10 THE SCIIANTON TRIBUNESAT UHDAY MOBNING, APRIL 27, 1895 , P1ZZI. By EDWARD MARSHALL. IHinv aaorv hum "dj righted by Bachetler, Johnson & Baohel- M . mtA In Th 'PrihnnA bv ii " special arrangement, simultaneous with uav appearance in mi kuiu wui; teurnois 01 uw large ciues;. CHAPTER II. : After that the wild look In the old man's eyes became more frequent. When he was not imoody ana silent ne was fiercely muttering to himself about his wrongs. He had forgotten the ex istence of Tom, apparently. And there was no doubt that ho literally hated Oullia. . Once or twice a day she slipped quietly away from him and ran Into Tom's studio for a moment to Hen ntm of the new development and gain what small comfort he could offer her. Her father looked upon these absences with suspicion, and once when she stayed away a few moments longer than she intended he broke out upon her return with a storm of angry words which claimed that he had secretly visited the restaurant to arrange some new humiliation for him. That night he stopped playing again In the midst of a number, but tiuillu, fearful, stopped, too. He eyed hvr, cunningly, and took up the avcompanlament again. Night after night, after that, he triod this plan. At first It rather pleased him to have her stop playing when he did. "Ah!" he would say; "you have 3 ' U m, . tcplng from the Folds of the Tahlo cloth Was a Pistol. ot arranged with these dogs here to appland you tonight after my music has stopped. You are afraid to play on for fear they will express their scorn of your poor tinkling." "No, father," she would answer, gently; "I do not play, because I know that no one cares to hear me. It is the full tones of your guitar that they wish to hear." But she could not pacify him. By and by, when the wild look had grown almost habitual with him, he tired of these tactics. He was angry when she stopped playing because he did. He wanted her to let him enjoy the triumph of her defeat. When she stopped he would hiss: "Keep on! keep on! Ah! you are afraid. You will not give me the satisfaction of proving that I am right." But Guilia knew what the result would be if she kept on, and .would not play. For a whole week this continued, the old man growing uglier every night. Finally a day came when he kept her In a state of terror constantly. All day he walked up and down muttering to himself. Just before the time came for them to start he wheeled toward her suddenly and demanded, almost in a scream: "Will you play alone tonight?" "I cannot play without you, father the people do not want to hear me," She replied. "We shall see," he shouted back, "we shall see whether my daughter will Jonger disobey me!" They walked to the restaurant In si lence. Their first three numbers went oft smoothly. The fourth was "La Palerma" an arrangement prepared fcy the old man himself, and with as Immensely difficult mandolin part. They began it as usual; then the old man stopped. Ouilia had feared this, and he turned her eyes quickly to him with an appealing glance. He had dropped his hands until his guitar lay across his knees, and was fumbling with something which he kept under the cloth of the table at which they were sitting. She paid no attention to this, but looked straight lnt his eyes. " Please, please, play, father," she entreated. When he answered her his eyes were red as fire and his face was as yellow as parchment. His voice was a thick and husky whisper, so low that she could scarcely hear. An expression of cunning hatred and triumph played In the wrinkles around his Hps. "Play? I will not play. Look down. Gee what I have In my hand, and you play." She looked down, and peeping from the folds of the tablecloth was the end of a pistol barrel with Its black little bore hole pointed straight at her body. She started back In amazement and fright. She realized now what the wild look meant Her father had gone quite mad. Her Hps parted. "Don't scream," he ' hissed!. "One sound from your Hps, and I shall Are. Not a word. But play! play Now we shall see! Now we shall seer You have thwarted me long enough. To night you have not plotted with the people here to give you applause that you do not deserve. Play alone and i Mil- . y , . I Geo. R. Davis oj Director-General of the World's Columbian Exposition, Cblcajro ... Says: , PS LJAVINGused Johann Hoff's Malt Ex- 1 1 tract as a nerve III to digestion, 1 can cheerfully commend it. 5 Vj Beware of Imitations. The genuine Van Tnhm-- UnfVt Malt Pvtrarf haathic cifrnatitre I IS"1 $Kon neck label. Eisner & Mbndeuon VXoh Sole Agents. New York. . we shall see how they will hits you and scorn you." "Father, dear father" she began. "Not a word, not a syllable. Play!" The old man's face plainly showed that he had reached a point in his in sanity where he would carry out his desperate Intention to its desperate end. Guilia, after ah unhappy glance about her