The Scranton tribune. (Scranton, Pa.) 1891-1910, February 07, 1894, Page 4, Image 4

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    4
THE SCT?A?STTOX TKTRUNE WEDNESDAY MOIWDTO. FEBlUTATtY 7. 1894.
SCRANTON TRIBUNE
F. E. WOOD,
General Manager.
fl HI IHltn DAH.T AND WBEKI.Y IN CRAM'
ion. Pa., by I'm 'lHiiiuNE PpatlMMna
LOU PA Nr.
Nkw Vosr Orriot: TniBnit Bcii.uinu,
I II A Mi B. ukay. Uanaoer.
IVrreJ UC the Fnitulce at SCrOftlOll) P.I .
aWi,mC'uu Hail Hatter.
THE SCRANTON 7RIBUNF
gC&ANTON, FEBRUARY :. 1894.
REPUBLICAN STATE TICKET
roll OOlfQRMBHAN-AT-LABQl,
GALU8HA A. GROW,
OF SUSQUEHANNA.
ELECTION FEBRUARY '10
THE PEOPLE'
( 'oaort mrior
VOTE.
mui I'
ll Igkt Uothamjoui nalta i iwm
e (O represent the Fourttttlth
1 art district m the fa
Quigg, tin-
.Veie
o( OlnlW im-
tore ii'iCi
tonal f-'f
qatUd int suing; mij that is approxi
mate')' ibe geui ral idea.
.
'one billions of ioM it a steer b fee f
pan fur Dtmocratie "Brtbrm."
H'oon BCFORI Ilia oongrMeionai elee
tiona of isdo, when tho Democratic
l'-irty w,n making1 it furious ealnniitv
Hbont, crying "panic," "lianl time,"
"farm mortgagee" nu "plutocracy.''
rertni'i li 'I'lbliean journals warned
the opp '.ion V.mt it wis estalill 11
precedent whicn vroul.i ri'-act. Oi i
bogttl loart Dsinrc-.-.cv got into power
lnt now, vp hen us coloss il incompet
ency has prfcipi.itil a reiil panic, trie
v.-. tit according to Dun, iu the pMl
iiirty veiir, it bt the nerve to asli
that tlio etrinKenoy bis not alluded t
!c olviouely '- :. relish being boist
v itb its own in-tird.
tupera6 oJJ, tecare hii
tir f0 fa.- editor u V7U' TRIBUNE ht
u-ritn: "0 eonret, I don't fiitt'
r fflui MlUliy Mtl ut .'oi' fRi
(ndirfdiiafy. H's (imply too .i" !'
mid any iuto i"i tA- tKitwaMN mid
ita i fmrntr majvi ity o I , 000 to the
rrtdit of the iMtnoeratic pwt, tin
ptopU atd ,.Vj.' I tkink the juff
Migat fu be tin luepfaiHoR tothtR
puMicae ujtitij everywhere." rfcR
iiiuu RepitMioane accejif omen
and mil add then ihoJ to ta harttst
iimUeii itayi from (iid-.
Ut!) HiirutcTioN Editor Bingerlyhu
evidently decidtid that the best polili
cat bannODUttr is an oipertly swung
poUtiotl club.
Tht; btri method of out door relief
that we kuow ot just now would be for
the senate to pitch Wilson s bill iu -cotue
lux and all, oat the uu.irest win
dow .
No D0CB1 can exists after yesterday s
Third district cauventiou of tbl sincer
ity and eirues'.uesj of th lliStiugs
movtmeot The hero of tbs ("one
DUQgh U pre eur.ueutly the favorite of
the Lackawanna
Mk I'L' i.Ham uut having been
broiled to a sufficiently appstuiu
hade of browness over the slow hie of
senatorial courtesy, his ..aseis shoved
u?r until next Monday Meauwhile.
Li ill can saw more wood.
