The Scranton tribune. (Scranton, Pa.) 1891-1910, July 02, 1894, Page 4, Image 4

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THE SCKANTON TitlJiUNE-MONDAY" MORNING. JULY 2, 18U4;
tit Jbanfon txiku
PUBLISHED DAILY IN GCRSNTON, P. TKI
THIBU PVILIIHIN9 COMPANY!
t. P. KINaSBURV,
NlfYMKOmel TAHUNt iUHDIN. FUM SI
Chav, Manaacn-
CNTKAKD AT THE MATOFPICI AT HCAAWTON. S.
SCEANTON. JULY 2. 1804.
REPUBLICAN STATE TICKET.
For Governor!
DANIEL II. HASTINGS.
UtrtSTKK.
For Lieutinant Ganrnor:
WALTKlt LYON,
m ALi.i.i.iitvy.
for Auditor Hern i al:
AMOS H. MYL1S,
OF LA.Nl'AsTKII.
For Secretary of Itrrnat AjTmrs:
JAMK8 W. LATi'A,
(if I'UM.AIiEl.rillA.
For ConirtiiHmrn-at-Ud fie:
LiAl.VSIlA A. tiROW,
(IF Sl'syUKHANNA.
UEOHUK F. JIUKF,
Vf WKsTMuKELAM).
Election Time, Nv. O.
Odr mohmnu UumocTutio neighbor,
The Times, ueed not fear that there
will b blood shed but ween The Repub
lican and The Tribune. The Litter is
minding its own business every secular
day in the year.
The Pullman Strike.
It is to be doubted whether all the
organizations possible to civilized man
can overcomo the fact that when a la
borer sells his labor to an employer he
enters into a contract which, lu thn or
dinary course of events, can be broken
only when the condition! of the con
tract are violated by one or the other,
or both of the parties iumwdiato to it.
Thus when a workman at Pullman, 111.,
enters into an agreement with the man
agement of the Pnllimn Palace Car
company respecting labor and wages,
any deviution by ithor party from the
conditions specified in the agreement is
a proper sulject for settlement at Pull
man, 111., aud nowhere else. If a set
tlement cannot be made there, it is the
lgal right of either party to withdraw
from the compact, the one to aoek work
nnd the other to suvk workers, else
where. This is both the common law
and the common sense of the thing,
plainly stilted.
One year ago Eugene V. Debs an
nounced that hn bad orginized the
labor of railroads into a body called
the American Railway union, one of
whose fundamental principles wus the
advocacy of moral suasion aud arbitra
tion instead of the uie of boycotts and
strikes in the Battlement of wage dif
ferences. This union embodies the
manual laoor performed on 05,000
milea of American railway; and holds
ant ject to its will the commercial and
industrial welfare of nearly two-thirds
of thia nation. Mr. Debs has never
been elcted by the American people to
govern their destiuies in this manner.
He baa received no appointment from
them to assume a greater prerogative
than was held by Julius Caes.-tr, Char
lemagne or Louis the Magnificent of
France. Yet one stroke of bis pen,
made becunse 3 000 car builders at
Pullman failed to agree with their em
ployers as to wages, has sent into idle
ness 300,000 men, deprived the families
of these men of $4,300,000 in lost wages
in one week; put a check
to the industrial movements of
the inhabitants of twenty -ire
states and caused iucouvenienca to ea
sily 40,000,000 American citizara?, and
perhaps more. In this estimate we
have not computed the losses sustained
by the railways themselves, for having
simply Insisted upon their right to haul
ancb cars as they pleased over their own
tracks ly aid of the labor which they
paid for. This aggregate undoubtedly
lseuormons; and is inevitably distribu
ted not only among the "bloated bond
holders" aud "graspiug plutocrats" of
whom tbe professional agitator speaks
with fluency, but also among tbe well
to do and middle claseea, whose small
pavings are invested in railway securi
ties, the moderate dividondi on which
constitute an important moans of sup
port. Neither does it take iotosooouut
the friction and ill-freiini: that, if on
(rendered now and restrained during
the crisis, will sooner or Liter find vent
to the material discomfort of all con
cerned. In this light the strike which Air.
