THE SCRANTON TRIBUNE FRIDAY MORNING. JUNE 7, 1895. Bally Ud Weekly. Ko Sunday Edition. Published at Scraoton, P , by The Tribune Pub- lleblng Company. . Kew York Offlot: Tribune BulMlns, Frank a Gray, Manager C. P. NINOttUMV, Pn. aae Oix'i Mea. LH.Rimt.lH'tueTMH, ' LIVV . RICHARD, KoiTe. W. W. DAVIB. Buemtee Muuia. Mr. W. V0UN08, Any. Kmi'i i:rrsaso at tbi roeromoi at shunto. fa., a StOOND-CLiSS MAIL UATTIB. "Printers' Ink," tho recognized Journal Ibr adver , lifers, rates TUB hcbantov TiiuiirNKasthe best HlvcrilNtnic medium In Northeastern J'enusylva lila. "1'rlutora' luk" knows. Tne Wesklt Tbimokk, Issued Every Saturday, Contains Twelve Hundsomo him, with an Abun dance of News, Fiction, aud Well-Edited Miscel lany. For Thorn Wbo Cannot Tako Tn Dailt Thibvmb, tbe Weekly Is Itecnmmended as the Best Bargain Uoina- Only 1 a Year, in Advance. tia Tbiboxi I s Ibr Bale pally at the D , L. and f. DOttlon at tloboken. BCBANTON, JUNE 7, 1895. Judging from the appearance of the Scranton Republican yesterday morn ing, the editor of that paper evidently Imagines' that every time he loses sleep through a Tribune pleasantry, the har mony of thellepubllcan party In Lacka wanna county Is at once disrupted. ThU probably arises from his inaccu rate belief that he is the Republican party. "Whatever may be true ot the editor of the Scranton Republican, the Republican of Lackawanna county are not worrying as to the future. Quay County. Entirely aside from the merits of the ease, It will have to be admitted by everybody that the Quay county people have thoroughly earned their victory. They have kept everlastingly at It; and they have thereby achieved success. The creation of a sew county has been, from the beginning of the present agitation, an inevitable result. Like It or not, we must admit that It was sim ply out of the question to expect the people of the Hazleton region to rest content under the rank inconveniences and the ranker lawlessness of a pro longed alliance wlU Wilkes-Barre. They would have been liftle less titan the angels had they borne these things without striving to eliminate them. And the police reports show they are not all angels, yet. It has been charged by certain large owners of property in the affected region that the creation of a new coun ty government would Increase taxes. It probably will. But will there not be corresponding benefits? This Is the point to be considered. All good things come high. Ia Quay county a good thing? If it la, never mind the cost, push it along. Those of us who have merely looked on, during this fight, will be heartily glad to know that It is ended at last. 'Maybe something else can now get a chance to enlist the able legislative eye. The Ascension of Olney. When Mr. Cleveland, first named hla present attorney general for a place in the cabinet, the universal question was: "Who the dlckena Is Olney?" During the two years f Olney's occupancy of the attorney-generalship, nothing has occurred to 'answer this interrogation. Nobody today knows anything more on the aubject than that Olney is Olney a man from somewhere picked up some how" by only somewhat of a president. ., The announcement that Olney Is to te made secretary of state will occa sion very little surprise. In a cabinet of nobodies It . la natural for the least known nobody to rise to the highest heights. Otherwise, there would be no virtue m being a nobody, and no reason for having a cabinet of that spherical species, Olney as sec retary of atate would be a fitting com plement to Gresham In the aame posi tion. Neither had shown qualifications for hla place; under the present regime It seems now to be established as a rule that the lesa the qualification the greater the place. There. la yet reason, though, in the appointment of Olney, and it 1 found In the fact that no decent Democrat would take the office. Senator Morgan, the ablest foreignraffalrsman of them all, would not be caught dead1 in a Cleveland cabinet; "William C. Whitney, the next, best, doesn't have words enough to express his contempt for the Cleveland type of diplomacy; Ambassa dor Eustla la too much of a man and even Don M. Dickinson, faithful cuckoo that he Is, cannot get along with an English gag In his mouth. What could be more naturaVtherefore,: than that the president should , fall back on plriey? Olney, at least, la inoffensive; for doesn't Olney play tennis- like a bird with Sir Julian Pauncefote? Where Justice Is Accessible. . A case was on Tuesday filed in the United States Supreme court which peculiarly illustrates the scope and fairness of our Judiciary system. The amount Involved Is only tt cents; but the case has already gone through two Inferior tribunals and 7 will now be passed upon by the highest Judicial body In he, world with' as much care as if the. monetary 'issue involved colossal fortunes.