Mk IliNks announces iusloJriut -ically
that bis courss toward the Wil
son bill "is entirely satisfactory'' to
Mr. Atkins, manager of the Wilkes
L.trre lace works This may be. and
yet not indicate us complete accepta
bility to the district's other thirty-one
thousand and thirty-rive legal voters
We suspect that it dors uot.
.
Thl SEW president of Pniladelphia's
Pen and Pencil club, the best con
ducted orgaulzttion of journalists in
the country, is Louis X. Megargee.city
editor of the Philadelphia Timei and a
brother of Megargee Bros , of this
city. That the creditable honor is
worthily bestowed will be conceded
when it Is said that President Uegargee
is just like bis Scrantou relatival.
-
Mr. Obow ha&avery reason to feel
proud of the loyal support he is recei
;ng in scrantou. Tue action of Third
district Republic ins yesterday in in
structing for his re -nomination at the
May convention is a broad hint of the
inevitable as it now appears. Mr
Grow will have the voice and vote not
only of every Lackawanna Republican,
but also ot hundreds who have been
won from the error of misinided polit
ical ways.
The Democratic press it displaying
its lest humorous propensity in an ef
fort to ridicule Mr. Heed's statement
that, since lstio, protection has raised
the purcnasing faint of wages in this
(ountry ninety-seven per cent It Is a
Hiunirjcant fact, however, thut it does
not attempt to disprove the assertion,
which is founded on statistics as accu
rate as the multiplication tkble. Mere
ly trying to laugh it out of sight is as
good as a concession of its truthfulness
The BtTtUlaO Washington Post has
made a collection of Cleveland epi
grams, witticisms, auKilotes and at
tempt's at repartee. The collection as
a whole impress's at hi being some
what wearisome aud ponderous Never
theless, there is one gem la the list
which seems worthy of a re-setting.
It is the assertion of Mr. levelaud to
bis chum, Don M. Uickinson, that "an
enemy is never so thoroughly defeated
as when one refuses to qiurrel with
bin." it is svidsnt from coutumpra ry
indications that Btnator David li. ilill
is not yet "thoroughly defeated."
'IhEDKJiocKAi io News Dealer is now
dissatisfied with The TMBtlMCl asser
tion that the money eoit of Democratic
misrule, not because the figures repres
enting that cost were iucorrect.but be
cause, in the News-Dualor's opinion,
they were irrelevant. .Nevertheless,
the fact remains that the first year of
complete Democratic ascendancy since
buchanan has cost the country more
than the money cost to the north of
foar years of frightful civil war
Voters who ordered that kind of a
"change" and are satisfied with it are
ciceedingly rare, outside the oflices of
Democratic newspapers
Mit BlNOXMLY'S einorieuce as a
pacificator has mad .' him as m id as a
nornet. These are some of the tunder
and' affectionate epitli-ts which he
l ulls with double loaded Stnpbaail at
Ihoje who refuse 1 to be harmonized by
him: "Malaparti" possessed of the
"scoariad lost for power aad plaoa'
' mousing and DtUtinoOS cabal" show
log "patty and leHlsii malignity," and so
n. in eonolailoo, tbedlsgastsd mdi
ator suys "The p,.rty cannot afford to
get into bankruptcy and enforce a
liquidation simply l ocalise it has a
simple OU its little linger.' I'.videntlv
tile rol; of
vintages.
peacemaker has its disad
OU1 DOOR HLLIEF.
It is growing obv iott1 to S. 'ran ton inns
that the problem ot out door relief
will uot be satUr ictorily aud parman
ently settled tbil side of a complete
Btnl Marching revision of the acts of
150.' uul lMi.t. Within the past ten
y ars a widespread change has over
taken the prevailing methods of ad
mlnlsteriog relief Tbe Idea that be
oatlia a eltllSD is unfortunate he should
therefore be treated to the additional
Infliction oT having hiiusitt brvidel a
pauper and put into public evidence as
uu object of contempt has beau so vig
orously assailed by honest aud con -slderate
reformers that it already
sbowa sigus of weakening aud must
soon disappear entirely.
