The Scranton tribune. (Scranton, Pa.) 1891-1910, February 01, 1894, Page 7, Image 7
Tim SCR ANTON ' i HIBUNE THIRSDA V MORNING, FEBRUARY 1, 1894. CHAPTER VI. CONTINUED. "The blood had beenttresuiitug trom luv nOMi bttt I htd lukeu no DOtlOi ol it. 1 tiou't kuowvvlmt it wu-. that ut it Into iuy held to write upuO the wall with it. Ptirhhpe it was wmi' mls ohieToui Ides of Betting the polios upon a Wrong truck, for 1 t'elt lijrkt-ho-arti'il aud cheerful. 1 roiucuibcieil u tier- P uk COWsUUCD away wuu wuii CBIEI AM' MurSM "ok MBB0Y." mail being- found In New Vork with m4hn' written up stove him. mid it -vva grfued at tlio time iti the newspa pers that the secret Societies mutt have tlutie it. 1 guessed that what piuled the New Yorkers would puzzle the Londoners, so 1 dipped nay Bnge in juy own blood and printed it ou a con venient place on the wall. Then 1 walked down to my cab and foaud ! 'that there was nobody about, and that the night was still very wild. 1 had driven some distance, n Ueu 1 put my hand into the pocket in w liioh 1 usual lv kept Lucy s rinif and found that it was not there. 1 was thunder-truck ut this, for it was the ouly memento that 1 had of her. Thinking; that I luijht have dropped it when 1 itooped oer Drebber - body, I drove back, and. leavim my cab in a side street. 1 went boldly up to the house for I was ready to dare anything rather than lose the ring'. When 1 arrived theiv 1 walked right into the arms of a polite otSicc-r who was coming out. and oiily man aged to disarm hi suspicious by pre tending to be hopelessly drunk. ' "That was how Enoch Hrebber came to his end. All I had to do theu was to do as much for Staugersou, aud so pav off John r'errier s debt. 1 knew that he was staying at Halliday s pri vate, hotel, and I uung about all day. but he never CUM out. I fauoy that he suspected some thing when Drebber failed to jut in an appearance. He v. an cunning, was Staugersou. and al Wtjn on his guard. If he thought he could keep me off by staying indoors he wu very much mistaken. I soon found out which was the window of his bedroom, and early next morning 1 took advantage of some ladders which were lying in the lane behind the' hotel and so made my way into his room in the gray of the dau u. 1 woke him up and told him that the hour had come when he was to answer for the life he had taken so loutf before. I de scribed Drebbex'f death to him, and 1 (gave him the same choice of the poisoned pills, instead of giaspiug at 'the chance of safety w hich that offered him. he --prang from his bed and dew at my throat. In self-defense 1 stabbed him to the hrart. It would have been the same la act CSM, fOT Providence would never tiavr- allow ed his guilty hand to pick out anything but the poison. T have little more to say. ami It's as Well, for I am anout done up. I went on cabbing it for a day or so. intend ing to keep at it until 1 could save enough to take me back to America. I -was standing In the yard when a ragged youngster asked if there was a cabby there, called Jefferson Hop,-, and staid that his cab Was wanted by a gen- "I fiESl'RUlKii bltKSHKH'H lit AiH TO BUt." ' tleman at MlB Baker1 street. I went 'round, Duspei.tiiig no harm, and the next thing i knew, this young man here had t he bracelets on my w ritts, and as neatly shackled as ever 1 was in iny life. That's the whole story, (Ten tie men. You may consider HM to be a murderer; but I hold that 1 Ml just us much uu officer of justice as joti are." So tlirilllaff had the man's narrative 'been, and his manner was ho impres sive, that we had sat, silent and ab sorbed. Even the professional detec tives, blase as they were in every de tail of crime, appeared to tie keenly in terested in the man's story. When he finished wo sat for IODIC minutes in a !stillness which was only broken by ' the ROratchiug of Lestrade's pencil us he gave the llnishiug touches to his shorthand account. i "There is only one point on which I should like a little more information,", Sherlock Holmes said ut last. "Who wus your accomplice who came for the1 ring which I advertised?" The prisoner winked at, my friend jocosely. "I can tell my own secrets," lie suld, "but 1 don't get other people into trouble. 