4 THE COLUMBIAN, BLOOMSBURQ, PA. THE COLUMBIAN. i:stai:usiii:i 1866. ME COLUMBIA DEMOCRAT, ISTABUSIIKD I837. CoNSOIIDATR!) 1 869. 1'UHI.ISIIEI) l-.VKRY Tlll'RSDAY MORNINO, At llloomslnirg, the County Scat of Columbia County, Pennsylvania. C.KO. V.. KI.WKLl, Editor. 1). J. TASKER, Local Editor. 11 EO. C. ROAN, 1 OREMAX. Terms : Inside the county .ft. oo year 'n advance j 51.5011 not paid in a nance Outside the county, $1.25 n year, strictly it advance. All communication should lie addressed THE COLUMBIAN, liloomsliurg, I'a. TIIUKSDAV, OCTOBER 25, 1900. Democratic Ticket. NATIONAL. FOR PRESIDENT, WILLIAM J. BRYAN, of Nebraska. FOR VICE PRESIDENT, ADLAI E. STEVKNSON, of Illinois. STATE. FOR AUDITOR GENERAL, T. GRAY MEEK., of Centre Co. FOR CONGRESS.MEN-AT-LARGE, N. M EDWARDS, of Lvcoming Co. . HENRY E. GRIMM, of Bucks Co. FOR PRESIDENTIAL EI.ECTORS-AT LARGE A. H. Coffroth, of Somerset. Francis Shunk Brown, Philadelphia. Andres1 Caul, of Elk. Otto Germer, of Erie. FOR DISTRICT PR Hugh Monro, Henry Fernborger, Mat hew Oilman, W. Horace llosklns, Adam K. Wulcli, N. M. Ellis Albra lit Kneulc, David. I. Pt-uraull, L. W. Rpirr, Dr. Mccormick, Josf-pn o'ltrlfn, roomas M money, Michael Mi'llet, 8. P ISiniNTIAI, ILRCT0H8. .! allies Hell, V. 14. Ilmjilnifs, It. 8cott Ammermnn, Dr. Dallas iiarnburt, Harvey w. Haines, Warren Wortn Bailey, Wesley K UufTey, Kamuel W. Ulack, Joliu F. Pauley, J. C. Kelly, John T. Brew, J. 8. Carmlcliael,' .1. Kltctiey, Kimball. COUNTY. FOR CONGRESS, RUFUS K. POLK, of Danville. FOR REPRESENTATIVES, WILLIAM T. CREASY, (South Side) of Catawissa Twp. FRED. IKELER, (North Side) of Bloomsburg. FOR SHERIFF, DANIEL KNORR, of Locust Twp. FOR CORONER, DR. B. F. SHARPLESS, of Catawissa. FOR JURY COMMISSIONER, DAVID A. SHULTZ, of Madison Twp. To The Voters of Columbia County. It is urged by your County Chair man that you organize "Bryan and Stevenson Clubs" in every election district in Columbia County. Do this at once. C. A. Small, County Chairman. The Paramount Issue The burning issue of imperial ism, growing out of the Spanish war, involves the very existence of the Republic and the destruction of our free institutions. We regard it as the paramount issue of the cam paign. From the Democratic Plat form. . . . . democratic Meetings- The County Chairman has ar ranged the following Democratic meetings : Oct. 25 Xewlin. Oct. 26 Espy. Oct. 27 Eyersgrove. Oct. 29 Mifflinvillc. Oct. 30 Orangeville. Oct. 31 Jamison City. Oct. 31 Canby. Nov. 2 Jonestown and Centralia People the Only Power, It is easier to lose a reputation than to establish one, and this na tion would find it a long and labor ious task to regain its proud posi tion among the nations, if, under the stress of temptation, it shonld repudiate the self-evident truths proclaimed by our heroic ancestors and sacredly treasured during a career unparalleled in the annals of time. When the doctrine that the people are the only source of power is made secure from further attack we can safely proceed to the settle ment of the numerous questions which involve the domestic and economic welfare of our citizens. From Bryan's Letter of Acceptance. . William Jennings Bryan is meet ing ovations wherever he goes. He is greeted by thousands al every stop, and the enthusiasm is un bounded. 25,000 votes, properly distributed, would have elected him in 1896, 'and the prospects now are much brighter than they were then. A full Democratic vote, all overlhe country, will surely put Bryan in the White House. BON. KUF08 K. POLK, The Democratic candidate from the Seventeenth Congressional dis trict, comes before the voters of the district this fall a tried and true friend of the people. It was said of his illustrious relative, President Polk, that "he entered office with a definite purpose in view and ac complished if" The same may be said ot Mr. l'olk. His recora as Congressman has been above criti cism. He has looked faithfully alter the interests of the people of his district. He has given special attention to the pension claims of soldiers from his district, and as a result of his efforts in this line a number of deserving pensioners have been placed on the pension rolls. Through his efforts three rural delivery mail routes have been established in the district with the prospect of additional service in this line. In all the details of his official career he has been faithful to the interests of the common peo pie. Mr. Polk comes from good old Democratic stock. lie possesses all those traits of human character which constitute the attributes of an ideal candidate. Born and reared on a farm he is of the people and knows their wants. He is a grad uate of Lehigh University. He entered the shops of the iron works at Danville, Pa., a number of years ago as a laborer at $1.20 jier day and worked his way up to manager, which position he resigned several months ago, and is now part owner of a smaller plant of the same town. His experience in life has eminently fitted him for the position which he now holds, and for which he received the unanimous nomination for re election from every county compos ing the district. 