THE COLUMBIAN. BLOOMSBURO. PA o65oboooooooooooo -joooou 1 o o o o SATURDAY NIflHT TALKS By REV. r. E. DAVISON Rul'.a.vJ, Vt. 8: f i 1 tlCOCCCOOCCCCCCCvXOCOCOOOCLl MEW SUNDAY SCHOOL. International Bibh Lesson for Sept. 19, '09. The Sunday School or the f.iture will bo In many iv:-.pt't;ta v. much of an I t i n r o v c::!c.-.t ovit present IlKlllOlis U8 to- lny a better than yesterJny. For if there Is nny tl.ing about the modern L.mi lny school in which there l.i practical agree ment. It is the failure, everywhere to . measure up to the Ideal of teacher ami pupil concerning Bible study. No one doubts tint the present i.. s- tematic study of the, Hook Is a vast Improvement over the ci.tci'hism, ni:d question and answer "helps," of ha'f a century ago. Nevertiieief.s the pie. ent is but the chrysalis Kf:;i! of the Btudy, and the cliilstlan world is be ginning to stir uneasily in Its shell preparatory to breaking forth into ne'v and larger life. Since the Inter national lesson syst.'sn was I r. .'.v.s it rated teachers and pii;.H.s have worn a rut of so-called rtmiy through the Diblo from (!eii( ;iis to Revelation, no that If the teachers' library hits been equipped with lc.-'on "help" he li'uls liiiuself to-day going over precisely t!i! same, ground that he bas traveled three or four times previously, chap ter for chapter and verse for verse, lie follows a wvll-bjaUn trail bia.cd fur Mm thirty ;r fc.rty yr,; ar. l recks cot of the va1 1 uik'X. ;.".'(.! world of ei'.llliti-i'.T.cnt, inKtrui ! Ion tk.d pleasure lyini; id! '.'.round hi 1:1. It is a world in which the traveler c!i:ir;s to the Blase 1 o;. h in ( refet ein e to the I'ullmnn c::r, .'e:'i:r; ing crude and primitive ways of living t') li.!bltiiti(-n:j of modern in.prove:vcrii. Of course, It is practically IninoFsd Mo for individual schools, cr tea: hers ui Individual clis.;e:s to break av.-.iy fioni the procession aud start on a jic.v path of exploration for thovi FvIvuk. To do that would break up I'.tii.'orn.Ity of study, in i::any ways i:,o:it desirable and introduce a chaotic statu rerally, but t!;;; protect, lo::-; a id loud find lr.si.tent can, at leant. In made until the international coin l il'.tee Is compelled to heed popular (';, ion and provide for it. Wo iciiy l.ol .( fuse to keep bep longer in tins ci'.'i,r?,s belt line to the s.rau old tmns ;' ."t v-... j ".!.-,!.! t.:tt In o ir e'aildho::,. we o've .'ucnetiiliij of reverenco to antiquities ar.d to c.iit'.r.'.s that hisvj become obsolete, but we er.n Uisux-h under protect and bo ready to ball deliverance from vhutever quar ter It conies. Brighter Outlook, Meanwhile evidences accumulate that things are brightening to a better day. Theological seminaries are tak-in:-; up the training of ministers fnr Sunday school leadridilp; universi ties are offering I'.ible courses, and extensions; training schools for Sun day school teachers have been opened and summer schools multiply; corre spondence systems have been evolved; a plan of graded lesi-ons bas been approved and a committee t: at work preparing them. This is the most hopeful sign of the times in Sunday school work. If those graded lessons are prepared by men Instead of fossils, if those who are engaged In the task arc more Interested In tuo warm-blooded youth of to-day thi.n the mummies of Kgypiiun and Assyrian cr.tacombs, if they do not In sist upon the use of portions of the Ilible for children of any uge abso lutely Incomprehensible to the ma turest minds, then we tliall have a renaissance of Bible study epochal and prophetic of future good. New Methods Needed. It Is In this sense that we need a new ilible, now teachers and new methods. Given these conditions the Sunday school of the .uture will be a vaai iiiipi ovemcit over the p'isf. The teachers of the future will not bu callow bnys :.:id girls, whose ig norance is dense, whose ability to In struct Is a minus quantity. Tbey will be trained Instructors, qualified to bring forth from the treasury of the word, things new and old. We shall no more thlr.lt of putting an ig norant person to tench a Sunday school class thau we should set 11 blind man to leud the blind. The Sunday school will be a school, not un nKgregnllun of classes. Classes will bo composed of students, not a mutual adniirr.tion suciety. Attend ance will bo regular, not haphazard. Teachers, pousibly will bo paid for their work, not drafted on account of r!ie!r good looks or iulluence or con nection with the best families. We shall imitate nature which grades children by r.ge, capacity, home en vironment, future prospects. There will bo