The Scranton tribune. (Scranton, Pa.) 1891-1910, March 25, 1895, Page 6, Image 6

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    TIIE SCHAKTCXST TUTBUXE MONDAY MOIWOXG, MAKCII 25, 1895.
i toxin
CTheae short serial stories are copyrighted by Bacheller, Johnson & Bach,
eller.and are printed InTlieTribune by special arrangement, simultaneous wJUl
their appearance in the leading dally Journals of the large cities).
' ' PHAPTElt II.
Veronica Lnranlgra was charmed to
find her necklace; she was still more
charmed to llnd an adventure through
it.
This beautiful youth with his starry
eyes, soft with admiration, who had
brought her back the opals, looked like
a kniKht out of fairyland. She was
young; she was weary of the seclusion
of her widowhood; she was kept In
close constraint by those who had au
thority over her; she was ready to re
enter life in Its enjoyments, its amuse
ments, Its affections, its desires. The
tragic end of her husband had Im
pressed and saddened her, but she had
recovered from Its shock. The mar
riage had. been urrunt;cd by their re
spective families, and the hearts of
neither had been consulted. I.aianlgia,
however, had become much in Jove
with her. and had left her all which It
was in his power to leave, and that had
been much,
"How clever it was uf you to see my
opals under the grass and the sand!"
she said, a few minutes later, as An
drcis presented lamer In the long, dim
room hung with tapestries and rich In
bronzes, marbles, pictures and mosaics.
She was like a picture of t'aterina
Cornaro as she stood on the balcony of
her house; her gold hair was enclosed
in a pearl-sown net, and her cloak of
red satin, lined with sables, lay on her
shoulders and fell to her feet like the
rob.es of a. Ligaressu; for her dead lord
she vtiad tVit.ii regret. The balcony
was tilled with Spiraea, whose white
blossoms were like snow about her In
,1 3 '
S7 jarl-i C52f!;-:rr.
Tiicy Sans Together.
the starlight and lamplight as the gon
dola which brought Andreis and his
companion t lu-r palace paused below
at the water-stairs. Sho threy her cloak
-.! a couch as she spoke; she was
dressti In black, but the gau? sleeves
i f ihe g.nvn showed her fair arms, and
tfc.- bodice was slightly, open on her
bos o m; h..r face wis byfiht like a rose
above the deep shad.- (Jf the gown;
her hair had been a mie rullled by the
wind of the evenii as 9)m naj 8tood
on the balcony.
M.ulani, ?icDamir. as he bowed
to her with
f.-nse of en
Irange and unwelcome
rassni'-nt, "Prince An-
dreis slioui
i it have told you that I
had such
"1 fortune. I am no fit
squire i.inm
es; he is."
catch his meaning. She
turneirom
him a little impatiently.
and g iltessed Andreis,
rL.(noke of mnsin Anileoia n-oa nrt
pllf-hed in that art; there was a
ndolln lying on the grand piano: he
k It up and sang to it a Sicilian
e song; she took it from him and
sang Venetian barcarolle and star
nelli; then they sang together, and
their clear, youthful voices blent har
moniously. People passing on the
canal stopped their gondolas under the
balcony to listen; sum. Venetian pro
fessional musicians In a boat applauded.
(Darner sat In the shadow and listened,
and looked at them. Music said little
or nothing to him; he had scarcely any
comprehension of it; but something In
the sound of those blended voices
touched a chord in his nature made
him feel vaguely sad, resile;, siy ((e.
Pirous, foolishly Irritated. The light
fell on the handsome head of Andreis,
on the carnations at the lady's throat,
on the rings on their hands which
touched as they took Ihe mandolin one
from the other; behind them was the
open casement, the balcony with Its
white spiraea; the lighted frontage of a
palace on the opposite side of the
canal. As they ceased to sing the peo
ple below on the water applauded
again, and cried: "Lrava! brava!
brava!"
"Prince Andreis Is a poet," said Da
rner, with a harsh tone In his voice.
"Who never wrote a verse," said An
dreis, as he handed a cup of coffee to
his hostess.
Through the closed windows the
Sounds of a chorus sung by the strolling
nlngers below came faintly and mu filed
Into the room; the lamplight shone on
the white spray of the spiraea, which
looked like a crystal of snow.
"If I had found the opals I should
have been Inspired by them," he
added. "As it Is, I am dumb and un
happy." Veronica Laranlgra smiled.
"If you are dumb, bo was Orpheus."
"And If you are unhappy," added
Darner, "you are only bo out of wanton
ness because the gods have given you
too many gifts."
"Or because he has stolen a piece of
Spiraea," said Veronica.
"I may keep my theft?" asked An
dreis. "Yes. For you brought back the
opals, though you did not find them."
Soon after they tonk their leave of
her und went down to the waiting gon
dola. The boatload of musicians had
drifted upward toward ltlalto, the
color of their paper lunt horns glowing
through the' dark. There tvub' no
moon. They did not speak to 'each
Other In the few minutes which
carried them to their hotel. When they
reached it they parted with a brief
tood night. Neither asked the other
what his impressions of the evening
had been.
When the young Sicilian ' prince,
T.loncjlo Andreis, head of an ancient
Ilispano Italian family, had met with a
hunting; accident and the tusks of an
old boar had brought him near to death,
an English surgeon, by nnme Frederic
Darner, who wasi then In Palmermo, did
(or him what none of the Italian sur
Ik
I .
