THE SCRAXTON TBIBUNE SATUBDAY MOBNIXG, -DECEMBER- 22, 1894. 0 inn AT :r I OPITTfS IVHU W 1 lArfJL AAA fit Festive Board Eighthflnndal Dinner oi lb? Heu) England ;iefy - of JkauJanna Colinfy Js:an EnfoyabI? Affair. Naragansetts . and. "ppcjuotB'- round about them daring to defy tlte power o( the British government?. -They had less than 6,000 In total population and less than 1,000 souls, Including boys over It year of age, capable of bearing arms,' yet when asked to return their charter their answer was' the hasty our old. enemy arid prevent triQftr.from who were once merchant, manufactur-1 mediately reminded of how. his mother undoing the work of 78. .1 earneJ the era and prosperous workmen, but wnon 'naa pursued ,nlrn, and, supposing that atofy: .of that -inscription. - Tlie- people of New Orleans, grateful to General Jackson, fiir his defence, of the cltfy in isin, ereciea mat monument but in scribed noihlngon the base. When the war for the Union was in progress a WIT, WISDOM, AND ELOQUENCE HOLD HEARERS SPELL-BOUND One of the Most Successful Meetings in the Annals of This Enterprising Organization Is Held ut the Terrace Hotel Eminent Speakers and -. j What They Said Kcv. Joseph H. Twitchelt on ''New England Hueh ' Kcv, Dr. Karfiehl on "The Old Ked Schoolhouse anil What Came of It ; T. V. Powderly on " The Heroism of American Labor"; and Kcv. Dr. K. H.l'curce's Tribute to " Xew England Mothers.'! .. to Jackson will not forget that (leneml Hutler, than whom no better, truer sol dier drew sword for liberty, emphasized the sentiment of fidelity to the union and the constitution in letters of gran ite wnere us lesson was most required. a narerooi Doy stood on the deck of a ferry boat on the Ohio river and earned his first dollar by carrying two HE descendants of the Pilgrim fathers celebrated Forefa ther's Day in an appropriate man ner ut the Hotel Terrace lust night. At 7.40 o'clock near ly one hundred and twenty-five mem bers and guests of the New England ' -society of- Lacka wanna, county sat down to banquet in thJ hotel. Gathered around the ban ' ;quet board were young and -old and comparatively sturdy buiis of the stur diest people this' country, and possibly any other country, has- ever known. The later-day revellers were a fair representation of" the -qualities -which have mmle 'possible -the Scranton of 'toduy.- ' The wealthy man elbowed ulong with his more worldly unfortun ' ate man,vbut during the early formal 'reception-and the sluing about -the .board the material condition was ab sorbed by the common boast of herit age from New England stock.' That the society does not move und ,huve Its being in name only was at tested by the brotherly feeling, some " thing deeper than platonlc friendship, which seemed to link the evening's gathering into a unit. The assemblage individually did not, In casual convers ation, boast of betng able' to trace Its ancestry; but these. was no mistaking the pi'lde'wtth which many spoke of having .staunch, stern and true New " England forefathers. - " it was the eighth annual banquet of the society and in point .of numbers and otherwise was said tohave been the . must, Ruoces8fulver:J)clil. Certainly small amount nf eredirjs'due trie, spean ers. l.icaland from abroad, .who-.added 'brilltane'y, lustre and learning to the occasion. . . . Speakers of the Evening. Among the toast resribn.Hors-was Rev. Joseph II. 'Twit-hell, of Hartfofd, a Yale man of ,-tMrty-flve years ago, w-hdm'the New Tork rilumni is allowed to yet call ;.!".Toe'v Twi'eheil, and': whose, irjame, is -linked "by the alumni with "Our. Chaun cey" and "Ike"' Bromley;-such 'was. the ?t":nanner,lh which he .wis introduced by " City Solicitor ' James il. Torrey,.; the toastmaster. ' " ,', .' i K. D..Warfleld, Ir.-tj.'D., borri In Ken-nituek-y, educated hi England, and who ' enjoys, the distinction "of .bejng the youngest college president, in the Unit ed. States, was another of the speakers. He Is af the head of Lafayette's facul ty, but frorn his own remarks and in "thesfsUmatloit .of his auditory,. he en r. joys as great an honor in being the hus ' "band of 4 -daughter of Massachusetts. . Hon. S. A. Northway, present mem ber of congress from Ohio's old Garfield district,1 contributed largely to the en joyment of the occasion. His humor, masterly style and familiarity with the part played by Puritan pluck in the last rebellion made' his effort one of intense Interest Hon. T. V. Powderly, ex-general mas ter workman of the 'greatest labor or ganization the world has ever known , iaiid Rev. Dr.'W. II." Pearee pastor of ; one of the largest Methodist congrega ' tlon in the country, represented Scran--ton In the list of speakers. It was 10.15 o'clock, after about two and onehalf hours of gastronomlcal i., discussion, before the feast was ended .and In. their gastrohomical power of .' ticking to a thing-and treating It prop Henry Delln, Jr., W. H. Jessup, R. S. Hull, Walter 11. Huell, F. B. Foote, K. O. Koote, V. W. Shear, W. F. Surdam, W. H. Richmond. H. R Cox. T. K. Tracy, C. F. -Wtirttemore, J.