THE RCItANTON TRIBUNE MONDAY MORNING, DECEMBER 17, 1894. FAVOR CARLISLE'S BILL v - Currency Committee Will Ask the House to Vote for the Measuie. THE VIEWS OF TWO BANKERS 6trong Opposition Will Probably Con front the Bill When It Is Taken Vp for Adoption-St. John Urges Free Silver Coinage. Cy the United Press. Washington, Dec. 16. Secretary Car lisle'! bill to reform the banking and currency Is scheduled to pass the house of representatives at 3 o'clock next Fri day afternoon. This Is the time agreed upon by the Democratic members of- the committee on banking and currency for taking the Vote. This agreement, to be put In force, must receive the approval of the com mittee on rules, and must be voted for by a majority of the members of the house. The programme was fixed up late yesterday afternoon, after the con clusion of the hearings which have oc cupied the time of the committee dur ing the week. The differences of opinion in the committee are so many and of such a radical nature that there was no hope of ever getting a majority to Indorse any bill. It was accordingly deter mined by the Democratic members of the committee that the only thing that could be done would be to report the Carlisle bill to the house without amendment, with the understanding that the members of the committee will have an opportunity to offer Individual amendments In the house. Mr. Springer was authorized to report the bill In this fway. It was at first proposed to have the Committee adopt a resolution, to be re ferred to the rules committee, provid ing for carrying out this programme, fcut there was considerable opposition on the part of the Republican members to proceeding so rapidly, and some of the Democrats also thought there ought to be more time given. It was rtherefore agreed that Chairman Springer and such other members of the committee as might wish to do so ehould go before the committee on rules on Monday and present their views as to what ought to be done. It Js probable the programme will be agreed to by the rules committee, as It Is understood the Democrats of that committee were consulted before It was prepared. Opposition to the Programme. -When the rule is reported to the house it will probably meet with the united opposition of the Republicans and a considerable number of Demo crats. There are at least four Demo cratic members of the committee w!;o think more time ought to be given for delate, and that the vote .on the bill cug'ht to be postponed until after the holiday recess. This will be strongly opposed by Chairman. Springer and others, who are understood to be act ing In concert with the president, and who insist that the bill must be sent to the senate before the holiday If there is to be any hope whatever of ac tion upon it by that body. The Impression among the members of the banking and currency committee and others who have studied the sxtu tlor. in the house Is that the bill will pass that body, If at all, substantially as !t was drawn up by Secretary Car llule. This is not because any one is satisfied with It in its present form, but because there is so much different! of op'nlon as to be the character of the i-niendments to be made. It Is doubt ful 11' a majority of the house can be etcured on the vote for any one of the amendments. .among the amendments that will be offered will be one to strike out the provision making each bank liable for the security of notes Issued by every other bank. Amendments will al30 be ottered to strike out the provision for Btate bank currency and to provide for th funding of legal tenders in low Interest bonds. Unless the speaker rules such an amendment out of order an effort will also be made to add to the bill a provision for the free coinage of Bilver, . Changes in the Senate. ' The chances for favorable action on any bill 1n the senate are rather diffi cult to forecast, especially as some of the Republicans seem to be disposed to oppose any bill, good or bad, and at any rate, a vote can only be reached by a