The Scranton tribune. (Scranton, Pa.) 1891-1910, March 01, 1894, Page 4, Image 4

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    THE SCKANTON TIIIHUKK -TIIUKSDAY MO!?NING. MAT5CH J. 1894.
SCRAKTON TRIBUNE
F. E. WOOD,
General Manager.
PtntMMII DAILY AMI w ikki.v in KrnAS
in, Pa., hy The 'Jiiiuum POSUUUM
CVhpa.nt.
New Yon Omen: Tiiiiicne BUILBIFOi
Frank P. cituy. Manaofr.
EVrtrcd oi ihr Pottofflei Srfowlo. Pa
Sfccokd-CTMI MM) Mlatttr.
THE SCRANTON TRIBUNE.
EOBAKTOR, MARCH l, 1894.
Affatttfar falftd beOM$$ he VHtiUd fur
things to "turn up." Tk$ MOOMluJ man
R01MQBVS (timi tni, in '. Hil WW i.'f
tftl prMt,' ail .Wcrum, jirinter s ink and
kit rward, tceattsattdbih. There's no
proof likt trying.
OP DOUBTFUL UTILITY.
In his Intent iinnivil repnrt Secretnrv
of Ititern:il AITnirs Stwnrt renew the
Bftntnrotia Uvor,ettbf of n Penn
rylvanla railway L-oiy.mission, or of a
railway bureau to takesaehsnptrrision
of tbe manaitvmt&i ami riwlntsnanes
of th ?7? ataatn ami 820 street railways
that are either ii opsritiou or in pro
cess of construction in this state, M
TTOUld insure grSttsr a.tfety to pasncn
i;r miJ emrU'Veii. l'.ut, lest tho pro
jeot of n separate comaiaaioa mlgbt
conflict with the OOOltitatlOD, t!i sec
retary thinks that authority sujuM bo
rxprsatljr confrrrsd iipoi hi in to re
quire the thorough Inspection of road
leJj, bridges ah.1 tqaipmtnt; and,
Attn necessary; to "employ experi
enced engineers or other txptrts to
pass upon tbe sfly of roudi ami
tquipmants. "
Jjut at whose expens! Must the
people bo txjd, in addition to their
freight and passenger fares, to aacara
the safety of railroads Wiich d-rivo
tUfif fibartara from Iba consent of tbe
paoplal Tbia would in nil probability
be tba net result ot any probabla
legislative notion in the Indicated dt
reetlotl. The people ur to l mulotad
at both aada of tba Una; iirsc in the
waiter of often exoeatiro cbargaa for
services rendered; nnd then in the
matter of taxation to piy f..r the prop
er inspection of the railroads that they
t:;-weIVHS create. Any dissent from
'.his proposition will lu ail likelihood
wset with the respoiu", theoretically
wrons, of course, yet practically tr;i,
that tho railroads ar.? already in a p0
Fesaion which is "niiio points ia law"
and that the tenth psiut is generally
their';;, when needed, by virtuo of di
plomacy, influence or pull.
If a achewe of statu inspection could
l.'e deviai d which, in addition to giving
better promise of thoroughness than
the inspection system already wain
t dnod by tiie railroad companiea them
adves. would place the burienof its
cost, not upon the people, bui upon
those railway shareholders who view
In railway securities sirayly ona easy
weans of rapid gambling, it WOtttd be
hailed with popular fervor, but tiler,?
aire no faint streaks In the gray dawn
of such a coming mitlemum. The
lieavens are yet somber with the fact
that corporations, owned imstly by
wen having no personal interest be
yond tho specnl itiv) possibilities open
to them, conlr-d the majority of our
railroads in sucii a manner as to render
a state system of inspection simply a
ii w mechanism of imposition on the
general public.
Democratic atJBBRXATORIAL timber
13 acarce in Pennsylvania, notwith
standing tbe Bourbons who are taking
to the woods.
