fa fa M.M i If ffOit ii ii ! ! VOL. 35. BLOOMSBUltG, PA. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 1000 NO. OS A O00D SHOtflNU. The Rescue Hose and Ladder Co , of the Fourth ward, did itseit credit Vrw1.iv evcniiR. By the untiring en- tIy ot i s members the people of our town were permi.ted io witness the hrecst ana most su--cssim succi nonstration in the h-s'ory of the local fire depa. .me .t. T.je, there has already a. elf .ce street paraues r. where there were ro c me.i in nre, but never one 1 w""ch the partici pants v. e all firemer. The lea'ng fca are 0." the pageant was the Dark en Brig.v'e, 01 the Rescue's. So grotesque and varigatcd were the cos tumes, and so amusing the" manner isms and gestures, that they we c re ceived by tunultous applause all along the line. In response to invitations, the three other companies Friendship, Winona and Good Will turned out, and the showing was tru'y an auspic ious one. The line of march was from the new hose house of the Res cue's, on East Fifth street, out Filth to Market, up Market to Main, down Main to West, countermarch up Main to Fast, and down East to the place of beginning. The chief object of the parade was to advertise and attract patron age to their festival, and in this they were eminently successful. So great was the crowd that a person could scarcely get through. A platform had been erected in front of the hose house and here the Bloomsburi' Band, under the leader ship of Lambert McIIenry, discoursed excellent music for nearly two hours, to the delight of the immense audi encc. The festival was continued Satur dav evening, and the crowd, while not so large as on the previojs even ing, because of ine'ement weather, was very gratifying, and the proceeds accrenatcd a neat sum, and will be a bis lift toward liauidatinc t'.ie debt incurred in the erection of the hose house. The Rescue's are all rijrht. So say we all. A Muraculous Escape. The io:w north bound train on the Delaware Lackawanna and West ern Railroad, ran into and demolish ed the delivery wagon of L. T. Sharp less & Co. grocers, Tuesday forenoon The wagon was in charge of Frank Wolvcrton, son of T. L. Wolverton, a member of of the firm. lie was at Rupert delivering goods. Little thinking that the train was due, and perfectly oblivious of any danger he drove over the railroad track. The horse and front wheels of the wagon were over when the train crashed into it. The vehicle was totally demolish ed, but fortunately, yet strange to re ute, the driver and horse escaped tin- hurt. Notwithstanding the fact that i the train was close at hand, the young man did not hear a sound of its approach. Death of Mrs. J. L. Girton- Mrs. J. L. Girton died at her home on Centre street Tuesday morning. Death occurred about eleven o clock Not more than half an hour previous to that time she complained of feel m unwell and retired to her room. Mr. Girton went 'up stairs at the mentioned time and found her dead. Her maiden name was Unger. She is survived by a husband and two adopted sons. The deceased was about fifty-five years of ace. The funeral serv'ce will be conducted at the house to-morrow at ten o'clock, oy Key. D. N. Kirkby, of the fcpis- copal Church. Mnv Rnlt in Dflftth. Georce Evans was fatally hurt at me carpet Mill this morning, a nine after seven o'clock. He was encaged in oilinc the line shaft and had one of his arms through the pulley, when the machinery was suddenly started, throwing him lo the floor. He was picked ud and removed to his home on Park street, and medical aid sum- moned. It is feared that his neck is broken, family. He is married and lias a TJ- Ev. Church Servioe, 8e.pt. 23. Sunday school, at 0:1s a. m.; w t l reaching (subject, "Education"), at lCVi-v n . T..:- I" T f V of 10:30 a. m.j Junior K. L. C. E., at 2 p. m.j Senior K. L. C. E-, at 6:30 P- rn. K. L. C. E. Rally, consisting 01 essays and addresses, at 7:30 p, m.; Prayer and Teachers' Meeting, on Wednesday evenine. at T.xo. A Cordial invitafinn tr. rh nf these cmces. Stranaers welcome. J. W. Bentz, Pastor. W Doath of Kester Parker- Kester Parker, an aged and respect cd resident of Greenwood township, died at his home on Fr'dav. Sent. id. at the ripe age of 80 years, 7 months and 20 days. He had been sick or some lime and at nis age death .as not entirely unexpected. Funer' services were held o 1 Sunday and the .iains interred in the cemetery at this place. He is survived by a widow and