1 THE COLUMBIAN. BLOOMSBURG, I A. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK THE OLDEST AND STRONGEST. Capial SIOO,000 Surplus 8150,000. With the Largest Capital and Surplus in the County, a Strong Directorate, Competent Ofiicirs and Every Mod ern Facility, we solicit Accounts, Large or Small, and Collections on the Most Liberal Terms Consistent with Sound Hanking, aad Invite. YOU to inspect our NEW QUARTERS. 5 Per Cent. Interest I-:. W.M. Low, President. James M.Htaver, Vice President. DIRECTORS: James M. Staver, Fred Ikeler, H. C. Creasy. Clinton Herring, E. W. M. Low, K.G. York, Louis Gross, M. E Stnckhoune. THE COLUMBIAN. ESTABLISHED 1866. THE COLUMBIA DEMOCRAT. CSTABLISIIF.n 1837. CONSOI IDAI F.D 1869 IMlLISIIED EVEKV THURSDAY MlKNINU, .i -Dloomsburg, the County Seat 01 Columbia County, Pennlvnnia. CEO. E. EI. WELL, Editor. GEO. C. ROAN.EoF.iMAN. I'kkms: fnswli the couni $1.00 a year Cn advance ; $l.$oif not paid in advance. Outv-ili llii coaisly, 1 1. J J a c.ir, Hirictl) in ivar.cr. All communication should be'iJdresscd I HE COI.VMHIAN, I 'lOomsi.r.r, Ta. lirUSDW. JUNE 10. 1901) High Tariff Prices. Some of the quoted prices for the ordinary necessities leave 110 room for doubt tint these are soar ing higher than ever before, except in war times. And that applies not only to meat products, but to virtually everything. It is readily realized how heavily the burden of increased values iu necessities of life falls upon the poor man, particularly just at this ti .le, when the country is emerg- : from a long period of business :'.!. The cost of living has ad- :cod immeasurably, and the mill . ;kr, the mechanic, the laborer, ..-.rning to his toil after tha lean j.riad, finds that it requires more iliau he can earn to supply his meager table, to pay his rent and keep his little family in decent clothing. And what are our lawmakers in Washington doing to lighten the burden? Are Aldrich & company devoting their attention exclusively to reducing the indirect taxation which the consumer of limited re sources fiuds it so difficut to meet? Are they, in fact, giving the slight est thought to a matter that vitally -concerns 85 or 90 per cent, of the consumers of the country? Are they not rather concocting schemes to keep the tariff on food and cloth ing as high as possible, in order to "protect" the American working man? What a iarce this pose of the standpatters would be if it were not so wickedly contemptible. Pitts . burg Post. Named lor Midshipman. T. T. Bower, a member of the senior class of the Danville high school, has been nominated for the position of midshipman at the naval academy at Annapolis, Md. The young man named by Con gressman McHeury as principal candidate for midshipman, was a resident of Sullivan county. Mr. Bower was nominated as an alter nate. The naval department advises Coneressman McHenrv that the young man named as principal candidate for the position took the mental examination but that his markings were not quite high enough to render him eligible for appointment as midshipman. These facts are duly explained in a letter to Mr. Bower written by Coneressman McHenrv. It appears that the vounr man named as second alternate was to have reported for examination on Aoril 20th. but failed offered no explanation as to why ne aia not. The young man named as third IFor CoughsTake This! Do you know a remedy for coughs and colds nearly sevenly years old? There is one Ayer's Cherry Pectoral. Once in the family, it stays. It is not a doctor, does not take the plac of a doctor. It is a doctor's aid. Made for the treatment of all throat and lunfi troubles. Ask your own doctor his opinion of it. Follow his advice. iNoaiconoi m mis cough medicine. irou cannot rtcover promptly if your boweU are constipated. Ayer'a Fill are uently lax ative; act directly on the liver. Sold for nearly lxty yeart. Ask your doctor all about them. Paid on Time Deposits OFFICERS: Myron I. Low, Vice President. Frank Ikeler, Cnohier Myron T. Low, ii. v. i lower Frank Ikeler, alternate withdrew at the last moment when it was too late to appoint another, hence no third alternate was nominated. As indicated by the above Mr Bower is left first and alone for the appointment in the sixteenth congressional district. Therefore, if his mental and physical examina tion prove satisfactory, he will be sworn in as midshipman at the naval academy. Would Bring Penn's Body Here. Corgrcssman Palmer Plans to Oisinlor Fto- main. Representative A. Mitchell Pal mer, of Pennsylvania, who is one of the six members of the house of representatives affiliated with the Friends, is planning a movement to hive the United States bring the coffin containing all that is mortal of William Peun to