THE STiAKTON TRIBUNE-TUESDAY MOIiNINU. OCTOBER 9, 1894. TRICKS OF LINEMEN. HOW, THBY STRING WIRES WHERE PEOPLE DON'T WANT THEM. gome of These Deft Fingered rellowi Are - . So Skillful That They Can Bun a Una Almost Under a Person'! Nose Without IIli Being Aware of It. On the roof of a lofty building in the business district two brawny linemen were, toiling among the network of wires fas tened to a high series of cross arms. One bent his ear close to a tiny telegraph in strument connected with a wire, while the . ether, under bis direction, busily twisted two wires together. "Hold on," cried the man listening at the Instrument. "They want to measure resistance. We'U have to wait awhile." The two descended, and behind a huge chimney lit their pipes. Asked a young man, who had been watching them with Interest: "Suppose you wanted to string a wire from this to that building opposite, how would you do itf" "That's against the law, young man," responded the taller of the two linemen. "Telegraph' companies never break the law." "But suppose yon wanted to?" "Young man, if I wanted to carry a wire across the street from here I'd let you go down on the sidewalk and watch, and while you were watching I'd get the wire ' over and you'd never know it. Howf Well, that's a business secret, but I don't mind telling you that I've known men toper form the feat several ways. If I wanted to do it I might take that pilot wire, for instance, that is composed of two or three strands. I might t wist a bunch of wires to go across the street till they exactly re sembled the pilot wire to an observer on the sidewalk. I might cut the pilot wire, hitching on my bunch, and keeping it taut by main strength my man opposite would slowly haul it over. "You wouldn't know it was moving. When he had wire enough I'd shake out the wires I wanted from the bunch and leave the rest to make good the gap in the v pilot. If I couldn't find a pilot wire on the particular roof I'd take the biggest gauge single wire there and hitch t wo small wires twisted together to it, make a fine joint, and my assistant would haul them over. One would serve to make np the break in the big wire, the other would be mine. If I were driven to it and had to get a rope ' ' across the street I'd work either early in the evening or early in the morning, when I have heard there are only a few police men around, and those either asleep or chumps that wouldn't know what I was doing. "I knew a man on Dearborn street who had one wire in bis office and had to have - another. An enemy swore be shouldn't, and hired a man and a policeman to watch the corners of two buildings on opposite sides of the street and tbe sky to see that no wire was strung. While they were looking the wire went over. It was a little, two strand cable, just the size of the single wire, and after it was fastened to the lat ter and the joint nicely soldered it took an hour to pull it slowly over." "If you were to undertake such a job wouldn't you be liable to mistake the wire get the wrong one? There are a good many on tbe roof tops." ."Yes, there are thousands of them tei egraph, telephone ! electric light, signal, lire alarm, public and private, dead and sjfrt iju there are scores of linemen , that know every one. I can put my hands ,) nn a dozen men, any one of whom you can take bllnulolueu on anypol anu lie 11 ten -vou the name, number, :?wserslnn, tr ), destination, origin and age of evelf wire in the biggest rack you can And. It's kind of a natural knowledge. You either knowit or you don't I know a man who can't read or write, bnt be can break open a thirty-two strand cable and pick out the wire he wants. "It is always a fellow wh" knows the wire geography of the roo " ho con tinued, "that makes the taps. Are there many taps? You don't bear of a fraction of them. It is natural that sometimes people would try to catch the secrets worth thousands of dollars that go over . tularrrnnli nrirna