By OUIDA.
geons dared to do, and, so far as the
phrase can ever be correct of human
action, saved his life. A year had
passed since then; the splendid vitality
of the Sicilian had returned to all Its
natural vigor; he was only 24 years
of age and naturally strong as a young
oak In the woods of Ktnu. Hut he hud
a mother who loved him, and was anx
ious; she begged the Englishman to re
main awhile near him; the Sicilian
laughed but submitted; he and Darner
had traveled together during several
mouths, and were about In another
month to part company; the Sicilian to
return to his own people, the English
man to occupy a chair of physiology in
a town of northern Kurope. Their lives
hail been briefly united by accident and
would have parted In peace; a collar of
opals jvas by chance washed up
amongst the ilags and burdocks of
Toreello and the shape of their fate was
altered.-
Darner was the son of a country phy
sician, but his father had been poor, the
family numerous, and he, a third son,
had been sent out Into the world with
only his education us his capital, lie
praotlced surgery to live; he prac
ticed physiology to reach through It
that power and celebrity for which his
nature craved and his mental capacity
fitted him. Hut at every step his nar
row means galled and fretted him, and
he had been a demonstrator, an assist
ant, a professor in schools, when his
vast ability and relentless will fitted
him for the position of a ilelmholtz or
a VIrchow In that new prleuthood which
had arisen to claim the rule of man
kind, und sacrifices to Itself all sentient
races.
In Andreis he saw all the powers of
youth and wealth concentrated in one
who merely used them for a careless
enjoyment and a thoughtless good
nature which - seemed to himself as
senseless as the dance In the sun of an
amorous negro. Andreis and the
whole of his family had shown him the
utmost gratitude, liberality and con
sideration, and the young prince bore
fromhimgoud-humoredly sarcasmsand
satires which he would not have suf
fered from an emperor; but Darner In
Ids turn felt for the Sicilian and his
people nothing but the contempt of the
great intellect for the uncultured mind,
the irritation of the wise man who sees
a child gayly making a kite to divert
itself out of the parchments of a treatise
hi an unknown tongue which, studied,
might have yielded up to the student
the secret of perished creeds and of
lost nations. There is no pride so ar
rogant,'' no supremacy so unbending,
as thfose of the intellect, it may stand,
like Hellsarius, a beggar at the gate;
but. like Hellsarius, it deems Itself the
superior of all the crowds who drop
their alms to it, and while it stretches
out its hand ( them Its lips curse them.
"I wish I had lived when this collar
was new," Veronica Laranlgra said,
when her Jewelers returned to her the
opals restored to their pristine bril
liancy. "Life in Venice was one long
festa then. I have read of It. It was
all masijue and serenade and courtship
and magnificence. People were not
philosophical about life then; they
lived Mina Laranlgra was a beautiful
woman. They have her portrait in
the Belle Arte. It Is by Lucchl. She
holds a rose to her lips and laughs.
She was killed by her husband for an
amour. She had these opals on her
throat when he drove the stiletto
through It. At least so Carlo used ti
tell me. Hut perhaps It was not true."
"Do not wear them," said Andreis.
to whom shp was speaking. "Do not
wear them If they are blood-stained.
You know they arepierres de rnatheur."
She laughed.
"You Sicilians are superstitious. We
northerners are not. I like to wear
them for that very reason of their trag
edy."
She took up the necklace and clusped
it round her throat; some tendrils of
her hair caught In the clasp; she gave
"I I.Ike to Wear Them for tho Reason of
the Trugedy."
an Involuntary little cry of pain; An
dreis hastened to release her hair from
the clasp. His hand trembled; their
eyes met, and said much to each other.
Darner, who was near, drew nearer.
She was silent, looking at him with
thut mixture of curiosity, interest nnd
vaguo apprehension which he always
aroused In her. She whs not very In-
Physicians
prescribe Scott's Emulsion of
Cod-liver Oil and Ilypophos
phites because- they find their
patients can tolerate it for a
long time, as it does not upset
the stomach nor derange the
digestion like ' the 'plain oil.
Scott's Emulsion is as much
easier to digest 'than the plain
oil as milk is easier to digest
than butter. Besides, the fish
fat taste is taken out of the oil,
, and it is almost palatable. Tha
way sickly children, emaciated,
anaemic and consumptive adults,
gain flesh on Scott's Emulsion
is very remarkable.
' Don't be ptrmadtd to actrpt a tvbillMet
8cott & Bewne, N, Y.. All Druggiiti. SOc. and St.
telllgent, but she had quick susceptibil
ities; there was that In 1)1 in which
alarmed them and yet fascinated them.
"He awes me," she said later In the
day to Andrles. "So often one cannot
follow his meaning, but one always
feels his reserve of power."
It was a grave speech for a light
hearted lover of pleasure. Andreis
heard it with vexation, but he was
loyal to the man who had saved his life.
"He is a person of great Intellect,"
he answered; "we are pigmies beside
him. Hut"
"Hut what?"
"He used bis brains to save my body.
So I must not dispute the virtue of his
use of them. Hut sometimes I fancy
that he has no heart. I think all the
forces in him have only flourished lilH
mind, which Is lninien.se. Hut bin
heart, perhaps, has withered away,
getting no nourishment. He would
say I talk nonsense; but I think you
will understand what I mean."
"I think I understand," said Veronica,
thoughtfully.
She had thought very little in her
careless young life. She had begun to
think more since these tWo men hail
come into it.
"Andreis merits more than you give
li I m." said her duenna to her. "How
long will you keep lilui In suspense'.'