continuous session. Secretary Carlisle's plan has now been before the country for two weeks, and has been the subject of hearings before the house committee on banking and currency for one week, and among all the men who have appeared before the committee, and among the hun dreds who have written to Chairman Springer, only one man has been found nvho approves the plan. This is Presi dent Post, of the York National bank, of York, Neb., whose letter Chairman Springer read before the committee !thls morning. Mr. Johnson, of Indiana, objected to !ts going into the record of the hear ings, and asked Mr. Springer if his rea son for adding it was not that it was the only letter he had received Indors ing the Carlisle plan. Mr. Springer ad mitted that it was, but did not insist oipon Its going Into the record, and It rwas left out. Bankers representing directly oppo site view occupied the attention of the committee today. They were O. Q. Williams, president of the Chemical Na tional bank, of New York, and W. P. St. John, president of the Mercantile National bank, of New York. Mr. St. John is in favor of free silver, while Mr. .Williams Is against it. Mr. Williams 'maintained that the pres ent situation in currency matters was Die requiring only firmness and com HIGHEST mon sense. The" flfrst , problem' in a clumsy and conglomerated financial system was the disposition to be made of the legal tender notes. - Nn financial Bystem, he said, could be permanently successful without providing for the elimination of .these notes. Provision should be made at once for funding a part of them, say $250,000,000, in amounts of perhaps $50,000,000 at a time, at the dlsoretlon of the secretary of the treasury. Wants Low Interest Bonds. Mr. Williams' suggestion was the is sue of United States bonds bearing a rate of interest not more than 3 per cenlt. and fhait these bonds should be re ceived as security 'for circulating notes of national banks on ithe basis of par for the bonds, the government having a first lien also on the assets of the banks as additional security. The itas on the circulation of national banks, he said, ehould be removed at once, and with a 3 per cent, bond at par and no tax on circulation there would be sufficient inducement for national banks to take out circulating notes. As for the sliver certificates, he be lieved 'It would be wise to pass an act allowing them to be redeemed In sliver bullion at its market value, and the Sherman act notes might be also in cluded. With these few changes In the law he thought our financial system be placed oh a safe basis. Mr. 9t. John discovered that under official dictation, tutored by the one most Aggressive of all our handful of "goklltes" in the United States, Con gress fiddled with bank notes while the burning issue was our primary money. His entire statement was devoted to an argument that congress should en act a law providing for bimetallism. This, he asserted, would do away wlith the necessity for other financial legisla tion, and once such a law was passed and approved there would be no reason for passing new banking laws. JILTED ON HIS WEDDING DAY. Aged Cato Uoagland's I'nhappy Experi ence with a Young Bride. By the United Press. New Brunswick, Dec. 16. A few weeks ago Cato Hoagland, 70 years old, a well-to-do colored resident of Frank lin Park, engaged Ellen Baker, 23 years old, to keep house for him. He paid her some money In advance, and she promised to assume charge of his house hold last Saturday. As she failed to keep her -word, Hoagland had her ar rested for dbtalnlng money under false pretences. When arraigned before Jus tice Wesscott the girl protested that she meant no harm, and begged for leniency. She made profuse apologies to Cato and manifested a great affec tion for him. The justice racked his brain for a1 so lution of the difficulty, and .finally an nounced that the only way it could be settled properly was for the couple to marry. Mr. Hoagland was not averse to such a step, nor was Ellen. The