THE COLUMBIAN, BLOOMSBURG, PA. First National Bloomsburg, i:. V M. LOW, J. M. STAVKR, i:. n. ti'stix. K. F. CARPKNTI; CAPITAL AND SURPLUS Safs IDspcsit Boxes HFcx DIRECTORS : K. V. M. Low, Myron I. Low, J. H. Vastixe, Oko. S. Robbixs, J. M. Stavek. o Dr, Dr, l-r Accounts o banks, corporation., nrms ited upon the most liberal terms, consistent with good banking. THE COLUMBIAN. F.STAHUSHFP iSofr. THE COLUMBIA DEMOCRAT, EsTA!L!!!iI) CoNSOI.IOAl F.l 1S69 I'i'ium:ei F.ykk'y TiimsnAY Morning, A: l'-'Xims ur. the County Seal uf CiKiMiliii County, )'ennylvania. C.KO. V.. I'.I.WKi.U, ti'iTOR 1. I. TA?KKK, Local Editor. C.i:o. C. KO AN, For'-mas. Tkm j :--Itnide the county fl.oo a year in a ivance ; 1.50 if not paiil in advance. Ou::i!e the cjtintv, $1.25 a jear, strictly in vivance. com tiunication shonl.l be nrlJrefscJ THE COLUMBIAN. Bloomstmrg, t'a. THURSDAY, NOYF.Ml.FR 7, 1901. The estimated plurality for the Republican State ticket is 54,000. Y. V. Hart, Democrat, was elected Judge of Lycoming county oYer Max Mitchell, Republican. Judge Savidge is re-elected in Northumberland county, and Yoris Auteu is elected Assistant Law Judge. Both are Democrats. . Weaver's vote for District At torney in Philadelphia is 43.667 over Rothermel. TheAVrM Anur ican charges that 50,000 fraudulent votes were cast by the machine repeaters. On Saturday evening last Hon. Fred Ikelcr was among the speak ers at the Academy of Music in Philadelphia. His speech was highly complimented by several of the leading city papers. The rress says: "Hon. Fred Ikeler is a Columbia county wonder from au ora:orical standpoint. Thoe who heard him at Harrisburg when he made the Philadelphia Fifth Court bill look like a plugged quarter and a count erfeit nickel, knew what was com ing when the eloquent young man from the far banks of Fishingcreek come to the footlights. He made a speech that caught the audience time after time as its applause testified." The result of the election shows that Mr. Ikeler's efforts, as well as those of all others who were in terested in the reform movement, were of no avail. They have the satisfaction of knowing however, that tbev did their duty. TEE HALLOWEEN NUISANCE. Thursday evening and night Philadelphia was treated to its an nual dose of the Halloween nuis ance. Gangs of boys and girls paraded the streets in many of the residential neighborhoods making the night hideous with their shouts and screams. Front gates were Carried off, bell knobs injured and houses invaded with demands for contributions. Most everything movable was carried away or dis placed and the slumbers of people were disturbed by untimely noises. This practice of celebrating Hal loween has become a nuisance which demands abatement. If there was ever any authorization for such acts that time has gone by. It is a relic of Pagan days aud its celebration would have been dis carded long ago had it not afforded au opportunity for pranks and practices that are allowed on no other day or night of the year. The pranks when performed under proper conditions are harmless pro moters of mirth. No one but a cynic could object to the "ducking" ana ooDuing tor uoating app.es and the cracking and eating of nuts and the efforts to make them fore shadow the result of love affairs These methods of celebrating Hal loween when prppetly conducted are above criticism. Much different, however, are the out-of-door practices when crowds of unruly boys aud girls take ad vantage of the old superstition that spirits walk abroad on Halloween to commit lawless acts and make of themselves an intolerable nuis ance. More harm is done, too, than the temporary inconvenieuce given to householders. Many a Bank Pa PkKSIDKN f Vick Pkks't Casiiiur 1 Apst Casiumk K. B. TrsTix, Louis Gross, and individuals, solic boy and girl can date from the liberty given them on Halloween the adoption of habits which have proved their ruin. Parents, usually careful of the company and lilerty allowed their children, are persuad ed to relax strict rules 0:1 this oc casion thinking that any harm done will be only temporary. This is a specious argument the fallacy of which appears when results become evident later in "life. Philadelphia is not the only city trouble ! with this Halloween nuis ance. Elsewhere the "fun" has been even of a more boisterous character than here, and two deaths and a number of casualties have oeen reported so far this year.. In Brooklyn a young lad engaged with others in Halloween sport was thrown under a trolley car and killed, and in New York city a girl was so badly injured by the boisterous conduct of some boys that she died a lew hours later in a hospital. And a Commissioner of Jurors in Peekskill was tripped by a rone and his skull fractured and his shoulder dislocated. In Chicago Halloween celebration almost reach ed the dimensions of a riot. Pcd estrains were insulted and cruised ou the streets and houses and barns set on fire. In Minneapolis roaming bands ot boys have committed so many depredations on private property on Halloween that the authorities have