THE SCBANTON TRIBUNE SATUTIDAY MORNING, JUNE 1, 1895. f Facte :TTto Women Readers. V,v ; .' 5ymposfurn of InformationPartly Grave, "'"'"t. Partly Gossipy and Partly Gay. ...... .... . -.;." ' In tila "Notes TTpon London,' M. Auirutln Fllorv claims to have discov ered the New Woman In England. The Ens-Han rl of today, he says. Is ut terly unlike th eeutlinental. languish ing creature of 'the old keepsakes. She Is dry. .and hard, and Her form 'Is tall tuml straight. The rape to developing on Darwinian principles. Men are giv ing up tnarrylnflr, or, t all events, hey marry less than they did. The women, therefore, no lofiKW Book to please the men ns they did. They k out Into tho world and compete, with the men. There ara women's clubB, where 'every sort of subject Is ecgvrly discussed. According to M. Fllan, here is a Bpeclment Kngllsh, family: Tho mother la the widow of a Cambridge professor, and she has four daughters, of whom the eldest 4s 30. The mother has very rdvnnced tnilltlcal opinions, and constantly epenlts In public. " She lives alone. Tho eldest daughter, who is a Journalist, occupies chambers and Is as free as any, young man. She is Intelllgvnt. happy, Irreproaelwvble. Tho ' second goea In fur higher studies urul teaches at Ulrton. The third has found- . ed a oolony for women gardaners. Th fount h Is a sculptor, at. l'lktv finds everywhere In England a continual physical and mental Activity. He Is Inclined, on h whole, to think thwt there Is a gotnl deal of pood, ns well as some harm, in the New Woman movement. . THE NEW WOMAN: In spite of her boasted independence in nine cases out of ta the new woman . couldn't got along without the old man. Boston Globe. "What's your opinion of the coming wo man?" He "I can't tell, but I suspect she will keep us' waiting. Just Uke the others Chicago Inter-Ocean. Mrs. te Style-I like this dress, but it doesn't match my complexion. Mrs. Van Snappy O. that's but a trifle; you can alter your complexion to suit. Harper's lrwer. Willie Sllmson Mamma says she feels so sorry for you. Mrs. Winterbloom Why, "Willie? ' WUUe Because you are going to have your reception the same days as hers. Harper's Bai&r. "Do you Intend to marry again?" said Mr. Riverside, of New York, to Mr. De Cree, of Chicago. "Of course," replied Mr. De Cree. "There re two ceremonies still unpunched In the commutation marriage ticket I bought of Rsv. Dr. Thirdly." Judge. "We women," writes iAmber, "have always had to bear the onus, whether Justly or not, of being great and weari some talkers. Too much talk Is weak ening all around. It weakens the talker, the talkee and tha talked about. A reticent tongue covers much. We are too prone to wage wordy battles, which, though they draw no blood, sear the heart as with hot irons. Better abjure the use of our tongues alto gether if we cannot make them minis ters of good will and Joy. I watched a bird swinging on Its perch In the sunshine today, and, although it is a venerable bird, as the age of birds count, it was as blithe and gay as when it first chipped the shell. Not a feather had turned gray, not a fur row bad channeled its smooth beak. I watched the cat on a rug, blinking , and purring her declining days away; not a wrinkle, not a tear mark, not a sign of the wittering bright and trou ble of okl age." I watched the family horse, poking his nose outside the bars of the pasture Jot, as dapper and gay as when first ha kicked his coltish heels In the clover. Why? Because to neither the bird, the cat not the horse has been vouchsafed the power of speech, ami in consequence they are debarred from endless bickering over trifles, and the mischievous warfare of vain disputation. Some eminent au thority gives it as a rule that the three things to be avoided in order that se renity and beauty may be maintained, both of soul and body, are anger, argu ment and avarice." LOVE AND MARRIAGE: He Tou think you ars too young to marry? Why, my mother married at 14. . She That's nothing; my mothnr mar ried before I was born. Smith, Gray & Co.'s Monthly. . "Her parents are putting every obstacle In the way." ' "You surprise me." ' "They have even gone so far as to urge her to marry me." Town Topics. BellaWhy on earth is Bess going to marry Mr. Lostalle now that he is ruined financially? Delia It's all her bargain-counter mania. As soon as she heard that he was terribly .' reduced she felt that she must take him. . New York World. A far-sighted miss of 17 summers has concluded to marry a big man for her first husband and a little one for her second, so that she can cut down the clothes of the first and make them over for his suc cessor. Thus the hard times force home lessons of rigid economy and practical sense upon tend childhood. London Tld Blts. She had now become desperate. '" ' "Tour family has a grand name," he ob served. . ,., , "I would prefer almost, any other," she . rejoined, with a promptness sufficient to suggest that she had given