The Scranton tribune. (Scranton, Pa.) 1891-1910, May 03, 1894, Page 4, Image 4

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THE SCTIANTOIC TRIBUNE THURSDAY MORNING-. MAY 3, 1894.
SCRANTON TRIBUNE
F. E. WOOD,
General Manager.
rcnUflnKT) n.II.Y AND WBKKI.Y IK 8CRAW
TON, PA.. UT l'UK TH1UUMI FuULISBINO
COJJPANT.
New York OrFica: Tiubuni Bcildiho,
FllANK 8. ttRAY. MANAOBR.
tnltred at the Itnffle at Scranttm, Pa.,
Second- Clan Hail Hatter.
1HE SCRANTON TRIBUNE.
SCRANTON. MAY 3, 1S94.
Tue Wh.kes-Bakhk Nowb-Dealer
would not Jiscbarfio from its employ
a ennoble nsiistant who hail during two
(lecndea worked faithfully for its inter
ests merely becnuie its managing edi
tor might undergo a political ehauge
of faith. What, then, does it mean by
its assault upon Peter Winter?
Pave Mulberry Street.
The current talk of endeavoring to
aecuro the conseut of a sufficient num
ber of property owners along Mulberry
street to insure its paving with as
phalt along its entire length has been
inspired doubtless by the reoent plac
ing of pulverized slag upon portions of
this roadway. The further fact, too,
that with the completion of the new
boulevard travel upon the street will be
largely increased may have had its in
fluence tition the agitation for a suit
nHo and durablo paving, lie this ns it
may, the suggestion is a good one, in
line with the progress everywhere
manifesting itself in this community;
And should the idea assume practical
ihapo, it will unquestionably receive
much earnest support.
As the one cross-town thoroughfare
with grades adapted to asphalt and also
with travel and prospects justifying
increased attention, Mulberry street
offers a particularly Inviting fluid for
a paving rsform agitation. Already
land for building purposes at Its upper
eitremity is rising rapidly in value;
and with a clean new pavement offer
ing additional inducements to home
seekers, property values along Mul
berry ought to respond readily to any
investment in the form of pave assess
ment. Business, too, iM pushing stead
ily toward thieetreet; in a few years,
at its present pace, the commercial
area will have eugultvd much
of that portion of Mulberry
which lies between Washington and
Jefferson avenues. The effect of this
unmistakable gravitation upon realty
values has already become palpable,
in the form of increased rents and ap
preciated prices for title transfers It
would be vastly accelerate 1 )y a mol
ern paving which should make of this
beautiful street a driveway compara
ble with Washington avenue to North
Park, and, when the boulevard exten
sion is opened, its superior.
fiitiment nowadays plays little pari
in determining the fate of municipal
improvements. Tnerefore we have re
stricted ourselves to the practical, dol-lar-and-cent
view of the case. But if
any person will take the trouble one
of these beautiful May mornings to
walk or drive out Mulberry along the
path of the boulevard to the southern
extremity of what, let us trust, will
soon be Nay Aug park, and view the
myriad beauties of renascent nature as
r fleeted In growing grass and leaf and
flower, each irinti ilant with the spar
kle of the dew and fragrant with the
healing odors of spring, one aspect of
this project will present itself which
may not be particularly "practical."
lot which certainlv is not unpleasant.
An asphalt pave on Mulberry street
wonld be a pnbllc benefaction if it
would contribute to the luring of our
tired citizens, morning or evening,
away from the feverinh and suffocating
air of the city out into the glorious
open, where bird soug and wild 11 wer
unite with bine sky and water fall in
preaching a soothing and helpful r
inon on peace and good will.
AKMQ I i.e. allowance for unusual
provocation, an exhibition of temper
such as that made at yesterday's base
ball gam by one of the Hazleton ont
fieldera deserved the swift censure it
received from the audience, nmplre and
fellow-players. While in nnirorm
ballplayers must act like gentlemen,
even if some of them occassioually find
it Impossible to continue the practice
indefinitely.
The Occultation of Coxey.
