uuUNTY'S, , POPULAR " FAMILY NEWSPAPER. krrr- U WA0BW8ELLEB l0f na rroF""w k0R OF EVENTS Rion MIDDLEBURGH, SNYDER CO., PA., AUGUST 13, 1896. VOL. 33. NO. Ura nnffvli ra imcCTiuinrnicca ranr ffiififinnrpnn a rvnrvii ra nnrMinnnr5rwnnn Ann Af-..... - lEiog iig Jj i itDiimwMUV, WW.W1LL HE EDWEM AWAY FISEE TO THE "MST" REMfPR ' i of New for Busy Readers. L, Rrndf-r. People t llll. Inf Ta ro hi very cueap u Carrie Unas of Shamokin ienJaia town last week. ll. Z. Steininger Las return. a week's visit to AliUiinDurg. Ifary Clark of Altoona is vis- 9 Bertua Erhart in awine- L. ....tnmul to S cents, for e 8 cents, at Weis Selins- loss the genial postmaster, le, was at the county seat Jay. E. P. Leonard and wife of Nebraska, are visiting at Orwig's. ViJlor and wife last week the hospitality of J. W. lud wue. Sarsnparilla nevr before its present daily record of s cures. l e of Dress Ginghams 6 cts. Lruicr prices 8 and 10 cents, Selinsgrove. S. Kohler pastor of the 1 church has been graated vacat ion. ttdiit 'ure never fails to ..... ur.il init.-TMit W i.i ranted. arv Weaver of Freeburg ktained Saturday and Sun- rs. Frank Reigle. C. Bowersox and wife and pwersox and wife drove to rville on Friday. flubscriber who pays one Ilvonce can control 18 votes lolarship contest. ( was the Hottest day oi n. The thermometer regis- legrees in the shade. iertrude Dunkelberger is a week at Dundore visit- aster, Mrs. Irwin Aucker. anck and wife and Mrs. rers visited H. H. Leitzel By at Mifflinburg last week. E. Specht and daughter. d Edward Walter's went the Elizabethville camp Protection alone can come venues, restored wages and business. The Press, N. II, 1890. eet lamps are being light- juight by Geo. Matthews, act having been awarded E. HuBsinger. lolarship coupon will not the Post after this week. test will close Saturday. at 12 o'clock noon. excursion tickets will be Thursday. Auirust 20th. in It - 7 Sioro. itate from Adams Beavertown 5.00, from rgh 1175 and from Selins- n from the Mifflinburg pa Mr. and Mrs. Harry Bibig ntly gave a lawn fete in rgto the honor of their rs. Carey, of Philadelphia. ,few more days remain to e great scholarship con he three prizes will be m the 29th of this month. Jcash-in-advance bubsoriber I to the control of 24 votes. Vth, easy shave, genteel )r other tonsorial work, is Hained at Soles Barber Aittenmyer's Building, op. )t office. Goto Soles tod -no mistake, filming ICrm Vi.U. J1 n a John A Snyder and wife spent Sunday at Richfield. Peter Hartman, the proprietor of the Centreville House, was a Mid- dleburgh visitor Monday morning, A large number of people passed through, town Sunday on thoir way to summit Grove Camp meeting, E l. Strunk, the popular tailor of Mifflinburg, rode from that town to Middleburgh on his bicyclo Tuos day morning. The St. Paul's (Erdley's) Sunday nchool will hold their annual picnio in the grove adjoining the church on Saturday, September 5, 1890, Rev. S. E. Bateman of Newberry passed through town last Thursday on his way to visit his sister, Mrs. II II. Herbstcr. While here he called upon A II. Ulsh and Rev. McLain. Geo. B. Boners and wife, two mutes of Millersburg, visited Frank Grimm and his parents on Saturday, They had been at Troxelvillo, Mid dleereek and Crossgrove whore Mrs, Bower's parents reside. One day last week John Kistner of Hummel's Wharf, went into the riv- er to bathe, and getting into water beyond his depth, would have been drowned if he had not been rescued by Jacob Trutt snd James Wertz. Prof. Ji G. App and wife of Lew isburgou Saturday drove to our county seat. Prof. App is one of the leading educators of this section of the state and in May was a formid able candidate for the Superinten deucy of Union county. We are now receiving the Phila delphia Sunday, papers. They., are broght here by Clem. Spansrlor from Selinsgrove on a bicycle. This affords. us coniunication with the ouUide world ou Sunday that wo otherwise could not get. Don't place your order for a