the subject thought. ' ' i T . After a time, she sat as one in a trance, and wondered what would be the chances of his .tumbling if a wheat elevator were to precipitate-itself upon -him. Detroit Tribune, ' ' . , s . i . ! ( ' A simple organization for "women and one or great 'Interest' fcr' called "The Newspaper Club." The members are ; bound to carefully read the news of the day as stated by the papers. One member' is assigned tho foreign news for one week, another the polltlcaj do ings of our country, a third has charge of the book reviews, while others must study up the records of tho lives of men and women at the moment most prominently before the publlo. In this way, says the Ladles' Home Journal, women are brought closely In touch with the life of the world etnd lifted above local prejudice and tradition. In some . neighborhoods what are called "rocking chair clubs" have been established. Such organizations have no object other than the cultivation , tif friendship among; women. Tha mot to might well be the words of Emerson : "Ckmversation what - is '-.It ' all but thatT" ' On tnetnbef 'teads aloud while ; he others sew,, but. part of the tlnw is devoted to the good old fashion of "itsfllntjr Ithe Individual .experience, and passing on the helpful thought, the title of the article or book found of service, the useful receipt or the per sonal discovery of now methods of value in tho homo. In one club whiut la called the "Three Ds Divas, Dis ease ' and Domestics," are prohibited topics, and no woman Is allowed to quota her husband or chrontclo the sayings and doings of her children. In anc.th.-r neighborhood, whore most of tho wonum are young mothers, the lit tle onoe become the principal mibjivt of discussion, and that most charm Ins; work, Mothers In Council," Is al most the handbook of thu organiza tion!, Tho Tall Mall duett has been gath ering tho opinion of some of the French novelists concerning tho now woman. "In woman I soo only tho mother," says IXiudet nnd this Is ex actly what the advanced woman has been complaining of. She wants mm tn see tho cltlnon as well. Diiiiuih priest: "A man is a being of mro valuo, but a woman is a being of bet ter vnhu?." Memt.'s, being asltfd if womanwnssuperlor or Inferior, replied: "She Is neither; she Is only different, and that i nn equality." Mlrabenu declaims: "How can the mon cstlmalo her political worth so long ns wo aro Mludod by hr charms?" "When she condescends 'to become equal with man." Pays I-otl. "the raw will die of shame." "Pho is braiding silken whips." soys Zola; "by and by she will put them in the hands of the man rIm loves, oral he will whip her back to subjection with laughter." AFTER MARRIAGE: "And I only married you to reform you!" "Yesh, but of cournh a mnn drlnksh more If he marries a fool like that." Life. Mr. Flatte Mv wife tnkes me down quite frequently In the elevator. Mr. Cottugo (with oecp iceungj no haven't any elevator, but that doesn't nmke any difference. Exchange. Finks Does your wife talk In her sleep? Links I never staid awnke to find out, but unless sleep makes an entire change In her nature I should say she did. Cleve land Plain Dealer. Greta-Belle tells me she's sorry she ever married you. Georee She ought to be. Bho did some nice girl out of a deuced good husband. Illustrated Bits. Mr. Benedict (savagely) No writing, no talking, no smoking. Well, is there any thing I can do without waking the baby? Mrs. Benedict Yes. dear; rock the cra dle. Tammany Times, Doctor I would advise you. dear madam, to take frequent baths, plenty of fresh air and dress In cool gowns. Husband (an hour later) What did the doctor say? Wife He said I ought to go to a watering-place and afterwards to the moun tains, and to get some new light gowns at once. FUegendo Blaetter. . SELECTED RECIPES: ' . Asparagus Soup This recipe requires two bunches of asparagus, a pint of white stock, a pint of cream or milk, two table spoonfuls of butter, one of chopped onion, two of flour, one teaspoonful of sugar, and a teaspoonful and a half of salt and one eighth of a teaspoonful of pepper. Cook the asparagus In the stock or water for twenty minutes. Remove the heads for later use. Put the butter and onion Into a small frying pan and cook slowly for ten minutes, then add the flour and stir until the mixture Is smooth and frothy, being careful not to brown. Add this, together with the sugar, salt and pepper, to the stock and asparagus and simmer for a quarter of an hour. Then rub the soup through a sieve and return It to the stew pan. Add the cream arid asparagus heads, and, after boiling up once, serve without delay. Lemon Ice. Squeese the Juice from six lemons and grate the peel of three of them; also take the Juice and rind, of a large sweet orange. Let the orange and lemon peel steep in the Juice one hour, then strain through a bag, squeezing tho bacc dry: mix in one pint of sugar and one pint of water. Stir until dissolved and