THE SCKANTON TRIBUKE-WEDNESDAY MORKING. APRIL 3, 1895. 6e Scrmtfon CnBune Dllj ud Weekly. Mo Sunday EdIUoa. , FuUlabed at Scnuiton, Fa., by The Tribune Pub llkbiiiK Company. ' Sew Tork Oaoe: Tribune Building, Freak B. liruy, ftUaiger,- t. P. KINGSBURY, Pan. nd Oix't Ma. C. H. HIPPLE, o' Tmm, LIVV . RICHARD, Corn. W. W. DAVIS, ButiNiu Mxiiin. W. W. VOUNQ, Amt, M . NTIRID At THI M3TOW101 AT 8CRANT0H. PA.. AB eiOOUB-OLASS MAIL MATTiR. Printers' Ink," the recoxolied Journul fbr odyer linen, rat Tim mcbanton Thibunk n tlie hit mlertlln(t medlnni In Nortliuuiera l'euaiylv ul. "l'rlnterrf luk" kuows. Thk Wkki.y Triiiunk, Issued Kvery HaUinlsy, Cantatas Twelve Handsome rums, with un Abun dance of News, Kii tlon, end Well-Edited Miscel lany. Pur Tluwe Who Cannot Take Tim Iuily TRint'Nlc, Uio Weekly I. Kecunmientleil un the Bent Bargain Ooui. Only f 1 a Veer, lu Advance. Th TamuH la for Sale Dully at the D., L. aud W. bUtiluu ul Uobokvn. SCRAKTON, APKTL 3, 1895. . a - - . ' THE SCRANTON Ol TODAY. Com and Inspect our city. Elevation above the tide, 710 feet. Extremely healthy. Estimated populutlon, 1895, 103,000. Registered voters. 20,699. Value of school property, $900,000. Number of school children, 12.000. Average amount of bank deposits, (10, (00.000. It's the metropolis of northeastern Penn sylvania. Con produce electrlo power cheaper than Niagara. No better point In the United States at which to establish new industries. Bee how we grow: , Population In 1860 9,223 Population In 1870... 35,000 ! Population n 3880 45.S50 Population in 1890 ; 75.215 ' Population In 1894 (estimated) 103,000 . And the end la not yet. If tha present legislature can con clude Its business properly In time to adjuurn by the middle of May, as some predict It can, that date will be entlrely eatlsfactory. The maiin point bo far ns the public is concerned Is that It Bhall Jo carefully those things which it was elected to do, among which we. desire especially to mention ballot and road reform. Scranton' Best Advertiser. The -writings of the late A. W. Cook Illustrate the difference between fiction which has malice behind it and fiction used as a harmless vehicle of expressing truths. The "bear stories" which Mr. Coolc located in Scranton and its Im mediate vicinity had no foundation in truth, as news, yet they were grandly true In their teaching of natural his tory. 'Mr. Cook was a careful student of birds, wild animals and fishes. He knew their haunts and their habits. His keen Interest inoutdoor life brought him Into happy Bympathy with nature, and gave to his most daring flights of fancy a certain semblance of sincerity which proved him the genuine artist as well as the observant naturalist. Mr. Cook probably did more to adver tise Scranton than any other man in It. It may be that he was guilty of Intensi fying the onoe-prevalcnt Impression that Scranton was a mining village of the wild and riotous type made familiar by Bret Harte In his pictures of fron tier gold-digging camps of the vintage of '49. It may be that his good-natured stories of mythical adventures Imposed upon some credulous people the notion that Lackawanna county was Inhabited chiefly by rattlesnakes, grizzly bears, weevils, coyotes and wlldcats. But If he had not done that, these persons would nevef have heard of Scranton; and 'twere better to be misunderstood' .than not to be thought of, at all. . At any rate, the Scranton which Mr. Cook pictured was decidedly more In viting than la the Scranton held up to reprobation by most of the space-raters of the sensational metropolitan press. He gave us bear dances tout not horri ble race wars. He took liberties with eagles, hawks and "painters," but scrupulously refrained from working the festive "cave-in" or manipulating the stlletto-aboupding vendetta. His writings were full of feathers and claws, but never of "pollnky," poniards or the murderous paraphernalia of the Mafia or the Molly M agulres. Scranton can rise superior to rattlesnakes and roving raccoons. Would that it could With equal ease rid Itself of the. ob noxious influences of the bloodthirsty sensationalist who murders men, wo men and children, demolishes 'homes and starts great conflagrations all for the small sum of $5 per column - A contemporary avers that" toft sec onds after theWUkes-Barre court house clock struck eleven, the other trvenlnt?, the Scranton court house' clock struck eleven also. This is a serious charge, which fmould be thoroughly Investi gated. Scranton Is not ten seconds be hind "Wllkes-Barre In anything. Concerning Christian Science. The