The Scranton tribune. (Scranton, Pa.) 1891-1910, February 26, 1894, Page 4, Image 4

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    1
THE SCBANTOK THIHTJNE-.MOXDAY MOliNING. FEBRUARY 2G. IS!) I.
SCRANTON TRIBUNE
F. E. WOOD,
Gonera! Manosor.
rcmirnri) DAILY AHU irMRLf mSOBA
ro. Pa yTbi Thibo MmuMwa
COMPANY.
Fuamk h. Okay, Mapageb.
Urn Wuj.'lo- "I
Stttnd-Cltu Ma-
Feranto
ilatt r
Pa,
THE SCRANTUN TRIBUNE.
BCBAMTON, FEBRUARY SO, m.
cut, tUrovgll their otuwetJ to the roll
call. UnJer the olJ order, whila every
member inl-ht bs proa ?nt and in his
war, it would not In it quintal. If H
sufficient number for tome reaio:i, re
fniowl from eaiwerlae; to the roll o ill,
Tuo rallng of Mr. U-el which no
lioned sucii ;i torualooi outcry, w is
nothing uore nor less tbtntho obvi
OUlly simple, plain Mid twilfbtforwArd
ilecllioa tlmt if ;t present member
sought- to delay business by rofmlug to
answer to his mine, lis should b) no
counted m present? anyhow, upon ths
vldt aoo of good eyt eight. The an
j.reuiD court, btfoee whom the consti
tutionality of thin ruling wee. trie 1, do
cided that a quorum meant a pro3out
quorum,' and the t in default of other
instructions by tho houii ai to the
manner of aioertalning wr.m a i lorum
was present, the spsaker'i eye-wee ai
lejiul aa the membir'a own vote, It
beiu-j; wisely held that the inenkir,
until obeoked by the home, note! a
tu- Keui of the houie atid that, t wi
tor?, his rulings wore the ru'.iagi id' the
bouse,
in t;:e parliamentary ii'.ts of the pnst
week, precipitated by Rspreieutative
Blati I'l rigorous flooring of hit party's
imbecility, Mr. iBeedbas emerged a
rietor t every point. Tno D.'mooratle
parliamentarians fori see that the per
petuation of hit r'liiitj,' is the cue
w;iy out o.f intensifying tangles, em
barrassments, delays and factional
distensions They recognize that their
profuse abuse of those rulings, while
useful for tho moment, was In the lou
run an overwhelming mistake. They
would give anything to recall it. They
would lmv envthine to feel free to
lr will not do to take future victory adopt the iod preoedent witnoni hu
for granted. It will not do to hue ex- j itultlfio aiou. Bhanie, at this moment,
lu'C'tat 01IS MS to NOTemOCr UjKU I IS UI) lUUUUUW irs.iniuiufc mc.u
iiciiieveuieiiti that belong to February
ONE Ptl-flL OF SUCCESS.
While Republicans are felicitating
tlipmsflves upon their magnificently
won victory of last week, the fact
bould not be overlooked that victor
ies such as that cany with thorn perils
as well at KjoteiuB. Wnen the Dem
ocratic lenders at Washington, despite
their possession of a oleau unjorlty of
ninety-four members in the house of
representatives, nro already conceding
great losses in the congressional elec
tions next fall, som? oven going so fur
as to predict tho substitution, by the
people, of a safe Republican majority,
it is evident that there need to be,
among Republicans generally, and es
pecially nmotig the triumphant Re
publioans of Pennsylvania, precautious
against over-conn lenoe, and amity in
the selection of congreislonal nomi
nees.
So far from feeling th.it .Mr. I. rows
phenomenal plurality ot 183,1)00 "tiers
any excuse lor Indifference or the re
lsxation of efficient party organization,
this strlklns triumph should h an in
centive to still tnor.i aggressive .-!i""rtd.