adopted the policy of warning parents that their children will be arrested on that night if they are not kept at home. The Mayor of St. Paul also issued a proclamation on the subject. This method of dealing with the trouble is being adopted in other cities. No one is adverse to seusible celebrations of Halloween. They are among the harmless frolics which help to maice life bearable. But they are vastly different from the intolerable nuis ances which have been grafted on to the occasion. Piia. JVess, Notei From the Pennsylvania Experiment Station- The Periodical Cicada Locust in or Seventeen 1902. Year In the Report of the Pennsyl vania State College, 1SS9, p. 187, au account was given of the nature and distribution of this common and interesting insect. It will be seen by reference to it that the brood of 1SS5 will be due next year (iqo-5) in the counties ot Bedford, Fulton, Huntingdon, Mifflin, Jun iata, Perry, Franklin, Cumber land, Adams, York, Dauphin, Lebanon, Lancaster, Berks, Ches ter, Delaware, Montgomery, Bucks. Lehigh and Northampton. It is not meant that the Cicadas will appear over the whole of this large area, but that they may be expected wherever the conditions herctDfore have been favorable for their breeding and development. Brush covered and woody pasture lands are particularly good breed ing places. Inasmuch as seven teen years is liable to make a good deal of difference in the utilization of laud, it is quite probable that in some places lands which seventeen years ago were not m cultivation. and were good breeding grounds of Cicadas, are now cultivated. Upou diem, and in their neighborhood, the insects, true to their nature, may be expected to appear, perhaps in dangerously large numbers. In many places the older residents are able to locate these grounds. If, now, there should be young fruit trees or shrubs at hand they run great sisk of serious injury and multilation by the egg-laying pro cess, since the habit ot the Cicada is to select small twigs into which it proceeds to cut in order to make a suitable place for its eggs: Hence it would be wise for those in the counties named, who con template setting out trees this Fall or next Spring, to find out whether they are on or near "locust ground" of seventeen years ago, and if they are, to defer planting a yeari or take this risk into consideration. I If it seems best to take the lisk it would be well not to prune the ( trees closely on sitting, but to post t pone it until after the egg-laying of the Cicadas, which takes place dur-. 'ingjune. By July 1st at latest. ; probably two weeks earlier in the soutliern tier ot counties, t lie egg- laving will have been complet.-d and all its injury accomplished The pruning may then Ik done and the cut-off twigs burned, thus de stroying the eggs of this insect, as well as giving the form and char acter desired in the young tree. Nine-tenths of all the destruction caused by insects comes from not "taking time by the forelocks." People wait until a horde of des tructive insects suddenly appear, and then comes the pathetic inquiry, "What are they, and how can I destroy thetn or prevent their attacks?" Here is a case which is of as regular recurrence ns the seasons, and preparation can be jnade to meet it as one would prepare for spring plowing or for winter's snow. It is true that the coming locust swarm may be reduced in size or numbers, and may even have been exterminated in some particular fields, but should it completely fail it will be for the first time in 1S7 years, and that is improbable in audition to the publication re ferred to excellent accounts of the Periodical Cicada are given in Bul letin 95, and the Annual Report for 1894, of the New Jersey Experi ment Station, and also, iii Bulletin 87 of the Ohio Experiment Station. The annual reports and quarterly bulletins of this station will be sent, free of charge, on application, and inquiries on agricultural sub jects answered so far as possible. Address, II. P. Amsby, Director, State College. November, 1931. (Vntre Co., IV. Mail Oar nt-r8 Urn tied. ThJy Vow That Martzv Ce Cemetery it Haun'ed. The strange liaiipeninjs on the Ber wick free delivery route still co'ntinu?, and the carriers are bee xning much wome says a dispatch to the Phila delphia Xsrth American Monday. Three of them ho drive the wagon , from Berwick to various points in the country round have had thriiluij ex periences, and the last is the worst of the lot. A couple of weeks ago a large catamount sprang from a tree at Carrier John Jacobys horse and seiz ed its head. 1 he horse shook the animal i:f and dashed down . the mountai 1 to Berwick, Jacoby having all he co lid do to cling to the wacon and trust to luck. A sho t time later carrier Henry Tresslei's horse stopped short and shied into tie bush. Tressler saw an enormous siake in the road, which he described as being as thick as a man's leg. It disappeared in the brush and is suppose 1 to be a python which es caped from a circus at Berwick a year ago. Carrier O. E. Evans noticed that while pass ng