THE SCRANTOX Til TTWJ"N"TC FRI DAY MORNING. FEBRUARY 1 G. 1394. SCRANTON TRIBUNE F. E. WOOD, General Manager. I I l.l l-livn DAILY ANI WEEKLY IN ScllAH TON, PA.. II Till '11IIUU.MS 1'tUUbUI.NO Company. New Vobk Orriot: Tiiibdnb IictLDiNO, Frank B. Gray, Manaukil SuttrtJ at tU Postujlht ot .'(Tuntuit. SnuntiClan Mail Halter. Tu, at induced to republish It in Its entirety. The addreis will be a contribution to economic literature worthy of careful Lierusaland preservation. THE SCRANTON TRIBUNE. BCBANTON, FEBRUAKV 18, lt94. REPUBLICAN STATE TICKET Ku K CON Q K E Bfl M A N A 1' 1 A UO E, GAI.USH A A. QROW, Of SUSQUEHANNA ELECTION FEBRUARY 20. INSTRUCTIONS TO VOTERS. To vule for Ike iltui li ijiji. murk it rroitlii the small (quart at thoright hand 'aid of thr word " I'u," at the out torn of lit lint column on the ticket. Tu tote for IU Mil purl.; marl; a tiWM r small cure at the riyht hand lull of tU word " I'd," at the bottom of ihr second column. Lutes ju uiakt a annate murk, for or uoditut hridjr and for or againtt theparli; your rot will nut affect cither uUtttton. he pro- Ifrtntv and n-t "if.v.' - It would profit the United -Pros to do les whining and .w more wood A . at for Mr (how next Tuesday xwllben vote of dluatltfaotlon witli jeliUerats dtfloit making, - AMOKd OTHKR Democratic reuiup :ions there Ins been a marked renewal uf activity in -Mr. 11 irrity' "pull." It 19 AUVASTAOKOUa to every ol tln ot SofftUton to have Scrautou well equipped with all uecesmy couvetii meed. After dknouncinu "wu taxation" for twenty-live years.it id characteristic j in the Democracy to propose its re liu- pOlttiOD, TrVI ICOSOMY In municipal govern -ment consists of giving oltlZMU What th-y need. Scrautouiaus need new bridges. The VIADUCT on West 1ickawanna aveuua will mike an admirable OOD pinion piecj to the dual bridge im provement. QXNBRAL HARBISON'S latest address shows that if he hasn't talked much of late it hanu't been due to any lack of gilt-edged ideas. A Vote for Mr, Grow next Tuesday will be an expression of dissent from the putting of Southern theories into Northern practice UpRI 01 this Manitobau frigidity ai an early point in the present game would hare given the coal trade a de cidedly winning hand. GOVERNOR FLOWER has re-appointod Health Oflicr Jenkins The action simply re-affirm the fact that Mr. Flower's man is satisfactory to Mr. Flower. With PROPER harmony anion New York Republicans, Governor Flower can next autumn retire to his Water town herbarium secure in the fact that he is the last of his political spacies, . . There NEED be no captious disens sion of possible candidates on the ticket with General Hastlugs. The unstifled voice of the Republican masses will "'i' its wishes and these wishea will be duly respected and elected. PrOORIM in municipal matters Is never achieved without som. dissatis faction somewhere, but the nearer a city can come to unanimity of go-ahead sentiment, the faster will be its asceut of the scale of nil round advancement . . . Those who charge that the bridge improvements are a "j b" are undoubt edly correct. They cumpriio a job de signed to give amployment to idle labor, to lighten the weight of public charities and permanently to benefit Scrauton. - Gut HA 11 BOURBOM who, in defiance of the present handwriting on the wall, lately censured General Sickles for bolting the Wilson bill, should remove from the metropolis and locate among their political kinsmen down in Ar kansas. There they would feel decidedly mure at bomi. Local 1KIEN.LS of 11. B t'hambsrlin will be interested and pleased in his vindication from nnjust charges, us explained lu another column. The confidence retained 111 him by them, during bis hour of trial, will undoubt edly long remain a pleasant