!' should he a lesson teaching both the
need and tne popularity of determined
warfare in behalf of American politics
ns championed by the one party that in
tno past thirty live years has typified
t he progressive ami constructive genius
of the American people. While it is
wholesome for Republicans to rejoice
uver it, and to sen in it the prophetic
blaBonry of yet greater coming sue
esses, there could not be a worse mis
take, h tnoro iotxcueible blunder, tbsu
to permit partisan vigilance to re'.a or
pirty discipline to ease Its necessary
omtrol of th" force that win.
In the civic warfare of the ballots,
jmt as In tho iterner contests ot the
military camp, great triumphs some
times carry with them an aftermath of
ugly dissension?. Petty rivalries take
Biivuntflgeof the general jubilation to
bud and blossom into danr.rjus forms.
The clash of ambitions Invariably fol
lows, as weli as precedes, tlie clash of
aims or the counting of the ballots.
1: ibould be the endeavor of tho great
mass of Republican citlZSUS, to whom
politics means civic principle rather
than personal emolnmentor preferment,
to interpose their pacific counsel be
tween these sources of possible divis
ion and to make tirui insistence upon
harmony, disciple and COmpiOtnesi of
Hi- parly lines.
It is not a tini9 for Eqnabbleft or petty
feu Is
.
Oxe EXJOYAiim feature of American
politics iii that the people will not stay
fooled,
On:: OF the cleverest recent flights of
Correspondent P. A Barrett's fertile
fancy was bis description in yesterday 't
'i'vlettram of Soranton !iv- years bencs,
Take a long breath and rea l thU ex
The hungry quadruped (: the genus
C i pra which browse on the rocks of Ash
no tee Heights will broh the bridge and
feed on tbe greensward ii front of the
residences of wUHubi Conuell au i Colonel
Boies. Tiie little Lord Fnnutteroys ot Han
dersoa Dili will come down to tbe bridge
and meet tbe "rising generation" of tho
HoutbSldr. Tlioa too sweet rosetmds of
tbe hilt will cross we bridge and romp
with the young, athletic sous of stalwart
German and Inch pa eutege, and these
young jralliini" Will, in turn, cross
ilio bridge and make love to tho
little maids on their own ground.
Aristocracy will ba shocked; dude
dom shatterodi castles built on pride
will receive) a fall; society will tumble to
Its) veJ; neiresses win marry poor mens
urns; young men of wealth will choose
mitt a from the awe-;. at'ianl (lower, of
from n complete somersault ;a:id suame,
With Democracy S leaders, im linuteil
t consideration. A Week Or a day hence
1 may witne-B their abject surrender
I They must come to it some day or else
ejni'e;i3 their utter incapacity for self-
. government,
And that is why Mr. Raid is on siuii
guou terms with hltnstlf.
BY PHACTIOINQ HARD and working
late, it is believjl jwa and h msas
can come pretty near eqaslllng Penn
sylvani s record.
Officer Roche and the entire polios
department are to ba eongl ttulatsd on
i the vigilanc.i with which they have up-
prehended certain members of the gang
! of burglars that lias so long infested
I Scranton. The OOlltinuinoe, iudetiu-
! Holy, of the police dctivity of tbe past
l few weeks would soon put this city
I upon a prop ir plane of security from
: petty miadeu anort,
-
DgMiKlBACV wit.:, be In iuck next
! November if It shall succeed in elect-
I tng a corporal's guard of congressmen,
THAT VIADUCT.