Whon one has been lifted aloft into
the blue expanse of infinite aether and
there pinioned by the fond wings of
hope, it must be distressing to get nd-
Jenly thrown down with what used to
be called a dull, sickening thud. This
articnlar kind of high flying doos not
asimilate with tho humblo editorial
function; and we nre. therefore, unable
to speak from experience. But looking
at the case abstractly, throwing upon
it, as. one may say, tho calcium light of
logic, reason and probability such a
drop, we are prone to conclude, must
be a drop too much.
imagine, then, tho sensations of
James tiltoher Coxey; ploture, ye who
can, the profnndity of his regret
gauge the depth of bis chagrin and
compute the awful volume of his de
spair wnen, having sot out to muss
300,000 indignant Americans before
the globular splendor of the great
whit dome thnt surmounts the capltol
of tblf peerless Kennblio, having de
termined, Ilka Hobart Toombs, to call
tha roll of his imperial peace army not,
to ba sure, about .Bunker Hill monu
ment, but In an oven more daring place,
in tho very shadow of the aegis of our
national liberties, bo awoke to find at
hi back not 300,000, but 1)00; and in
stead of ohaplets of laurel with
fillets of
myrtle got clubs of
the muscular grip of
locust in
policemen
of Coxey
in blue. The occultation
was cruel and unkind.
It curdles the milk of human kindness
and fouls the well-spriugs of human
confidence. But while our hearts bleed
our minds approve. There was no other
thing to do.
Citizen Coxey, no doubt, la a bero,
a philanthropist and a sage. We, in
this vulgar ago, probably do not recog
nize tha massiva merit which lurks be
neath bis flannel shirt, nor value at its
true worth the priceless Hindis of his
great, kind baart. For alt this, we
Jure aay, we tball have to answer
before the augnst tribunal of coming
centuries. We quake and we tremble
when wo think of the rlBk we run. But
all that is for the future. It is still a
truth, even though Citizen Coxey
doesn't know it, that we live in what
Mr. Longfellow called the living pres
ent It it a good time to live in ; prob
ably the best time, all things consid
ered, that a live man could choose.
One of the requirements of this present
is the maintenance of law and ordor,
Perhaps, tbia is a crude and a needless
instance. Possibly we, in this age,
overestimate the need of sense and
ballast. But facts are facts, and'have,
in real life, to be accepted as such.
Even Coxey will confess that ho has
lately learned this fact. Had ho recog
nised that same fact sooner, his oc
cupation would have beeu less im
pressive but more lenient.
Thus, always, with cranks 1
v
Keep an eye on Tom Stewart.
No better choice for the senatorial
seat advocated by Senator Stockbridge's
sudden donth eould bo made by the
governor of Michigan than Julius 0.
Burrows. His fame as a protectionist
statesman is international, lie would
bring into the senate a reputation al
ready made and a facility in all the
various forms of political warfare won
during vcars of active and militant
leadership in the lower house.
As to tho Viaduct.
It is not to be gainsaid that tho prin
ciple laid down in Judge Archbald's or
der revoking tho appointment of view
era in connection with the proposed
West Lackawauua avenue viaduct is a
sound one, much as It may, in this par
titular application, disappoint those
who had looked upon the viaduct pro
jeot with favor. In common sense, ns
well as in law, t tie right to appoint
viewers clothed with the power of in
vading property, interrogating its
owuors and assessing damages f, ,
which the only rocoiirae is through an
appeal to court preauppoaes, on the
part of tho city, tho existence of a seri
ous and definite intent to use this right
for the advantage lot the general v '.
fare. To mako the application of this
right depend upon an Indefinite and
uncertain purpose would be verv ob
viously to invite OOnfOslofl and create
just complaint from citizen whose
property should be thus lightly
jiggled.
A applUd to the immediate ca in
hand. Judge Archbald's rnling.ln plain
words, means that until the city,
through it councils, is willing to make
a definite and genuine step toward au
thorizing the construction of the via
duct, it cannot experiment by the aid
of viewers When it has pissed a
specific ordinance, viewers may let ap
pointed an 1 their report either accept
d or rejected within thirty days after
its presentation. If accepted, well and
good, If rejected, the utmost harm that
would have been I'one would lie the
fruitless costs incurred But the en
actment of such an ordinance is an in
dispensable preliminary, for without
it viewers w nld view to no puipuaa
and have no excuse for returning a re
port. Although the court, speaking unof
ficially, recognized the necessity of the
viadnct and expressed a hope that
nothing would seriously stand in the
wsy of its speedy coinpleti n. It is
probably true, aa a cold matter of fact,
that, for the present at Uast, the via
duct project has boon rendered a vain
hope The question of damages he 1
not, nutil rsenntly, received particular
attention , yet it is OM which must play
a large, if not a fatal, part II dntsrm
ining the project's future. With the
city obligated to build a new Pridg at
landed street, there is likely soon to be
leta need than at present for the via
dnct at West I.ickawatina avenue, and
it Is clearly among th possibilities
that the latter pn j'ct may not agalu
be iftlclally revived Many citizens
will no doubt regret this, but the issue
is purely a business oue of value and
cost, and opiuioii seems to be gaining
ground that the total cost of a viaduct
at this time, every item Included,
would much exceed the value returned
to the public
s
DIANA MA-- long had the reputation
of Inning out the toughest crop of
Democratic senatorial timber to be
found in any of the western legislative
swamps and bogs; and the exhibition
made by Senator Turpie Monday fully
sustains this unenviable claim Had
such a torrent of inebriated billiugagate
poured from the lips of Turpie'e col
lesguo it would have been attributed
at once to that class of personal exhibi
tions which Mr Ingallt, of Kansas, once
designated as the Work of a man
"drunk nnd disotderly." There is rea
son to fear that Mr, Turpie will have
considerable difficulty in clearing him
solf from tho suspicion cf having beeu
loaded with the same wst wespous.