-W. Altk. Carbondale; George Sunclerson, Colonel F. M. Hitch cock, -Dr. L.' M. Gates, Homer Greene, Honesdale; W. W. Watnon, Dr. Cupwell, C. H. Von Stoiuh. President Pond's Kcmurks.. Owing to a severe throat affection, C- II. Pond, the society s president, coum only make a brfef address; In fact he had to desist in the midst of It. ' In in troducing his remarks he referred to the death of two members, Dr. George Throop and D. W. Connolly, whereupon the members drank while standing to the memorv. of the departed. Presi dent Pond saild: , I am more than gratified to witness so large a gathering of Yankees, which eclipses any of our preceding meetings, and Is a grand token of the future. You will pardon me If I say nothing about our past presidents or fail to brag a bit about Connecticut; I had hoped to do so,' but my throat is incapable of the effort. While looking over such an audience of well known men, and men of ability, 1 cannot help recalling the most domi nant characteristic of the New Eng land people force; whether It comes from ' blood or association there is force, a vital force, In New England blood which, is. seen and felt In every progressive locality In our country We all have a fond hope of a more extended development of our society. whose aim should from now on be to perpetuate the memory of New Eng land in a broader Held. I hope the society will be so permanent nu merically and financially that It will be alive ull the year. Already a commit tee Is at work extending our field throughout northeastern Pennsylvania, jiiid. jyj; Jrustsyyil.to Mve JJLdiar.ter, for corporate existence. 3dr. Torrey prefaced his remarks as toastmaster by reading letters of re gret from VC. R. Storrs, first president of the soclt'ty, and Senator J. R. Ha,w ley, of Connecticut, now in Washing ton, whose public duties prevented his presence in the capacity of a speaker and guest. Mr. Torrey said, after re ferring to the couplet beneath his name on the menu card: I rise I suld with undisguised dismay SUchfare my feelings as I rise I say. :I am "dismayed" from the fact that the toastmaster is expected to be the butt uMila hearers, but you no doubt will not experience that feeling from the fact that you will be the butters. Like the Irishman who was assessed tx for owning a goat, I place myself. The Jrlsliman went for legal advice to n brother felt who in a law book could only find bearing upon the case a pass age which read of property aboundin' HiV'abuttin on the public highway as sessable div the sum of $4 for each front foot. ! However, I'm here to be butted ! , ',-, . -.!.... - 1 and snnu receive uie mittua un u mvt yer's brazen shield. Mr. Twlchell was happily Introduced by Mr, Torrey, who referred to him pardonably as "Joe," the' appelation still given,' him' by Yale "graduates o thirty-flve years ; ago, ' Mr. Twlchell said: Kcv. Mr. Twklioll's Address, Your president partially based his claims uin my attendance 'here upon the fact that we were b'orn In 'the same town. While I feel that' it is too late to alter that -circumstances I feel that I am paid too high a .compliment 1 being asked to export myself 200 miles for .the. .use specified. I jlnd myself like a farmer who fastened to his leg rope, to the other ."end of which was tied a yoke of steers. The Bteere ran away, dragging the farmer after them bringing up a few old pieces of cannon New England general, who was a bare- and the melting of lead. The demand foot boy when Jackson was a candl- was renewed, but the little band was date for the presidency, went to- New never frightened. Il was an everlast- Orleans to-drive disuninn into theulf. imr example of the .stuff of manhood Riding past the Jacksun statue one dnv unsurpassed in the records of human- it struck him that the people should be tly, not excepting David's slungBhot given an object lesson In loyalty and battle with the armored Saul; it was he engaged the services of a stone cut- in the spirit of the German offlcer wno shouted to his cowered men, "Forward! Charge?1 Do you want to. live forever!" Their only ally was distance, but they held their charter and furnished a manhood which history does not pnr nllel. They were not hotheads; thelr's was Inspiration and sentiment that' was an Inexhorable determination . to hold a point wrung in their faces stern faces, that we mirht have a cheerful coun tenance. If, In tracing back the noblest of heritages we leave out the hard fea tures of our ancestors, we miss a chief explanation of the fortune to which we and our children are neirs. "The Old Red School House andWihat Game of It," was responded to by Dr. Warfleld. of Lafayette college. He said; Old Htd School House. Like Ruth. I cannot help thinking thut- my effort will be fraught with cleaning among the alien corn. I an not wish to convey the meaning, but I am forced to be reminded of the Scotch laymen addressing some of the kirk He was III at ease and spoke of casting pearls before swine. Of New England blood I can only say my children have that of Massachuse tts which I cannot claim for myself. I was raised on the Kentucky bottle as product for export only Of "The Old Red School House" I believe that Irt'lta memory we have our birthright and heritage. Washington, Lincoln, Claywhere should I stop in the list of men who educated them selves for us. If my country could have had that school house wecould have long ago clasped hands over the Mason and Dixon line; we could always have been one country, all free and going on to a unity. For myself, I thank- God that went down before the -march of the merchant prince, or the-' coming of the trust. I grant that the-Hramp element is largely made up of the idle, the drunken and the shiftless, but never forget that when a brother falls or halts by the wayside the whole re sponsibility rests not ' upon' himself alone. The Accumulation of Wealth. A dozen men.'or families, In this na tion own or control one-flftleth or the wealth, and-the reverse side of - the Picture shows thnt 9(1 npr cpnt. of the lei ui cui me inscription I nave quoted producing masses support their faml- lnto the stone. - ' lies on an averaire of 90 cents a day. minever iooks upon tne monument While this is true, we hear a cry go up from tht citadel of the nation: "Make things cheap, give us cheap products, cheap food and clothing." The