1 saw your advertise ment, and 1 thought it might be a plant, or it might be the ring 1 wanted. Sly friend volunteered to go and see. 1 think you'll own he did it smartly." "Not a doubt of that," said Holmes, heart ily. "JS'ow, gentlemen," the inspector re- novna. marked gravely, "the forms of the law must be complied frith. On' Thursday the prisoner w ill be brought before the magistrates, and your attendance will be required. Until then I will be re sponsible for film." lie rang the bell us he spoke, mid Jefferson Hope w us led oft' by a couple of warders, w hile my friend and I made our way out of the itatlon and took, a cab back to Uaker street. CHAPTER vii. I Ilk I O.SVU SIO.V We had all been warned to appear before the magistrates upon the Thnrs" day; but when the Thursday dime there was no occasiou for our .testi mony. A higher Judge had tukeii the matter In hand, and Jefferson Hope had been -uuimoned before a tribunal where strict justice would be meted out to him. On the very night utter his capture the aneurism burst, aud he was found iu the morning stretched upon the door of the cell, with u placid smile upon his face, as though he hud bet u able ia his dying moments to look back upon a useful life aud on work Well done. "Gregson and l.estrade will be wild ubout hi-death." Holmes remarked, us We chutted it over next evening. Where will their grand advertisement be now .''' "I don't see that they hud very much to do witti his capture," 1 answered. "What you do in this world is a mat ter of no consequence," returned my companion, bitterly. ''The question is. what can you make people believe that oil have done'.' .Never mind," he con tinued, more brightly, after u pause," 1 would not have missed the investiga tion for anything. There has been no better cuse within my recollection. Simple as it was, there were several most instructive points about It." 'Simple!" 1 ejaculated. "Well, really, it can hardly be de scribed as otherwise," said Sherlock Holmes, smiling at my surprise. "The proof of its intrinsic simplicity is that without any help, save a few very or dinary deductions. 1 was able to lay my hand upon the criminal withiu three days.'" "That is true." said L "1 have already expluined to you that what is out of the common is .usually a guide rather than a hin drance, lusolviug a problem of this sort, the grand thing is to be able to reason backward. That Is a very use ful accomplishment aud a very easy one, but people do not practice it much. In the everyday affairs of life it is more useful to reason forward, and so the other comes to be neglected. There are fifty who can reason syn thetically for one w ho can reason an alytically." "I confess," said I, "that I do not ijuite follow you." "I hardly expected that you would. Let me see if 1 can make it lear. Most people, if you describe a train of events to them, will tell you what the result would be. They can put those events together in their minds, aud argue from them that something will come to pass. There are few people, how ever, who. if you told them a result, would be able to evolve from their own inner consciousness what the steps were which led up to that result. This power Is what I mean when I talk of reasoning backward, or analytically." "1 understand," said I. "Nov. . this was a case In which you were given the result and had to tind every tiling else for yourself. Now, let tne endeavor to show you tkc different steps in my reasoning. To begin ut th beginning: i approached the house, M you know, on foot, and with my mind entirely free from all impres sions. J naturally begai by examln ing the roadway, and there, as I have already explained to you, 1 taw clearly the marks of a cab, which, 1 ascer tained by inquiry, must have oeeu there during the night. ,1 satisfied nr. toll that it was a cab and not a pri vate carriage by the narrow gauge of the wheels. The ordinary London growler Is considerably lest wide than a gentleman's brougham. "This wus the first point gained. 