which no one noticed, began to play. Her nervous fingers lost a note. "No mistakes,", came Intensely from the old man. "No mistakes on your life." She went on with the music, her heart beating almost as fast as her fingers flew. "Play! Play!" he constantly hissed. From tremolo to staccato, from pian issimo to fortissimo the music changed, while all the time Qullla's heart was shrinking with fear and breaking with grief. When she came to the passage where the clacking of the cantanets comes, when the piece Is played by' an orchestra, ho whispered, close In her ear: "Louder! No shirking now; I want to- show that your best, alone, Is not good enough for them!" And louder, she twanged the strings, At last she approached the end of the piece, occasionally as she looked mo mentarily from the notes which lay be fore her on the table, she caught a glimpse of that wicked, black little hole In the bright steel circle, con cealed from all but her, and knew that there was death In it if she disobeyed. It was with great relief that she began to strike the fine full chords that termi nate the piece. But her heart sank within her when she heard, close to her ear: "Again! Repeat It, and faster! faster!" Her tired fingers started again on the different notes. "Faster! Faster!" whispered the voice at her ear. Faster and faster the pick twinkled on the staccato and shook on the tremolo, and faster and faster the fingers of the other hand danced and pattered over the Btrings and frets. It was magnificent the music that the fear of death was drawing out of the pale-faced, black-haired girl. Faster and faster. Diners stopped their eating and paused to listen, amazed by it. Such music had never como from a mandolin before. "Glorious!" whispered a girl to her lover at one table, "See how excited she Is." From harmony to song; from song to tinkle; merriment, pathos, wild aban don all were In . the music; none hinted at the tumult in the poor girl's heart. Not one of those " who heard, guessed it. But back of the musicians, half hid den by an angle in the wall, sat the big blonde artist. Every night since Plzzl had ordered him away, he had come before the music and staid until after the musicians had gone. Tonight he, like the others, had been amazed by Gullia'sp laying. At first he thought that she was simply singing out her sorrows on the mandolin, but a glance at the musialans showed that some thing was wrong. Plzzl. now with his face flushed, was bending forward, gazing at Guilia with an intensity which seemed to Tom to bode mischief. Guilia bore the paleness of death upon her face. Tom saw the old man lean toward her and whisper something Into her ear. A wave of color swept over her face and her renewed effort was evident. Some person, too delighted by her music to wait for her to stop before expressing his approval, shout ed: "Bravo!" Tom saw the old man, his dearest hope dashed to earth by With a Spring Tom Caught too Pistol. that shout, start and look quickly around the room. Then there came into his face the expression of a wild animal. That shout of glory for his daughter was a shout of failure for himself. His look of hatred and tuty was so Intense that Tom atose from his chair and started toward them, while Guilia still played magnificently now pale as death again. Tom hastened and In an instant stood close behind the musicians. It was Just as he reached them that the second shout of "Bravo!" came. The old man did not wait to look about the room this time. Tom, watching him as a cat might watch a mouse, saw a quick motion of his hand and then saw what was In It. With a spring he caught the pistol barrel and forced It down toward the floor. There was a report partly drowned by the crash of the last fear-forced chord on Guilla's mandolin and muffled by the table cloth which had In the struggle been bunchel about the pistol's muzzle. Guilla's Instrument fell rattling to the floor as she dropped back unconscious In her chalf. .Tom, despite his bullet punctured, bleeding hand, still held old Plzzl's now nervous fingers and with the other hand pressed firmly but soothingly on the old man's shoulders. "Signor," he said, quietly, his Eng lish calmness now helping him, "you are exalted. Do not be frightened. We all understand. It was an accident. It has harmed no one very much." Poor old Plzzl! With the culmination 3f. 1 41 tonic, and as an aid'' s Co.. . X ' ot his mad anger he had broken. There was no fierceness ' left 'there was no; anything left except the wretched old shell of what had once been a, great artist. In a moment he rallied, though; and it was evident that his mind was wandering along pleasant paths. It had left the tempestous ways of the mountains of his anger and turned to the peaceful valley, sunwrapt and smil ing. He looked up at Tom with the smile of a baby on his face. "Guilia! Guilia, my daughter! Did you hear