tins country and have it interred on the banks of the Delaware. The suggestion was made to Mr. Palmer recently by a constituent, who is a Friend, and who believes that the time is now opportune for su-li action. The body of Penn now reposes in a practically aban doned cemetery iu Buckingham shire, England, and considering his distinguished career, is not ap propriately marked. Mr. Palmer contemplates eoinsr about the business in a practical way and intends to submit the proposition to the president and as certain his views, and, if it is pos sible, get the support of Mr. Taft. It is also jis purpose to enlist the aid ot Se:retary Knox in the move ment. The removal of Penn's body will have as a precedent the action taken by this government in disinterring the body of John Paul Jones from a cemetery in Paris aud its rebunal at Annapolis. 1 he movement is regarded as op portune at this time in view of the fact that the Friends have a larger representation iu congress at this session than they have had in half a century or more. Mother Gray'i Sweet Powder for Children. Successfully used by Mother Grav. nurse in me nuaren s Home in New York, Cure Feverishness. Bad Stomach. Teething Disorders, move and regulate the Bowels and Destroy Worms. Over 10,000 testimonials. I hey never fail. At all DniRgists. ajc. Sample Free. Ad dress, Allen B. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y. Rival For The Bell. Independent Telephone Company Incorporate ed With $15,000,000 Capital. The National Telephone corpo' ration, with' a capital stock of $iv 000,000, has been incorporated at Charleston, West Virginia. It is understood the new company ex pects to become a rival of the Bell system in its long distance business, The new concern has purchased or secured options on many of the leading independent telephone lines ot Pennsylvania, Ohio and West Virginia, and it is said it will in vade other states and Canada and construct transcontinental lines. Pittsburg will be its principal of fice and John A. Howard, of wheel ing, W. Vs., backed by New York and Boston capitalists, is said to be the leading spirit in the new con cern. J. C. Ayer Co., Lowell, M, aw. WASHINGTON From our Regular Correspondent. Washington, D. C, June 7, 1909. In the estimation of Democratic Senators who are studying the tar iff, the determination of the Re publicans to maintain the increased duties on meats of a!l description, both fresh and cured, constitutes one of the most striking anomalies of the protective policy. In thtir defense of the policy of protection almost every Republican Senator has referred to the necessity of. maintaining the existing high standard of living" of the Ameri can workingman. Many have de voted pages of the Congressional Record to this srgumeut. When asked wherein lies the chief differ ence between the standard Ameri can laborers, both skilled and un skilled, and similar workmen abroad, they invariably reply with an elaboration of the difference to be found in the tables of the two classes, maintaining that meat is served on the table of the Ameri can twice or thrice as often as on that of his fellow workmen in for eign countries. And yet these same Republicans refuse absolutely to recognize that by increasing du ties on meats they are not only ad ding millions to the profits of the beef trust, but are precipitatiug a situation precisely similar to that abroad. Iu the estimation of a number of Democrats with whom your correspondent has talked on the effect of the Aldrich bill, if en acted as it now stands, will be to drive meat off of the tables of a large percentage of American work ingtuen in the near future. Asked why they do not make a more vig orous fight for the reduction of these duties, the Democrats main tain that they are perfectly helpless iu the matter, that Mr. Aldrich and his associates are in complete control of the situation in the Sen ate, and that it is useless for any Democrat or group of Democrats to undertake to secure reductions in any schedule decided upon by the I'inaiice Committee. In this con nection, however, the remarks of a Republican member of the Finance Committee, while not perhaps to be taken at their face value, are of iuterest. To a New England member of the Finance Committee your cor respondent put this question, Are not the Democratic Senators pecul iarly helpless in this tariff debate, and if so, ihat is the reason"? The Republican replied, "Our Democratic friends can accomplish nothing because they are so badly divided among themselves. Prac tically every one of them has some special industry for which he wish es above all else to secure protec tion. Brother Aldrich is nobody s fool aud he has felt out the aims of his