You ought to remember 'what hell It Is
In waiting to abide.' "
"A heir.'" said Veronica, with Ihe
color in her face. "You mean a para
dise." "A fold's paradise, 1 fear," replied
the elder woman. "Anil what does
that oilier man do here'.' lie fold me
he was due at some university in tier
many." "How can I tell you why either of
them stays'.'" said Veronica, disingenu
ously, as her conscience told her.
"Venice allures inanv iiconle. esneelallv
111 her spring season." I
"So does a woman In her spring."
said the elder lady, dryly, with an Im
patient gesture.
"You are angry with me."
"N'd, my dear. It Is as useless' to be
angry wlfh you as to be angry with a
young cat because in its gambols It
breaks a vase of which It knows noth
ing of the preclousness."
Veronica Laranlgra did not resent or
reply. She knew the vase was pre
cious. She did not mean to break it; but
she wanted to be free awhile loiige,.
.Mutual love was sweet, but It was not
freedom. And what she felt ashamed
of was a certain reluctance which she
felt to allow Daiiier to see or know that
she loved n man of so little Intellectual
force as Andreis, a man who had noth
ing but his physical beauty nnd his gay,
glad temper und kind heart.
"Do you want nothing more than
these?" the gaZ" of Darner seemed in
her Imagination to say to her.
Andreis was delightful to her; his
beauty, his gayety, ami his homage
Were all sympathetic to her. She knew
thait he loved her, but she prevented
him telling her so; she liked her lately
acquired liberty; she did not want a
declaration which would force her to
decide in one way ir another what to
do with her future. And she was af
fected without being aware of It by the
scarcely disguised contempt which his
companion hail for lilm. It was seldom
outspoken, but it was visible in every
Word of Darner, In every glance.
"He is beautiful, yes," he said once to
her. "So Is an animal."
"Do you like animals?"
"I do not like or dislike them. The
geologist docs not like or dislike the
stones he breaks up, the metallurgist
does not like or dislike the ore he fuses."
"You are what they call a physiol
ogist?" she said one-, suddenly.
"I am," replied 1 amer.
She looked at him under her long
silky lashes as a child looks at what it
fears lit the dusk of a fading day. lb
attracted her and repelled her, as when
she had herself been a child she had
been at once charmed and frightened
by the great ghostly figures on the
tapestries, and the white nnd gray
busts of gods and sages on the grand
winged staircase of lipr father's house
In the Trentino. She would have liked
to ask him many things, which of mys
tery and of horror, but she was afraid.
After all, how much better were the
sea, th? sunshine, the dog rose, the bar
carolle, the laughter, the lute!
To He Continued.
GOSSIP FOR WIIKLLMLX.
Oormany has captured the "world's"
championship races this your. The meet
ing will ho held In Cologne.
Sun Francisco Is to have a Chinese
cycling race meet, but the prizes will not
be silver mounted washboards.
Du Munrler'n "Trilby" has nt last
worked Itself Into the cycling world. The
latest wheel out is named after the great
novel.
The bicycle track ill St. Louis proved to
be a greut failure, as It has been on most
grounds, and will probably be done aw ay
with this year.
Zimmerman and Wheeler deny ithat
they Intend unking for permission to en
ter class It. Having turned professionals,
they am content with their lot.
Ifliss may possibly be seen on the stage
as a performer im the bicycle nfler the
manner of the horse nice In Ihu "County
Fair" and oilier like shows.
In Austria the manufacture of cycles Is
making enoinoiis progress, t Hie Vienna
muniiliicttirer, who produced In lfoiH only
Tim machines, turned out In IK'.M nearly lu,
WJO. ' '
Arrangements lire being niiiite by the
governing body of French cyclists to ur
rungo a grand prlx viloclpedliue, the
prize to be worth $1.01. The event Is to
be run In the fall.
V. J. Ridley, the Philadelphia profes
sional, who left the uniiiteiir ranks to ride
In the cash prize league, has tiled an ap
plication for reinstatement with the
League of American Wheelmen racing
board.
According to the report of Albert L.
Mott, of the committee on trunuportiitUm,
the railroads of tills country curiii'il 4:ii,
li"0 wheels last year. At l!u cents a wheel
this guve a revenue of tl'W.WHi.
The American wheelmen will upjily for
dales In the national circuit as soon as the
new racing honrd chiilrinnn Is appointed,
for their annual good roads toui iianien.,
which, last year, was one of the must suc
cessful racing hum tliujs.
The Mexican party of class lis will re
turn to northern i limes much sooner th in
lit first expected. The lilwh altitude of
Mexico Is working huvou with the riders,
and the opinion of K runic Lyman, tho
trainer, Is that the men will do much bet
ter to come home as suon as onllile.
OUT OF Till: OROINAKV.
It takes a snail exactly fourteen days
and five hours to travel a mile.
At i Japiiueso banipiet It Is a compli
ment to auk to exchange cups with a
friend.
The Swiss government mndii a profit of
about II.ikh), mni last year on Its monopoly
In spirits.
There are HKV bureaus or branch post
olllcea In l'arls, nil of which, with one e
ceptton, a ry eiiulppcd with pnuumutlc
tubes.
Actual, unthinkable, and iinfeolahle cold
Is made by physicist und chemist, not by
nature. In the laboratory ill degrees be
low Zero have been reached.
A surgeon on an Atlantic steamship line
says that In Ills wldu experience lie, has
found womun on the whole cooler' und
mure Relf-posaussed than mutt In cuaot) of
disaster at tea. . ,
flr(hife(Uire of
the Olden Days
It Is Ajjain Comimj Into Style in the
Fashionable West.
ADOBE BUILDING IX PAYOR
llricks Made of Mud and Straw by Seerct
Process of .Mexlcuus Ilccomlug Popu
lar In the Wcst-AJvuntugcs
of the Material.