When you oome right dawn to tho
: merit of the thi::j, wny should ths
I public give any thing tjv,irl the con
i struciou of the propue 1 W ist Livka-
wanna avenue viaduct : V ho was it
that destroyed that stretch of public
thoroughfare? Who was It that made
those railway and street car crossings
unsafe-'.' Was it the public? r was it
the railway corporations themsslvosv
Who u'flts ttia benefit of this dangerous
occupation of the public streotv The
public or the railroads: Who, then,
ought to pay for the privilege and in
cur tho responsibility of making it
nfe':
It is kind In the two corporations
that bare made this part of Scranton
a notabie center of danger to volunteer
to Lear two-thirds of the expensa of
obviating thai danger. They coull
doubtless have evaded paying a single
ciitot the oostottbe proposed viaduct
had t'.iey 1 , -n :j minded, and tiie pub
lic would liafw had uo l-ttr recourse
than to wn;stle for contributions, or
ties bear all tbe expense itself. We do
not wish to be uadarttood a bsii tiling
tbe generous spirit which prompts the
donation of ten thousand dollars each
by the Scfanton Traction company and
the Delaware) Lackawanna and West
ern Railway company, As corporation
1 gratitude goes, this was aa exceptional
display of public obligation, for which
wn ar duly grateful.
Yet it can do no 'ruin to remember
that when the gonornl public is asked
to pav the remaining ten thousand dol
! lart itself, it is simply ask id to bssr
the spiritual betterment of tno race,
urging that tbe bill bo immediate!!
tunc ted.
For TtIB TaiBOKB'8 part it ennnot see
Wherein tho regulation of American
morals can bo improved through tho
contemplated Interference of congress.
Admitting without question tbtf o
ii xiousness of many kinds of modieiQO
advertisements winch appeal to disrep
utable passions and vices, and concod
tng fre.-dy that such things ought not
to bj ma le glaring feature i of any
Journal circulating In the home otrcle,
it is yet unable to believe that a gen
eral law, passed by congressmen col
lectively far froui brilliant in their
standards either of intelligence or Bior
witty, will better meet this case than
the individual judgment of the gener
ally reputable and respectable men who
conduct the business departments of
American newspapers, or of tho citi
zens who lubstiribe for these, pip'rs.
That this law would place within the
; .ii filce department a dangerous
power ii shown in the mistaken r.eal
with which a former official in charge
of this department made n strained and
unwarranted uj of the necessary tat
nte against tbe circulation of Improper
literature, to discriminate agtltist lit
erary productions as innocent in spirit
and purpose, in the oplulon of many
p rson , as any play of Shakespeare
or any chapter iu the Old Testament
Scriptures.
The central point in all Ihesn recur
ring soaiina of attempted moral regen
eration by act of congresi ia that, iu
t his broad, liberal and tolerant nine
Uentti century, tho intslligent Ameri
can public is well qualified to take care
ot itself It doss not require the aid of
fussy paternalism to conservs its mor
ality uor to enlighten it as to what is
good and what U not good for its wel
fare. If it caonot pad lie its own canoe
through the flurries and eddies of a
-eetbing and fermenting age, that task
cannot well be performed under the
pilotage of a cotigioss nine-tenths de
lirious in all its i , .in deliberations,
nor by tbe capricious guidance of a
Postmaster General who may, individ
ually, bo a most estimable and worthy
gentleman, but who cannot, in the
nature of things, amplify his miud so
us to put a proper moral aegis over
seventy million of sovereign Americans.
Congress should ktep hands off-
There's not a tbiof round hero that would
Btel om, of them chickens, lor leer he'd
goi tho thirteenth.
.-
An AtUoiin 11 pia-.iO.
Tbere was n slick gambler from Nice
Tried 1 1 introduce poker In Oricei
lint seme Alliens banditti
Confiscated the kittl,
Scooping m seven dollars apiece.
1
A-..W-rd.
Said A to 1!: '! CUB
disposed 10 U A ,K"
Bald Ii: "Your wit, my long eared
friend,
Show Signs of And I) K."
vUiis'i.-; Cilij Jin'.i-iiul.
T CUBE
DRUNKKNN 11.83
AMI TBI!
TOBACCO HABIT
No iujuieio.n. No ineonYsnionoOi Nn i....
or timu. 'irsetment ai your owu noma Cores
after "the.- method foil.
Ask your drtifntlat for PHO-UB'-SOS. Con
sultatlou ittd treatment free. Addreaa, eon-
N THE
SSSOSBJ
r
18 OUR MOTTO AMD OUH CUSTOM
OVES
on the
noontiaiiy, "PHO-KE'-.nos cuiti-. co
: Qimiton, Pa,
BEE WHAT
Will buy in the
way of a
a a a -j u o n
AT
!