memory. - 'l in hi is an abiiudancd of room in this great country for two atttociationt for the collection aud distribution of genuine news. It is a false assumption that th activities of seventy millions of healthy Americans can be monopo lized by any single press news organi Thk Washington Post's prediction, based upon a careful canvass, is that the free coal clause will never be able to pull through the senate. Ilow'uver, that may be, one thing is at least cer tain. It will never be able to pull the wool over eyes that use its Inspiration, motive and menace. , WHILE IT is undoubtedly true that in thirty busy years of prosperous and ag gressive rule, the Republican party, In moments of error, has cast up some unsightly specimens on the shore of official station, it nevertheless remains the fact that it never was able tn ap proximate such a misfit as Hoke Smith In TOMORROW'S Tribune will appear the full text of Daniel K Strong' mas terly address In exposition of the fun damental principles of protection aud free trade, Mr. Strong delivered this originally at the Starncca, Pa , opera house, Feb. 6, and its condensation of the arguments for protection was so thorough and apt that we have been It was doubtless not tho intontion of the ballot law to cinse any misappre hension as to the etVevt of one mark in the top circle. Vet at elections where there Is a submission of special ques tions the law's provisions inevitably create confusion. Tho ballot prepared for uext Tuesday's municipal election observes strictly the law's letter. It is the law, and not the commissioners, that deserves whatever blame there may be a disposition to accord, because of such confusion. Taiu.no OP the remarks made re cently by The Tribu.nl with reference to the need of an overhauling of the practioners of medicine in Luzerne county, the Wilkes-Barrj Record re luctantly confesses to the existence in its community of "creatures who pro fejs to be physician?, but who are iu reality murderers of the most iuhuuiau stamp.'' and cmtiuue as follows uuou a much-mooted point lu medical juris prudence: The failure of the courts to admit the ante-mortem itateMBt of a woumu who Uiea uniior such olrcumstsnose-ha placed u (irciuluin upon this unuauiral work, and effectually abuts out all hope of bringing the guilty ones to justice. It is no credit to tho medical proteseion that it has as yet Hindu little or uo effort to have such u ual pably uujust law repealed. It ought certainly to be repealed, whether the doctors agree thereto or uot. The theory that a woman, at the very portals of eternity, would, with her last breuth, perjure her soul by the utterance of talis testimony, puts an undeserved stigma upon the se, aud acts tbrlos to shield guilt where once it serves as a protection for inuoceuce. VOTt KOR MH. GROW: Beoause every ballot cast for him is a iprag in the wheel of our industrial rush to ruin Because it will let the wreckers know that there are ominous breakers ahead, because it will restore to public life one who has been too loug immured in privacy. because, if by your vote you help roll Up a majority that will break the rec ord, it will be a proul deed to talk about, in tho Republican years to come. because yon do uot believe iu paying old debt by the creation of new ones. Because you do not believe that the men who sent uo substitutes iu '61 are a pack of resells and frauds iu l!Jl because every vicious thing Demo cracy ha lately done has savored of uupardonable iguorauce or smacked of almost criminal results Because, In the very nature of things, the Democratic party is unfit to assume the responsibilities of a majority or ganization and is only truly tolerable when In inuocuous desuetude, because the manifest destiny of our phenomenally expanding couutry, the dignity aud welfare of its indomitable citizens and the honor and good repute of our national emblem abroad demand that the reins of legislative control shall be taken from inadequate hands and put in hands skilled in the guid ance of affairs aloni; the paths of peace. 