THE COLUMBIAN, BLOOMSBURQ, PA. THE COLUMBIAN. BLOOMSBURG, PA. J. S. Williams & Son, BLOOMSBURG PA Public Sale Criers and General Auctioneers. Itr Fifteen yearn experience. Batlnfaet.lon oarantoert. Bent return of any sale criers In his section of the State. Write for terms and dtes. We never disappoint our patrons. Charles Harder ot Catawissa and Miss Laura Farley of Danville joined hands at Catawissa last even ing. Rev. U. Myers, performed the ceremony. J. E. Hunting was thrown from a Bloomsburg & Sullivan R. R. lo comotive on Sunday and was quke painfully injured on his arm and face. The accident occurred at the water tank while he was drawing wa.er, and was caused by the en gine being started before he had the feed pipe disconnected. The Carpet Mill ball team was defeated three times last week. Twice at Mt. Canuel on the Fourth and again at Sunbury on Saturday. The scores were 13-5, 9"8 and 4-2. "Wandering Willie Setley" pitch ed the second game for Mt. Carmel and the boys touched him up for 10 hits. This was a ten inning con test. Danny Brewer, colored, was taken to the asylum at Danville on Tuesday by Constable Miles Betz. He had been confined in the jail for some time past, but became so violent that it was necessary to remove him to the Asylum. Exces sive rum drinking appears to be the cause of his mental derange ment. The young men of Kspy had quite an elaborate display of fire works on the river front Friday night. A contribution was taken up early in the evening, with which a supply of sky rockets, Roman candles and flower pots were pur chased, and about eight thirty they were set off, to the delight of the populace. . The Catawissa Car Shops will start work on Monday. Several good orders have been booked, and the Company anticipates a pros perous future. The plant will be operated with soft coal, a large supply of which has been pur chased. The working force will be limited for a week or two, after which it will be increased and every department run to its fullest capacity. Owing to the rainy weather in this section. The farmers have considerable trouble in harvesting their wheat. In the low lands it is almost impossible to use a binder to cut off the grain as the ground is so soft from the coutiuued rains. Where the wheat has been cut and shocked for a few days it has begun to grow. - F. P. Billmeyer and A. J. Will iams, executors of Peter Billmeyer, deceased, will sell on the premises in Liberty township, Montour county on Friday July 25th at two o'clock in the afternoon, real estate consisting of a farm of 130 acres, improved with a large frame dwell ing house, bank barn and other outbuildings. Robbers opened the safe iu Daniel Knittle's office at Catawissa Friday night, and enriched themselves to the extent of about $40. They secured the booty without the use of any explosives, and opened the safe by finding the combination. The door of the safe was open when Squire Knittle went to the office Saturday morning. - - In noting the explosion at Joseph Schain's store at Berwick last week we neglected to mention the fact that Jerry Kuukle was severely in jured. He and a clerk were engag ed repairing the acetylene gas gen erator when the explosion occurred, and he was carried a distance often feet. His injuries are, a badly burned face and arm. The clerk also sustained a few burns. At the Fourth of July celebra tion at Pittsburg Judge Penny packer and Robt. E. Pattison rode side by side in the same carriage. An exchange says it was an un lsual sight but not one that any Reoublican or Democrat will criti cize. They divided the cheers of :he multitude, and neither will -eceive a vote more or less next November on account of this. There is a dance for almost every week in Catawissa. Tuesday night's menl was a diversion, gotten up by in exclusive few who do not wish to mix with the hoi polloi, wiio us ually attend the open to all dances, rhp occasion was an invitation at- air attended bv the smartest of :bf.'voiinr neoole from Bloomsburg, Catawissa and one or two other owns. Music was furnished by HAVOC WIDESPREAD Loss by Flood Unprecedented In Western New York. WATER HIGHER THAN EVER BEFORE. Many Vlllaxra DnMinvoil and Crops Itnlnrtl Staple nml Knrm Hnlld lnita Swept Avn l)rllp Wrecked ! the Score, KOCIIESTEH. N. Y.. July 8. News from tlus Hood