action of a Palmyra, N. J., coro ner's Jury In declaring "criminally re sponsible" for 5-year-old Madeline Huffs death her parents, who, although they 'knew their daughter had a severe at tack of measles, refused' to Bummon medical aid, preferring to await ; a ''faith cUre," reapers a subject Upcm which there will probably never be en tire harmony of opinion.. .The COroner'S jury in this case is not content with censuring the indifferent or else de luded parents, but also reprimands per tain prominent "Christian Scientists" of Palmyra, through' whose teachings it Is thought the neglect to? summon medical aid originated. The effect of this action will be, not to add to the sentiment against so-called Christian science so much as to muke martyrs of the "reformers" thus censured, and to this extent to stimulate the "faith cure" propaganda. "We confess that we see no legal way out of these recurring Uragedles of superstition, delusion or whatever elso the tenet In question may be called. It does not look plausible that sane par ents would wish to sacrlllce their clill dren; yet parents to all appearances sane do not Infrequently achieve this horrible result, not throuKh intention but through misplaced confidence. A censorship of the teachings of prophets of new religious beliefs is impossible of establishment by luw and apparent ly ineffective when established by the consensus of intelligent opinion. The application, uiulcr forms of law as In the Palmyra case, of the principle that while the state moy not exerbise'a cen sorship over the words or creeds of Its citizens, it may properly hold them nc. countable for results, satisfies Juntlee only when responsibility for such re sults as the death of unattended nick persons can be clearly established. Aiiri thus the problem gains In complexity the longer It is studied. Perhaps the best, certainly the eas iest, solution would be to let these vari ous systems of religious, or irreligious. Instruction continue without opposi tion. If there be truth in them, It will eventually work Its way to the surface, while the errors will quite as surely be precipitated to the bottom. Before this reaction ahull be complete, doubt less a number of lives will have been sacrificed; but not a greater number than would be sacrificed were persecution and martyrdom to figure lu the process. All progress is won at tho cost of bloodshed. Kvery flower gathers'its brilliant hues to some, de gree from the coloration of human blood, shed in the battles for a per fected civilization. This Is a luw of na ture not to be lightly evaded or nega tived; Therefore, we may as well view the present ephemeral subject phllo. sophlcally, and save our energies for more important crises. The Philadelphia Record does not like Senator Lodge's foreign policy. The Record, on some subjects, has ex ceedingly peculiar tastes.' Democracy and Education. In the April number of The Citizen, organ of the American Society for tho Extension of University Teaching, Rev. TV. Hudson Shaw, who has Just com pleted in our city an admirable series of lectures upon Venetian history, has an article headed "Democracy and Edu cation" which contains much whole some thinking. After observing that the nineteenth century, by reason of the fast and furious pace at which it has latterly moved. Is suffering from nervous prostration, he illustrates his meaning In this wise: In literature, we luckloss moderns have passed from the neurotic horrors of Tolstoi and Zola to the physiological mon strosities of Ibsen's "Ghost" and the hys terical morbidities of Sarah Grand and "Sew Women" of that Ilk. American maidens by the hundred thousand desert Joartnie Deans for the fiii-de-slecle heroine, of virtue, "Trilby." English clerics dls? course to admiring congregations of Chris, tiins concerning "Tess of the D'Urber vllles" and the "Second Mrs. Tanqueray." In religion we have arrived at Madame lilavatsky and Theosophy, the revelations of W. T. Stead's "Julia" and tho credible, miracles of the Christian Scientists. In art, wo are bidden to rejoice in the In anities of Aubrey Ileardsley and. "Tno Yellow Hook," succinctly though unpo lltely characterized by a Phlllxtlno crltlo Insufficiently up-to-date as "erotic, neur otic and Tommyrot-le." What wonder is it that wo have drawn down upon us tho righteous Indignation of Max Nordau, who in his striking book, "Degeneration," has reminded us that nations, like Indi viduals, mny suffer from overwrought nerves and carry Intellectual excitement to the verge of mental disease? This "unhealthy