,
NEW STYLES of Outsic
and ready lor inspection.
tpr
mi'
Garin
nc now
n
xou are cora
ially
;:iOi
invited to visit our
n By'bBsRrii t
Upon the Second T'loor and see the new
a wonderful contrast betw
things
een th
in Capes and Jackets. You will behold
tashion ol
and 1 8
9.1.
Board.
Spring stock for 1894 coming in daily
have made this Department one oi the ni03t
a household saying: "If you want to sav
Rugs, Curtains and Shades, visit
1 11 111 ?.n
I'll
opular in out'
TV
vane. v an t ;,T.va;n 1 rices
establishment, and now it
money in
Carp eta
tttins
Cloths,
Goldsmith's Ba'-
LANK
(LANK
BOOKS
BO )KS
MEMORANDUMS D Y0U SELL?
1 lie Door Wan s liom--; the air will be id;i'ii
witn romance, TUe Jkior man's duck wilt tax for the avoldanos of a peril whloh
ueacK id 1 we ms sin j arui it pieomn a tu corporation-. In iDtjalVSS. tnposed
Will I-,, , ll! I ,.,fll-ni, fl'.ircf. ..rt the r l
nri-itncrat'.-i beok fenoe: the German's yel
low ibu will be on DeishborlT terms with
the wtlHouatfe's blooded pnp, and tbe
Irishman's rooster will crow on the blui
blood' ninibli! iwrtiro. '!'hre will be no I
easte, no exolnsiveness; tho poor man and
the ndi man will meet on the bi id-, and
both gn.ti at tee. troubled waters below,
us tht-y rush on nut liy totbe lea
Let na never again say that Altrm ia
lea(arofl dream Utopia ilsolf will
imvofcr its otlier name, "Soranton, the
dellghtfnl," Speed, 0 speed, the tn-
tervealng years'
'i Bl TIlOCBLl witn .Mr. Bland In cou
itres tho otlier day was that lie acted
more like n Mr. BltWt, It isn't
fashionable iu polite society to HI
unpleasant truths.
.
TOM REED HILARIOUS.
T heso are happy days for Thomai 11
Ut-ed. Not ouljr he on tho test of
political terms with blmifK and with
t tie pttbllCbnt lieia moreover ciijiyiiiK
an uncommonly enrly and tlierforo an
uncommonly gMttfying vindication of
those parliamentary rdliogl which
won for him, from displeased and
( hcckinnted llamocrutic filibusters, the
most artistic, symmetrical and empha
tic dehiB of mlerepreeentation ami
iiiniKD Inoorred by any Repnblloan since
Lincoln. In III pltlaWe inability to
traniaot bnilneta without the meant of
eofordag the HtUndauce of a iuoi um.
1 he Ueiuocratic majority ii to-lay Upon
tho very vergo of adopting thoio name
mttoh-derided Beed rnles which it late
ly depicted as aiitocralu-.-irbitrary mid
un-American. Bhame uloue holds II
hark; and anyliody conversant with
Dftnotraey'i history u ti not be told
tiiat when aliamo is the only conald-r-tlOD,
it rarely Insta long,
Thu roles of Mr. Heed, it may lie
Wlee to recapitulate, ware simply the
application of common Hi-nan buiinesi
principles to tlm tranaactiou of hotiin
business Without a quorum tlie'houfce
au do no business, Under Mr. Jteel's
t rdecesiors,a quorum had uicaut a
quorum of present mid voting mem
bers; that t, ot meuiben who, in ad
dition to being visible iu the house to
the epsukar'i oye, were audibly pres
Uiion it and which on i
obviated by the bbri
very beginning, Tile
m'.ts a railroad
street or ofTect 11
tho public eafuty
hereafter, when
lit to have been
orations nt tho
law which psr
oompaoy to seite a
crossing hurtful to
sho.il 1 .-j jo to it that
it oinies to ereoting
precautions f-r tin prottotlon of the
public, tho cost of tin-si precautions is
put whero it properly belong!,
,i
RtPUBIdOAM nomination's n oct fall
should not be in isUcn earnest demand
aa to sacrifice H ipoblioan harmony
and thus do away in some measure
with the chances f,:r Republican vic
tory. VYKMQARD it as an uufounled in
sinuation that the motion, at a recent
ineetniK of the poor board, for an im
mediate special session in the event of
a court decision favorable to out door
relief, was inquired by nuy fore knowl
edge of what the opinion of the uourt
would be. Such a thought derives no
encouragement from the public record
of nny of our honor tble judges.
