THE SCTR ANTON TI?IHTJ.N"R MONDAY MOHNINO. MATICII lSDf. SCRANTOiN TRIBUNE F. E. WOOD, General Manager. rrni.lSHEH DAILY AM) WEEKLY IN ScnA ton. Pa., uy Tut TmIBOKI Hlui.isiiino COUPANT. New York Omor.: TRIBUH Buildino, I'HANK B. Uiiay. Manauer. Eutered at the runtujjh-e at Scranton. Pa., at Betoad-CIa foil Matter. 1 HE SCRANTON TRIBUNE. SCRANTON. MARCH :.. 1801 Ihe jir.-t year oj i 'UreianaVt second pret idtntll ended yette.dar, amid the humilia tion of k(l party, the drpremion of hi toyal countrymen and the ecstasy of Hie re-instated Confederacy. It is yet Una to be duly ret gutted that America sustained a national lasi when DanUl Manning died, and tool: into the yi aee with hint the trains of the Democratic party, THE liRIDGE ISSUE. At the lust mttttlng of select ioiiU''il there was a spirited contention us to the minner of estebltenlnB tn legal machinery necessary to procure thoaii proaches to the propoatd now DriiltfBS. One lid, led by Mr. Sanderson, insist ed that the city authorities should move carefully tnd conservatively, do ins uothinK that would (live the peo ple reason to OOtrgO bad faith upon those loreiuost in Minting the electors of Scrauton that the coat of the bridge would not noeed 1330,000. The other Bide, captained by Mr. Kuche, wanted ordinances passed appropriating the rijjht of way and, in case of non-agree ment with property owners, wanted the mayor to rile a bond and the city to take immediate possession. This ilifMvnce, it will be seen, is one of procedure rather than of ultimate re sult. Both sides In this controversy have done efhcient.service Id advoca iug the bridue bond issue; and both de serve well of the community, however they may di!t'?r as to details ot muni cipal progress. But lest In the diver gence of counsel and frictions of method valuable time should be lest and false steps taken, it may be well hastily to review the facts in the case and let thein guide common sense to a wise conclusion. vVhtn tbtoity engineers ehtimated the cost of the Roaring lirjok brida-o at $100,000 aud its approaches at $20,000, the latter calculation was based on a written offer from the I'Utt estate that afterward left ..", 000 available for con tingencies. Now that the bridges are nssured, certain property owners on Plutt place, feariut; that the adoption of this approach might work inj :ry to their property by tbepoailbhi construe tion opposite, of undesirable buildings, want another approach, to he made by limply widening Piatt plao. In order to gratify their wish It would be neces sary to purchase from the Piatt estate land fur which the estate asks the city $85,000; or iJIj.OOO more than the laud upon which the city engineer based his triginal estimate, and $10,000 more than was contemplated in the sum set apart for the bridge and approach -s. The question at once arises, liow cm the city, without violating its faith with taxpiyrs, uccpl an ct'f r that on its face pledges it to pay a sum largely in excess of the amount originally agreed upon and accepted by the voters of Scranton f As we understand the position of Mr. Roche in this matter, he proposes to evade this troublesome Interrogation by having the property condemned This would be all right if he did not also propose to have the mayor file a bond aud have the city enter into pos session at once, claiming, no doubt correctly, that until the approaches are acquired, bonds cannot legally be llined. The point in this plan to which objection is raised is in the tiling of the indemnifying bond. The instant that bond should be tiled, the city would have no legal escape from pay ing whatever damages might subse quently be imposed by viewers or bv nrico of bis land. These offers, in writ ing', are now on file in the city clerk's eftice. Absolutely no necessity exists for condemnation proceedings, in visw orthefRctth.it the property can be acquired amicably and voluntarily. The institution of snch proceedings would simply mean thnt the owners of this land could throw tiirir letters to the wind and claim every possible cent that might be awarded, besides dam :!grs for the grading, which, if their present propositions are accepted, they will not claim. Only in ono instance Is their any friotion with respect to these voluntary off.