freese In a freeser. Coffee Cake. One-half pound of butter boaten fo a cream', with one-half pound of sugar, four eggs, one-half pound of flour in which one teaspoonful of baking powder has been mixed. Pour it on a baking tin, so that it will be one Inch thick; strew cinnamon and granulated sugar plentifully over It and bake. Rhubarb Jelly. For rhubarb Jelly sonk an ounce of gelatine In half a pint of water, with one-fourth pound of sugnr. Wash and slice about one and a half pounds of rhubarb and put to boll In a pint of water. Strain off the Juice before It becomes thick, and add a scant pint of It to the gelatine, with the whites and shells of two eggs. Whisk it all quickly on the fire, then pass through a Jelly bag Into a mould and leave It In a cool place to set. Plrklcd Lemons. The following Is nn English way of pickling the lemon: Take a dozen small, sounl lemons, selecting those with thick rinds, rub them over with a piece of flannel and silt the skins In four quarters without cutting Into the ptllp. Fill these sills with salt, pressing It Unfitly In, and then set them upright In a deep pan and set the pan In a warm place until the salt melts, turning them three times a day and bnatlng them often with the liquor until they nro. tender. Then drain the liquor from thorn and put them Into larthen Jars. Add two quarts Of good vinegar to the brine, eight ounces of bruised ginger, three ounces of black pep per, six ounces of mustard seed and an ounce of Jamaica pepsr; boll all togother, and pour It, boiling hot, upon (ho lemons, giving an equal quantity to each Jar; when cool cover tho Jars with thick paper. The lemons must bo kept well covered, nnd, ns tho vinegar evaporates, more must he added. This pickle will keep for years, and, when tho lemons are gone, the liquid Is useful In mnklng nsh and other saucos. It Is best when kept a year before using. Celery flfiuce. (For, boiled fowls or boiled rabbit) Chop up young white celery tn fill a pint measure, and boll ft In a pint of lightly salted water, or broth In which tho fowls wero boiled, until It Is qulto tender, then strain It off, and use the water It wns boiled In to make a butter sauce (melted butter), thus: Put a large toblespoonful of flour and an ounce of buttor In a sauce pan and stir It over the flro until the butter has taken up all the flour, but. do not let It take color. Stir In slowly tha broth or water the celery was boiled In.' Drop In a pinch of ground mane or grated nutmeg, and, when the sauce has thickened, put In the pieces of celery, and warm up. When quite hot put Into a tureen and serve with, or over, the boiled fowl or rabbit. i Cabbage Balad. Cut a solid, tender head of cabbage very fine, and plaoe It in a deep dish. Put In a saucepan over a rather hot fire one cupful of thick sour cream. Stir In while heating the yokes of thre'e well benten eggs Add half a teaspoonful ouch ov nade mustard and sugar,-and butter tilt. size of an egg, with a;dasb of red pep per and salt While cooking stir In half a' cupful of strong vinegar This makes a smooth, thick dressing, with a delicate creamy taste. Pour over the cabbage while hot and mix thoroughly. Orange Omelet. This omelet Is made of four eggs, five teaspoonfuls of sugar, a saltspoonful of salt, two oranges and two tablespoonfuls of butter. Orate lightly the rind of one of the oranges on one table spoonful of sugar. Tare the oranges and cut thorn In thin, smnll slices, cutting from the sides, not across the orange, Sprinkle two tnblcBpoonfuls of sugar on the sliced oranges. Itent the whites of tho eggs to a stiff froth. Beat into them tha tnblesnoonful of sugar, mixed with the orange rind, the salt and yolks of tho eggs, Add also two tablespoonfuls of the orange Julco. Put the buttor In a lurga omulut pan and on the stovo, and when It becomes hot odd tho egg mixture. Cook for half a mlnuto, slinking the pun well. Bpreuil tho orange In tho center, then fold over nnd turn upon a warm dish, fprltiklii with tha remaining spoonful of sugar and pluco In tho ovon for two minutes. Serve ut once. RUT IT'S UNCONSTITUTIONAL; And now tho modern businoss girl Declares that ull goes well, Blnco gay ducelvurs may no mora Tholr truthless Btorles lull. For when ho lays In honeyed phrnso The whole world at hor foot, "Good sir," says she. "pray let mo soo Your income tux receipt." Washington Star. HOUSEHOLD HINTS: Never allow left-over coffee or tea to stand In tin. To mnko whiles of eggs beut quickly put tn a small pinch of suit. Use a clnth to wash tho potatoes for bull Ing; It will suvo your hands. Keep nil preserves. Jellies nnd canned fruits In a cool, dark and dry plaoe. A tnblnspoonful of kerosene added to tho stiuvh when bulling prevents It from stick lug to the Irons and leaves no odor. In order to removo a glass stopper from a bottle heal tho neck by holding over It a lighted mutch, or by pouting hot wuter over It. It Is well to boll tho molnsses to be used for gingerbread, or at least heat It very hut lieforn heating up tho cuke, and It will bo greatly Improved. Tuck little rolls of cotton batting, cov ered with a dark cloth, under the rear ends of tho rockers of tho chulr thut mukes u practice of "tipping over." Wash teapots thoroughly with strong soda and water, and then rinse well and dry perfectly each day to prevent tho curious huy-l!ku smell often noticed In a teapot. FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN: Mrs. 