Debs has offlered becomes more than a
great mistake. It become Almost
fqnivalent to a public crime. The or
ganisation over which he preside! has
never been clothed with power to come
1 etween employer aud employed at
Pullman, III., or anywhere else and,
when told to stand aside, given the
delegated authority to retaliate with a
strike tbat bat cost an much in one
week as did the war for American in
dependence in on eventful year. He
lins simply usurped tbia function, fie
has in effect, if not in intention, put
himself Above the common law, above
the courts, above the common welfare;
and baa decilel with extraordinary as
sumption that he will make tbo Pull
man diffrnce a pretext for a demon
stration of bis power. Can thonghtf nl
labor approve bis conrst? It is, in any
event, the men who work who must
pay for this groat blonder. They must
pay for it in wages lost, in influence
sacrificed, in increased cost of railway
service, in crippled opportunities for
remunerative employment, and in the
reaction incident to trouble unneces
sarily and improperly excite! Labor
has nothing to gain and much to lose
by permitting itself to be drawn with
growing frequency into great strikes
tbat co9t ton-fold more tbat they unit
edly accomplish. It should shun tbe
men who deceive it in thia manner; and
Btu.ly instead the peaceful and lawful
processes ot the ballot aud the press.
The Washington journal which ar
gues for Dew White house should not
forgot that we also used s new presi
dent. ;
Tbb assertion in Snndsy's dis
patches that all the trade unions in
Chicago, and possibly all in Illinois,
contemplated going tint on strike out
of sympathy with the Pullman strik
ers, is incredible. Hire are 150,000
busy artisans with no disputes of
their own to settle and with nothing
greater than fraternal sympathy to
warrant their desertion of employ
ment and consequent vast crippling of
trade. What would 'it profit them to
leave work alio, merely because 2,500
Pullman car builders hare left it?
What ioo 1 would It do for the earlier
strikers? No doubt among the execu
tive ofQoiuls of these Chicago uuior.s
there are some who are kuaviiU aud
many who are foollih; but Wo cannot
yet believe that among the rank aud
flic there is sufficient folly to warrant
a strike of sucti magnitude and cost
upon literally no provocation at all.
The would will never be reformed
by clubs or bombs.
When fifty-five thousand miles of
railway have to be tied up for weeks to
settle a trilling wage difference in one
car shop, something is manifestly ont
of alignment in the foroesof civiliza
tion. Strikes, to win respeet, must not
be positively silly in their origin.
Thk person with a future in Ameri
can politics is the man who carries bis
sovereignty under his own bat.
One Magnificent Investment.
The next two months will be months
of maximum mortality among iufuuts.
It requires the utmost care and many
facilities to successfully bring the wee
ones through this heated term, Many
mothers, oppressed by poverty and the
cares of a large household, nra unable
to give to their infants the indefatiga
ble nursiug that is necessary to their
preservation. Even where some
mothers have the time to watch over
their babes, financial considerations
prevent tbo giving of needed atten
tions, such, for instance, as a trip to
the couutry and a srjourn out in the
fresh air,
, This, however. Is an opportune time
for charitably inclined Scrantouians to
remember those local ageucies which
supply facilities for the proper nurture
of infants and whloh inuke a specialty
of providing free summer homes for
tbe littlo children of tbe poor. There
are a number of these beneficent agen
cies in successful operation among ns.
One, the St. Stephen's summer borne
at Dai ton, is familiar through its ad
mirable ministrations that have re
sulted in uutold goou. lSeiore going
away ou his annual outing tbe well-to
do Scrantonian ought to write out a
nice check and mail it to the treasurer
of the Daltou borne fund; or, better
still, be ought to write out a number of
checks and mail one to each of the
treasurers of these various local insti
tutions of summer relief, all of wbicb
are pursuing a noble work.
Tbe excursionist who shall do this
prior to his own vacatiou will enjoy
himself better, get more tun out of his
pleasure trip and come back with a
healthier expression ou his countenance
than he could possibly experience on a
basis of complete selfishness. We have
no desire to sermoniz . We are speak
ing merely of a first class business in
vestment. - ..
Keir Haddig told the naked truth;
aud conventionality is correspondingly
shocked and indignant. Convention
ality admits it was tbe truth; in faot,
that's why it's mad.
Looking Ahead.
That was an interesting canvass
which a St. Louis paper made of the
preferences of tbe delegates to the
Denver Republican league convention
for president in 1800, Out of 800 who
named their choice Governor McKinley
of Ohio, got 087; ex Speaker Rjed 142,
including forty from Pennsylvania j
ex-President Harrison twenty-three,
and Senator Cameron twenty-oight,
besides several scattering choices.