'When the cries for help fiom the suffering and down trodden Cubans were wafted to our shores, he donned the uniform and joined the army of liberators. Here again he showed the kind of stuff he was made of. And when, through the inexcusable neglect of the War Department, his comrades in arms were stricken with the deadlv typhus, he pulled off his coat laid floors in their tents and tenderly cared for his sick boys. Here is a brave man, brave as the bravest, gentle as the gentlest, and it is of snrh stuff hprops n'r I made. Do you wonder then that the soldier boys worshiped him, and voted for him regardless of party affiliations two years ago? The meu in the mines, shops, lumber woods and on the farms also voted for him, and will dosoagaiu. Sul livan Jlcrald. Just a Dozen National Tickets Here are the Presidential tickets for 1900, that thus far have been formally placed in nomination : Republican For President, Will iam McKinley, of Ohio ; for Vice President, Theodore Roosevelt, of New York. Democratic William J. Bryan, of Nebraska ; Adlai E. Stevenson, of Illinois. Silver Republican William J. Bryan, of Nebraska ; Adlai E. Stevenson, of Illinois. Fusion Populist William T. Bryan, of Nebraska ; Adlai E. Stevenson, of Illinois. Mid-Road Populist Wharton Barker, of Pennsylvania ; Ignatius Donuelly, of Minnesota. Prohibition Tohn T. Woollev. of Illinois : Henry B. Metcalf. of Rhode Island. Social Democrats Eugene V. Debs, of Indiana ; Job Harriman, of California. Social Labor Joseph F. Mallo ney, of Massachusetts : Valentine Remmell, of Pennsylvania. United Christian J. F. R. Leon ard, of Iowa ; Charles M. Sheldon, of Kansas. Anti - Imperialist William J. Bryan, of Nebraska. National Donaldson Caffery, of Louisiana ; Archibald M. Howe, of Massachusetts. National Union Reform Seth Ellis, of Ohio ; Samuel T. Nicho las, of Pennsylvania. No Ticket In Luzerne Oounty. Judge Weiss on Wednesday of last week handed down an opinion, which leaves Luzerne County without a Democratic ticket at the coming Nov ember election. He says that during the convention the tumult and dis order was so great that no body knew what was taking place. All the certi ficates of nomination are accordingly declared null and void. Stanley Woodward and T. R. Martin were the candidates for Judge, and Stanley W. Davenport and A. K. DeWitt for Congress. . . Judge Metzger's will has been filed in the prothonotary's office at Williamsport. The paper is simple, brief and clear. G. B. M. Metzger has been named as executor. The deceased's estate will exceed $56,. 000, and is divided among his child ren and grand children, his son George receiving the residence on Fourth street. 44 Honest Labor Bears a Lovely Face J' There is nothing more pleasing to look upon than a hearty, ruddy face, gained by honest toil. They are the saving of the nation, these toilers of both sexes, strug gling for daily bread. 'Pure blood makes them Me to keep up the ddily round of duty At home, shop or store. If the blood has a Umt or im purity, or a run down feeling comes on, the one remedy is Hood' s SrsparilU, America's Greatest Medicine for the blood. Poor Blood "SMy blood ivas so poor that in hottest tvetiher I felt cold. Hood' s SjrsApArillA made me ivtrm. It is the right thing in the right place," lUttie J. Taylor, Woodstcmm, N. J. TTiw3', HIL rur lWerlll. ; th iionlrrlt.liiig uni cmiy ethrtlo to tak with H.iod'p Wurtapurlll.. WASHINGTON. From our Regular Correspondent. Washington, Oct. 22, 1900. Republicans, from Mr. McKinley down, have made this a campaign of misrepresentation from the start. Mr. McKinley himself started the false pretense that the war taxes would be repealed at the coming session of Con gress, and the promise has been reit erated and reiterated by republican speakers and writers in all sections of the country. The war taxes will not be repealed by the present Congress, unlets the election of Mr. Bryan in cites the republicans to do so with the hope of embarrassing his administra tion, lor the very simple reason that the money they produce is necessary to meet the expenses of the McKinley policy of imperialism. This is well known to every prominent official of the Treasury Department, although it would be as much as his place was worth for any one of them to publicly say so. But they don't have to say anything, the figures tell the tale. The official figures show that the total ex penditures of the government for the last fiscal year amounted to $168, 099,828.00, and the total receipts to $171, 271,451. 