Ihere ought, in the nature of things,
to be no serious diltsreuce of opinion m
to tho statutes upon which our reliet
system is founded. Any friction or
npoertainty as to the meaning of the
law tends inevitably to obstruct aud
impair the efficiency of that system's
practical aud daily operation, and thus
to augment tue miserv of the sys
tem's helpless beneficiaries. The
change iu sentiment which lias devel
oped since the law was last revised
should have clear and explicit reuog
ultiou iu the statutes of the comm u
wealth, it should no longer be due to
chance, local generosity or the waiving
of possible legal interference that un
fortunates are enabled to obtain relief
through the performance of liouorabl-t
work upon terms Involving no public
reproach, rather tuau be carted iguoiu
miously "over the hills to the poor
house,'' that unequalled graveyard of
of hope, ambition and sslf respict
The present difference of
and put fit rami into office. The much
derided "bow" it a base growth di
rectly chargeable to tho fact that
while the professional Civil Service
Reformers of ibe largo (Upiul variety
were staying away from tbe primaries
and polls, to prepare fia otationi
sgalnit matters Md things in general,
the enterprising ward "heelei" was
getting in his tots
It will be- grearh' to th credit of the
r;-w co'.hctor, Democrat tuougli heii.
Ifbe'shotlld trova to have a prsctica'
man's oontempttor fspMltlee of fin'
.1 mii talk and a wholesome reg ird
for tue business interests nf his deptrt
rnent. The tine civil eervios reformer
the oue. lio he Republican, Dimo
crat or what not, to whom a lov-1
headed public will lift its hat insin
cere respect- is the one who makes of
tbeolrll service a carefully conducted
business, run by bminest men. for
builuess meu. on business principles.
FoHr billions of Ion'S is ll slefp pi it'r ttt
put for Dnnocfcile ''reerai."
.
Tklkl ARB coiidiimns of social da
pair which to an Amerloau are almost
incredible. Lven in tho blight of a
partisan threat to reproduce in this
favored laud one of the severest factors
in the creation of this condition, wo
are saved from a personal realt!U6n
of the economic and sociological dept hs
iu which are nurtured inch human
anomalies aa Yaillaut. Destitute alike
of fear, feeling and conscience, his verv
existence was an incessant mcnac I aud
Ins execution a mathematical problem
of self protection cMly in morbid
eyes was there anything heroic in his
continuous bravado. The human
mechanism which , for any reason, sis
bereft of its controlling spiritual ten -ant,
whether alive or dead, provokes
lees of pity than of Surprise, Anarchy
is the gospel of midness. Let the
agents of anarchy be treated as maul
acs whose departure from life is so
ciety's gain.
In last EVgNiKO's CarbondaleJ Herald
appears the formal announcement of
J. W. Oould'a retirement as its man
aging editor. Anew relationship has
been formed by which Mr. Gould will
have control of the Herald's weekly
issue, which is to be doubled iu
size and otherwise improved. Mr.
Gould is a Tkiui'se graduate who has
acquitted himself admirably since bis
entrance into the journalism of the
upper end. 1'nder his coutrol the
Daily Herald has achieved a place
among the very toremost ot inland
state journals. That bis new venture
will be equally successful can be confi dently
predicted from The TRIBUNE'S
knowledge of tbe man.
to assert t lint, its enactment is "glviug to
the country what It asks for" is tanta
mount to declurlng that the idle and
starving thousands ask fur continued
idleness aud starvation lustcad of work
aud bread.
Treuchant and Vereatlle Pen.
.S'iuU ian11" 7'iuiucii''
K. T. swojt. a termor Montrose newa
paper man, la now ii.eiciaie editor of the
Scrantox TniBuxt. Mr. BWeef wields
trenchant aud versatile pen, aud will
prove a valuab'a acqutottlon to tbe stall1 ut
that excellent lnlauU daily.
n i a i 1
H,i-itn. Bourbio Chorus,
H'iHe -Jerri Ntl lualrr.
i 'ollecior iierring you're a man.