'Theodore Havomcyer, wlfo of tho weulllir sugar king, Is a queen of extrav agant 1. She buys luvlshlly and bus spent ns in eh as JGW) for a great basket of or chil' ; 0 rtrucle Franklin Atherton, tho author, II v s modestly In Fifty-ninth street, New Yo.'k, with her maid. She Is In the neigh borhood of hor SOth year nnd Is a widow. She Is beautiful, with tho plump face and slender figure of a schoolgirl. Mrs. Joseph Harper, wlfo of one of tho firm of publishers, hns received a letter from Mrs. Robert Mlnturn protesting against tho publication of "Trilby." Mrs. Mlnturn's reason for writing to Mrs. Har per was that she felt the subject to be too Indellcato for discussion with Mr. Hnrpcr. A subscription raised among women named Kutharlne in England and America has been the means of placing a monu mental stono of gray fossil marble over the remains ut Peterborough cathedral of Katharine of Arngon, Urst wife of Henry VIII., nnd the sublime figure In Shakes peare's drama named after that monarch. A new employment which requires skill and cleverness rather than means Is tho dresslngof fashion dolls for store windows, tho Idea having developed rapidly since the exhibit of historic French dolls nt tho Chicago fair. A woman with real taste In dress can thus find scope for her talent In deslgnlng'pretty costumes for little fig ures, which must be just as chic In every detail as tho full-sized ones. WHAT IS HYPNOTISM? One of Scronton's Well-known Physi cians Says It Is Nothing Mors Nor Loss Than Animal Magnetism. Dr. F. B. iSmlth, of this city, writes to The Tribune as follows: "In a recent issue of tho Republican there appeared an editorial on 'Hypnotism or Hypnotic Suggestion,' which went on to say that the physicians of Scran ton had been consulted and some few of them had stated that It would be at least fifty years before physicians could make any use of this method of healing with satisfactory results. It is not my Intention to say anything detri mental to my brothers ad professlo, but simply to enlighten the public in gen eral. Considering the advancement that hns been made In hypnotism by most of our physicians, it would tnke a thousand years before they could make use of It. Hypnirtlsm or animal magnetism Is a mighty power, and by the majority one more honored In the breach than the observance. It re quires years of hard study and devo tion to learn the science of healing by this mighty power; also a man of strong muscular nnd nerve strength to apply It successfully. "Any physician who In acquainted with this wonderful power and knows how to properly apply It Is aware of the fact that It Is not necessary to hypno tize his patient to bring about a cure. Hypnotism, or more properly called animal magnetism, Is a science, while tho practice of medicine Is only nn art, and has lieen so decided. This prin ciple of animal magnetism being coeval with man's existence. It doubtless lay at the foundation of the otherwise in explicable, mysterious nnd miraculous. In the life and religions of ancient peo ple. Among the Hebrews and Assyri ans these means were resorted to in the cure of dlseaso. "Namnan snld: 'I thought he would stand up, and strllto his hand over tho place and recover tho leper' (II Kings, v, II). Tha Apposition of Hands. "Spiritual powers, gifts of healing, prophecy nnd leadership wore also con veyed by the apimslthm of tho hnnds. 'Tho Lord said unto Moses, Take Joshua, tho son of Nun, a mnn on whom In the spirit, and lay thy hands upon him. Set him before the priests and congregation, and nsk counsel fur him. And he laid his hands upon him ns the Lord commanded' (Numbers, xxvll. 1K tft. 'And Joshua wn;l full of the spirit of wisdom because Moses lind laid his hands upon him.' Innumerable pass ages could bo quoted from the snored books of the Hebrews In support of the prnottce, some of ths effects approxi mating more to ths Incidents of modern spiritualism than to purely mesmeric phenomena. Henllng by the applica tion of tho hands wns common among the Jews, and -was practiced by tho B'ounder of Christianity and Ills Imme diate followers. 'Many wero astonished that such mighty works were wrought by Ills hands' (Mark, vl, 2). 