nin'r. ir." , ... , .... . "I was after a tap the other day and found it in our own office tower. It re minded me of another in the days of the hottest war against the bucket shops. A certain shop was getting quotations. We made a dozen tests and tours and fonnd nothing. Finally, by accident, I discov ered the operator in a certain hotel had his instrument near a telephone, and shouted quotations out too loudly. I locked at that telephone and found that it ts kept in circuit by a little wooden pet der the lever, which was apparently w, the ear piece hanging in it. That wt ( a good dodge, but the tappers made it a beautiful one by taking that telephone wire all over town and actually breaking open a tele phone cable, running it through that a piece, then into another cable and finally taking it through a central tower, all to disarm suspicion. We located its other , end In an office in a high building on Clark street, and there sat a telegraph operator, the phone to his ear, catching the shouted quotations of the other operator and tele graphing them over a secret wire to the bucket shop. "In another case they left a blind lead for us in the shape of a wire half concealed running into a hole in a brick wall, while they broke open the linen covered line wire, fastened their tiny copper threads to it aud ran them down holes bored in the insulator into a chimney. In another case they tapped every wire of a certain company and rigged up a battery of their own, thus . making themselves independent, and bade defiance to that company for fonr weeks till it dropped on the taps in its own office. In another case they went on a certain roof, theownefof which swore he would lUoot any man found there stringing more wires, and kept a guard to do it, and while the guard was on hand they tapped tbe wire they wanted. Of course we didn't think of looking there, and, didn't go np there till we ha," to, fearing we'd be throvn off. Oh, there at Mcks in all trades but ours." Chicago 'i.ibune. Crimes of High Civilization. ' May not New England's murders be ac cepted as manifestations of the peculiar weakness of un old and advanced civiliza tion? How else may they be accounted for? Upon what 'cither basis may we solve the yearly reiterated riddle of the unspeakable scandals, of London, the very center and fountain of modern civilization? If the ' most shocking crimes are not related some how or other to tbe progress of civilization, why should we look for and And always the . very refinement of villainy in Paris, the queen, as Loudon may be called the king, ' of Christendom? . The services of the logician and the soci- .' olpglst may.be needed to yoke this strange teiim together, but surely as much may be . said as has been said without risking a conviction for sophistry. Boston Globe. .'' . An Enticing 'Welsh Word. The Listener onoe knew some excellent Welsh people, who insisted that no lan guage In the world is so free from hard words as Welsh. They , cited the word cwrw as proof qf the falsity of the notion that Welsh words are unpronounceable. ' This fascinating word is pronounced ex- aotly as if it were spelled koorocvand it means beer. To bear a Welshman pro- Bounce that word is enough to make one's . mouth water. ' Yon might remain insensi ble to the temptations of mere beer, but an invitation to take a glass of kooroo otherwisev cwrw is . Irresistible. Boston 'rtanscrip. Nonconformists and Music For more than two centuries it has been a furdamental principle of the noncon formist conscience that all instrumental music on Sundays is sinful, oven when used for a "religious purpose." .Bishop Earle, in his portrait of a rich "noncon formist" lady in 1028, says that "she suf fered not her daughters to learn on the virginals, because of their affinity with or gans." The fathers of nonconformity, in their first admonition to parliament In 1570, gravely informed the lords anil com mons that "organ players came from the (ope, as out of tbe