clr.stes In good citizenship and itn!:.l lervlce. In a word, the Sunday ichool o.' tl 0 future will be the church at study, belns trained to rightly di vide the word of life, that each may have his portion in due season. Such a Sunday school will have no need for doubtful measures to draw piipiU. They will come to It as nun try men to a banquet when thora la :!:i.hm-;i nr..', to a pare. A CRYING NEED. What Is really wanted at the pres ent time Is a standard of misconduct We are constantly doing things In doubt, as if we hadn't a right to do them. The contusion caused by people do ing things which In their circum stances wo had no right to expect is the principal cause of our troubles. It ought to be definitely settled, for ex ample, that any millionaire who tins, say, over a hundred millions, will thereafter lead an honest life. If he has only fifty inlli.ons his life should be semi-honest, and if he has only a paltry ten millions, then it oitf-ht t be conceded th-t he can loot a le v railroads or so until he gets 011 !.',., feet. lTp to, say, ten thousand a year no man can afford to be dishonest, lie ought to get up In the cars nnd give tip lils sent to won.cn under thirty-liv" at lea.it, and of course be will not take the chance ot robbing any safe. From ten thousand up to one hundred thousand can cngago In little dis honest llyers by making one of a pool or putting through a land deal or so for variety. When be gets fifty millions or mop! together, however, every man oiviht to ask himself plainly the question whether from now on he ought not to be a philanthropist. Doesn't he owe this to his fellow-men? A DREAM OF A btTTER CHINA. Sir Kobert Hart, after spending for ty years In China in charge of buBl tiers carried on through the Custom House, probably knows the country and its people as well as any iiuo pean can. Ho says that China Is to have a great future. He says the Chinese are a strangely reasonable people; that they have hated the Idea of having soldiers or becoming sol diers, saying, "If right is right, it ought to bo recognized by everybody, and we ought not to bo required to tigut to suppor' It." But In our time foreign nations have forced upo'i China the neceslty of arming itself, and some day out of the four hundred millions of Chinese a pr-at army may ' be formed and then instead of fight : i::;r, China will turn around to faco ' the rest of the world and say, "Uentle- men, there must be no more fighting." I If a cuuutiy should be attacked, they I would defend it, and so, with thcii ! vast momentum and great numbers, i make for the peace ol the whole ! .rid. This is the reverse of the j "yellow peril" that so terrlflei the : Ct-rman kaiser. A SAILING SHIP SANITARIUM. The liailing-ship sanitarium for con sumjitlvcs projected in Kngland and described by tue British Medical Jour nal seems an admirable scheme. If a patient is to be sequestrated and kept in a long chair out of doors, why not alevlate his lot by the Interest of sea life and glimpses of pleasant coasts? The ship projected would be of about JOuD ton. 1, -.villi ample deck space fl eets in the open air. The plan would bu to cruise In the neighborhood of the Cai.aries, taking advantage o:' trade winds and nn equable climate, and seeking port in bad weather. The cost to each patient Is not stated, but there must be a good many invalids who could afford -1 pay handsomely, and with fifty patients it might be pos sible to keep a 000-ton schooner In commission. EATING UP SHEEP. The world Is eating up its sheep. The number on Dot is steadily being diminished and the same Is true of cattle anci poultry, says the London Meat Trades Journal. From the avail able statistics it Is said that In three years should there be no increase, at the preseni rate of consumption every head of cattle, every hog, every sheep and every chicken In the barnyards would be eaten up. It has been no ticeable for several years that the number of food animals raised throughout the world was steadily do creasing. The question Is, unless conditions are modified, and that shortly, from where are the meats of the future to come? "LETTER" G3AMS. The French government has defi nitely adopted the scheme of "lettei telegrams" which has been under dis cussion In Franco ior some time. The new system provides that letters may bo telegraphed between any two points in France at night at a cost of one-fifth of a cent a word, and that they will be delivered the next morning. LUXURY AND POVERTY. A thoughtful clergyman has re marked that "luxury is as great a curse to the human race as Is abject poverty." This