1 ie BOSSISM'S DOOM. The verdict of conviction, reached in the case of John Y. McKane, the "czar" of Gravesend, prosecuted for gross and audacious electoral frauds, is doubly suggestive at this time, coming in the wake of municipal revolutions in a score of ill-governed New York cities and towns, from Brooklyn and Buffalo down. It is a new reminder that, however much tho public 00c -cience mey at times seemed lulled into indifference to franchise outrages; however patient or inert the mass of citiz-ns may appsar toward those who make a capital of ttris weakness aud reap from it huge profits in the schemes of "practical politics," there is bound tocomea crisis when pampered ring rascality will overleap itself and land, cold and shivering, "outside the breast works." From the very naturo of democratic Institutions, then is bound to be an irrepressible conflict between vice and virtue; between ofti jial rascality on tho one hand and offijlsl honesty, upright ness and fairness 0:1 th other. The community, whether grsat or small, naturally divides nlong this funda mental line of sp tration. But unfor Innately it has of comparatively recent years oeen t'.ie race or tne natter ele ment very frequently to be numsrically outnumbered or strageticilly over reached. This has given to )us those legacies of municipal 0 irruption and Venality which, now and anon, make necessary some uiant struggle waged in evory instance to bossism's doom. The conviction of M i in itself is of minor importation, but as titly typify ing u life-and death battle reaching throughout every ramification of 011 r political system down to the very well springs of government by the people, it attains dimensions of momentous import It seems almost prophetic fiat the jury which has found McKiue guilty should in the same breath have uttered a reoommsndatlon of msroy. Undoubt edly, such monstrous municipal growths as registry-forger, bullot-stnffor Mc Kane exist only as possibilities of civic inditf srenoe. They are, iu a large degree, the creations of circumstance which are uf deeper root than their own design or endeavor. It is iu the nature of a solf-atonem jnt that an In stitution of justice, in meting out jus lice to a poisoner of justice, should by this leniency, inferentially rebuke tin courU themselves for so long tolerating such characters Nevertheless, an ex -tension of mercy to men like McKane la implied In the very fact that, Instead of treating them ae society treated its traitors ot old, weptrmit them to ksep their heads on their shouldsrs, and to "do" merely a few years of uoulual imprisonment lu some politely con ducted jail Senator "Ed" Muitriiv has absented himself from Washington, and an uounces that he will "look after things iu Troy" until after election. From all accounts, things lu Troy need look lug after. The people of that city, iu a caprice of anacc juntable an laid tv, are almost on the terrible point of ae lu illy daring to look after things them selves. Strange, ridiculous, inoompre hetisible as it may seem, thev are su 1- denly imbibing a delusion that it Is their own duty to do the looking; mil (hat a little earlier recognition of this principle would have saved them sev eral million dollars in municipal rev enue, not to speak of removing their odium as tho worst governed city iu the western hemisphere. THE TRUE REMEDY. Mr. Archer's admission that tho streets of Scranlon are far too lavishly endowed