e
One Remedy for Lynching.
Judge Tourgee baa drafted for intro
duction in tho Ohio legislature a bill
which promises to put u new phase on
the lynching Industry. The bill pro
vides that the legal heirs of any person
killed by a lynching party In bio shall
recover from the county where the
lynching occurs the sum of $15,000;
in case suob person is only injured ho
shall recover from tbo county the sum
of $15,000, and every person found
guilty of participating in such affairs
is to be sent to tho Ohio penitentiary
for a term not less I ban three or more
than twenty years, i he sum recover
ed again -t such counties shall be taxed
in the first tax levy made by the board
of county eommissionurs and remain a
lien upon the property of the county
until paid. In order to secure proper
prosecution In such cases, the attorney
general is authorized and directed to
appear in behalf of the heirs of the
person so lynched or injured by
lynchers
This measure has received tha warm
approval of Uovernor Mckinley and is
expected to pass the presont legislative
gpHiion. Something of a similar na
tnra shonld be formulated in our own
commonwealth. The recovery by heira
of a monetary damage would perhaps
not be the most logical antidote for a
mistake by an impetnous mob; par
ticularly If an innocent man ahould be
killed before his innocence was dis
covered. But it wonld be better thau
nothing, nnd it might operate at a
dampener to vigilante fervor. The
knowledge that a lynohing wonld tap
the pocket hooka of tha lyuohers, aa
well as subject them to the penalty of
long imprlBOtimsnt, would have a de
terrent influence certainly not exer
cised by any law now on our statuto
book.
In this connection, it is interesting
to note the sense of shame which inevi
tably develops in a community that
has lent itself to the perpetrutlou of an
unauthorized banging, Illustrated in
the sensitiveuesa of certain Strouds
burg citizens at references to the lynch
ing of Puryear. Only yesterday Tun
Tribune reoeived from some kind
Stroudsburg friend a clipping detail
ing a lynching in Texas, to which was
appointed the query : "Why don't you
blame this on StrondsbnrgV" We are
not aware of having in any wise over
stated the truth respecting Monroe
county's recent crime. The sarcasm,
therefore, was lost npon ns. But we
are glad if the publicity incident to
such a crime has beeu tho moans of re
calling the citizetiH of Monroe county
to their aobor senses. They will be
the ultimate gainers in consequence
of this pressnt sensitiveness.
ALTHOUGH TUnta are hard and freight
business dull, the Pennsylvania Kail
road company goes right on declaring
"i per cent, quarterly divideuda just as
if nothing had happened. This is one
of the few railroads in America that 1 1
managed as n straightforward business
enterprise and not an an annex to stock
jobbing departments. Tbo dilference
will readily bo notod wbou hard times
pinch.
Governor Pattison has honored a
hard-working newspaper man and a
loyal Democrat In the appoiutineut of
John rit.timmous to the vacant alder
manship iu the Kighth ward With a
gifted brother to toueh up the rusty
places in his legal lore, Alderman 1'itz
simmons will have an opportunity to
make a record in the position to which
he has been called.
PS THE
Coffee Cools.
