THE SCRANTON TRIBUNE FRIDAY MORNING. FEBRUARY 1, 1895. CQ1U3BI9 DAILY IN 8CRANT0H P.. BT TBI TRIBB PUBUSHINO OOUFAJIT. Iff P. KINOtBURV, Pais, "o Qin'l Mm C. H. RIPPLE, tio'v Tiims. LIVV . RICHARD, Edit. W. W. DAVIS. Ium MuuM. W. W. VOUNOS, Aow. fcUs.'s. iflW TOM 0WIC15 TR1BDK1 BOTLDUia. Vbare 8 OHAT, MANAOIH. fcttTIMO AT TBI FOSTOmcl AT 8CR1NT0B, PA., AS 8IO0ND-CLAB8 HAIL IIATTIR, "Printers' Ink," the recognized, journal for advertisers, rates THE SCRANTON TRIBUNE the best advertising medium In Northeastern Pennsylvania. "Printers' Ink" knows. SURANTON, FEBRUARY 1, 1S95. THE SCRANTON OF TODAY. Come and Inspect our city. Elevation above the tide, 740 feet. Extremely heulthy. Estimated population, 1894, 103,000. Keglsterad voters, 20,599. Value of school property, J750.00O. Number of school children, 12,000. Average amount ot bank deposits. $10, COO, 000. It's the metropolis of northeastern Peon ylvanla. Can produce electric power cheaper than Niagara. No better point in the United States at Which to establish new Industries. Bee how we Brow: Population In 1860 9X3 Population in 1870 35.000 Population in ISSO Population in 1890 75,215 Population In 1894 (estimated) 103.W0 And the end Is not yot, Tire new county craze has broken out ilWIs winter with the startling dls itlnpttvees of a week's growth of whis kers on the face of a. masculine bru nette. The .new county craze, however, is not dainfeivut and no doubt serves a good purpose In keeping restless spirits out of mischief. Lackawanna Reapportionment. Two propositions relative to the leg islative reapportionment of Laekawa wanna. county .have been submitted to the Harrlsburg; committee having this matter In charge. One is embodied In the old bill re-Introduced by the chair man of the reapportionment committee. It solidities the First district, creates a new Second district with 600 Republican plurality and throws nearly 1.S00 Demo cratic plurality into a new Third dis trict. Thus, out of Ave districts two, In ordinary years, would be as solidly Democratic as the other three would be Republican. The second suggestion, that of Rep resentative Connell, provides that the city districts shall made up as follows: First district Fourth, Fifth, Sixth, Fourteenth, Fifteenth, Eighteenth and Twenty-llrst wards. Second district Eighth, Ninth, Tenth, Eleventh, Twelfth, Sixteenth, Seventeenth, Nl'ne iteenth and Twentieth wards. Third district First, Second, Third, Seventh and Thirteenth wards. The vote cast In these districts in 1893 for state treas urer is as follows: First district, Re ptrbHcan, 2,443; Democratic, 1,738: Re publican plurality, 703. Second district, Republican, 2,383; Democratic, 2,551; iDemocratlc plurality, 168. Third dis trict, Republican, 1,496; Democratic, S.564; Democratic plurality, 68. This plan would give the Republicans a good fighting chance to capture every dis trict In the county including the Fourth, which .Is now probably safely Republican for some time to come. It would seem as if the members of the committee who live in unaffected districts ought to be willing to let those members who are directly affeoted have Borne voice in this discussion. The prompt ending yesterday of the Fifteenth district congressional confer ence at Tunkhannock by the, nomina tion of E. J. Jordan, of Wyoming, and James H. Codding, of Bradford, for the short and long .terms respectively will naturally disappoint the friends of C. 3'red Wright, of Susquehanna, who had Jioped to see ihlm. entrusted with the performance of his deceased brother's uncompleted work. The selections made by the conference, however, are per sonally acceptable, and they ' have the political advantage of representing the most disaffected portions of the dis trict. Now that harmony has been re stored after many days, Republicans of the Fifteenth district will be ex pected to continue in good humor and to elect Messrs. Jordan and Codding by enthushietla majorities. We suspect that in David Martin's Case the public Is rapidly nearing the beginning of the end. A Good Scheme to Let Alone. The efforts of the United Mine Work rrs, which is an organization composed at the present time almost exclusively of men engaged in the bituminous coal mining business, Ito gain a foothold In iThe anthracite regions are meeting with scant success, for which fact there is an obvious Jid a, sufficient reason. The bituminous miners, recollecting how their past citrikes have failed largely, as they Imagine, through their inability to control the competition encountered from the anthracite .trade, seek now to use the anthracite miners and mine laborers as cat's-paws. They reason Ithat If they can once get these eastern diggers of hard coal Into