Colorado Springs, Col., March 24. The
ndobc house is becoming fashionable In
Colorado. This is an architectural fad
uf unusual suggestiveness and Interest.
Mysterious. Indeed, are the tricks of
fashion. Who could have foreseen that
even here lu Colorado, where the rare
fled air stimulates the Imagination to
strange tricks and fancies, the Immem
orial mud house, bequeathed to us
through the 1'ueblos and Mexicans by
the piL-lilstiii k races of the canons,
would be taken up to afford an outlet
for the esthetic craving for novelty und
Individuality that besets every Amer
ican bouse builder? Yet so it Is, and
wiio knows but that If the abode rage
spreads It may ultimately rest with
Colorado to claim the honor of having
originated a true national school of
architecture?
Kverybody who has ever seen a pic
lure of a cliff dwellers' town or of a
l'uebl.i village knows what ail adobe
house Is. The adobe brick Is made of a
peculiar sticky mud and Is ulways sun
ill led. The bricks vary In size, und are
generally about 4 Inches deep, 8 Inches
wide and Hi Inches In length, while the
outer walls of the adobe building proper
vary from two to four feet in thick
ness, line old mission In New Mexico
boasts an outer wall six feet lu thick
ness. Curiously enough, writes a corre
spondent of the Chicago Herald, the
exact receipt for mixing this udobe
mud Is held as a secret by the Mexi
cans and half-bleeds.' Not even have
they disclosed tho necessary amount of
hay or straw to make up a perfect
adobe brick. Mayhap the Egyptian
told ft to the AztdC and this wonderful
race to the ancestors of the present.
The building of an adobe hous? must
necessarily be conllned to the months
between May und August, ut least in
Colorado, Arizona and New Mexico, for
frost is death to the unbaked brick.
The adobe Is prepared III the old-fashioned
way that of treading und when
the mud Is worked to a proper consist
ency by the nervous feet of the Mexi
can It is placed In molds of the re
quired size. The mortar is also of mud,
but dries quickly, and Is as solid as
modern cement.
.Missions Built of Adobe.
All of the old California missions are
built of adobe, and also the famous
one of San Miguel, In .Sante Fe, which
Is generally supposed to be the oldest
building In the United States. All
through New Mexico these adobe build
ings are the only habitations known.
Just why the craze should have been
caught and matured In that individual
ized settlement, sarcastically but apty
termed by Governor Davis Walte "Lit
tle London," but known to the outside,
unprejudiced world as Colorado
Springs, Is a mystery. Hut here the
cru.e did come, and Is now In full sway
to the tune of a score of "mud
houses," planned and under construc
tion. Fashion may be smiling In her
sleeve, but her right bower, "style,"
bus issued a proclamation.
Advantages of Adobe.
The greatest argument used In favor
of adobe bouses is that in summer noth
ing Is cooler and in winter nothing Is
warmer. It Is rather a clinching argu
ment, and undoubtedly true.
In Santa Fe almost all of the dwell
ings ure made of adobe, except the
quarters where the United States
troops are stationed. The old Span
ish governor's palace, where Oeneral
Lew Wallace wrote "Ben Hur," and In
which he lived while territorial gover
nor, Is a single story adobe of the most
pronounced type. All the rear rooms
open out Into a court, in which grow
vines and trees, and around the outer
border of this court is a wide pronien
ade. Another old adobe lu Santa Fe Is
Juke Gold's shop, which corners on tho
remarkable Hurro alley. This place is
almost us old as the governor's palace.
Hut this Is degression. Yet It Illus
trates the remarkable age of these
buildings built of "bricks with straw."
I'erhaps some enterprising easterner
may anticipate the craze and llnd In
Luncnster county or In that pictur
esque section of Philadelphia long ago
known as "The Neck" an adaptable
clay. Then a syndicate could easily be
formed, which would pay a liberal sum
for the secret to successfully mix It,
and then the east would have, after
these long years, Spanish missions and
nilobe bouses both "up to" und yet far
out of date.
1'cminlnu Politics.
Detroit Tribune.
"Have you been able to catch the speak
er's eye?" asked the first lady legislator.
"Have I?" rejoined the second legislator.
"Well, rather. 1 wore my navy blue ben
galine with the heliotrope sleeves and he
Speaker couldn't keep his eyes off me."
I 'pon the call of the House 'they separ
ated. ABSOLUTELY PURE
THE OLD RELIABLE
SWEET CAPORAL
CIGARETTE
Hit stood th Toct ol II mo
MORE SOLD THAN ALL OTHER
QRAND9 COMBINED
(nrri posit ITi-ly, iiuli'ld. (nut lucrel chwtiB.)
It iiutunU'l or liiutiey ri'tuiiili0. Avolil ilRlinerout
renieilUw. l'rli SUrnirliiitlu. Mix lluitlr
(will nirii KcviTu.,i fiiMO Rent irinutii. nwun fiuta
iitiscrvui Imi. with only nUviullluilly nuulo nyrlUKO,
tnuny uililrcu lor I3.IK). t ,
.. -n . flu T rvg
Mild k -CxtriA Fink
Hit amhican i r cm cwwr Htcuutt y
DIPHTHERIA
'
Too many homes bear this fcar-lnsplr-Ing
placard, denoting the prevalence of
that most Insidious and dreaded of all
diseases Diphtheria.
It Is to-day a recognized fact among the
best practitioners that nine out of ten
cases formerly considered hopeless may
be brought to a lmppy termination by
the use of that great original raw food
product,
liovlnlne.