-rs. Ttiis arises from a dispute as to the land's owner ship, and coul.l, so far as the city is concerned, be easily adjusted. The argument that bon Is for the Linden street strnotnrs cannot be legally issued until the approaches are secured is overthrown by the fct that the city already owns technical approaches, an. I needs land simply for the purpose of widening thess approaches It is the contention of Mr. Sinderson that Mr. Heche's proposition to institute condemnation proceedings relating to the Linden slreet I ridge would, if adopted, be to delay the structure's completion and incur dangers of in creased cost. What he and hie friends urge ia that the city solicitor bo recom mended to put the letters of these Bwetland street property owners into legal form, and that the city then tit once proceed with the work of build- lug the bridge. Thb Tribune offers no apology for the devotion of much space to an ex tended presentation of what it believes to bo the true facts of the case. No question before the people of Scranton is of greater interest than the one which wo have just endeavored to out line Experience tn every new losson re emphasises the force of Davy Crockett's sapient advice: "First, be sure you are right; then go ahead." Scranton wants the two bridges as soon as she can get them; but she does not want tlnm to bj builded upon legal quagmires or upon a foundation of broken faith with the taxpayers who authorized them. When two ways present themselves to a certain end, one of whieb is tilled with doubt and uncertainty aud the other, a snro and certain one. it would bj lolly not to take the latter. . It has taken Congressman Dnnphy a long time to make up his mind that Tammany Hall is not a collection of seraphs ; but even a late enlightenment is better than none. JCDQIXCl lltuM his course with refer once to the liland bill, Representative Hums has decided that the double jointed, now -yon-see- me-and-now-you-lon't kind of advocacy isu'tas safe, po litically, as it looks When the seign iorage vote wrs taken, llines simply dodged, Whan the people nf his dis trict take n division next November, they should make his exit final. ANDREW Carneoie'8 indorsement of the Wilson bill was evidently In par tial liquidation of a much more impor tant bill, the last of which has yet to be reached. PENSION STABBING. The Democratic party, in its pension retrenchment, apparently shares the feelings of Mr. Meredith, the Virginia congressman who, :last Friday, "thanked CJod thirs were no loyal mon in his couuty" ami afterwards wanted to light the Republican member who shamed him for this robel yawp. Mr. Meredith is a (ire eater with something less than the usual Democratic diplom acy and somothiug more than the cus tomary Democratic frankness. His principal defect, from a Democratic Standpoint, is in hit tendency to show the party's band. That, in politics as in poker, is against the rules. Representative Grout, of Vermont, has prepared some statistics with ref erence to tho pension bureau which ii lnstratos the gladness of the present administration at the gradual decrease in the number of surviving I'liion vet erans. During tho first six months nf the present fiscal year Commissioner Locbren, under the Hole Smith system of pension reform, issued in round in New York city Inst fall, according to Representative Dnnphy, who has been a member of the Taiuuiauy gen eral committee nud who ought, there fore, to know, under oilers of prizes to be awarded by Diclc Croker to districts Mowing tho greatest majority for Elcctiou-Keturii Thief Mayuard, the entire registered void was polled and In these districts Maynard AOt every vote. This startling unanimity of liking for a smirched criminal proved such a potil to Mr. Dnnphy' con science that he has washed his bands of Tammanyism, regardless of conss qosneea Yet this little Inoldent is on titled to dismissal as inooasequsntial and trivial as compared with tho al leged vote for Maynard of interior Troy, under the personal orders and supervision of Senator Murphy and his smoothly, working subsidiary forces of falsa registration, police Intlmlds tton, ballot stu'tiig and dazzling mathematics in the count Whereas, hist fall, Brooklyn showed a Repub lican gaiu of y7,0D0, Buffalo, oue of 10,1)00 and even rotten Gotham, de spite Dick Cruller' premium list for expert franchise pollulion.oue of 0,000, it rem lined for Troy, under tho clutch of Murphyism, Molloytsm and the sub ordinate factors in Democratic supre macy, to return a majority for May nard ot 0.000, or nearly double the av erage Democratic excess. It would take a solid page of Tit:: 1K1BUNE to tell what its editor person ally know concerning the irregulari