THE COLUMBIAN. BLOOMSBURG, PA. Ciital $100,000 STRONGEST BANK First National Bank, UFKIAIOMSHUilG, !A, Make no mistake, but the Strongest Bank. OFFICERS: V. M. LOW, President, J. M. STAVER, Vice President. E. B. TUSTIN, Vice President. E. F. CARPENTER, Cashier. DIRECTORS: W. M. Low, E. B. Tusiin, J. M. Staver, , O. Yorks, Fred Ikcler, M. I. Low, THE COLUMBIAN. ESTABLISHED 1866. THE COLUMBIA DEMOCRAT, Established 1837. Consolidated 1869 Published Every Thursday Mokmnu, At Bloomsburg, the County Seat of Columbia County, Pennsylvania. GEO. E. ET.WELL, Editor. I). J. TASKER, Local J-.ditor. GEO. C. ROAN, Foreman. Tkkms: Insiilethe county 00 a year (n advance ; $1.50 if not paid in advance. O itside ihecounty, $1.25 a year, strictly in Advance. All communications should be addressed THE COLUMBIAN, EloomsburR, Ta. VITURSDAY. JULY 16. 190.1. Assessments For 1903. The total valuation of all taxable property in Columbia county is as follows: Real Estate.... ....$10,889,153.00 Occupation 981,635.00 Horses.. 267,410.00 Cows 89,429.00 Total valuation, $12,225,627.00 On this the county tax of 4 mills amounts $48,902.52. Money at interest.. 1,587,06600 Hacks 3,630.00 On these two items the state tax at 4 mills is $ 6.382.S6 The dog tax is 1,504.50 The total of county, state, and .iog tax for 1 903 is.$ 56,789.88 The valuation and assessments "or Bloomsburg are as follows: Real estate $ 2.128.501.00 Occupation 214.190.00 17,085.00 1,640.00 2,361,316.00 9.445"-26 Horses Cows Aggregate County tax Money at interest... State tax Dog tax 356,483.00 I.43I-43 I39-.50 increases over Inere are some 1902. Real estate is assessed $3, 512.08 more than last year, and the aggtegate is increased $473,710. borne very careful and accurate work has been done by clerk J. W Hidlay in making up the assess ment table, there being a difference of only 12 mills between the aggre gate amount of county tax, and the aggregate of the ludividual taxes in each township. Mr. Hidlay is reliable man and well' fitted tor the position he is filling so acceptably tiis cnoice Dy the commissioners was a wise one. CRUELTY TO ANIMALS- Since the death of J. I,. Girton there has been no one in the town who is specially authorised to pro tect dumb animals from cruelty. Mr. Girton was an officer of the so ciety for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, but no successor has been appointed. There are occas lonal exhibitions of abuse. Not long since a man drove a horse from Danville to Bloomsburg in 3S min utes, on a wager. When the Ex change Hotel was reached the horse was ready to drop, and it was a clear case of cruelty, but no one wanted to appear as prosecutor, though many bystanders were loud in the'r denunciation of the driver. Some one interested in horses ought to be willing t accept the appoint ment as agent for the Society. We believe there are some fees attached to the position. , m . Huckleberries were very plentiful in market this morning and sold readily at ten cents a quart. There was also a large and very nice variety of vegetables. One man had a lot of frogs for sale, but the demand was so great that he dis posed of all of them in less than fifteen minutes. They brought $1.50 a dozen. Millville's new school room will be furnished by the local branch of the Americau School Furnishing Co. The order for forty desks was secured by Hon. M. J. Phillips, the company's agent. Siirplm ifnij.ooo deposit your savings in I'rank ikelcr, Geo. S. Kohbins, Louis Gross, J. II. Vtine C. Creasy, II. V. Hower, SUPERINTENDENT EVANS County Superintendent W. W. Evans has finished the first year of his administration with much credit to himself, and with great benefi to the schools. He has high ideals, and he has labored constantly to re alize them. One of the most im portant and beneficial of his innova tions has been the publishing of the Columbia County School Journal, a monthly magazine issued from Sep tember to May. This has offered a medium by which he has brought the directors, teachers and pupils closer together, aud has enabled him to get hiuisclt in closer touch with all the schools. At first, there was some little resentment manifested at what was considered a too strict surveillance on the part of the sup erintendent. Some directors were not pleased with the prcspect of having made public the fact that they had not made a single