condition of our brain centers" has also, In Mr. Shaw's opinion, seriously affected our polities, a circumstance shown by the "perpet ual succession of academic Jeremiads" against the ability of the people to govern ' themselves, which , proceeds from "men who evolve theories In their studlCB and know little of the real life and thought of the maBS of men." The writer shows how -these prophecies of evil have been repeatedly disproved in England, and then adds: America, the .chosen home of democ racy, has had a longer experience of gov ernment by the people, and here, In spite of difficulties caused by her too hasty grant of citizenship to foreigners and thu too frequent dumping of tho scum of Eu rope upon her shores, the general avorago of human happiness is probably higher than In any considerable nation of undent or modern times. It Is true, American streets nre not over-clean, her municipal councillors are not always persons of Im maculate virtue, nor hor senators entirely disinterested In their political actions. But those evils are not Inseparable from democracy. Arlstocratlo England, a. cen tury ago, experienced them more than tho United States do now. Some day, when business will permit, the Lady Columbia will hang a contractor or two; clear both her streets and her councils; nnd remem ber Jhe bosses and the spoilsmen no more. The fact is that'the era of democracy has arrived; that It is useless y try to fight It back, even were It desirable that democracy should be fought back; and that both the policy and duty of common sense are to so educate the peo ple as to fit them for their responsibili ties as sovereign governors. Upon this subject Mr. Bhaw says: We need, however, somothlng more than the training of children and thn bestowal of the tools of knowledge, If democracy Is not to chd In unutterable disaster and ruin, we must takn In hand 'the training of the adult. Citizenship does not come by tho light of nature, nor will the workman learn it from the litera ture to whlrh at present he is chiefly ad dictedthe Sunday 'newspaper and tho sporting chronicle. - We shall . have to teach It. -We shall have to place within his reach, In every, town and village of the land, What Carlyle called the "true modern university of books." W)th what amazement Will Our descendants read that civilised nations like England and the United States, boasting of their enlight enment, cared greatly about. gas and trol leys, arid were Indifferent to the. need of public libraries! . It is something of a coincidence that upon the day that this article saw light, which was likewise the date of its au thor's final visit to Scranton, a Scran ton court was laying down the principle that the reading of the Bible in the public schools constituted a breach alike of common, statutory and funda mental law in the commonwealth of Pennsylvania. We should like to know Rev. Mr. Shaw's opinion of an educa tional system in a democracy from which the moral teachings of the Chris tian Bible had been eliminated. Tho current report which credits Gov ernor McKlnley with having recently declared that should the Republican party endorse free silver he would de cline the presidential nomination and quit the party needs corroboration. Overlooking the fact that the governor cnuld not well decline a nomination which has not been tendered, It re mains to consider what free silver means. If by . that It meant silver monometallism, Governor McKlnley, If he ever made the foregoing remark, which Is doubtful, may rest easy, for tho Republican party will, very cer tainly, never espouse so undesirable a policy ns that. Hut If tho phrase be lined to denote the free coinage of American sliver at un equitable ratio toward gold, the governor Is recom-nit-nded to get his declination speech ready, for the chances are' lie will, If of th: same mind, yet have occasion to line It. The legislator at Albany who, in order to conserve the morals of cer tain perverted flothamlte admirers of the nude In art, proposes to prescribe by legislation what people shall wear and what kind of pictures they shall look at, no doubt means well, but ho has taken hold of a task for which no living legislator Is sufficiently quail fled. We do not believe that statutory enactments nre necessary in these premises. If individual decency ' and good taste are Insufficient to cope with the problem, little can be expected In way of wise relief from so promiscuous a body as a general assembly. The Royal commission, app.dnlod two years ago to consider the question uf prohibition In Canada, has