ties that are practised at elections in this Trojan citadel of tbngtsm, polios brutality, professional repeating aud unblushing perversion of the popular will. Another pane would fail to con tain the supported testimony which he has heard rendered by others. Not in the wildest tlights of the Keystone Im agination, us applied to electoral frauds, has there been conceived such a degree of franchise profanation a is here developed aud systematized into a machinery that moves forward to its corrupt onils with the unerring preci eiou of an automaton. For twenty years this mechanism has bneu x (cut ting its perfect work, and not once has it failed to do just what its owners and bosses wanted it to do. Tho pub lic has alternatively iqnirmed, howled, fought and pleaded; but with its one hand it has held the public steadily by the throat, while with the other it has coolly picked the public's pocket, i bis year, by one nf those stranire co-incidences in which reverent ob servers perceive the handiwork of a compassionjte Providence, tho Murphy plundering machine has b;en jeoparded by a revel; within its own ranks. One of its creations, Dennis Whaleu, three times its choice for mayor, has, like Representative Dnnphy, reached bis limit of tolerable acquiescence in fraud, and has turned upon his old-time masters. The Republican committee, assured through a score of humiliating failures that a straight Republican nomination would encounter only de feat, nas endorsed Mayor WiiaUn aud is giving bw Independent candidacy its best energies, Opposed to Whaleu, as the embodlement of Murphyism in all its black phases, is Francis J, Molloy. The struggle has been so bitter as to necessitate Senator Murphy's personal presence on the battle field. Regard less of his public duties he. lias dsvoted the past fortnight to a personal inspec tion of his fraud mill, nnd to redoubled plotting in tho mill's defense. U ider Murphy's orders Governor Flower has just vetoed n bill giving Troy elections non partisan supervision. Tho culmin ation of the battle will bo reached to morrow; and its result will play an important part in discouraging or in accelerating honest elections in our greatest state. Tub Democratic Harrlsbnrg Patriot draws a characteristically long bow when it accuses Lieutenant Governor Waters of laying wires for the United States Senate in 1897. The Patriot's resources of exclusive misinformation are a study in journalism One of the Empire state Industries expected to closo toon after Governor Morton's election is the liiauufactiirj, In Buffalo, Troy and Albany, of bogus Democratic majorities aud jumped uti poenaed nie. bin, and so they sub- BOUI Pajkinu ThoiuIITS. Most men ore generally bravest when the nneuiy is around the corner out of sight. It is best, lo nnilo occai-audly, jud for the sake ot developing facial muscles, if nothing more. Luck Will idteu bring a nan to li ia level where efforts have failed. The meat terrifying sign of spring to the average husband is the spring bonnet, The silent man who louks wise and dig uitled in jut as apt to be a blockhead as a deep thinker, (hi was n bad man but bis relatives are to be congratulated that lie never "tuuk music lesauus. ' UU (xh Slater. "I Will be, ' she mul, "a sister to" "Bacuse me,' broke in he, "Five sisters 1 already have. That's ipiite enough for li e." Bhe Bulled "And yet, Alphonso,dear, You'll have to take another, For 1 am going to be the wife Of your big, handsome brother." - Kansas Oity Journal, GOLDSMITH' S $ BAZAAR g Moving and House Cleaning SEE WHAT Will buy in the way of a IT n n Arc near at hand, and the question will naturally arise: Wher e will we buy our new Carpet, Shades and Curtains. For your benefit W3 beg leav to my that tin doori to our Carpst Department are open, and ever ready to extend you a hearty welcome. That, v3 are head quarters you will soon b3 convinced whra you see what a hr?e stock wa carry, and how low our prices are. We handle every coaceivab'.a graJh of Carpets, such as RAG CARPETS, BODY BRUSSELS, HEMP CARPETS, WILTON CARPETS, INGRAIN CARPES, VELVET CARPETS, TAPESTRY CARPETS, MOQUETTE CARPETS . fSattini aterials, AT B LANK BOOKS LANK BOOKS MEMORANDUMS Office Supplies ol all kinds inks and Mucilages LEADING MAKES. Fine Stationery W IRT.WATERM AX and FRAN K LIN FOUNTAIN PENS. All Qusrsntoed Agents for Crawford's Pens and Buck's Flexible Rubber Stamps, Oil Cloths, Linoleums Curtains, Drapery I window shades. And we make a specialty of Fine