The most noteworthy feature of this
poll is the small vote recorded for
General Harrison. Whether this was
due to his expressed refusal to be con
sidered a candidate or to a belief that
his renomiaation two years hence
would bo inexpedient may be left to
the reader's individual judgment.
The main fact is that if this canvass
fairly represents party sentiment at
this time and the delegates were
evenly distributed over all sections-
General Harrison will not figure in a
decisive manner in the national con
vention two years hence.
There ar reasons for this that in
volve no reflection upon the ex-prasi-dent'a
character, ability and thorough
devotion to high civic ideals. In the
first place, bis overwhelming defeat,
two years sgo, after an administration
of exceptional solidity and cleanliness,
involves in many minds a aorions, if
not fatal. 1cm of availability. There
is no use denying that that defeat, in
some of its aspects, was deliberate,
The American peopio do not, even in
moments of craz nnd delusion, ad;
minister to faithful officials the robuko
that was Administered to President
Harrison without having lomi real
ground of complaint. It is probably
true that they rt sin ted the interfer
ence of southern officeholders in the
Minneapolis convention office holders
who.'althongh lacking in Republican
constituents and unable to promise a
single electoral vote, nevertheless held
the balance of power and used it to
pay off debts of personal gratitude re
gardless of the wishes of the chief
Republican states. The break with
Mr. Blaine, too, following in a long
train of apparently studied suubs of
the great state secretary, perhaps bad
its iuflnenco. Added to all was a lack
of party enthusiasm and a failure to
inspire popular confidence which, if
somowhnt inexplicable, were neverthe
less powerful, as any study of tho re
turns will show. While it would be
possible to elect General Harrison in
1890. or any other Republican, it is
doubtless the feeling ot a majority of
Republicans that he has had his torn
and that there are other lenders,
equally wise, good and strong, wiio
have deserved high honor from their
fellow citizens.
The marked preference for Governor
McKinley exhibited at Denver Is not
surprising. It is tbe logical outgrowth
of his prominence in the fight for pro
tection to home industries, of his per
sonal pnrity and high ssnse of honor
and of tbe great reaction which has
been caused by Demooratio mislegisla
tion. Many Republicans feel under
personal obligation to Major McKinley
for the spectacle he has given them of
a man in pnblio life wbo can be poor,
trne and honest withont losing either
influence or popularity. In days of
jobbery, spoils and eorraption his clean
personality, surrounded by all the
quiet attributes of reputable manhood
and surmounted by high ability, looms
up as tbe bay tree in a desert. Even
If tbey never elect him president, they
nave bnilt a monument or grstituae to
him in the respect which they every
where feel for him which abundantly
recompenses him and provides an im
portant legnoy to coming generations.
It is early yet to say who should be
named by the party two years henee.
The robust leadership of Mr. Reed,
peerless la oongress and fearless on the
battlefield, may yet recommend Itself
as most advantageous. Bat there will.
even in the event ot Mr. Seed's nomi
nation, be a popular admiration for
Major McKinley whioh few men have
claimed and fewer still so well de
served,
Illinois Democrats are boasting so
loudly because it would take a 40,000
Ilopubllcun majority to smash their re
cent gerrymander that the people of
the Sucker state are more thau likely to
provide the 40,000 together with an ex
tra 10,000 for exemplary purposes.
F
OR AND
About Woman.
A funny incident occurred the other day
ou a Duuuiore suburban trent car which
caused a ripple of fun nud clearly fore
KhaUowod the coming wumun. A bright,
innuly lookmc miss hailing It spraug on.
The jaunty hut, Immaculate shirt front,
tuo perfect lonr-ln-Land tie, completed a
uiuHt striking tout ensemble. And tbe
pulled down vest was, as the boys Buy,
"out of sixht." Thero was plouty of
standing room Inside the car. Thero were
the usual number of tired looking mou
sitting sido ways with faces bnried in tho
evening paper, aud the mine Bprinklinir of
callow youth guziug into vacuity. Tho
lonely simp nuiig mvitiugiy. me bright
uiise, looking in, took m the situation, aud
coolly planted her natty body llriuly
against tho door jam on the platform. Ttio
(lou't-offor-iiitt-a-aeat look was enough,
No oue did. The conductor well, he wan
distressed. Ills arm would reacti forth
and come back without touching bur (he
dare not), us she swayed and bouuceJ, as
the car Douuced, a only Hcrauion cars
can. Poor conductor, lie dnrtid not come
inside to collect fsrus, he dared do uothiug
hut walcb. Kho well, her manly ab
straction was lovely aud how it deepened
hs we puBSid the culm heap. Wo could
fancy her planning a "comer iu coal."