their grasp, general strikes may bo ordered with pom para-try impunity, and the consum ing publlo will have only one alterna tive except ito force the- bituminous operators to concede all points in dls pule. That would be to freeze. If their plans should succeed,' the am. Ithraclte element, being in a minority, oould, in any question as to the advlsa. tll lit y ot a general strike, be outvoted two to one, a fid thus be literally dragged Into disturbances In which they lave no interests to guard and tio grievances to right. A more preposterous and ah normal arrangement of affairs would be almost impossible to conjecture, Wlth the two 'branches of the coal trade In spirited and Increasing rivalry, such a union of labor Interests would simply mean that the bituminous people would accomplish by strategy what they have been unable to achieve in open commer cial warfare; .that is to say,- the con quest of the anthracite business. Emissaries of the United Mine Work ers are now busy in these parts. Not withstanding the chilliness of (their early reception, they are bent upon catching the workers of this region in the snare. Forewarned, however, is forearmed. The sensible miner of an thracite will think twice before he de cides to play into the hands of the opposition. If the offlclalsof steamship companies which are too poor to equip their pas senger steamers with an adequate num ber of life boats could be made to tajce a dose of their own medicine, this form of murder would soon decrease. The Inevitable Has Come. One of the first questions that natur ally arises in connection with the re cent exehanire of compliments between Senator Lexow and Dr. Purkhurst Is why the former, occupying as he does a public oltlee In which he Is peculiarly the representative of the people, should regard as "impertinent" and "Insult ing" an expression by the people, or by a conslderablo number of them, concerning a subject of vital public In terest and Importance. It would be In teresting to know upon what ground Senator I.eXow can defend his assump tion of superiority to the wishes of his constituents or set up, us he virtually does, as u being quite above the level of the paid servant hired to perform Ills master's work. We admit that this kind of assumption is getting to be very common these duys; but we ven ture to believe that it is none the less wrong. A publlo oillclal accepts ollice upon tho distinct understanding that he shall be held accountable to the pub lic for his actions. When he arrives .it a point of cranial enlargement where such accountability becomes Irksome, he should reduce the swelling or sur render his position and rotire to private life. Let us remember, in the present case, the difference between the two men who have just publicly "fallen out." One Is a politician, in politics for what there is In it In way of glory and self advuncement and spoils. Three years ago he was, so to speak, an unknown man. Outside of Albany and his home district few persons had ever heard of Clarence Lexow. The circumstance by which he wus pitchforked into public prominence was not of his own crea tion, nor was lt of his extraordinary deserving. It came to him In the course of political vicissitude. Party interests suggested the advisability, about that time, of following up the Fassett in quiry of two years prior with a second probing into Tamnianyism; and it was begun, we may readily believe, with no purpose higher than vote-capturing and with no laws of action superior to political exigency and expediency. Of this commute Oii rence Lexoi.' hap pened to be chosen chairman. We s;iy "happened," but the word is used with due recognition of the frequency with which, in Albany appointments, so called chance is but another name for the potent wishes of Thomas C. Piatt. As chairman, Mr. Lexow acquitted him self neither wonderfully well nor amaz ingly badly. He presided with regular ity, had little to say and through, all the stench and slime of Gotham's re vealed rottenness, preserved his health, his appetite and his capacity to draw his pay. This is about all that need be said concerning Senator Clarence Lexow, unless we add that since last Nov. 6 his mission, as he views it, has been logically at an end. On that date he ceased to be the reformer and be came once more the politician, out for spoils. The comparison of such a man with Charles H. Parkhurat is not a compari son, but a contrast. We do not know whether It will be expected of us to again portray Dr. Parkhurst as he ap pears to those who are in full sympathy with his herculean work and who have taken pains to study him not in envy nor in malice but fairly, justly and in the clear light of all available evi