UndXB TBE decision of Julgs Gross
enp, of ChiciflO. railway agents ned
not, in prosecutions bron?ht under
the interstate OOSttBaroe law, lure
after testify if their evidence WOttld
tend to eliminate themselves. This
i tantatnonnt to saying that so
long as all are in one pool, there
is virtually no l.aw which can prj'oe
the pool's significance. The interstate
er.miuerco law is left by this decision,
where it ongbt either to be speedily
galvanised by saving amendments or
ehe bat) d beyond hone of resurrec
tion. Its prasnt form is a trav-sty on
legislation.
TBI SOOTfl, Blade Bolid by prejudice,
will next November be confronted by a
north made solid hv anxiety and loss.
NEW LIBEL LAW.
Although thers is frrqnently desnl'
fory diicnssion of tho noeil of an
amended law in this sti; with refer
ence to ltbel,tba rabjtet la pretty much
where it was yntra ago. Mean While
the enterprising lawmikers of arinm
bar of wore progressive states haV4 al
ready done justice to publishers with
ont sacrificing sny of the real rights
of tbe reading public. In Michigan
Minnesota and Georgia t ha editor who
wakes a mistake without bearing
malice is no longer rngtrdedas guilty
beyond possitiiity of vindication or
extnuation. Like other accused per
sons he is at least gi v--n a ohitnea to
establish his InSOOeBM; and his public
fxpression of sorrow, in case of guilt,
is not, as in this s:at, refused admis
sion to the jorv rooms
In three other states, namoly, New
York, Illinois and Wi;consin, the con
certed effort of publishers Is at wcrk
on legislative sentimuiit, in the liopo
of inspiring similar r .run. The pro
posed law which has been drafted by
the Illinois State Editorial association
reflects the beat thought on this sub
ject, and ia similar in import to the
bills contemplate! in tb other two
atates. It is wordsl as follows:
BtOTtOH V That for any nction bronght.
for the publication Of a libel in any news
paper in this Htate, the plaintiff ehall re
cover only actual damnges if a sbnll ap
pear at the trial of such action that kucIi
publication whs made In good faith and
that its falsity was due to mistake or mis
apprehension of tho facts, and that in the
jiext regnlnr issue of said newspaper, nf ier
sucli mistake or inisapprohension was
brought to the knowledge of tho publisher
nr publishers of such newspapers, whether
before or after n unit be brought, a curroc
ttol or retraction be pnblisiiwl inns cou
KDicuous a inaunor and place in said news
paper us was the libel.
Sec. 2. No exemplary or punitive dani
; ': shall bn rerovero l iu any nctiou
brought for the publication of n libel In
iny newspaper in this s'at.n unless the
plaintiff aball, before bringing initigtra
. m wriiing to tua defendant to iub-
La retraction or correction of tha libel.
II, borore brinzlng suit, allow the
; a roasniiahln time in which Co
ch retraction or correcciou.
Proof of the publicatiou of such retraction
or correction hall be admissible iu evi
dence under the general isuo in mitigation
of damage and In evidence of the good
faith of tho defendant, provided that the
l et l action or correction shall be pnblisbed
in as oonapleaone a manner uud place in
Said newspaper nswasthe libel.
This law, it ft BeedleM to say,
breat lies tbe very ossnc i of fairuess
Th only real obstacle to ils enactment
is thu presence In nearly ever': reading
community of Irresponsible atnaational
printa, against whom a judgment
would mean nothing, and whoss col
umns are, therefore, subject to no real
iliaciptlqe whatever Beoauaeof th.-si
journallalio quack aheeta, reputable,
honorable andoontoiantlous publishers
are left exposed to annoyanc , petty in
trigue and malicious persecution. It
is an anomalous condition, and it can
not long last, not even in Peanaylvania,
BOCTHtfUl BTATMttBM can stand any
quantity of tally, but fsw col I facts
plainly stated, as iu the oaso of air,
Hewitt, bring out all tbe oharaoteris
tic oi their sUve-driviug ancestors.