Jus tice tied the knot forthwith. On Sunday afternoon Mrs. Hoagland told her husband she was going out for a short time to see her aunt and tell her what a nice husband she had and all the circumstances connected with her marriage. She did not return that night, and for several days Hoagland waited In vain for tils bride to return. Finally he went In search of her, and found her yesterday. He asked the girl why she had not come back. She re plied: "It was marry or go to Jail, so I mar ried you. Did you think I was going to live with you?" Hoagland came .to this city this morn ing and inserted an advertisement in the local papers tlhat he would not be responsible for any debts she might contract. The woman is a cousin of the young negro who murdered Mrs. Moore Baker and her baby and was himself killed by the murdered woman's husband. THEY STEAL COFFINS. Michigan People's Charge Against Chi cago Undertakers. By the United Press. Detroit, Mich., Dec 16. Grand Haven officers here claim to have vldence that a firm of Chicago undertakers have been Btealing many coffins they have used during the past five years out of country graveyards In Michigan, Illi nois, Indiana, Wisconsin, and perhaps other states. They are of the opinion that they have not only stolen what they used, but refitted and sold them In quantities to country firms. Emis saries have been going over the country opening newly made graves in isolated cemeteries. They take the body out of the coffin, throw it back Into the grave and cover it, robbing the corpse of any Jewelry there may be upon It. The coffins are taken to pieces, packed in cases, and shipped to Chicago under various fictitious names. A Chicago detective who recently visited In this vicinity is authority for the statement that the officers ' are on the tracks of the men who rob the graves. INDUSTRIAL TOPICS. The electric road between Mt. Carmel and Centralla will be ready Jan. 1. The Shamokin 'v Telephone company has been chartered with a capital stock of $12,000. Twelve new passenger cars have been ordered by the- Lehigh Valley for the main line. , . , ,. The Delaware, Lackawanna and Western rallrodd Is said to have had less accidents than any other road in the United States. , ' During the past week the Philadel phia and Reading railroad carried 216, 276.07 tons.' In the same week of 1893 they hauled 202,819.05, ah increase of 13,457.00 tons.. , Under the .Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad company the mines are "at -present working very slack. The quota of coal for the year AWARD is almost filled and much will not be dons before Jan. 1. '' The "air line" between New York and Chicago brings out some of the most remarkable propositions. A writer In the Mauoh Chunk papers geta over the difficulty of grade between Audenried and Mauch Chunk by Binklng a shaft 1,700 feet and dropping passengers and freight down an elevator. Work was unexpectedly . resumed at the North works of the Lackawanna Iron and Steel company last Friday, and the order on" which the mill was started is said to be one that will last for a few months. The South works are undergoing repairs and after a week It is said that plant will also re sume. The Stevens colliery at Plttston is in danger of being flooded by a sudden Inflow of water. The other night while one of the night miners was at work In his chamber he struck a stream of water which filled the place' so rapidly that he was unable to secure all of the tools. The water has continued to flow in ever since, and all of the pumping facilities of the mine have been Insuf ficient to cope with It. Additional pumps are being placed In position In hopes of controlling the flood. The col liery Is still in operation, those portions of the mine not under water furnishing the coal. The material made by the Bonta Plate Glass company at Moosic will be much stronger than marble and much more desirable from a sanitary point of view, and with this process It can be produced at a much less cost than polished