The esteemed llazleton Plain Speaker
in iww entirely owned and edited by
.lames '. Morris, who has been for some
lime connected with its management as
presldeut of tha PI tin speaker com
pany. Mr. Morris is a polished writer,
an affable gentleman of wide acquaint
ance and extended scholarship, an I a
man whose greatest fault is that he is a
Democrat. I nder his direction this
well established journal ought to ex
perience a new leas of life ami viva
ritr. Nm bright, new feature la already
nttrarting attention, that In which
Editor Morna, writing lu the first per
sonal singular, racorda racy impress
i ns as to pursing events. Recognition
of the popular Interest attaching to in
dividual opinion breoiily expressed has
lieeti rapid in the newspaper world of
late No good newspap-r is nowadave
deemed complete withont Its column
of sprightly and good humored current
gos-lp
...
Vmust dianant, however, to this on
of Brother Mm' aooaloaiona "Tint
niiam Turn' nk. editorially to the
ext.-nt of three ,'iarters of a column,
laments i Ver the lack of culture m
Scran tod, lu wall Is dns to a realist
tlo'i of Its citizens' great lark of appre
elation of th drama, made manifest
by the fact that Palmer s theatrical
company, which, Tiia Tmiu m: says, is
'the ll today plsyinii on Am-rloan
soil, played in th FJectrlo City on
I rl lay and Satnrlsv to almost etuplr
houses A thorough realization of
one's shortcomings la th most nca
asrr condition precedent to an amend
inrnt of one's ways and It is with the
realizing sens id Its people' abortrom
inga that Tmk Tkiiu sk begins the
herculean task of Instilling collar
into th citizens of Slocum Hollow.
Hard th road It has to travel I r
expressions and letters which hay
si ac)a reached us, ws are convinced that
ur recnt "wall waa not without
g 1 rwnltl ultnre la not a plant of
Aiiuibr ooin growth It takee time to
develop Bat s city which can contribute
-.' "I attendants to a concert like that
given Tuesday evening In the nw 1 in
Park church by Mm. Blauvelt, and
these repreernling aa fin an array of
bauly, chivalry ami lutlllgi mm m
ronld be found ear where in th Inited
Statan, is aurdly getting on Olv
us time, dear friend, gtve ns time.
a
Wo are progressing rapi lly. Here it
ia wall on toward Mtm inal I lay anil
we havn't yet beard a aingl tish He.
U that doeau't speak wll for reoent
religion iustructlou, 1 should like t0
know what dOM After Mr. Mixslv
gets through with Wilkea-IUrre, the
ateemed Leader of that city will not
have the hardihood to Indorse as trn
such a fable as that which it accredits
to J. It. Woodwsrd, Prank Wheatoti,
Dr. Will a Kelly. A. B, Walters and
A P. nl-1 in th following languag
It waa on Pishing ('reck, that pretty
stream that skirts the North mountain,
at a point known aa llelam'a bridge
Druggist Walters wa fishing In the
pool below tbe bridge when his book
was taken with a Jerk that told
he had something worth hanging
od to. lip and down the stream
ihey fought nutil the whole party,
aroused by the noise of theconfiot,
came up and watched the exciting
sport Finally the monster trout was
lauded and then followed a small cele
bration over the aizs and beauty of the
fish. No creel was large enough to
bold it and it was lugged to camp like
a shad. As soon as convenient it was
opened and cleaned mi l tho first thing
taken out was a spring ohlcken. Mr,
Walter was nt lit ! accused of having
baited his book with a chicken, but he
iudignantly denied it, with the remark
that spring chicken was pretty nearly
as good aatlng as trout. Bnt there it
was, a small chicken, Evory one of
the party saw it and now have a new
poititer about bait." The Leader gen
erously explains that tha narrators have
a little modesty lu relating the tale,
feeling that it would be classed with
other remarkable legends that come
within the province of the fuhernian,
bnt all of them earnestly state that this
is a true fish story, which of course, ii
to be taken cum grano calls.
e
According to latest reports tho hon
orable William Henri Hinea is cavart
i tig up and down the corridors of time
objurgating Postmaster-Oeneral Bis
sell In language more expresatve than
elegant, One of the appellation ap
plied to Mr. Blssell is that of "an old
duller," whom Mr. Him says ha will
see in Halifax, or soma other place
equally remote before ho, which is to
say Hinea, will go to him again for a
political favor. No donbt this ii a very
deliuate aubjeot in tho houorablo Wil
liam's tuiud, but we anspaot it will be
even more painful before the Kingston
and Plymouth post office fighta are
definitely adjudicated, Ur. Bisaell is
aa cool aa a cucumber these days, bnt
there's a wink to bis eye that is re
plete with ominous foreboding.
Hi
If the people of Luzerne county are
a trifle proud of their witty after din
ner speakers, who can blame them?