her play?" he whispered slowly. "Yes," said Tom gently, and I think he was unconscious of his wound. At least he paid no attention to it, al though It dropped blood on the carpet and dyed the, tablecloth. "Yes, I heard her," he repeated. The old man's face was contorted with strange twitching when he es sayed to reply. One syllable only could be speak. "Mag" he uttered twice with lips that trembled and tongue that rolled indefinitely and would not do his bidding "Mag" "Mag" "Mag" he repeated, but could go no farther. No one called the police. The guests of the restaurant who had gathered about the group of three In Inquisitive excitement did not understand the muf fled report and Tom's wound, but they did understand that the old musician's hands had been stricken with some thing that would bind them tighter than rheumatism had. After Guilia revived they carried him away. Constantly he muttered "Mag" "Mag" "Mag". It was midnight before he could complete the word, and with its completion came that of old Plzzl's life. But it was a pleasant ending for them both. Tom and Guilia were watching over him and the doctor, realizing, stepped away. Plzzl started again at the beginning of the tribute whloh had been stopped by the paralysis. Before he passed out of the sunshine Into the shadow of the valley, he was warmed Into correcting the er ror he had made. "Guilia!" he whis pered. "Did you hear my daughter Guilia play?" "Yes, yes," whispered Tom, bending close to him. The wrinkles In the poor, contorted face smoothed out into a smile. "Mag nif I cent!" came the un finished acknowledgment. "Magnifi cent! She Is a great artist." And with this final tribute to the great artist whose day was coming, the great artist whose day was past breathed deeply, and his words, like his music, were forever silenced. The End. ; j TYPES OP DEGENERATION. Some Plain Observations Concerning a Very Corrupt Creature, and Also Con cerning Degeneration in General. From the New York Sun. The complete exnosnrn nnd tho prompt apprehension of Oscar Wilde will have the valuable result of re moving an Odious creature fmm fho view and the thought of the public. After a little he will diss forgotten, and with him will go the particular school of moral perversion of which he posed as the vain and shameless leader. The nrnnpr nlnro tnr him is a lunatic asylum, to which he should be confined permanently; for the manifestations of intellectual nni moral disease and abnormality In him nave Deen constant and unmistakable ever since he began to glory in their public exhibition twenty years ago. The type of his malady Is accurately de fined In medical literature, and the symptoms of it as disDlaved In hi case do not vary from those by which It is usually recognized by alienists. He ought to be sequestrated from society like an Incurable leper. Undoubtedly he Is a man of Rnmo lit. erary cleverness and artistic percep tion, and it has been only by means of SUCh abilities that he has mnrtn him. self tolerated by the public. The plays wnicnj ne has been writing of late years have proved that 1 possesses these qualities to a degree unsuspected when he first courted public attention in the guise of a silly coxcomb posing as a languishing aesthete in whom every at tribute of normal manliness was lack ing. They show that he has facility enough In dramatic construction and in the art of producing a falrlv Aramnttn situation to turn out plays that even me lawanness and vlclousness of the sentiments with which his Impertinence charges them do not prevent from be coming successful in .English and American theaters of the best class. The subtle moral poison he seeks to Inject into them, with the crafty per sistence of a mind so perverted. Is wholly Innocuous so far asi concerns normal beings. Thev listen in hio - rlously Intended provocations to vice as merely the absurdities of fantastic bur lesque. Only those nlronriv are capable of understanding or of even suspecting tnelr destructive purpose, unless they be special students of the protean forms In which mantni nmi moral degeneration exihibits itself. Other Types of Deterioration. This deterioration Is not Wnnoictnnt with the possession of a high degree of Intellectual brilliancy, of the super ficial sort more e.qnerlnllv nnri It tra. quently accomDanles the refinement nar. rled to an extreme, of which we have so many exam Dies at the nresent tima Peoplewho imaglnethemselves superior to their fellows In sensitive perception and requirement, so that they turn away from them revolted by healthy expressions of human nature, are really me victims or this decay. They are morbid and hysterical; and not of the finer and deeper and more exalted qual ity of mind and emntlnn hv whlnh thn flatter themselves they are distin guished. Very much of the Impulse wnicn nowadays is looked upon as re formation comes from that morhlrt