At we whirled round a comer the auxioty
became painful. The tiny lonu braced
itself against tho bottom step ready for a
spring. Tbo conductor made a frantic
uivo for tbe bell rope as the chic creature
glided off aud waived away with that
OelicioUHly uouclislent air which only a
Womau can assume under the most trying
circumstances. The conductor gasped,
"Well, J never 1" The nieu looked tnought
f ul. Aud we women we saw the bigu of
the times.
Car Fake:
Have you ever watched tbe warfare
Uf two women over car fare f
E'icli atluiue with gonurons feoling,
Depth ot heart aud purse revealing;
Kach umpired with gentle horror
Lest the other should pay for her,
liut take uote the more insistent
Uf tbe combatants persistent,
Slio whose hand moat promptly snatches
At her pocketbook's stiff catches,
She who murmurs. "Don't be strange,
deur.
It's all right, 1'vo got tbe change, dear!''
She though 1 am sad to say it
Always lets the other pay it !
Iwici'tcan Jlebrew.
During a libel suit recontly brought
against her before Judgo Putnam, of Bos
ton, by Hepresentative Elijah Morse, Helen
M. Uougar was forced to udmit that in the
last presidential campaign she received
jj,000 for lifteen speeches. Iu 1800 she re
ceived (1,000 from the Prohibition party
for speaking once or twice per day for a
month. She also said she made like
speeches in other states and received some
compensation. She also admits that she
stumped the state of Indiana for Blame
and Logan in 1SS1, but only received $100
for speecties outside the state. She also
stumped the states of Wisconsin, Illinois
aud Kansas for Blaine nud Logan In 1SS1
and received pay.
The emotional man, as a rule, is not
givou to extraordinary demonstrations of
affection, aud tho particular specimen of
the geuna coucerned in the follow. uj
narrative from the Deiroit Free Pns
was no exception: The prosecuting
attorney iu the breach of promise case
thought be would make life a bnrdou to
the unfortunate young man who was the
unwilling defendant. "Do you mi-an to
say," he asked after a lot of embarrassing
questions, "that after you had been
absent for an entire month you did uot
ills the plaintiff, to whom you were en
gaged to be married, whnn you first saw
her on your return?" "1 do," responded
the defendant firmly. "Will you make
that statement to the jury?" "Certainly,
if necessary." "Do yon think thoy would
believe you?'1 "One of them would, I
know." "Ah, Indeed. And why should
ho. pray?" "Because he was presout wheD
I first saw her. He was at the gate when
1 rode up, and she stuck her bea t out of
the second story window, and I told her
'how d'y,' and said I'd bo back to supper iu
half an hour. I'm no giraffe," aud every
body in tho court room smiled except tho
attorney.
Aidh to Coolness:
Ico.
A good temper.
Plenty of exercise.
Abstention from alcohol.
Putting Comfort above style,
Hathiug frequently and well.
Tinperiiten3 iu the use of iced bev
erages. The doing of charitablo actions toward
tho po)r.
Moderato activity in congenial em
ployments. Calmness and n o hod in the perform
ance of lionsi'bolil duties.
Determination not to get into a pre
mature perspiration oat of net dies anxmiy
to know "how high the thermometer
registers" and if it "is hot enough for you.''
600 IN NATURE.
ForTiiE Timir.vi::
O'er tbe lair earth a holy stilluoBs reigns,
As fair Aurora opes tbe nates of day;
Forth on liis car; o'er meadows, fields aud
plsins,
Young llelics starts alouguis miulit way.
The golden our sublimely rolls aloug,
Athwart great clouds of rolling, cease
lets snow;
And nature smiles triumphant, as each
song
Of praise arises from tbe earth bolow.
God, Tbou art great, mysterious and di
vine; Unfathomable grandonr wreathes Thy
name:
Through those dark mists Thy wonders
ever shine,
Which hurl the works of man to wreck
and shame.
Oh, great creation, wonderfully made
Out of tbe deep an.1 vasty nothingness;
Tbe tree, tbe rosebud and each grassy
blade
Forever speak of Thy great mightiness.
It was but yesterday I saw a bird
la tbe mm sordid tbroes of deathly pain;
Although I hoard It breathe a teader word,
1 bonded low; and board the word again.