opponents and knows so well how to play one against the other that throughout this debate there has not been a single instance where the Democrats have all voted one way. It is simply the eld sto ry of a house divided against itself and of statesman who place person al aud local interests above party zeal and national welfare". Of course that is a partisan arraign ment and must be accepted with due allowance for the narrowness of the New England viewpoint Nevertheless it contains an element of truth which is worthy the seri ous consideration of every Demo crat. No member of the Taft cabinet entered upon his term of service confronted by a more perplexing situation and harassed by more difficulties than George von L. Meyer, Secretary of the Navy. Nevertheless Mr. Meyer has not only the courage of his convictions, but the temerity of a Roosevelt. With the staff versus line contro versy still at white heat, Secretary Meyer has had the audacity boldly to defy Cupid aud practically to is sue an order forbidding the young god to aim a single dart at the hearts of Uncle Sara's middies. A heartless predecessor of the present Secretary long ago forbade Mid shipmen to marry during the four years' term at Annapolis, but Sec retary Meyer has added two years to the proscribed time and forbids matrimony prior to the time when the midshipman receives his first promotion and becomes an ensign The moral effect of this order will doubtless be beneficial, but should any midddy have the courage to violate it and Je solemnly arraign ed before a court martial charged with the grave offense of having taken unto himself a wedded wife it is a question how long the order would stand the ridicule of an un feeling pres.. Secretary Meyer's prohibition against the marriage of Midship men recalls an incident which oc- a paragraph was added to the N. vy regulations instructing officers that they must not permit their wives, or other members of their families, to travel from place to place and thus meet them at every port where their squadron cast an chor. Soon after the order was is sued the Secretary of the Navy re ceived a communication from an officer, now an Admiral on the re tired list. It read somewhat as follows: "I have the honor to re port that my wife TaCatha Blank, in direct violation of Naval Regu lation No. , and in wilful in subordination to the order of. the Secretary of the Navv. persists iu following me about from place to place, and meeting me at every port where my ship casts anchor". The Dedication at the Orphanage. Will Bo An Interesting Event tor Odd Fellows, at Sunbury on Thursday, Juno 17. Blooinslnirg will be well repre sented at the dedication of the Odd Fellows' Orphans' Home at Sunbu ry on June 17. The program will begin at 10.30 in the morning when a parade will form at the old build ing in the following order: Band; Patriarchs Militant; members of the subordinate lodges; members of the Rebekah; members of the Encamp ment; members of the board ot di rectors; building committee; dedi cation committee; officers of the home; superintendent and matron, children and attendants; past grand masters; past grand patriarchs; past presidents ot the Rebekah assem bly; grand patriarch aud members of the grand encampment; state president and grand officers of the Rebekah assembly; grand master and officers of the grand lodge. The program of exercises at the dedication ceremony will be as fol lows: Openiug ode of the order, sung by members and children; rit ualistic ceremony by the grand master and his staff of officers; ad dress by J. S. Montgomery; doxol ogy by audience; music oy baud; song by children; address by Mrs. Hattie Mandel, president of the Rebekah state assembly; song by children; addresses by Rev. B. H. Hart, E. C. Wagner and J. W. Stroh. A drilliue exercise by the Cantons will close the ceremonies. A Meeting Long Deferred. The Bellefonte Watchman of last week says: "An interesting fact developed at the Memorial day ex ercises at Pine Grove Mills on Mon day. Rev. John Hewitt, pastor ot the Episcopal church of this place, made the memorial address and in the course of his remarks he stated that he had been a soldier in the Confederate army and in 1861, just at the breaking out of the war, he had been captured and held a pris oner at Fort Beauregard, on the is- laud of St. He.eua, off the coast of South Carolina. Later in the day he aud Capt. W. H. Fry, the well known veterinarian of that place, exchanged confidences and the fact developed that Mr. Fry was one of the detail or skirmish party who captured the reverend, or private Hewitt as he was at that time, and took him a prisoner to the Island, Mr. Fry being at the time a mem ber of the Forty -fifth