end degenerated source. It has Its origin in a mseasea discontent with conditions and passions and ambitions which are Inseparable from social health and in dicative of normal human nature. The natural instincts and the rugged virtues Of the Deonle: the invlenrntlnir nnlrlt and the hearty sentiment necessary for the preservation of strength of the race, are treated as the evidences of an In feriority nf develnnment. Pntrlntlnm 4a derided as unreasonable affection and impulse.' Partisanship,' or the senti ment which binds together kinship and friendship, and brings men Into loyal, religious and political association In great, masses, is denounced as a vicious instinct to be eradicated. The flag of the country and the symbols of party union are hated and ridiculed. All this Is a svmntom of desenerattnn in minds deluded with a notion that they are of an exalted superiority be lore wnicn the rest of mankind should bow. It is indicative of moral and in tellectual deformity: of variation -from the rule upon which depends the per petuation of the race in -sanity and vigor. -Oscar Wilde is an extreme and aoominaDie example or ma perverting possibilities of a type of degeneration which must be resisted by all the un contamlnated moral and normal influ ences ot society, j LlJ L j, j i( jf( J Health flints and Rales of Hygiene Suggestions That May Save You Many o Doctor's Bill. WISDOM FOR THE HOUSEHOLD Those Hints Don't Cost Much, Aro Not Copyrighted, and if They Don't Do You Any Good, They'll Not Do You Any Harm. It is pointed out by the BritiBh Medi cal Journal that nicotine IS not, as used to be supposed, the most dangerous principle (of tobacco), but pyrldln and collodln. Nlcotln Is the product of the cigar and cigarette; pyrldln, which is three or four times more poisonous, comes out of the pipe. It would be well, both for the devotees of tobacco and their neighbors, if they took care always to have the smoke filtered through cotton wool or other absorbent material before it Is allowed to pass the "barrier of the teeth." Smokers might also take a lesson from the un speakable Turk, who never smokes a cigarette to the end, 'but usually throws It away when little more than half Is finished. If these precautions were more generally observed, we should hear much less of the evil effects of smoking on the nerves and heart, and on the tongue Itself. The' temperaure at which bread Is both raised and baked is of the great est importance In producing the perfect loaf. Dr. Woods, of the Connecticut Experiment station, places the proper raising temperature at from 80 to 85 degrees Fahrenheit, and the baking temperature at from 400 to COO degrees. In a late paper on bread making he cautions the housewife against cooling the loves of bread too rapidly after taking them from tho oven. "Much of the souring of bread," he adds, "Is doubtless due to lack of care during cooling. Owing to the high-water con tents, and the larger amounts of nitro genous substances and sugar which bread contains, It is, especially while warm, a good soil for development of various kinds of molds and bacteria, A loaf of bread hot from the oven, taken Into a poorly-ventilated room crowded with people, will become sour In the course of two or three hours." Dr. Thomas 9. Blair, of Harrlsburg, advances In the Medical News the sen sational theory that our sudden and destructive epidemics are ghastly vis itors from other worlds. In other words, he contends that the thousands of tons of meteoric matter and cosmic dust which are annually precipitated upon the earth inflict upon this planet a host of life germs of nan-terrestrial origin. "Recent investigations have proved colored snows to be (Wed with organisms," states Dr. Blair, "and the Polar snows are said to have yielded more than three hundred different life forms. These organisms can hardly be produced in our atmosphere, mil lions of hundredweights of them, ac cording to Dana, having fallen since the days of Homer, who first described them in the 'Iliad.' " Dr. Blair feels sure that not only the mysterious "Black Plague" of the Fourteenth cen tury andithe old type of "spotted fever" arose from a ion-mundane source; but he assigns to these unearthly microbes the blame for the peculiar epidemic called cerebro-spinal meningitis which prevailed between the years 1866 and 18G7, and goes so far as to assert that his theory throws light on other local epidemics such as those of typhoid, diphtheria and "la grippe."