As knows what lie's abnut:
So let us liare a chance nt p:ip
S &J turning rascals out.
r'oiir
billion of "" i- il ateep pt
I h-muei ativ "reform."
I
TOUND,
Then Noted.
ATTuRSEV Genkkw HrVSBL'S reply
to Treasurer Powell's questions re
specting the theatrical license problem
is an opinion full of common sense.
The- paragraph exonerating county
treasurers from "active duties In the
way of fsrrtsing out attempted, pre
sumable or actual violations of the
law" may annoy casuists, but it will
be pleasaut reading tu thousands of
Pennsylvania theater goers who do not
wish to encourage violations even of a
discredited pioneer law yet who, at the
same time, do not especially desire to
see that law enforced. The natural In
ference from the attorney general's
brief is that the heavens will continue
to span the sales even it (bis law be not.
lived up to in tbe fulness or its ami
will be valuable to the public if it shall
lead to a correct definition of the law
as it exists, thus clearing the pathway
to any amsuduaats tnat may bs
thought necessary. The present uncer
tain location of authority under the
special act of ISO! is an anomalous con
dition whose further continuauc
would be a redaction upon the fairness
of our legislative aissmbly. VieWel
from any standpoint, the question bril
ties with perplexities which could b-j
most satisfactorily removed by the
framing of a complete, new law, appll -
cable uniformly to all similar districts
in the state.
It WILL be very agreeable news to
tbe numerous friends of Rev. Dr.
Warren G Partridge, pastor of the
Peun Avenue Baptist church in Scran
too, and elsewhere throughout Pennsyl
vania, that lie has decide 1 not to ac
cept a recent call to the pastorate of
the First Bsptist church of Syracuse,
N. V. In many particulars this call
embodied one of tbe highsst
tributes that could be paid to a
Christian minister It was acompli
ment to his learning, bis eloquence
and bis piety that will . questionably
be r grstef ul recollection iu bis m mi
ory aud that of his friends. Uut tho
peculiarly warm and cordial relation
ship that exists between Dr. Partridge
and members of his Penn avmue con
gregation has happily carrlel the day,
a fact which will be most pleasantly
received by every Scrantouian in tonch
with the success that has atten lei Dr
Partridge's ministrations In this city.
. -
CIVIL SERVICE REFORM.
Ills announced In the columns of a
local contemporary that collector
Grant Herring "makes uo pretensions
to being a civil service reformer."
Well, so much the better It is unfor
tunately to often the case that the poll
liclan wiio makes the most pretensions
is the one that do-e the least genuine
reforming It is not always the man
who occupies sll his energy in tellimr
whet h" intends to do tnat really does
the most In this world. Oie trouble
with civil service reform irs those
who spell their titles with large letters
and find a melancholy solace iu the ir
reverent designation. "Mugwump!'
is that by tin tiius they get ready to
do something, they too frequently dis
cover that theif mental resource hSTe
been eaten up in superfluous prellml
naries.
On instance In point suggests itself
in the speech deliverei in New York
tbe other evening by an eminent edu
cator, tbe president of 'a prominent
American university, wno exhausted a
laign amount of really valuable energy
iu sucn serio omic rhetoric as this
The party of moral reform mean tooon
vert the epigram "Public ottoe is a public
trutt " intoati actuality. At the prusont
i one I rear public ufflce is a private crust,
Dung by the bust to tbe party henchmen
who feed from ibe crumbs of plunder mat
fall from his unhallowed lable The Anwi
loan despot Is a uew unite J loss iSBeBS
itlve tu ibeuitflulatlQg and restraining in
flUeucesof woatf proMlge or seutlment ; a
base and Ijnnrant fellow who excels In
low cunning and Iu the wretched arts o.
venal leadership, aud who Is In what
ilieaven save the Oork'i he oalls politics
Imply for what he can get out of politics
This Is the worst ot all t) raunles under
which a people can groan.
