THE COLUMBIAN, BLOOMSBURG, PA STRONGEST BANK irto.ooo First National Bank, STATEMENT. At the Close of Business November 10th, 1904. RESOURCES, '.tins, f 312. 13294 S. Uonl, 50,1 00.00 1 her Honda, jK6,ia$.oo i'. ailing, . 27,100.00 e from Banks amlU. S. Trens. a4.159.71 . .-h anil Kesetve, 129.2S8.31 698,705.96 E. W. M. LOW, President, THE COLUMBIAN. ESTABLISHED tS6h. THE COLUMBIA DFMBCRAT, ESTMll.ISItKP IS37. CoNSOI.I DA I lil) 1869 runi.isiiK.il Kvkry Titi RsnAY Morning, At r.loomslmr, the County Scat of C'Urul'i;i County, Pennsylvania. CEO. E. ELWELL. Editor. D. J. TASKEK, Local Editor. CEO. C. LOAN, Eokuman. Tkums: Inside the county $1.00 a year fo advance; !j 1 . 50 i f not paid in a Kance. Outside the county, $1.25 a year, strictly in AJv.mce. All co nmunicitions should lc.iddresscd THE COLUMBIAN, Bloomslmrg, Ta. THURSDAY, MARCH a, 1905. Political Announcements. subject to the rules of the demo cratic party. Primary Election, Saturday June io. Convention Tuesday, June 13th. FOR REGISTER AND RECORDER, A. N. YOST of Bloomiburg. FOR COUNTY COMMISSIONER, ISAAC REICHART of Scott Township. UOR TROTIIONOTARY AND CLERK OF THE COURTS, C. M. TERWILUGER of Blooinsburg. FOR REGISTER AND RECORDER, J. C. RUTTER JR., of Bloomsburg. FOR DISTRICT ATTORNEY, CHRISTIAN A. SMALL of Blooinsburg. FOR COUNTY COMMISSIONER, ELISHA RINGROSE of Center Township. Subject to the rules ot the Republi can Party. Primary Election Saturday, April 75th. Convention, Monday, April 17th. A BEBUKE TO UN WILLIS Q JdfiORS. A number of Dauphin County men, who after having been drawn for jury service, sought to avoid their duty, were rebuked by Presi dent Judge Weiss in court at Harris burg Monday morning. Alter hear ing the numerous requests to be excused the Judge said: "there is not a semblance of a reason why any man should be excused The men are all suitable and yet unwill ing to serve. The reasons given don't rise to serious consideration." The Judge then said that every court men asked for release who don't want to serve and find lawyers who are willing to make motions to excuse them when there are 110 reasons at all. He ordered all jurors to hold themselves subject to call. It is just the same here. Rarely is there a court that men drawn do not seek to shirk their duty, and they nearly always succeed. Some time ago a juror was released from duty on the pretext that he was a valuable employee, and could not be spared by bis employer, but instead of going home where his services were alleged to be needed he re mained in town the greater portion of the week. Every man drawn as a juror whoeannot present a reason able excuse ''should be made to serve. XT . iew xoric is to nave a worls fair in 1909 in honor of the discdW cry 01 tne Hudson river. T Dutch Deole. fainilioc haoAnA an uncle ot President Roosevelt wj raise lorty million dollars for purpose. Options on 600 acres land have been secured. Surplus $125,000 LIABILITIES Onpitnl $100,000.00 Surplus and Trofits (net) 145,392.98 Circulation 49.300.CK l)eposit . 404,0198 $698,705.96 E. F. CARPENTER, Cashier. IIOOESAN FINAKG8- New $100,000 Endowment Fund. $34. 236.18 is Already Raised. The endowment fund committee of tie1. n;w Episcopal diocese of Harrisburg, of which James M Lamberton, of Harrisburg, is sec retary. has issued to the clergy aud laity a statement regarding the progress of t lie collection of the kind which it is hoped to bring up to $100,000. Thus far $17,464.70 has been pledged from forty parishes and missions. The diocese will receive from the old diocese $16 771.48, making a total endowment to date of $34,236.18. Subscriptions may be made payable in three annual installments and without interest A special meeting of the com mittee was held 111 . Harrisburg, February 13. Rev. George I. Brown was elected chairman in the place of the Rev. Edward Henry Eckel, resigned. Rev. Roland S. Nichols, of St. Paul's church this town was made a member of the committee. A PICTURE OF LUX'. This has been a remarkable win ter for coasting. There was no lack for opportunity. The youth of the land have enjoyed unusual privil eges. But how many wrecks might be counted in the enjoyment of their sports, and how many fatalities? How many skated to their death through treacherous ice one of the most exhilarating sports known to youthful enjoyment. How many hearts have been made sad through the accidents resulting from indul gence in these innocent and health reviving sports? But, who would deprive the world of youth and children from enjoying these sports to their fullest capacity? Theonly echo of protest might be heard from the distant hills; "Is it safe?" But, where is safety ? Where does not danger lurk ? Who is sure that his next step is not into a death trap? We have only drawn a picture of the great arena of life. All the world are coasting in every avenue of life's activites. In every pursuit of business or pleasure, every indi vidual is coasting or riding on some vehicle of disease, down the . steep decline of life; and at every stage cf the short route, many wreck and topple over into eternity. Some are pushed speedily along by the cruel blows of assassins, others by bombs and dynamite, and others by the cannons' deafening roar, while other multitudes are hastened on by the rattle of musketry. Thus the stream of humanity is coasting 011 to eternity through all the ages to come, as they have through all the ages past. Yet who wculd think to stop business because people in the best of health are liable to drop out of the living ranks at any day, or any