71. Subtract one from the other anJ you have the "immense surfpluf a,bou,t which rePubI'cans are so fond of talking. There will be no repeal of war taxes.but there will be a reduction in the tax on beer, the brewers having bought a promise to that effect with heavy campaign con tributions. Still republican speakers say it will be repealed. They go on the theory that a vote obtained by falsepretenses counts for just as much as one bought for cash, and is cheaper. Echoes of the big Bryan meeting held in Madison Square Garden, in New York City, will reach the remot est section of the country, and the enthusiasm there aroused will spread until it takes on the qualities oi a democratic tidal wave, which may be great enough to sweep the trust-ridden administration out of power, or may just tall short of that much to be de sired accomplishment. No man can say in advance what the result of it will be, but let it be what it will, it is admitted, even by the McKinleyitfcs, that no such outpouring of the masses as that which honored Mr. Bryan has ever before turned out in that city to hear any candidate; and old campaign ers, who were there, declare that they were astonished at the intensity and the amount of enthusiasm aroused by Mr. Bryan and the other speakers. It was a revelation to New Yorkers and it opened the eyes of many who have heretofore refused to believe that Bryan and Stevenson had a chance to carry the State of New York. One enthusiastic Washington democrat who attended the big meeting said : "That meeting was worth a million democratic votes. It would have been an absolute impossibility in that town during the campaign of 1896." wny Mr. .McMniey keeps an American minister pt Pekin when he invariably turns down his advice and recommendations and acts in accord ance with what the Chinese Minister to the U. S. says, is one of those questions which a whole bunch of I Americans would like to have satis factorily answered. It bobbed up again this week, when Minister Con ger sent a dispatch warning Secretary nay tnat the Chinese government was not "toting fair". After that dis patch was received the Chinese min ister, in violation of all diplomatic us age, was allowed to have a personal interview with Mr. McKinley, in order that he might present a dispatch from the Chinese Emperor to the would-be American Empeior, thanking him for all he had done for the Chinese gov ernment, while members of that gov eminent were inciting the murder of Americans and other foreigners in China, and Mr. McKinley dropped the political work in which he is now exclusively engaged for a whole hour to swallow chunks of taffy presented by the wily Chinaman. Inasmuch as it has been well known WHEN 1 can always be found at Townsend's Star Clothing House, PL in Washington that there has been no love lost between Mr. McKinley and ex-Senator Quay, who was kept out of his seat in the Senate by Boss Hanna, there was much curiosity aroused when Quay called at the White House and had an hour's private talk with Mr. McKinley. It has leaked out that Quay sought to make a dicker whereby the administration's influence would be used to help him in his fight to conliol the Pennsylvania legislature and be returned to the Senate, and that Mr. McKinley refused to help, him, on the ground that he had troubles enough of his own just now without assuming those of Quay. It is said that Quay left in a pet, and made threa'.s of getting even. The tip has been passed in the Mc Kinley inner circle that Hanna's agents have got the thing all fixed and and that a majority of the electoral college is to be secured by the same methods that were successful four years ago the wholesale use of money. As a consequence, the re publicans have exchanged their fright for confidence. Democratic advices do not coincide with that tip. Hanna's agents are plentifully supplied with cash in all the doubtful states and are trying hard but they haven't got things fixed yet, and they won't get them fixed, if vigilance on the part of demo cratic leaders can prevent. The demo crats know the game that the republi cans are trying to play, and hope to spring some surprises on the McMin leyites before it is ended. STATE NEWS IN BRIEF- With his head crushed, Swan Johnson of Waterville, was found dead along the Reading railroad tracks in Williamsport Saturday hurt while attempting to board a freight train. He died before the hospital was reached. About 100 survivors of the Forty seventh Regiment, Pinnsylvania Vol unteers, held their twenty-eighth an nual reunion at Easton Monday. General J. P. S. Gobin, who com manded the regiment while it was in service back in the sixties, made an address. The main bar to the happiness ot Solomon Snyder, a prominent West Penn farmer, appears to be rats. Re cently he awakened from his slumbers to find that one of his fingers