buggy until you see the Safety buggy man ufactured by the Safety Buggy Co., of Lancaster. A sample buggy can bo seon at my livery stable near the Washington House. tf. W. R. Jones, Agent. Do you say that you are against Bryan, but not for McKinley T Then you contradict yourself. If you are against Bryan, you want to beat him, and how can you boat him ex cept by being for McKinley. The Sun, N. Y., July 30, 1896. Last week tho Post for the west end of the countv was printed bo fore the verdict of the jury in the Potter damage suit was known. All the other papers contained the ver dict, ($n,33;j). The Post was the first paper to announce the verdict. Dr. J. E. Bogar, candidate for Coroner, of McKees Half Falls ; Miss Ella Patton of Liverpool ; C. D. Bogar of Port Treverton i Miss Kate Fisher of McKees ; John S. App, wife and daughter of Mahan tonga were county seat visitors Sun day. Some people don't know that the courts bare decided that if a person orders bis newspapers discontinued be must pay all arrearages, or the publisher may continue to Bend it until payment is made, and collect the whole amount, whether the pa per is taken from tho post-oflice or not. The Franklin Township school board on Saturday eloctod the fol lowing teachers : Hassinger's, L. E, Derr; PaxtonyiUe, R. W. Gift; Moyer's. U.F. Roinard; Gift's, L. Walter Gr. Franklin, II. M. Amig ; Pr. Franklin, Louisa Walter ; Ren ninger's, Jerome Erdley ; Erdley's, L. O. Bachman, and Gilbert's, W. W. Ripka. A young man three weeks married at Topeka, while watching his wife cook breakfast, swallowing ten grains of strychnia, and going to a bed room lay down with his face in towel saturated with chloroform and died. He left a letter apologiz ing for putting her to the trouble of getting ready for marriage, but said that the knowledge that hit extremo baahfulness would annoy her all through life was too much for him. .What the Soldiers Ate At the encampment of the national guard at Lewistown, the following rations were issued by the State : Fifty-four thousand throe hun dred and seventy-five pounds of fresh Deer, 1!,575 pounds of ham, 62,200 pounds of soft bread, 13,050 pounds of hard broad, 7,830 pounds of beans, 10,440 pounds of sugar, 2,610 pounds of rice, 7,0t pounds of coffee, 8f4 pounds of candle, 2,4r.O pounds of soup, 2.2S2 pounds of salt, 1 17 pounds of pepper, 62,000 pound of potatoes, 8.W5 pounds of onions, 2,784 two- pound cans of corn, and three box rels of vinegar. This, of course, does not include the extras purchased for the various head quarters and company messes, fw bile all the food gave general satisfaction, the meat this year was especially fine, and the bulk of it, nearly 40,000 pounds of fresh beef and 15,000 pounds of hatu, was fur nished by Thomas Bradley, of Phil adelphia, whoso representative. B. P. Crookea, was in camp all the time personally superintending the stor age and delivery of tho tnoats and not a joint or side was allowed to go into camp that was not found per feol after a thorough inspection. ' To the Sunday School Workers. The Executive Committee having met and districted tho county, (the names of the Vice Presidents not yet being announced) who agreod to do thoir share of the work. It now be comes the duty of the workers to do their part. It was the sense of the 0Oi.JfrU.tee that each district should organize and adopt the constitution laid down by National Association, and make their plans for tho work as soon as the weather permits ; at least three conventions or institutes should bo held in each district dur ing the yeur, and as many more as possible. Without the united and earnest effort of all engaged in the work the labors of the executive committee will be barren and unfruit ful. It is also suggested that as many as can in each district preparo themselves ou topics selected by each association, for many of the topics that would suit ouo case might not another ; such topics as are par ticularly needed in your district