uVviiHtntod districts in tlilM Ht'ction of tlu state arc coming In slowly. Iloports from Medina lmve been received which show that the cloiidlmrst did thousands of dollars damage. From Cliurchvllle come reports that Muck creek is the highest ever known, even In spring freshets; Is out of its channel and causing great damage to growing crops along Its lianlis. Hun dreds of acres of peas, corn, lienns and potatoes, sugar beets and the other crops are under water and ruined. The dam at Byron Is reported broken, and the creek Is still rising at n great rate. Iloneoye reports six bridges. Includ ing an Iron structure on Mill creek, washed away and heavy damage to crops. The total fall of rain at that point Saturday was 2.K2 Inches. I.eroy reports that the water in Ont ka creek attained the highest point In years, but crops escaped much dam age. lVnn Ynn says that many thousands of dollars damage has been done to residences nlong the course of the creek flowing through llanimondsport, and cattle were rescued from Hooded pasture land with great dilliculty. Mount Morris reports the (lenesee at that point easily two feet higher than the best previous record at any time of the year. It broke through its banks east of the village and has ruined thou sands of dollars' worth of crops on the fertile flats below here. Many fine farms have been entirely ruined by the swift current washing them Into dee) gorges and carrying away the soil. Hams have been washed away and cattle drowned. The loss to farm ers Is extremely heavy. At Williamson lightning struck the residence of I'liul Van I'ruyiilngham, and the baseboard of n bedstead In which his two daughters were sleeping was demolished.. Neither of the occu pants of the bed was seriously Injured. Isaac Van Pee Roegh's evaporator was struck by lightning and demolished. Undoubtedly other damage was done tn this section which as yet has not been reported. West. Rush reports great damage from the cloudburst. The (ienesee riv er and Iloneoye crock are out of their banks, and the entire valley Is under water. The crops of the lowlands are n total loss. Nunda reports the greatest flood In the history of that section. The state footbridge over KIshiquii creek has been washed away, and the town is in darkness. Largo fields of growing crops have been washed away, ground and all. Daltou has also suffered great ly. Tortageville, I'iko, I.amont, Hose berg, Fillmore and many other towns have been under water since Sunday morning. The tracks of the Pennsylvania are washed away, and n new roadbed will have to be laid at many places before trains can be moved. l'ike reports the loss of a large iron bridge, the postotlice building. Towers' store and opera house, a meat market, cheese factory, drug store, two dwell ing houses and the village warehouse. At I.amout the milldam has gone out, wushlng away a bridge. Large num bers of dead cattle were seen flouting down the river during the day. Mlddlcport reports all dams swept away In Johnson's creek, with damage of hundreds of thousands of dollars, and all business Is at a standstill. The crop damage Is also considerable. Five bridges in the town are gone. 31 oh link Valley Vnder Water, UTICA, N. Y July 8.-The Mohawk river has risen above Its banks from Koine eastward, and water now covers thousands of acres of heavy grass ready to harvest and all the bottom lands devoted to mixed fanning. In some places in the Mohawk valley fanners have lost nearly all the crops of this year. They will be covered with dirt and del iris and thus spoiled. Jennie Morrlnon Sentenced. EL DOUAIK), Kan., July 0.-.Tess!e Morrison, convicted June 2M of murder in the second degree for killing Mrs. Olln Castle at the hitter's home here in June, 11MKI, by cutting her throat with a razor, has been sentenced to twenty-five years In the penitentiary. A motion for a new trial wns over ruled. Miss Morrison, who has gone through three trials, took the sentence with little show of demonstration. The case will be appealed. Cinld lleeln Lowers Worlil'a lleeord. NFW YOKK. July 7. On a track that was lightning fast and before a crowd of 2.",KH persons F. t McLe wee & Co.'s Suburban winner, Gold Heels, favorite in the betting at III to 10, galloped home an easy winner in the Krlghton handicap at the lirlgh ton Bench race track. He not only lowered Jack Points' record of 2:1)4 3-5, made In l!)iK, but established a new world's record for a circular track. The time was li:0:i 4-5. Tlt" Wliu AuiiIii. LONDON, July O. S. Titus of the T'nlon Bout club, New York, who won his preliminary heat with Louis Sclioles nf Toronto In the IHamond Sculls, yes terday beat W. J. Fields of Exeter, Oxford, easily by three lengths; time. Din. I"s. The betting Is now even mon ey 011 Titus' chance of winning the tro- phy. THE PRESIDENT'S VACATION. Rooarvrlt'a Stay at Oynter Hay la For Heat and Iteerrntlnn. OYRTEH KAY, N. Y., July 7.