dence. It seems ito us that these things are already fully understood. Nor do we wish, because we admire this man on account of his energy, his fearless ness of purpose and Olympian direct ness of attack, to Imply that he may not, through sheer excess of zeal, be at times impatient and overcritlcal. It would be singular, indeed, if in the face of' the almost infinite responsibilities and tasks and discouragements that encircle him, he should invariably be smiling like the sucking babe and placid as the noon-day lull. The point with him upon which politicians like Piatt and Lexow, from the nature of things, never agree is that reform must not consist of turning one set of rascals out merely to accommodate another set of opposite partisan belief. 1 lie wants the good work to go on, not simply until election day for indeed that is, In his view of the matter, simply the begin ning of the work but until every ves tige and trace of the old municipal rot tenness shall be cleansed and fumi gated, and the city accorded a clean bill of health. Hence the clash; a clash in evitable from the very circumstances of the case; but a clash in which honest moral sentiment, with no personal axe to grind, will be uncompromisingly with Charles II. Parkhurst every day In the week, including Sundays. , in the matter of making a settle ment with China, the Japanese govern ment appears as Independent as a lady operator In a telephone exchange. The Church and the Poor. Ought church-goers to wear good clothes? Is it conducive to Christiani ty to "dress' up'" oni Sunday? These questions look simple enough, but there appears to be a negative side to them founded on serious argument. The February Chautauqun, dlscoursjng edi torially upon tho relation, of the modern church to the poor, bravely utters this sentiment: "Tho thoroughly bad habit of wearing the ibeat clothes to church, the expectation of a. certain, smartness kind fashlonableness in. the dress of a congregation, draws a line against peo plu'Who are shabby and have not grace enough to forget It and forgive their brethren for being better dressed. It Is true that there in a. kind ot piety In deaa and fresh clothing; and many would blush to appear In the Lord's house clothed in oilioe or kitchen gar ments. This brand of piety has some claims to respect ; in many hearts It Is associated very closely with th pro prieties of sincere worship. But It does tend to exclude the man with the shabby coat and his wife, with her last year's bonnet, if wa went to church in everyday attire, wo ehould look less like ai smart social club and some of tho poor would worship with us in a more comfortable frame of mind." The tenor of the Chautauqua's con tention is .that 'tho modern church and, as we take it, more especially the Protestant church has not yet caught the full meaning of Christianity's duty toward the abounding poor in our pop ulous cities. The feeding to these peo ple of the spiritual graces of religion when their physical stomachs are suf fering from . chronic absence of meat and potatoes Is a kind of zeal which is mistakenly applied. Even Jesus, it will be remembered, ilrst fed the mul titude before He preached to it; and no doubt hud He sojourned in Pennsyl vania rather than in Palestine, He would have clothed Jt as well. This much miay be said without irreverence, since it is only u. logical extension of the Instructive parable of the loaves and llshes. The editor of the Chautuu quuu might easily have addod to his argument the historical fact that fine apparel nowhere appears in any of the Scriptures as a requisite feature of Christian evangelization. Not that this Js, in .itself, an argument against cleanliness or neatness of clothes, but simply that in the serious earnestness of primitive Christianity the niceties of our fastidious modern time found little counterpart, and did not, there fore, to any perceptible extent retard the spread of Christ's Gospel among tho meek and lowly. In one or two of our large cities, mjt;cbly n New York, it has come to be the fashion for wealthy congrega tions which themselves worship amid luxurious surroundings In veritable earthly tenmples to establish, in the poorer districts, modest missions, In which plain pews and a. plain service beckon to a plain and poor attendance. One cannot criticize the sincerity of good intention which prompts this thoughtfulness for the "other half;" yet it requires to be added that this division of the Christian church Into dlstinilt classes, when dictated by other reasons tha'n necessity, is scarcely in unison with the divine democracy of that church's Founder. How, then, shall 'the 'problem, be solved? It is perhaps not for the secular press to answer