Lord RmIBIRHT, upon whom it
seems probable that Mr. Gladstone's
mantle will fall, is n peer whose deeds
uud principles correspond withhis nouii
nal elevation, lis has wealth, but ho
is nevertheless Indefatigable! lis has
position and influence, but he uses both
in tho advaucomsut of his fellow men.
Perhaps no other Englishman of the
youngerolaaa has equalled him lu th
promotion of wise and tiiutly reforms,
particularly iu the social improvement
Of the industrial classes and iu the re
clamation and modt rnUttiou of munici
pal London. i ono can truly say that
hie political success has tut been hon
estly aud fairly deserved.
Pennsylvania's Repubuoan editors
dould do aworae thing than to "gt to
getiiwr." Why uot meet and exchange
riowat
-o-
GETTING TOGETHER.
Ic is significant of tbe prevailing
faablon in American municipalities
that a bill has just been paaaed in the
Now York statu senate, with only two
dissenting votes, submitting to popular
vote the proposed annex ttton of lirook
iyn and adjiceut tsrritory to Now
York. Upon an earlier OoOMioO this
proposition to amplify Gotham met
with strenuous resistance, both from
the dominant element iu New York's
municipal government and also from
the majority of tbe citizens whom it
was iulendrd to annex. Now, by ft
curious coincidence, Tammany ring
aten vie with Brooklyn anti-snappers
in favoring th? "greater raetr polis,'
which, if it shall materialise, would
have a population sscoud. ia the list of
the world's great cities, to L indon
alone.
-Much tho sams tendency toward
greuter municipal co-onTitiou ia vis
ible in numerous sm ;li it communities,
to which rnl our own is no exception.
Tims in Troy there ii a very pnistnt
effort to annex West Troy, separated
only by the Unison, and Lansiugburg,
cut oft only by a fanciful legal boun
dary. Altogether, tr.is would make a
city with approximately 115,000 inhab
itants; and the only riasou for the di
vision is the political one that it now
renders possible a greater number of
offices and a larger assortment of
pulls. '' If in Wilkea-Barre the move
meat to taka in Plymouth, Kingston,
E iwar isville, Pl iinaville. Aiiii'r's
Mills andaduen or more additional
(daces has not yet attained vitality it
is not through lack of newspaper agita
tion, aimed at the glorification of 11
municipality that "would rival Scran
ton." We have had sonn illus'.rition of
bow this sentiment works in our own
c immunity, altbouzn it wist bs con
fessed that the aentinsnt is ns yet in
iis infaney hereabouts, A timi will
come It il inevitable when, as many
of our fors-seeing citizsns. at burl of
trade celebrations and other Inspiring
ncCAciOOf, havo nireaiy sapiently pre
dicted, there will be. no further adher
ence to the provincial divisions of
-icr.inton into .South Side, West Bide,
Central City and North End, bat when
the entiro community, United senti
mentally as well as politic ill, will bs
prond to ha70 it go forth to tho world
that it is just plain Scranton; acity,
let us hope, of 200,000 inhabitants,
whnqe collective energies ahall have
made it tho best governed and bist ap
pointed municipality In Pennsylvania
This is the spirit that is behind all real
growth; and it must sooner or later
dominate our people.
ii . O11
Rk.v. Du. Talmauf. attributes poverty
to the saloon and to labor-saving in
ventions. But what about individual
improvidence?
Wjiokvf.p. Mr. Vandmno, in hia of
ficial relation as postmaster, nets con
trary to the best interests of the city
and Tiif. TuimwK finds It ont, it will
ItOt hesitate 10 say so. But the cone o
tion of inaccurate stories about him by
; journal of his own political faith is
something which not even his oppo
nents should regard as fair or just.