should be taken and discussed. Do not depend entirely upon outsido tal ent, some is well enough, but to b've all from outsido of the district, to our mind, is not the right thing to interest your own people. Lot all Officers, Teachers and Scholars do their utmost to further tho causo in our county, as we said beforo, the executive committee will do all they can to assist in the work. Executive Committee. REAM THIN. Thra Oblige n by Trllliiir Tour Hj(h- bor All About It. This will be a campaign of educa tion. The issues at stake aro such as every voter should be fully ac quainted with. There is no better way to do so than by reading the newspaper. Every voter in Snyder county should be posted, and then he can cast his ballot intelligently. In order that all may have this op portunity we have decided to send the weekly Post from now until Jan uary 1, 1897, for only SO cents cash in advance. This offer is only to those who do not now take the pa per. It is so reasonable that no man in Snyder county can plead ignor ance of not knowing the great issues at stake in the coming campaign. Our subscribers will confer a great favor upon us by informing any of their neighbors, who do not take a 'paper, of this low offer. tf. Dr. A. C. Spangler, the efficient dentist of Selinsgrove, has handed us a reprint of the description of the building to be erected in connection with the dental department of the University of Penna. The Universi ty is one of the leading institutions in this country and those desiring information concerning ' the same should write for a catalogue. SOME RAMBLING THOUGHTS. BY NEMO. L'op.vriKhtl.) (Penned by a layman in the spare moments of a busy career and dedi cated to a better understanding of life and its varied opportunities.) Be neither a treo nor a wave in your montal make-up. A troe stands, rooted fast in one spot ; a wave is driven hither aud thither by every wind that blows. But iu your judg meut of things, be a man, free to move at will, from place to place. ana wen awe also, if necessary, to brace yourself against the liercost efforts of a very tempest of arjru. ment. A troe, with its limitod Knowiedgo of tun xmi world is the very counterpart of s .ne of us ; wo acquire a smattering of a few sub. jects, and tho very littleness of our knowledge makes us mad enough to tnink we know all that we should know. We somohow, perhaps from conceit, for surely it is a species of uarrow-giittga couceit that will bar out new ideas, thiuk it a shameful thing to chaugo our opiuious. We cling with all the ramified rootlets of prejudice to one little spot and progress is not for us ; the healthful gales of disuussion pass us by and we are not moved. Bo a strong man to dofoud the castle of your opinion, and be also a wise one, wise enouirh to know when io capitulate to a stronger than yourself. Tho riht side of a ques tion in ono generation, may be quite the .vroug ouo iu u later, butter-in formed age. If, therefore, you still worship tho day of little knowledge you are out-of-date, you are shelv ed, you are a Chinaman. v-7his queue-weuring, parchment-skinned Asiatic is content with the fow or many but necessarily antiquated things of ancestors : and ho is not alone for there are Caucasians riijht in your neighborhood who resist with dumb stubbornness all argu ment, all advancement. You may draw togother the curtains of your mind aud say it is as dark without as it is within; vou may close your ears to the hurrying foot of progress and say that everything is as motionless as you are, but tho only deluded one is yourself. "Tho world moves," desperately and under his broath said noor. weak, recautintr old Galileo, as ho turned his back ou a crowd of ec clesiastical sinners, who loved dark ness rather than light. Thoso con ceit-stuffed edition of men laughed him to scorn, and we iio hold them iu derision. New facts will force themselves into recognition and op position to them will be as the sand heaps piled up