sin of cheapness has run mnd, for Its logical, nourish his body Into strength and his inn miner nau 'a I Ke exner ence. he shouted 'out. '"It ahe.' after vou. too. father.?".. -, . W orld Indebted to Her. The life of the New Enirland mother was full orbed in tho hnm. Shu rnld- ed in all of its affairs, and she holds a very heavy account against our best civilization for the unnumbered hoBt or mighty men she moulded into nobil ity .of character and inspired with reverence and faBt clinging love for law, purity, truth and sroodness. I am Just old-fashioned enoiiE-h to be lieve, when a man steps out into the glare of public Ufa or sits down at the loom of life's weav-lnes. that he Is already what the home has made him. It is the eternal and Inalienable heri tage of woman to mould the man,' to ending is poverty, its final analysis Is charity to- men who should be self- sustaining, cheap, products ends in cheap men, and the conscience of the nation should be stirred until It real- passengers from the Kentucky to the lzts that the lesson of old is still true ...j ii Those present were: , Theodore Strong, PHtston; Rev. N. F; Btahl, J. K. Burr, Carbondule, J. A Latisf lng, j. II. Fisher, Arthur Frothlnghami B..B. Mott. 11. E. Watson, H. A. Fullen, O. B. Wricht, Colonel H. M. Holes, L. O. -Northrnp, W. J. Lewis, L. C. Kennedy, Rev. George E. Guild, L. M. Smith, R. M. Blocker; Honesdole; Rev. Charles : Lee, Carbomlnle; R; W. Luce, J. 1). Btocker, Jermyn;. F,. C. Whltmore, J. 1J. Blocker, E. 8. Sanderson, John H. Law, Throop; V Alfred Hand, S. P. Hull, R. A. Jadwln, Carbondale; W. T. Smith. J. W. Peck, L. JtfUnnitMl; T.-C. Von Bhirch.-P; S. Page, Albert 8, Raker, W. J. Hamilton, Carbon- ' dale; H. J. Anderson,' A; Vr Law, L. R. " Pottdr, George R. Molr. Jotut F.V Roe, E. F. Marsh, W. P.'Kennedv, A.' D. Hlack- , JJtfptpn I Sohn- II. .PhelnaV.'A. lUVWlltama, "f; L. Pftllllps," WV .O Robertson, C. R. Klhslny, JJlukely; Charles O. Rse, Er F. CmrmberlUIn, George .F. Ferris, Pltts-i ton;"' "' Foster,''' Isaac- 1. Post, W.. 'B:' Blantihard," p.- n."' 'Atherton, J( L. Atherton, G. P. Ronnrn. Carbondale Mayor E. El Heridrlc'kvX'arbondu: A. P. Trauiwoin, laroondaie; Ctintain W. A. May. IW.' Foster, ,y. A. Wilcox, Dr. IV., 11. Throop, v. V.i Jones, w. 1I. Peck. 1. F. Megargol, E. B.. purges, W. J. Torrey, A. C. Fuller, C. H. Pond, J. H. Fisher, F. E. Piatt, A. G. Gllmore, C. H. Welles, Indiana shore. Sneakine of It after ward he said: "Sometimes it was diffi cult to propel tha boat up stream, but Having no shoes on my feet I could get ai Detter grip on the deck." He fol lowed the streum .later .on until it took him to where he saw slaves sold from the block in New Orleans, and ns nis niooa surged fast and hot through his Bix foot of manhood he said: - "If ever I get a chance to hit that Institu tion (meaning slavery) I'll hit It hard The Opportunity- Came.- " In the Providence of Ood it wns or dained that the opportunity should be given him, and it came when he sliriipd the proclamation which liberated four millions of black men and women. The name of Lincoln will always shed light on tne uarK and dreary pathwav of the boys who struggle .throuirh vicls- pltude and trouble. .. .. Our-national history Is" studded from the beginning to the present with the names of those who as barefooted boys strode from youth to manhood, from obscurity to fume, und from unknown depths to the proudest places In the gift of the people. But here were and there are others, Just us good, whose names are never told, whose deeds are never "The laborer Is worthy of his hire." While those who pla'y In the game of life are permitted to-stock the cards that they may wiln and keep the golden pi'ize, the homes of the poor grow darker. When wo trace the causes why many a life is tainted with crime, no man can boast, for the race of life is not run with an equal chance for all the barefoot boy carries double weight today. As .we shake the frosts and snows of time from the boughs of memory, we can look back to nothing purer or brighter than the green fields and sparkling rivulets of our boyhood days. What we fondly love to dwell upon within the sacred walls of memory we should not begrudge to others. That the barefoot boy of the future may hold his own in the march of progress, which rushes so swiftly onward, we should give of pur effort to make.lt possible for him to reaeh-the goal of his ambition and become d. gain to the na tion, Instead of being a'draln upon her charity. -We devote time, thought and means, to theerectlon of warships, forts and arsenals; we clamor for oflice and strive to 'vrite our names as those who did something great or heroic, but we mls9 the greatest of 'all opportunities mind Into soumlncssto equip him for. tne warrare or tire and Inspire him for its victories; to breath through him the wishes of her soul and teach him how to gain the ideals which her purity re veals, her ambition craves and her love demands; and In this she gives tone ana cnaracter and color to society ana tnrough it virtually makes the world. The souls and minds of little children are marvelously tender, senai live uno uetlcate things, and keep for ever tne snauow that first falls upon them, especial v if it Is the mother's. I do not think that it is an exaggera tion to say that there was never a truly great man whose life ran along the lines that converge - .In the world's peace, purity -and universal brother hood, but what had a great mother, The first six years of our llf mnkr n It stamps the coin of our. .character and tells what it will be worth In the great market and exchange of life. Alter me years or our childhood all thut Is added is only veneer. There la no higher