1 then Walked fduwly down the garden path, which happened to be composed of a clay soil, peculiarly Mittuble for taking Impressions. No doubt it ap peared to you to be a iners trampled line of slush, but to my trained eyes every murk upon its surface had a meaning. There is no brunch of de tective science which is so important and so much neglected as the art of tracing footsteps. Happily, I have al Wayi laid great stress upon it. and much practice has muds it second nature to me. 1 saw the heavy foot marks of the constables, but I saw also the trucks of the two men who had first passed through the garden. It was easy to tell that they had been before the others, because In places their marks had been entirely obliter ated bv the others coming upon the topof them. In this way my secoud link was formed, which told me that the nocturnal visitors were two in number, one remarkable for his height (as f calculated from th length of hit stride) und the other fushionubly dressed, to Judge from the small and elegant impression left by his boots. "On entering the house this lust in ference was OOn flfmed. My well-booted nan iuy before me. 't he tall one, then, had done the murder, If murder there was. There was rio wound upon the deud man'l person, but the agitated expression upon his fuco assured me that he hud foreseen his fate before it came upon him. Men who die' from heart disease or any sudden natural cause never by any chance exhibit ugi '.atlou upon their features. Having sniffed the dead man's Hps, 1 detected a slightly sour smell, and 1 oametothe concluslou that he hail had poison forced upon him. Again 1 argued that it liad been forved upon Mm, from the hatred and fear ex pressed upon his face. II y the method of excluslou 1 had arrived at this result, for no other hypothesis would meet the facts, ho not Itnaglna that It was a very unheard-of Idea. 'i'he forcible administration of poison is by no means anew thing in criminal annuls. The cases of Dolsky, iu Odes sa, and of Leturier, in Moutpelier, will occur at once to any toxicologist. "And now came the great question as to tho reason why. llobbery had not been the object of the murder, for nothing was taken. Was it politics, then, or was it a woman'.' Tluit was the question which confronted mo. 1 wus Inclined from the first to the lat ter supposition. Political assassins are only too glud to do their work end to fly. This murder had, on the con trary, been done most deliberately, and the perpetrator had left his tracks all over the room, showing that he had been there all the time. II must have been a private wrong, and not a political one, which culled for such u methodical reve&ge, When the in scription wus discovered upon the wull 1 was more Inclined Ihuti ever to my opinion. The thing wus too evidently u blind. When the ring was found, Ugwever, It settled the question Clearly the murderer had used It to remind his victim of some doad or ab sent woman. It Wasst this point that 1 asked Oregson whether he hud in quired iu his telegram to Cleveland as to any particular point iu Mr. Drebber's former career. He tmswered, you re member, iu the negative. "1 theu proceeded to make a careful examination of the room, which oon Qrmed me In my opinion us to the mur derer's height, aud furnished me with the additional detail as to the Trichi uopoly clgur and the length of his nails. 1 hud already oome to the con clusion, since there were no signs of a struggle, t tin t the tdood w hich covered the floor hud burst from the murderer s nose iu his excitement. 1 could per ceive that the track of bliajtl coincided with the Track of his feet. It is sel dom that uiiy man, unless he is very full-blooded, breaks out in this way through emotion, so 1 uuiuided the opiuiou that the criminal was probably a robust und ruddy-fuced man. Kvculs proved that 1 had judged correctly. ' Having left the house. 1 proceeded to do w hat UregSOB hud neglected. 