was be ing chewed by a rodent. Sunday night he was awakened by a sharp pain and found that a rat had bitten a piect out of his right eyelid. Francis Casey, aged 1 1 years, of Girardville, attempted to board a south-bound freight train near his home Friday and had both his legs and arms cut off. He had hold of the handle of the car he intended mounting, but the train was moving too fast and he was thrown in front of a tram on the opposite track. He died while being taken to his home. Will Managd Somehow. An exchange says: Do not worry about the editor. He has a charter from the State to act as doormat for the community. He will get the paper out somehow and stand up for the town and whoop it up for you when you run for office, and lie about your big-footed son when he gets a $4 a week job, and weep over your shriveled soul when it is released from its grasping body, and smile at your wife's second marriage. Do not worry about the editor; he will get along. The Lord only knows how but somehow. o A. s ToniA . Bn tU l ri Kind You Haw Always Bought Bigutun of YOU COME TO TOWN Be sure and stop at the Star Clothing; House FOR YOUR FALL OVERCOAT- The latest styles in Fall and Winter Goods, For men, boys and children. Hats, Caps, Sliirts,&c.,of the latest style, BLOOMSBURG, The Autumn Sale. Blankets and Comforts. This Sale Will Begin Thursday, October 25th. Good buying makes good selling. We've been do ing some famous buying of VOU rerreted out the very best values we could hnd. '.They're all here now, and we want you to come in and inspect them. Money saving for you, sure, if you take time by the forelock and replenish from these warm bed coverings. CANTON BLANKETS F03 AUTUMN. Just the kind, just the weights you want now. Got them in white or gray, and you'll find much to tempt you in the way of price. io-4, all cotton, good weight, at 53c. 10- 4 Heavy Cotton Blank ets, at 75c. 1 1- 4 Heavy Cotton Blank ets, at 98c. WHITE WOOL BLANKETS. These are all made from fine selected wool big, fat, heavy fellows that speak warmth and comfort on a cold winter night. Buy them now, and here, and you'll buy at a saving. 1 1-4 all wool, Muncy Blankets, $4.50. 10-4, all wool, heavy and big, $5.25. n-4, fine, soft wool, Mun- New Jackets and Misses and Children. We have selected these goods from the three best makers in this country. They have just come from the makers, so they are the latest cut, and we are safe in saying they are as good values as we have ever shown. They are cut right and made well. We know this, be cause we get them from the best makers in the country. F. P. Lockawanna E. E. Improving Its Service. "Lackawanna," the most powerful tug in eastern waters, made her trial trip from John H. Dialogue & Son's Shipyard at Camden, N. J., on Tues day of last week, and fulfilled the re quirements in every particular. On board were President W. H. Trues dale, Traffic Managet B. D. Caldwell, General Coal Sales Agent E. H. Hold en, Purchasing Agent W. H. Whalen and General Auditor O. C. Post, of the Lackawanna Railroad. The "Lackawanna" is conceded to be the best seagoing tug yet constructed. She is built entirely of steel, is 150 feet over all and of 25 foot beam. She is fitted with tripple expansion engines of 800 horse power and is guaranteed to pull six barges each of a capacity of 160c tons of coal. She is equipped with her own electric light plant, has electric search lights, wreck ing pumps and every other modern device for utility ard safety. She is painted in the Lackawanna colors, n PA. 0 35 3 Blankets and Comforts for 9 cy make, $575. 1 1-4, made of fine Cali fornia wool, $975. COLORED BLANKETS, ALL WOOL. Many colored blankets used nowadays. Think we can prove to you that it will pay you to select from these : 104 all wool Colored Blankets, $2.98. 104 Best Muncy Colored Blankets, $3.98. 1 1 4 Best Muncy Colored Blankets, $4.50. BED CO-IFOETS. Some covered with bright Chintz, but most of them i 7. satteen covered. e buy Comforts direct from the mills, giving you the job ber's profit. Then we share our own profit in a sale of this sort, so you come in for a double saving. Price, 98c. to $2.75. Capes, for Ladies, PURSEL. 1 white with yellow funnels. She wil make easily 15 to 16 miles an hour "Lackawanna" will be used for towing coal barges between New York ana Boston. Another powerful tuB. "Scranton" has been in this brantn of the Lackawanna Railroad's service for some time. A passenger train on the Penn sylvania Railroad Saturday evening struck William Miller's butcher wagon. The two horses attach to the wagon were both instajW killed. T-Jie accident occurred 0 the railroad crossing at Mifflinv lie. The watfon was completely tk-n ished but Miller escaped wi in ' little injury. He is a resident Nescopeck. . .. ...tiia Laxative Bromo-Quinine w- th. remedy tht eurt a ,u "