- HEALTH FOR THE MILLION: To relieve the blocking up In the chest and difficulty In breathing take ten drops of the tincture of digitalis In a wlneglass ful of cold water, after meals, for three weeks. To tone up the appetite: Tincture of nux vomica, two drams; tincture of Colombo, one ounce; compound tincture of gentian, enough to make four ounces. Take one teaspoonful In water before each meal. To euro corns, carefully paint with aro matic vinegar every night. Be watchful lest the vinegar spread beyond the corn, ns It would cause blisters. About two weeks are required to destroy corns. ' Forsweaty hands and feet there Is noth ing better than dusting with a powder Composed as follows: Salicylic acid, 120 grains; talcum powder, one ounce, and prepared chalk, one ounce. Mix and uue three times dally. Ringing In the ears is often caused by collection of cerumen (wax) In the external auditory meatus. Drop a fw drops of gly cerine Into the ear at night. The next morning syringe the ear very slowly and gently with lukewarm water. This will remove the mass. The best complexion remedy Is water plus a washiug and soap, vigorously ap plied from head to foot once every day of one's life. Either at night on going to bed or upon rising in the morning Is the best time to bntlie. Use hot, warm or cold water as may be the most agreeable. Rice coffee is very palatable and nutri tious for Invalids. It should be browned as coffee Is and ground. To two table spoonfuls of rice add a pint of boiling water. Cover and keep In a hot place for fully ten minutes. It may be served with sugar and cream or boiled milk, as coffee or tea. VALUE OF PASSPORTS. f You Intend to Travel in Europe You'd Hotter Uet One. From the Chicago Herald. It is surprising how few people In this country who have money enough to go abroad know the significance of a passport and the conditions under which passports are issued. Since Mr. Gresham became secretary of Btate 21. !)25 passports have been Issued from his office alone, 'not 1 to mention several thousands granted by ambassadors and ministers of this country abroad. More than 10 per cent, of the applications made to the secretary of state hai'e been returned because they ale not in the proper form or because some Important detail has been .omitted. Passports are Issued only I to United States citizens, and citizenship must be proved under oath. The age, place of birth, occupation and legal residence must be given, and the applicant must swear that he will return to the United States and perform the duties of a citizen. The oath of allegiance to the United States must bp taken and a full description of the eyes, nose, chin, hair, mouth and complexion of the ap plicant furnished.. A woman's pass port may include her minor children and servants, and a man's may Include his wife, minor children and servants, provided their names and ages are given. . - A great many people who want pass ports go to attorneys and pay from $3 to 15 for their application, ignorant apparently of the fact that the secre tary of state will supply the blanks free of charge. One lawyer In Boston has his own printed form and sends hundreds of applications to, Washington for which he has charged a fee. It -is estimated that SO pen, cent, of the Americans who go abroad take no pass ports. Women traveling alone always take them, and, in fact, the women are the best customers of the pass port division. In some foreign coun tries passports are not required. They are necessary, however, for the Turkish dominions, Including Egypt and Pales tine, and must be certified by a Turk ish consular officer In New York or elsewhere before entering Turkish juris diction. Persons traveling with United States passports desirous of entering Alsace-Lorraine from France must have their passports vised by the em bassy of Germany at Paris. In many of the larger cities of Germany pass ports are required of all foreigners who take up even a short residence there. THE LADIES AND THE PIG. A Curious Happening in tho English County of Westmorland. From the Westmorland Gazette. The residents at ,two of the most fa mous historic halls of Westmorland have Just been parties to a transaction, a record of which ought to find a place In the family archives of both houses. Both houses, I may say, are within an easy walk of Kendal, and are two or three miles apart. The gentlemen oc cupying the one challenged the ladies occupying the other to drive a pig from his residence to theirs. If they suc ceeded they were to have a pig for their pains. The ladles accepted the challenge. There were three or four of them, and they knight have carried the pig, but I pret.t.ie such an expedient was barred. They drove it akn the high road, did those ladles of high degree, nothing daunted by the thought that the shades of grim ancestors might be looking down from their ivy-mantled tower, in mute and sorrowful wonder, at the pig and Its maiden convoy. There were other spectators, also, whoso wonder waa as great but was not mute, as this note testllleth. For, indeed, the valor ous virgins vanquished the pig and won the wager. Not N'ecossury. From New York Weekly. Foreigner ".Many of you Americans have distinguished ancestors, yet you never mention them. Why Is that?" American "It's this way: While we are poor we are ashamed to boast, and when we get rich we don't need ancestors." Gastronomlcally Correct. From the Chicago Tribune. "The horse Is a very useful animal," wrote Johnny -In his composition, "but If I can't have my eosslges made of pigs' meet I don't want no sosslges." GOLDEN MEDICAL DISCOVERY Many years a(?o Dr. R. V. Pierce, chief consulting physician to the Invalids' Hotel and Surgical Institute, Buffalo, N. Y., com pounded this medicine of vegetable ingredi ents which had an especial effect upon the stomach and liver, rousing the organs to healthful activity as well as purifying and enriching the blood. By such means the stomach and the nerves are supplied with pure blood; they will not do duty without it any more than a locomotive can run with out coal. You can not get a lasting cure of Dyspepsia, or Indigestion, by taking arti ficially digested foods or pepsin the stom ach must do its own work in its own way. Do not put your nerves to sleep with so called celery mixtures, it ia bttcr to go to the seat of the difficulty and feed the nerve cells on the food they require. Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Biliousness aud Nervous Af fections, such as sleeplessness and weak, nervous feelings are completely cured by the " Discovery. " It puts on healthy flesh, brings refreshing sleep and invigorates the whole system. Mrs. K. IIENKB. of No. S96 North Hahttd SI., Chicago, III., writes: "I regard my improve ment as simply wonderful. Siuce taking Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Dis covery in connection with his ' Pleasant Pellets ' I have gain ed in every respect, particularly in flesh and streuKth. My liver was dreadfully enlarged and I suf fered greatly from dyspepsia. No.phy siciau could ' give relief. Now, after two mouths I am entire ly relieved of my disease. My appe Mrs. Hbhkb. tite is excellent ; food well digested; bowels regular and sleep much improved." Wm. Linn Allen & Co. STOCK BROKERS, Buy and sell Stocks, Bonds and Grain on New York Exchange and Chicago Board of Trade, either for cash or on margin. 412 Spruce Street. LOCAL STOCKS A SPECIALTY. G. duB. DIMHICK, Manager. TELEPHONE 6.002. CALL UP 3682. MUl OIL 1 iHll CO. OILS. VINEGAR AND CIDER. OFFICE AND WAREHOUSE. 141 TO 151 MERIDIAN STREET M. W. COLLINS, M'gtr. Complexion Pressntf PR. HKBRA'8 1 VIOLA jCREAT.1 BoiSiJIh iMbor and Tea. and to tores the skin to Its orlglr md tmhneta. produclnt .1m mnA BAAlthv 00m- BmwiM In .11 Ian. frapmratlons and .perfectly birmlem At-U iu-ugglau, or mallad lor SOcu. ffcudlc Circular, 1 VIOLA MM tOAP I. l ' aau rtMM aMM ir u- Mftrt JjJ au. At truslit.. Mm prim 23 u.nta Q. C. BITTNBR i vUi TOLEDOi W For by Matthawt Bros, and Joho n. r-i ar C.l.fc.tra lulhk Mutoad Bma& rcnriYROYAL pills w J .'i ..h .i.., nMilk .nil. ..k DfunM air OUdkrl tttftulk Dia l MmA In Und ul (laid B.talllol IboiH, mM with blue ribbon. Take IjmuJmhMUMUIUIIi ttoiia oil imitation,. At Druniiti. MttA 4a, la lUnpa tor ptrllc.ltr., iMtiaMatel. and "Rallsf fcr Ladlm," in tiur. bjr ratal If .11. 10.000 ToulnoslaU. Kmmt Para. ran; iwir." lr .if Av lr MtlvattUulbraauu. , , rkllaAta I'M DR. E. GREWER, The Philadelphia Bpectuliat, and hia aaso elated staff of English and Uurman physicians, are now permanently located at Old Postoffice Building, Corner Penn Avenue and Spruce Street. The doctor ia a graduue of the Univer sity of Pennsylvania, formerly demon, trattor of physiology and surgory at the Medico-Chirurgical college of Phlladel. phia. His specialties are Chronic. Ner vous, Skin, Heart, Womb and Ulood die. eases. DISEASES OF THE NERVOUS SYSTEM The symptoms of which are dlzzlness.lack of confidence, sexual weakness In men and women, ball rising in throat, spots floating before the eyes, loss of memory, unable to concentrate tho mind on one aublect, easily startled when suddenly spoken to, and dull distressed mind, which unfits them for performing tho actual du ties of life, making happiness impossible, distressing the action of the heart, caus Ing flush of heat, depression of BpirlU.evll forebodings, cowardice, fear, dreumn, mel ancholy, tire easy of company, feeling as tired in the morning as when retiring, lack of energy, nervousness, trembling, confusion of thought.depresslon, constlpa. tion, weakness of the limbs, etc. Those so Bftected should consult us immediately ard be restored to perfect health. Lost Manhood Restored. Weakness of Young Men Cured. If you' have been given up by your phy sician call upon the doctor and be exum )d. He cures the worst cases of Ner vous Leblllty, Scrofula, Old Sores, Ca tarrh, I'lleB, Female Weakness, Affec tions of the Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat, Asthma, Deafness, Tumors, Cancers and Cripples of every description. Consultations free and strictly sacred and confidents.".. Office hours dally frem 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. Sunday, 