'Lay hands upon the sick and they shall recover' (Mark, xvl, 18). "As Illustrative of what I wish to point out. In the light of modern science held Inconsistently by professng Chris tians, Namaan, if cured, wo cured by nothing more or less than hypnotism or animal magnetism. While Hippo crates Is supposed to be the 'father of medicine,' Esculaplus really de serves this soubriquet., esculaplus delivered oracles In a dream for the cure of his patients. He breathed on the diseased parts or allayed pain by the application of his hands and often the application of his hands and often, patients Into long and refreshng sleep for tha recovery of health. There can ! be no doubt that the effects produced In these and In similar instances were Identical In character with the mng niotlo phenomena of today. Magnetism's Curatlvo Value. "Magnetism Is active everywhere and has nothing new but tho name. It Is a paradox only to those who ridicule everything nnd attribute to tho power of Satan whatever ithoy themselves aro unablo to explain. Wlno physicians are Mara how bcncllcla! to the blood it la to make slight frictions with the hands over tho body. It Is believed by many experienced doctors that tho heat which oozes from the hand on being ap plied to tho sick. Is highly salutary nnd Bunging. This remedy has been founil to bo beneficial to sudden as well ns habitual pulns. It huH oflen Mppnrod wbllo I have lieen thus treating my patients that there was xomo singular proorty In my bands to pull and draw nway from the aiTeetcd parts aches and U'vcrs Impuiiileg by rppiylng my hiindrt to the ulTuctcd parts and extend ing my fingers toward it. Thus It Is known to some of the learned physi cians that health may bo Implanted In the sick by certain, gestures and by con tact ns somo discuses) may bo com municated from, one to another. "About nine years ngo a wealthy young man nnd a philanthropist by th mimn of Von Humboldt graduated with high honors from Lelpslc. lie moved to Nancy, France, and erected a hos pital nt his own expense, whero be treated dlsonse magnet leully, free of charge. Invalids that had la-en pro nounced Incurable nt tho medical hos pitals at Nancy Hocked to him In great numbers, and were cured of their in llrmltlcH. Finally the faculty of the college waited on him In a body. They were received by the young (lerman wllh nil respect due tlio medical pro fession. Ho cheerfully Instructed them In the science of mngnotlsm or hyp not l suggestion. Two of the number possessed the natural gift of healing. They returned to their own hospital and performed many wonderful cures. Many of these cures were reported to the London Lancet, At Inst the atten tion of itlio celebrated Dr. Tooky, of London, and om of 1ho editors of .the Lancet were attracted by these notices. They visited Nnncy and received thor ough Instruction In henllng by this wonderful power. Thoy both possessed the natural gift of henllng and re turned with the most gratifying re sults. The cures performed by them were also reported to the Lancet. In duo time the attention of the late Tro fessor Charcot, of the Salpetrler hos pital at Purls, was attracted by these notices and Immediately he went to Nancy, where he also received a thor ough course of Intitructlons. On his re turn to Paris tho wonderful cures he performed were such that he could not remain silent. For years he had been bl'teiiy opposed to .this mode of treat ment, but his first article published In tho Lancet was an ample apology, his headline being, 'For Mo to llemaln Silent Longer Would Be Criminal.' "At tho next meeting of the Hrltish National Medical association the mot powerful medical Institution in tho world, tho subject of hoaling disease by animal magnetism was taken up, thor oughly discussed and under the name of hypnotic suggestion was accepted and adopted as one of the most power ful agents known to the healing art for the euro of disease. During the past eights years over fifty books hnve been written on .this subject, and It Is no longer a disgrace for any physi cian who has the natural gift nnd power to use It to put It Into pratlce." WELSH JOTTINGS. A meeting of the Prince Llewelyn memorial committee was recently held at Shrewsbury, when It was decided to rulse funds to place a monument over the ptince'B resting place at Cwm-Hir abbey. A few dayo ngo a Liberal demonstra tion was held at Ferndalo, Khondda Valley, when Hev. D. a. Williams, Con gregational minister, made an attack upon the Cymru Fydd organization, de claring that its existence was. In nn tngcnlsm to the Liberal federation. The icmnrks of the reverend gentle man have created considerable exclte mnt. D. A. Thomas, member of parliament, In theeourse ofa longlettertothe Times upon Ihe proposed religious census says that what parliament requires to know In order to carry out the wishes of the majority and to properly discharge Its legislative funntlons was not how many there may be belonging to any particu lar denomination, but how many wero for and against disestablishment, and tho best means of ascertaining this wns by the voice of the people as Illustrated In tho election of members to parlia ment. The wholo controversy, how ever, Is Into, ns the bill has been before