visit during the year, to the schools of their district, aud were slow to ac cept any advice or suggestions from a young man so new to the office. But Mr. Evans' evident determina tion to perform all his duties fear lessly now commands respect, and he is receiving hearty cooperation in quarters where he at first found most opposition to his plans, and it is now generally acknowledged that the affairs of the public schools have never beeu better administered than they are now. The continuance of the School Journal, we understand, has not yet been decided upon. The Sup erintendent gave much valuable time and labor to the preparation of the Journal each month, and at the end of the year he found himself several hundred dollars out of pock et. That it accomplished much good is admitted, but it is not fair to ask him to continue its publica tion at his own expense. The sub scnption price is only fifty cents a year, and there ought to be enough friends of the public schools who are willing to pay this small sum, to put it on a basis where it will at least pay for itself. It's publication was a great stride forward, and its discontinuance would be a back sliding. Some scheme ought to be devised to maintain it, so that the good work that it has already done may continue and increase. U ay Fever Season Here- The hay fever season, so distress ing to victims, is here in all its terrors and the unfortunates afflict ed with the malidy will have a dis tressing reige of it. Its duration is from five to six weeks and some times longer. Many of the victims hie themselves off to some cold climate, where they remain until the departure of the season for the disease. A cold climate is the most effective balm for the disease. There are some oeoole who always see a trace of the devil in the most innocent of pigrams. ong About a year ago my hair was coming out very fast, so I bought a bottle of Ayer's Hair Vigor. It stopped the falling and made my hair grow very rapidly, until now it is 45 inches in length." Mrs. A. Boydston, Atchison, Kans. There's another hunger than that of the stomach. Hair hunger, for instance. Hungry hair needs food, needs hair vigor Ayer's. This is why we say that Ayer's Hair Vigor always restores color, and makes the hair grow long and heavy. $.00 s sotlle. All druzrlsli. If VOIir drill'friMt fnnnr.. ......il. sonU ua one dollar anil we will exiiri-ns ym a hottle. Ho tur anil plve the name of your nearest expri-ns olhre. Address, J. C A 1 f.U CO.. Lowall. Mail. IN THECOUNTY Spring Medicine There is no other season when good medicine it so much needed as In the Spring. Tho blood Is Impure, weak an impoverished a condition indicated by pimples and other eruptions on the face and body, by deficient vitality loss of appetite, lack of strength, and want of animation. Hood's Sarsaparilla and Pills , Make the blood pure, vigorous and rich, create appetite, give vitality strength and animation, ana cure all eruptions. Have the wholo family begin to take them today. "Hood's Sarsaparilla has been used In our family (or soma time, and always with good rasnlts. Last sprint I was all ran down and got a bottle of It, and as asual recelred great benefit." Miss Bichh Bores, Stows, Vt. , Hood's areaparllla promises) to ure and kssps the promise. PK0FLIOA0Y IN WASHINGTON- 1 he scandals in the post office department, in the war department 111 the fiscal service of the muuicipa government and 111 the police de partment in Washington are the prolific sources of gosip in the na tional capital. Every department appears to be honeycombed with crime of one character or another and the heads are apparently power less to either regulate or check the trouble. The government is de moralized, as a matter of fact, and no man can predict the outcome of the investigations already in pro gress and those yet to be instituted Still Republican state conventions in various sections are "pointing with pride" to the record of the party. The Pennsylvania conven Hon which met a week or so before the postal revelations bcean declar ing wit U Pharisaical satisfaction that in half a century the public had lost nothing in defalcation or delin quency ot the party. The facts show that ever since Senator Hanna ana nis lrienas have broken into the places of authority there has been a saturnalia ot corruption and a carnival 01 crime in