That kind of walico is growing tire
some to the public,
It tS b'NFAIlt iu tho lib-1 law to pre
suppose that the accused Is BMlioiously
guilty, an I that he makes it a daily
practice to gloat ovor his gnilt.
A HOPELESS TASK.
Editor Singnrly has at last cot his
conscience twisted 'ronod to the point
where he oan join in the polloy of in
famy to the liinitod extent of denounc
ing Minister Steven-i for an action
which ho did not take, Apparently
fcjrgetfni of his journal's past expres
sions, the new leader of th Pennsyl
vania Democracy now declares that
"there was no abdication (in Hawaii)
until it was foroed by Minister Stev.mi
in bis precipitate haste to acknowledge
the provisional government." Ma
Bingerly! ought to remetabaf that tho
provisional government had bnen set
lip and recognized by other foreign
representatives n good day befors
Minister Stevens took any action in tho
matter, and that when he did act, it
whb (.imply to land tiie Halted States
troops for the protection, if necessary,
of life and property,
The fact that Mr. titevens may have
been inJiscret in his later dSOlsratlon of
nni American protectorate ,for which he
wan duly reprimand.) 1 by the Republi
can secretary of state, Mr, Fostor, (iocs
not cast discredit upon his preceding
conrse. Neither does it give any just
ground for tbe repeatol Democratic
misrepresentation that he forosd the
unsavory QtMSfl LU to "abdicate," OT
that he did anything else Inconsistent
with the proprieties of an American
uiiuister in sympathy with tba aspira
tions of a young republic, Tim vindi
cation of Qrover by 'the defoliation of
Stevens is a task entirely beyond even
Commodore Bingerly'k admittedly great
abilities.
QTKBSn AS to Mr. Gladstone's re
tirement will no doubt ba fulfilled if
they lire kept up long enough.
- .
An'OTHRR wnSK of fnsMng aul r -fl .
tion has convinced llarpsr's Weekly
that it went too far when it olroult
ously hinted that Mr. Cleveland had
become a fatKlf. It is now disposed
to retract something of its rstMttt sol
emn deprecation, and is ready t) ad
mit, with all its old-timo seriousness,
that "Mr. Cleveland is still better than
his party." lint his party? Words
fail.
QOVEONOB FLOWER has restored Al
derman Jaehne to full citizenship, aud
neds only to pardon lloss McKaue to
get the nnanlmoUS shyster vote.
MR. BLAND'S BILL.
An esteemed subscriber courteously
asks The Tribune to explain "how
the silver that Ilia . S . bill proposes to
deal with accumulated, aud what
Miami proposes to do with the seignior
age; or in other words, what is the
siigniorago and what are they trying
to do with It?'1
In reply, this extract from a loiter
printed in yoaterday'a New York Bun
presents nu approximate estimste:
"Bill H. R. 4.!.-(i. reported Feb. 3.
Congressional Use . i d, p 2 110. pro
poses to direct the secretary of the
treasury to ISSUS ordinary silver certifi
cates of the United States to an
amount equal to the coining valui of
the salver bullion on hand iu ex
cess of the sura of the treas
ury notes issued thsrsfOf and out
standing, Tho secretary's estimate of
this sx.'ess tints to be uv ill ib'.e for cer
tificates ia fifty-five million, one hun
dred and llfty-si:: thousand, Si 1 hun
dred and eighty-on dollars. Against
th sail outstanding treasury notes
there are already coined an I hoi I abso
luteiy idle in the treasury thirty six
million, eighty-seven thousand, two
hundred and elghtyfivs dollars (mint
report for 1809, p. (!), Inasmuch as the
present escrotary rostricts himself in
the redemptions of these treasury notes
to Hold alone, it follows that thssa
thirty six million dollars of standard
silver dollars become immediately
available for redemption of these pro
nosed nw silver certificates, if the
Bland bill is enacted. Section 2 of the
bill directs the coinage of all the re
mainder of tho silver bullion.on hand
as rapidly as convenient, the additional
silver dollars to be deemed available
for silver certificates as rapidly only as
treasury notes shall b retired.''