dignity than the dignity of shaping In silence . and patience .'the forces that mould, and guide human society, nor can the. sphere be narrow rrom which such potent influences flow. This is Just what the old-time New England mother thought. She thought that the home was the divinely or dained fountain of all blessing to the SIP DR. E. GREWER, The Philadelphia Specialist, and his asso ciated staff of English and German physicians, are now permanently located at Old Post off ice Building, Corner Ponn . Avenue and Spruce Street The doctor Is a graduae of the Ufflver- . mty of Pennsylvania, formerly demon strator of physiology and surgery at the Medico-Chlrurglcal college of Philadel phia. His specialties are Chronic, Ner vous, Skin, Heart, Womb and blood dis eases. DISEASES OF THE NERYOUS SYSTEM The symptoms of which are dizzlness.lack of confidence, sexual weakness in men and women, ball rising in throat, spots floating before the eyes, loss of memory, unable to concentrate the mind on one subject, easily startled when suddenly, spoken to, and dull distressed mind. which Unfits, them for performing the actual du ties of life, making happiness impossible, distressing the action of the heart, caus ing flush of heat, depression of spirits. ovll loreDomngs, cowardice, rear, dreuma. mel ancholy, tire easy of company, feeling as urea in tne morning as wncn retiring, lack of eneriry. nervousness, trnmhllnir. confusion of thought.dcpresuion, constlpa- ui'ii, weuKiiuHH oi me nmos, etc. Tnose so affected .'Should consult us Immediately; ard be restored to perfect health. , Lost Manhood Restored. Weakness of Young Men Cured. WOrld, that it WflB n nnurnrfol ln lla-l .t A " .i J T . U' U. X0,lr P""' my ancestors clung to the old flag of I Ing the forest fires of lust summer, in inscribed on brass or marble, and of when we pas the door of the public could wnuHe praises no poet ever sings.' Dur moral and social training and equip ments that neither time nor change . y "V. .'u i."'. lL: :B?."ciJ"nJi Finally the rope 'parted and the neigh snoweu uieir .eieuuaiy uaus " bors gathered the. farmer together and payeu . coii-'i-Liv t? .t-uiiiiJuiiit-iit iv ue caterer. .- Three lines of tables along three aisles of the 'dining .room, and forming a hollow square and a smaller table In the center contained the ban quetters. In addition to an elaborate array of limitless good and rare things selected from the -season's delicacies the menu contained such reminders of New England as pork and beans, cider and mince and pumpkin pie. Those Who Attended. The guests from abroad with the oJ fleers of the society occupied the front side, of, the table facing the square. During the progress of the feast or chestral ' music wias ' furnished by t party of Hauer's. muslcluns situated in the hotel lobby, and the intermissions of the speech-making were filled by the admirable vockl music of a quartette. - sat him up against a stump, when one of them asked what ,hq meant by fool lsniy tying tne rope to- nis.leg, hadn t gone fur," said the farmer, "be fore I realized my mistake.". I must put levity, aside; the minute one begins- on a subject like mine "New England Pluck," he stops foolishly and takes olt Ma hat. - The pluck of the Puritan was endless, intellectually and physically; in his day opinions were al- niost a man's only property, and it was his purpose to stand by them to the death. They were tolcrent, but they- were fell debaters; they" split hairs. but they never split differences. In speech they were straightforward and honest, a, characteristic their, sons have, In a metsur,! lwt, and an example of which was shown thirty-one years ago, when a- terrible voice, indeed, spoke against their weakness and spoke the trutH. ; , .;, , While our forefathers were not liter ary, they made themselves understood; they generally spared people the pains Of guessing what they were driving at. perhaps they were unamiable, unpleas ant, and assimilated in their domestic affections, and yet were not wont to turn their sunny side outward; these Puritans were not of the effusive and osculatory type. They were true even to hardness whenever the Btern faculty Would -do-a good turn. People pooh at the stern face of the Puritan; do they think of the stern situation of those days days that nur tured the vlBnge of a soldier? Like armies in battle (hey faced situations which' made men a very sombre com munity, I can tell you; there wng no time, for fiddling and othej" fine arts unnecessary tospeakof. And yet people poke fun at them. It was a struggle for existence with arm on the; body most, of the time and arms in the mltui all of the time. The stern look on some of the faces about me tonight' Is the elgnttlre of a fighting people' and, pot the signature of, an 'aesthetic ahueetry, leaver'.' in history', have,; Pluck,- and icyurage. been shown equal to , thut of tha. New England colonists. "Can there b,any'proor Inching? What, of the people of the Hay State colony with scarcely bread to eat, and with the New England. One of my fondest and most sacrea memories Is that nf L n coin's presentation to my father, a Kentucklan. a commission in .the United States armv, The greatest and best school idea 1b founded on the idea of Puritanism, on its hard necessities, "on its practical teacnings. mot all the seers and poet9 and orators were trained In colleges. Mucn or tneir greatness came from the schooling of the schools. I am reminded of Webster, who, arguing In the su preme court that Dartmouth be sus talncd, said with tears in his eves. "She Is in- her dotage but we love her very dearly." Such men and Such Institu tions are tne necessaries which are fertile provinces of God In which