Trojan horse s belly, lor the destruction of God's kingdom," which was their convenient synonym for Presby terian nonconformity. "That old 6erpent, Pope Vitaliau," said the nonconformist ministers, "bronght up organs," and "two other monsters, Popes Gregory and Gcla sins, inspired by the devil," were the au thors of "Plainsong and Pricksong." ' When the nonconformist conscience, tome seventy years later, had a parliament completely at its own disposal and eager to satisfy all its demands, commissioners were sent all over England to destroy the organs as "abominations" in the sight of th Lord. Evelyn said, In 1034, that they were then "almost?" finiversally demol ished." Any one who wishes to know something in detail of tbe nonconformist campaigu against mujie on Sundays should read the entries in the "Journal of Will Dowsing," "the parliamentary visitor," who laid waste the Suffolk churches in 1043 and WH. Dowsing had a warrant from the Karl of Manchester for demolishing pictures, painted glass, superstitious im ages and organs. London Saturday Re view. Some Very Old Pronunciations. "Laylock," the pronunciation of flao once very common, has now almost en tirely passed away. It is hardly likely to be found in dictionaries or glossaries, ex cept such as profess to give provincial vari ations of speljiug. Sixty years ago, how ever, it was by no means a provincialism or a mark of the uneducated. I well re member that Walter Savage Landor al ways spoke of "laylocks," as did my own' mother and most people of that generation. It belonged to the age, now almost entirely passed away, which called Rome "Room," gold "goold," St. James "St. Jeames," with other variations of sound now deemed vulgar. I have heard my father say that George IV alwuys spoke of "My loyal cltv of Lumion," while "obleeged" and "cow cumber" were heard from the most refined mouths. I can distinctly remember on the first Sunday in Advent, 1825, hearing the of ficiating clergyman at St. Mary Woolnoth give out sonorously, when reading the first lesson, like a lodge in a garden of cow- cumbers," and my dear old rector, Julius Charles nare, twenty years later, adopted the. same pronunciation, saying at table, "Obleege by passing the cowcumber." "Vilets," as a dissyllable for violets, was equally common nmqng people of good education. otes and Queries. Stfdmun on Wliittier. Taken' for all in all, Whitter, "our bard and prophet best beloved," that purely American minstrel, so virginal and so Im passioned, at once the mun of peace and the poet militant, is the Sir Galahad of American song. He has read the hearts of bis own people, and chanted their emotions and powerfully affected their convictions. His lyrics of freedom aud reform, in his own justified language, were "words wrung from the nation's heart, forged at white heat." Longfellow's national poems, with all their finish, cannot rival the nab ural art of Whlttier's; they lack the glow, the earnestness, the intense characteriza tion of such pieces as "Randolph of Ro anoke," "lehabod" and "The Lost Occa sion." The Quaker bard besides, no less than Longfellow, is a poet of sympathy. Hu man fueling, derived from real life and en vironment, is the charm of "Snow Bound," even more than its absolute transcript of nature, leurs enough have passed since it was written for us to see within its range it is not inferior to "The Deserted Village," "The Cotter's Saturday Night" and "larao Shanter." Edmund C. Sted man. in Century. The Whist riaycrs. They play whist, the beaux in their pow derod wigs and velvet coats, tbe ladies in llieir brocade petticoats and fine stom achers. The west window", are open; a fountain plashes in the garden; the flower beds are bordered with box, and the scent of tlio box comes in utXbe open windows, They play whist. A beau shakes back the laoe frill from his hand as he deals. A red jewel gleams ort his finger. The ladies' brocades rustle; they frown softly at their cards. An