with pjUs will not provoke disfent. At many corners in the busi ness portion of the central city, as any one can see, the clusters each comprise from fifteen to tweuty-fivo supports, fully two-thirds of which are absol utely superfluous. No system or de sign has governed the location of time poles. There has been no perceptible effort to distribute them in a manner calculated to decrease the sum total of their uiisightliiiess. Thev have been erected iu obedieucs to no other rule than that of greedy caprice , and they are uot only detrimental in point of appearance, but also grossly extrava L'aut iu their unwarranted waste of wood and ground spac.i, and iudefensl bly menacing to the public. But it seems like a vain hope to ex pect the electrical companies to unite in remedying this evil, aa Mr. Archer suggest! If we may venture to use an expressive bit of the vernacular, they are uot built that way. The opportu Dlty to unite bus been open to them for 11 dozsn years. The argument tuat it would bean economical move, as well us a politic one, had just as much force twelve years ago us it has today, but nothing wu done iu the matter. Nor, if we wait for these corporations to as sume the initiative, is it likely that anything would be done iu a do.-, -n years to com'. Efsry year sees the number of poles increased, Instead of lessened. Whenever a company lias occasion to enlario its equipment of wires, the thought fiat auiiuates it is not whether 11 mutually beueticial agieemeut can be made with the other companies; the sole eudeavor Is to pick out the spots m ist suitable to Its tem porary purpose aud on them to prompt ly erect additional pole. The public itself will need to tujve ahead i 11 this matter, if the evil is ever to be abated. Fortuuutely, there is a permanent remedy already within re ich. An or dinance requiring all overhead wires, within a certain butiuess area, to be laid upon tne surface.iu a property insulated conduit, placed parallel to the curbing aud buried at crossings or court ways, would open the door to a project which is practical, comparatively inexpensive sud certain in its results. The saving made in repairs, and the increased ef flolenoy of a service thus protected from the hurtful influences of every wind, rain or hail storm, would soon repay the cost of the alteration, while hereafter the maintenance of the curb conduit Would be decidedly cheaper than the maintenance ofexpensive poles that rot; cross beams that break, and overhead wires that twist together, get torn loose and otherwise require con stant attention from linemen. Councils will need to apply tome such prod as thio if the pole nuisance Is to be solved with any approach to permaueucy and general gatisfatiou. Halt ThW Aianitlnatlon. Wilket-Hune fttCOtd It is the plain duty of the medical pro fession 10 drive from its ranks the men who dinRruce it. Any hesitation ou the part of respectable DhvetCiMtt to briui; about a reform of this kind rearls upon themselves with tellinc force. They can not 11IT011I to etiuid idly by and see their noble profession dragged Into tliu mire by irresponsible and ConlcleOCeteM bCouud inls Let the liUzerue (Vuutv society tuko up ibis mattW ul the next meeting and tee what can b it.. hi. to rid the community of the Inhuman monsters who murder for money. Home Evlduici of DmnorutL- Riform. C'uitiuJldue l.i-udri It Is said that passenger t initio between this city and Herautou lias (alien off near ly one-hulf iu the past few weeks. WE CURE DKI'MKKNNKSS AMI THf TOBACCO HABIT No Injections, No InoouVsntenpe No loss of time. Treatment at your own none Cures utter other instlimls fad Ask your drttgglSI ( ir I'IKI RE' NUS. Con sulcutiuii and tremulant tree Address, con SaentiaUy, "PHO-RE'-JfOd