1 telegraphed to the head of the police at Cleveland, limiting my Inquiry to the circumstances couuected with the marriage of Kuoch Drebber. The, an swer was conclusive. It told me thut Urebber hud alreudy applied for the ' A BAGGID I'ODXOSTKH ASkLD IF lllhltK WAS A CABBY OUBK CAUtKD fltVKK- son hope protection of the law against an old rival iu love, named Jefferson Hope, and thut this same Hope w as ut present in Europe. I knew now thatl held the clew to the mystery in my hand, and ull that remained was to secure the murderer. "I had already determined In my own mind that the man who hud walked into the house with Drebber was none other than the man who hail driven the cub. The marks in the road Showed mo that the horse had wan dered on in a way which would have been impossible had then been any one In charge of it. Where, then, could the driver be, unless he were in side the house'.' Aguiu. it is absurd to .suppose that any sane man would car ry out a deliberate crime under the very eyes, as It were, of a third person! who was sure to betray him. Lastly, supposing one man w ished to dog an other through London, what better means could he adopt than to turn cab driver? All these considerations led me to the Irresistible conclusion that Jefferson Hope wus to be found among the jsrveys of the metropolis. "If he had been one there wioj no reaSOn to believe thut he hud ceased to be. On the contrary, from his point of view, any sudden change would be likely lo draw uttetition to himself, He would probably, for a time at h ast, continue to perform Ids duties. There was no reason to suppose that he wus going nndar an assumed nume. Why should he change his nume in a coun try where no one knew his original one? 1 therefore organised my street Arab deteetlve corps, and sent them systematically to every cub proprietor iu London until they ferreted out the i man thut I wanted. How well they I succeeded and how quickly I took ad I vantage of it are still fresh in your recollection, j ne Inurucr ol Sluuger- son was an Incident which waseutire- ly unexpected, but which could hardly in uny case have been prevented 't hrough It, as you know. 1 came into possession of the pills, the existence of which I had already surmised. You see the w hole thing is a chain of log leal sequences without a break or flaw." "it is wonderful!" i cried. "Your merits should be publicly recogni.ed. You should publish an account of the case. If you won't, I will for you." "You may do what you like, doctor," he answered, "See here!" he con tinued, bunding a paper over to me; "look ut this! look at. tin tl " It was the Luho for the day, and the purugruph to which he pointed wus de voted to the case in question. "The public," it said, "have lost a sensational treat through the sudden death of the man Hope, who was sus pected of the murder of Mr. Enooh Drebber und of Mr. Joseph StangerSOU. Tim dctullff of the cas will probably never be known now, though we are Informed upon good authority that the crime was the result of an old-standing and romantic feud, in which love and Itormohism bore a part. It seems thut both the victim belonged, in their younger days, to the I .alter-1 lay .Saints, aud Hope, the deOeated pris oner, hulls also from Salt Luke City. If the case has had no other effect, it at least brings out in the most striking manner the efficiency of our de tective police force, end will serve us u lesson to ull foreigners that they will do wisely to settle their fouds ut home and not to curry thun on to Ilrltlsh soil. It Is an open secret, thut the credit pf this smart cupture be longs entirely to the well-known Scot land Yard officials. Messrs. Lestrade ana Uregson. The man was appre hended, It appears, in the rooms of a cer tain Mr. Sherlock Holmes, who has him helf, as an amutcur, shown some talent in the detective line, and who, with such instructors, may hope in time to nttaiu to some degree of their skill, it is expected thnt u testimonial of some sort will bo presented to the two offlOera us a littiug recognition of their services." "Didn't I tell you so when wo Started?" eried