If tiu: mineraof northeast Pennsyl
vania bad wanted free coal they would
have voted for Mr.' Hancock, who rep
resented tariff reform down to the low
nut approximation to free trade, Their
failure to do so was not iu the nature
of in accident
KEEP HANDS OFF.
The introduction into congress of a
idii prohibiting the circulation through
the mails of newspapers or other
priuted mattor containing edvertlii
nientB of certain patent remedial tiiat
embody vicious ingieetlofil or inspire
the moral readn with dlignat has nat
urally llloltld luu.di discussion. The
American Newspaper Publishers' as-o-olatlOD,
tor initaooe. meeting In New
York last week, adopted resolutions
protesting against this censorship and
recommending congress to ku.-p within
its proper and constitutional sphere;
While, in contrast with this curt advice,
lire innumer.il' ' petitions from minis
terial associations, social purity leagues
uud other bodiei which have iu view
D. P. Tbomi, of tho North Lnd,
who has aiiunuuctil himself as a candi
date for legislative honors iu tiie l-'irat
diltriot, is national secretary of tin
True Order of Ivoritea, has been prom
nent iu Welsh-American journalistic
circles during an extended oweribip of
the Blad;. and it a Republican from
( his feet up. His hustling opponent,
Representative Farr, is better known
' than Mr. Thomas iu legislative circles,
j but friends of Mr. Thomis cite bis
dexterity as a parliamentarian and say
1 he would not tak a MOB seat 111 any
I gathering to which be might be nc
: credited. The outcome of this com
petition will be awaited with interest.
s. e a
Ex-Jndgs Saeley's peremptory with
I diuwal from the ooogresstonal Rgbt In
! the l-'itteeiith leaves Hepresontative
.iyron 15. Wngur, to an nppeiranooj,
muster of the situation. His rc-noin-ination
is therefore probable and his
re-election, if hesiuli bere-nomin ited,
practically certain. Mr. Wright has
been an attentive legislator, prompt in
attendanos and fertile in resources.
He would possess ninny advantages
over a member lacking his expsrienoe,
Any disposition to inlrodaoe bittei -iipss
into the selection of the noxt R -publioan
nominee for congress in Lu
cerne connty will, of course, be resisted
by disinterested friends ot good gov
eminent, Mr I lines must be beaten,
but his delVit should not leave behind
it dlsseneions among the victors. A
little while ago he refusa l to "please
1 a few Republican!" by voting to pro
tect the industries of his constituents.
These Republicans" who appear
to have been in n very healthy lu.t jjr
ity last Tuesday inonld select a rep
resentative who will reipsct their
Wishes, and o.-.o whom they can at nil
times tiust.
e 4
Representative Joieph A. Scranton
got OUt of last week's p li !i ime jtary
tangle In the house by receiving a leave
of abience on loconnt of sickness,
Rows, troubles and motions bnet
the local D-raooraoy on every hand
If ex-9hrrlff Robinson dbuld have
beard the comments that were ma le
among tbe rank and file with reference
to the laying out ucoorded by the
Blmirn Tel-gram yesterday to his
leadsrship, be would have regarded il
as a poor recompense for Dnancial an 1
other aaiiitanos rendered by him to tiie
party. Nothing succeed' like SQCOesi
is true in politics, but it doesn't begin
to come up to tho gigantic truth tin,
nothing falls like failure, Toe lot of
the Laokawauua Deinooraoy for tbe
n-xt few mo;il!is is truly an unenvi
able one.