Let us quota from the wilkeB liarre
limes: "The BORAMTON Tribune had
occasion the other day to puy a high
compliment to the attractive quality of
Judge Woodwards extemporaneous
addressrii, and cited hie recent talk at
the Like reception to their Scrauton
brethren, here the other night, ns
graceful evidences of the judge's ac
complishments iu this respect. Cer
tainly those who have had tbe pleasure
of listening to Judge Woodward on oc
casions in tbo past, have stored away
tho pleasantest memories of his happy
stories and genial speeches. His man
ner, to an outsider, would appear on
the start, to be a little hesitating, and
fears might arise that be would not be
equal to the demand But this impres
sion lasts but it brief time, for when
his native wit and humor begin to
How, all doubt of holding bis own
vanishes like mist before the snu, and
bis influence over the crowd is para
mount. Tin: Tin in NIC pays tbe judge
a deserved compliment when It says
that ho is a king mining after-dinner
talkers."
a a a
I'vangelist Rice's effort to inoculate
the warring factions in Schuylkill with
the vims of cowboy morality doos not
seem to have culminated in a profound
triumph. The Puttsville Chronicle
calls loudly, lonix and ardently upon
tbe chief burgess to "throw the stout
lariat of the law about tin long loaned
dch mt nuisance nnd give liiiu a lesson
or two in commou sense and decency."
Tho conservative Miner's Journal
opens 11 throttle in this wise: "That
picturesque cowboy who is making
night hideous with a 100 n week basso
profundo, buz, i sw-liko melody threw
aside bis hypocritical meek and re
voided his nskod ugliness Saturdsy
morning when he openly challenged
certain newspaper representatives to a
catch as-catch-can, rough and tumble
fight. This fellow courts notoriety
and If council does it duty tomorrow
night ha ll get it " And tbe other
journals say pretty much tho same
thing Kilt !t!c.
We are
Headquarters for
Everything in
Our Line.
REFRIGERATORS
WATER COOLERS
I0E CREAM FREEZERS
HAMMOCKS and
BABY CARRIAGES
A Large lino nt N'. t and iVauti
IU ( rood, ail suitable
for ifl -s.
Coursen, demons & Co.
422 LACKA. AVt.
e
AYLESWORTH'S
Meat Mark
CI
Ih? finest in the Citj,
The latest improTed fur
nlaliinM and apparatus for
kiiii( inal. t utter and egg.
'- :.i turning . .
Don't Fail to
Attend the
at the
Driving Park
JULY 4
ALL THE SPEEDY RID
ERS WILL COM
PETE. Scientific Eye Testing Free
By Dr. Shimberg,
Th Specialist on lite F.yti tseVfessfMI nml
N'T' "i relloreil. 1. 1 1 . t and lmpmvd
(stylo of Kja (Dawn and Spectacle at ta
Uwet l'rletw. Beet Artificial Byes liiiwrtod
fur $j.
15 SPRUCE ST., op. Old Poet Office.
Bicycle
WANT a Piano or Organ Cheap?
LOOK AT THE LIST:
An extra flnn Ilonrr K. MiUor Square
Piano 17!l
An extra fine "('iilclierlnir"Siuare llano IV,
A ooq Haines Brothers Square Piano... tm
A irood Meyer llrutliers Mtmro Piano.... 80
A (rood Klrth a Pond Square Piano i.
A k1""! l'luphonla Square Piauo M
A very good Hoitim piano Co. Walnut
cpnifht , A. ran
A very guod Wheulock U prlyht Piano.. Ml
A very uood Whoolock Upright Plans., ISO
GUERNSEY BROTHERS' NEW STORE,
PlanoB
GOLDSMITH'S 9 BAZAAR
"Only a Dream"
I en thousand copies of this popular new song is
now being given away by us to everybody free and open
handed. You are not required to purchase any goods
in order to obtain it, but simply step inside and ask
for a copy and it will be cheerfully presented to you.
The music is printed on the best enameled paper, and
the front page contains a full-tone portrait of Miss
Delia Fox, for whom it was written, and who will
sing it here in "Panjandrum," Tuesday, May 8.
Goldsmith
With the New Valves
Out of Sight
Our new Bicycles are now
to be seen at our )! Lacka
wanna avenue store.