f URE" CO., BtfieUtOUi Pa. CONRAD the: HATTER IS SHOWING SOMh DRESSY LOOKING HATS FOR SPRING WEAR SEE F. L. Crane's New Prices FURS! FURSI GOLDSMITH'S $ BAZAAR CAPES 18 INCHES DEEP. A vote for Mr. Orow next will be a vote of censure on waiian policy of infamy. Tuesday the Ha- French Coney Capes, 15 luehts ieep. Astrakhan ( apes, " " , , Astrakhan Cape, " " , Attraktiuu Capes, " " . Led Opossum Capm " " . Monkey Capes, " " Moukey Capes, " " , Nat Otter Capes, " " . Xat. Utter Capes, " " . Knmraer Capes. " " Beaver Capes, M " , Nutria Capes, ' " . Seal or Persian Capes " " . Alaska Seal Cap, " " . Alaska Seal Cupel, " " , Mink Cates, " " . Brotvn Mai ten Capes " " . We Game by Them Honestly But in rather a mysterious way. Therefore will offer a large lot of Ladies' Four-button, Scalloped-topped Gloves at 39c. a Pair Kd In all the good shades, such as Tans, Browns and Reds. This f lower than you can buy an ordinary fabric glove. No restrictions will be placed upon this sale as long as the gloves last. Our new lines of FOREIGN DRESS GOODS are the talk of the city. Es pecially the 50-inch All-wool Novelties at 50c. per yard. Goldsmith Brothers & Company. NOTED J ust As Seen. Hon. Myron Ii Wright, of Susque hanna, representative from tbo Fif teenth congressional district which in cludes Susquehanna, Wyoming, Wayne and Bradford counties, is n typical ox ample of the a lf made mi.i. Con pressman Wright's early days were spent upon a farm in Forest Lake towuahip and hi tirst itu preisions of life wore gained in the contemplation of green fields aud lowing herd. When quite a young man, Mr. Wright obtaiued a position as clerk in a National bank at Susque hanna, lu a short time he wis pro moted to the position of easbier, and from that time ou fortune has smiled upon his endeavors. Six years asro he secured the congressional nomination from the eonferrees of the four counties who had previously been Controlled by Bradford county politic ians, and was cleoted by n handsome majority. He baa received the nomi nation and election for a second term, and i now announced as a candidate to succeed himself for a third term. As Congressman Wright seems at pres ent to have everything bis own way In the Fifteenth district his ronotninatioii and election seem a certainty. s Although but few may be awAre tf the fact, the well known marksniau, George W Stout, is one of the most v i -i t puzzle workers iu the couutry. There are about tiftetn hundred people iu tho United StAtes who I'm 1 amuse ment iu manufacturing anil solvlug knotty problems that appear iu varlom newspapers from time to time. They are well known to each other through their until de plumes, and frequently hold conventions in the larger cities. As editor of the l'nzzle eolmnu which appeared in the News during the past year, Mr. Stout made inanv friends among the puzzlers from Maine to California, wtio will regret that he has been forced by busiuess cares to discon tinue the work. Arthur H. Collins, who is at ptesent associated with Mr. Freas iu the man ufacture of oarauels, is an accotu nlisbed writer of vers and takes a lively interest In literary work ueuer illy, lit poems and essays invariably nhow n thorough knowledge of the sub jects at hand, which are treated with grace aud refinement. M Colt of Damnoratlc Rub. BelMmer Amtrkan U New.Yurk city Itf.tlsi families, com prising aof roi peron, aru out of employ ment) and there are 87,1111 families in need of assistance. Daatlny'a Favor Ilea Vstred. Nw eri I'otnuuuitul Aitctitiitr. The Mini uf Deatiay" Ulna hobuis to have petered out coualdii ably ot late. A dial Walt for It In Vain. (VtH York OMeiennl AJmrthtr Adlai's huugur for pie (till gue uual peasud. - 1 1,. In Buouy Italy. Qlicitfe ftrn nil. First Fair Neapolitan ibaaring tier iuuu dry i,i.,.