reported adversely. The news item which her aldsthls Information slgnillcantly adds: "The government derives $8,000,000 or $10,000,000 revenue from the liquor traf fic, which it is not disposed to surrender unless compelled to." The liquor traf fic did a shrewd thing when it accepted tho license system. Mr. Piatt's come-down In New York is currently described as graceful; but we see nothing particularly graceful In one man telling several million men that they may have their way. LEGISLATIVE TOPICS. Ilarrlsburg, April 2. The senate com mission appointed to Investigate tho oper ations of tho Brooks license law will re port a bill when the senate convenes week after next. It will embody the recom mendations made by the temperance peo ple. Tho most drastlo provisions abolish bottlers' licenses, and mako money ttn- collectable that Is advanced to start up saloon men by brewers, distillers and wholesalers or combination of them. Tho liquor people are preparing to muke a vigorous fight In opposition. The Rep hart bill, forbidding brewers to bottlo beer, will be virtually incorporated in tho proposed new license law. ... Completing tho Governor's Staff. According to newspaper gossip it ap pears to be definitely settled that Major Warren, of Scranton, will be judge advo cate general of tho National guard after all. There Is talk of retaining the veteran Surgeon General Reed, of Norrlstown, who is a Democrat. Colonel Thomas Pot ter, of Philadelphia, will likely be ap pointed assistant quartermaster general. He held the place tinder Governor Beaver. Opposed to Pitro Elections. The defeat of tho Lnndls antl-brlbery bill In the senate renders It doubtful If tho nntl-corrupt act proposed by the Penn sylvania Civil Service Reform associa tion will pass this session. The Landls bill, It will be remembered, provided that any person who pays money to secure votes or to withhold. them at nominating, primary or general elections, shall on con viction be fined ?!,000 and lie deprived of the right to vote for five years for the first offense and for a period of ten years for the second and subsequent offenses. To make the bill objectionable and to fur nish some excuse (or- killing It, this amend ment was put Into t In committee; "This act shall not be construed to prevent the payment of state or county taxes, by any political organization acting as agent for any such political organization of reason able compensation to watchers nppoiuted by luw representing such political or ganization." Such an amendment Is enough to kill any bribery election bill. Cuba nnd Spain. From the New York Sun. ftupposlng no international complica tions arise, the United States government cannot touch the struggle of tho Cuban In surgents. Our government has no con cern with the question, no right to meddlo with It. But every American citizen worthy of his birthright wishes that tho Cuban rebels might prevail, and throw Into the sea the authority of Spain in this hemisphere, never to be raised again over Cuba. Tho Spanish monarchy on this side of the water, governing a foreign country de siring self-government, Is an anomaly, It Is an untimely and outlandlBh outrage on the principles asserted successfully by tho colonies of the United States. The entire population of North and South America, all republicans, want to see the power of Spain withdrawn to Its own soil, and Cuba left to the destiny Its citizens can make for It. Free Cuba, of any form of government, but self-governing, is tho hope on this side of the Atlantic today; It Is tho Inevitable fuct of tomorrow. All the effortsof the gallant Cubnns to make that morrow come as soon as pos sible nre backed by tho living symputhles of tho North American Union. Sanity and Ifrlllluney. From the Lebanon Report. The suit brought by the once famous Anna Dickinson to recover damages for alleged falRe confinement on tho plea of insanity revives Interest In the question of the relation Insanity bears to brill iancy. It Is a point contested by medi cal experts, and opinion la by no means one-sided. Not a few careful students of the physiology of the, mind allege that there 18 but a step Between me two anil that a really brilliant mind Is not a normal one. It ,1s pointed out by them that a strnln of Insanity In more or less violent form almost Invarlubly crops out In the family tree. There are some consplcu ous instances of marked peculiarities In brilliant men. roe s was certainly not .a normal mind; Edwin Booth's brother, the murderer of Lincoln, was unquestionably Insane, while Edwin Booth himself pos sessed a very singular mental tempera ment, Byron was not normal, though he could not bo called Insane; Samuel John- son and Carlyle were so ecoentrlc that fow could fathom them. In fact If we would confine ourselves to eccentricities, a long list of notables in the annals of art, war, diplomacy, would have to be Included. On the other hand aome brilliant minds seemed free from defect. The nuestton is I an Interesting one which would well bear an exhaustive study. TOLD BY THE STARS. Dally Horoscope Drown by Ajocehus, The Tribuno Astrologer. Astrolabe cast: 1.18 a. m., for Wednesday, April S, 1895. 