such a question; yet we fancy the true solution may be reached, In time, without the .necessity of dividing the churches into sections, the one kind for the fastidiously aflluent, und the other for the penniless unfortunate. One of the men recently admitted to citizenship in a. county not a thousand miles from here confessed, while under examination, that he did not know who the president of the United States was, and did not care. We should think that our glorious republic would feel proud of such a eon. It is none of our funeral; but we can not help remarking that it is a rare kind of Wilkes-Harre philanthropy which seeks to defeat the Quay county movement because it would cost Hassle tonlans too. much. The Anthracite county movement has reached Harrlsburg; and will doubt less give the newspaper correspondents something to write about for a period of perhaps eleven days. LEGISLATIVE TOPICS. Captain Dclaney's Little Bill. Harrlsburg correspondence of the Car- bondalo Anthracite: "John C. Deluney'i bill has successfully withstood the batter. ing ram of that great and original thinker and Intrepid warrior, General Gobin. Dp- laney's bill Is to Increase the salary an responsibilities of the custodian of the public buildings and grounds and for which the Uunmoro laddie Is scheduled Time was when we old timers who have seen the map of Europe change and who have withstood the shock of the discovery of horse blankets, used to call this job, which John C. la after with a gun, a "spar row farmer." Gobln tried to shoot Do- laney's bill full of holes, and he did put a few holes in It, but John C. Is a man who Is generally on the ground where the worms congregate at the sume time with tho curly-rising lark, and ha bail the sen ate well set up. John C. Is a friend of mine whom 1 have borrowed money cf and to whom I can go at any time for a chew of lino rut. When his bill passes ho will be appointed to this enlarged cus todianship und will pocket the HOW) mil ury like a little man." The New Charities Measure. A bill to establish a department of char Hies and correction has been Introduced In tho house by Representative Marshall, It provides that the chief officer shall be known us etipenlntendent and be ap pointed by the governor for a term of three pears. The superintendent Is em powered to employ three Inspectors and live clerks, and also three deputies, to be be known as inspectors of charities, cor rectlons and lunucy. It is the duty of thi superintendent to see that the laws re speetiing charities, corrections and lunacy are enforced. For this purpose he Is In vented with all the powers now con ferred upon the board of public charities, The superintendent Is given full power to visit and Inspect the books of all In stltutlons receiving Mate aid, and to In quire Into the grounds of any request for state aid by any Institution. Whenever he shall be satisfied that any Insane pa tient In any county or dlstlrct almshouse cannot there receive proper treatment he shall make application to the president judge of the proper county to have the putlert trnnsrerrue ta state hospital, Another Good Hoade mil. A bill Introduced by Mr. Snlvely appro priates J5,IXK).(KK) to Improve the public highways under the charge of the secre tary of Internal affairs. It provldos for the election and appointment of a town shin road committee and a cuonty road en glneer. The money Is to be disbursed by the slate treasurer upon order of the sec retary of Internal affairs, when this order Is accompanied by the sworn statement of township committees countersigned by the county road engineer. The approprla tlon Is to be expended outside of cities end boroughs prorata, according to the popu latlon of each county or such road as the secretary of Internal affairs with tils' rounty engineer and township commit tees shall agree upon. All such roads shall be kept In reiialr by the state. Tho local committee will consist of live men who shall servo five years without com pensatlon except expenses. Tho pay of the engineer shall not be less than J8U0 a year und uctuul expenses. Think Its Friends Hurt It. Carbomlale Anthracite: "Representa tive Korr's compulsory education measure does not seem to be making that haste which was expected from the groat clamor made nbout It at the beginning ot the legislation .session. Compulsory edura. tlon Is likely to suffer because of the friends it hua made. When any pjece of legislation Is backed up by particular so cltties, opposition Is likely to take a course that will annov and oerhaDS cheek the measure." AS TO ANTHRACITE COUNTY. From the Philadelphia Press. Our. esteemed contemporary, the Car bomlale Dally Anthracite, is as busily en gaged as