-i on her hear!) -Say, .feanetta. Second Fair Neapolitan WellV First Fuir Neapolitan Is tny baskot ou straight CAPES 22 INCHES DEEP. Astrakhan Capes. iucties deep SIO U) it.. : Sea Capua. " MOO Electric Heal Cape. " iS 00 Frtm-n Cunay Capes, " i 00 Mink Caooa. 60 00 llruwn Marten Caues, " 5U DC Moukey Capes, ... DO YOU SELL? OR ARK YOU MAKING PRESENTS? of Mixed Caiidy, Clear Toys, or any style of Candy or Nute, Express Wagons, Velocipedes, Tricyoles, Doll Cabs, Diunu or Toys of every kind. DOLLS 'hliia Dolls, Wax Dolls, Patent Dolls, Jointed Dulls, any kind of doll from 'jcto (19 SLEDS OR SLEIGHS For Boys, Girls or Dolls, in Maple, (Jak ur iron, lioui -'5a to 15.0U BICYCLES We Lave the goods aud our prices are right. Wholesale uud retail. 1 J. D. WILLIAMS & BRO, 314 Lacka Ave. 29 U0 We make a BPSC1ALT Y of supplying coin I mlttees Tor Sunday ticbuLils, Fairs, Festivals IRON and STEEL . 8 UU . 4 00 . 500 . V HO , . 000 10 nn . 13 00 . 20 00 . 3J0O . 1J 00 . wOU . 1.4 . 25 00 . 3400 . 6u UU . &U00 . -am NORWAY IKON BLACK DIAMOND SILVKR EXTRA SPECIAL SANDERSON 'ft ENGLISH JEBBOPS ENGLISH CAST STKEL HOUSE SHOES TOE CALK TIKE MACHINERY SPUING SOFT STEEL AXY1L9 BttLLOWS HUKSK NAILS WILEY ii RUSSELL AND WELLS UHOS CUTTING MACHINERY W AGON WHEELS AXLES SPRINGS HUBS SPOKES RIMS STEEL SKEINS R. R. SPIKES SCREW Bittenbender&Cov$craiiton, Wholesale and retail dealers' in Wagonmakers' and Blacksmiths' fcl'PPLlES. THE DICKSON MANUFACTURING CO. ICS AM TOM AND WILKlSBARKI"., PA. MANUFACTURERS O? Locomotives and Stationary Engines, Boilers, HOISTING AND PUMPING MACHINERY. General Office. BCBANTON, PA Highest Cash Prices Paid for Raw Furs, Repairing Furs a Specialty. B LANK BOOKS LANK BOOKS MEMORANDUMS Office Supplies of all kinds Inks and Mucilages l.l.Aljl i MAKKS. Fine Stationery W 1 1! 1', W A.TEH M A N and THANK- LIN POl TA1N PENS. All IHiiiraiiteutl AfcHit-s for Crawford's Pens and Buck's Flexible Rubber Stamps. r Reynolds Bros. Stationers and Engravers. 817 LACKAWANNA AVE. WATCHES DIAMONDS JEWELRY SILVERWARE SPECTACLES EDWIN G. LLOYD 423 Lackawanna Avenue. SPEC ALS SALE OF f -AT THE- mnn'n rim LlcniM For the Next 10 Days. BE I il ioo pieces Twilled Toweling, best j 10 pieces Black Cashmere, worth quality, bleached, 3:'C. oo pieces Glass Toweling; red and blue checks, 4jC io dozen Turkey Cloths, size 8-. Red Table only 69c. pieces Table Linen (wide) Damask and Red, only 22c. cases Amoskea' Ginghams, worth Sc. o5 only 4-"C. the Loom Muslin, one yard wide, case Fruit of warranted oly 7 4C. case I nbleached Muslin, I wide, .Sc. quality, only 5 cases New Dress Calicos, worth ; . . a yard, only yd. 1 2 Wc, only 5c. 65 pieces Cashmeres, all colors, worth 35c, only 21c 40 Ladies' Jackets, all sizes, worth 7.50, only $3.75. Ladies' Jackets.all sizes, worth $10 to $i-5o, only $5. do, en Ladies' Merino Vests and Pants, ;oc. quality, only 35c. dozen Ladies' W ool Ribbed Vests, worth $1.25, only 65c. dozen Gents' Natural Wool $L25 Underwear at 76c. doz. Gents' Grey Underwear, 75c. quality, only 44c 8 i8 SALE AT BOTH STORES: The Fashion I Our New Stores 308 Lacka. Ave. 400-402 Lacka. Ave. I ASK YOUR GROCER AND INSIST UPON HIS FURNISHING YOU WITH STOWEES THE UUTHEIL STUDId 1 QIC LACKAWANNA AVENli:. DELICIOUS, MILO SUOAR, CUHBO ABSOLUTELY FTTXVB HAMS. LARD. EVERY HAM AND PAIL OF LARD BRANDED. !Mt"MTHE STOWERS PACKING CO., SCRANTON, PA m a !.'' MADE ci.utr.tr tti . frags t tory U turn al if trad M'.fMl. ncv aud ( 1 1 f man. I ilsi. (oa-.'.nuunds th Ml lis llmt 1 '.vUl :uks u nr,.'j3JN rat CHaVON i'OHTH AJT , -.)o. (torn anv ,i)U pl4 ABWUTO.Y ilt charge LA 11.-r STALKS OV KUAJIK FFOM St AO WW A III.-. SVi ikuianaiil i guaranUdl. Fraraea M out cnut. 1n tbaa . ptfA B, DVXOIUU Arilsk