And yet, If the peopl do any amount
of groaning nnd-r this bur leu. it le of
their own direct volition, since all that
tbey need to do, to get rid of It, is to
go to tbe primaries, attend caucuses
lion. James T. DuBois, ot (Treat
i Bend, one of Mr Grow's warmest sup
i porters, may be included among the
talented sons of Susquehanna county
opinion who are well qualified to represent the
I A 1.1. . . 1 . 1 1
ewl ft fjlu. KtiLua Vat at kmH (flit
UWe4v"s V't-U;.
GOLDSMITH'S 8 BAZAAR
THE MATCH-UP SALE
Match-up! Match-up!! j the smell of it. Always! Broad, long and thick,
mot pennies,
winter
but your
i Hies Uie Tobae
Hal.ir
comfi
nasily without ilii-
our great commonwealth in tbe balls
of congress Although still a young
man, Mr. DuBots has a thorough ac
qualntanSS with national politics.
t rom the modest occupation of Betting
lyne at tbe case In a country newspsp ir
office, Mr. DuBois rose to the editorial
chair of oue of the leading Republican
organs at Washington, D 0. lie was
subsequently made Unite I States con
sul at AlX'la-Chapelle. which position
he filled with dignity aud filellty.
Returning to this country at
tbe beginning of thn Cleveland
administration, Mr. DuBois became
publisher of tbe luventivejAge n jour
nal, issued weekly nt Washington, D
C and now divides hi time between
that city and (rroat Bend, where he
has an elegant residence. Mr. DuBois'
name has been mentioned at a congres
sional nominee from the Fifteenth dis
trict upon several occasions bnt he Iisb
always declined tbe honor, saying, that
the time ha I uot arrived for him to seek
a nomination at the hands of bis
friends. Mr. DaBois is an eloquent
peaker. R pleasant gentleman to meet
socially, and posseiges all tin other
qualities calculated to insure success
politically, it D safe to prsdict that
Hon .lames T. DuBois. will again be
heard from in N'orthwesteru Pennsyl
vania politics.
see
Editor .lames P. Taylor, of the Mont
rote Republican, is one of tho on thus! .
astic Bonermen of tho northern tier.
Editor Taylor hasepant much ttini and
money in distributing trout nd sal
mon fry in the streams and lakes of
Hiisqiiohnuna county, and can tell a fish
story with the case anil tiueucy of tho
oldest inhabitant.
Dr. J. W. Coolidgo, the well known
bomeopBtbUt, is one of the most en
thusiastic archeologists in this section.
the doctor has made extensive study oi
the relics nf the Colorado an 1 Arizona
Cliff dwellers, end has written ninny
interesting articles upon tbe subject
Dr Coolidgo is a gracnfnl writer as
well as a thorough stulent, aud bis
discoursos upon the antiquities are al
v ivs interesting nni instructive.
t ts
Eiitor Llward A. Niven.of the Wil-kei-Barre
Times, is :i of th' most
prolific versatile writers In this part ot
tbs state Upon apparent ly barren
soil from a literary standpoint, Mr.
Mlven produoso dally one of tbs most
interesting impels In Northeastern
Pennsylvania. BJltor Niven as it
writer of verse has few equals in this
section, his piimis always read with
interest by people of literary taste
Ills libretto for the comic opera. Th)
Smith Family " sparkled with good
things and deserved t!ie recognition it
received at the time the opera was pro
dnosd
AVOID
suggests undertaker shop3. $2.98 a pair.
GRIP
BY WEARING
Fleece Lined Hygienic
UNDERWEAR
This ia
conviiicetl
fake, ii it aud be
Underwear
Your undershirt is wear
ing out faster than your
drawers. All right, match
it up. Come to us and we'll
sell you just now Under
shirts to match Drawers,
Drawers to match Shirts,
at half the price you paid
originally.