by children to stay the progress of tho sea. You no longer confino yourself to a dreary, dripping tallow candle, whon a turn of the hand floods your apartment with electric light, lou no longer deny yoursolf the succulent tomato because an earlier generation named it "love-apple" and dubbed it "pois-onous." Would you stand head and shoul ders above tho small meu who echo the dead! Then bo loud-minded enough to bo inconsistent with your past. No knowledge that you have had on great subjects has ever been final. Recognize that and you will continue to grow. Somehow I have read, the place I cannot now recall, that Dead men and fools never chango their opinions." You are alive in moving times, be not then as if you were dead. In religion, in science, in education, and, especial ly at this moment, in politics, a con stant re-adjustment of our opinions is necessary if we would be in the world and of it, in its forward swing. Station V. New York. On account of ill health Editor John A Nash has sold the Hunting. don Journal, and publishes his val edictory in the last issue. The pur chaser! are Dr. Z. B. Taylor of Or bisonia and others. It is said the Journal under the new manners. ment wffl be anti-Quay and will also oppose . some 6f the Republican county nominees. . AWAY nil Tl TG3 COURT HOUSE CRACKERS. Itoda KHttrtxt lor Krrnrri. Iliram P. App and Henry Ziealer. Exocutors of John App, deceosod, to A B. Wolgemuth, lot on Pleasant street, Selinsgrove, for $2M. J. O. App and wifo to Edwin A Heiser, tract of land in Monroe twp., cuuimuing vi acros, consideration J100. Jonn fouirey and wife to Isaac Maury, tract of land in Beaver two.. containing lo.soo squaro feet, con sideration ?62.. Mari-ln l.lrrnr. f u ... . nouLs iio iKEAM or Buss. The following inarriago li censes have been granted siuco our last publication : Wm. E. Heckard. McKees 1 Falls. fAnuieC. Cornelius, " " J Win- M. Sr. cht, Beavertown. ( uiDuie a. et bbio A. Wetxel, mnit wl.MH-rV ontrr. The contract, for putting the ma son work down for the foundation I il. t!l, I t . ui vuo iuiuuteuurgu liruigo was awarded to Peter Kiefferof Suubury lor f I'.ia. lhu contract for the mason work at Fisher's Mill 13rido in W. Beaver township was awarded to M. G. Roitz of Crossrofo for $214. At JhII. Willie Smith, a twtuvo-year old lad, residing at SeliiiH grove, was brought to the couuty jail charged with lurccny. His transgression.' are numerous. SHAMUKIN DAM. On the sick list Mr. and Mrs Els warth Aurand. . Hone they will soon rdJX fc,sW'Ko'ut again... -.Satur day Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Watts started to visit Mrs. Wutts's brother, Abel Herald, of Chapmuu township, and on tho road there Mrs. Wutts took sick and this morning tho Bad news comes that Mrs. Wutts is dead haviug died ou Sunday. This is a great Bhock to her neighbors hero aud they can hardly roahzo that this can bo true. She whb aged 78 years The news just reached hero that David Wilt, a formor citizen of this place, but now of Suubury, is dead. He will bo buried on Wednesday at this place. . . .L. G. Yost, wifo and two children, of Nuremberg visited Mrs. Yost's twin Bister, Mrs. Scott Ritter, over Sunday.... Scott Rit ter says he is authority ou pump kins. He lias somo fine ones, but we doubt if they wero here if his wife would not have planted them. X. V. z. SELINSGROVE. Our town seems to bo infested with a gaug of thieves. On Satur day night the show window in J. C. Kessler's jewelry store was broken and tho entire contents stolen and on Sunday night the collers of A. N. Gomberling on Pine street and A. B. Wolgmuth on N. Market were broken into and all eatables were taken.... Selinsgrove has tho base ball fever in proper stylo now. We boast of live clubs. .. .Last Friday "Our Boys" defeated the Northum berland club in a one-sided score: 21 to 3. On Thursday of this week the Lewisburg club will play here ..The Reformed Missionary So- ciety held a picnio at the Mamie Mills ou