marble or Blate and can be decorated In relief In any color or de sign desired. This opens a new article of commerce for which this company have letters patent covering the em bossing process and the custing of plate glass by rolling on both Bides of the sheet, saving labor in the grounding and polishing after the sheet of glass has been annealed. A new trolley car track was tried be tween Fullerton and Allentown this week which seems to have many ad vantages over others previously In use. While It embraces all the capabilities of the old style truck it Is as much an improvement and advancement on the latter as electric light Is superior to kerosene, says the Allentown Chronicle. The old style trucks now In use are rigidly fixed to a car. Their maximum distance is 7 ft. 6 in. In the new trucks the distance between the wheels can be increased or reduced to suit the length of any car, and being placed at the ex treme front and rear they do away with that disagreeable pendulum-like and Jarring motion so productive of nausea whenever a car Is run at even a mod erate rate of speed. So smooth and easy was the motion that when the car was run at a forty mile an hour clip the reporters on board were able to write down their notes with perfect ease. The new truck Is the Invention of J. W. Fuller, who spent a year In perfecting It. The Dickson Manufacturing company Is at work upon three large fans for the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western company. They are to be set up at the Woodward, Pettebone and Bliss mines. They are what is known as Guibai fans and have an outside diameter of thirty five feet, nine foet face. The fans have double Inlets 17 ft. 6 In. In diameter and are of central disc construction, built of plate and shape steel, well braced from periphery of Interior circle to the heavy cast Iron center. Each fan has sixteen blades. The estimated weight of each of the fans complete is 60,000 pounds. The calculated capacity of each fun at a periphery speed of 7,000 feet per minute and under a three and a half water guage, Is from 250,000 to 300,000 cubic feet of air per minute. The fan Is connected to a 28 by 40 Dickson Corliss engine of special design. The casting Is of steel plate and shape, -with evassee chimney and adjustable V shutter of construction commonly used with the Guibul fan. STOCKSAXD bonds. By the United Press. New York, Dec. 15. The sales at the Stock exchange today were 87, W0 shares, of which 48.UU0 were Sugar. The trading was mainly of a professional churacter and the changes, except In a few In stances, were unimportant. There was same pressure to sell Sugar and Chlcugo Gas. Sugar sold down from US to and ChicaKO Gas from 71 to 7U'4. The general railway list receded anywhere from ' to and closed weak In tone. Net changes show losses of to 1, Sugar and Gas being the heaviest Biifforers. The ranife of today's prices for the ac tive stocks of the New York stork mar ket are given below. The quotations are furnished The Tribune by O, du It. Dlm niluk, manager for William Linn. Allen & Co., stock brokers, 412 Spruce street, Scranton. , Op'n- High- Low- Clos ing, est. est. Ing. Am. Cot. Oil 25 i 24 ilj Am. Sutw Re'g Co. ttii J)l?i W A. M. T W!4 !W 7i 98 Can. South 51 51 M M Ches. & Ohio 18i 18V4 184 Chicago Gas 71H 7 Wt 7014 Chic. & N. W 994 Wi W4 Wi Chic, li. & Q 727 73 72 72 Chic, Mil. & St. P... 69 KHi 08-4 to Chic, It. I. & V B1'4 CI '4 fil'i 61 "4 Delaware ft Hud....l26'& VX', 120'4 12614 Dlst. & C. F , 8'4 8"i Gen. Electric 35 85 3414 34 Louis. & Nash 63"i 5:1 53 53 Manhattan Ele 101'i 1IH 104 104 Mo. Pacific 29V4 29 28 2S N. Y. & N. E 31 31 31 31 N. Y., L. K. & W.... 9 0 9 9 Phil. & Head 14 -4 14 14 Union Pacific 11 11 11 11 Wabash, Pr 14 14 ' 14 14 West. Union 88 88 88 88 CHICAOO BOARD OF TRADE PRICES. Op'n- High- Low- Clos ing, est. est. lug. WHEAT. May 68 58 53 6S?i OATS. May 32 32'.4 32 32 January 29 29 CORN. May 49 60 49 50 December 4ii 47 4ti 47 January 47 47 47 47 LARD. January 6.85 6.83 6.82 6.85 May 7.10 7.10 7.05 7.07 PORK. January 1U5 11.85 11.72 11.80 Seranton Hoard of Trade Exchango Quo tations. No. Par 8ns. Val. . Bid. Ask 10 100 Scranton Packing Co .... 