Tho foregoing extraci answers th
question as to how much thn seignior
age would amount to. As to the mean
ing of the wor 1 seigni jr igo.iti i ts pr 8
ent application, it my bi added that
itjhai reference to tho small pr centage
which tho governm-'nt sets aside, When
issuing treasury silvsr certificates i n
payment for deposited bullion, to pay
'or the coining of that bullion into
tsn lard dollars. This percentage.
Which is a small one, is set aside, in
bullion form, until snch time as it may
become necessary to convert the bul
lion Into coin.
4y
TIME CURES all inequalities. When
anthracite shippers were pinchel by
railway discriminations, tho bitumin
ous shippers laughed. Now that
they're in thofqueezi themselves, it's
our turn fo smile, and tho laugh will
not be lose hearty because it comes
last.
QROVER
Needs a Rest.
Il in which case, Indeed, ba is the worst
liiml ot a presidential imp ) .ltlon.
it la and has been tbe custom with great
m.-u and warriors t.i have their favorite
Weapon or characteristic trait emblazoned
on then- oat ut arms. Tbns, Attlle, the
great aud terrible Hun, loved to Do styled
"The Fear of the World" or "The Scour;;.,
of i ut," and had himself represented as a
great comet about to atrike the earth ami
destroy it. Thus Was th.. mighty IWOrdof
the immortal English knlghr, Richard the
Lion-Hearted, llku the flamioa sword ol
an nrcbangei. Uhnrlea Martel'a battle ax
was "Gods hammer" t' break In pieces
the Mohammedan power on the hold of
Puttier And Bnlwer Lytton represents
on ins coat of arms that the penis mightier
than the ..word. But If ever Qrover Olevo
land h is a roai i t arms, hi blatorical ln
aignla onght certaiuly to bu a gigantic
blunderbuss.
Yonrs very truly
Danicl h. Btroro.
Btarrueea, Pa.. K-'h. 2B,
To tho Editor of Tnn TRtBUNX:
Dead BlRIa bis last presidential mes
sage, Mr. Cleveland, taking the whole na
tion to witnos. publicly proclaims that re
present, or MrKinloy, tin iff dntiSS on ra v
materials radically pr.-veiit our mannfae
turers from OOmpsting in f..r.'igu markets.
Therefore, says our enlightened and far
llghted i.resident, "Away with protec
tion," that we may hsvo free raw mater
ials in favor of our export trade when
Immediately snch vast qnantitles of
manufactured g'ojs will ho cxpnrted
abroad that nevermore will our work
men be idle at home. Hence, the absolute
and pressing necessity of tariff r.-form ot
which he has so devotedly accepted tba
apoetlcahip on tho fat, ealaryof 1)0,030 a
year. And thus ho dedncs his (nmom
free trade-t'onfedn:ntn mnxiin of 'less
wages and mors toll," that tho long-da-sired
workingman'a parallse mnv at. lad.
bo open to American labor. Now, nil
this might saem intensely statesmanlike
the nee plus ultra in line, of
American n.iltieai economy were it
not for Mectlon U of the aforesaid
McKmley bill, which, f r the honor of the
presidential chair, ought to be brought,
even at this latshOdr, to Mr. C leveland'.,
notice, becaiiM. it unfortunately brands on
the fa oe of it the whole Cleveland tariff re
form theory, as the most, outrageous and
barefaced fals ihood polil ically Speaking
that, ever disgraced an American presi
dential message,
And the reason is simi.lo ennugli be
canee Section U fully provides that no
tariff shall exist on Imported raw materials
used by our manufacturers In goods sobs
exported for rale in foreign markets,
Which, in plain EnyHdi, means that all du-tl"-.