hourglass stands on a table in laid with mother of pearl; the sand in the hourglass ilows silently; the pungent smell of the box comes in at the open win dows. They play whist. A lady leads from her long suit; a beau takes the trick with a king. His black eyes flash under his white wig like eternal youth. The fountain plashes in the garden; the pungent smell of the box comes in at the open windows; the sand in the hourglass flows as silently as the lives of the players, They play whist. A beau leads an ace: his partner trumps. A trick Is lost, but he looks at her and smiles. A trick is lost but love is immortal. Mary E. Wilkins in Century. An Old Time Editorial. Regarding the reading of the Decla ration of Indopondanoe, says the Balti more American, tho Maryland Journal aud Baltimore Advortiser now the Baltimore American in un editorial of 3uly 31, 1770, says: , "On Monday last, at 12 o'clock, the Declaration of Indcpendanoe was pro claimed at the courthouse in this town at the bend of the independent and ar tillery companies, to the great joy and satisfaction of the audience, with a dis charge of cannon, etc., and universal acclamations fox the prosperity of the free United States. In tbo evening the efllgy, representing the king of Great Britain, was carted through the town to the no small mirth of the numerous spectators, afterward thrown into a fire made for that purpose. Thus may it fore with all tyrants!" Power In Iron Mining. The power used in iron ore mining in the United States is enormous. The official returns from the various mines report a total of more than l.lOOsteam boilers, with an aggregate ef some CS.000 horsepower and these boilers furnish steam to about 1,100 steam engines, including air com pressors, hoisting machinery, entrines for driving washers, crushers, etc., some of largo size. Ihese engines, however, do not in most instances include the motive power for pumps, in a majority of cases the latter being rated independent of steam engines, as a locomotive would be. In the returns made, however, there weru about eighty pumps mentioned Independ ent of steam engines, twenty locomotives used In and about tbe mines, four steam shovels employed in digging or handling ore, eignt turuine wheels driving machin ery, and ten air compressors worked by water power. Of course the application pf steam and compressed air in the iron mines has very largely reduced the number of animals employed in and about tbe mines, and it Is to be remarked that Michigan, on account of its numerous deep mines, and as the' largest producer of. iron ore, stands at tbe bead of these data of machinery and power, -new xor bun. TODISPLACEWJUTING- A THEATRICAL MANAGER'S PLAN OF CORRESPONDENCE. How It Originated and Was Developed. Used First as an Advertisement The rhonograph as a Substitute for Letters and Postal Cards. . Phonograph letters were popularized by a member of tbe theatrical profession, and the so called fad bids fair to become a com mendable and useful practice. The phonograph letter is just what its name implies a letter by phonograph. It consists of a communication spoken into a, phonograph. Tbe phonograph letter was first used in a general way by a theatrical manager who was handling one of Mr. T. U. French's "Fauntleroy" companies in the south. He noticed that one, of the attrac tions in nearly every town visited was a phonograph so fitted up that one or a dozen persons could listen to its story or song at one and tbe same time. As customary with itinerant showmen, the first thing that suggested itself to him was the chance for advertisement, so, Bend ing for bis agent to "come back" to Wil mington, N. C. the town where the scheme was first tried he had the scene in the second act, where Cedric meets the old earl for the first time, repeated to and re corded by the phonograph. Some ten or a dozen cyinders containing this scene from the play were prepared, and the advance agent carried them away with