-.. The case Is that of the railroad commissioner of North Carolina against the . Western Union Telegraph compsfny, and it grows out of the com plaint of over-charge made by one Robert B. Lovell. Lovell on tbe 17th of August last delivered a ten-word message to the Western Union operator at the, town of Wilson, N. C, for transmission to Eden ton, in She aame state.. ThaSrparator made a charge of CO cents for sending the mes sage, notwithstanding the rate fixed for messages Inside tho statu by the commis sioners was only 25 cents. Lovell paid the full charge under protest and brought the matter to the attention ot the. coramls. slon by making a complaint. At the hear lng -the telegraph company set up as a defense that In transmitting the n-legram to Kdenton it was necessary to send It through Norfolk. Va., and therefore out side the state of North Carolina, and also that as the Western Union had no com merclal office at Edenton it became ne esaary to transfer the message to another telegraph eompany at Norfolk, and Justl fled the double chnrge on the ground that the rate from Wilson to Norfolk was 25 cents and from Norfolk, to Edenton tho same price, making necessary a total charge of 50 cents, as colluded by the oper ator. The railroad commission In Its rul ing held the charge to be excessive and Issued an order requiring the company to refund the 25 cents extra charge and for bidding a contiuuunce of the practise un der similar circumstances. Tho Western Union took the case to the state supreme court, where the decision was also ad- vorso to it. It comes to rhe federal court on motion for a writ of error. - - We know of no other country In the world where an Issue equally small Ifi the amount at stnke would be nc corded tho corresponding privilege of a review before that country's highest courts. Wo are aware of no other country In which tho legal rights of the citizen 03 between the citizen and the state are so carefully safeguarded as they are in the United States. This North Carolina case Impresses us with a new sense of the value and tho dig nity ot American citizenship and Amer ican opportunity, and as sucH we com mend it to those who sometimes fall Into the error of thlftklng that our gov ernment Is overrated. Miss Kaiser's Last Letter. It ia with regret that Tho Tribune an nounces that tomorrow's twelve-page issue will probably contain the last of the very readable series of letters writ ten to this paper from London by Mls9 Sadie E. Kaiser, during her year's so journ in the English capital. Through out the next month or two, Miss Kai ser will, as she Informs us, be so busied with the studies Incident to the ending of her year's tuition at the Royal Academy of Music as to be prevented from contributing her welcome weekly greeting. In dispensing with this feature of the Saturday Tribune the editor desires, on behalf of its readers, to express the de light which both he and they have felt In Miss Kaiser's charming correspond ence. Making no pretension to liter ary experience; In fact, never having previously written for the press, Miss Kaiser undertook th assignment with reluctance, and wrote, at odd moments snatched from her music studies, with many misgivings as to the effect of her letters upon those to whom they were addressed. We may say that we had difficulty In persuading her to continue, especially when one churlish contem porary published In her native city at one time very ridiculously Intimated that the letters were possibly first re written before their appearance in print The success of the letters, however, haa been en abundant vindication of them. In ease, grace and facility of description, together with the rare knack of making, the reader see things with the writer's eyes and In sympathy with the writer's mood, we do not hesi tate to pronounce the letters of Miss Kaiser, printed during the past year In the Saturday Issues of The Tribune, noteworthy contributions to the liter ature of travel. With experience super added to this natural gift, it is our be lief that the writer of them would make equally as prominent a mark In Journalism or literature