The Columbian. (Bloomsburg, Pa.) 1866-1910, October 14, 1909, Image 1

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    ftLOOMSWRG, PA,t THURSDAY OCTOBER 1',, IDO.'J.
NO. J, I
WIIKN VOU WANT TO
Open a tJank Account Have a Check Cashed
Borrow Money, or Make an Investment
CAM, ON Till-; OLD RKLIAP.LK -
The Farmers National Bank
OF HI.OOMSIJURO
Capital, $00,000 Surplus 8100,000
0 M. CIlEVHIilNG, L'uks. M. MILLKISKX.Casiiiek.
DIRKCTORS
1 I Moykk N. V. I'i-n-k C. M. Cii:vi:i.iNf. C. A. Km-im
V L. WinTK C. V. Rlnyon- Du. J. J. 15 row n M. Mi!.i.i:iri;.
3 Per Cent. Interest Paid on Time Deposits.
THE PAIR IS ON.
The Entries of Live Stock so many
that Additional Sheds Had to tie
Erected for Them.
THE LOCAL EXHIBITORS.
It is au annual custom to say
that "this year's Fair surpasses all
other3," whether it be entirely
truthful or not, but from a hasty
and early glance around the grounds
yesterday morning the writer feels
that he can honestly say that he
has never before seen a more ex
tensive exhibit at this Fair.
The main building has been
filled with more than the usual
number of" attractive booths.
Among the merchants of town who
have arranged a tasteful display of
their goods are the Wirt Fountain
Pen jCompuny, Buckalew &Co.,
W. McK. Reber, Columbia Power
Light and Railways Co., L. K.
Whary, Ilousenick & Co., the
Leader Store Co., W. O. Holmes
&Son.J. Sallzer, C. M. Kvans.
and a number of others, beside at
tractive displays from out of town.
It is in the exhibit of live stock
that the large size of the Fair is
particularly noticeable, the old
stalls were entirely filled with cat
tle, sheep, and pigs, but more were
brought in in such numbers that
yesterday morning the new west
end of the grounds was well filled
with live stock tethered to posts
awaiting the erecting o( new sheds,
at which work a force of carpenters
was hustling.
The showing of poultry is large
and varied, and is interesting even
to the persou who knows little
about the technical points of fowls.
Large and small eating nanus
have been put up by the dozens, as
well as stands for the sale of sou
venirs and trinkets.
The shows which have been ad
mitted by the association are above
the average, a dog and pony show
being the largest.
The races, three of which are to
be run each day, are expected to
prove exciting, and as the recent
raiu has put the track in good con
dition, fast time will probably be
made.
Judging from the outlook, the
Fair of 1909 will not take second
place to any which has been held
in the history of the Columbia
County Agricultural, Horticultural
and Mechanical Association.
STONEWALLSCOMPLETED.
The outside stone wall at the
Farmers National Bank was com
pleted on Friday, and the work on
the interior will be pushed as rap
idly as possible. It will require
several weeks to finish the improve
ments. During all the confusion and
dirt incident to tte rebuilding of the
Bank, the business has gone right
on without interruption, and the
patrons have ben waited on with
the usual promptness and courtesy.
A WELCOME RAIN.
On Monday night the long
drought was broken by a heavy
downpour of rain. It was badly
needed, ns many of the small
streams were nearly dry, and the
dust in the roads was very deep.
The laying of '.he dust will bring
mauy more people to the fair who
must drive in from the rural dis
dricts. This paper goes to press this
week a day earlier than usual, in
order that the office force may at
tend the fair on Thursday and Friday.
COURT MATTERS.
Boy Sent to Industrial Homo. Real
Estate Ordered Sold.
At Saturday's session of court
Judge Kvans sentenced Howard
Van Huskirk to the House of Ref
uge at Glen Mills.
The boy is fourteen years old
and was recently caught in the act
of robbing the money drawer at
Gelb's store.
ICtnil Gelb, proprietor of the
store, testified of the various thefts
at his store, stating that the money
had been taken during the dinner
hour when the cashier was out.
The boy was called and acknowl
edged making a confession in which
he said that on four difTereiu occa
sions hi had stolen in all $26.25,
which he had spent for candy, pea
nuts, oranges nnd bananas. Since
April he has worked at the Furni
ture Factory.
He was before the court at the
September term in 1908, when lie
was parolled under the care of a
probation officer.
After giving the boy some good
advice Judge Kvans sentenced him
to the House of Refuge.