120 10 60 Providence & Alding ton Turnpike 75 6 100 Scranton Glass Co 85 5 100 Traders' Nafl Hank 110 1 1000 Mt. Jesnup Coal Co.. 600 10 50 Moosic Mount'n Coal Co 60 60 60 Lack a. ft Montrose Railroad 60 10 . 100 Sora'n Savings Hank 175 25 100 Third Natl Bank.... 850 It 100 First Nat'l Bank COO 15 1U0 Lacka. Trust & Safe Deposit Co 130 400 60 Scranton Trac. Co 10 80 100 Walker Automatic ft Steam Coupler Co 5 5 100 Suburban Elec. Light Co 100 30 100 Allegheny Lum'r Co 110 i . 600 Scranton a lass Co (Bonds) 450 8 100 Wyaluslng Water Co (Uomls) 100 1 600 Stevens Coal Com'y (Bonds) ,.. COO 2 100 Bcra'n Jar and Stop per Co 70 20 60 Dime Dep. & DU. Bank ....C2W T A Word. wants of all kinds cost that Much, when paid for, in ad vance. WHEN A BOOK ACCOUNT IS MADE, NO CHARGE WiLL BE LESS THAN 26 CENTS. THIS RULE AP PLIES TO SMALL WANT ADS, EX CEPT SITUATIONS WANTED. WHICH ABB INSERTED FREE. Poor Taxes Arc Out. ALL UNPAID JANUARY 1, im. WILL be collected with costs. AHJA WILLIAMS. Collector.' Agents Wanted. TO MAKE BIO MONEY SELLING OUR Electric Telephone. Best seller on earth. Sunt all oomplot ready to set up, linea of auy dixtnnce. A practical Electric Telephone. Our agents ma due $j to 911) a day easy. Kvorybody buys; hit money without work. Price Low. Anyonecan ninke $75 per month. AddreHs W. P. Harrison & Co., Clerk No. 11, Columbus, O. AGENT WANTED EVERYWHERE TO will the lati-st aluniiuum noveltien. enor mous profits, sells at sight, delivered free, se cure territory. Sample in velvet lined case With full information, 10c. Catalogue free. Aluminum Movelty Co., 835 Broadway, New York. WANTHD - ACTIVE SALESMEN TO handle our Hue, no peddling. Salarr, $75 por month and expense paid to all. Goods entirely new. Apply quickly. P. O. Bax, 6303, Boston, Mass. Helo Wanted Females. ? ANTED.- GIRL TO DO GENERAL V housework ; one who can cook. Apply 200 N, Main avenue, West Hide. Help Wantcd-Male. en1neverTntown posltloii. Good pay. Experience unnec essary. Chautauqua Xturaery Go., Portland, N. Y. WANTED GOOD SOLICITOR TO SOLICIT the printing trade of Scranton and vi cinity. Apply to J., Tribune office. WANTED AN EXPERIENCED BOOK canvasser. Address T. B.. cafe Tribune office, Scranton, Pa. For Rent UX-TWO SiNULB HOUSKI modern Improvements, with or without barn. Apply to FRANK SHIFFER, 138 Franklin avenue. I?OR RENT FURNISHED AND UNKUR . nished rooms at 500 Lackawanna avenue. FOR RENT-SIX ROOM HOUSE ON WEST Lackawanna avenue. Address THOMAS E. EVANB, soar 1182 Lucerne, Hyde Park. I?OR RENT-NIC'ELYFURNISHEbllALL ' suitable for lodge rooms. JOHN JER MYN, 110 Wyoming ovenue. For Sale. VOR SALE CHEAP A GOOD WORK r homo. Apply to FRANK SHIFFER, 188 Franklin avenue. Real Estate. V houses exchanged for farms. & ER NEST COMEUYS, Real Estate Agent, 128 Washington, Price Building. Special Notices. rpUE ANN UAL MEETING OF THE STOCK. JL holders of the Sciantou Illuminating Heat and Power Company will be held at the office of the company, 130 Wyoming avenue, on Tuesday, January 15, 1801, at 4 o'clock p. m.. for the election of directors for the ensu ing year and such other business as may come before them. FRkD C. HAND. Secretary. Scranton, Pa., Dec. 8, 1894. 1 AM NOW PREPARED TO FURNISH EX. 1 hlbitions and lecture upon any subject de sired. These exhibitions will be illustrated, having lu my possession the roost powerful dissolving stereopticona made. E. H. CALL, Tribune Office. YOU WANT THIS RELIC - REPRINT Frank Leslie's Illustrated Week.y War Illustrations )Kll-18tl5. Two Volume Folio, f 10.50; payable monthly, $2.00. Delivered by express complete. Prepaid. Addiess P. C MOODY, 618 Gibson street, Scranton, Pa. BLANK BOOKS, PAMPHLETS, MAGA aineH, etc., bound or rebound at Tns TniuiiNH olUce. (juick work. Reasonable prices. MEAL TICKETS CAN BE HAD AT Hi corner Spruce street and Kraukltn ave nue. Twenty meal tickets for Ji.50. Good table board. Removal. PETER 8T1PP. CONTRACTOR AND builder, has removed fioin Spruce street to 827 Washington avenue, opposite Eureka Laundry. Situations Wanted. YOUNG MAN (25), GOOD HABITS, ABIL Rv. and six years practical exuorlence. wishes a position as bookkeeper or collector with a good film; first class reference and If required. Address W. L.. Tribune. 