Skull Oraokiai Cnmn West,
IhtUulv'tihia lUttiotiii.
Now lor an exhibition of old-fashioned
Democratic "harmony." The fnn has only
uit begun,
TJiiln'i Vol In Muhlrls fl(yl.
t'ltHnihlt fiiU Time. DtM,
At leat there Were in evidences tiiat
the Democracy was gnllty of ballot-box
Stnflllng of any kind.
-
Twsntv Ave Tons Vr Man.
1 hifilyv VUptUth
It cost! a great deal U) die in Braslt,
Thus far tbu fnieliUfS have averaged nb.iiit
niie to every f,o,WX) poundii of juup iwder
1st Ul Hsvn Pen ll
.Vc- Vet,. ini,tiictil Aitt'trtiti i;
ilornblower and Peokham outbt to end
the painful epieode by sending Judge
W hite a banliot of lluweis.
Lndlsroue, tfehapoF carl.
Atfis I'erJt ' ',,iii-, , 11 Advti'tfHtt
There is no more pathetic spectacle
those days than t'lfl Schntl trying 10
Slilile at (lli'f.
Cellsoted Befere iiivsry.
BtwUna Htrali, Devi.
II is well for Ufrstiall Wriglit lhat It
got hi- reward fur his brilliant manage
ment of tbe campaign before the election.
Tno Many Seel Kfinrt.
.sv in I'orfc Otetswreei AdtirHter.
line of the dilliculties in the rereut ease
ot Mr. Peokham was that he bad too many
ool fiiuiuL.
r - 1
Hot Unluok-.- In His
Parmer Oatcake- yes; always make II
a point to ku - thirteen eblekene,
Vial tor Dot, yon know, th rteeu is au
unlucky number,
lurmer- That's ju9t the reujou 1 do it.
Office Supplies ol all kinds
Inks and Mucilages
LEADING MAKES.
Fine Stationery
WIKT.WATEIi.M AN and FRANK
LIN FOUNTAIN PENS.
All Guaranteed.
Agents for Crawford's Pens ami
! Brick's Flexible Rubber Stamps,
i
Rflvnolds Bros.
J
5-iationers zni EngriVOTJ,
LACKAWANNA AVU
ii: a i:k Yi a:
MAKING PRESENTS?
of Jlixed Cuutly, Cletir Toys,
orauy htyh; Caudy or Nuts,
Express wagons, Velocipedes,
Tricycles, Hull Cabs, Drums
ot- Toys of ever kind.
DOLLS
China Ttolls, Y:w Dolls,
Patent Dolls, Jointed Dolls,
any kind of doll from 25c to $15
3L3DS OR SLEIGHS
For Boys, Qiris or Dolls, in
Maple, Oak or Iron, from -3u.
to pi 5.00.
BICYCLES
We have U10 ooils and our
p:i i-s are rijthi. Wholesale
and retail.
D. WILLIAMS Zi Dr.O.,
31-3- Lacks Ave.
We moke n BPEOIALTV of mpplvlDj com
mlttueit lor Sunday Hehools, Fauw, restlvele
T
NORWAX IRON
IUiA K DIAMOND
V CTJli 8FECIAI1
SAMJIiltHON'S EXOI 1 -II
JHKSOlfi KXGMBII
CAST 8XK.EI1
HOUSE 8HOEM
u Ll
i.ii
1 IKE
SI ICHIXEIt
t tMUXCl
f.o: 1 sir:
ANVILS
Ul LLOW8
HOUSE NAILS
RUSSELL M IVELLH D
CVlTINCi MACHINERY
WHEELS
Wholesale anil retail dealers'
my.
in Wigi mns
JPPL1E.