Upon petition filed a sale of the
real estate of the late Capt. J. 15.
Robison was ordered, and a bond
for $7,000 to be filed by the admin
istratrix. A rule to show cause why the
farm of the estate of Isaac Klinga
mau deceased, should not be sold
was argued, but no order was
made.
On petition of L. C. Mensch,
Ksq., committee of Mary R. Lead
er, a weak minded person, the mat
ter of the sale of her real estate
was before the court. The com
mittee claimed that the income of
the property is less than enough to
pay the fixed charges on it, and al
so keep Mrs. Leader, who is at
present living in Milton. The
property consists of a fine residence
on Fifih street. C. C. Peacock,
Ksq , called as a witness, said in
substance that the property is in
good repair and has a good barn
erected upon it, and that in his
mind it is one of the most desirable
locations in to'vn. The property
is worth, in his opinion $3, 000 or
$9,000. F. D- Dentler said that
the property ought to bring $7,500.
L. C. Mensch stated that after pay
ing insurance, taxes, .Sic, he had
but $85 a year left for Mrs. Lead
er's support.
The court ordered the sale to be
made on the following terms: $500
on the clay of sale. $r,ooo on con
firmation of the sde, au.l balance in
one year from date of sale.
SNEAK THIEVES.
Sneak thieves are again getting
in their work, and it is not safe to
leave anything portable outside the
house over r.ight. On Sunday
night a five gallon demijohn of
vinegar was taken from the back
porch of I- K. Mi'der. The thief
soon discovered that it was not a
beverage and the jug was found
broken not far from where it was
taken. , ,
Two umbrellas and a potted plant
werj recently taken Iroiu the porch
of Dr. Houk on Fifth street, and a
number of similar cases have been
heard of.
SPECIAL POLICEMEN.
During the fair the town police
force will be increased to fourteen,
and they will be on duty day and
night. Chief Damn has a telephone
at his home, where phone calls
may be sent.
4
.1 k...L
cf
Th pink of
ts 'jkj iV InjJ perfection foundtd upon ' K.- "V yfy K
fv$n'V f'tX rcsptctand s.tisf.cHnn.U tl,- $''1 VU
' ij study cf vry succewiul oank. 'V V ''Vv'i
S ki'1! vA llewl: Courtesy here Is insisted upon 'P , W-rM
Mid " Bank Juty. f!lu)
V 1 W have co-.tributed
)X A7 srcci;s5 of this ins itit- ymjfl
M
' Y 'TliV
TION.
We piy 3 p.r cent
ThE BLOOMSBURG NATIONAL
BlOCMSBUJKi PENNA
THE STROLLER.
II Visits his Alma Mater, and Stiol's
about Manhattan During the
MDSON-FILTON CEWBRATION.
The wanderlust again gripped
the Stroller some weeks since, and
he boarded a Lackawanna train,
en route to New Kngland via Man
hattan. Placidly lolling in a comfortable
chair as the train drew out from
the station, hi sighed to himself
th uswisc:
"T are well, O site of Fort Mc
Clure. Adiiu, town which fosters
the Columbia County Fair; O Vil
lage of the brewery which never
brewed, Auf Wiederseheu. I shall
return."
So, serenaded by a squalling
youngster in the seat behind him,
who emitted fifty-seven varieties of
howls for fifty-seven miles, he ar
rived at Scranton, and boarded the
New York train.
As he crossed Jthe North river,
he had a foretaste of the excitement
which he was to witness a week
later. The harbour and river were
full o! craft of every description;
decorations were being put up, and
general preparation for Hudson
Fulton week was in progress. The
Scroller gazed at this animated cen
ter of commerce, and his mind
rimbled back to Port Noble in the
palmy days of the Pennsylvania
canal.
A further journey of three hours
brought him to the Nutmeg Capi
tal, where he had spent four years
filling his head with knowledge of
the ancient drama in the lecture
rooms, and of the modern drama in
the Hartford ther.tres; where he
had tested the ingredients of some
mixtures in the laboratories, and of
other mixtures in the cafes; in oth
er words, where he had enjoyed
himself for four years, and had
tucked a sheep-skin in his trunk to
carry away with him.
He hunied out to the college on
his arrival and was received in his
eld rooms by a bunch ot undergrads
who had arrived a week before the
scheduled opening of the institu
tion. That night the Stroller re
newed his undergraduate clays and
returned to his wonted bedtime of
two thirty. The next day he mov
ed his bag and baggage down to
the president's house and was giv
en a night key. Here he made
himself at home, and spent six
days much like the ones in the
ante-alumnus period.