him. In every town visited thereafter he left one of these cylinders with the local phonograph agent, who gladly included it in his lim ited repertoire of phonographic works and advertised it. The result was scores of people heard this scene long before tbe company arrived, aud as the record of intonation, voice and inflection was absolute, and the perform ers were among tbe best to whom the re spective parts have ever been intrusted, the advertisement was most successful. As engagements were met the manager picked up the Fauntleroy cylinders at the local agencies and shipped them ahead, again to be used by the advance man and dealt out as before in the tour through tiie country. An injury to the manager's hand, which rendered writing painful, and for a time Impossible, suggested tbe idea of using the cylinders for correspondence, and they were tried accordingly. The first letter dictated for that is what it really amounts to was to his wife. Besides set ting forth the fact that he had injured his hand and could not write, the cylinder gave the gossip current of the day and tbe general matters of business and included about all that the customary hand written epistle of a man to bis wife usually con tains. Besides that several members of the company saluted the manager's wife, each giving her aquiet little tip, as it were, of tbe dally doings of her liege lord. The cylinder was carefully wrapped In a sheet of cotton, incased in a cardboard car ton and mailed. A-few days went by and then came a letter to the manager from home acknowledging the receipt of this present and asking what it was nnd what use could be made of it. It then dawned upon the managerial mind that having no lniormation ol the change be had mode in the manner of carrying on bis correspond ence, his better half might well be excused if she should attempt to polish the cylin der's surface and use it for an ash receiver or a receptacle for hairpins. Accordingly he wired her to take the "present" to the phonograph depot in the town in which she lived and its nse would be explained. The dutiful wife did as directed and fol lowed it up by purchasing a half dozen cylinders, dictating letters and playing banjo solos to each, which were at once sent to her spouse in the south. On receipt of the cylinders he put them on the pho nograph nnd had what was recorded there on reproduced for his own satisfaction and the amusement of several of his company, One cylinder, however, was a conundrum. It simply hissed and made a noise resem bling the bursting of a paper bag, which was followed by a prolonged growl and a sharp, quick sound resembling the break ing of a piece of wood. The operator suggested the manager's wire was splitting wood to make a fire. and worked at the instrument some time trying to adjust it, so that the record could be got distinctly. Finally he cave it un, let the cylinder go on revolving, when clear and distjnet came the voice of tho manager's wife: "Have just broken a bottle. I look toward you, and Chick says, 'Me tool' " Then all was clear. She had pulled a cork from some effervescing mixture (apollinaris probably) and drunk success to the new Bcheme for correspond ing. This accounted for the hissing noise and explosion, and the noise likened to that of splitting wood was soon brought out by a readjustment of the machine as the growling and bark of the manager's little dog. Now quite a number of professional and traveling men make use of the phono graph letter system. They require only two things care in packing and a knowl edge of the speed at which the recording instrument is run at the time of dictation, This should be marked on the carton con taining cylinder, for to secure a perfect re production of the matter thereon recorded the phonograph used togrind it outmust be run at precisely the same speed. Thus, if the recording phonograph is set to seventy revolutions, which in a general way is about right for letter dictat ion, the