This great blood-generating, llfe-maln-tainlng,
strength-developing, and flesh
producing product of lean, raw meat,
contains the greatest amount of life
preserving qualities In the least pos
sible bulk of any preparation known.
lu cases of Diphtheria, liovlnine bus
special advantages. In this disease, us
in ot inn's, the rapidity with which it is
assimilated gives to It a preference over
all otfier foods, passing, as it docs, Into
Mm system immediately, without causing
the digestive organs to perform any labor.
And cwnuldcriug the fact that the lesion
in the throat prevent the swallowing of
solid food, it becomes an absolute neces
sity, lu the worst cases, where even
liquids cannot be taken by the mouth,
Bovlnine
Nnves Life
by being used as an injection. Above nil,
Hovliilne Is in itself a germicide, and in
all such diseases us Diphtheria, caused by
microbes, it not only performs its greatest
mission of maintaining life, but antidotes
the existing bacilli.
lSoviiiini' hasdonc wonders in thousands
of cases of Diphtheria. When your doctor
uses It you muy (tease to worrv, and be
assnred of u speedy recovery. To neglect
Its use may uieun years of remorse in the
feeling that some loved one might still be
with you if everything possible had been
done. Bovlnino is sold by all Druggist
RAD WAY'S READY RELIEF Is safe,
reliable and efloctuul because of the stim
ulating action which It exerts over the
nerves and vital powers of the body, add
ing tone to the one and Inciting to re
newed and Inereused vigor the slumbering
vitality of the physical structure, and
tluouph this healthful stimulation and
Increased action the cause of PAIN Is
driven away nnd a natural condition re
stored. It Is thus thut the READY RE
LIEF Is so admirably adapted for the
CURE OF PAIN and without the risk of
injury which is sure to result from the
use of many of tho so-culled pain reme
dies of the day.
It Is Highly Important That Every
Family Keep a Supply of
ADWAY'S
READY RELIEF.
Always In the house. Its use will prove
benoliciHl on all occasions of pain or sick
ness. There isnothing In the world ttmt
will stop pain or arrest the progress of
disease as quick as the READY RE
LIEF. CURES AND PREVENTS
Cold:, Coughs, Soro Throat, Influenza
Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Head
ache, Toothache, Asthma, Dif
ficult Breathing.
CURES THE WORST PAINS in from
one to twenty minutes. NOT ONE HOUR
after reeding this uuvertigement need
any one SUFFER WITH PAIN.
ACHES AND PA1XS.
Forheadache (whether sick or nervous),
toothache, neuralgia, rheumatism, lum
bago, pains and wt-.akness In the hack,
spine or kidneys, pains around the liver,
pleurisy, swelling of the joints and pulns
of all kinds, the application of Kadway's
Ready Relief will afford Immediate ease,
and Its continued use for a few days ef
fect a permanent cure.
Internally A half to a teaspoonful In
half a tumbler ot water will, In a few
minutes, cure Clamps, Spasms, Sour
Stomach, Nausea, Vomiting, Heartburn,
Nervousness, Sleeplessness, Sick Head
ache, Flatulency and all Internal pains.
There Is not a remedial agent In the
world that will cure Fever and Ague and
all other Malarious, Illlious and other
fevers, aided by RAD WAY'S PILLS, so
quickly us RADWAY'S READY RE
LIEF. Price .0 cents per bottle. Bold by all
druggists.
PELLS,
Always Reliable. Purely Vegetable
Perfectly tasteless, elogantly eoatiMl,
purse, regulate, purify, oleanse and
strengthen. RADWAY'S PILLS for the
cure qf all disorders of the 8tomclj,
Bowels, Kldnsys, Bladdsr, Nsrvons Dlo
asns, Dlttlness, Vsrtlgo, Cosilvenaaa,
Ptles.
SICK HEADACHE,
FEMALE COMPLAINTS.
BILIOUSNESS
INDIGESTION,
DYSPEPSIA, CONSTIPATION
AND ALL DISORDERS
OF THE LIVER.
Observe the following symptoms result
ing from diseases of th dliraetirv orronj:
Constipation, Inward piles, fullnau of
blood la tho head, aoldlty of tha s tenia ca,
nausea, heartburn, disgust of food, full
bms of wslrht ot th stomach, sour eruc
tations, sinking or fluttorlns of tbo heart,
choktnv or suffocating ssntatiens when
In a lying posturs, dimness of vtioa, doti
or wsbe tutors the sight, fever and dull
fain In the head, deflolency of persplra
Ion, yellowness of the skin aad eyas, pain
In tho side, chest, limbs, and sudden flushes
Of heat, burning In tho flesli.
A lew doses of RAOWAY'B MIXS will
free the system of all th above-aaaied
disorders.
Prlo 25o. per box. Sold by Druggists
or sunt by mall.
Bend to DR. R ADWAY & CO., Look
Box 865, New York, for Rook of Advice.
HT. PLEASANT
COAL
AT RETAIL
Coal of tho best quality for domestic
one, and of all slrew, delivered In any
part of the city at lowest price.
Orders left at my Oftlce
NO. 118 WYOMING AVENUE,
floftr room, llrst floor, Third Nation)
Hank, or sent by mull or telephouo to tho
nine, will receive prompt attention.
Special contracts will ho made for tht
tela and delivery of liuckwheat Coul.
WM. T. SMITH.