He made himself agreeable to
promising freshmen for obvious
reasons, -smoked for hours in the
sanctum of many au old friend,
and chummed about with more
than one classmate who had return
ed for the opening ceremonies.
At the opening chapel service he
joined four of his classmates and
some undergrads in pealing forth
sweet music from the choir.
The week rolled past and the
time to leave for the Hudson-Ful-1
ton celebration was at hand, and J
he was loath to depart. lint col
lege days, as he had found, have
the habit of coming to an end, and
besidts, the New ork committee
of arrangements would probably
not consent to a postponement of
the metropolitan hubbub over Hen
ry and Robert just to allow him to
loaf around his alma mater a bit
longer. So, with one Fellow Al
umnus he set forth to the erstwhile
New Amsterdam, and took up his
courtesy.
C;v,! cr:v.
courhry, inly-
1 .rgely to the ffiSf
Wt t7'lT
o:j time dep sits r-sjg -'v3
DANK
residence at the F. A's. house on
Fifth Avenue, on the night before
the big celebration was scheduled
to burst.
Saturday morning, the twenty
fifth of September, was the big day
of the naval parade. The Stroller
was awakened by the distant boom
ing of big guns, and realized that
things were about to start. After
breakfast, he and the Fe'dow Alum
nus strolled to the pier at West
Forty Third Street and boarded
the steamer "Cygnus" with the
Seventh New York Regiment,
The "Cygnus" steamed down
the river at ten o'clock and dodged
about among the hundreds of craft
in the harbour. Kvery type of boat
that floats was represented in the
throng in the bay. Tugs, private
yachts, excursion boats, ferry boats,
and ocean liners, all crowded to
the rails, with bands playicg on
every side, and all ablaze with col
ors, swarmed over the waters of the
bay presenting a picture which
even New York has seldom seen.
Shortly after noon this flotilla
assumed a semblance of order, and
formed into line. Led by the little
"Halve Maene,"the Holland built
replici of Henry Hudson's ship,
and by the facsimile o! the "Cl;r
mont," Robert Fulton's first steam
boat, the parade started up the
river
The Stroller and the Fellow
Alumnus tucked themselves up into
the anchor chanis in the very bow
o: the "Cygnus" from whence they
would have been yanked in an' un
dignified manner had not a friendly
coil of rope hidden them from the
gize of the officers. From this
vantage point they had an unob
structed view ot both sides of the
river, and were enabled to mow
down the fleet with their battery of
five-inch kodaks.
Arriving opposite Forty Second
Street they passed the first vessel
of the greatest international fleet of
warships the western world has
ever seen. Stretching from Forty
Second Street to Yonkers, nine
miles up the Hudson, were the
fighting representatives of teu ua
tions. As the little replicas approached
the fleet each warship let loose
twenty-one guns, which made the
cold chills play tag about the Strol
ler's vertebrae.
Passing the French warships,
the Seventh Regiment Band 011 the
"Cygnus" played the "Marseil
laise"; to the Germans they shriek
ed "Die Wacht Am Rhein"; across
the water they sent "God Save the
King" to the Britishers; to every
foreigner they played their nation
al anthem, and every one of them
returned the "Star Spangled Ban
tier," while the. crews shouted.
In the river above the foreigners
rode the American fleet; seven
miles of fighting machines battle
ships, cruisers, torpedo boats and
.submarines.
Around all of this war armada
the peace flotilla made its way,
going up on the west side and down
on the east, watched by millions of
people who blackened jthe shores
from Staten Island to Yonkers,
The "Cygnus" hid to just off
the Statue of Liberty at dinner
time, and the Stroller and the Fel
low Alumnus snatched a bite iu
true military form, sitting on boxes
and using a coil of rope as a table.
At dusk the illuminated city
shone forth iu all its Hudson-Fulton
splendor a sight which put to
shame all expositions, and which
even belittled Coney Island with all
Continued on pngeS
TQWNSEKD
Adler's Gloves.
Cluett Shirts.
Arrow Collars.
Luzerne Underwear.
Stetson Hats.
Cooper Union Suits.
Philadelphia Clothing
L. MJLACK. CQ.
Rochester Clothing.
Rochester Clothing.
I
IONCAIB & CO.
Utica Clothing.
International Tailoring Co.
Made to Measure Clothing.
All High Class
Merchandise.
TOWM
CORNER
CLOTHING STORE,
BLOOMSBURO, PA.
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