as she bids fair to make in the world of song. Trying Hard to Forget. tt Is truly amusing to notice with what avidity the Democratic news papers seize upon and magnify every sign of Industrial Improvement, claim ing it as a vindication of the tariff which their own president denounced as a scheme of "perfidy and dlshoefor." Perhaps tbey are anxious to shut out the sight of that black trail of privation and loss which Democratic threats fol lowed by partial Democratic perform ance drew across the pages of the past two and one-half years of our national history. If so, we don't blame them. It certainly Is a good thing for Dem ocratic partisans to forget, if they can. But the public will not so readily overlook this Item. As a matter of fact, it cannot overlook It. The party which played this costly trick on the people; the party which, In two and one-half years of peaoe, so conducted itself as to create losses among the people greater than all the losses of five years of frightful war, cannot escape from its responsibility by setting over against this $2,500,000,000 of loss the few mil lions of gain which have recently come to the - wage-earners in our industries In' eplte of . Demooratio policies and Democratic achievement. It can neither change the subject nor enter an alibi'. It Is slated for another thrashing; and it must stand up and take its medicine. In this connection It may be aald that the Republican press gladly welcomes every new Indication of business re vival. But It does not forget that un der twenty-five years or more of Re publican rule such indications were not so exceptional as to occasion among the people expressions of gratified sur prise. It Is amusing to hear a certain olass of publlo speakers talk about friends of reasonable silver coinage aa if friend ship for silver In any form were some Jtlnd of high crime. Tet there has never been a national convention of any kind In. this country which has dared to ad vocate permanent gold monometallism; and there probably never will be. ' e The Republicans of Kentucky did well at their recent state convention to defeat a resolution commlttiqg the party in that state to a single gold .v f - Standard. The monetary plank of the last national platform Is the plank for Republicans to stand on. Protection and bimetallism will beat the Demo crats out of their boots, In 18(1 To a man up a tree It looks now as If, were the convention to 'be held next week, it would be General Harrl son against the field; and this quite in dependent of the ex-president's own personal Inclinations. A year, though, may work Important changes. They are saying that Senator Elktns of West Virginia bought the Clncin natl Commercial-Gazette for the ex press purpose of furthering another Harrison boom; but the chances are "they," aa usualre merely guessing. It seems a bold thing -to say; but we have a suspicion In our veins that W. O. Bradley, whom the Republicans of Kentucky have Just unanimously nomi nated for governor, is going to carry that state. The Cleveland Republican league convention will make no mistake if it Bhall come out strongly for the old platform, with special emphasis on the need of an American foreign policy. A number of newspapers are busy Just now sparing the Republican party the trouble of selecting a new Btate chairman. What Is the matter with Judge Ollkeson? Senator Oobln's vote against the Ap pellate court bill was probably granted to the unsuccessful minority as in the nature of a souvenir. Senator Quay Is again displaying his liveliness as a so-called political corpse. He Is unquestionably the Ilvest dead man on record. Lackawanna county cau sympathize with Quay county. It went through the mill Itself, orrce. POLITICAL GOSSIP. There can, we should Imagine, bo vory little dispute of the assertion that by far the ablest defender of bimetallism who has appeared as yet In the east is Charles Hober Clark, secretary of the Manufactur era' club, of Philadelphia, and editor of Its weekly Journal, tho Manufacturer. Mr. Clark may be entirely wrong In his argu ments, but no one has yet accused him of a luck of sincerity, or of being afraid to follow tho bent of his personal conviction upon this subject. Last week's Manufac turer contains from his pen a notable ar ticle comparing the present movement against monometallism In this country with the abolition movement ot forty years ago. We quote part of bis conclud ing paragraph: "No great wisdom, no In tense respectability, but