3) A child born this day will wonder why Scranton'! starving plumbers should wait until this season before entering Into com bination for mutual protection. Tho fact that vibrations of Wllkes Barre's town clock are perceptible In Scranton will go upon record as another evidence of the success of the long-eared telephone system. His hot breath swept athwart her cheek; The maiden soughed a sigh And nerveless she became, and weak, Bo strong It smelled of rye. The attention of cotton-brained reform ers Is respectfully called to the fuct that tho proprietors of tho four-wheeled lunch counters have not been arrested this weak. Ajncclnii,' Advice. When out collecting ancient bills, If you'd ovoid attending Ills, Do not Innlst upon tho "nion" Till sure the debtor has no gun. All collectors, In fact, should emulate Li Hung, and wear yellow vents that are bullet proof. Do not discuss city politics until after the 8th Inst. TP0 not be deceived. The following brands of White Lead are still made by the "Old Dutch" process of slow cor rosion. They are standard, and always Strictly Pure White Lead The recommendation of "Atlantic" "Beymer-Banman," "Jewett," "Davis-Chambers." "Fahnestocfc," "Armstrong aMcKelvy," to you by your merchant 13 an evidence of his reliability, as he can sell you cheap ready-mixed paints and bogus White Lead and make a larger profit. Many short-sighted dealers do so. For Colors. National Lead Co.'s Pure W hite Lead Tinting Colors, a one-pound can to a 35-pound keg of Liad and mix your own paints. Saves time and annoyance in matching shades, and injure the best paint Hut ii it possible to put on wood. Send us a pof.tul card and get our book on paints and color -lard, freej it will probably save you a good many dollars, NATIONAL. LEAD CO., New York. 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 selection's while our as. bortment is complete. Hill& Connell, 131 IND 133 WASHINGTON AVE. ARE THE BEST COASTERS. Consequently they must run easier than any other wheel. Call 11 ud examine them. C- M. FLOREY, 222 WYOMING AYENUE, V. HI. C. A. BUILDING. The secret Is out Not only do they say wc do wahslng for a living, but that we do it well. So keep it going. Tell everybody jou sec, but tell them not to tell. . EUREKA LAUNDRY, 332 Washington Ave. BICYCLES 1 mri-?-j.im.?rz?x' THAT WONDERFUL GUERNSEY BROTHERS, GOLDSMITH'S APRIL FOOLED. . . . Almost Incredible as it may appear there are doubtless some people hereabouts who have not yet bought goods of us. Not many, you understand only a few. Now, it's bad enough to be the victim of a practical joke on "All Fool's Day," but to continue to gnore our claims is to make every day in the year an April 1st for you. Worse, indeed, because the joke may cause you to lose only your temper, while to avoid us is to lose your money. Remember, will you that ' Tho foollsr-ieat kind or a fool wo fear, lo tho fool whose April loots all year. For those that are moving and require house fixings 25-cent Wissahickon Ingrain Carpets, 19 cents. 35-cent Delaware Ingrain Carpets, 25 cents. 50-cent Union Ingrain Carpets, 35 cents. 05-ccnt All Wool Ingrain Carpets, 49 cents. 75-ccnt Best All Wool Super Carpets, 59 cents. 50-ccnt Tapestry Brussels Carpet, 45 cents. 75-cent Tapestry Brussels Carpet, 59 cents. $1.00 Body Brussels Carpets, 75 cents. $1.25 Body Brussels Carpets, 98 cents. 15-cent China Straw Mattings, 10 cents. 25-ccnt Japanese Straw Mattings, 15 cents. 30-ccnt Satsuina Straw mattings, 19 cents. 25-ccnt Window Shades, on Spring Rollers, 15 cents. 60-cent Best Hand 31ade Cloth Shades, 30 cents. 