committee for a cnnslderablo period. Cnerphllly Is proverbial for the sa lubrity of Its air and the longevity of Its Inhabitants. The following octo gennrlans have spent tholr lives In nnd around tho ancient town, nnd nre nble to follow their respective dally avoca tions: John Howl.inds, farmer, 87: Margaret Kvnns, boot denier, 87; Ann Davles, domestic, SO; Mary llnrgcst, do meKtlR,,fB;'T'!lllani Morgan Evans, 81: John Rowlands, thntcher, 81; David Llewelyn, surgeon', 81; Mary ltnwlnnds, Twyn, 84; Hobeo.cn, Howclls, SO; making a total of 758 years. ' Tho complaint ngalnst the Welsh pul pit of assuming English words In Welsh sermons Is not a new one. The late Cnledfryn, In a paper rend nt the In dependent qunrterly meeting nt Llan trlsnnt, In November, ISfll, gives n list of nearly 200 English words and bast ard Welsh used In sermons, Including such words as Illumination, hamllo, quallfyo, monopolize, nnd tho like. Could the poet-preacher hoar the lan guage used In too many of our modern Welsh sermons ho would find that the practice he so strongly condemned hns greatly developed during tho thirty years that litivo since passeu. Gilmore's Aromatic Wine A tonic for ladies. If you are suffering from weakness, and feel exhausted and ner vous; are getting thin and all run down; Gilmore's Aro matic Wine will bring roses to your cheeks and restore you to flesh and plumpness. Mothers, use it for your daughters. It is the best regulator and corrector for ailments peculiar to woman hood. It promotes digestion, enriches the blood and gives lasting strength. Sold by Matthews Bros., Scranton, Where Republicans ' Wall Soon- Gktfaer. Programme of the CJevebnd League Cofiventlou and Features That Will Attract Visit brs." Cleveland, O., Mny 01. Two weeks from next Wednesday tho eighth annual convention of tho Republican national luaguu of tho United Hlutos Will open In this city In tho spacious edifice known nn Muslo Hull, nnd will continue throe days. Tho opening session will be hold at J.O o'clock Wednesday morn ing, when President W, W. Tracy, of Chicago, will call tho convention to order. The afternoon will be passed by tho 2,000 dolcgutcs nnd alternates In slght-rcndlng, the tour concluding with a league plcnlo nt the celebrated ForestJ City park, at which muslo will bo fur nlslied by tho Iowa Htnto band. In tho eveanlng tliero will bn two Immense moss meetings, one nt Music Hall and tho other a reception In Kxoelslor ball, tendered to the colored delegates by the Young Men's Foialier club. Following those meetings, which will bo addressed by speakers of national reputation, the Iowa Htato band will give un open-nlr concert In Forest City park. The pro gramme arranged for Thursday and Krldny Is as follows: Thursday, Juno 20-!) a. m.. short ex cursion to parks, factories, cemeteries nnd suburbs; 11 n. m., excursion No. 1 Upon Luko Krle, free to delegates, upon pnlitcn steamer City of Cleveland; 2 p. m.. open meeting nt Music hall, with spcecties by prominent oratos; to 8 p. m., reception to the delegates at the Hielornma building, corner of Kuolld avenue nnd Krle street; 8..'!0 p. m., ban quet tendered the delegates nt the Ar cade.KnclId avenue und Kupeiior street. Friday, Juno 2110 a. m., session of tho convention, Music hall; 2 p. ni., ses sion of tho convention, MiihIc hall. An Appropriate Mcctliig Place. There Is nn appropriateness In tho rtepubllean league of tho United Ktnts meeting In convention In Ohio, for tho leaguo movement Is another of tho many "Ohio Ideas" which have made the llnckeye state famous. By general consent, tho credit of originating the present league movement Is given to James I'.oyle, now private secretary of Governor McKinley, In tho fall of 18S3, during tho noted gubernatorial cam paign of Honorable J. II. Foraker, Mr. Doyle, who was on the editnral staff of tho Cincinnati Commercial, Gazette, sent a communication to tho chairman of tho election committee of the Cincin nati Young Men's Ulaino club, suggest ing the organization of a State league of nil .the permanent Ilepublicsn clubs In Ohio. Tho directors favored the Idea, and a special committee was ap pointed to carry It Into effect. Mr. Boyle was made chairman of the com mittee. The first thing he did was to secure endorsements from the leaders of tho party In Ohio. Subsequently, nt a meeting of the rep resentatives of tho Young Men's Blnlne club, tho Lincoln club, the Sherman club, of Cincinnati, and of the clubs of the Twelfth, Fourteenth and Sixteenth wards of that city, Mr. Eoyle was au thorized, In the name of those organiza tions, to call a conference to nssemble In the office of tho secrctnry of state, Columbus, at C p. m., Jan. 11, lRj-0. when J. B. Forakor was Inaugurated gover nor, to consider the question of the formation of a league of nil permanent Itepublican clubs In the state. The con ference wns very Inrgely attended, nnd It was unanlmouslyand enthusiastically resolved to form a State league, and