Washington 11 uas louim louement in everv t. 1 r j , , . . place. The maladministration, rnisap propnation and profligacy of the government by the Republican par ty have cost the people more since the civil war than the successful prosecution of that most expensive 01 an wars, ancient or modern, cost. c 1 : . ... .. ' nuiu ueginning 10 ena. it tne re dundant revenues and the taxes in ciaent to the protective system which never reached the treasury are considered, the people have paid as much as the present valu ation of all kinds ot prperty over and above the legitimate expenses 01 me government. Upset by the Gale. TT nciiry ureaoenner was among mose wno experienced some of the torce ot the storm last Saturday He had been to Bloomsburg attend ing market with a load of truck, ana Having disposed of his goods was on uis way to his home in Main township. His fourteen years old son John was with him. When they reached a point near Burt Bankes in that township, on the river road, the wind cautrht the covered truck wagon and turned it over into the gutter which was full of water. The horse was thrown down, but regained its feet and went down off the other side of the road with the wagon. Coming to a stream which it could not cross it came back up to the road and went home. The top of the wacon was broken, but no other damage done. When thrown in the gutter the boy was under the crates, and Mr. Bredbenner had to let the horse- py as he was busy rescuing his son from under the boxes, otherwise the boy might have drowned. They started home through the storm, but before they reached there, thev were met by Mrs. Bredbenner and a neighbor, Mr. Goodman. The wife was naturally very much al armed when the horse came home alone with the wagon broken, and had started out to meet them. Mr. uredbenner's head was cut and bis leg bruised, but not seriously. He was in town 011 Tuesday standing in market as usual. Clerks Will Pionio- Gerald Gross, Elmer McBride, Edward Leighow and Charles Sterl ing the committee, named by the Clerks Association to select a place for holding the annual picnic, has decided on Fairchild's Grove. The picnic will be held the first week in August. The clerks never spare any pains to make their picnic an enjoyable one, as those who attend ed last year's outing can attest. More particulars will be given later. Mid Summer Sale of PER CENT. REDUCTION ON ALL .sr THE LIBRARY. The Directors well Pleased with the First Month's Work There was a unanimous expression of satisfaction on the part of the di rectors of the Bloomsburg Public Li brary at the amount of work done by the library during the month just end ed at the meeting held Tuesday even ing. The meeting was attended by- all the directors but two and a lively interest was manifested. In regard to the matter ot maintainance it was decided to allow those who have filled out support slips to exercise their own prerogative as to the manner or time of payment, that is they can pay it all pt once or at any time within three or six morins. 1 nere nas been a very liberal ami altogether gratifying re sponse from the slips but still more is needed to place the library upon the desired self sustaining basis. The report of the first month's work prepared by the librarian Miss Rr n- ninger and assistant Mrs. Worthing ton and submitted was a most pleasing that the people are to the directors, one, and showed appreciating the library. A program and course of study are now under consideration which will have for their aim systematic and pur pose reading. To all those vho spoke at the opening held in the Court House a vote of thanks was extended, and it was ordered that a letter of thanks be sent to each one of them. The library is here to stay, and with the proper support and co-opera tion on the part of the citizens, there is no height in usefulness and good to which it cannot attain. The library is one of which the town can well feel proud. Teachers Elected The schools of Center township will be presided over the coming fall and winter by the following teachers who were elected Saturday afternoon : Willow Springs school. Laura M. Redeker, of Bloomsburg; Lime Ridge Primary, Elizabeth Smith, of Lime Ridge; Campbell, li. B. Aikman, of Lime Ridge ; Miller school, Dorothy L. Kiefer, of Lime Ridge; Whitmire Primary, G. W. Henrie, of Orangeville: Whitmire