our grand country was nurtured and made what Bhe is. Men trained in these simple schools are not unlearned; from the schools are bred the very essence and Juice of learning. It is a mother Influence ovor which we should all rejoice and the memory of which should be perpet uated Rather than let my Inspiration make me chow my subject too fine, I shall cease, although It is a subject dear to the heart of one who loves his nation 8 welfare. T. V. Powderly was Introduced to speak on 'the subject, "The Barefoot Boy, the Heroism of American Labor, Hla response was as follows: Mr. Powdcrly's Addrcus. In the dead of winter, with the regu lator of the weather bureau preparing plans and specifications for the coming more comfortable place to introduce a bare-foot boy than to this gathering of tne sons and lineage -of progressive, hospitable New Englund. What would the boy say were he to stand here, bare foot and in rags, before this table? He would feel awkward and abashed, but I doubt If he would be more surprised at the novelty of the situation than those who sit here would be. The bare foot boy, the Ideal bare-foot boy of Whlttler is but a memory, a dream of the past, and in repeating the beautiful lines we lose sight of the reality, the hard, cold, stern reality, and give thought to the sentiment alone. Jn no country on the globe has the barefoot boy stood forth. so prominently as In ours. In no land did he find so many opportunities, golden opportunities, too, stretcneu out uerore mm, and In no place on earth has he reached the heights to which the barefoot boy of America has climbed. America is pe culiarly the land of the barefoot boy In it he has reached a prosperous, suc cessful manhood such as the boy of no other nation has been fortunate enough to call his own. It is but Just and right that we should crown him in wreaths of song and story and hold him up to the light that future generations may see him as he was, as he is, and as he ought to be, Whlttler. he whose lines we repeat when we sing of the barefoot boy, iwas once a shoeless lad, and In his youth he was taught in his New England home that it was wrong for man to own his brother man, wrong for property in man to be known as an institution of a nation which began Its glorious record with the words: "All men are created equal." New England, America, , has been blessed with many brave, true men, whose names stand for -cour age on the battle field and in private life, but no man ever struck at the steel links which made up the shackles of slavery with a better blade,, a keener weapon. or with more strength of will or undaunted courage than the black men's poet friend whose words and songs cheered and . encouraged a na tlon to do its-duty by Its God, in the liberation of man from chattel bondage, Had Whlttler been born in affluence it is a question whether he would have realized the necessity for the telling of bucH. truths as his songs carried to the southland, where they lifted the gloom from the home of the poor black slave. He knew what it was to toil, Michigan, a relief train was dispatched to the rescue of a number of villagers who were hemmed in by a wall of flame. It was necessary for that train to run through the blazing forests; buf before the return could be made the fire had swept across the tracks for miles and escape appeared Impossible. The engi neer closed the windows of his cabin, saturated cotton waste with water. placed it before his face and with his hand on the heated lever he stood at his post. Behind him, in the tank stood the fireman shovelling coal Into the furnace and occasionally dashing water over the engineer and himself to quench the flames that hud seized upon their cloth lng. The frightened passengers throw themselves on the bottoms of the enra and during the long minutes, that seemed like ages, they scarcely breathed. Through the long lines of flame, out of the stilling smoke and into tfie pure air they came, but the engineer speed. Mr. Northway said: aim iireman were almost wrecKS oi school unmindful of the fact that, after all. It Is the only real fortress of free dom, the bulwark of liberty, the hope of the barefoot boy upon whom this nation must, nfter all. depend for Its strength and support. On behalf of the barefoot lad now entering on the march, made rough and perilous by the greed of those who went before, let me quote the words of, Longfellow, an other son of Now England "Were half the power that fills the world with terror, W ere half the wealth bestowed on camps and courts, Given to redeem the human mind from error There would be no need for arsenuls or . forts." "What Congressman Northway Said. Hon. S. A. Northway was introduced by Mr. Torrey and asked to respond to the toast, "Uprising of a Great Peo ple." In the course of an Interesting were what they had been. Burned and blinded they guided that freight of human souls to safety regardless of their-own. A few days ago we nil read of-the colliery engineer, who, on learn ing that the engine house and shaft was on fire, remembered that a number of miners were down in the earth. He sounded the alarm, called. the men to the carriage, and with the flumes lick ing up his clothing, burning his hand to a blister, he clung to the heated lever until his fellow-men were safely landed at the top of the shaft. ' Where shall e look, In the days to come, for the name 'of Root, the engineer of thnt Michigan locomotive: of O'Donnell. his fireman, or nf Lloyd, the' -engineer of the colliery? No monument, no stone, no record even of their heroic bravery but they are specimens or us sterling man hood as ever evolved from bure feet to man's proudest estate. We I-'orgct the Soldier. We