-In dls cussing the president's stay at Oyster Kay Secretary Oortelyou today said that there seemed to be considerable misapprehension as to some features of it. He stated that there would be no elaborate office established and that the only clerical force maintained would consist of two stenographers. Arrangements have about been con cluded for the tise of two rooms in the bank building for olliee purposes, and It will be there that the president will transact most of his business when be comes into town. Roth the president and his secretary have planned to make their brief holi days ns restful as possible and to that end will transact In Oyster Kay only the most immediate public business. Everything rise will be transmitted to Washington for attention there, eilher by the regular White House force or, In eases where other action Is required, by the various departments. The people "of Oyster Kay seem to resent the presence of secret service men, as they believe that the president is perfectly safe from bodily harm. The strictest surveillance is main tained, however, despite these protestations. Trealilrnl at rittalinrar. PITTSBURG, July 5.-Half n mil lion persons greeted President Theo dore Koosevclt in Pittsburg yesterday. They came not only from Pittsburg and Allegheny, but from the scores of industrial towns within J(K miles of the city. It was the distinguished guest's first visit to Pittsburg ns presi dent, and his welcome was uiost en thusiastic. From the Union station to the speakers' stand In Schenley park, nearly four miles nwny, it was one continuous cheer. A WEDDING AT LENOX. Slnnne-rie Id Niilliil of Keitnl Mng nltteenre, LENOX, Mass., July ft. In pictur esque Trinity Episcopal church, sur rounded with lavish floral decorations and under sunny skies, Miss Leila Yanderbilt Slo.mc, third daughter of Mr. and Mri. William Iiouglas Sloane of New Y rk and Lenox, and Mr. William Kradhurst Osgood Field ot New York were married here yester day. The assembly of guests, the acoouter meuts of the ceremony, the value of the wedding gifts and the wealth and social prominence of all interested par ties made the event the most magnifi cent of its kind that ever took place In the Kerkshire country. More than 2(10 guests, Including representatives of the most wealthy New York families, were present. The church was most elab orately decorated. Kev. Dr. David II. Oreer of St. Bnr tholomew's church, New Y'ork, offici ated, assisted by Kev. Harold Arrow smith, rector of Trinity church. Pone'a Jubilee Kept. ROME, July 7. All the members of the American college at Kome, includ ing Kev. Dr. Thomas Kennedy, rector of the college, and Fathers McCnte, McCourt and Mullln of Philadelphia, were present last evening at the fetes held at the Vatican In celebration of the pope's Jubilee In honor of the twenty-fourth anniversary of his corona tion. t'hmnlierlnln Hurt. LONDON, July 8.-WI1II0 Colonial Secretary Chamberlain was driving in u hansom along Whitehall yesterday the vehicle collided with a post at the foot of the Canadian coronation arch. Mr. Chambevlain was thrown forward, and his forehead was knocked against a window of the cab. The window was shattered. FINANCIAL AND COMMERCIAL. rioaiiinr Stock Qnotatlona. Money on call firm at 4 per cent. Prime mercantile paper, iViio per cent. Sterling exchange barely steudy, with ac tual business in bankers' bills ut $4.87 4.88 (or demand and nt J4.Rrfi4.nr for 60 days. Pouted rutes. 4.8fi4.K6V4 and $4.88 (fii.SH. Commercial bills, 4.84-V4.85. Bar silver, !i2c. Mexlcnn dollars, 42c. Gov ernment bonds steady. State bonds In active. Railroad bonds irregular. Closing prices: Atchison 8974 C.,C.,C.,& St. L.10,-,',4 Chen. & Ohio... 4:14 People's Goh....101 Del. & lluiiHon.lTC Krle 3i7f, Lead 21 ' Louis. & Nash. .141 Maiihattnn Con 1.12 Ontario & "West. S2 Pacific Mall .... 