9 to 2. Enclose five 2-cent stamps for symtpom blanks and my book called "New Life " I will pay one thousand dollars In gold to anyone whom I cannot curn of EPI. LEPTIC CONVULSIONS or FITS Old Post Office Building!' corner Penn avenue and Spruce street. SCR ANTON, PA. BREWERY. Manufacturers of the Celebrated PILSENER LAGER BEER CAPACITY S loo.ooo Barrels per Annum Atlantic Refining Co Manufacturer! and Dealers in Unseed Oil, Napthas and Gaso lines of all grades, .".xle Grease, Pinion Grease and Colliery Com pound; also a large line of Par afllne Wax Candles. We also handle the Famous CROWN ACME OIL, the only family safety burning oil In the market. Wm. Mason, Manager. . Office: Coal Exchagne, Wyoming Ave. Works at Pine Brook. DUPONT'S MINING, BLASTING AND SPORTING POWDER Manufactured at the Wapwalloppn Mills, Lt (erne county, Pa., and at Wil mington, Delaware, HENRY BELIN, Jr. General Agent for the Wyoming Dlstriet. t18 WYOMING AVE Seranton.PaV Third National Bank Building. ' AOIWOIES! TH08. FOBrXHttaton, Pa. JoHN B. SMITH A SON, Plymouth. P K. W. MULLIGAN, Wilkin Barre, Pa. Agents for the Ropauno Cliamical Uonx aaay's High KsptoeiTea. tot REVIVO RESTORES VITALITY. Made a iiaf.it aa. latDar. U PS 'Wvl aeu mow loth Day. jf Of Me. aa F at m bv THIQREAT 0th FBSiron ZlX23MCZlZ"jBr producM the above reaultala'30 days. Itacti ?awarf ullr and qulokly. Curaa whan all othera tall oone man will ncaln their loat manhood, end old maa will recovar thalr youthful vigor by win KBTI VO. H quickly and aunly reatorea Marroua. dm, Lort Vitality, Innotenoy, Nightly Emlaaiona, Loat For, FalUna Memory, Waa tin DlaeaM., and all afreets of Mlf-abuaa or axraas and indiscretion, hioh unflta one tor atudy, btMlnoM or marrlafa. It not only ourea by atartlng at the aaat ot dineaa, but U street nertatonlo and blond builder, brlns Idi back the pink glow to pale cheeks and ra lorinf th. fire of youth. It ward, off fnunlty and Oonaumptlon. Inaiat on having REVIVO. no other. It ean be carried in Teat pocket. By mall a 1 .00 per paokage, or all tor 98.00, with poll tlve wrlttan guarantee to rare) or refund tho money. Circular traa. Address i ROYAL MEDICINE CO., 53 River St, CHICAGO. ILL I Tar tala y Matthews Bros., Draulal araatoa . 'a t ill's w LAGER BEER R4!iR0AD TIME-TABLES Central Railroad of New Jersey. (Lehigh and buaquebanua Diviaionl I Anthracite coal used exclusively, insur ing cleanllnass and comfort. - - . . TIM hi TABUS IN KKFECT MARCH 25. ' 18. Trains leave Buranton for Plttston. Wllkes-Barro. etc., at g.20, 1.10, 11.30 a.m.; 12.45, 2.00, 3.06, 5.00, 7.26 p. m. Bunduys. t.W a. m., 1.00, 2.16. 7.10 p. in. For Atlantlo City, 8.20 a.m. For New York, Newark and Elisabeth. 8.20 (express) a.m., 12.45 (express with Hut fet parlor car), 106 (express) p.m. Sun day, 2.16 p.m. For Mauch Chunk, Allontown, Bethlo. hem, fcrfistou and Philadelphia, 8.20 a.m.. 12.46, 8.06, 5.00 (except Philadelphia) p.m. Sunday, 2.15 p.m. " For Long Branch, Ocean drove, eto., at i.10 a.m., 12.45 p.m. For Heading, Lebanon and Harrlsburg.. via Allentown, 8.20 a.m., 12.46, 6.00 p.m. Sunday, 2.15 p.m. " For Pottsvlllo, 8.20 a.m., 12.46 p.m. Returning, leave New York, foot of Lib.' wnj si. .bi, ituiwi river, ui .iu lexpreHBl a.m., 1.10, 1.30, 4.30 (express with Buffet parlor car) p.rra Sunday, 4.30 a.m. Ieave Philadelphia, Reading Terminal, t.OO a.m., 2.00 and 4.30 p.m. Sunday 6.27 a.m. Through tickets to all points at lowest rates may be had on application In ad vance to the ticket agent at the station. H. P. BALDWIN. Oen. Pass. Agent. I' 3. H. OLHAUSEN. Gen. Supt. m"m " "T BBBMBBBBBBBB Del., Lack, and Western. Trains leave flcranton as follows: Ex- rress for New York and all points East, 40, 2.60, 6.16, 8.00 and 9.65 a.m.; 12.00 and 8.50 p.m. Express for Easton, Trenton, Phlladel- hta and the south, 6.15, 8.00 and 8.06 a.m., 1.66 and 3.D0 p.m. Washington and way stations, 3.65 p.m. Tobyhanna accommodation, 6.10 p.m. Express for BlriKhamton, Oswego, EI- ' rnlra. Corning. Bath, Danaville, Mount Morris and UurTulo, 12.10, 2.35 a.m. and 1.24 p.m., muklng close connections at Buf falo to all points in the West , Northwest and Southwest. Bath accommodation, 9 a.m. BlnKhiimton and way stations, 12.37 p.m. Nicholson accommodation, at 6.15 p.m. liinghamton and Elmlra Express, (M p.m. Express for Cortland, Syracuse, Oswego Utlca and Rlchiield Springs, 2.35 a.m. and 1.24 p.m. Ithaca, 2.35 and Bath 9 a.m. and 1.24 p.m. For Northumberland, Plttston, Wilkes Barre. Plymouth, Bloomsburg and Dan ville, making close connections at North umberland for Williamsport, Harrishurg. Baltimore, Washington and the South. Northumberland and Intermediate sta tions, 6.00. 9.65 a.m. and 1.S0 and 0.(7 p.m. Nanticoke and Intermediate stations. 