is complete. We handle the celebrated Leather brand Stockings for ladies, misses and boys. Corsets, for 24c. up. Our Grocery Department is improving daily adding new goods at better prices. Our whole stock is complete and prices always right. It will pay you to see our goods before you buy. Bloomsburg Store Co., Limited. Corner Main and Centre. ALFRED McHENRY, Manager Our $2.25 shoe we will sell you at $1.75. Children and misses' shoes. We sell the Bay State Shoes. There is no shoe that will wear equal to them for the price you pay for them. Hose. We make two offers in chil dren's hose this week. One lot is worth 25c a pair, but we will sell them this week and next at 19c. Another lot would be at 20c a pair, but they go for 2 pair for 25c These are new goods, and the colors are fast The New Cottons. Organdies, satteens, figures dimities every fabric fixed bj fashion as correct is included in the showing. 25c organdies at I2jc. 10c. lawns at 8c. Neck Dressings. We thought our last year's stock of women's neckwear grand. It was for last year, but these neckwear now surpass themselves with each succeed ing season. You musn't miss this collection. Gloves for Easter. Easter is the time every lady should have a new pair of gloves, if nothing else. Our stock would supply a great many of them with gloves, in any of the new spring shades. Price, 75c, $1.00 and $1.25. Pursel