hour. The business of the world will go on, and the vacancy of the missing filled by others, and those dropping out are never missed by the moving mass of the world. All nature and eternity are not de pendent upon the innumerable vi cissitudes of humanity, in solving the great problem of man's future destiny. John C. Wenner. In 1897 the Pennsylvania legis lature attended the dedication of the Grant monument in New York. James Russ of Harrisburg was en gaged to supply the refreshments for the trip, and his bill was a little more than $6,000. The next legis lature refused to make an appropria tion to pay it. In 1903 a law was passed permitting suit to be brought Russ, accordingly brought suit and lost. He appealed and the Supreme Court sent the case back for retrial. A few days ago a special attorney for the state confessed judgment for $4,000 and a bill will be introduced appropriating the amount. Russ it is said has collected about $500 by appeals to those who were on the trip. IN THECOUNTY Washington. , From our Kccular Correspondent. Washington, Feb. 28, 1905 Congress is now engaged in the usual Titautic struggle of crowding into the last two weeks of the sess ion all the work that has been neg lected through the previous months and the result is a legislative jam which compels hasty and ill-considered legislation, the neglect of work that ought to be done and the care less perlormance of work thatshould command the utmost care and pre cision. Appropriation bills provid ing millions of dollars are rushed through the closing hours of a Con gress with less consideration than should properly be given to bills appropriating hundreds and great policies are intitiated on the assur ance of a few men that they are judicious or necessary. The oc casion of all this is the constant fear that improper legislation will be enacted under the spur of local demand, that members of Congress unable, or unwilling, to rise above the petty considerations of their own political futures, will lout the national treasury and that under the lash of agitators legislation inimical to the interests of the great corporations will be forced upon the statutes. The leaders in both houses of Congress permit, then fore, a waste of time throughout the session in order that they may have the excuse of "lick of time" for not passing the private bill of this, that or the other member, in stead of denouncing the undesired private measure if it be unworthy, or of passing the public bill, if worthy, regardless of the pressure of lobbyist or capitalist. No more striking instance of ill considered legislation has been fur nished in recent years than is pre sented by the naval appropriation bill of this session. Early in the session Republicans as well as Democrats declared that the con dition of the nation's finances would not permit of the construction of more great battleships at enormous cost, and it was generally accepted that none, or at most only one, would be authorized at this session of Congress. The President, how ever, who is determined to have his "big stick" policy carried out, has demanded that not less than three big battleships be authorized and the House this week passed a bill providing for two, all that the President really expected. Now the Senate committee 011 naval affairs has determined to follow the lead of the House, not because it believes that the country can afford to, or ought to, build two ships, but because the time is so limited that greatest expedition can be ef fected by accepting the house bill and refraining from crossing the will of the President. Fortunately the Senate does not expire with the Congress and for that reason the San Domingo treaty wiil not be rushed through while the hands of the big Senate clock are turned back in a ludicrous at tempt to establish the fact that the hour of 12 o'clock noon on March 4, has not arrived. Senator Bacon, the leading Democrat on the com mittee on Foreign Relations, has given notice that the San Doiningan treaty cannot be ratified at this session of Congress and the time is so short that no difficulty will be experienced in preventing the ap proval of the convention. Instead, the treaty, or protocol, will be con sidered during the special session of the Senate which invariably fol lows a presidential inauguration aud which is held for the purpose of confirming the cabinet and other nominations which the newly inau gurated President always sends to the Senate. Rarely has the Sena te seemed prepared to judge of a great problem Ayers Give nature three helps, and nearly every case of con sumption will recover. Fresh air, most important of all. Cherry Pectoral Nourishing food comes next. Then, a medicine to control the cough and heal the lungs. Ask any good doctor. " I first ni.d Ay.r'i dhurry Pwitoral M ve.n afro. I have eon terrible ne of lung du it eurea by it. I am never without it." ALUMUT i. Hamilton, Marietta, Ohio. nti.,m.. fi.oo. All .trtiiiif Itita. for 1 T. C. ATIR im., T.owrlt, Miiatt. Consumption Health demands daily action of the bowels. Aid nature with Ayer's Pills, so nearly on its merits as in the case of the San Domingan treaty. There are no party lines on this convention. A few rock-ribbed Republicans, staunch supporters of the Administration, would be wil ling to vote for ratification without due consideration, but many Re publican and all Democratic Senat ors will insist on full and free dis cussion ol the policy which the San Domingan pact would inaugurate before they will cast an affirmative vote therefor. While the discus