LOST MANHOOD
ami all attrn!intf nutiifnt:,
bolli of youn't anil uiiiiiilt-a.-ivl
tn.-n and ltomcn. 1 he
awful, itoctjof Youthful
Rmtdtaof Irratimmt. f ttliOU3. rrmluclnti wenk-
rtmr, NerToin Debility, Ktirhtlr Knltulon'i,roniiumTtioii,
iinatutr, fcUliauntina' dntlusatiillooiMfimwiT of thi lou
eiaUvolliyaiiflui.ilttlit'roearjrptitJy, Duhirnsar.d inai
rlAiraliqiitrklyduretlbj' ir. I'erirtr-urBfpanliih Ntrva
frnina. int-j uutoniyrurv DT Nnning mi'iam-ai Ol a"
faw, but araagrvat Nl ItVK lO.M
Jll ll.ltr.ll. DrlUKlnir l-anK mo nlnk rlft-v to pain
rSrvka ami rolorlue tbo I'lKP, air Vol I'll to Uio
oaltant. Ut mall, ei.llu uor box ore for S5 itllh irlt.
p'H f ueranto to .-ut or rel'nf.4 t miity. Bonk
Iron. Siiu:Uji iervv il rain Co., lo liQlt'J, ti eiv Vefsa
For sale by JOHN II, PHULl'S, Dru
e)lst W'i'Omliw ava. uid uce street.
ADWAY
FIRST TREATMENT FREE
FOR ALL
$100 Given for any Case of In
I'onipllcatcd Catarrh We
Cannot Cure,
DR.W.H. HACKER
Has iiHSueistwl with lunis?lf a C VT tUnilAL
SPiiCIAUST from WASHl.NOTON, D. U
who btrii-tlr fud iws out tli method of the
.iileliriili.il "CMiLisH SPECIALIST," SIR
MOKI1KLL M i. K F.N ZIP, in the treatment of
( ATAlilUI, HI:iiNCIIlTlS. ASTHMA and all
T11KOAT and Lt'XU trouble- aNj ALL D1S
FELTS of HEAK1NO, ai'liiu? troia catarrh.
327 SPRUCE STREET,
Opposito Now IlotulJi-imyii, Scrautun, Pa.
OFFICE IlorKS-8 TO I.
LAGER
BEER
BREWERY.
Manufacturers of the CelebratoS
PILSENER
LAGER SEER
CAPACITY :
ioo.ooo Barrels per Annum
Mooslc Ponder Go
Rooms 1 nd 2 Commowealtb Bld'g,
SCRANTON, PA.
MINING and BLASTING
POWDER
MADE AT MOOSIC AND RUSH
DALE WORKS.
LafTlIn & Rand Powder Co. 'a
Orange Gun Powder
Electric Batteries, Ftjsp for explod
ing blasts, Safety Fuse and
Rcpacno Chemical Co.'s High Explosl . ei
RE VIVO
RESTORES VITALITY
Made a
S Well Mar
mWJ oi me,
THE QREAT 30th t)ay.
prcViu-o thn olim o remit In .lOrisyt. Ita.-ti
pow.-rfuJIy aud quickly- Cttrra when all olhrrc fa'.l
Young mouwill regain thtur Irot manhood. anil cl.
mnn Mill recover thtfr youthful visor by uaiiit
ItliVI VO. tt qulclily and uinly nitorrs Nervous
Dfm, boot Vitality, lnipolvmy. Nislitly DuikhIokj
.out Power, Falling- Mfinory, WaHtllis PlKnasea. and
all eff.rta of elf-oSnno or excotand lndiu.-r:tlon
w bioh unSts one for a'lvly. biiHloi-M or marriage. II
not only curra by Ktartitif at tho oat of diaraae. but
llajr-i'it ni-ri tonic and blond Imlldor, brtuf
It-g bai:k tlio pink ploty to pale chert a-d re
taring tlio fire of youth. It ward off Intanu
tnd Consumption. Insist on bavin; RKV1VO. n
other. It can be carried 11 Tist rocket, by mii'
VI.OO per packsici, or six for 95. 00, with a potc
tle xrrltteu auarsntao to enro or re f urn
t lie money. Circular froe. Addreaa
'OVAL MEDICINE CO.. 63 River SI.. CHICAGO. ILI
ror sal by Mntttiewa Itros., Drrsl'
, hcraiitois'. l'a.
Wni. Linn Allen
8c Co.
STOCK BROKERS,
Buy and sell Stocks, Bonds nnd Grain
on New York Excitant and Clitcaco
Hoard of Trade, cither for cuih or oa
maii,in.
412 Spruce Street.
LOCAL STOCKS A SPKC1ALTV.
G. diiB. DIUMIGK, Manager.
TICLKl'HONK 6.C
ROOF TINNING AM SOLDERING
All done nwny with by the use of HAIIT
MAN'S PATHNT PAINT, which consists
of liiKredlonls well-known to all. It can be
applied to tin, Kiilvu'iltcd tin, sheet Iron
roofs, also to fcrlck dwclii'ss, which will
prevent absolutely any criiinblinK. crack
ing or brenkliiK of the brlrk. It will out
last tlnnliui of any kind by many yearn,
and It's cost does not fcxeoed one-II ft h that
of tho cost of tin nlnt,-. Is sold by the job
or pound. Contracts taki'ii by
ANTONIO UAUTMAJSN. Sl Ulrch BU
Hays yon HoroThroat, ltmploa, Oonnpr-Colored
Spots, Aoht-s, Old Hotvs. t'leon lu Moiiih, Ilslr
KalllnijT Write I'nok Ut-mrriy ' UOl Ma
aonloTempt.rh1rniri.lll..lornro(ifBof oures.