carton Should le marked lxx. This will at once advise the operator of the machine Upon which the record is to be reproduced how to adjust his instrument, and there will be no delay or breaks. Inquiries made at the office of a phono graph company elicited the fact that the phonograph is used for a variety of pur poses many of them akin to correspond ence. For instance, a leading soprano of a Denver church, who wauted to adopt the stage as a profession, wrote to a manager in this city for an engagement, He replied that he must first hear her sing and thus get the compass and quality of her voice before he could decide upon her case, and the matter slipped from his mind lustanter. Some weeks later he received a letter, ac companied by a phonograph cylinder, upon which was recorded a very good rendering of a well known test piece for the voice, which the manager had reproduced, and was so satisfied with it that lie sent for her to come to New York. New York Mail and Express. Tennyson's Sensitiveness, Tennyson's sensitiveness was often much tried in the matter of reviews of his works. If unfavorable be would cry with pain and vexation, so whenever an unfavorable word appeared in a paper, however obscure, the publication was immediately hidden or Jestroyed, so. that tbe poet should never lee or bear anything that could pain him. London Star The Wonders of Reproduction. Aphide are a species of minute insect be longing to tbe order of beniiplera, sub order homoptera, and taken collectively 100 of them would hardly weigh a grain. Now let us try a comparison. The average man, we will say, weighs 2,000,000 grains; Yet it has been found, by actual calcula tion, that if theBe minute insects were left uacbecked to only the tenth generation, the descendants of a single pair would be equivalent, in point of actual weight, to 500,000,000 very heavy men. This would be equal td one-third of the population of the globe, supposing each person to weigh an average of 280 pounds.-St, Louis lie oublic , , . Growth Movements of Plants. Photography is marvelously widening our lieid of vision. It has shown us mil lions of stars hitherto unknown; it has re vealed astonishing details of animal loco motion, and caught tho rifle bullet in Its flight, and it is now being made to record the movements of the growing parts of plants. Especially curious are the results with certain climbers, such as the bop con volvulus, lpomcea, etc. The young stems move in a succession ol irregular circular or elliptical curves, which vary every mo ment, eveu in direction, and are due to ir regular growth in different parts of the stem. During the sleep of plants, move ments do not cease, but consist of alternate upward and downward vibrations. Ohio State Journal. odden Fainting Spells, Epileptic Convul sions, or Fits, and all nervous diseases, as Paralysis, Locomotor Ataxia, Epilepsy, or Fits, St. Vltua's Dance, Sleeplessness, Nervous Prostration, Nervous Debility, Neuralgia, Melan cholia, Threatened Insanity, and Kind red Ailments, are treated as a specialty, with great success, by the Staff of the Invalids' Hotel and burglcal Institute, Bufl'alo. N. Y. Many are cured at a distance without personal consultation tbe necessary medicines Deing sent Dy mall or express. Question blanks sent on application. For Pamphlet. References, and Par ticulars, enclose 10 cents in stamps for postage, Address. WORLD'S DISPENSARY Medi cal Association, Buffalo, N. Y. tl. A. HULBERT3 City Musio Store, m wxouura avj bcbamtuh TEINWAT SO DECKER BROTHER ADS KRANIOH St BACK PIANO A 1st a 1st if stock of first olus ORGANS MUSICAL MERCHANDISE atUBlC, afiTU. KXU REVIVO RESTORES VITALITY. Made a la Tin 1 AII M.. wen man 15th Dav, of Me. V i nt nut i 3nth Hay. FriETilCII xiEikirarj-v produrrs t he above resull s In 110 days. It a'ti powerfully aud iuldily. Cum whi n all others fail Iouuk mcu will njain their lout monliuod.and old men will recover tlnir youthful vior by unliig