41V4 Reading 6ti Rock Island ,...1M St. Paul 17734 Sugar Uellnery.,128 Texas Paclflo .. 4374 T'nlon Pacific ..l(l Wabash pref. .. Hi West. Union .... 874 Missouri l'ac....lluv N. Y. Central...ir,ii;i Slew York Murketa. FLOT'R Pull, but steady; Minnesota patents, Mf4.1:; winter straights, $X7.VJ 4.10; winter extras, W.7M(3.si; winter pat ents t4ti4.lt). WlllOAT Quiet and easy because of liquidation and more favorable eiop Mews; September, 7JiVci7x7ic. ; December, 7nVu 'i!H-.c. HVE Sternly; state, RSTHUc; c. 1. f., New York, car lots; No. 2 western, 6uVjc, f. o. b., alloat. CHUN Opened firm with the west, then eased off with wheat; September, 6t',viii tije, OATS Pull and weaker owing to liqui dation; truck, white, Htuto, &7rulyc. ; track, white, western, 67f tKlc. POUK Firm; mess, UI.2.-ii20; family, "LARD Firm. Hl'TTKR Firm ; mate dulry, 17Vifi20V4c; creamery, ls'i.ii ai MrO. C11KICS1C Irregular; new, state, full cream, small, colored, fancy, lU'il0i:ie. ; small, white, l(VtiH)c. : bil ge, colored, UVi 4'M,o.; large, white, 9.,ti tie. Sl'tiAH Raw Htea.ly; fair refining, 2 13-ltic. ; centrifugal, H6 test, 3 D-ltle. ; re fined steady; crushed, D. lie; powdered, Tl'RPKNTINK Pull at 47r 47e. Rli'fci Firm; domeatlc, 4Vi,uii'o. ; Japan, TAI j.OW Firm; city, 6c; country, evmi'io. HAY Steady; shipping, (iiHiO.'.c. ; good to choice, 90fi 5c. Live Stock Market. CATTI.K Steady; choice, $7:15fi7.r.O; prime, t6.7Wii7.15; good, tiifiO.SU; veui calves, S70i7.uU. IK HIS Active; cholco heavy, tS4j8.10; mediums, $7.M)((7.W: heavy Yorkers, $7.7a i7.M); light do.. 7.70(.7.70; pliis, 7.7Uti7.7B; roughs, jifri7.rifl. BHKKI' AND I.AMHS Slow; best weth ers, 'l; culls mid cuininon, tl.Wu'i; choice lambs, JUiii.fiO. THE STATE kT A GLAN0E- " Trol." Kretz, of Reading, spent twenty-four hours hypnotized in a grave, and was dug up smiling, to the disgust of a mob of sightseers looking for excitement. A sad home coming was that of John Moyer, ofShamokin, who re turned from three years service in the Philippines to learn forthe first time that his father had died two yeats ago. While a Northern Central freight train was leaving Sunbury for Mt. Carmel Monday, Teter Rockefeller fell from the rear end. His head struck against a sill and was crushed so badly that he will die. By the premature explosion of a large cannon Murray H elder, of Selinsgrove, a ten-year-old boy, was fearfully burned Friday about his face and one of his eyes was ruined. Monday afternoon Edward Le kicker, aged twenty, ol Lewisburg, and John Gingrich, aged twenty-one, ot Lebanon, both carpenters, fell from the roof of the new St. Peter's Catho lic church, a distance of forty feet, and both were instantly killed. After a spirited debate Monday night the Shamokin School Board resolved to abolish corporal punish ment. Professor Joseph Howerth, Superintendent ot Public Schools, Sh'd that punishment made boys vicious and ugly and that teachers could reach students better through the heart. During a thunder storm on Mon day lightning played a peculiar prank on the farm of Walter Earnhart, at Liberty Square. Five cows, a bull and a heifer were inclosed in a field in which there were no trees. The cattle were widely separated but were all instantly killed by one bolt of lightning. Rev. A. W. Lilly, D. I)., a re tired Lutheran Minister, died Mon day at his home in Mechanicsburg, Pa. He was born at Turbotville, Northumberland county, December 3, 1822. In 1855 he accepted the call to Zion's Lutheran Church, of York, Pa., where he remained for forty-four years, retiring to Mechan icsburg a few years ago. Eagles Mere Excursion Thursday July 31st To accommodate persons desiring to visit the beautiful " Lake of the Eagles " for a day at a moderate cost, the Philadelphia & Reading Railway will run special trains Thursday July 31st as follows: Leave Bloomsburg 6.30 a. M., Leave Catawissa 6.30 A. m., Leave Rupert 6.40 a. m , Leave Danville 6.57 a. m., and ar rive at Eagles Mere 10.00 a. m. Returning leave Eagles Mere 6.30 p. m. stopping at above named points. Tickets will be sold at special rates cf $1.50 for the round trip, good that day only on special train in each direction as noted above. Sale of tickets will be limited to seven hundred, for which number ample accommodations will be pro vided. 