sion of the San Domingan treaty will, of course, be in secret session, it is tensouable to assume that the Washington correspondents will secure fairly accurate reports of the debate and it promises to furnish some instructive and interesting reading. The Swayne impeachment case is drawing to a close and will prob ably be disposed of this week. The testimony and closing argu ments, in fact, will .ill be disposed ot on Friday, nlthough the final v te of the Senate niny be defer red urtil later. The evidence sub iniue 1 seems clearly to hive estab lished the unfitness of tlu d.fendait for a place on the federal bench, but it has hirdly proven dishonesty or other charge which might be termed either a "high crime" or a "misdemeanor" and consequently the chances are all for acquittal of the accused jurist. One of the lessons of this caie has been the necessity of a process whereby a judge may be removed without at taching the stigma which must inevitably follow impeachment. All hope of railway rate legisla tion for this session of Congress has been abandoned, due largely to the philandering tactics of the "Honor able" Steven B. Elkins, the chair man of the Senate committee of Inter-state Commerce. Mr. Elkins is a prominent railway man who contributed upwards of $80,000 to the campaign fund which resulted in electing him to the United States Senate and his conception of his duty is not in the line of any cur tailment of the profits now paid him by his various railway invest ments. There does seem, how ever, to be good reason to expect some adequate legislation of this chaacter at the special session of Congress which President Roose velt purposes to call next October, whether Mr. Elkins committee re commends it or not. Senators Cul lom and Dolliver (Repuolicans) have acted with the Democrats on Senator Elkins' Committee, but even this combination was impotent before the powetful influence of the West Virginia ".statesman." Triumphs of Modern Surgery- That awesome bundle of potential mysteries we call the body is made the subject, in the March McClure's, of an absorbing article on modern surgery by Samuel Hopkins Adams. This writer owns the happy faculty of seeing a thing "by and large," of grasping the esseutial facts aud telling them vividly, with dramatic force. He reduces technicalities to their lowest terms, and makes a sur gical process as interesting and as compelling as a tale of war. The triumphs of this most modern of sciences are elucidated in the lan guage of every-day. Here is the story of the gastric ulcer, an ail ment as serious when cured as in the virulent stage, for as he explains, in healing it causes a contraction of the stomach's wall, narrowing that organ's exit to the point of useless uess. "In serious cases the method of treatment has been to cut out the ulcer or scar a complicated and dangerous resource because of the proximity of tha solar plexus, which (as everyone knows, since Mr. Fitz- sunmons operated npon Mr. Corbet at Carson City, for the removal of a championship belt) is a nerve cen ter highly susceptible to shock. ' 'Several years ago a German sur geon, named Wolfer, contrived an operation which is nothing more nor less than a skillful plumbing device. He cut a ho'e in the stomach in front of the ulcer, clipped off the smoller intestine, and spliced thr the two together, leaving the ulcer to take care of itself. This process short-circuited the food route. The ulcer, relieved of irritation from the passing over of food, soon healed: the resultant contraction didn't matter because the old exit was now out of commission, aud the system of plumbing properly took its place among recognized usctul opera tions. Reduction iu Poor Tax. At a regular meeting of the Directors of the Bloom Poor Dis trict, held at Alms bouse Saturday evening, it was decided to reduce the tax rate for the ensuing year from four mills to three mills. Bttrt th. ) l18 Kind You Have Always WE SHOW RfiAWY FASHIONABLE FABRICS And there isn't the slightest doubt that you could easily and quickly find some thing that you would be glad to call yours. There are other reasons than variety too. Price is one of them. And price is a point that pros pective customers cannot know too much about. A good suit costs &1S.OO Here. From that, dollar by dollar the prices advance, and up dollar by dollar also go the values. Glad to show you any time. TOWM Final Clean up of Winter Underwear. Misses' and Boys' Fleeced Kibbed (gray) Skiits, Pants and Drawers Size 18 were 12c. now 10c. Size 20 were 15c. now 12 J c. Size 22 were 18c. now 15c. Size 21 were 20c. now 18c, Sizes 20 and 28 were 25c. now 20c. Sizes 28 and 30 were 28 and 30c. now 25c. Size 3 1 were 35c. now 30c. Women's Underwear. Silver gray or white, tine wool, vests and draw ers, were 1.50 now 1.35. Two-thirds wool were 1.00 now 89c. Wool sizes were 1.15 now 1.01. Men's Underwear. Natural Wool pants and drawers were 1.00 and 1.50, now 89c. and 1.35. Medium weight pants and drawers were 1.00 now 89c. 50c. shirts and drawers now 42 cents. Combination Suits. Were 2.00 now 1.00. Were 1.50 now 1.35. Were 1.75 now 1.58. Were 50c. 75c. and 1.00 now 44c. G8c. and 89c. Cotton Fleeced Underwear. Women's Cotton Fleeced Underwear that have been 25c and 50c. now are 20c. and 12c. Out sizes that were 30c and 55c. are now 25c. and 50c. Little Tots Not Forgotten In this sale. Were 35c. to 1.00 now 31c. and 89 cents. Were 10c. to 85c. now 3Gc. to 7Gc. F. P. BLOOMSBURG, STOP JAYNE'S An almost SEHD'S PURSEL. PENNA. 'HAT COUGH EXPECTORANT. infallible remedy.