five grown children Mrs. John Kitchen and Klmer, of Greenwood; Avery K. and Mrs. Edward Hartman, of Madison township, and Mr. Jacob Holler, of Bloomsburg besides nu merous grandchildren and four great grandchildren. He had been mail carrier from the railroad to the Green wood postoffice almost ever since the mail was put on the train. Millville labltt. "Our Methodist Mothers and fathers " A lecture on the above subject will be delivered by Dr. Frysinger in the Auditorium of the M. E. Church on Saturday evening, Sept. 22, at 8 o'clock. It was on this subject the Dr. talked at the recent Huntington Valley Camp Meeting, when, the Shlckshinny Echo says : "He moved his audience from tears to laughter as he related incidents in the lives of the men and women who made the church.' As it is desired to give an opportunity to everybody, voung and old, to hear this popular lecture, the price of tick ets has been put at the nominal sum of ten cents. The spacious Auditor ium, large as it is, ought to be crowd ed at this low rate. T he proceeds wi be a donation to the church. As it is Viewed by a Stranger Mr. Editor: What is the matter with the north side of Main street in your town of Bloomsuurg ? The pave ment is sort of a cat ladder, being on grade, below grade, and ro grade. The houses, for the most part, do not compare with those on the south side, and the me. hods of the business nv.n drive pedestrians to the south side for an agreeable and pleasant wall:. In the night time the north pavement is dangerous to a stranger or person un acquainted with its ups and downs, and will, if possible, make his pur chases on the safe side of the street. At any rate, that is" the way it strikes v A VlRANUKR. Ready Tor Business. Authorization was received Tues day from Comptroller of Currency Dawes directinc the First National Bank of Shickshinny to begin busi ness. The counters are being put in position and the safe will arrive this week and be placed in the vault. Ev- en-thing is in readiness tor opening. except the buildinsr. and Contractor rury expects to have his work done So that the bank can open on October ist. Depositors wishing their busi ness cards printed upon their checks can have them ready tor tne opening of the bank by giving uieir order to Cashier Mensch now. Echo. Death of Mrs. A. J. Derr- Mrs. A. T. Derr departed this life at her home in Jackson township this county on Thursday evening last, after an illness ol only a tew nouis, m the sixty fouith year of her age. Death at any time is an unwelcome visitor, but when it comes as it did in mis case it is indeed sad. Mrs. Derr was an estimable lady, and her death has cast a deep gloom over the community ,n which she resided. Mr. uerr sur I vives. The funeral took place on Sunday. The directors for Rosemont Ceme tPTV Association for the ensuing year are . j. g. Freeze, J. urotz, j. j Grower. Tohn Wolf. C. S. Furman, C a. Kleim. W. E. Rinker, W. R. Ring rose) r. r. Little, S. V. Peacock and Frank Ikeler. The board was organ jZed last Monday night by the election r,f T ft. Freeze, president : w. IV Rinker, secretary, and S. F. Peacock superintendent and treasurer, Mnrdansville still has its ghost. A resident of that village informs us that it appears almost nightly at a anil nf t h hridne. looks to be .1 .. r. toil is rlnthed in flimsy 1 auuui icu n-vfc . j j t ial of immaculate white, and I . - -, ... - 1.: mates a noise annual w . : ' - it,,- ."x n 1 1 wr u; n ri n n nlsn savs that travel over the bridge after nightfall has greatly de creased T.W. Dawson & Sons, of Ulootns iMirrr are OllttillK down a gratlO' litnic pavement, in umu ui "-" I ...... F Mj I. bank building. o7 ,,v. M. E. OHCROU ANNIVERSARY- The congregation of the First Methodist Church, of this town, will celebrate, in an appropriate manner, beginning on Saturday next, the third anniversary of their handsome edifice, on the corner of Market and Third streets. Special music, to be ren dered by the choir, will be a pleasing feature of the exercises. The ser mon, on Sabbath morning, will be de livered by Rev. R. H. Gilbert, D. P., of Berwick, who is recognized as one of the ablest divines in the Central Pennsylvania Conference. The event promises to be one of the greatest oc casions in the church s history, lie- low is appended the program in its entirety : SATTRI1AY, SF.I'TFMliKR 22. Lecture, 8:o p. 111. Suliject, "Our Meth odist l athers and Mothers." liy VV. M. Krysincr, 1). 