2t. Tbe Winona Fire Company boys inteud making their appearance a feature of the centennial parade. At a meeting held Tuesday evening great enthusiasm in the matter was displayed. Inasmuch as the com pany is without uuiforms and the condition of the treasury at the time will not warrant a purchase, it was decided to rent uniforms for the occasion from a costume house in Philadelphia. They will be of colonial style, with the typical white long hair wig and complete in every way. With forty men fitted out in this manner, headed by the j ustly celebrated Catawissa Military Band, they are certain to make a beautilul showing. S. H. Harman, G. Ed. Lewis and Will iam Mortis are the committee on uniforms. Frank Shaffer pitched the after noon game of ball on the Fourth for Steelton. Steelton lost the game 7 to 1, but it was not due to Frank's pitching, his work was perfectly satisfactory. Dr. Aldinger played in both games. That he made a fa vorable impression is evident from the following paragraph which was included in the report of the games in the Philadelphia papers. "The afternoon game was replete with brilliant plays. Dr. Aldinger, phys ical director of the Bloomsburg Nor mal, played first base for the bteel- tou Y. M. C. A., and put up two great games." . . Expectorating on the sidewalk is an offensive habit that is prohibited by ordinance in most well-regulated tewns. The spirit of reform in this direction lias not struck Bloomsburg yet, though it is not because such action is not needed. The habit is not confined to the loafers who in fest the street corners. On Sunday evening a number of very nice young men sat on a front porch on Main street and cast their surplus saliva on the pavement to such an extent thai church goers on their way home almost had to swim to get through it. If blossoms are any criterion, chestnuts will be plentiful this fall. New Summer Goods Less Than Regular Prices. Parasols Have been selling at $4.50 and $5,00 each. A small lot only one of a kind, reduced to $3.39 each. 3.95 Parasols Reduced to 2.59 Another small lot of different kinds and col ors. Reduced just when wanted. The Old Liberty Bell. Ono ol the Dearest Mementos ol tho Early Days ol American Independence. The Louisiana Purchase Exposi tion management have determined to take if possible, the old "Liberty Bell" from Philadelphia to St. Louis lor ex hibition at the World's Fair in 1902. If the effort is successful it will be the first visit to the territory west of the Mississippi river of this sacred memento of early days of American indepen- dence- A psychic influence is in the pro phetic inscription of the bell "Pro claim Liberty throuchout all the land unto all the inhabitants thereof Leviticus XXV 10," cast on it a quart er of a century before it accomplished its epochal task of calling the colonies to the first public reading of the Dec laration of Independence, six score and six years ago. There is gratifica tion to the morbid and a sentimental hint at the mutability of things in the crack which has parted the sounding hp of Liberty Bell and silenced it for-, ever. Persons who do not know ask with surpassing interest how the bell came by the crack, and are disappoint ed to learn that it came, not in fire or battle, but from the impact of its own clapper on July 8, 1835, while tolling the luneral of John Marshall. It was cast in London in 1752, and it was cracked by a blow of its own clapper a month after it was hung in the state house at Philadelphia. Pass & Stow, Americans, recast it on the same model and with the same main inscription. The first recasting was unsatisfactory and it was re cast again. Contrary to the popular impression, the bell did not ring at Philadelphia on July 4, 1776 after the passage of the Declaration of Independence. Its service to American Independence was that it called the colonists to a public meeting at the state house on July 8. 