It whispered "God" in aocents sweet and
low,
As on its tiny form a sunbeam played;
It seemed to think; nnd greater, seemed
to know,
That the eheea ot death Rs form ar
rayed., I've seen Old Winter on bis frozen ear
Hurling , the cold bluetB through the
wuuumna imr;
And smiling Spring diffusing from afar,
Her ravs of Kindness on tbe chilly air,
I asked tbe river as it sweetly sang
"Whence art thou bound, Oh Di cipn. so
full of glee r
She answered back; sod viewless echo
rang
"Mortal, to God and dim eternity,"
I strolled along where fragrant flowers
grow,
In woodrous clusters, beautiful and fair:
I stood, I marvelled; saw them softly
blow
Their pleasiug fragranoe on tbe dewy
air.
How fair, how varied nature's stencil
gleamed
On every petal, wonderful aud true;
Ileavon's transcendent rays incessant
soomod,
To mingle sweetly with their beauteous
hue.
Last night I gazed upon tbe welkin dome,
Uupillared wonder, boundless, vast ana
dim;
The amber clouds, the moving sea of foam,
Seemed to my soul the counterpart of
Him.
1 laid me down to sleep. I dreamt 1 laid
'Twixt tifo aud death in some enchanted
grove;
Anon! athwart the sceue a vision strayed;
And whiskered sottly to me, "God is
love." Ukokuk W. Bowbn.
Providence, To., Juno au.
Furniture for Summer Cot
tages. Rattan and Reed Parlor
and Sitting Room Suits,
Couches, Rockers and
Chairs.
Porch Chairs, Rockers and
Settees.
Lawn Swings and Canopies
Baby Carriages and Re
frigerators. & Gonnel
131-133 fi WliNGION AVE
ICE CREAM
Do you make your own Cream? If go,
buy a TRIPLE MOTION
White Mountain Freezer.
"FROZEN DAINTIES" -A book of
choice receipts for Ice Cream. Sher
bet's Water less are pscktd in every
Freezer.
ALSO, A FULL LINE OF
Refrigerators,Water Coolers,
Baby Carriages, Hammocks
!
8c CO.
N. A. HULBERT'3
City Musio Store,
ii. WX01I1NQ AVE . BUUANXO&
BTE1NWAY SO
DKCKEB UrtOTHERS an
KKANIC11 & I1ACIA OfiHE
Hill LIZ BAUUll
lilt a kTR stock ot Brtt-elaa
MUSICAL HlKKCILWDlSli
MCblO, KXU. KXU
AYLESWORTH'S
Meat Market
The Finest In the Citj.
The latest improved fur
nishings and apparatus for
keeping meat, butter and eggs.
823 Wyoming Ave.
BUY THE
SUHR
FURNITURE
Hill
COURSE N
CLEMQNS
PIANOS
For many years this Tiauo has stood in tho front ranks. It ha been admired so much for its
pare, rich tone, that it has become a standard for tone quality, until it is considered the highest com.
pliment that can be paid any Piano to say "It resembles the WEBER."
We now have the full control of this Piano for this section aa Well aa many other fine Pianos
which we are selling at greatly reduced prices and on easy monthly payments. Don't buy until you see
our goods and get our priee3 .
GUERNSEY BROTHERS' MEW STORE,
GOLDSMITH'S $ BAZAAR
Special Sale of LADIES' WAISTS
MANY OF THESE AT HALF PRICE.
$i.oo Ladies'
$1.49 Ladies'
$1.98 Ladies'
$2.49 Ladies'
Extraordinary Inducements to purchasers of Carpet it
and Draperies for next Ten Days. In order to
reduce stock before taking inventory, we have decided to give you
some of the Greatest Bargains ever offered.
MOQUETTES
VELVETS
BODY BRUSSELS
TAPESTRIES
INGRAINS
KARAH RUGS. 30x60, Different Patterns'on either side; for tb's sale, 98 cents
Regular price, $1.59.
Fireworks
Fireworks
PAIN'S COLUMBIAN EXHIBITION
ri u t:vonKs,
IICHKETS, CANDLES,
MINES, BATTERIES,
SAUCISSIHUKS,
DEVIL AMONGST THE TAILORS.
VERTICAL WHEELS,
AVUISTLINO JACKS.
ALSO A FULL LINE OP
Fire Crackers
From Baby's to tbe largest No. 9. Also
Viotor American Cannon Crackers in
all sizes.