only common sense, can be required to permit a man to understand that It Is folly to suffer our greatest creditor to tlx our money stand ard; that we are now upholding the llr!t- ish gold system only by borrowing money; that the , wealth-producers are being rooDeu oy; me non-yrouuesr wno nag fraudulently enlarged the buying power of the dollar; that the nation Is In shame because Its treasury Is buying, at heavy costt protection from foreigners; that everything has been made to rest upon gold which has then been cornered; that the land and the control of tho money supply are passing from the hands of tho people; and that the domestic and foreign debts of the nation are growing larger tho more desperate the effort made to die charge them. No bland talk from very respectable citizens, no sophistry and llg ure-Jockcylng from statisticians, no in genulty of mendacity from public Jour nals, no rhetorical efforts from secretaries of the treasury, will operate to hide these facts.", Mr. Clark a conclusion is that bi metallism Is Inevitable with Europe's no- operation. If possible; but, if necessary, without that co-operation. i! II II The prospect is apparently shaping it self for a big fight In the next Empire state Republican convention for an In creased representation In the state com mittee. The matter Is being agitated now all over the state by tho Republicans who are opposed to Mr. Piatt's control of tho machine. The McKlnley-Unlon league men who want to see McKlnley and Cornelius N. Bliss at the head of the next Repub lican national ticket, are especially ac tive. With them stand the Republican alub's campaign committee and the dis satisfied Republicans throughout the state. Within the next week New York will be flooded with literature urging a change In the basis of representation. As matters now stand the Republican state committee Is made up of one member from each congressional district, one member at large and three members of an advisory committee, or thirty-eight members alto gether. This makes a close corporation which, in recent years, ex-Senator Piatt has found little difficulty in controlling. Under the present system there are thirty seven counties without representation. The antl-Platt people want the representa tion changed from congressional to as sembly districts, which would make a state committee ot 100 members. The antl Platt people believe that the very size of this stato committee would prevent its being dominated by any boss. II II II Major Handy sa-ys he has good, reason for believing that Senator Comer on will enter the next Republican national con vention as a presidential candidate with from CO to 80 votes on the first ballot. The major recently had a long talk with Cam eron on the sliver question. . Bays the for mer: "The senator makes no bones of be ing as earnest and as radical as any sen ator from a silver state. Indeed, he elalms to be among the pioneer blmetalllsts In congress, and to have spoken and voted on the silver side whenever the question was presented to the senate In any guise whatever. Whan I expressed my surprise that a man of his large mcnnai and close identification with eastern enterprises con trolled by extreme gold men, If not gold monometalllsts, should be found fighting In the ranks of the enemy, he said that with him It was a matter of conviction ami not of'geography, politics or sentiment The money lenders, he said, controlled the country and were so hot In the chase for tho next dollar that they gave no thought to the public Interest, never reflecting that In the end they, as well as everybody elso, would be benefited by legislation which In sured the greatest good to tbe greatest number." II II II SI nee the death of Secretary Oresham a story fiaa been In circulation that he did not agree with the financial policy of the administration, and was, In fact, In favor of free sliver. Walter Wellman says It Is Within his personal knowledge that this statement Is untrue. Mr. Oresham was not In favor of the free and unlimited coinage of silver, neither during the last two years, nor at any other time. It Is only fair to say, however, that General Oresham was In favor of the use of silver as money to the greatest extent eonslstent with safety. His sympathies were always with the under dog In any fight, and it is not Impossible that the argument of an- appreciation of the purchasing power of a gold dollar, with Its effect upon debtors. may have had soma little