1776, at which the Declaration of Independence was first proclaimed. If Liberty Bell goes to St. Louis It will be the sixth journey which the bell has taken. The bell's first journey was from Philadelphia to Allentown in 1777, to save it from falling into the hands of the British, when the Ameri cans evacuated Philadelphia. The other tour journeys of the bell have been to American expositions: To New Orleans, on the east bank of the Mississippi river, in 1885; to Chicago in 1893; to Atlanta in 1895; and to Charleston in 1901. For the meeting of the Young People's Chsistian Union Society of the Presbyterian church the Lackawanna Railroad will sell ex cursion tockets to Tacoma, Wash.; Portland, Ore.; Seattle, Wash.; Vancouver or Victoria, B. C. at the very low rate of $70.30 for the round trip. Tickets will be sold July 10th to 20th, inclusive, and will be good for continuous passage to the first Colorado, Wyoming, Montana or Assiuiboia point, west of which points stopovers will be allowed at pleasure up to Sept. 10. The final limit for return will be September 15th. t A certain gay young Lothario of Berwick, is said to have recently fled from his native heath,' to parts nnkuown, because he was guilty of committing the terrible crime of being found out. He must have some pride left, or he would have stayed at home and faced the music. Wash Dress Goods These goods we have bought at special prices and are all ot this sea son styles. 18c. Dimi ties and Swisses at 12 1-2 cents a yard. 25 Pieces Batiste 6J4c. yd. wide goods, new pat terns and all colors. Have been selling at 8 and 10c yd. This lot 6 I-2c. a yard. Centennial Envelopes, The Centennial envelopes are here and are in great Jemand. They ar rived on Monday and nearly half of them are sold already. The envelopes contain half tone cuts of the Town Hall, High School, Court House, and Normal School, representing the town, county and state. The words " Centennial Celebration of the found ing of Bloomsburg, Pa. August 2S and 29, 1902 " also appear. At the upper kit corner is a small space for a business card. This is an excellent way to advertise the celebration, and everybody who writes letters can helj the cause along by using them. They cost about the same as ordi nary envelopes. Any printing office or dealer who desires to handle theru can procure them at the Columbia; Okfice at the. wholesale price. They are now on sale at Bidleman's and J. W. Moyer's, where they can be bought by the pack or in smaller quantities. This office will not sell less than 250, and a small charge is made for printing the business card on the corner, if wanted. The pric without printing is $2 75 a thousand, $1.38 for 500, 70 cents for 250 Printed, $3. 50 a thousand, 1.80 for 50c, 1. 00 for 250. Get your order in now. 2t- Increase in Circulation. The large increase of circulation ol the local newspapers goes far to show that the intelligent farmer is waking up to the value of the local periodicals. The farmer can't af ford to be without one or two of the local papers. It is his paper which points out the condition of affairs in the business world. It is the paper that points out to him the swindlers that are coming to fleece him out of as much as possible. It is the newspaper that posts him in regard to the things which are of the great est importance to him financially. No farmer, no matter where he lives or what are his circumstances can afford to go without his local newspaper. And it is to his inter est to boom that paper in every way, for it is his friend and it's prosperity is his gain. Exchange. A Pitohfork Swindle- A gang of swindlers are reported to be victimizing the farmers of nearby counties with a scheme that it seems no sane person would entertain for a moment. The salesmen as they claim to be, approach a man with the prop osition that he shall become their agent for a patent pitch fork. He is presented with a sample for his good looks and signs an agreement to sell pitchforks to his neighbors. The agreement proves to be a judgment note and the poor man finds himself impaled on the "pitchfork that the oth er fellow was using. The slippery gentlemen have made some good hauls, their profits ranging from $7$ to $450 per fork. Give the peddlers the cold shake. They pay no taxes, and have no interest in your community. They are ten times more likely to cheat you than a merchant who is located and has a reputation to sustain. And again, merchants should take their own advice to heart, and buy at home, instead of sending out of town for everything they need that they do not happen to keep in their own shop. Schwarz's orchestra.