ltKY'lVO. It quickly and surely rento ,-bs Nervous ness, Lot Vitality, Impotancy, Nigbtly limicsionn, LoHt l'otvcr, 1'ailiiiK M mory, Yatuui l)lsra8, and 11 fUVctu of self-ahiiHe or excels and indiscretion, which mints one fors'nily. bimlneaa or man-tune. It not only ctirea by starting at the seat of dlseaxe, but isaureot ner; tonic and blood builder, bring inir baek the ptuk glow to pulo checks and ro torlng tlio fire of on'h. It wardH off insanity md Conximiptiou. lnsjft on havinv ltKYIVO, no "tber. It can bo carried in vest pocket. IJy null. ',1.00 per package, or rlx for 83.00, with a posl ilvo written irunranlce to cure or refund 'hn money. Circular free. Address WAL MEDICINE CO., R1 Hivsr St., CHICAGO. ILL. For snle by Matthews Tiros., Druggists . Scranton , l'a. nASSON STARK. AT THE OLD DEPOT HOTEL, FACTuKYVlLLE, Is prepared to receiva summer boarders and furnUhriKS for tourists to surrounding towns and suuimur resorts. lf lib. SB i7 M lr A. - -VTA' ml. MK IV- maw TRY thtrqjlley soap T. y-.-..i.-t.-. PHIUHDHUPHW vFor Washing Clothes CWAN and SWEET. It LASTS LONGER than other Soaps. Price FIVE CENTS a bar. 700-SiSLE By tlio Beautiful NW Steamships of the Old Dominion Line OLD POINT COMFORT (DYQEIA IIOTEL), OH . (PRINCESS ANNE HOTEL), AND RETURN Most Delightful Resorts on the Atlantic Coast for AUTUMN OUTINGS - FOR $16 Old Point Comfort Virginia Beach - A day aud a quarter at either hotel. INCLUDING EVE1JY EXPENSE of meals and berths en route, a day and a quarter's board at either hotel , This trip is an Ideal one. as the course skirts the coast, with lit tie likelihood of seasickness, and places ana points 01 interest. ' Dor OLD DOMINION W. L GUILLAUDEU, Trafflo Manager. WEAK MEN your attention i JS TO TUB vwi AMiitsu Airiuvu Gray's Spacillc Medicina IF YOU SUFFER ffmNer. n.na.i .aYOUS Da- MfMTMUn. AHU TURK. lilitv. W eakness of Body and Mind. bDerma- torrbsa, and lmpoteuoy, aud all disease that srlso from over-iiiiinlnon.ee nd self -Htms as Loss ot Memory nnd l'ower, Dimness of Vis ion, 1'remnturs Old Am aud cuay other ill esses th.it kml to Insanity or ( KiiMiinution and an early t-ravu. wrtt't for a pamybiot. Aildr'sliHAi" Mt'DU'INB CO.. BnftVo, N. . The buolr)a Medicine is sold by all drucglsts at $ per packago, or six packages lor $S,or sent by mail on receipt ot uiuuey.aud with every S5.U0 order WE GUARANTEE a cure or money refunded. ff"On account of counterfeits wtt have idopted the Kollow Wrapper, the only gunu Ine. told in Bcranton bv Matthews lirutt Third National Bank of Scranton. ORGANIZED 1872. CAPITAlT" $200,000 SURPLUS, $250,000 This bank offers to depusltors ever facility warrauud by their balances, busi ness aud responsibility. Kpoll attention jjixen to business ae count. 4 , ' WILLIAM fOKNFT.I, President iKO. H. CATLIN, Vice-President. WILLIAM H. FKCK, Casulek. DIRECTORS. William ronnell. Genres H. Cstlln, Alfred Hand. James Arrhbald, Henry Ilelln, Jr., tVUltaiu T. awitn- Lather Hell- TUB TRADERS National Bank of Scranton. ORGANIZED 183a CAPITAL $250,000, SURPLUS $30,000. 6AUTJEL HINES,tPrfliMont. W.W. WAT HON, Vice Prosidsni, A. b. WILLIAMS, Cashier. CIBECTORS, AMTOLHnfK, JAMES M' EvURHARf, IRVINO A. FlNOB, PlKItCt R FlNI.ir, Joseph J. Jeriiyn, 11. 8. Kkmekkh CkUtt, P. Uatouew. John T. fouiKU. . W. W. Watbuh. PROMPT, ENIRGETIC, CONSERVATIVE and LIBERAL This bank Invites the patronage of business (aen and firms gem-rally. SPRING HOUSE HEART LAKE, Susqu.hanna Co. U. E. CHOFUT ...Proprietor. j UIS HOURE In strictly temperanco, In novf and well furnished and ofli-:!) To 1 HE PUBLIC THIS YEAR IluUND; ! located miuway uetweeu uoutroio an l &i:rau tun, on diuntrose ana Lucaimi ivaiiroau, ix miles from U-, U A W. K R. at Alford Station, and five milm from M nitron; ca 1 acity, eighty-live; throe minutes' walk f rom it. it. station. , GOOD UoAT. FfniNO TACKLE, C-, HIKE Tl Gits IS. Altitude about .000 foot, equalling in this respoct me Auirouuacn ana Cutmu Moun tains. line frrovea, plenty of