Capital r.UO.OOO. I'ntlom -loured nine veare I
airoliHliir lontii ind well. 1 OO-pu gt book fTrr
1
is
rra lin.
wmimri
1st Day.
RAILROAD TIME-TABLES
Central Railroad of New Jersey.
(beliigh and Susquehanna Dlvisloui
Anthracite coul used exclusively, Insur
ing cleanliness and comfort.
TiAlhJ TABL,li IN EFFECT MARCH 25.
1895. .
Trains leave Scranton for Plttston.
Wllkes-Barre, etc., at 8.20, (.16, 11.80 a.m.,
12.40, 2.1X1, 3.05, 6.00. I.ii p, in. Sundays, D.ut
a. m., 1.0U, H.15, 7.10 p. m.
For Atlantic City, S.20 a.m.
For New York, Newark and Elizabeth.
8.20 (express) a.m., 1146 (express With Buf
fet parlor car), 3.05 (express) p.m. Sun
day, 2.16 p.m.
For Muuch Chunk, Allentown, Bethle
hem, Kanton and Philadelphia, 8.20 a.m.,
12.45. 3.06, 6.00 (except Philadelphia) p.m.
Sunday, 2.16 p.m.
For Loiik Branch, Ocean Qrove, etc., at
8.20 a.m., 12.46 p.m.
For Reading, Lebanon and Harrlsburff,
via Allentown, 8.20 a.m., 12.46, 6.04 p.m.
tiunday, 2.16 p.m.
For I'ottsvllle, 8.20 a.m., 12.46 p.m.
Returning, leave New York, foot of Lib
erty street, North river, at 9.10 (express)
a.m., 1.10. 1.30, 4.30 (express with Buffet
parlor car) p.m. Sunday, 4.30 a.m.
Leave Philadelphia, Reading Terminal,
9.00 a.m., 2.00 and 4.30 p.m. Sunday 6.2?
a.m.
Through tickets to all points at lowest
rates may be tmd on application in ad
vuncu to the ticket agent at the station.
II. P. BALDWIN.
Gen. Pass. Agent
J. II. OLHAUSEN. Gen. Supt.
Del., Lack, and Western.
Trains leave Scranton as follows! E
press for New York and all pulnts East,
1.40, 2.60. 6.16, 8.00 and 9.66 a.m. ; 12.66 and 3.69
p.m.
Kxpress for Easton, Trenton, Philadel
phia and the south, 6.16, 8.00 und 9.66 a.m.,
12.66 and 3.60 p.m.
Washington and way stations, 3.66 p.m.
Tobylianna accommodation, U.10 p.m.
Express for BliiKhainton, Oswego, El
mlra, CornlUK, Bath, Dansville, Mount)
Morris and Buffalo, 12.10, 2.36 a.m. and 1.2
p.m., maklnK close connections at Huf
fulo to all points la the West , Northwest
and Southwest.
Bath accommodation, 9 a.m. '
BliiKhiimton and way stations, 12.37 p.m.
Nicholson acconimoilutlon, ut 6.16 p.m.
Rlncharntou and Elinira Express, not
p.m.
Express for Cortland, Syracuse, Oswego
tltlca and Richfield Springs, 2.36 a.m. and
1.21 p.m.
ltliaiu, 2.35 und Ruth 9 a.m. and 1.24 p.m.
For Northumberland, Plttston, Wilkes
linrre, Plymouth, BloornsburK and Lau.
villc, maklnK close connections at North
umberland for Wllliamspurt, Harrlsburtf,
Baltimore, Washington and the South.
Northumberland and intermediate sta
tlons, C.'Xi. 9.66 a.m. and 1.30 and 6.07 p.m.
Nantlcoke and Intermediate stations,
8.08 and 11.20 a.m. Plymouth and Inter
mediate stations, 3.60 and 8.62 p.m.
Pullman parlor and sleeping coaches oa
all express trains
For detailed information, pocket time
tables, etc., Biddy to M. L. Smith, c!t7
ticket office. 324 Lackawanna avenue, or
depot ticket olllce.
DELAWARE AND
HUDSON RAIU
ROAD.
Commem-lnix Monday,
day, July 30, all trams
wlilurrive. it new Luck-
awanria avenue station
as fallows:
Trains will leave Scran
ton station for Carbondale and in
termediate points at 2.2J, 6.46, 7 J, 8 26 and
10.10 a-m., VIM, 2.30. 3.66, 6.16, 6.15, 9.1t
an.l 11 .20 t) in.
For Farvlow, Waymart and Honesdala
at 7.00, S. and 10.10 a.m.,12.00, 2 20 and 6.11
' p.m.
For Albany, Saratoga, the Adirondack
and Montreal at (.46 om. and 2.30 p.m.
For Wllkes-Earro and Intermediate)
I ,ints at 7.45, 8.46, 9.33 and 10.45 a m., 12 06a
l.M, 2.38, 4.00, 6.10, ii.06, 9.16 and 11.38 p.m.
Trains will arrive at Scranton station
from Carbondalu and Intermediate polntj
; at 7.40, 8.40, 9.61 and 10.40 a. in., 12.00, l.i;,2,JI
8.40. 4.M, 6.66. 7.46. 9.11 and 11.33 p.m.
! From Honesdaie, Waymart and Far
view at 9.S4 a.m., 12.30, 1.17, 3.40, 6.56 an 4
i 7 46 p.m.
I From Montreal, Baratosa, Albany, ettx
at 4.54 and 11.33 p.m.
From Wllkes-Barre and Intermedia'
points at M6, 8.04, 1005 and Il.CS a.m., 1.16.