anybody could expect to be In these rather dull times manufacturing a brand new county. It Is a very popular sort of enterprise with a considerable number of the newspapers in different parts of the state, and there Is no reason on earth why our sprightly Carbondale contemporary should not have a share in It. There Isn't muA elso worth bother ing about Just now. This new county nroiect contemplates taking a strip from Lackawanna county, a considerable chunk of Wayne and quite a large bite out of Susquehanna in ordor to make up the necessary 400 square miles of territory and satisfy our contempo rary's craving for a new county, which Is to bo called Anthracite county In honor of the newspaper which has invented the scheme. There Is no news from Wayne and Susquehanna that the people In those counties are sitting uu nlirhts and tear ing around In the day time to advance this new county movement, hut It Is pos sible they will catch on In the course of a few hundred years und accommodate themselves lo the vociferous demands thut Carbondale shall be made the county seat of something or other. Nobody will blame Carbondale which Is a tine town with most of tho modern Improvements excepting a court house for wuntlug the great distinction ot be ing a county town. It could not b ex pected to stand unconcernedly by and see Jlazloton, so near Its own size, moving gaily and uninterruptedly forward to be come the duxzllng center of the new Wuuy county. And yet Carbondale is not ex travagantly excited over the alluring prospect. Whether It Is of a less exuber ant nature than llnsleton or Is merely laying a deeper game we cannot pretend to say. but It Is certain that Carbondale has not yet been aroused to that degree of Intensity which hourly convulses llasle ton, and which impels every public-spir ited HuSlotunian to keep his ear near the end of a telegraph wire to intercept the first news from Harrlsburg. Nor does the country round ubout show that eager nppetlte for a new county which Jim Sweeney lias so successfully stirred up in the vicinity of Hazloton. These things may come In time, how ever, .though We fear that Carbondale it laboring under some disadvantages. The chief among these is the proposed name for the new county. Nobody could be ex pected to get much excited over Anthra cite county. There was no particular In terest in llazleton's project us long as the Intention wus to call It Hazlc county, but now that It Is to be Quay county every body Is enthusiastic und all join in de manding it. That was a loong-neaueu proposition end there is no longer any doubt that Quuy county will go through; Hazleton will have a nice new court house and a full outfit of county officers all to Itself. Our contemporary, which Is fighting this new county battle u.11 alone, should rellect upon this vital point, lirother Moonoy could get some very valuuble tips from lirother Jim Sweeney about how new counties are made, und In the present condition of the Anthracite county move ment tho quicker he gets such tips tho better. Mr. Powdcrly in Philadelphia. From the Philadelphia Inquirer. Robert Wuitchorn. the retiring chief fac tory Inspector, gave a dinner lust night at tho Hotel Vendlg to his successor, James Camnbell. of Pittsburg, and a few friends, During the progress of the dinner, T. V. l'owderly. the former chief of the Knights of Labor, registered at the hotel, and as soon as his presence was known he was prevailed upon to Join the party. lr l'owderly is on 'his way home to Scran ton from Washington, and as soon as he gets there he will commence to practice at the Lackawanna bar. The former labor chief was recently admitted to practice, and In view of his long residence in Scranton, and the high place ho holds In the com munity, it is probable that he will find the law more profitable' than the role of a labor leader. Will Prove a popular Member Special to the Anthracite. Senator James Vaughan, I am Inclined to think, will prove a jwpular member of the upper house of parliament. He Is up proachable, courteous, obliging and has got a great deal more sense than an ibex. Useful and Orna- fnental Goods LADIES' DESKS. CABINETS. BOOKCASES. LADIES' DRESSING TABLES. TEA TABLES AND LIBRARY TABLES, BRASS AND ONTX 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. SORTMENT IS COMPLETE, Hill & Connell, 131 IND 133 WASHINGTON AVE. Tbe secret is out Not only do they say we do washing for a living, but that we do It well. ( . So keep it going. Tell everybody you see, but tell them not to tell. EUREKA LAUNDRY, 322 Washington Ave. THAT WONDERFUL W1PR1RO "rV WEBER PIANO GUERNSEY GOLDSMITHS FROM THE ALPS TO AMERICA We are just patriotic enough to use, and want to use, everything we