BSSStaed Ofl raw inat'-rlals thus used
are refunded to the export. r on goods to
ba eela abroad. Oenseqaently, under tho
Iireront protective tariff, us I have ofti.n
proclaimed, raw materials Ire asfroefrom
all liiti.es as any free trad.- measure can
mnlfi tbSffl, so far as our export, trade is
concerned. I hold, therefore, that tho
Whole ho called tariff reform movement,
of which free raw materials for our ex
port trade la a fundamental feature,
is n gignn'in Swindle ia face
of tho hundreds of ihogiands
noW starving by reason "f it. Ami iih pro.
in. iters f hc.iild b le 1 1 rennoiislble by n Of
fering aad deluded public, The wlleoo
bill nor any Other Hill cannot do on.. Iota
more for our foreign etpoTt trade than
protection is now d ilng Bus, on the other
nsnd, is not protection wMely ami patrioti
cally Living our BSTolJleeut homo market
for ouraerves this magnlflcont mar
ket Which Cleveland h ruining
arid betraying, with his free trade
Confederate aoolytes, Into tbe hands of
the commercial snsUles of our OOUOtry!
No Jadgmsnt) therefore, and noeriUclam,
can bs too severe or to . p.-r.-onid on a man
like Mr. Cleveland win., mnv that he Is
seated ia the pro-.ldent.ial chair, has not
only forced his blundering persouality on
the whole northern and western wing of
his own purl y to better decolve it ami be
tray it. Into the hand.iof tho "tolid Smith"
bat has also attempted to deceive the wind.)
nut ion in a pro -ident ml moeeagoin tbe man
nr above Indicated. Of two conclusions,
then, one must bo (orio-t, namely, either
that, clevelSnd has mad s .ction "j ..t tl s
MoKinley Mil, when, truly, he is the m.s;
nnprinclplod kind of a political deinngogao;
or, on thu other I. and. thnt he has uot read
WE CUBE
Dili Mil N.-.ISS
am. Tim
TODAUtiO UABIT
Notnjeetlona no laennvenienee, N.. Ins
of time, 'iruataient it yonr owu hMne. Cares
after ottn.r ninth. ..Is fall.
Aek year drntirUt for PHO-ltEMloa. '.in
sidiution and treatmont free, Address, eon.
hdsntlaliy, "PUOdtE'-NOS CURi" CO.,
oianton. Pa.
SEE WHAT
torn
Will buy in the
way of a
HAT
n b
AT
B
LANK IiOOKS
LANK BOOKS
MEMORANDUMS
Office Supplies of all kinds
Inks and Mucilages
LEADIXO MAKES.
Fine Stationery
WIRT,WATERM A N nnd EUAN K
LIN FOUNTAIN PENS.
ah Quaraateed.
Aponta for Crawford's Pens anil
Iltick'n Flexible Rubber Stamps.
Reynolds Bros.
Stationers r.nd Engrivcri
0t7 LACKAWANNA AVIi
SEE
F. L. Crane's Hew Prices
FURS! FURS!
CAPES 18 INCHES DEEP.
French Coney Cnpifi, is inchi-a
Ant. Hkh.in Capea "
Astrakhan ('-.in-s. "
AtHraatian Cap i, "
Iiy.-d iipo.is.im I'npoa "
Monte? caiwi, M
Monkey I'apw, M
Nat. Ottr t 'ap-i, M
Nat. Otter Gape
Krlmm. r Capea "
Bearer Cap. i,
aatria t'up.'s, M
Hoal nr reraun f'.ino "
Atapka K.nl Oapes, '
Alnnk.i Hani Capes, "
Mink (tflt.PH, "
Hi own Mai ton Capos "
deep.
.$ it ni
4 11
. r i
u III
. no
. U in
. IS a
. at (i
. r.r. in
. um
. ixi
. M in
. i nn
. Xi n i
, M in
. fi nu
. (6 00
CAPES 22 INCHES DEEP.