1). SUNDAY, SKI'I KMI1RR 2J. Sunday school at 9:00 a. m. Morning Church Service at 10:30 a. m. Opening Anthem Choir llvinu No, 37 choir and Cotigrc galion l'rayer. OlTcriny and Music ly Choir. Sermon Kcv. K. II. (lilhcrt, II. D. Music I'V the Choir. Reception of Probationers into Full Mem , bership. Doxology and Benediction. Anniversary l.ove least at 3:00 p. m. League Devotional Meeting at 6:30 p. ni. K veiling Church Servi.-esat 7:30 p. m. rUtform Meeting and Service of Song. Five-Minute Addresses by Laymen and other interesting exercises. MONDAY, BKI'l KMJIKK 24 Address, at 7:30 p in., by Miss I'rol. Hen rietta A. Il.imroft, Kicld Secretary of V. II. M. S. Organization of a Woman's Home Mission ary Society. Maier in Good Soirils. I. Maier who is in jail in Williams port for making improper use of the mails, is taking his imprisonment good naturedly. He is in the best of spirits at all times, ever willing to talk as can be seen from the following taken from the Willianisport Sun: "Maier can tell a visitor to the jail in an hour enough to fill up an edi tion of a newspaper. He claims to ave quelled the Cuban war, the South African conflict, the Philipine trouble, and is now engaged in the herculean task of straightening out the Chinese flair. He is President McKinley s constant adviser, according to his talk, and has dead loads of knowledge stored away in his eruite brain that he has not permitted to escape. He has, however, set adrift lots of knowledge n days gone by, and holds the grog- ress of the universe in the palm of his and. He knows more about mter- ational law, he says, than there is in the books, and is, in fact a handy man for a president to have close at hand in case of an emergency," . ... . Like Expressions- Under the above title A. B. Black has collected and collated the various expressions of prose and verse, from the time of Homer to the present day. One is surprised on examining the pages to see how nearly different writers in different lands have put tne same thoughts into almost the same words, and the cry "p'agiarism rises to the lips more than once. There ran be no Question of the value of such a work, both for use as a refer ence and for careful study in literature classes; and it will undoubtedly assist many a puzzled author or speaker to give the proper credit for his quota- tations. Taken trom me scroti. monthly magazine, published by 1 he Scroll Publishing Company, 30S Dearborn St., Chicago, 111. Bloorasburg fair Oct. 9 to 12, 1900. This great Fair is second to none in this state. From the present outlook, the management expect to have 1 larger and better exhibit than ever be "ore. Nothinn has been spared to make it a great success. A large ad dition has just been built to the grand stand. The attractions secured are novel and up to date. Something new presented between every heat of the races. Kacing begins Wednesday with the 2:18 pace, 2:24 trot, 2:30 pace and 2:40 County race. Thurs dry the 2:14 class, 2:30 trot and 2:24 pace. Friday, the closing day, the Free for All race, 2:20 trot ami 2:27 class. For premium lists write the secretary. A. N. Yost, Sec'y. An Unprecedented Demand for Coal Since the Anthracite coal miners strike has been promulgated t..ere has been an unprecedented demand for coal, as almost every person real izes that the present struggle between the miners and the operators may be a long and bitter one, and will, con sequently, make coal very scaxce. PROGRAMME. Fifth Annual Rc-Unlon ol thu Columbia County Votcrsn Association, at Benton, Pa., Sept. 29th, 1900. Lieut. Kussgr. Karns, pres. J. W. Evans, Vice Pres. John K. Kkki.kk, Trcas. I)R. I. K. l'AT TKRSON, Scc'y. Commillce of Arrangements Formation of parade nt 10.30 a. m., at ring ing of church bell. The procession will form 011 Public Square and .Market treet, ntjht resting on Two and a Half street. Chief Marshal, Col. A. I). Secly, of lierwick. Assistants Capt, II. I. Conner, of Orange- ville, M. 1'. l.utz, ol lilooinstnirg, dco. V. Sfrner, of Ked Mill, C. F. I la der, of Catawissa. Kenton Comet Hand. Columbia C0.1 y Veteran Association and all (1. A. R. Posts, on the left of Ass'n. C10I. A. I). Secly Camp, S. of V., Russcl Karns Camp, S. of V., all other Camps S. of V., on left of Camp 319. W. C , P. O, S. of A., No. 12j, on left of Camps S. of V. All other P. O. S. of A. Camps form on left of Camp 123. All other orders will form on left of P. O. S. of