Influence with htm. He may at times have expressed his opinion of the methods adopted by the Wall street bankers to force the govern ment Into a sale of bonds, as tt Is certain that he denounced In unmeasured terms tbe ahylock character of the latest bond deal which the administration was forced to acaede to. But he was no more of a free silver man than President Cleveland or Secretary Carlisle." II II II The probability that flan Franalsco will be an active competitor for the honor of entertaining the Aext Republican national senventlon Induces the Washington Post to observe that It "hardlyeeetns probable that any national convention will be held next year on tbe shores of the blue faelllc, In the first place It would take every east- em delegate from his home aud Us busi ness for a month or live weoks, at the least. The railroad rates would be an other obstacle to a large attendance, while the almost absolute Impossibility of trans mitting anything like full and adoquute reports by telegraph would bo a serious objection. At Minneapolis in 18113 the meuger telegraph faeilltles causad any amotrt of trouble, but even that experi ence would bo heavenly to the delay, an noyance, and cost of endeavoring to send matter across the continent. II II II The Tribune tomorrow will contain the text of a magnificent speech recently de livered by Governor MuKinley before the McKlnley club, ot Hartford, Conn. In this speeoli the Napoleon of protection clearly outlines the duty of the American people in the hour of Democracy's demonstrated Incapacity, and tutors a stirring appeal to Republicans to prcparo for tho real issues of the next year's campaign. The address should bo read by every voter. WISE AND OTHERWISE. Hon. Joseph H. Choate and Hon. Ed ward Lauterbach were associated In 1 suit a short time ago, says the Sun, irnd wou. As the the Jury luft their seats, Mr. Lnutnrbacb turned to Mr. Choate and said: "Choate, we won this vordlct becauso wo happened to know more law on this sub ject than our adversaries," "xos? queried Choate. "Our clients are rich, you know, a corporation and all that," re Joined Luuterbach. "Yes?" again replied Choate. "What do you think we ought to charge, Lauterbach?" "Oh, $750 apiece." "Tut, tut," broke out Choate, Impatiently, and he repeated: "Tut, tut! You let me handle this bill, Lauterbach. I'll collect for us both." A short time afterward Mr, Lauterbach was tn Mr. Choate's ofllce In Wall street, and Mr. Choate handed out a check for $1,5U0 as Mr. Lauterbach's fee In tho case, and said: "Lauterbach, what do you think of that?" Mr. Lauterbach looked at tbe check, stroked his beard for an Instant, and, looking Intently nt Choate, replied: "Almost thou porsuadlst me to be a Christian," PERSONAL DEFICIENCIES: Jeanne d'Ara lacked education; Pompadour lucked depth of mind; Main tenon lacked toleration; Est.her might have been more kind. Hebrew Sarah lacked humaneness; ' Uood Octavla wanted wit; QYel-k Xuntlppe lacked urbanencss; Eliot wasn't chic a bit. Cleopatra lacked humility; Ruth was minus worldly wealth; Bess of England lackud civility; Sulnt Theresa lacked In health. Aspasla lacked in social Btation; Puula laclftad in style and fashion; De Stael lasked domestication; Phyrne didn't luck in passion. Polly's perfect, but, you see, Lacks in toto love for me. Chicago Tribune, Moses P. Handy tells a story concerning a visit he once paid to a Troy, N. Y.. Dom ocratlc convention which is Interesting, If not strictly accurate. After the prelimin aries of the convention were urrunged suys the major, Pat McCurthy got up In the middle of the hall and said that In view of the debt the party owed the race, ho proposed the unanimous nomination of Terrance O'Dowd for sheriff as a well earned compliment and a most diplomatic movei Everybody said "Whurroo!"' and nominated Mister O'Dowd by acclama tlon. Helnrlch Schmadt got the floor and said that while he was willing already to concede the sheriff's olllce to tho Irish, he thought the Chermans should have the coroner, and he named Franz Danglellnger for that office and called for the same unanimous compliment. It was given with another "Whurroo!" When the pleasant and cordial management of the proceedings was broken In upon by a lean, slab-sided must, who had half a chair on the fringe of the convention way out un der the gallery. Handy says that he said In a most unpleasant nasal voice: "Mr. President, there Is another race that ought to have some recognition in this