Martzville Cemetery, in Briar Creek township, his horse acted in a peculiar manner and bolted. This occurred twice before Evans, saw the cause of u, and then the other night he beheld a terrifying white ob ject rise at the cemetery fence and wave its arms. He let the horse bolt, and now takes a circuitous route. He says he does not believe in ghosts, and thinks the apparition is some joker with a sheet, but he is not going 10 take any chances. The carriers are demoralized by these occurrences, and each is now armed with a double-barreied gun. After January 1st the railroads will notaccept as baggage anything but luggage containing persoual effects which accompany the owner. The express companies have been making a kick over the indiscrimi nate checking of articles as baggage which under no stretch of the imagi nation could be considered as such Dark Hair " I have used Ayer's Hair Vigor for great many' years, and al though 1 am pas t eighty years of age, yet I have net a gray hair in my head." Geo. Ye'.lctt, Towson, Md. ('e mean all that rich, dark, color your hair used to have. If it's gray now, no matter; for Ayer's Hair Vigor always re stores color to gray hair. Sometimes it makes the hair grow very heavy and long; and it stops falling of the hair, too. tl.M a ktftlc All rnt. 11 your drniit cannot mrply yoa, end u on ilW ami will cipreM you a botcl. lie ur and piv the nam Ol your ueamt eiireM oilu-e. Addreu, J. t. A V tilt CO., Lowell, Uaaa. Lii & , To ho i'th prd I rr;-'iv? is r-rofula ili iv'y ovrr g:iic! ;'::ir ii.'t.ivnu.r'.al. , Jt .st'Ai ! nrhtM il tin mck, di- i f.jr.r. 3 the ft; in, : lai.v.-s tl.. mrecui I t.ie .i,r;'.r.',) w.wfj i'" :nurc!r, weak- I n r. t'-.c bi,t!!!, :o. ':..-. ;!'..! wer of iv -.- .-,:; to w v.is- a;;d tite capacity for r.row.y, a::.l di-vdr:9 ir.t- con f n"-.':r:). ::.! rpfO-.T.-'l ci t:n 'of, liitc of r.r- nr. fc. 1'. :';: 1 strut KiL wo lninpil, t.tnl If -ti im' a ri'.i.i.i:i' ri-ri'. I v.-otit Itito n c. !" ml lin linr. I wi.h rtu: k'l to try 11 ,i SarMii arn-i. nr .1 wh'-ri I hl tn'.wi fix totM-.'S my r.f'k v as h?nlrd. mi l I have nover ho't nny trouble of the kind since." Mm. K. T. Snvdi-.k, Troy, Ohio. Hocd'a Scrsoparilla and Pills will rid you of it, radically and per manently, as they have rid thousands. THANKSGIVING. The President's Proclamation- President Roosevelt issued the fol lowing proclamation on November 2. A PROCLAMATION. The season is mgh when, according to the time-hallowed custom of our people, the President appoints a day as the especial occasion for praise and thanksgiving to God. This Thanksgiving finds the people still bowed with sorrow for tne death of a great and good President. We mourn President McKinley because we so loved and honored him; and the manner of hisdeath should awaken in the breasts ol our people a kten anxiety for the country, and at tiie same time a resolute purpose not to be driven by any calamity from the path of strong, ordeily, popular liberty which as a Nation we have thus far safely trod. Yet in spite of this great disaster, it is nevertheless true that no people on earth have such abundant cauie for thanksgiving as we have. The past year in particular has been one ol peace and p!en'y. We have prosper ed in things material and nave been able to work fur our own uplifting in things intellectual and spiritual. Let us remember tha, as much has been given us, much wi.l be expected from um and that true homage comes from the heatt as well as from the lips and shows itself in deeds. We can best prove our thankfulness to the Almighty by the way in which on this earth and at this time each of us does his duty to his lellowmen. Now, therefore, I, Theodore Roose velt, President of the United States, do hereby designate as a day of gen eral tffanksgiving, Thursday, the 28th of this present November, and do recommend that throughout the land the people cease from their wonted occupations, and at their several homes and places of worship reverently thank the Giver of all good for the count less blessings of our national life. In witness whereof I have hereunto set my hand and caused the seal of the United States to be affixed. Done '.t the city of Washington, this second day of November, in the year of our Lord one thousand nine hundred and one and of the independ ence of the L'mted States the one hundred and twenty sixth. THEODORE ROOSEYELT. Bv the President, JOHN HAY, Secretary of State. A curfew law is among the proba bilities for Plymouth, according to the Wilkes-Baire Record. Inside of a few weeks the people of Plymouth will be experiencing the greatest re formation ever in its history and one that will be looked upon with interest by the people of the county, if not the State. At a meeting ot the council held recently a resolution calling on the borough attorney to prepare a rigid curlew law was unanimously passed. For a curfew law it is un usually strong on account of the ad vanced age which is set for children to be off the street. The ordinance i will also cover the dance hall nuis ance and, :n all, the Plymouth