Bherlook Holmes, with a laugh. "Thai's the result of ull our study In tear let; to get them u testi monial!" "Nevermind," I answered; "I have all the facts In my journal and the public sluill know them. In the mean time you must make yourself conteut sd by the consciousness of success, like the Homuu miser " 'Pepuhw me slbilst, ut until pliiudu lfr AOBu stuiul M i . cuuihuplur Ui utvu.' " no. t mi. THE POSTMASTER'S LETTER. fin. a. v. Piincsi iMar Sir I in. i been so Invalid for nine teen years und imu ull the doctors 111 our Country prescribe for BS, but iln y could nut sny Just wluit tiled mi-. When I wrote you (jiv ing tbu luatory mid tyinptonit, you iIIiikikm cil Buy OSW an dltejUM of tin- blood and UlUiiryu, and udvUid mc to try vnilr ' i !, i M, l , I 'jt'Ju-' Discovery" and "Pel- inn, aim i leri cniu- T. ii. Uumdniihon. deal your medicines Miid mu lilt, mid I t.nio iill miii i. i , limn kidltsy und bluud dlseshi-H will try your vulu ablu medicine. T. u. KDMioNTisoN, Postjnsstor, Home, Mtirtiluill Co., Kam. The uiuaculiir system, the Heart, StOBtSOb, l.lvcruiid K iiliit-ye, all dntlielr work with cull ttsnt dlUlcully lor every weuiy, tbln or tbiu lilnudod person. I'utltfue comet) euiiy, it ex treme, und lusts km. The demand fur nutri tive aid It ahead of the supply, ami poisonous DlSteriall accumulate. Tbl U the reunou pill tiSople sre always tlrtu. Oilaln It la that Dr. 'farce's Golden Medical Discovery curd und tiullds up Just lUcb lUOertrt, 't'otduwctU and the m i fierce (uiuuulees A CDKS. uwifTiasn, Indapo maae a wen Man of e." INDAPO 1 It K (ill KIT HINQOO REMEDY t-hobtVE trU AlpfU itfclJiL'LTS iii UU lrH. 1'urrM ull Nt-rf ml vImmm; PaitTnf a nor j rirl. :n;i ucsiin-'ti. Millll) l.ililf tglUtSftfftiCSUSW t lUtt s' . r , t: Vjgul oi ! iu ln ttuki-u 1. 1 v . , , .... , , , Hut oumy icntom l.o.t m milium) in kid or young EMlly l'aitmU in w- pK-ktt. I' 9 1.00 fcpaokAfft. :.nn . . it till u Ktumiutrr lo fiire or money rcCuiiuVil. Dob'l (tt hli v twyi'tnclpwd illurnflHt HU luu any khiii uf Imitation, itiaUtonhev InfflXIIAPw rtoneotiiei ft he hue hut k"t It. .1 ft ill - i. i It iV ihftll np'm r uoelut ..r,.il.- P i.l.UI uia.i.11 i.i.i.W. :, ' .. . Orient III U , , in f , I'rofM., ChkRffo, HI,, t,r M r IfMtth j 10 LD bv Matihi'At Bra., WOOMMle :md Retail innwibis. SCUANTON, PA., itrid other U-ad- ENCYCLOPEDIA BRITA1ICA .r.Mjnlrk.d. .... . I ..ii mriiTtt.Li.ji. 'ST .. OTH"' jm. UmKS.:k.VtlSr- Tlie Bridge of Learning Mow oft repeated la the admonition: "Don't croM the bridge till you get to it." Another form for tlu' suiwi advice in: "Don't borrow trouble," iiui it is equally Important that the bridge should be crosied when it is icncht'd tunl that lioulile or M'.-j)onsiljilit Khould he borne manfully when One meets it face to (boo, The tnrbnlenl stream of life is studded with the reefs and shoals oi vice, raUery and Ignorance, and it ll the ntlhapp lot Of many to I aitle ngainst such breakers from the cradle lo the grave. In many eases, it is true, esCQMt can bo fciind for 1 he failure to surmount the dtfficultiea, but usually a mau is the architect of his own fortune. Willi a lew men the greater the difficulty the more certainly it will bo Overcome, but the average man shrinks from a task as a mud dog wouldshtiti water No one, in this sge, is go base at not to with for an erlucition but how lnany there are jret amor. m who have not the mural couj-hko to incite any gscrilics to acquire that e-luc itloo, Kven tbu niDrcduary aud tellit'u covet the look and bearing of a man who KNOWS; for knowledge anil witdom art the most potent factor! in thrift. Hut when a person Iibh attained a knowledge of men and their action: of the government nud their rulers , of SCienoe, art, religion, and all the tilings with which master ui.nds are liable to grapple, then the Question of money making become! a sec ondary consideration. When one lias put himself in poitetHion of the "facts iu the cut," evaa at tin sscri&M of titnt aui money, be tuccetdt so well that soon he is better oil financially on acuoont of the sacrifice; no that