remember the general but forget the soldier who made it possible for the general to succeed. We Idolize Wash ington, and well we may, but have given no thought ta the barefoot boys whose bhKxl consecrated the soil of Pennsylvania at Valley Forge that we imilght.be rid of the king's evil In this land We shout the praises of the general whose chief claim to recognition lies In the fact that he killed men to save his country and we ride. silently over the Brooklyn bridge, or through that which sua n b the Father of Waters at St. Louis, and are oblivious to the fact that the greatest monuments that can be erected to the memory of man are be neath, around and before us, We can tell who designed these wonders, but never question who they . were who erected thin. Look around .you tomor row ana everything your eye will rest upon will speak to you of the handi craft of your fellowman. The raw ma terial placed at our hand by the Al mighty Is made sublime und still more wonderful by the hand of man We recognize In the Commonwealth build lng, ut the corner of Washington and Spruce, the thought, of a Hand, a Hand to whom we all turn with respect and pride, fof It Is Justice Hand's common wealth. We are watching the erection ef the Jermyn hotel, at Wyoming and Spruce; we wonder as the iron girders and braces fit into each other day after day and our admiration Is challenged as the building climbs heavenward. After Hand and Jermyn have passed on to that empire or silence these mon uments Will tell the future resident of Scranton the Btory of their work among us. Whose tongue will tell the names of those whose labor made It possible for the names of Hand and Jermyn to be remembered as builders among men? While dreaming over what the bare foot hoy of the long ago could do we olose our eyea to the fact that he Is fast vanishing from among ue as the little hero of Whlttlcr's poetic fancy. We dream of the barefoot boy of fiction and pass the living, breathing boy in his rags and bare feet every duy on the street without giving him a thought. My toast is "The Uprising of ft Great People," and on 'on occasion like this politics are apt to predominate, and If I say anything in political mutters which seemingly offend any one, you must charge it to those who originated the toast and not to the one who re sponds. American people are peculiar people In one respect, in being emphatic In expressing their ideas. There are no other people on the globe who can ex press their ideas in such an emphatic manner, tind no people can gather to gether like ourselves in the sense that we, the descendants of the ISew Eng land people, can. With the New Eng land people originated the government for the people . by the people. It Is a saying worthy of the wisest man that people who can hold a proper, peaceful public meeting are lit people to rorm a government, and we have gathered that idea until we express it in nn em phatlc manner. If there is any field in which we express our Ideas more em phatically than another It is the field of uo it cs. 1 have come in contact witn a largo number of men of all political parties and the great majority, I am urmiy convinced, are. thoroughly honest, whether they be Republicans, Demo crats or Populists. We are all pollti clams we are the only people on the globe who. us a class, are all politi clans." Uo to a few years ago It was generally believed that the position of parties in politics did not unect mucn In their results to the country and the general talk we were accustomed to was that it did not make much differ ence which "party was In power, the country would go on Just the same. One other idea is that great people are capable -of great things. They can rise above party for the sake or their coun ty, their home and their country s in dustries when any of them are beset by danger. Much of this feeling we owe to the New England- people and their descendants, 'who, from their town meeting had originated the great com mon school system, the dual syBteip of government and many advantages of the present day.- There, that evening, they renewed their allegiance to the memory of their ancestors and re vived their pledge of faith, given to their old fathers and mothers, to hold to those glorious principles which had been taught and given to them In homes defended by their life's blood. Rev. Dr. W." II. Pearce was the last speaker. He responded to the toast. 'New Englund Mathers, the Angels of the Household." He said: . jvlmt it was to endure privation, and he We like to read of what the American could feel for the sufferings of others. The recollection of his barefoot days made him strong of heart when he wrote For to my ear methought the breeze, Bore Freedom's blessed word on; Thus salth the Lord: Break every yoke, Undo' the heavy burden. Ills Career of Progression. Somehow or other we find Ourselves looking toward New England when we Speak of the barefoot boy. It was there that he began his career of progression; from there he started westward to carry the spirit of freedom beyond the hills, slopes and mountains, to where the Missouri rolls down to the sea and beyond. .No wonder, then, thut Boyle O'Reilly, another barefoot boy, sang of the staunch old ship that bore your sires to the landing place at Plymouth: Thunder our thanks to her guns, hearts i and Hps, Cheer frdm'the ranks to her, j, Shout from the banks to her ' Mayflower, foremost and, best of our ships. 1 On a Sunday morning, four weeks ago, I sat in Jackson park, New Or leans, and studied the equestrian statue of General Jackson which stands in the. reenter pf the square. .-On the base of the statue these words are cut Into the granite, block; "The union must and shall be preserved.'