8.08 and 11.20 a.m. Plymouth and inter-' mediate stations, 8.50 und 8.52 p.m. Pullman parlor and sleeping coaches on all express trains For detailed Information, pocket time, tables, etc., apply to M. L. Smith, city ticket ofllce, 3L'X Lackawanna avenue, or depot ticket ottlce. Nov. 18, 1894. Train leaven Scranton for Philadelphia and New York via D. & II. R. H. at 7.43 a.mu 12.05, 2.38 and 11.S8 p.m., via D., L. U W. R. K.. COO, 8.08, 11.20 am., and 1.30 p.m. Leave Scranton for Plttston and Wilkes Barre, via D., L. & W. H. It., COO, 8.08, 11.23 a.m., 3.50, 6.07, 8.50 p.m. Leave Scranton for White Hnvcn. Ha zleton, Potts v I lie and all points on the Beaver Meadow and Pottsvllle branches, via E. & W. V. R. K., 0.10 a.m., via V. & H. it. R. at 7.45 a.m., 12.05. 2.38, 4.00 p.m., via D., L. & W. R. K., 6.00, 8.08, 11.20 a.m., 1.30, 3.50 p.m. Leave Scranton for Bethlehem, Easton, Reading, Harrlsburg and all Intermediate points via L. & H. R. R., 7.45 a.m., 12.05, 2.38, 4.00, 11.38 p.m., via 1)., L. & W. R. K-, 6.00, 8.08, 11.20 a.m.. 1.30 p.m. Leave Scrunton for Tunkhmnock, To wan du, Elmlra, Ilhaca, Geneva and all Intermediate points via D. & H. R. K., 8.43t a.m., 12.05 and 11.35 p.m., via D., L. & XV. R. R., 8.08, S.55 a m., 1.30 p.m. Leave Scrunton for Rochester, Buffalo, Niagara Fails, Detroit, Chicago und Hit points west via D. Ai 11. R. R., 8.45 a.m., 12.05, 9.15, 11.38 p.m., via D., L. & W. R. R. and Plttston J unction, S.S, D.55 a.m., l.VJ, 8.50 p.m., via E. & W. V. R. It., 3.41 p.m. For Elmlra and the west via Salamanca, via D. & H. R. R.. 8.45 a.m., 12.05, 6.05 p.m.. via IX, L. & W. R. K., 8.08, 9.55 a.m., 1.30, and 6.07 p.m. Pullman parlor nnd (sleeping or L. V. chair cars on all trains between L. & B. Philadelphia, Buffalo, and Suspension Bridge. ROLLIN H. WILBUR. Gen. Supt. CHA8. S. LEE. Gen. Pass. Agt., Phlla., Pa. A. W. NONNEMACHER. Asst. Gen. Pass. Agt., South Bethlehem. Pa. DELAWARE AND HUDSON RAIL ROAD. Commencing Monday, day, July SO, aii trln . will arrive at new Lack awanna avenue station as follows: Trains will leave 8eran- tntian for Carboudule and In termediate points at 2.20, 5.45, 1.00, 8.25 nnd 10.10 a.m., 12.00, 2.20, 3.65, 6.15, 6.16, 7.25, 9.19 and 11.20 p.m. For Farview, Waymart and Honesdaia at 1M, 8.25 and 10.10 a.m.,12.00, 2.20 and 6.1 p.m. For Albany, Saratoga, the Adirondack , and Montreal at 5.46 a.m. and 2.20 p.m. For Wllkes-Barro and inturmodlattf .Intel at 7.45, 8.45. 9.38 and 10.45 a.m., 12.06. 1.20, 2.88, 4.00, 6.10, 6.05, 8.16 and 11.38 p.m. Trahis will arrive at Scranton station) from Carbondale and Intermediate points) at 7.40. 8.40, 9.34 and 10.40 a.m.. 12.00. 1.17.2,314 140, 4.64, 5.55, 7.45. 9.11 and 11.33 p.m. From Honesdale, Waymart nnd Far view at 9.84 a.m., 12.00, 1.17, 3.40, 5.55 an4 7.45 p.m. From Montreal, Saratoga, Albany, et, at 4.64 and 11.83 p.m. ITrom Wllkes-Barre and Intermedlatr. not at 2.15, 8.04, 10.06 nnd 11.55 a.m., 1.1 .14, &S9, 8.10. 0.08, 7.20, 9.03 and 11.16 p.m. Erie and Wyoming Valley. Trains leave Scranton for New York and Intermediate points on the Erie rail road at 6.36 a.m. and 824 p.m. Also for Honesdale, Hawley and local points at 6.35. 9,45 a.m., and 8.24 p.m. All the above are through trains to and from Honesdale. Trains leave for Wllkes-Barre at 6.40 a. m. and 3.41 p.m. RCRANTOX DIVISION. In Effect Sept; 10th, 1S94." North Bonn d. South Bound. 206 903 201 r m a.. 7 .... 710.... .... 7 00.... p urn Ta us .... aio 109 .... 7 58 1366 .... 751 1846 .... 745 W40 .... 7W 1X96 .... 7,U 1918 .... 722 1903 .... 719 fllU) ... 7 08 11 40 A M 6 51 1184 915 5 4A f 1130 9 VJ f8 43 fO Of, 6l 1193 903 85 11 18 8 57 &! flllS 8 54 6 29 11 11 8 50 6 1107 8 41 691 U05 841 19 1103 8 30 tU 11 00 8 86 f8 1 f 1057 8 33 610 10 58 8 30 r U A A M 1202,204 206 6tations - a a .1 a (Trains Dallv. Except Bunday)! 5a Arrive Leavel A III N Y Franklin Ht 7n 7 6.N West iimi SU Weehawken 8101 Arrive Leave! T Ml Uancock Junc.l 6 001 2 051 Hancock Starlight Preston Park Como Pnvntelle Belmont Pleasant ML Uninndale Forsnt City Carbondale White Urldge .Majdeld Jermyn Archibald Winton Peckville Olyphant Uickaon Throop Providence Park Place Scranton 811 6 IN 6 25 3J 8 31 9 41 0 3: 6 40 6 45 250 9 5H 8 OH 800 6 55 f6 58 710 819P M 8 34 5 31 7S4 727 fS43fS43l 7 84 7 40 7 43 845 645 V 8 51 6 51 8 54 5 54 3 50 659 404 804 407 907 410 610 414 614 f4 17 616 480 690 T M r at ' 74S 7 54 754 7 56 800 802 805 Leave Arrivel A All trains run dally except Sunday. f. signifies that trains stop on signal for pea- ae.Vrara. . Hture rates via Ontario ft Western before. 8urchalng tickets and save money, Pay an ' laM altoreea to the West, J. C. Anderson, Gen. Pass. Aft, : T. Flltoroft, Div. Pass. Agt., Scranton, Fa, Hbm erai flaM hfYi&t.. PimnlM. PimmMlOfOt hdoui. a ones, un wm, uicera in muatu, ijaur- frlllr.? Write Cook Rentxly C80T M olTeipltChlcco4llfor proofs of onfM I Capital 6MvoeO. ItientKrared nlner I afAM toriftT sound axidwell. 1 OO-piht? baklV i-i
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers