The Scranton tribune. (Scranton, Pa.) 1891-1910, January 10, 1895, Page 4, Image 4

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    V
TIIB SCRANTON TRIBUNE TIIUIiSDAY MORNING. JANUARY 10, 1895.
PUBUBRII) DAILY IN SCRANTOH. PA, BT TBI TR1BUM
Pobushmo Oomfaht.
C. P. KINGSBURY, Pick Mfl'l
E. H. RIPPLE, 8c uo Thus. i
LlVVt. RICHARD, Io.toh.
W. W. DAVIS. SuMIIIHTCMOtRT.
W. W. YOUNGS, Ay. Mm'.
tisw York omci : tribdri botldiko. Irahe &
GRAY, kANAOIR.
HTBRIO AT TBI TOSTOmOl AT SCRANTON, FA, At
8IU0MD -OLAB8 MAIL H ATTBH.
" Printers' Ink," the recognized Jonrnnl
for advertisers, rutcs THE SCKANTON
1 Illlll NE as tbc best advertising medium
in Northeastern Pennsylvania. "Printom'
Ink" know.
SCRANTON, JANUARY 10, 18U5.
THE SCRANTON OF TODAY.
Come and Inspect our city.
Elevation above the tide, 710 feet
Extremely healthy.
Estimated population, 1894, 103,000.
Registered voters, 20,599.
Value of school prope rty, $750,000.
Number of school children. 12.OU0.
Average amount of bank deposits, $10,-
eoo.uoo.
It's the metropolis of northeastern Penn
sylvania. Can produce electric power cheaper than
Niagara.
No better point In the United States at
Which to establish new Industries.
See how we grow:
Population in I860 'z!3
Population in 1S70 S5AM
Population in 1SS0
Population In 1S90 K-'il:
Population In 1S91 (estimated) 10S.M)
And tho end is not yet.
Mr. Slblpy's remark, In so far as it
TIMS directed against the president of
the United States, was In questionable
taste; but as referring to the Individual,
Grover Cleveland, It aptly crystallizes
v u good deal of generally accepted opin
ion. Lt It Be a Kouser.
The public meeting in this city next
Saturday evening, called In protest
against the Armenian atrocities, will
le addressed by eminent citizens, and
4t should be a rouser! Each day adds
to the horrors of Turkish misrule; and
each dtiy of inactivity on the part of
the civilized governments of 'the world
decivas3 the likelihood of a satisfac
tory investigation.
Primarily, of course, this Indigna
tion meeteing will be directed sgainst
the barbarities indicted upon Inmoeent
men, women and children in a far-off
ilaml where Justice is known only
through Occident or favoritism; and
where freedom of faith and liberty of
conscience are an unvoiced hope. But
secondarily, the meeting will, in effect,
if not In Intention, help to stimulate the
itrowlng demand In this country for an
American policy which will not compel
th" American (traveler In Turkey, If he
wishes to have any rights before the
lav.-, to seek the protection of the Brit
ish consulate and the Uritish flag, be
cause his own Ha Is regarded with su
preme contempt.
Among the thousands of Innocent
lives recently sacrificed to Moham
medan prejudice in Asia Minor there
may have been not one American, life.
But we want a condition of public sen
timent In this country, back of its au
thorities, which will enable us to be
lieve that no American life will be lost,
in time to come, through the senile ob
eoltsctince of the present Turkish dyn
a.sty; and that .no orderly American
citizen, setting foot on Turkish soil,
phall stand in danger of death, Impris
onment or injury of any' kind whatso
ever. Representative Farr, now that he has
been re-appointed chairman of the
house committee on education, will
doubtless move promptly toward the
establishment in this state of compul
sory education. Sentiment Is ripe for
it; a gubernatorial hindrance will soon
disappear and all that Is now needed is
work.
That Reconciliation.
There has been numerous "explana
tions" of the sudden recent reconcilia
tion between the president and Senator
Hill, the majority of which have utterly
failed to explain. But we suspect that
the Washington correspondent of the
Chicago Evening Post comes near to
the truth when he writes that "Senator
Hill, wearied of eternally struggling in
the trough of the waves, has made up
his mind to try for the presidential
nomination In 1896 juflt hard enough to
lose. It, thus giving somebody else the
opportunity to do the hard fighting for
once. He has figured In a cold-blooded
fa.'thion that the chances of Democratic
euccess two years .hence will not be half
as good as in 1900, and being patient he
prefers to reserve his crowning struggle
for a stage that will offer the best pros
pects of winning. The senator Is be
lieved to favor a western or southern
man' for the presidential nomination,
no special preference yet expressed, but
neither Carlisle, Stevenson, Morrison,
Crisp nor Vest being considered objec
tionable." In considering this plausible theory It
must be remembered that David B,
Jllll, whatever his faults, la a man of
conceded astuteness. While Tammany
represented th indispensable requisite
of Democratlo success, Hill, albeit In
finitely Tammany's superior In Intel
lectual ability and personal tastes and
(habits, sedulously cultivated Tammany,
When to retain Tammany's favor
meant to wage bitter warfare upon tho
administration, Hill unhesitatingly
threw down dhe gage of battlo and
fought aa only great politicians can
fight. Now that an uprising of the pub
lic conscience has unhorsed Tammany,
the consequent question which David U.
Hill Is smart enough to study In all its
aspects is how to detach himself from
the Tammany entanglements without
vharlng In Tammany's overthrow.
The idea of Joining forces with a tra
Jflltlonai enemy would never occur to
commonplace minds; but It wns prob
ably the very first Idea ithat occurred
to David B. Hill. . He very likely rea
soned that Mr. Cleveland was In pretty
muoh the same kind of a dilemma; and
"being- so much better a politician than
Cleveland, he doubtless manipulated
mutual friends In a manner to cause
Cleveland to make the first overture.
This hypothesis tallies admirably with
all the known facts and in addition sup
plies an adequate imotlve for the much-
advertised reconciliation. The days of
Cleveland's lofty scorn have passed.
The president has rapidly deteriorated
of late; and Hill Is Just adroit enough
to work upon raw material of Cleve
land's present quality with a skill that
Is truly Machiavellan.
Whatever its end, the game is cer
tainly worth waitchlng.
We wonder how Colonel Sweeney
knows that the water at llarrisburg Is
polluted.
The nomination at yesterday's Re
publican primaries of Adjutant W. 8.
Millar for the Eighth ward alderman
ship assures the polling of the entire
Republican strength In this Important
ward, next month, and may be taken
as presaging Mr. Millar's triumphant
election. Ills qualifications for the posi
tion are notopen to question. In other
and en ally difficult relations ho has
shown an executive capacity for de
tails and a soundness of judgment that
cannot fall to make him a superior
ward magistrate. Especially note
worthy were Ills indefatigable and
courteous services last fall, when acting
as secretary of the Republican county
committer These services fairly en
title him to the support of every Repub
lican in .the ward; while his personal
popularity and conceded fitness will un
doubtedly procure for his candidacy the
votes of many Democratic friends.
In Philadelphia, It Is said, a Penrose
by any other name would disseminate
the usual quantity of fragrance.
A Risky Game.
If the gentleman who chiefly superin
tends the destiny of the Republican
party In Philadelphia and Harrinburg
knows good reasons for the sudden
turning down of Senator Boies Penrose
and the equally sudden turning up of
City Solicitor Charles F. Warwick us
tho approved Republican candidate for
mayor of Philadelphia, he seems to
have kept those reasons carefully se
creted as yet. The subject Is not one
for outside interference; but in so far as
the welfare of the Republican party In
Pennsylvania Is ldentilled with its wel
fare in Philadelphia, state-at-large Re
publicans may with propriety take In
terest 'in a situation which seems, at
this distance, reasonably certain to re
sult In the election of Robert E. Pattl
son to the position now graced by Ed
win S. Stuart.
David Martin, the gentleman to
whom we refer, it is to be presumed
Is In a position to know the full mean
ing of this eleventh-hour transposi
tion better than it Is known by those
who se-m disposed to criticise him. If
he shall succeed In electing Mr. War
wick under present circumstances such
a result would conspicuously strength
en his hold upon the politics of the en
tire state and place him, In point of
political prestige, fairly alongside one
who is now looked upon as his superior.
Senator Quay. We do not recall, on
any scale, a more ambitious and dra
matic political climax than was en
acted In the early hours of yesterday
morning, when a Penrose convention
was changed Into a Warwick conven
tion between mldn'lght and dawn. Had
Martin really been Warwick, ho could
not have been more proficient as a
maker and unmaker of kings.
But Is the prize worth the risk? To
Mr. Martin, It may be; but how about
the great bulk of the Republican voters
of Philadelphia? Do they share In Mr.
Martin's ambitions and wish to further
his Interests by being careless of their
own? We are inclined to doubt the ex
pediency of relying too implicitly upon
affirmative replies to these interroga
tions. The situation to us bears a sus
picious look;, we fancy we can detect
in It Just such symptoms as have twice
before, In state politics, played Into
the hands of the present Democratic
governor. Tlje mistakes mHde'ln 1882
and In 1890 by those who Mien occu
pied much the same relation toward
state politics that Is sustained by
David Martin today toward themunlcl-
pal politics of Philadelphia proved too
costly, we should think, to suggest the
wisdom of their repetition, even upon a
smaller scale.
Congressman-elect Lelsenrlng, of Lu
zerne, has already begun the epicurean
portion of his political career at Wash
ington by giving an elnborate dinner
at Chamberlln's to a company which
Included such distinguished entertain
ers as Colonel John A. Cockerlll, Dr.
Edward Bedloe, Major Moses P. Handy
and Colonel Thomas P. Ochiltree. Mr.
Lelsenrlng has selected the proper
route to success.
Honest Ballot Reform.
The politicians hqye already begun
to cry out against any amendment of
the present ballot law, upon the ground
that frequent changes of that law give
the voter insufficient time In which to
become familiar with Its operation. It
is a satisfactory reply to this weak ar
gument to say that If the politicians
had perm 1 tied a proper ballot reform
measure to become a law in the first
place, amendments of It would not now
be necessary. In view of the fact that
the only measure which they did per
mlt to become a law was notoriously
defective, Intelligent public sentiment
will offer no apologies to the politicians
for insisting upon amendments until
those defects shall have been corrected
The amendments most needed at this
time have already been pointed out by
The Tribune; and Its designation of
them has recelved'emlnent and wide.
sprend approval. We are pleased to
see such able Journals ns the Philadel
phia Record, the York Gazette, the
Chambersburg Public, Opinion and the
Wllkes-Burre Record come to the sup
port of our position In this matter,
The last named Journal's remarks upon
the subject are especially timely. It
says:
Under cover of tho very loose wording
of section 20, which allows voters, under
certnln circumstances, to be helped In
marking their ballots, It has often hap
pened that men perfectly able to mark
their own ballots have b. en allowed or
even required to tuko other men Into tho
compartments with them, so ns to prevent
the possibility of secrecy. The courts
would almost certainly hold such a prao
tlco to be a criminal offense, but It can
not be effoctUh.'(ly prevented as long un
there Is tho least doubt about convicting
and punishing those concerned lu It.'
The provisions lu section J4 and 22
whereby a "straight ticket" can be voted
by marking a cross In a circle ubove a
party column Is not only useless to the
average voter who rarely wishes to vote
an absolutely straight ticket, but causes
endless uncertainty and mistakes, expe
rience shows that if a bullot can be
marked In two ways many voters are cer
tain to attempt to use both at tho sume
time. This causes many votes to be lost
by Inconsistent murklng, besides leaving
it to partisan election officers to decide
ilellcate questions as to voters' Inten
tions. In so far, too, us this provision fa
cilitates "straight" voting und obstructs
the exorcise of tho voter's free choice. It
Is utterly un-American and Inconsistent
with popular government. A similar pro
vision hus been declared unconstitutional
In California und our courts would prob
ably reach the sume decision If a case
cume before them.
Our ballot luw, therefore, needs to be
mended so us to require
That every voter shall murk his ballot
absolutely ulone, unless clearly prevented
by physical disability or Inability to rea i,
and that In all such cases the mun who
helps a voter to mark his bullot shull
himself be sworn to secrecy.
One uniform system of marking ballots,
namely, by putting a murk opposite tho
nuino of each cunillduto voted lor, ex
cept In tho cuso of presidential electors,
when1 a murk for a whole group shall be
ullowed.
'Phis Is the only tenable position for
those who honestly favor lionest ballot
reform.
Because the new district attorney did
not choose as one of this assistants a
Carbondule candidate, the Herald,
umidst furious airs, declares that resi
dents of tho l'ioneer City "are not a
lot of Jays." AVe are now laboring to
trace the Intellectual connection be
tween this premlst! and the Herald's
conclusion.
The only police Inspector In New
York who escaped smirching by the
Lexow investigation Is now boycotted
by the other inspectors and will soon
resign. Viewed from all standpoints
the New York ikollceman's cup of Joy
does not seem tJbo bubbling over at
present.
Lackawanna at Harrlsburg has a
clerkship, a committee chairmanship
and several good committee appoint
ments, not to speak of Sam Hudson.
Lackawanna, thanks, is doing quite
well.
The Inventor who springs a new lawn
mower upon un unsuspecting public at
this season of blustering blizzards and
burated water pipes seems to lack a
sense of the eternal fitness of things.
In the matter of explanation as to
.1,., ... If 1 f A ,.ii,.r. n wnrhlna
from Honolulu, ithe administration of
corpulence still displays a disposition
to beat about the bush.
o
It begins to look as thuttgh Democ
racy mt large had been released from
the hypnotic spell cast over It by what
Mir. Sibley terms the b. b. b. adminis
tration. A searching party will need to be
organized to find the trail of Colonel
Breckinridge's lecture tour which was
lost in the blizzard several days since.
It Is unfortunate that the ballot law
In this state has to be amended; but
It Is also unfortunate that it needs
amendment.
Queen Lil bids fair to become1 a rival
to the divine I'attl in the business of
farewell appearances.
LEGISLATIVE TOPICS.
New huritlcs I'lun.
A bill creating a state department of
charities and correction has been drawn
up at the Instance of some Interested par
ties and will be umong the first presented
to the house at llarrisburg. tlovernor
elect Hastings, it Is understood, hus been
requested to recommend It In his message,
ami there will be a strong fight made to
push It through. Tho new department
would cost the state Just the sum at pres
ent expended on tho boned of charities.
il5,0uo. This fund now goes to salary two
men, Cadwallader Kiddle, the secretary cf
the board of charities, und .Mr. Wetherell,
secretary of the commission on lunacy.
tho remulnlng ten members being unsal
aried appointees of the governor. Tho
new bill contemplates four salaried of
ficers, and the cost of running the depart
ment will be about the same as for the
board. The superintendent of the depart
ment will be appointed by the governor
and approved by the senate, as are super
intendents of bunks, schools and other
departments. The department will be di
vided Into three bureaus charities, cor
rections and lunacy, respectively, with
un Inspector lit the bead of each, ap
pointed by the superintendent. These
four officers will be salnrled. Whenever
the various Institutions throughout the
state make application to the legislature
for appropriations, the bill further pro
vides thnt the superintendent of this de
partment, the auditor general and the
state treasurer shall form a commission
to pass upon und recommend to, or with
hold from, tho committee on appropria
tions the special application. As tho au
ditor general knows the revenue of tho
commonwealth, the treasurer knows Its
llnanclul status, und the superintendent
would or should know the needs of the
Institution, It Is supposed n much moro
equitable basis of appropriation could be
secured than heretofore,
Children .Must Ho I dlicutcd.
Erie Dispatch: "Pennsylvania should
enact a compulsory ediicutlnn luw at the
session of the legislature this winter. It
should not be vetoed as Governor Pattl
son vetoed the act passed two years ago
und we believe tlovernor Hustings will
see to It Unit it has his signature. Penn
sylvania should not bn behind other
states In matters of education. The com
monwealth owes it to the perfection of
her Institutions to see that her children
are ediiouted. There ought to be no hnng
Ing between duty nnd the Inlliienees which
have ulways operated to prevent this law.
There are people who do not know and
do not care anything about the value of
education and this class must be reached.
If In no other way, then by force. To
maintain the state, the youth must be
ediicuted nnd If pn rents nre so forgetful of
their duty, they should be made to fully
realize. It by legislative enactment. Let
us have this compulsory law and have it
In 1W5."
Iliilldlng nnd Loan l egislation.
Two bills affecting building nnd loan
associations will make their appearance
ut Jlnrrisburg this week and possibly two
or three others may follow. The first one
will provide for the filing of reports at
Intervals seml-unnnally with the super
intendent of bunking, showing compre
hensively the business of the association,
Its receipts, expenses, earnings, dividends,
outstanding capital, loans and withdraw
als. It will also provldo for periodical
examination by the state banking de
partment Into the business of all asso
ciations or companies organized under the
laws of this Btnte, territory or government
which mny bo doing business In this
rommonwenlth to ascertain I and make
publlo tlrtdr condition. The second one,
drawn by Representative Cotton, of Pitts
burg, limits the operations of building and
loan associations to the counties In which
those associations lure organized, and
rules out all foreign associations whatBo
evor. v '
The Dntv of the Drama.
Prom tho New York Sun.
It Is the duty of the drama, first, to be
clean1 and wholesome, then truly, to enter
tain, to create as powerful a charm as it
can out of the trugio and comic elements
of real life, mixed not too strongly, with
the Ideal sympathies, the Ideal beliefs,
and hopes und poetry of men. Let It not
skip either the fuets or the poetry, for
men are made up of both; and as It hopes
to live, let It not be so meanly real as to
produce tho thing Itself rather than the
artistic and Ideal suggestion, and so attuln
merely a cheap shock rather than an
abiding pleasure. Of all the reasons for
tho Inability of men to write plays, this
tendency is perhaps the commonest and
most effective; und wo commend this
truth to all dramatists who desire to
practice their art on mutters essentially
uncleun.
ONE MODEST AMERICAN.
Ho Believed in Rendering Vnto Caesar
and America tho l ull Amount oCWhat
llclongcd to Thorn,
From the Commercial-Advertiser.
It seems that thirty years ago when the
civil war whs nt Its height, the patriotic
Americuns then in Paris came together to
celebrate tho Fourth of July In un appro
priate manner. When the toast "Our
Country" was given, a gentleman re
sponded by proposing: "A lieulth to tho
1'nited States bounded on the north by
British America, on the south by Mexico,
on the east by the Atluntle, und on the
west by the Pacific ocean." The toust
wus drunk, but the company were not yet
seated when (mother guest requested thut
u second one follow which would do the
subject Justice, and Bald: "The United
Stutes, our country, bounded on the north
by the north pole, on the south by the
south pole, on the eust by the rising und
on the west by the setting sun." The up
plause wus greut, but at Its conclusion u
gruy-halred old soldier, who for half a
century had served his country with fidel
ity and courage ut home und abroad,
slowly arose In his place and spoke ns
follows: "It grieves nio greatly, gentle
men, to hear my countrymen speak with
so much levity upon whut should be a
serious subject, und set such nurrow
bounds to our country's domain. Let us
drink aguin to the United Stutes bounded
on the north by the aurora borealls, on the
south by the precession of the equinoxes,
on the eust by the nebular hypothesis and
on the west by tho Buy of Judgment."
(live the People a Chance.
From the St. Louis Globe-Democrat.
As we are to have more bond sales, let
them be fixed so thut the people can get
the bonds. The banks should not be ul
lowed ull the profit from the government's
necessities.
Punishment I its tho Crime.
From the Chicago Dlsputch.
In capital offenses sllpknotlsm Is the
best cure for hypnotism.
Hope for Cigurctto Smokers.
Scientists predict that In a century there
will be no dlseuse not curable.
Useful
and Orna
mental Goods
LADIES' DESKS.
CABINETS.
BOOKCASES.
LADIES' DRESSING TABLES.
TEA TABLES AND LIBRARY
TABLES, BRASS AND ONYX
TABLES AND CABINETS (OF A
GUARANTEED QUALITY.)
AN ELEGANT STOCK OP PIC
TURES AT MODERATE COST.
FANCY BASKETS AND LAMPS.
CALL EARLY AND MAKE YOUR
SELECTIONS WHILE OUR AS.
BORTMENT IS COMPLETE,
HH1&
Connell,
131 IND 133
WASHINGTON AVE.
Hand Sleighs,
Baby Sleighs,
Clippers, Alligators,
Self-Steering Sleighs,
Steel Sleighs,
Iron Sleighs,
AND THE FAMOUS
Paris Hill Oak Sleighs
In Clippers aud Kent Wood Knees
und the Montrose Una
Tubing Sleighs. "
We have over lot? dozen in stock end
will sell very cheap at wholesale and
retail.
J. D. WILLIAMS 5 BR0.
314 LACKAWANNA AVENUE.
The secret Is out Not only do they
say we do washing for a living, but
that we do it well. So Veep it going.
Tell everybody you bcc, but tell them
oot to tell.
EUREKA
LAUNDRY, 32a
Washington Ave.
THAT WONDERFUL
WCRPD .
"I'TT WEBER PIANO
GUERNSEY
GOLDSMITH'S
This Is Stock-Taking
When all Odds and Ends from every stock are brought to the surface, anS a
price put upon them that will give the sharp, shrewd bargain seeker an opportu
nity to save considerable money, and at the same time you need not buy what
you don't want, because it is cheap, but in our varied collection of useful articles,
you are bound to find something THAT YOU DO WANT, and because it is
cheap you will certainly buy it; therefore, we bring these important facts to the
reader's attention.
Many odd pieces in Ladies' and Children's Muslin Underwear, such as Night
Gowns, Corset Covers, Chemise, Drawers and Skirts, some of them fresh and new,
others slightly counter-soiled, all marked down to a price so they will be quickly sold
CONTINUATION
OF
LADIES'
Of Chinchillas, Cheviots, Boucle, Diagonal and Plain Cloths, at
$4.25, $5.50, $6.75,
$8.00, $9.85.
mum
IS THE MONTH WE
1
GREAT REDUCTIONSarsar
IN ODD AND ENDS OF
DINNER.
TEA and
TOILETSETS,
LAMP GOODS
and
BRIC-A-BRAC
422 LACKA. AVE.
Blank Books
Raymond Trial
Balance Books
Graves' Indexes
Document Boxes
Ms of All Kinds
AGENTS FOR.
Edisor's Mimeographs
and Supplies
Crawford Pens
Leon Isaac Pens
REYNOLDS BROS,
. Stationers and Engravers,
317 LACKAWANNA AVE.
DR. HILL & SON
ALBANY
DENTISTS.
Bet teeth, in.GO; best sot, JS; for gold cap
and teeth without plates, called crown anil
brldgo work, call for prices alien, refer
ences. TONALUIA, for extracting teetlj
without pain. No ether. No gas.