possibly can of the produc tions of our own country. The Yankees, may their tribe increase, have succeeded in making nearly everything that can be made ot cotton, wool, flax and silk, but there's a few Old World industries thut don't flourish here yet One of these is the art of Embroidery. To do that successfully, one must be a Swiss and live in Switzerland. We can't bring over the Alps, but here's the All of the Newest and Choicest designs, hut recently aew itortt uusiom nouse. upen work and Loop Luges will take the . lead. We have them of every price In Cambric, Swiss, Nainsook. This bids fair to be the greatest Lace season ever known. Our first impor tation for 1895 now open and ready for inspection. England, Germany and France are represented. Our line of Point de Venise with Net Tops and Fine Black Laces is Un-surpassed. GOLDM TfUl 0 lnl ANiuuunr IS THE MOUTH WE GREAT REDUCTIONS' IN ODD AND ENDS OP DINNER. TEA and TOILETSETS, LAMP GOODS and BRIC-A-BRAC 422 LACKA. AVE. Blank Books Raymond Trial Balance Books Grabs' Indexes Document Boies " Inks of All Kinds AGENTS FOR. Edisor's Mimeographs and Supplies Crawford Pens Leon Isaac Pens REYNOLDS BROS, Stationers and Engravers, 30 LACKAWANNA AVE DR. HILL & SON ALBANY DENTISTS. Bet teeth, J5.60; best set, 8; for (told caps and teeth without plates, railed crown and brlda-o work, call for prices and refer once. TON ALU I A, for extracting tsetfc without pain. No ether. No gas. OVER FIRST NATIONAL, BANK. TONE IS n n r m r m m in i BROTHERS, WYOMING AVE, M LACE A Roductiou bale with HoJuctiuns. Feb. 1,1805. AN OAK CHIFFONIER FOR $5.5o, $7, from $10. $8, from io. $17, from $20. $25, from $30. $28, from $32. $55, from $70. $48, from $58, etc. Chiffoniers In Walnut, Birch, Mahogany and Cherry with a similar reduction in price. Hull & Co. 205 Wyoming Ave. We Move March i. START THE NEW YEAR RIGHT And 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 BROTHERS 1 OliPAW BAZAAR. landed and fresh from the MY Kimlens Bifocal GUwcs oomMuo di tatitand reatHnif la uti pair aud fftvj tu tfret"Ht satisfaction. Hoiulacha and nef vouknt'ss remedied by uitinff glaAHen accurately fitted. batiBfactiuD jfunrtoUji'd Id every caa. DR. SMMBERG. 30.i Spruce St., Eyo Specialist EYES EXAMINED FREE. DR. E. GREWER, The Philadelphia Specialist, and his assu elated staff of lirinllh and German physicians, are now periucnenlly located at Old Post off ice Building, Corner Perm Avenue and Spruce Street. The doctor is a oraduae of the L"niver slty of Pennsylvania, formrrly demon strutor of physiology and surgery at the Medico-ChlrnrRlciil college of Phlladel. phia. His specialties are Chronic, N'er vous. Skin, ileart, Womb and Ulood dis eases. DISEASES OF THE NERVOUS SYSTEM The symptoms of which are dizzlness.laclc of confidence, sexual weakness In men and women, ball rline in throat, spots floating before the eyes, loss of memory, unahle to concentrate the mind on one subject, easily sturtlert when suddenly spoken to, and dull distressed mind, which unfits them for performing th actual du ties of life, maklnit happiness impossible, distressing the action of the heart, caus ing flush of heat, depression of spirits. evil forebodings, cowardice, fear, drmms. mel ancholy, tire easy of company, feeling as tired in the morning as 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, ar-d be restored to perfect health. Lost Manhood Restored. VenkuesB of Young Men Cured. Tf you have been given up by your phy sician call upon the doctor and be exam t"d. He cures the worst cases of Ner o'i Lability, Scrofula. Old Bores, Ca tarrh, Plies, Female Weakness, Affec tions of the Eye, Kiir, Nose nnd Throat, Asthma, Deafness, Tumors. Cancers ana Cripples of every description. Consultations free and strictly sacred and conlldenlR. Office hours dally fram 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Sunday, 8 to 1 Knclose five 2-cent 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 EH. LEPTIC CONVULSION'S or FITS. 1H. R. oniCWFR, Old Tost Office nullding, corner Peua avenue and Spruce street. SCRANTON, PA. EVERY 1 BUYS HARDWARE. The question Is, where can the best b obtained? Where the lowest prices fop the good kind? Listen! Let us speak to you confidentially. Most people say ours. We know and you know that they know, what Is what It ought to he In Hardware. We have shaved our prices with Knives. Chisels and Shaves, and planed them with our planes. They aro now below the lvel of others as our Levels show, 'i Wo remove to our large neW storo, HI Washington avenue, April L F00IE & SHEAR CO, 3 iJtl Ir TOUn OLD BOOKS NEED 1NO, 8KND Til EM TO $ Tkl Sorutod Tribune V Bookbinding Dtp
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