1 100 Scranton Axle Works .... 75 20 100 Nutlonal Itorlng an Drilling Co 20 20 100 Econ'my Light, Heat and Power Co 100 4 25 Crystal Lake Water Co 100 100 100 Lacka. Lumber Co... luo New York Produce Market. By the United Press. New York, Dec. 15. Flour Steady. Wheat Quiet, Bteady: No. 3 red store and elevutor, 69c. ; afloat, CLV. ; f. o. b., C0aClc; ungraded red, 54aC3c.; No. 1 northern, C8aC8c; options cloned firm; at uc. below yesterudy; January, 69c; February, 60o.; March, 01c; May, G2c; June, 62c; July, V3c; De cember, 59c. Corn Dull, easier; No. 2 new, 53c; old, 55o. elevator; do. 50c. afloat; ungraded mixed, 61c. ; steamor do,, 50c; No. 3, 48c; options ulosed steady at c. decline to. c. advance; De cember, 63c; January, 53c.;. May, 63c Oats Dull; options dull, firm; De cember, 34c; January, 34c; May, 3Gc; No. 2 white, 38c; No, 2 ChleuRo, 36c; No. 3, 38c; No. 3 white, 38c; mixed west ern, 3ln35c. Provisions Quiet, weak, unchanged. Lard Quiet, lower; western steam, 17.15; city, Cc; December, $7.15; January, $7.20; refined, quiet; continent, 17.00; South America, $7.90; compound, 6a6c. Butter Quiet, fancy steady; state dairy, 12a21c; do. creamery, 17a23c; Pennsylvania do., 17a25c; western dairy, 10al5c; do. creamery, 15a24c. ; do. fac tory, lOalGc; Elgin, 24c; imitation cream ery, 13al8c. Cheese Dull, unchanged. Kggs Quiet, . cnblce steady; state ami Pennsylvania, 25c; refrigerator, 17a21c; western fresh, 24c; do. per cose, 2a4; southern, 21a23c; limed, 16al5c. Buffalo Stock Market. By the United Press. Buffalo, Dec. 15. Cattle Receipts, 8,000 head; on sale, 60 head; market steady; ex tra Christmas steers, 6a6.15; light steers, $3.40a3.85; fat bulls, $2.65a3. Hogs Re ceipts, 13,000 head; on sale, 6,000 head; mar ket easy; heavy Yorkers, 4.tt0; light, $4.50a 4.65; good mixed packers, I4.55a4.60; stags, $3a3.50, Sheep and Lambs Receipts, lu, 009 head; on sale, 9,000 head; market Bteady; good mixed sheep, $2.60a2.75; choice, $3; extra heavy wethers, S4.25a4.65; native lambs, good to prime, J3.7ia4.2ij; common to fair, 3a3.60; Canada lambs, (4.f5a4.25; extra Christmas wethers, 34.75a 6; very fancy Christmas wethers, $7a8. Chicago Stock Market. ' By the United Press. Chicago, Deo. 15. -Cattle Receipts, 6,000 head; market weak; common to extra steers, f2.90aG.25; stackers and feeders, 12a S.S0; cows and bulls, 1.25a3.40; calves, tin 6. Hogs Receipts, 24,000 head; market weak; heavy, J4.80a4.66; common to choice mixed, . J4.20a4.50; choice assorted, $4.30a 4.40; light, 4a4.30; pigs, J2.25a3.90. Sheep Kecelpts, 3,000 head; market steady; Infe rior to choice, Jl.2r.a3.25; lambs, J2.2f.u4. Oil Market By the United Press. Pittsburg, Dec. 16. Oil opened and low est, 91c; highest and close, 3c. HE KD (onnolly 8c Wallace INITIAL HANDKERCHIEFS FOR THE HOLIDAY TRADE The five following numbers are the Greatest Value we have ever been able to obtain We offer them at the following NO. I. 50 doz. Fine Lawn, hem-stitched, put up i doz. in a box. Price, 75c. a box. NO. 2. 40 doz. Pure Linen, hem-stitched, full size for gentlemen, 25c. each; very fine letter. NO. 3. 40 doz. Pure Linen, hem-stitched,in ladies' size, 25c. each, or $1.35 for box of y2 doz. NO. 4 100 doz. Jap. Silk, hem-stitched, size adapted for either ladies' or men's use. The greatest handkerchief bargain ever offered iu Scranton. 29c. each.or $1.50 for doz. NO. 5. 