A. orders. Carriages, with orators of the day, and all other carriages and vehicles to follow. ROUTK OK I'ARAIlK. The procession will pass down Two-ami-One-Halt street to Col ley street, up Third to Kveritt street, out Kvcritt to Second, down Scconu to Market, out Market to first, up First to the Park, where a suita ble stand has lieen erected. After the parade the different orders and associations will assemlile at the speaker's stand in the Park, where the following exer cises will be conducted : National air, by lictitnn Cornet Band. Piayer, by Rev. Wilhelm. Singing, by Male (Quartette. Address of Welcome, by S. K. Karns, Esq. Reply to Address of Welcome, by Kev. J. I). Smith, of Ploimsburg. Singing, by Male (Quartette. Reading of Minutes, by Dr. J. E. Patterson Treasurer's Report, by John R. Keeler. Callinc o the Roll, uy Secretary. Election of officers and place of next meeting Announcement ot result. Adjournment for dinner. Promptly at two o'clock p. m., at ringing f church bell, will again assemble on the grounds. AFTERNOON MEETING. Opened by piayer by Rev. Sawtcll. Singing, by Male (JttaiteUe. Remarks by Dr. M. Ii. Hughes, Rev. (1. II. Hemingway, Prof. Jas. M. Coughlin, and others. Music, by Hand. Every one come, and bring your families, o hear and see the Veterans of Columbia County together once more. The Rev. Dr. 15. F. Dimmick, pastor ot bt. Paul s .Methodist Kpiscopal church, Danville, at the completion of his Sunday morning sermon, announced to the complete surprise of his congregation, that he had accepted a call trom a cliurcli in Columbus, Ohio, and would leave about the middle of October. Dr. Dimmick is an able minister, and his leaving is a source of deep regret. line Stationery The job department of the Colum bian is now prepared to show its pat rons a fine line of stationery, in bord and linen papers, for unidled letter and note heads, in blue, white or .1 1 Ti cream, witn envelopes 10 maicn. 11 is suitable tor either pen or typewriter Admirers of fine stationery are in vited to call and see it. 1 he prices are very low for the class of goods. . Buckwheat. We will pay 60c. per bushel for good buckwheat delivered to our mill this week. 9-13-tf H. V. White & Co, J. G, WELLS, Successor to S. F. Peacock & Co., Market Square. o Fodder Tar Rope, 10c. Lb. Corn Cutters, 25c. NEW LINE DELFT WARE, JUST RECEIVED. Tust in Sincle and Double Barrel Hammer and Hammerless Leenins. Coats, Belts, Shells, Etc General Hardware, mk III Mff WW fill I? pi'sr i its M immmmm 1 ffi BuHl i Cwrifhl IBQObf Bui. tckuhiM Mum Rugged People Are apt to sneer at at a light-weight overcoat as a "softy's' garment. But the way to keep rugged is to look out for your health. Don't take any risks. Wear a top coat as soon as chilly weather approaches. We have them in different lengths, weights, aud sizes. BLOOMSBURG, PA. 13 Come in and see 113 we'll treat you right. The Leader Department Store. Suppose we say but little this time about our Carpets, but let us say that little strong. Don't make any mistake about our being headquarters for all grades of Carpet That you know. these few things while you pre cleaning house and getting ready for Fair. Wool t Velvet Carpet, MADE, LAID AND LINED, 90 Now that's an unbeatable proposition. Try aud match it. Heavy Ingrain Carpet, 50 OB1STTS. HEAVY ALL WOOL CARPET, EVERY THREAD WOOL, S5 GEHnTTS. Now that's another hard item to match. GROCERIES. Still advancing. Still doing more business each month. We put it to you as good, sensible people, who want their dollars to go as far as possible, that there is some reason for this. The reason is simply this. We aro selling good, fresh, edible goods, at close prices. Yet we will not sacrifice quality for price. We will buy and sell only what we will eat ourselves. THE LEADER STORE COMPANY, Ltd., ATTT A"NTn Af AT?Tv'T?T 75 he Overcoat Store" Don't make any mistake about the place to bay your overcoat. We are overcoat specialists we can show more kinds of good coats than anybody, and we sell them for less money. You can prove this to your own satisfaction by coming in yourself, trying on the coats and pricing them. The Hart, Schaffner Marx overcoats are known all over America for their superb fit and durability. Every one guaranteed. and Furniture. Just think over QTG TT rkAAf GlTTrn 4 i'l II 'i 1 ' -.1 , - I m Si I I'.; j,l F1' -ii1!" ': f ll'ii r '! l': r.vV:-.ji'; ; ' I1"1.' 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