Tuesday. . . .Chas. Parks of Williamsport visited friends in town last week.... Miss Mabel Moyor of Bloomsburg is the guest of Mrs. M. A. Miller.... Miss Alice Glover of Duncannon is visiting Miss Tillie Glover.... Miss Annie Kinney of Mt. Carinel is the guest of friends in this place.... James Carey of Sun- bury was in town on Tuesday.... Miss Eflie Breimier, who has been visiting friends in Millersburg, has returned home. . . .S. B. Hare of Al toona spent last week in this place . . . . Will Fetzer, who has been in this place for the past two years left for his former home in Butler coun ty, where he will take charge of bis father'' business.... Our two jolly liverymen, Jonas Miller and Chas. Erdley. pent several days in At lantic City Ljet week. WEST BEAVER. Still some oats to harvest iu W. B. at this writing (Monday).... T. F. Swinoford threshed Win. Ulsh'scrop last week and reports lots of dust caused by about ono-fouith stnuck in tho oats. . . . Joromo Roitz reports another littlo girl caino to his place to stay last week.... J. J. steely inado a business trip to Adaiusburg last Saturday. . . .Solomon Wagner's son Samuel m d to have his arm re broken and ro-set last week. Drs. Smith, Bousli and Rothroch did tho work.... Tho M. E. Sunday School picnic held at McCluro on Saturday was well attended considering tho hot day. Tho school had free din nor for every ouo who was not pre pared with tho statl of lif.. Ti, scholars and members highly appre ciated tho kinduess shown. ...Fil son, (Ex. Clerk), of Shellenberger's WasHoon on our streets wheeling himself towards Buunervillelast Sat urday. . . . Wm. Steely of Middlecroek spont a few days with his sou, John, last week, tho former not being iu very good health . . . .Tho storm Sun day cvoning broko down a good many apple trees. S.ine orchards aro nearly stripped of their apples ..Milton G. Roitz has tlin rnnlmrl for the mason work for tho rmmii- bridgo at Fisher's dam for th .m. of $2I. KREAMER. Mrs. Mary Mitchell of Hear l'liiln. dolphiu, who li.id been visiting her aunt, Mis. J. ,v. Smith, for a few weeks, jJ-L nod home . . . . ( leorgo Gord: V-- Jl to Sunburvto ll lay li.?) foundation of th new nchool house. . . .Mrs. Lizzie Magee of Lew isburg spent a few days with James Magee and sister V'iu. (leniber. ling and wifo of Saloiu spent Sunday with A. O. Smith and family. . . .Tom Sauer is homo from Mt. Carinel. . . Misses Ivy and Eva Mensh of Mif. flinburg mingled with friends at this place a fow days last week. .. .Jan. Row, wifo and daughter of Selins grove enjoyed tho hospitality of tho hitter's purouts over Nuti.luv Williurd Roush and family of l'ax- inos visited the former's pareuls last week. . . . Kalph Mitchell and Charles Herman of Puxiuos aro spendiuir a few weeks at homo. . . .Tho people of our town who were uttending court at Middleburgh aro certainly reliev ed that tho case is settled and somo say they never want to sit on that witness chair again with Scarlet ou tho right and Bucher on tho loft. They all claim to have sworn to tho truth, but of course both sides claim that aud one must lie. Who are they? Base Ball at Middleburgh. Tho second team of Solinsgrovo crossed bats with the Middleburgh loam on I uosuay afternoon, score : .MIDKUilU Ktill. Gilbert, lb Marks, If Matthews, lib Sholley, rf Crouse, cf Stetler, c Clelan. 2b Spangler. hh ittenmyer, p 3 1 1 1 3 3 Totals, 20 SKLINSOKOVK. Phillips, c 3 Keller, 2 b 3 Gemberling, ss 3 Kohuack, p 1 llolic. lb 4 Wagenseller, 3b 1 Deoblor, If 2 Phillips, cf 0 Batoman, rf 0 a. 3 0 1 1 1 3 1 3 15 II. 3 r 3 2 3 1 2 2 r l 2 (I j K 4 . 1 o. 8 2 3 1 3 4 1 I 1 K 1 2 (I 0 1 1 0 0 0 Totals, 17 23 24 Mlddlolmnfh, BelluKKrovt), 1 t 0 t 0-17 We have several thousand yards of calicos in stock, most of them 6 cents and 7 cents, all fresh goods. We will offer the entire lot at 6 cents a yard. This special sale will begin Saturday next, August 15, and will continue untill the whole lot is closed out. S. Weil, Selinsgrove. 71 tfs dVnl