Interior Decorations, employing none but the most skilled workmen in everp branch of the business. Carpets cleaned by our New Process and relaid at short notice. Grol dsmitli's Bazaar. juries. It is wll known tbst rlswsrs numbers 158,000 certilic itea. Daring tho una juries, in uses liks tliin, are la dined toma;,'nify rattier than minimize iluuiHges, particularly when a munici pal corporation in the victim. Thin would he introduced in this problem a juiw factor of grave uncertainty and iilmost incvitablu embarrassment. It ! not improbable that under such a procedure tns result might be an in crease over the vol unt try off -r of the Piatt estate, to s iy nothing of dauiaze which might be recovered by the grad ing of tho spproich to other property owners. The estimate of the city sn gineer made no spacilic provision for iiaproviug the approach, it being ttksn for granted that the surplus of $5,009, which would exist if the original ap proach were rarried out, would meet this contingency. The changed ap proach therefore with its expensive re taining wall, can hardly be constructed without a considerable increise over the Minimum original estimates. Upon tho other hand, it is contended by Mr. Sanderson and bis supporters, that the only saf and proper oours. nnder the circumstances, to avoid even the possibility of a breach of faith with the people, is to have vi.iw era appointed without riling a bond. This the law permits, and if the conse (jtience is heavy datiing'" the city will not be bound, hands nnd feet', but can take either a new slternntive or else fall back upon the original estimate. Conversely, if the daniuges are low enough to come within the moral con tract ontnred into at tho racent election by the city with the taxpayers of Hcranton, the signal to "'o ahead" can beglvsn at once, nnd all would be well that should thus end well. This plan, moreover, would afford adjacent property ownors seemly consideration, as much as they have any moral right to expect, without sotting th tir desires above and beyond tho welfare of tho (treat maps of Hcrniiton taxpayers who voted for thu bridges under the repre sentation that they would coit a epoci hd sum, and who do not desire now to be juggled with by councils. With respect to the Linden street bridge, different conditions prevail. A special committee of councils obtained from every interested property ownsr Ik definite statement as to the selling correH.'inmli'iz ptriod of the year be fere, Commissioner Kaum had issued :il 1,000 certihY iteg. During this s ime six mouths Mr, Lochron rejscted 07.000 claims; while, in the corresponding period of Mr. Konm'g commissioner ship only 48,000 claims bad been re jected. To uvsry rsJsoUd claim, Gen eial Raum passed favorably on four. On the other hsaiLCouimissionsr booh ran, under Clsrsisndism, has rejected two claim to every one admitted. When men like Holes Smith are put in Amtrlosn cabinets: when Confeder ate brigadiers like Meredith get the whip hand over legislation in both branches of congress, and when, in every tendency illustrative of its un patriotic impulse?, tho Cleveland ad ministration panders to the pockets and trie prejudices of the Solid S irtlb, even going o far ns lo wipe from the ItatQts books n law that tried to make southern slsStiODS fair and honest, the Republican revival that is nntnlstak ably sweeping over the country is evi dently no inexplicable mystery. His tory iB repeating itself. - LlT l h have the bridges; lint let us have them in the spirit of fairness, tqaltjr nnd economy. Lot us not have any breaking of faith. , T HERS aiik lively times In view, lo cnllv, in tho state, nationally and in European politics. It is tlms to pity tho man who does not regularly read a romplote daily newspaper every secu lar day in the year. THE FIQHT IN TROY. Tho resignation of Upresoutntive Dnnphy, of New York, from Tammany Hall, cnupUd with serious charges of ballot trrsgttlaritisi In wblcb tbo Tatar many organization plays an ignoble part, throws an interesting" side light upon a desperate buttlo which is wag ing in the Empire state against lh most unscrupulous conspiracy of ballot corruption in the bistor,- of American politics. ThD battle will tomorrow, in Benator Murphy's home city of Troy, which for tweuty years Mr. Murphy has rulod with tin firmness of an abso lute monarch, reach a partial expres moii at the polls, deciding a muiiicipaJ contest ot instructive issues. In three separata election districts THE Pie Counter. With lamb-like aspect .March drew near, While maplosHp was Rowing; liut she'll depart in manner drear. With angry, wild winds blowing. s s father What's ttmtdeviliih noise in tho Itltchsd, Bobby r Bobby That's mamma making angel cHke! Life. e .lami's Can a man oat a ipiail n day fur thirty dnybV Wllllam 1 think so. I know of Damo crnts who have been eallug n crow a day for a l inger period. w Hello, Kiljordanl Deen buying a now overeoatf "No. Don't give it away, Shadbidt.bnt Its my ua chinchilla.. 