.',,. 1 Butler's Object Lesson. ! I could not recall that as one of the Sayings of Jackson And it Struck tne as- being rather odd. . . The preservation of the union was not in question when General Jackson earned the right to that monument. ' No question of In ternal strife agitated the union then, and his mission southward was to repel youth can do, but do we realize that the achievements of the past are no longer to be reckoned among the possi bilities or the future? . , . Different from Our Fathers. We are not such creatures as our fathers were, our environments are not the same and our end in life Beems to be different. We grasp for riches, for powerand position, forgetful of the fact that he Who gains power over others loses control of himself, and that once the longed-for position or eminence is gained he becomes a servant for others and must be guided In his acts by what others think and what custom pre scribes rather than by the dictates of reason or the better impulses of his nature. ,We struggle for wealth and trample barefooted boys and men Into the earth in the mad rush. We applaud the Ideal and damn the real. We wrap ourselves In a dream of what used to be and scarce bestow a thought on what is tg come. What the barefoot boy could do he can no longer do. The race Is keener, the competition more, heartless, and the struggle more bitter than- it ever was. Machinery has almost super- ceded hand labor, more shoes are. made than can be worn, and there are more barefooted boys, women arid men than ever bpf ore. In the race of years , ago only the Idle and shirtless went down, but now the deserving and worthy who cannot p. 'y cards' at - the game or chance In the industrial world are In danger of1 being run over.. Go among tramps, among tnose whom we .have been taught to bears hatred, and ques tion them as I have done and you will find among them men of .education, and if .you scrape the dirt a-way you wll- see the traces or rennement. Among that New England Mothers. T am not sure that I belong to this goodly company, and that I should be accorded the privilege to respond to the toast just ottered, "The New Eng land Mothers, the Good Angels Of the Household. I am not an immediate New Englander. .1 wish that I was; at least for the present hour, and for the full enjoyment of this bright and festive occasion. And yet, perhaps, I do not deserve to be-wholly ostracized, for my life has been cast upon the great lines of New Englund history and by tne royalty or descent. 1 am some what, though remotely,-akin to you. My father's father .came from so far down east that he used to say that there was nothing beyond his father's farm but the bleak shore of Nantucket and the Judgment day. My mother's mother spent a happy girlhood amid the green hills and laughing rills of Vermont. So vou see that I am at least tributary to the great river of New England life, that has poured its noble waters through every channel of our splendid Civilization. There Is a royalty of mind, as well as a royalty of blood; there Is a royalty of character, as well as a royalty of de scent; and tiws royalty of mind and character characterized the New Eng land mother, tier lire was given up to the home and home-making. She cared but little for anything else, and her life in the home was as tender as it was brave, as gentle as it was strong, as beautiful as It was stern; inspired with a lofty purpose to make the home as Sweet and blissful as a bit of heaven on earth, and at tne same time as Strong and rigid-In its moral, mental and physical ministrations as If It were the grasp or an unrelenting law. A story Is told of a down-eastern mother who was seeking tc correct her boy of 7 years for ill conduct He eluded her grasp, fled from her and hid under the porch. She threatened him find Impor tuned h'm to come out, but of no avail, and at last' she reminded him that she would have a satisfactory settlement of the matter When hla father returned. The boy quickly went to playing under the porch with some blocks and forgot all about, the late unpleasantness. - Uy and by the father returned home, heard the story of his bad behavior, and went to the porch and begun to crawl under: Tne Doy, seeing him com arrest or undo what it had wrought! That the home life over reached and underglrded all other life and cnaracter, and If things went right there, they would go right everywhere, and if they went wrong there, they would go wrong everywhere. mat sne was riKht and her deduc tions safe and wise, none of us In this presence would question for a' moment. Her l.ofty Mission. ... Controlled by this thought, inspired by the greatness and loftiness of her mission and sublimely awed by the results aim destinies that it involved she gave herself up to the home and to home-making so lovingly and ef fectual' and with such faith in God that the beauty and strength and value or her productions have been the hlth est adornment und the strongest-story and the surest and most enduring sal vation or this great American republic, Sad day will it be for the home and church and nation when the home shall be anything less than our New Enirland mothers thought it to be.'a divine thing sent of God to bless and beautify the whole round of human life. Lead child hood captive to high and ennobling principle, and through It, the whole world to its promised latter day glory- Let me say In closing that as woman decrees so will human society be. When cruelty held high carnival In the Coliseum at Rome and bloody tragedy in human life was the sport and fusel nation of the people, the victorious gladiator held his victim close to the ground and before he daggered him to