the sacrifice bee omes sn invest ment. Rdtication of the AHHAI1AM LINCOLN kind is obtained a little at a time, but with a constant application. No one should wait to take iL DAY OFF To get an education. The process of taking a day off to get sn education is at follows You bear or reai au allusion to Rome vaguely familiar eutj'ct and feel eager to know more abont it, and you determine to look it up a t the firtt op portunity ; but beforo that opportuuity comes another and another of suiib points are presented to your miud, aud when at last you come to an eticyclopedin you begin to look ap thtee points iu a wholesale way Hut tbe interest is gone and some of the questions forgotten, therefore the mind does not grtBp tbe bro.td application of the facts and cannot re member them, whereby if ynn go immedifttely to your encyclopedia while your mi nd is keen upoa tbe tubjtct it is iin poisible to forget what you real. This necessitates your having a set of the best encyclopedia in your own library and on the most convenient i-helf THIS IS REAL EDUCATION, When each and every family shall have adopted this plan, education will be advanced and civilization lifted to a higher plant. Do not neglect the opportunity offered through THE TRIBUNE to procure a library on easy payments. The offer must be withdrawn in a short time. Hun- and do EN0CMID T TM HlUMUT Mini' AL AuTHORITItt jRatiww. n-riKnruj i dreds are providing themselves with this unparalleled encyclopedia. Go JgSlW.J"r'-MJ".", likewise before it is too late. j ; mm .MENTimi JL JZ IMIalku will euro you. A W ffifr Lvf from i,i. . ni , mi i 6 nlliit-i! i ,i. Hi .uu 1,111.. f Uii FETEIt. .1fo;,i , Immdlafffllf.'. Anfflicloi.i ri'lm'ilff. ( ,'iirt'nlrtril t,i Mn. In pnfkit. rea.1T to Bf on Itrm IndletUnu or oolp, t'nnllDnrd I'io K0rti Pel niiinrnt Oiire. atUfftAaloiastttrsottSa r money rc-tundeU. Prle,;, o Hi, 'i rlal free i.t Dnmcliu. Hfdlsterefl mull DO MM, E. . .v. Str., TkrH fUttri, II . , U. S. t cxrsxxiucA.r'Gi UrUTUni Ttii' Biiri-t ami unfi'nt rmiily Tor ' nUU all skin dUmiwi, Kctemt. luh.Sa'i RbeniUii'M f'iriM, nurin. Cuts. WonSvrflil mm cilvforPll.R- Price. SScti. at Kruu- nil at frlt '.r by mall I'li'l'iii I AU Irt'iH iim rU-v. DWLffl For 9:ilo bv ItsttheWS Bros,, If ore tH Hri"! and Mnrsatl ('o. DR. HEQRA'S viola mm R(-moVC Frteklea, Pimplti Livtr Molei Bltclchctili, Sunburn and Ttn, and ro ttoret the slila to Its origi nal IrvstinesH. produciUK s clear and healthy com plexion. Superior t&snnee riT.Minmttit-H mul naruotlt (iiugtjlits.ormalled tor SOds. 8cud for Circular. VIOLA SKIN SOAP l"Ply lacnaiparaMa u Bkia ; ' "'ij t-utp, uu'i laM p r ilia tiyrt, iuiJ vliaoul riml fur in aurwy. AUoUit.ly mn nut aellimui1 mll oii. i. Pries 25 Cent. 0, C. BITTNEB6kCQ.,Tc.:.EDO,0. bnnrilew!. At all Regulates Tbu LIVER CURES Biliousness. CIRE8 Biliousness. nrtF.s Biliousness. Illrrcl Proof. My wife has tx-pn tronble l with Liver I'uinululut and Pal pftttlou of the heart for over a year, tier caw baltli il 1hi skill of our bttt physicians. After imiiiu thrre buttlca of your Burdock Blowl Hitter" "he It al most eutirely well WS truly recommend your mediant. IlKllHliE V. SHAWLI. Montielier, WillUius Co , O V s ilo by Matthews Broa Mr .: oi Ai 1' Horgaii Bro.AcU Every Womai: Somelimct needs a rcli able monthly regulating medicine. Dr. PEAL'S PENNYROYAL PILLS. Are MOBBt, HHfc anil esnsla In result. The irpnii I'm. i lir. Ptal't) never ttltSppolDt, SentauywUere 11.00. I . ii ii' ' ,,.i'u , I'levolauU O. Hiid h .tohn ii. PHELPS Pbarmaolst corner Wyoming avenue and BttrUca street Bcianloii. Ps. Di iiKH niior Co., Ino'p, (tpital.si.mm.non. BK8T Si.r.o SUOU IN rut: VVOBLOi " ,1 ilnllar iirnf I ft dollar fflftjtd TbltLadlet' Sella Prench DoiiKnlaKlil ni ton Hunt delivered fret Hnywhere in the r.s.,.1n receipt of Caali, Money Order, iinIiiI r,utt lor Sl-.'u qutlt every way the boOil .ii id In all retail timet for 1.W). We make ihln hoot ourselves, tht'li'fore wn (inlr- ItUltt tl"l VI, tUt 1111,1 ,' !. , and If any' one Is not satisfied n will refund the SjOftSy send another pair. Opera