a committee was appointed to draft a constitution. Mr. Boyle wns made chairman of the committee, and after a great deal of trouble and consideration, a constitution was framed. Ohio State I.cnguo Organized. Acting by authority of tho conference of clubs referred to above, a call was Issued on Juno 28, ISSB, by James Iloyl", chairman, nnd IMchard J. Fanning, sec retary of tho committee on organiza tion, for tho first convention of the Ohio Itepublican league, to bo held nt Columbus, Aug. 2", ISSli, nt the Oarlleld club rooms, Columbus. Honorable Pnnlcl J. Hyan, .then the representative In tho legislature from Scioto county, wns elected the first president of the league. Thus was organized nn tho SSth of August, ISSli, tho first fitato league of Itepublican clubs. The constitution of the Ohio State league, as originally formed, has been materially changed since tlyn, and has been made the model of nearly nil of the State leagues throughout the country. Tho "Ohio Idea" rapidly spread In tho east nnd west. The development of the. state league Into Ihe National league Is to bo placed to tho credit of the "Itepublican club" of tho city of New York. At .1 call of that organization, a national conven tion of Slnto leagues, nnd of Individual clubs throughout the country, was held nt Chlckerlng hnll, New York city, on IVc. IT., 1B and 17, 1887, nnd Ihe Itepub lican league of the United Slates was then and there formed. Honorable Daniel J. Ilyan, president of tho Ohio Statu league, was made vlee president of tho convention, nnd Mr. Boyle wns made chnlrmnn of tho committee on national organization, which reported tho original constitution of the rtepub llean league of tho United States, nnd the Ohio plan of state organization was recommended ns tho model for other state leagues. Tho City of Cleveland. Ono of t,lio mo-it Interesting features of, tho coming league convention will bo tho opportunity It will afford to vis itors to study tho city of Cleveland Itself, nnd Its. picturesque surroundings. Cleveland h) a spacious city. Its nrea Is about thirty square miles. It hns a frontage of some seven miles upon the lake. The dlstnnoo between the ex treme points within Its limits Is nbout ten miles oast nnd west, nnd seven miles north and south. It mny be seen from theso ilgures thnt Its citizens do not need to elbow ono another. Though It hns Increased Iji population more rap idly than any other western city In the country, with the exception of Chicago, thero nre very few of Its more than twenty-threo hundred streets which can be snld to bo overcrowded. According to the eleventh census, only seventeen per cent, of its population lived over ten In a house, whllo In, New York tho per centage reached elghty-threo and one third. It Is this ronmj' Character of the city which Is one of Its most delight ful features. Cleveland hns had a phenomonnl growth. As lata ns 1S25 it was still only a modest hnmlet of 150 souls. It was not until ,S.10 that It had passed the thousand mark. From that timo Its growth began in earnest.. According td the federal census, the population In 1840 was 6,071 ; in 1850, 17,034; In 18G0, 43,830; in 1870, 92.829; in 1880, 160,146, and in 1890, 261,560.. At the present time, the population probably exceeds 340,000, At j this rate of Increase, Cleveland will enter tho twentieth century with 430,000 citizens. In IHM), It was the twenty-Ilfth olty In the United States; In' 1K0, tho twentieth; In 1S70, tho fifteenth; In 11180, tho eleventh, und In 1X00, tho tenth. Its Alnny Attractions. Thero Is, perhnps, no city of lis size In tho country so singularly attractive. Tho proximity of tho Inlte, wllh Its ever-chunglng UHpocts, and delicious breezes tempering the hottest of rays; tho broad avenues, so embowered with foliage ns to have given, Cleveland tho nsine of tho Forest City; the countless lovely homes, with their green lawns; the picturesque resorts, nnd tho rare points of Interest, render It a most charming place to vb'lt In the summer months. It Is its manifold attractions and facilities of access by land and sea which have tnado Cleveland a favorite convention city. To meet the ever-Increasing demands upon hospitality, the city's hotel capacity has been more than doubled during thu last few years, and today It boasts of n number of hosti-l-rb s which are the peers of any. Tho lending ones nro tho Hollerulen, the tillllmun, the Wedd'-ll, the Foivut City, inn Kenniird, the American, and the Ilawley; but there are many others of cousldernblo capacity. To meet tho de mand for a large convention hall, Music hall, which comfortably seats 6,000 peo ple, was built a number of years ago, and It Ih here that the leaguo delegates will assemble. Its Municipal Government. Any description of Cleveland would In- Incomplete which dldjnot mention Hs admirably sysitem of government. This has attracted a great d-al of attention throughout the country, since it was, In an emphatic serne, a "new departure.'" The "federal plan," as it is called, has, during the fnur yurs of Its operation, thoroughly estalfllshed Itself In popular approval, and Illustrated tho wl:-:dom of Its originators. Jt receives its nnme from tii- fact that It is closely pat terned after the plan of the federal government. Its distinctive feature is that It centers authority and fixes re sponsibility. Under the "federal plan," tho executive power Is In the hands of a mayor f elected by tho people) and his cabinet, consisting of six heads of de partments, chosen by him and con firmed by the council. Following are the heads of the depnrtmontsr The director of law, who Is corporation (AOTION to our patrons: Wushburn-Crosby Co. wish to assure their marrv fp.U rons that they will this vcar hold to their usual custom of milling Sl'RICTLY OLD WHEAT until the nev crop is fully cured. New wheat is now upon the market, anj owing to the excessively dry weather many millers aro of the opinion that it tnlready cured, and in I roper condition for milling. Vi'ashburn-Cro.sbv Co. will Mko no risks, and will allow the new wheat fully thrco months to m at lire before grinding. This careful attention to every detail of milling ha3 S laced Washburn-Crosby Co. 'a Hour far above otiicr rauds. 6 9 Wholesale OAK BILL HEGAiM lair Pifii mis fire Nt rKUro II IK liC8IISIIiLIBLIIiEIi.,BKS TELEPHONE Colts, Nuts, Bolt Ends, Turiibuckles, Washers, Riv. cts, Horse Nails, Files, Taps, Dies, Tools and Sup plies. Sail Duck for mine use iii stock. SOFT - STEEL - HORSE - SHOES, v And a full stock .of Wagon Makers' Supplies, Wlieel3, Hubs, Rims, Spokes, Shafts,' Poles, Bows, etc, TTE1IE1I SCRANTON, PA. S nfewdlicflferr- ttarrtf''a InToinntory KmlWQt frow h-f,u- iiul Attmr lluuu "niHIOO Of IDMinty, r"'"r W IF'" WIIUilB fortau oy JOHN H. FHEIPS Pharmacist, cor. Wyoming Avenue ana Spruea ttrtat, Scranton, Pa. counsel; tho director of publlo works, who has charge of tho water. worki, streets, parks, public buildings, and all Improvements . thereon nnd additions thereto; tho directors, of police and flro service, whoso duties are fully indicated by their titles; tho director of accounts, who Is city auditor and lias full control of tho book-keeping and reports of (Ml tho departments; and tho director of charities nnd correction, who 1s re sponsible for tho caro of tho worU houso, infirmary and cemeteries. Tlia mnyor and directors constltuto tho hoard of control, whoso duties' and powers correspond in a general wey with those, of tho boards of improve ment in other cities. Tho head of each departments has full authority to select all of Its oiricurs and employes, and to purchase its sup plies. His appointments do not require confirmation. The mayor can removo any member of his cabinet at pleasure, who, in turn, has tho power to removo any subordinate of hlK department. All legislative authority Is In tho hands of a council of twenty members, who aro elected from districts. Tho appropria tions aro made ns In congress. No war rant can be drawn or used for any. other purpose or period than l-provbled by tho appropriation net. Tho Judicial of llcer the police Judge and police pros ecutorare elected by popular vote. Tho "federal plan" went into operation in tho spring pf lttil. In the' spring of ).'92, a reorganization act for tho gov ernment of tho public schools of tho city was passed by the statu legislature. By Its provisions, a director of schools and a Kchool council of seven members are elected by tho people. The dircetor has all executlvo control, and all ap pointments, ore made by him, except thoso of teachers, who nre appointed by the sii;iernu-ndcnt of instruction. The school council has control of all 'i lsHtlonfor tho sch'iols. The -city auditor Is the auditor of the school department. Tho new government has most admir ably fulfilled all that its most earnest advocates could have hoped for. It has been safe and economical, an1 its opera tions an; us open as tho day. It is rot t'io much to say that it has materially contributed to the progfesB of the cliy. The present mayor, Honorable Rob. rt V.. McKlsfn, Itepublican, was eleof'jd In Pj'i. IP; is said to lw the youngest man ever entrusted with the executive authority of so great a city, being o.nly 32 ytnrs of a;j. Visitors to lie Well Entertained. Tho preparations which ore be:nr mad for the entertainment of visitors on the occasion of the league convi n tlon are u;;on an elaborate scale, nd no person who shall attend tti'.s splendid gathering of the young blood of tho It' publican party will ever regret that he went The ptyiplo of "Cltvehind ex pect a, large representation from Penn sylvania, and aro prepared to take g od caro of every gallant son of the Key sti'ne state. Agents. STUFF. 432. LOST VISOR brm 7i npttt wrt. (Pol J irltb WSITTKM ny raiiia. If neglected, mich troubles jad t .IHI pOf DOS nj H1R1I, O OOXB 10. K. W ll fTT P UUftUDIW 10 CUrf W IQIU4HI IH HIHllf (ftraft1 v