1 paid a barber R0 cants to run his clippers over it." Chicago Tribune, Young Manager- What do yon consider the gri atest drawing card for an opening :! Stager -Well, I've found that the complimentary card board generally fetches 'eiu. Ileheiniau does nut that ho dors lliluud Tho My Catcn ninny. Van liiB im Do you menu not, catch many iisti? Blland Noj ho doesn't eateh many liies. Pittalittrtj Telegraph. If yon em an old gold bin; then your ago Should immediately teach you to mend ytittr rage; And smlls upon I'laud, in lending a hand To give us a slice of the seigniorage. Wife (at the amateur ronosrl) What a rich fullness there ij In Charlie. Mead's voice ' Hubby Pal In eiS j yes, Charlie has got a pretty heavy loa 1 on tOttighl Wife Who Is that benstly sot leaning against the telegraph pole. Husband That Is tho person who pre pares tho tampsranoa column for the BottgtOWn Eagle. Attorney What do you know about this case!1 I V Witness Nothing. Attorney What uro you here for? 1 U lines? hy, ynu se.-, 1 heard Dan call Hill a liar and Dill knocked Dan dowu Reynolds Bros. Slationors and Eiiyravcr.s. 817 LACKAWANNA XvH With the New Valves Out of Bight Our new Bicycles are now to be seen at our 314 Lacka wanna avenue store. VICTORS. SPALDING, CREDENDA, GENDR9NS, 1 And a full line of Iioys' and j Girls' Wheels. We are mak I in extremely low jjrices on j Second-hand Wheels. J.D.WILLIAMS&BRO, 314 Lacka. Ave. IRON and STEEL, NORWAY IRON BLA k DIAMOND sIl.VI.U EXTRA SPECIAL SANDERSON'S ENGLISH JESSOP'S KNGL1SH r.xsr STKEL HOUSE SHOES V. ILMY & TOE CALK 1 IKE M IOHINERY BPItINU sol T STEEL ANVILS Ut- LLOWS UOKSE NAILS RUSSELL AND WELLS BROS CUTTING MACHINERY. WAGON WHEEL AXLES SPRINGS HUBS S!' liiKS ItlMS SI EEL SKEINS It. li. SPIKES SCREW Bittenbender & Co., Scranton, ha' Wholesalo uuJ retail dealers' in Wagoomskora1 and Ulnciisuiit SUPPLIES. THE DICKSON MANUFACTURING CO. ECRANTON AND WU.KES rjARKT, PA, MANUFACTURERS oi Locomotives and Stationary Engines, Boilers, HOISTING AND PIMPING MACHINERY. General Office. Mil A. XT OX. PA r HieMIHHCFIllUHEHHIIIinRIIIillllHIRfllllEllRlilliriEIIIiilillRlillRIRietttllllHfi FURS! FURS! CAPES 18 INCHES DEEP. U Inohsi daop Pranob t'ny 'aes, Ast: aktmn CapaSi AHtinklimi 1'rh'9, Atsraknan Caposi Dy.-.l ' M"'S'uiii CapiM SluM (t!V I 'llp.'H, Monkey CapaSi Nt. Ottar cnpoi, Nat. Ottor (.'ap..., KrunnMr ('apus lifiivr Capsa Nairla Capsa w. iil or PvrthiD '!ipi Alaska St-al i Sapasi .lMHk S. at lapSOi At. uk Capsa Brown uartan Capos 4 im t, III 1 mi 1. IHI 11 id ir. So 10 00 M w IS ui 'j:. i 1 1.1 m : ii ;ii ni !) 01 611 IW 1 1) CAPES 22 INCHES DEEP. Astrakhan Capaa IhcIms O'-.-p. Baltic Sea I ap- " . Etit-tiiu i-i-ai Capaa " . Froiirli Cniiey l-'apoa, " , Mink Cap. ' . ptown llartan Capaa " tonjtoy capo-., " , ...S10 00 1 ... II 00 ... j. on ... 11 (m . . . Ml (HI ... WOU . . . n tm Highest Casli Prices Paid for Raw Furs. Repairing Furs a Specialty. WATCHES DIAMONDS JEWELRY SILVERWARE SPECTACLES of EDWIN G. LLOYD Lackawanna Avenue. The Fashion s 1 308 Lackawanna Avenue and 400 and u2 Lackawanna Avenue. 5 s s f Last Few Days! At the Sale of the 1 I miw s Dry wus mock DO NOT MISS THE OPPORTUNITY. 1 I PRICES LOWER THAN EVER I a mm mm dm niiiiiaiiyitiiiiHMiMifeiitiiiiiiiR(iiiMBtaiiiitMiiiitBcisiiiiitiuifiiniBiiicstiiiBBiti ntua ASK YOUR GROCER AND INSIST UPON HIS FURNISHING YOU WITH DELICIOUS, MILD 8UGAII ounilD Ai301,UTEI. Y XtJIX33 HAMS. LARD. EVERY HAM AND RAIL OF LARD BRANDED. tdkuppWbd THE SX0WERS PACKING CO., SCRANTON, PA nun iuuii uiiuui-n nnu moio 1 urun eiiij iuiimiiiv w STOWER T HE DUTHEIL STUDIO 315 Vi KAWANNA A V P.N I' r, iATo, r.. VAVJKO MADE n wiwrt with V TJ fi-amo f:.rt.:y to tUMl Mli l.lU fl ir.dti'B utwvn now "ii'i Cbrit j, i'i.ip I toannouBOo lotlipu)j; ) lirtbsl 1 v.-m ma,kf n WSNulKn CHAYON IMKTUAir L-. l.-l Ir.n in rnuill OBU AB;i'JIA! l liLV FUKB if CHAROE. l.ATI -i STVI.l.i OF PRAMM PROM .Bp UriTARD. Workinsilshlp iwiniBtttti Pmct B0 p7 cent. ls axu ngulu i E. DUTHEIL. Artist,