OVER FIRST NATIONAL BANK.
TONE IS
BE
Tim
BROTHERS,
JACKET
China Closets reduced 13 to 10 per cent.
Jan. 10, 1S95.
Removal
Sale
of
Furniture
at
HULL & CO.'S,
205 WYOMING AVENUE.
rino Drauing Tables greatly raluced Is price
START
THE NEW YEAR RIGHT
Aud keep going right
by buying and carry
ing one of
LLOYD'S WATCHES.
LLOYD, JEWELER,
423 LACKA. AVE.
VENISON, PRAIRIE CHICKEN,
Partridges, Quail, Rabbits,
All Kinds of Ponltry,
Ripe Tomatoes,
Mushrooms, Green Beans,
Cucumbers, Head Lettuce,
Salsify. Radishes, Etc.
Pierce's Market
FOUND ONLY IN THE
!24
WYOMING AVE,
BAZAAR
Week
SAL
MY Rimloss Bifocal Glasses oonihlne dia
tuntand readintflu una pair and give
tuo grcntwt satisfaction. Headache aud ner
vousness remedied by luting glasses accurately
fitted. Satisfaction gutintntuud iu every cage,
DK. SHIMBERG, 305 Spruce St,'
Eye Specialist
EYES EXAMINED FREE.
DR. E. GREWER,
The Philadelphia Specialist, and his ossu
ciatrd Htali of English and Orman
physicians, are now permanently
located at
Old Postsffice Building, Corner Penn
Avenue and Spruce Street.
The doctor Ih u Kruduao of the L'nlver
slty of Pennsylvania, formerly demon
mator of physiology und Kurgery at the
Modico-l'hirurKicHl collt'Ke of Philadel
phia. His opeciallles are Chronic, Ner
voux, Skin, Heart, Womb and Blood dis
eases. DISEASES OF THE NERVOUS SYSTEM
The symptoms of which are dizziness, luck
of confidence, sexual weakness in men
nnd women, ball rising in throat, spots
floating before the eyes, loss of memory,
unable to concentrate the mind on ona
subject, easily startled when suddenly
Bpoken to, and dull distressed mind. which
unfits them for performing the actual du
ties of life, mnking happiness Impossible,
distressing the action of the heart, caus
ing flush of hem, depression of spirits, evil
forebodings, cowardice, fear, dreams.mel
anclioly, tiro easy of company, feeling as
tired in the morning ns when retiring,
lack of energy, nervousness, trembling,
confusion of thought, depression, constipa
tion, weakness of the limbs, etc. Those so
affected should consult us Immediately
ard bo restored to perfect health.
Lost Manhood Restored.
Weak uess of Young Men Cured.
If you have been given up by your phy
sician call upon the doctor and be exam
m1. Ho cures the worst cases of Ner
vous Debtllly, Scrofulo, Old Sores, Ca
tarrh, Piles, Female Weakness, Affec
tions of the Eye. Kar, Nose and Throat,
Asthma, 1 'outness. Tumors, Cancers and
Cripples of every description.
Consultations free nnd strictly sacred
and conildcnlRw otllce hours dally from
8 a.m. to 9 p.m. Sunday, 9 to 2.
Knclose five 2-eent stamps for symtpom,
blanks and my book called "New Life."
1 will pay one thousand dollars In gold
to anyone whom I cannot cure of EPI
LEPTIC CONVULSIONS or PITS.
1R. K. GRKWEM.
Old Tost Office Hulldlng, corner Pouts
avenue and Pprnce street.
SCRANTON. PA.
If you would have the
LARGEST
Amount of heat from the
LEAST
Amount of fuel, j-ou must
have a
Howard Furnace.
Foote & Shear Co.
IS
IF YOUB OLD HOOKS NEED FIX
I INC). RICND TI1KU TO
$1 Till Soranton Tribune ;
Vl -7 Bookbinding Dept.
1