death turned his gaze toward the bal cony of the great building that was filled with women, the most beautiful and richly attired of Rome! And if in response to his gaze they turned their thumbs down he proceeded with a new and Increased relish to finish his awful work. Hut If the thumbs were turned up he quickly released his victim and sought to ease his wounds. Today such is' the power and in fluence of woman In society that If she smiles at sin and gives herself up to fashion and pleasure the tragedy of sin will go on to its awful finish; but If she decrees purity and lofty Chris tian character for herself and the world and adheres (o It In sublime consecru tlon, earth's sorrowful dirge will speed lly end In songs as sweet as those that float from angel harps. Unique Menu Curds. Each succeeding year the society has included in its menu card some feature symbolllc of early New. England and later day Scranton. This year Oliver Wendell Holmes and the witchcraft of Puritan days and the witchcraft of this generation were ingeniously and historically embodied in the menu cover. On the front of the cover is an engraving of Mother Goose riding on - the trolley of . an electric car, while above her the wire Is throw lng off a splutter of sparks, and be neath her can be Been only the roof of the car. The words, "Scranton Witchcraft, December, 1886," recall thnt In that year the first electric car was run in Scranton, that Scranton was the first city east .of the , Mississippi river to use electricity for transports tlon, that Is was the first city in the United States, to build a road for the purpose, and thnt its cars were the first in the world to be lighted by elec tricity.' The whole Is. a travesty on Holmes' "The Broomstick Train." On the rear cover reproductions of Faneuil Hall and the old North church and other colonial structures suggest the early scenes of and the title, 'Salem Witchcraft." The two engravings are shown with an ecru coloring and with the enclosed menu will prove a happy and appropriate souvenir to the ban: quet and be t tnm. ed. He cures the worst cases of Ner vous Debility, Scrofula, Old Sores, Ca- in.iTn, rues, rerrmie weakness, Affec tions of the Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat, Asthma, Deafness, Tumors, Cancers and Crlpiiles of every description. Consultations free and strictly sacred and confident!!;. Oflice hours dully from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Sundav, 9 to 2. enclose nve Z-cent stamps for symtpom blanks and my book called "New Life " I will pay one thousand dollars in gold to anyone whom I cannot cure of EPI. LEPTIC CONVULSIONS or FITS. , r, UK. ,is. GREWER, Old Post Office Bui dim?, rnnur v.A avenue and Spruce street. SCRANTON, PA. China C'losots reduced 13 to 40 per cent Dec. 22, 1894. ragged fraternity you will find jnen I ing upon his hands and knees, was lrn- Removal Sale Furniture at HULL & CO.'S, 20S WYOMING AVENUE Fine Dretuing Tables greatly reduced In pries t I If you would have the LARGEST INTERESTING AND VALUABLE. Amount of heat from the LEAST TWENTY-l-lVK YEARS A SIT'FERF.R. Mrs. i.lzite (', Wilt's Grateful Account of I Her Recovery-A Slinolo Hcmcdv. I From Advance Argus, Greenville, Mercer AttlOltnt of fuel. VOU mUSt Co.. Pa. I . ' J Co., Pa. With feelings of uncertainty Mrs. Wilt began the use of Dr. Kennedy's Favorite Remedy, but today It has no better friend than she. Mrs. Wilt la well known, lor she has lived for years within a few miles of 'Greenville. Ttte following letter, ad dressed to Dr. Kennedy, will make inter esting reading for many a sick person "Dear Sir; For twenty-live years I have been troubled with sick and nerv ous headaches, so bad that much of the time I was unable to do anything, for I would be so weak and prostrated after the severe pain was gone. I tried every thing I could hear of, but they fuijed to do me any lusting good. Last spring my son was using Favorite Remedy, and he Insisted on my trying It. I did bo, and used less than a bottle, and found It was Just the medicine I needed, for I have not had a headache since. "It also benefited me In other ways, for my health was poor, and It acted as tonic. I hope this letter will reach the eye of some- poor sufferer, for I know If they will only try Favorite Remedy they will be thankful ror It. Yours truly, . Mrs. Lizzie C. Wilt, Greenville, Penn, Such a mark of commendation coming from one of our residents should place in the minds of all the great value of this mvslclne. Dr. David Kennedy's Favorite Rem edy Is pronounced by the majority of physicians as the superior of all blood medicines and nerve restorers. It cures rheumatism, neuralgia, nervous and nil- ous headaches, heryous prostration and the tired feeling reuniting therefrom. It Is a specific for scrofula, erysipelas, dys pepsia and for- the troubles peculiar to the female system. ' Dr. Dsvid Kennedy' Favorite Remedy can be purchased at Jl a bottle or six bot tles lor la. have Howard Furnace. Foote & Shear Co. W. L. Douclas, l CUnC HTHI HIT.- ' yiA OnUL nobouiarin f3. CORDOVAN, fftENCH&ENAMEUJEDuALE ,.3.VFlNECAl&lftN6AI!DI 93.VP0U0E.3SOLE3. 2.l.yBOYSCHO0t5h0E4 LADIES Nseno ton CAmoaus EO BROCKTON. AVA33.' Yso can saTCjnnner by purchasing W. Im Because, wt are. tbc laraeat mannfactarert of tdverUtcd shoes in the world, sad guaraute the value by stamping the tutse ana price e the bottom, which protects you agalut high prices and the middleman's profiti. Onr afcoes, equal custom work in style, eaiy Suing audi weariag qualities. We have them sold every where at lower pricea fur-tha tahte gcrea tana any other make. Take no. aubctittttc. K yee dealer cannot pply von.Ve'can. Cold by ' E.J. LEONARD.' km