! 2.14, 3.39, S.10, (.98, 7.30, 9.CC and 11.16 p.m.
Nov. 1$, 1S94.
Train leaves Scranton for Philadelphia
and New York via D. H. R. R. at 7.45
a.m., 12.U5, 2.38 and 11.38 p.m., via D., L. At
W. R. R., 6.00, 8 0S, 11.2uam., and 1.30 p.m.
Lcavu Scranton for Plttston and Wllkes
Barre, via P., L. & W. R. R., 6.00. 8.08, ll.'.'O'
a.m.. 3.60. 6 07. 8.6u p.m.
Leave Scranton for White Haven. Ha
zl. -ton. Pottsvllle and all points on ths
Beaver Meadow and Pottsvllle branch?-.,
via K. & W. V. R. R.. 40 a m., via !. te H.
It. R. at 7.46 a.m., 12.06, 2 K, 4 00 p.m., via
l., L. & W. R. R., $.00, i.08, 11.20 a.m.. l.SJ,
3.60 p.m.
Leave Scranton for Bethlehem. Kaston,
Reading:, Harrlshur. and all Intermedia'.
potnts via V. 4- H. R. R., 7.45 a.m., 12.01,
2.38, 4. 110, 11.31 p.m., via D., L. & W. R. R..
6.00, 8.0S, 11.20 a.m.. 1.30 p.m.
Leave Scranton for Tunktiannock, To
wanda, Klmlra. Ithaca. Geneva and all
Intermediate notnts via D. ec H. R. R . S ti
a.m., 12 u6 and 11.36 p.m., via D., L. & W.
R. R., 8.0.1. 9.56 a m., 1.30 p.m.
Leave Scranton for Kohester, Buffalo.
Xlnftara Falls. Petroit, Chicago and sii
points west via U. H. R. R., 8.43 a.m.,
12.06, 9.15, 11.38 p.m.. via D.. L. at W. R. R.i
and Plttston Junction, 8.U8. 9 65 a.m., I.jJ,
6.50 p.m., via E. W. V, R. H., 3.41 p.m.
For Klmlra and the west via Salamanca,
via 1). & H. R. K.. 8.45 a.m., 12.U5. i.05 p.m.,
via V.. L. W. R. R., 8.08, 9.55 a.m., 1.3U,
and 6.07 p.m.
Pullman parlor and slaeplng or L. V.
chair cars on all trains between L. & B.
Junction or Wllkes-Burre and New Y'ors,
Philadelphia, Buffalo, and Suspension
Bridge.
ROLLIN H. WILBUR. Gen. Supt.
rilAS.S.l.KE. Gen. Pass. Ast., Phlla., Pa.
A. W. NONNKMACMKR. Asst. Oea.
Puss. Agt,, South Belhluhem. Pa.
Erie und Wyoming Valley.
Trains lenve Scranton for New York
and Intermediate points on the Erie rail
road at 6.86 a.m. and 321 p.m. Also for
Honesdaie, Hawlcy and local points ut
6.35. 9.45 a.m., and 3.24 p.m.
All the above ar through trains to and
from Honesdaie.
Trains lonv for Wllkcs-Uarra at 4.40 a.,
m. and 3.41 p.m.
SCRANTON DIVISION.
In lvflact sept. ltb, 1804.
North Biund.
South Bound.
206 ;i03i:
301
io4 Sos-iod
5
s
But loos
(Trains Daily.
Kxcept Ijiiiidayll
3Q '-
r mi
Arrivtt Lcavol
A M
740
tltt
810
p a
Tv:
N Y Prankliu SI
West 4.'ud Si
W'eehawken
? 10
7iW
r h
" S.M
Mill
TM
T6I
f 4.-.
r al
Arrive Iavcl
A II
1 15
I W
19, 111
19 46
Hancock Juao.i
1)011
8 08
e ift
6 15
8 3.'
6 40
645
855
9 051
Hancock
HtarliKht
Preston Park
Omu
Forniolls
llrilulollt
rioiuunt Hit
(Tniondale
Korset City
Onrbondale
White Uridge
Mnylleld
Jernivn
Archibald
Wlnl. m
Peckville '
Olvphant
liickaon
Throop
Provldenos
Park Place
Scranton
911
9 A
9 31
9 41
11140
111 ia
78K
Ttt
l! 50
5
80b
309
tii is
7
111 tvi
Tin
708
fllMI
(6 58
11411
II til
A M
710
8 19!
P St
0 61
915
7U4
8 31
5.11
5 37
4S
f 411
tlliU)
91l!
7
f3 34
moo
f7f.'
fS 41 (5 49
I41
11
OlW
7 81
8 45
6 43
e.v
11 IS
fl113
8 5;
7 40
6 51
6 51
654
8 59
604
607
610
8 541
743
7 43
7W
754
781
9 54
-.
II 11
8 50
8 50
II 07
11 Oft
li m
II oo
8 44
841
4 04
em
407
410
4 14
f4!7
6 ill
8 m
8X'I
838
e 14
8 00
8 INI
8 05
614
0 14
N037
e 10
10 55
8 80
48 69)
P M
a
A S
Tamivo
ArriA Ml
P M
IP
AT'
All trains run dally exet Sunday. -
f. Ignines that traius stop on signal for pas
sengers, f
Secure rates rla Ontario & Western beforj
pnrchaslnu tickets and says money. Day sac
tilfkl Kxpraee to the West,
J. V. Anderson, 0n. Pass. Agt.
f . ni'oroft, l)ly. Pans. Agt, ocraatou. Ps. . .
. ' .
I