I h I U I ;
M 9
si
anJ lilt
THE
DICKSON MAWUF
r 1 .'
n t
ECU ANTON A.D V.
-HAllKE, PA.,
ill ll d
RURS
0.
Locomotives and .Stationary 1 : . Boilers
HOISTING AND PUMPING MAC .!. I IY,
Qenerai OiUce, SI , MT
W, PA
FURS! FURS!
The Fashion
308 Lack a.
Avenue.
CAPES 18 INCHES DEEP.
Freneli Cousy Capes,
Astrakhan Itepes,
Astrakhtiii i lapes
Atenikhan 1 -ni1
lUi-ll I lu..r,-li (';,;,..,
Nontoy rujii-M.
U nkiv ' 'iii'e.
Nit. Otter I'up.i,
No;. Otter '.. n,
Rrimnier C'nn-s.
Bvaver Capev,
.'-.. r:a 'a)-.
Hoal Persian '' idc
Alaska Si-bI Uapei,
Atnska s,.;-.-, Capee,
.M.iih Uancs.
Brown .Man in pos
IS inch.
:;)
4 Iii
r, mi
M t
it mi
l : 00
111 no
do
li-'t iai
111 iu
ffi ii
II in
Uf fli)
."ill IM
fiii mi
no
Oi
400 and 402 Lack
awanna Ave
Of, PES 22 INCHES DEEP.
Inches deep.,
WALTER S i
for MONDAY
a n n
:5
AHtrokhan Capi
Hair: Si'a I'imhh,
Blvotrln ''. , a te i
Kion,-ii i 'on,", t ,j ,
Mini !apes
Hmerii Mnrtoii Cepej,
Monkey i 'opes,
JIU I'l
M 00
i.'i en
i; mi
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500 pieces Best
yd
Indigo Blue Calico.
price 33 c.
7c. yd.
quality
Our
Worth
cases new Spring Style
Dreas Calico. Our price,
3;c.
Worth (c. yard.
Three casea yard-wide Un
bleached sheeting. Our
price 3 -.,c. Worth Gc.
yard.
t Cash Trices raid for Ran Furs.
Repiifind furs a
WATCHES
DIAMONDS
JEWELRY
SILVERWARE
SPECTACLES
EDWIN G. LLOYD
423 Lackawanna Avenue.
2 cases newSpriny Styles I Ninety pieces Extra Good
Dross Ginghams Our, Apron Gingham. Our
price 10c. Worth 12' 1 price, 3fc. Worth 7c.
to loc. i vara.
Two cases new Spring
Outing Flannel. Our
pric9, 9c. yd.; worth
12'.- and liic.
150 pieces Linen-finished 125 pieces Bleached Mns- 12 pieces Tabble Li
Glass Toweling. Our 1 in Fruit of the Loom. Bleached, Un
price 5''4c. Worth 9c Our price 6
yd. Worth 9c. yd.
yard.
ana
pric:
urKoy r-ea. rar
35c; worth 50a
100 pieces Dress Goods, Fifteen pieces Checks and
all kinds assortment.
Your choice 25c. yard.
Worth 39c. tc 69c.
Stripes Honcsdale Flan
nel.
Our price 29c. yard.
mm.s
18 pieces allcolors Bro
caded Velvet-1. Your
choice 25c ; worth 75c.
to $1.
AS5C YOUR GROCER AK0 INSIST UPON IDS
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FURNISHING YOU WITH
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HAMS.
EVERY HAM AND RAIL. OF
HE DOTHEIL STUDIO
315
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LACKAWANNA A KNUR
HtltANTUN, PA.
PTTRS
LARD.
LARD BRAND!
IFBT?WPLIBD THE ST0WERS PACKING CO., SCRANTON, PA
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M.BO Ul V.Ill.
V.'i-Vmniislil;j Runr.-.ntep I.
1 ,aiin't per cont. loss than regular v.-i-.
B, DlANBUBUItj Artist.