sliala and beautiful scenery, matting a Duinmsr ucsort unex celled In beauty and Ghnpnes. Dancing pavilion, swiu ra, croquot gr onndi, &c Cold Spring Water and plumy of Milk. Hates, 7 to SlO per week. Kl.CU per day. Kxcnrsinn tickets sold at all stations on D. L. Si W. lines. Porter meets all trains. - Tina, jSttsnr'' ""7 SEA TRIPS to- VIRGINIA BEACH - passes in review many watering printed matter and full partiou S. S COMPANY Pier 26, North River, New York 3i6.oo dh D $17.00 $ I V. -Ili.iull' ' 3 ' V : To CAUTION Washburn-Crosby Co. wish to assure their many patrons that they will this year hold to their usual custom of milling STRICTLY OLD WHEAT until the new crop is fully cured. New wheat is now upon the market, and owing to tho excessively dry weather many millers are of the opinion that it is already cured, and in proper condition for milling. Washburn-Crosby Co. will. take NO RISKS, and will allow the new wheat fully three months to mature before grinding. This careful attention to every detail of milling has placed Washburn-Crosby Co.'s flour far above all other brands. MARGE Wholesale Agents. SHAW I BV PIANOS SHAW J. Lawrence Stelle FORMERLY STELLE & SEELEY, MUSIC ' DEALER 134 Wyoming Avenue, Scranton, Pa. SHAW PIANOS to the front EMERSON PIANOS, Old and Reliable. Clough& Warren Waterloo I'KICKS SAT1SFACTOKY. YU KNOW? That we will GIVE you beautiful new pat terns of Sterling SILVER SPOONS and FORKS for an equal weiHounce for ounce, of your silver dollars. All elegantly en graved free. A large variety of new pat terns to select from at 807 LACKAWANNA AVENCK STFFI aJ H Janed I wmwllf "iff All Grades, Sizes and Kinds kept in stock. IRON Of every description on hand. Prompt shipments guaranteed. Chains, Rivets, Bolts, Nuts, Washers, Turn buckles, Eolt Ends, Spikes and a full line of Carriage Hardware. BITTENBENDER & CO. SCRANTON, PA. We have the following supplies of Lumber secured, at prices tbat warrant U3 in expecting a large share of the trade. Pacific Coast Red Cednr Sbiugles. "Victor" and other Mlchi(tan Prnnd. of WUIte Pine and Wait Cedar bhinffles, Michigan White and Norway Pino Lum ber and Bill Timber. North Carolina Short and Long Leaf Yel low Pine. Miscellaneous stocks of Mine Rails, Mine Ties, Mine Props and Mine Supplies in general.. THE RICHARDS LUMBER CO, Commonwealth Building-, Scranton Pa. tMIIIOOD lMimptionorinnaimy. n,v mull nmn.1,1. With (h M.nn utFORE AND AFItR USING. uooUicr. AuuroslkfcBVE bEKUCO., slatonlo Temple, CUlCAOO-lU. For Sale In Scranton, Po.,by H. C. SANDERSON, Drufiist, cw. Wajhlngtoa PENNYROYAL i Aak for DR. MOTT'S MITITYBOTAI. TILLS and take BO other. Bend for olroular. lrle s)1.00 per box, 6 boxes) for t&.OU, Aai& Dll. MOTT'S CIIKMIOAXi CO, - Cleveland, Ohio. for Sla by O. M. If ARRIS. Druinrlst, EVERY WOMAN BomttlBM needs a rsllsbls, monthly, retralaUnc msdleioe. Only harmUaf the purest drugs should Mused. 11 you want Um best, get Dr. Pcalps Pennyroyal Pills Thar are prompt, safe ami osrtatn In result. The ssanlne (Dr. Peal's) aeTer itau. oolat, goat ajiwuare, 11,00. Address i'&U. UxslUlia Cv UersUild, O, Foraala by JOHN H. PHELPS, Spruca Street, Scranton, Pa. . Our Patrons lr - EMERSON EMERSON Carpenter Crown Connell Juniata County, PennaylTania, White Oak. Sullivan Connty Hemlock Lumber and Lath. Tioga County Dry Hemlock Stock Board Elk County Dry Hemlock Joiata and Studr ding. RESTORED!" NERVE SEEDS. Tkl.wgal.rM nudj MI MMdunn .11 s.rvou til GONNELL . such ts Wesk Memory, lessor Brain Power. Heailsolie. Wakefulness, lutMunuood.NlKDtlr Kmlsaluns, NerYoutineM.audralnsatidloisor powsr ItHioneratlreOniansof ellliersBk caused b7owxertlon,oolhfulrrr, x(wlvo ue of tobaoco, opium or stimulants, which leid to lDflrmltT.Con. can uecarneain TeBtpncseu ir . & & nrrinr ...It. m written BTaaurSmtee S nr rim.)., fm. HnM h Mil rlniffJl.U. A.k f Or It. tSkl PILLS. Ter offered to Ladlei. apeoially recommend d to married Ladiaa. 17 Vtmn Avnue. Pharmaciat, cor. Wyoming Avtnue an4