For we are in the same
! fix. More shirts than draw
er3 of some kinds, more
drawers than shirts of
other kinds.
Same state of thing3 in
! Women's Merino Under
wear.
Odd pieces at the oddest
of odd prices. We've no tar
paper or camphor to pack I warm, worth $5, price now
away woolens in. Won't 1 $3.75 a pair.
have it around. Don't like Dartmouth Blankets.
Our own Blanket3. White
as chalk, warm as genuine
charity, $4.75.
j California. Three sizes,
$G.50,$7.50, $8.50. ($2.50
a pair off regular price.)
i We have a few pairs of
1 the above Blankets, slightly
soiled on outside fold by
handling. An additional
discount will be made from
CON RAD, HATTER
HEU.1NU AUKNT.
Come here and match-up
your disintegrating Under
wear. Same case with Fine
Blankets
We'll say 50 pairs high
class Blankets.
Somebody gets them fori the above prices on them,
a few days at a rickety,
tumble-down price.
No camphorated Blanket Two things in Black
fatock shall assail us next
fall.
We'll sell it NOW before j
the winter goes.
While the bloom and
beauty are still on them
Duquesne Blankets.
Big, Clean, wholesome,
Dress Goods
45-inch Imported
Twills, 50c.
Fine
38 inch Novelty Crepon
Effects. 25c.
Spring Novelties
stantly arriving.
con-
CEE
FURS! FURS!
CAPCU 18 INCHtS DEEP
French (aiey Capes, is inches Utep
Astrakhan capus, " " ,
Aiti attban CspeSi " " ,
AtStftltblilt Cupos, " "
L)y xd y uu C'upos " " .
Monkey 'apes, " " .
Monkey Capes, " "
N'at Otttr Capes, " " .
Nut. Otter Capes, " " .
Krlmmer Capes, ' .
Beaver Capos, 11 ,
Nutria Capes. "
Beat or Persian Cspee " '
Al.i-k -'-at Capes, " "
Alaska Seal Capet, " " .
Mink 1 .ti" " .
Brow u Hal ten Capes " " .
. 4 00
. 5 00
V IU
. l 00
. uoo
. 15 00
. 0o
. ts oo
, is 00
. a oo
. 15 00
. ft 00
. pn
. iooo
. OUO0
. cjuo
Goldsmith Brothers & Company.
DO YOU SELL?
OR ARE YOU
MAKING PRESENTS?
of Mixed Candy, Clear Toys,
or gay style of Candy or Xuts,
Express Wagons, elocipedes,
Tricycles, Doll Cabs, iiuuii
or Toys of every kind.
DOLLS
China Dolls, Wa Dolls,
Patent Dolls, Jointed Dolls,
any kind of dull lioiu 'JoctoSlD
SLEDS OR SLEIGHS
For Boys, Girls or 1 lolls, iu
NEVERSLIP HORSE S
Removable and Self-sharpening Calks.
We are sole agents for Bradford, Columbia, T.a.ka
wanna, Luzerne, Montour, Pike. Sullivan, Susquehanna,
Wayne and Wyoming counties, State of Pennsylvania,
Catalogue on application.
.Maple. Oak or
to 915.00.
Iron, hum 258.
CAPES 22 INCHES DEEP.
Astrakhan C'upes. lui'tlus Jeep
Baltic Sea Capos.
Electric ."eal Capes, " .
French Cenej Capes, " .
Mink Capes,
Brown Marten Capes. " .
Muukey Capes, "
10 fJ
. . iS 00
. 15 Ui
.. H 00
.. SO 00
,. WOO
. . 8 j oO
BICYCLES
We have the goods and onr
inices are right. Wholesale
Highest Cash Prices Paid for Raw Furs.