Is dreadfully true when t!.e two go together. For where they go together the luxury of some spells poverty for the rest. But the luxury that all might have by earning It, would that be a curse? Colorado has the best laws for the protection of women and children of any state In the Union. Colorado has undoubtedly the best Juvenile court In the world, and it Is the ojjy court holding the parents responsible for the deeds of their children. And the women vote In Colorado. Grievous wrong Is committed when society surrounds children with such influences that by the age of sixteen boys and girls almost thoughtlessly commit crimes such as ought to be impossible except to dcllberuto vo tary of the most hardened typo. UCK&WANNA ' RAILROAD. THE ROAD OF ANTHRACITE. If you contemplate spending the Sum mer months in Florida or California, call upon our local ticket agent for particulars. Professional Cards II. A. McKILLIP ATTORNEY-AT-LaV, Columbian Building an- Floor Bloonisburq, Pa, A. N. YOST, ATTORNEY AT LAW. Wirt Building, Court I louse Squax Bloomsburg, Pa. RALPH. R.JOHN, ATTORNEY AT-LAW. Eut Building, next to Court Htu Bloomsburg, Ta. . FRED IKF.LER, ATTORNEY-AT-LAWj Office Over First National Bank. Bloomsburg, Pa, VV, II. RIIAWN, AlTORNEY-AT-LAW. Office Corner of 3rd and Main Stt. CATAWISSA, PA. CLINTON HERRING. ATTORNEY-AT LAW. Office with Grant Herring, Blccrrt-lnrp. Pa. Jn Orangeville Wednesday each wefel A. L. FRITZ, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. Office Bloomsburg Nat'l Bank BIdg. Bloomsburg, Pa. J. H. MAIZE ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, INSURANCE, AND REAL, ESTATE AGENT Office 116 North Street, Bloomsburg, Pa, N U. FUNK ATTORNEY AT LAW Ent's Building, Court House Sqnai Bloomsburg, Pa. M. P. LUTZ & SON, iNSfRANCE AND REAL ESTAT AGENTS AND BROKERS N. W. Come Main ami Centre Sts, Bl.nOMSMTKR. Pi Represent Seventeen n jrood CompanU iniic mc iu me v oriu, ana ail losses promptly adjusted and paid at their office. ...PRINTING... MUCH of the work that is done in this office is of kinds ' that can be done by hand only. Nine-tenths of all job printing done in any country office must be done by hand. It can't be done with a machine. This office is fully equipped to do all kinds of print ing at the lowest prices consistent with good work. A Large Stock is Carried in ENVELOPES, LETTER HEADS, NOTE HEaDS, BILL HEADS, STATEMENTS, SHIPPING TAGS, BUSINESS CARDS, VISITING CARDS, INVITA TIONS, ANNOUNCEMENTS, CARD BOARD, BOOK PAPERS, COVER PAPERS, &c. And Everything in the Printing Line If you have been a customer of ours, you know the character of our work. If not, we shall bo glad to fill a trial order. Among other things in our line are Dodgers, Posters, Sale Bills, Pamphlets, Books, Re ceipts, Orders, Check Books, Ruled Work, Half tones, Line Cuts, Engraved Work, Stock Certifi cates, Bonds, &c., &c. No trouble to show goods and give estimates. The Columbian Printing House, GEO. E. ELWELL, Proprietor. Entrance First Floor, through Roys' Jewelry Store. Next to Bloomsburg National Bank. BLOOMSBURG, PA. DR. W. H. HOUSE SUROKOV riiriUTiCf Office Barton's Building, Main below Market. RlnnmBti,,.i. D- All styles of work done in a tuperio u.uuiivi. tn woi k warranted as represented. TEETH EXTRACTFn vrrumw dim by the use of Gas, and free of chare .,..1.1 .11 imi-iuiit'Fin lire inserted. Open nil hours during the day DR. M. J. HESS DENTISTRY IN ALL ITS BRANCHES Crown and bridge work a specialty ; Corner Main and Centre street! Bloomsburg, Pa. Columbia & Montour Telephone J. J. BROWN, M. D. THE EYE A SPECIALTY. Eyes tested and.'fitted with glasses. No Sunday work. .311 Market St., Bloomsburg, Pa. Hours 10 to 8 TelephoM J. S. JOHN M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGI0N. Office and residence, 410 Main St 7-3-iy BLOOMSBURG. PA EDWARD J. FLYNN, - ATTORNEY AT LAW, CENTRALIA, PA. Office, Liddicot Building, Locust Ave. H. MONTGOMERY SMITH, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Office : Ent building, 11-16-99 WILLIAM C. JOHNSTON, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. Office in Wells' Building, over W. McK KeDer s Hardware Store, Rloomsburg. Montour Telephone. Bell Telephone H. BIFRMAN. M. D. Homceopathic Physician and Sutoeo Office and Residence, Fourth Stl Office Hours : J0.8, ,"V a P- m- BLOOMSBURG, PA C. WATSON McKELVY, Fire Insurance Agent. Represent twelve of the Btronveat com . . . . , 1 , milieu 111 me worm, among which are Franklin, of Phlla. Pciiiul Phil. tj ueen of N. Y. Westchester, N. Y. iNorm America, pcna. Office: Clark Buildine, 2nd Floor. 6