Astrakhan 'ap..s, l"; laches deep io 00
Baltic See Ospea " l (J
Klwtrlc M-al l ap. s, " lR (II
Freiii ti Obney nepne. " 1 00
Mink fniH.s, BOuj
Brewn aTanen Capea " W"'
Hookey Capea " a 00
Highest fnsli trices Paid for Raw Ml,
Kepairing Fan a Specialty.
WATCHES
DIAMONDS
JEWELRY
SILVERWARE
SPECTACLES
EDWIN G. LLOYD
423 Lackawanna Avenue.
A
WEARY
MD
WICKED
WORLD.
All of us arc desperately wicked, and some of us more so. Not necessary to men
tion names -you know who yon arc, if we don't. If it wasn't for the few pleasures
capable of being grasped occasionally, this world would indeed be "a vale of tears,'
But when our friends can avail themselves of a chance like this occasionally, prospects
become slightly more pleasing.
45c.
25 c
TAKE YOUR PICK:
Of that beautiful Gent's Neckwear in one of our
windows at
Oi tho3e Rich Wool Twill Suitings at our Dry Goods
Counter 40 Inches in any of the New Spring
Shades--at 25 Cents Per Yard.
Of 1 hose Exquisite Half Wool Challies at Domestic
Counter, 15 Cents Per Yard. 5C
Of those Fine Domestic Satines in our Basement.
10 Cents Per Yard. I OC
Of those Best French Satines in the Prettiest Designs
you ever beheld in our Basement at 15 Cents Per
Yard.
Our Next Talk Will Be On CARPETS and DRAPERIES
s
DO YOU SELL ?
OH ABB YOU
MAKING PRESENTS?
of Mipd Candy, Cigar Toys,
orany stylo of Candy or Nuts,
Express Wagons, Velocipedes,
Tricycles, I11 Cabs, Dronu
or Toys of every kind.
DOLLS
C'hinn, Polls, Wax Doll.,
Patent Dolls, Jointed Dolls,
any kind of doll from 25cto$15
SLEDS OR SLEIGHS
For Hoys, (iirls or Dolls, in
Maple, Oak or Iron, Irom
to 15.00.
BICYCLES
we have t lir goods nnd our
prices aro right. Wholesale
and retail.
J. D. WILLIAMS & BRO,
Lacka Ave
Wo in.iko a SI'Ki 1 Al.TY of umpiring rim
inittoM lor Bonny BohouU, Fair FetttvaU
IROM and SIZE
v
NORWAY IRON
BLACK DfAMOND
MII.VI.it
EXTRA SPECIAL
SANOERBON'H ENGLISH
.IKssoi-s ENGLISH
CAST STdCEL
HORSE SHOES
TOM CALK
Tl IIH
MACHINERY
M'i:iN;
BO FT STEEL
ANVILS
DtfLLOWS
HOUSE NAILS
WILEY RUSSELL AND WELLS BROS SCREW
CI TTING MACHINERY.
WAGON Wiir.l S
AXLES
RPKINOS
HUBS
SfOKRS
RIMS
STEEL SJilMNS
R. R. SPIKES
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Wholesale and retail dealers' in Wsgoomakers' tnd BlaOksinitlu'
bUPPLlES.
THE DICKSON MANUFACTURING CO
ECBAKTOK AND WiLKES-EAlIRE. PA., MAKUFACTCKSR8 O?
Locomotives and Stationary Engines, Boilers,
HOISTING AND PUMPING MACHINERY.
(icneral Oftice, SCRANTON, TA.
1 1
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08 Lackawanna Avenue
dr. a
400 aud 402 Lackawanna Aacuuc
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5 At the Sale of the
tier's Dry Goods
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ASK YOUR GROCER AND INSIST UPON HIS FURNISHING YOU WITH
HAMS. LARD.
EVERY HAM AND PAIL OF LARD BRANDED.
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OlO SCUANTON, PA
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