Parties, Societies, Cities and Towns
desiring to give displays can save
money by consulting in.
ICE CREAM, CANDY, ETC.,
AT BOTTOM PRICES.
314 Lacka. Ave.
A Foil Assortment
Letter Copying Books
OUR SPECIAL:
A BQO-paga 10x12 Book, bourn
in cloth, sheep back aud corners,
guaranteed to give sati faction,
Only 90c.
FINE STATIONERY
AND ENGRAVING,
Reynolds Bros.
Stationers and Encnvrs,
317 Lackawanna Avo.
Dr. Hill S-Son
Albany
Dentists
tt tooth, SS..W; boat sot, JS; for gold CRM
nd toeth without pinto, called frown nai
hrAg work, call for prices n4 relerenoo.
rONALUIA. for oxtrnatinj tectij without
Vain. Meetfaer. Kogai.
OVEU F1UST JiATIOHAI, BANK.
224
Y. M. C. A
UILDINQ.
B0OICS
WEBER
Waists at - -
Waists at - -
Waists at - -
Waists for
Twenty-five pieces best Axminster Moqusttes. Latest Designs, Exquisite Color
ings. .Sale Priee, 980. Former pries, $1, 25.
Ten pieces Wilton Backs, Newest Effects. Sale Priee, 95c., formerly $1.23.
Twsnty-fivs pieces Choicest Line of Patterns and Coloring ever shown in Scran
ton, going at this sale at 99o. Never sold before under $1.23 a yard.
Fifteen pieces, Fine Assortment, reduced to 49o. Formerly 67c.
Twenty-five' pieces, Latest Styles, reduced to 69o. Former price, 85o.
Fifty pieces Best Kidderminster, 1IOQUETTE COLOKINGS. Your choloe,
59c. Former price, 73a.
iiiuiuiutinfiiiuNeiiuiuiisiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiitiiiiitiuiiiiiiisuiitiiiiuiiiiiiu
UllitlllllIBII3Billi3ll!l!IIIIIIIlllllllllllIIllll!llllIIISIiliUiinilCllllllllllIfj
YOU WILL-
Tho comfort and convenience
of our
ALASKA -:-REFRIGERATOR
till you have ona in your
home. They consunio very
little ice and Will 'keep fresh
meat for three-weeks in the
hottest weather. We have
many styles aud sizes.
FOOTE & SHEAR CO,
Economizers
513 Lackawanna Ave.
PIERCE' SMRKET
Fancy Home-grown
RED RASPBERRIES,
STRAWBERRIES,
CHERRIES, &c.
Do not wait later than tuU weak to
bujr Strawberries for canning.
HEME'S MARKET
and Get the
Best.
WYOMING AVENUE.
SORANTON,
.49
.73
3 8 a 3
. $ .49
THE COLUMBIA BICYCLE AGENCY,
Opji Tribune ice, IU .Spruce St
HavlDg b3 12 years' oxporierica In tiis Bicyel bnsl.
note and tb scene? for lesdihg Wheels c4il'eradoiy
Wear rjreparud to guuranto satisfaction. Those in-
tending to purchase are Invited to call and examine
cur complete Hue. Open evenings. Call or Bund stum
for catalogues.
IS IT NOT
A BEAUTY?
THE I
LECTRA" f
GAITER
Globe Shoe Store
227 LACKA. AVE.
Evans & Powell
THE OLD RELIADLE
Caledonian
GAMES
Will be held by tha Caledonian Clab,
of tbia city, at
Laurel Hill Park
-ox-
JULY 4
A large number of nttractioni are
down on tbe billi and a good tim vay
be expected by all Wbo are present
DAISY PAWSON, the Champion Child
Dancer, only years of oe, will Rive o
grand entertiiuinent well worth tle
price of admiiiion.
ALL THE USUAL GAMES
A tbe Delegates from all parts ot
the United Stata and Cmarla will ba
present, tbls will undoubtedly be a
gala day.
Strtet Cars every three minutes.
Admission, 25c. Children, 10c.
Grand Stand, 15c.
Dancing Free All Day
Grand Picnic in the Evening.
ADMISSION, 10c.
Wedding
The best is none too
good. Ours are 18-k.
All sizes and weights.
LLOYD.lEWELER
423 Lackawanna Ave.
II ADS.
Inserted in THE TRIBUNE At the
into of ONE CENT A WORD.