75-ccnt Nottingham Lace Curtains, 40 cents. $3.00 Real Irish Point Lace Curtains, S1.9S. $7.50 Real Brussels Net Curtains, $4.9s. 25-ccnt Brass Sasli Rods, New Patent, 12 1-2 cents. Old Carpets Cleaned and Belaid at Short Notice. &S?Wc Arc Kings in Wall Paper, You Well Know. HOOKS K9h ' Raymond Trial Balance Books Graves1 Indexes Document Boxes Inks of All Kinds AGENTS FORaay Edisor's Mimeographs and Supplies Crawford Pens Leon Isaac Pens REYNOLDS BROS., Stationers and Engravers, 317 LACKAWANNA AVE. f?ro If you intend (jetting the baby a Cairiuue nee our before you buy. We huv the largest assort nient ever brought to the city. Alno a full line of liundsoino goods suitable for presents in CHINA, CUT GLASS, SILVERWARE, BRIC-A-BRAC DINNER, TEA and TOILET SETS. THE LIMITED. 422 LACKAWANNA AVENUE. DR. HILL & SON ALBANY DENTISTS. Ctt teeth. 9R.60; bent act, M: for gold cap! and tenth without plates, called crown and brlrlRe work, call for prloea and refer ences. TONALOIA, for extracting teet without pain. No ether. No gas. OVER FIRST NATIONAL BANK. il .Here April 3, 1333. We Have Moved to No. 121 North Washington Avenue, Next First Presbyterian Church New Store, New Styles, New Prices, and We Want You for a New Customer. GO. Jl FURNITURE DEALERS. ' A POOR RULE That doesn't operate as well In the Inter est of one party as of another, of those who buy Hardware as well ns those who pell. We sell Hardware. That means peo ple buy Hardware. Our business in creases. That mentis people are satisfied more thnn satisfied for instance. Don't fonret that we have a few novelties not sold by any one else In town. Hi SHEAR CO. 119 WASHINGTON AVENUE. LENT. Fresh Fish and Oysters Received Every Morning. Pierce's Market WHOLESALE AND RETAIL TONE IS FOUND ONLY IN THE WEBER PIANO WYO MING AVE.. Is WISDOM, for their new homes : 4 i a?. DR. E. GREWER, The Philadelphia Specialist, and his asso ciated staff of iinrrli h nnd German physicians, are now permanently located at Old Postoffice Building, Corner Pcnn Avenue and Spruce Street. The uoi tor lu a graduae 01 the L'nlver rlty of Pennsylvania, formerly demon strator of physiology end surgery at tho MiMlico-rhirnrgical college of Philadel phia. His spc.-laltles are Chronic, Ner vous, Skin, Heart, 'Womb and Blood dl. eucj. DISEASES OF TEE NERVOUS SYSTEM The symptoms of which are dizzlnnss.lnsk of confidence, Fcxiinl weakness In men and women, ball rising in throat, spots floating: before the eyes, loss of memory, unable to concentrate the m'.nd on ono suhjeet, easily startled when suddenly spoken to, and dull distressed mind, which unfits them for performing tho actual du ties of life, making happUieas impossible, distressing the action of tho heart, caus ing flush of heat, depression of splrlts.evU forebodings, cowardice, fear, dream,mel ancholy, t'ra easy of company, feeling ns tired in tha morning as when retiring, lack of energy, nervousness, trembling, confusion of thoughl,depreslon, constipa tion, weakness of the limbs, etc. Those so affected should consult us Immediately ard be restored to perfect health. Lost Manhood Restored. Weakuess of Young Men Cured. If you have been given up by your phy sician rail upon the doctor and be exam d. He cures the worst cases of Ner vous L-ehlllty, Scrofula, Old Pores, Ca tarrh, Piles, Female Weakness, Affec tions of the Eye, Ear, Nose and Throy. Asthma, Deafness. Tumors, Cancers and Cripples of every description. Consultations free nnd strictly sacred and confident". Otll"e hours dally from S a.m. to 9 p.m. Sunday, 9 to 2. Knclose five 2-cent stamps for symtpom blanks and my book enlled "New Life." I will pay one thousand dollars in gold to anyone whom 1 cannot cure of EPI LEPTIC CONVULSIONS nr FITS. DR. E. GRKWKR. Old Past Offica Building, corner Vtttm avenue and Spruce street. SCRANTON, PA. AYLESWORTH'S MEAT MARKET The Finest In the City. The latest Improved furnish' Ings and apparatus for keeping meat, butter and eggs. 223 Wyoming Ave. NT. PLEASANT COAL AT RETAIL Coal of the best quality for domestle Dso, and of all sizes, delivered In anil part of the city at fewest price. Orders left at my Otfloe NO. 113 WYOMING, AVENUE, Rear room, tlrst floor. Third National Bank, or sent by mail or telephone to tha nine, will receive prompt attention. Special contracts will be mado for tka lale aud delivery of Buckwheat CoaJ. WM. T. SMITH. PXITRB SHOE CO., Inop. Cailtat, lljMNMNK ' lUUff 1.M SMOH IN THIS WORLIfc' "A dollar land M a dollar MnMrf." i ThU Ladles' Solid Prench DoafoUi KldTOat. ton Boot delivered fne anywhere la the C.S..oa nmrm nriplof(Mi,MoMyOrar( r i'oaut new nr ai-iv. v,i.t. mrr wav Ike Mote old Ul all retail Mete lor tl.t0. We make thU boot missives, therefore we (Mr oM the JU, tpl4 mud tntr. and If anyone fa aot sMtalM wo win ranimi u. nvmr r send aooUMT pair, upera Toe or Com mo Bomit ldlhe C,rt B.fc KB, lsIios 1 to I and aaH ilna. ufisrieu tHIIJI .uomreua Otta- lefoa rntt OJtmm hi ww t vffwicFw MID