oe or t.oininun rense, widths (J, l, B, IL KK, I to H and half . Stntl i i o ... II uill Ut 1eU. Illusttaled I aft. li'UUH FREE FEDERAL ST., I HOSI'ON. MASS. Sffctul f frUM to JJtitlrr. flaflHasflMIMaV ur ns vji 1 isswiii ip H3 Dexter Shoe Go. L Robinson's Sons Lager Beer Brewery Mtnafsetareri or tL ciotirttoii PlLSKNF.R Lager Beer CAPACITY lCXD.Oaj Bbk Per Annum. I MALONEY DIL AND MANUFACTURING CO. Burning MT. PLEASANT AT RBTAlU ObS) nf th t't quality for tantStti nqe.anfl or sllaUns. dttlverN In any part of thu city al lowest jirk-e. Orders loft at my offloo. no. 1 1 8, WYOMIMa AVKNI r. Hear room, llrnt floor. Third National Utuk, or tout Ii v mail or telepliouu to ths mint, will rvcelvt inoinpt ttttutlon. Kpeidal coiuraett vclll ho made for tho salo and dsUVery "t Buikwhtat Ousl. WM. T. SMITH. 1 t st A' Si Pimm 3 1 From the X. 1 . ibunt. tVon The Flour Awards "CbiCAOO, Oct. Sl.-Fh first cfflcisl announcc-mont of World's Fair di plutass on tlocr has been made. A medal has teen awarded by th World's Fair judcei to the flour mana factured hy the V'aahbnrii, t'rosby Co., in tbe prest Wathburn Flour Mills Minneapolis. The corumittee repcrts the flour ftroog and purr, and entitles it to rsuk as first-dat? pattut flour for lamily and bakers use." MEGARGEL & CONNELl A IllllisO l Al.lMv SUPERLATIVE AND GOLD MEDAL The above brands of flour ran be had at sny of tbe following merchant, who will nccept Thk Trihl'n;-: PLOPS COUPON of SS on each one uundrel poandi of flour oi "id on each barrsl oi llour. KerantiMi r I'. Priee. Washington tvemie. Hold Medal Brand. Hyde rark Careen Davit. Wsthbttrn St. Odd Medal Brand; JstMN A. ... M.. . avenue. Superlative Brand retnntdft LSpsactr.Oold Madal Brand, l)uninorv-P. P, Price. Uold Medal Brtud. iilvpliant .lames Jordan, Superlative Brand Punmott P, D Mauley. Supsrlative Bran I I'rovldenee Kenner ' CliapeU. N Main ave line, SnptrUtlVt l-rtnd:i , .1 Qtlltiptt, W .Market strott, O. ld Medal Brand. Kfiser. lapsrlettve Co Superalttiv j Peck till-SUafTer Brand Jernum Ci. wintsrs Brand i Srboadsle- R s Olark, Qold Medtl Brtnd ll.'ii.'r.al.- J N. l oiter Co Oeld Meda. Brand. Hoiiesdule V P S henclf .Surerlttlvo Brand 1 altnn- S E, ran Jt Son. fluid Medal Brttl l il' atdsboro ta A. Ada-Jit. Oold Medtl Urtnd Tehvhanna Tobvlianna tt l.ehtk-h Lumlii I Co., Gold Medal trand III I . I i. t.Nl AI'TaH I'VINU. I or RESTORED MANHOOD Tht ureal remedy forntrroua prostttlen ard nllnervonsdlse.vaes of thejenerauve eiytnaof either sei in ii ai Nervous I'rutlrailm. Vail- I MS ot lst Mtnhtod. Impuiem y. Nihti( Kmlsalone.Touililul Krrvri. ,' Menial Viorry.eiee-i'lre use oi Tetni, .' i r iinluui.chlrli Itad to Con sumption and Iniamtv Wuh eier M oroer w sire a rttiu anar-nii.-e toeurti vMsiund the inimey ,t si I.Ot per p.,, 0 uhm o i va.OO. UU. ttO'l T'MriiEMI ai.l O.,llcvclaud.Uklo. DR. MOTT'S MBTEBOF PILLS ibj M, iin..1 Druggist, let feuu Avtnttt, Maiiiifaolnrers and Dealers I t an J W B BkaW rllniit UjllllU ' Also Shafting and Journal Greasa. ornoxt' 72t Watt Ltekawannt Art. WOHXSl Meridian Slroet Ladles Who Value A refined eompleiion mutt use Pozwnl't 1'usr- der. It pniducea a soft and beautiful akfn Hotel Wayerly European I'lan. I , rl . . Bar sittiiohtrl. I ' Del (or Boignur A Kustel't Taiiuhitiliaer Uter. N, E, Cor, 15th and filtot Ms,, Philidi Mot ftsstrebjt tor rssMenti of n k. Penn lylvauU. AU eoi.venlenoon lor travoltrt lo and Irom Broad Btreet ttnllxn aud tliii 't welfth and Market Htreet aUtton. I9 tlrtblofor vlBltliis HeraiitoiiiaiM suUr lie iu thu Anthracite Keirlou. T. J. VICTORY, PROPRIETOR. lllllllllllillllllllllllllllllllllllllllNllili1lllllllllllllll!t ! CUT THIS OUT. The Tribune Order 1 OK World's Fair Art Portfolio IN FOUR PARTS. iCOUPON. February 1. 1894. I V I Send or bring 3 Coupons of different dates, to gether with 10 Cents, and receive ertrh part of Mag nificent IMiotoirrnnhs. No delav: no waiting, as each m 1 Ba T part is now readv. THE TRIBUNE, Cor, Penn Ave. and Spruce St CUT THIS OUT. HiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiniiiiiiiiiitsiiHiiiiiijl i