Repairing Furs a Specialty,
uud retail.
J. D.
WILLIAMS
DRO,
314 Lacks Ave,
YTomuke a SPECIALTY' of supplying com
mittees tor Sunday Schools. Fairs, Festivals
Bittenbender&CoJcrantoii
Wholesale anJ retail dealers' in Wagonmakers' and blacksmiths'
Supplies, Iron and Steel.
THE DICKSON MANUFACTURING CO
tCRA.NTO.N AND WILK tS BARRE. PA , MANUFACTURERS Of
Locomotives and Stationary Engines, Boilers,
HOISTING AND PUMPING MACHINERY.
General Oflice. SCRANTON, TA.
B
LANK BOOKS
LANK BOOKS
MEMORANDUMS
Bliould Know How to Ac'.
futit.ft.'jiiH frets
v roproJuco from tbe 8i bamtom Thiu-
i ( en Inteivlew with Mr. William Cofi
BelL of that clt), which speaks nuUiorita
lively 'in UAqSMtion of free coal. Air.
Cornell is en expert with personal know
ledge el the Nova Scotia field mid wltli
long expeiicucn Iu turowu. rim luctsund
tlgnrcs show the deuiirr ni, i, msnacee us
under tlu Wilson hill. 1'hc vsat interests
nf labor anil production mioUeil lu th
coal tudustry shnutil know how to deal
with the representatives who have uton
false to theni.
- -
Not In the Anthraolt Rig-ion.
Km ftftj I It raid.
It wo cnild mini'X thn 'climate nf the
lliiwnliuu islands, vrltbout the tw jple, the
project would vtri) unanimously.
.
It la Partltanahip Oane Mail.
' a.'. . IVmeti
The n ek less partisan ohstlnacy of thn
pretBOters of thu ruinous Wilson tcheinu
In persisting In it lu the face ut the main
fett aud uuruistukahle resistance of thu
country certaiuly Itamaiug enough, but
Olce Supplies of all kinds
Inks and Mucilages
LEADING HAKES.
Fine Stationery
WIHT.W ATI-:!; M AN. mil FEAXK
l.l.N FOUNTAIN PENS.
All Ihiaiautsdil
Aleuts for Crawford's I'eus auil
Buck's Flexible Rubber Stamps.
Reynolds Bros.
Statluners and CnQravers
LACKAWANNA AVK.
WATCHES
DIAMONDS
JEWELRY
SILVERWARE
SPECTACLES
EDWIN G. LLOYD
423 Lackawanna Avenue.
rai,
GREAT SALE
OF THE
Walter's Stock of Dry Goods
COMMENCES
MONDAY. FEBRUARY 5
AT
The Fashion
308 Lacka. Avenue,
AND AT THE
New Stores
400-402
Lack a Ave.
ASK YOUR GROCER AND INSIST UPON HIS FURNISHING YOU WITH
STOWBRS'
T
HE DUTHE1L STUDIO,
315
1. tl'KWANNA AVKM I
il'K.lSTON I A,
U franii
till
madl contract itii
factory to turn cut i.w
between nuw anil Ciir
ritf I 1 Ith to anno,i'.i 1,1 thu put
DELICIOUS, MILD 8UOAH
HAMS.
EVERY HAM AND
OURllX) ABSOLUTELY rTJ.B
LARD.
RAIL- OF LARD BRANDED.
A,.t,-.,.s-.v la tl)'. I wi l i,ik . ii '.' .
CRAYON r'OK I HAll
any sDuil!
CHAROK
l.ATKVI'
,-ohmJ trun:
ABedLutn.Y FBRG rr
jwtradepplibd STOWERS PACKING CO., SCKANTON, PA
STTLV OF IRAMKS I'ROM
3 80 I i-W HU
wuiLmauaLiti uanuiteed
t'miui's M (i.r Cent, iemi tlmn ref ttlAf pr'.oi
K. DUTHEIU Artiat