Pennsylvania regiment which was in charge of the fort. The further fact was also brought out that Rev. Hewitt and Capt Fry are the same age to a day and that they both enlisted on the same day, the former in the confed erate army and the latter in the ar my of the north, so that in the lives of the two men there has been co incidences enough to justify the warm friendship that has already been formed between them." Mr. Hewitt was rector of St. Paul's P. E. Church of Bloomsburg back in the seventies. Sturgeon in the River. The Government Will Stock Susquehanna With Important Speciu. Fishermen along the Susquehan na hope again to have the oppor tunity to fash for the gamy stur geon, one of the greatest fighting fish that swims. The government has made arrangements to import a large consignment of sturgeon from Russia, aud Pennsylvania is to get a share for the Susquehanna river. At the next session of the Legislature a law will be passed to protect these fish until the streams are well stocked. At one time the Susquehanna river was full of stur geons, but they were almost exter minated by the fishermen with seines, and it is a rare thing to catch a sturgeon now even at the mouth of the river. Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTORI A New Spring- Suits! Spring Suits have arrived! There's migic in that simple an nouncemcnt for Where's the woman who is not all eyes to see the new garment fashions f Tho New Spring Suits Are Low Priced. A most remarkable feature about these handsome new models is their extremely low prices. Your spring outfit will give you a bet ter service a much finer appear ance and yet cost you a small price. Catering to every taste we've gathered an assortment of choicest correct styles. Prices $10 to $35. Spring Suits ., Regularly $2000 4) I J .$0 Suits of hard twisted serge and striped worsted in black blue, green, tan and gray. 36 inch hip less coats; slashed back, patch pockets, self button trimming, full sattn lined; satin collar and cuffs; Skirt is Demi-Princess with self covered buttons down the front. All sizes up to 42. SUIT at $12. 75 Of shadow stripe chiffon panama in navy blue, elect blue, green, tan, ashes of roses and gray. Coat 40 inches long, semi-fitting hipless cutaway front forming points 011 the sides, new small t-lcevcs, lined throughout with satin: gorad flare, skirt with trimming of straps and self covered buttons. SUIT at $26.50 A 4 button cutaway coat 40 inches long of striped worsted, slashed back and sides, inlaid bengaline silk collar; large flap pockets, trimmed with but tons, lined with taffeta silk; plain 11 gore demi-Princess skirt, At $6.00 to $14.00 Junior Suits for the little Misses in sizes ii, 13, 15 and 17 years. Made of shadow stripe pan ama and fine serge in navy blue, gray and green, semi fitting hipless coats, gored and pleated skitt. SUIT at $27.00 A strictly tailored suit of French Serge; 4 button cutaway; single breasted (just a slight cut away effect;) lined with taffeta silk; new small sleeves; Demi Princess Skirt with inverted plait at sides. SUITS at $20.00 Of chiffon panama in blue, green and black; graceful semi-fitting hipless coat 36 inches long, single breasted, new small sleeves and trimmed with satin piping; gored flounce skirt. F..P. BLOOMSBURG, JUST A REMINDER! Here is a list of some of the printed goods and blank stock that can be obtained at the Qolumbiam Printing Some x riudp 11 umy remind ENVELOPES HEADINGS CARDS (Sard skins IN ROAKV Admh'istrators Executor's, Treasurer's Receipt Ail Dllal Books. Plain Receipts, with or without stub, Note Books, Scales Books, Order Books, Etc, TT ANFV RTTTv Printed in any size fr aii strat iinni OA LiiJi dodger, up to a full Sheet Poster. BOOKS AND PAMPHLETS MISCELLANEOUS 1 Our Stock Includes : Cut Cards, all sizes, Shipping Tags Round Corner Cards, Manila Tag Board, Card Board in Sheets, Bond Papers white and colors, Ledger Papers, Name Cards for all Cover Papers Secret Societies, Book Papers.' Window Cards. Folders for Programs, Menus, Dances, Societies and all special events. , Lithographed Bonds and Stock Certificates Supplied. Wedding Invitations and Announcements, Printed or Engraved. Visitors are Always Welcome. No Obligation to Purchase. We Do All Kinds of Printing Columbian Printing House, BLOOMSBURG, PA. PURSEL. PENN'A. you 01 something you need. B All sizes, Commercial, Professional, Insur ance, Baronial, Pay, Coin, Letter leads. Note Heads, Bill Heaas, State ments, in many grades and sizes. Business, Visiting, Announcement, Admission, Ball Tickets, Etc. No Admittance, For Rent, For Sale, Post No Bills, Trespass Notices, eW. WILL BE PLEASED TO SHOW SAMPLES OF THESE AND ALL Of OUR WORK. cut red a number of years ago when