50 doz. Jap. Silk, large size, for men's use, or for ladies' mufflers, 48c, worth 75c. Every letter represented in above lots. CONNOLLY &. No Better Bedding Is anywhere made than is manufactured right here in FURNITURE UPHOLSTERED. BEST AND Moosic Powder Co Rooms 1 and 2 Commowealtli Bld'g, SCRANTON, PA, MINING and BLASTING POWDER MADE AT MOOSIC AND RUSH DALE WORKS. Lafllln & Rand Powder Coa Orange Gun Powder Electric Batterlea, Fusea for explod ing blasts. Safety Fuse and Repanno Chemical Co.'s High Explosive) A Decided More In the Bketea trade bai set In and tt will pey you to examine the stock of JURIBCH'S. at 135 Bpruce street. Fine line of superior pocket cutlery, razors, etc.. for Holi day trade. Guns and ammunition at bottom figures. Also some seoond hand heels at prices that will astonish you. Seeing is believing ill's Si BREWERY. Manufacturers of the Celobratcft PILSENER LAGER SEER CAPACITY 1 100,000 Barrels per Annum ROOF TINNING AND SOLDERING A1 1 K,?5e,?.y w,,n by the of HART MAN 8 PATENT PAINT, whlyh consist of Ingredients well-known to all. It can be applied to tin, Ralvanlsod tin, sheet Iron roofs, also to brick dwellngs, which will prevent absolutely any crumbling, crack ing or breaking of the brick. It will out laat tlnnintr of any kind by many years, and It's cost does not exceed one-llfth that of the cost of tinning, Is sold by tho Job or pound. Contracts tsken by ANTONIO HARTMA&N, (27 Birch St PtXTlB IH08 CO., Ine'p. CasHal, l .OOfjOMt BEST I.IK) NMIOE IN THE WORJLU, "A dollar tut4d it m dollar ani." This Ladles' Solid French DoaoU EM Bat. (on Boot delivered free anywhere In the U.S.,00 reset pi 01 vun. uomt uraer, or rosui neie lor auv. Equals every way the boots sold la all null stores for $i.W. We make this boot ourselves, therefore we par anus vt ju, tfU aaa wnr. and If any one (a not satisfied ww win rernna ue nwoey or send soother pair. Opera loe or coeomoa Dense, widths (J, D, K, st SK. .alias 1 to sad nail sunuyourtmf mu nt yen. Illustrated Uata. loaM FREE Dexter Shoe CciJSI'JLS:' cuxcmh icrwM is jjtaitrt. A Handsome Complexion la one of the greatest charms a woman can ppsaess. Possum's OoMrusxioit 1owdu gives It. m. -Of"5 I 1111 Hi' "" CUT PRICES WALLACE 29 Washington Ave. bcranton by the Scranton CHEAPEST IRON BEDS IN to our patrons: Washburn-Crosby Co. wish to assure their many par rons that they will this year hold to their usual custom of milling STRICTLY OLD WHEAT until the new crop la fully cured. New wheut is now upon the market, and owing to the 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 other brands. MEGAB6EL Wholesale Agents. We have the following supplies of lumber secured, at prices that warrant us In expecting a large share of the trade : Pacific, CoaBt Red Cedar Shingles. "Victor" and other Michigan Brands of White Pine and White Cedar Shingles, Michigan White and Norway Pine Lum ber and Bill Timber. North Carolina Short and Long Leaf Yellow Pine. Miscellaneous stocks of Mine Rails, Mine Ties, Mine Props and Mine Supplies iu general. THE RICHARDS LUMBER COMPANY COMMONWEALTH BUILDING, SCRANTON, PA. SHAW, EMERSON, KRAKAUER, NEW ENGLAND, ERIE. w 11 J. LAWRENCE STELLE, Music Dealer, 134 Wyoming Avenue, Scranton, rsDfe. MOTT'S PENNYROYAL PILLS. '?Ak for SB. KOTT'S nnmOTAX. PHI . '!tr Bend for circular. 'liH. MOTT'S CHEM.IOAL CO, CUiveUad, Ohio. For Sale by C. M. HARRIS, Druggist, 127 Penn Avenue. .'fV v TSs- . A. VWf iff" ST JiM 4us.. BslHs s4 aOM Uusf . order w air s nrltMs faUI, MEDKUIg CO.. roraale By JOHN M. PHCIP3, Spruce Street, Scranton, Pa. Carpets Cleaned. Feathers Renovated. Bedding Co. THE CITY. Juniata County, Pennsylvania, Whit Ouk. Sullivan County Hemlock Lumber and Lath. Tioga County Dry Hemlock Stoclo Hoards. Elk County Dry Hemlock Jolste and Studding. fCLOUGH & WARREN, CARPENTER, WATERLOO, CROWN, I PALACE. ver offarad to Ladiaa, spaolally reoommend d to married Ladiaa. Irlee ai.oo ncr box. boxes lor 15.00. RESTORE LOST VIGOR Will br ms vM op Is a WMk. t4 witb WRITPIM CONNELL JffltUBANiKEteCars lUrvoai Dakilltv, LastofSwutl Pomr la sllktiMi, luvoluntirT SmlM.aifroator c.ui.. U ntlMt4, mob troubUa ImS tusnptlos sr isMalty, 11.00 por bus by miil.Gbofii;'&5. Kith srrrr ss. tr.nt. to uuf r.fuua th. munit. Adur.M U.f.lmd.OlJlo. Pharmacret, cor. Wyoming Avenue anil 1