VICTORS,
SPALDING,
CREDENDA,
GENDRONS,
And t full line of Hoys' and
t iiil . Wh'-els. We ar- mak
in extremtrly low price on
s nd hand Wheels
Ii Ul
314 Lacka. Ave.
FINE ENGRAVING
Wedding Invitations,
Announcements,
Reception and Visiting Cards,
Monograms,
Menus and Dinner Cards,
Reynolds Bros.
Statlonera and Enrjr.wrrs.
BI7 LACKAWANNA AVR
N.R We nre otYorinc a now
edition of tho Hook of Common
Prayer, wall bound In doth.
Two Copies for 25c.
Single Copies, 13c.
Dr. Hill & Son
Albany
Dentists
Pel Icoth. fUSO; I "'.t sot, ?. for Rold caps
and twth without plate, mlled crown nnd
hrtdco mirk, call fur prioea and rcfeioneo.
Th.s'aUUIA. for catraclta- teeth without
I sin. Nu ether. No g
OVKK FIRST NATIONAL HANK.
A very good euttuar (.'prlght Pimm.
OKOANS.
US
A Masou & naiiilln,neerly now.hlgh top,
double reed t
n
AA,R. Chase, nearly near, high top.
ituuhln read v h
A OMBMO CoH&uo.noarly new, high top,
den hie reed W
A Worcester, nearly boh-, high top,
duuliln reed....
J.D.WILLIAMS&BRO
224
and Organs at Wholesale and Retail, on Installments.
Brothers &
ENAMEL WARE
Fur ONE BEK Wt "ill Mil 1'nannl Ware at the following unore
oedontod prices,
Tea and Coffee Pots
ONK-grART. TWogl'AKT, TBRBI Qt'AKr, POTTB-QCaVBTi FIVE gl'AHT,
Oo. 47c. sse. eOc. 70c.
Aliso I)rt-iiMi ami I'rcaervini.' K-ttIc, Fattco Pans and Pot
Wa-sii Ditbei tod Tvu Kettle, at equally low prices.
GLOBE SHOE STORE
Reliable Goods
One Price
Satisfaction Guaranteed
227 Lackawanna Avenue
EVANS & POWELL, Proprietors
FIRST MORTGAGE
6 BONDS
Of TUE
FORTY FORT
COMPANY.
COAL
A limited number of the nbove
bond! :ir lor milt" :il pitr nnd no
aruod interest by the following
parties, from whom oopiea of the
luortk'iitfu and full Information can
be obtained)
K.W. Mulligan, Cashier Second
National Bank, Wilkes liar re, ln.
W. L Watson, Cashier First Na
tional Hank, Plttston, Pa.
J. L. Polen, Cashier People's
Savings Bank, PUtaton, Pa.
A. A. Pryden, President Miners'
Savings Bank, Pittston, Pn.
And by the Scrauton Savings
Hank ami Trust Oomp any, Trustee
under tho Mortgage.
T. tt Atherton, Counsel,
WILKES BAKRE, PA.
A Standard, nearly new.hlgh top,double
rood.
A h-huiilii.'.-r nnarlv mitf. lllilh ton.
double reed "t
And about 20 other good second hand or
gans, '.''. to tuo.
The above collection of HocomHiand Inaru
lueutsarsall in good ordor, fully gnaran
UMid, the greatest bargains evor offored In
this city. Call and aoe them. Installments
or discount for cash.
WYOMING AVENUE,
BOB AN TON.
Company.
Th Qroat Marvel of Dental Boienoe
Ansesthene
A recent disoOVI ry and tho 6olo
property of
Henwood a Wardoll,
dem urn,
316 Lackawanna Av&
WHAT J. Q, BBAlfONSSAYfl ABOUT
AN.'KSTHENE.
irt hfntvooh a tnosxtt
After having eieeea teeth ztraesesj t
one tilting by the inlnlrH method. 1 pre
aoaaes it entirely sell resteer In every
particular. J. U. 9KAMO.N8
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s s
DO YOU REQUIRE
I ACCURATE
TIME?
3 WB HAVE IT.
f EDWING.LLOYD42
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CEED POTATOES
V ALL BEST VAH
VAHIETIE9.
ONION SETS
And all kinds GARDEN"
BBBDB in bulk and in pack
ages. Pierce's Market
fE IM IM AVE.
40
America
Hi ii I. A i I 1 1 I I- riUTUKKg. 1 VI Ii V
MM i ii PLACU IN ALASKA, THE
I Mil h SI A I I S AMD MKXICO.
FIVE M M III Its ON Till; COUN
TER. TEN CENTS AND ONE
COUPON FOR ANT NUMUKE.
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