Grammar, Rolandus Kocher, of Fowlersville; Fester school, Irene Hortman, of Fowlers ville; Grange school, Geo. Ruckle, of Centre; Hidlay school, Frank Harris, of Centre; Lime Ridge Grammar school not elected, male teacher wanted. Good Will Festival. Good Will Fire Co. No. 4. will hold their annual festival at their hose house coruer of Main and West streets on Jnly 31 and August A. B. Naylor is chairman of the committee of arrangements. The Good Will has nearly fifty members all active men and good citizens, and they deserve a liberal patronage. They have purchased their own apparatus and are always ready to end a helping hand in timeot need. Money spent with them is well in vested. Berwick will hold a special elec tion on Tuesday, 21st instant, on the question of increasing the borough's indebtedness. They want to spend f 60,000, for sewers and other needed improvements. CASTOR I A for Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature TOWNSEND'S 031iQTSII3Sr3- FOR 2 "WZBZEIKZS A.T TOWSMSEW D'S. EXTRAORDINARY SALE OF MUSLINS FOR ONE WEEK. In the face of the heavy advance in the price of cotton we are oiTerirjg you in this sale muslins that we could not duplicate at the prices we are selling them to you. Don't confuse these muslins with the usual one3 offer ed at euch sales. We did not buy CHEAP MUSLINS to sell at this time. They are all STANDARD makes and the kind we sell the year round, and this store is noted for the good quality of the muslin it sells. We stake our reputation on our Annual Muslin Sale. You cannot afford to mis3 it. A good bleached muslin worth 7c. the yard, 10 yards 50c. A good weighty bleached muslin with no starch, worth 8c. the yard, 10 yards G5c. A good, fine bleached muslin, same grade as Hill's, the kiud you use for making underwear, 10 yards 75c. It always comes handy in the house we mean calico. Best, indigo blue during this sale, 10 yarda 49c. Extra good quality counterpanes, full size, hemmed, ready to use. Real value, ! $1.50. Sale price, $1.19. I Friday's atmospheric experience has convinced us that of all summer discomforts excessive humidity is the worst. From different sections of the country comes reports of in tense heat and numerous deaths and prostrations. At Harman & Has serfs in the afternoon the ther mometer registered 115 and at many other places it wasequally as warm. It is difficult to enjoy even driving in such weather as that of Friday. Even at the watering places, the papers say, people stewed and steamed and simmered in the at mosphere of a Turkish bath. The writer feels like apologizing for these remarks upon the hackneyed subject ot the weather. However, the weather has been the foremost topic of conversation, hence this dis quisition upon it. A new Presbyterian church will be erected in Benton soon, a lot next to the Argus office which was willed by Mrs. Rohr McIIenry for that purpose. The building will be a frame, 56 by 72 feet. Dr. Hem ingway has been holding occasional services in Benton for some time past. Clothing Unbleached muslin, fine and soft.worth 0c. the yard, 10 yards 45c. Good, fine unbleached muslin, the threads are fine and round, worth. 7c, 10 yards 50c Unbleached muslin, fine and heavy, about the same quality as Appleton A., worth 8c. the yard, 10 yards COc. Best quality of un bleached muslin, worth 9c. the yard, 10 yards 68c. F. P. PURSEL. We overheard a lady say she wouldn't go to a certain church pic nic because the people were too un sociable. There is some merit in that claim too. At a church picnic everybody should enter into the spirit of the occasion and make an effort to have everybody enjoy themselves. Unfortunately there are always some people who hug their exclusiveness too close to their hearts. Preachers should tell their people from the pulpit to extend a welcome to outsiders and thereby encourage the spirit of sociability, and Sunday school teachers should warn their scholars of the hallow ness of a life based on selfishness. Be sociable at your church picnics and you will have bigger crowds and a better time. A handsome display of busts in the windows of Alexauder Bros. & Co., attracts much attention. The collection includes heads of Indians, Egyptians and Orientals of various kinds. They are of plaster, and are brightly and artistically colored. They make very handsome orna ments at reasonable prices,