borough fathers expect to turn the town into the most moral municipality in the county. The pastors and press of both the town and county are called upon to indorse the first curfew law ever "tried in Luzerne county. The resolution that was passed is as fol lows: " Resolved, That the borough attorney draw up an ordinance and submit the same at the next meeting of council, requiring all children under the age of 1 6 years to be off the public streets when the fire gong blows nine taps, which will be at nine o'clock each evening, and that all children under the age of iS years be off the streets ot Plymouth borough at 10 o'clock, unless accompanied by a mem berof his or her family over 21 years of age. Also an ordinance prescnb inn a minimum age of attendants at public balls or dances. Second The hour at which balls or dances shall close. Third Requiring a license for the privilege of holding the same, witn name of hall and managers in which same is to be held. Tourth Re quiring the attendance of a police officer to be detailed ty the chief of police and such other requirements will in the judgment of the borough attorney be necessary to prevent the evils now resulting from public balls and children running the streets at a'. I hours of night TOWNSEND'S AUTUMN STY I I N OnrrrlUI lMl.bv CSOVsJt a BkASBIOU. Faskiofnable M p 1 1 We have the newest shades, the newest styles in Suits, and Overcoats, for men, boys and cbildren. Call and examine the New Fall Stock at TOWNSEND'S. BP 1 i 32 Always on There is nothing that pays better in this business S than eternal watchfulness. It pays us, and in paying us it is bound to pay you. Never a season known when S the buying chances were better, caused chiefly by jC weather conditions. Makers and makers' agents are C most anxious to sell. We're on the lookout for the best, C where we can buy it cheapest. Then we pass it along to vou at a reasonable pront for the handling. jg Special Lets cf Dress Gccis. We put on sale, this week, a lot of all wool Cheviots, 50 ins. wide, all the good selling colors, and from one of the best mills 3g in this country. Price, 50 Z2 cents a yard, worth 85 cts. 3r A lot of odd pieces of Dress Goods, worth 50c. Price, this week, 29c. i3 A lot of odd pieces of all wool imported Dress Goods, & worth $1 00. Price, this week, 49c. :3b Flannelette, far Wrappers. Sri With the first real cold 3c snaD of winter you'll need anew wrapper. V hy not anticipate and buy at this low price, 10c. Flannel 2 ette, at rjc. Flannelette Night Kcbes. J5r! Good, warm winter wear this, and costing no more 2 than the ordinary cotton 3? lots. ?$i Night shirts, for men, at 5oc- J5 Robes, for ladies, made 2fc full, at 75c. i Robes, for ladies, nicely trimmed, 1 00. Night shirts, for men, made as well as you would make them at home, at 75c and $1 00. Ladies' and Hisses' C:ats. Coat selling has been good so far this season. 22R 3? a? a; a? F. P. Notice- The annual meeting of the stock holders of the Bloomsburg Land Im provement Company will be held at the office of the company on Monday. November 25, 1901, at two o'clock in the afternoon, for the purpose of the election of a Board of Directors and Officers. N. U. Funk, 11-7-3W. Secretary. For books, of all kinds, go to Mercer's Drug & Book Sttre. Fall Clothes You will be forced to admit that our double breast ed sack suits are just a little smarter, just a little newer, and just a little better as to crooks and turns of good tailoring than even before; this is the handsomest one you ever saw, and this label in every one. CROUSE ft ERANDEGEE Mammatlmrimf Tailtrt Utica, .Vn. Kr 1 AV Not too long, not too short but with that something about them that makes our clothing so satisfying to the hard-to-please chap. Same is said of our hats, our furnishings, they too look just like the sort that costs more. the Lookout. and we ,have some odd coats that must be closed ! out, and we think the way ; to get them- out is to cut ) the prices. Can't tell you I about all of them, but j come and we will show you. See our three-quarter i coat, made of all wool Kev- i sey, at $9 50. Infant's Wear. We are agents for "Ar nold" goods. You want your infant comfortable. If you pay our store a visit you can" pick from orr stock of "Arnold's" goods just what you want for your baby and its mother. If you can't come, send us your name and we'll send you a catalogue. Wrappers. We don't sell the cheap est wrappers made. Don't try to, but we do try and get a well made wrapper that we know will please a customer, and at the least price possible. Wrapper, made of Simp son print, 79c. Wrapper, made of good Flannelette, at 9SC. Flannelette Wrapper, trimmed, at $1 25. , Wrapper, made of Simp, son print, trimmed, at 9SC. PURSEL. NOTICE- - 1 PLOOMSBL'RG. BRASS WORK S BONDS. Holders of the outstanding bonds accompanying the mortgages on the Bloomsburg Brass and Topper Com pany's plant, at Bloomsburg, Pa., are hereby notified to present the same at the First National Bank, Bloomsburg. Pa., for payment. Bloomsburg Brass and Copper Co 10-ira t