hull. allude to tbe American " He never got any further. From every part of the hull arose cries: "Oh, the know-nothln' seoun drel! The A. V. A. Kill him!" Handy says that he believes tho mun escaped, but he isn't sure. e e e IN THE SWIM-AND OUT: At Santa Cruz we both were In the swim, Her bathing suit Clung fondly, damply, to each shapely limb; My lips were mute, But eyes speak volumes. Well, she wasn't prim; She didn't mind iV we were in the swim Today wo played at tennis, here in town; Her flannel suit The breezes caught. She called me, with a rrown, A perfect brute. She simply crushed me, left mc, turned me down; The game was tennis end we were In town. San Francisco News-Letter. Evan Howell, of tho Atlanta Constitu tion, writes Walter Wellman, Is going to suggest the use of bees to the war de partment. "Tho idea was suggested to me," he said the other day, "by the trick of a smart Yankee, which I experlenoed DO YOU WANT TO STOP TOBACCO? You Can Bo Cured While Using It. The habit cf using tobacco grows on a man until grave diseased conditions aro produced. Tabasco causes cancer of the mouth and stomaoh, dyspepsia, loss of momory, nervous affections, congestion of the retina, and wasting of the optic norvo, resulting in Impairment of vision, even to the extent of blindness, dizziness or vert igo, tobacco asthma, nightly suffocation, uuu pain in the region or the heart, fol lowed later by sharp pains, palpitation and wenkoned pulse, resulting In fatal (heart disease. It also causes loss of vitality. QUIT, BEFORE IT IS TOO LATE. To quit suddenly is too Sovere a shock to'the system, as tobacco to an Inveter ate user, becomes a stlmulunt that his system continually craves. "BACO- CUHO" Is a sclentllle and reliable vege table remedy, guaranteed to be. perfectly harmless, and which has Keen In use for the last 23 years, having cured thousands of habitual tobacco users smokers, chew ers and snuff-dlppers. YOU CAN USE ALL THE TOBACCO YOU WANT WHILE TAKING "BACO- CURO." IT WILL NOTIFY YOU WHEN Tq STOP. WE GIVE A WRITTEN GUARANTEE to permanently cure any case with three boxes, or refund tho money with 10 per cent. Interest. "BACO-CURO" Is not a substitute, but reliable and sclentllle sure which abso lutely destroys the graving for tobacco without the aid ot will power, and with no Inconvenience. It leaves the system as pure and tree from nluotlne, as the day you took your first anew or smoke. Sold by all druggists, at tl.00 par box. three boxes (thirty days treatment, and GUARANTEED CURB), i.60, or sent di rect upon receipt of prise. SEND SIX TWO-CENT STAMPS FOR BAMPLE BOX, BOOKLET AND PROOFS FREE, Eureka Chemical & Manufacturing Com pany, Manufacturing Chemists, La Crosse, Wisconsin. during the war. Some of our men sur prised a bunoh of Yankee raiders one day. They were In the front yard of a big plan-tatlon-housa, and the moment they saw us streaming round a bend in tho pike they leaped for their horses. One of them, the tricky Yank I mentioned, plaked up a beo gum, one of a dozen standing in the yard, and swung it over his shouldor. Then he eUmbed Into the saddle. Every Jump of his horse Jolted a handful of bees out ot the hive, and tt looked as if they never budged, but stood right still In the air wondering what bad happened. And when, we got up to them they seemed to lay their troubles to us, and pitched into us like -rabid dogs. Not one of our cavalry ever got farther than the first bee. The whole outfit same streaming back and lit Into us and our horses, and made It so hot we had to turn and fly. They Just simply stung us plumb out of the country, and the Yanks got away." see WISPS OF WIT: Wiggles Where are you going to take your family thlB summer? Waggles Well, I haven't decided yet whether we will spend a fortnight at one of the fashionable hotels, or take the same amount of money and buy a New HumpBhlre farm. Somervllle Journal, "Rut," objected the father, "you are financially worthless, while my daughter " "The way to tlx that," Interrupted the suitor, "Is to arrange a bimetallic con ference and devise some way to put me on a flnuncial parity as a circulating me dium." Albany Argus. "Your little brother Is better, I hope?" "Yes, the wetting he got gave him a severe cold. Some more boys and he were playing at who could walk the near out the edge of the canal with their eyes shut, and he won." TOLD BY THE STARS. Daily Horoscope Drawn by AJncchus, The Trlbuno Astrologer. Astrolabe cast: 2.48 a. m. for Friday, Juno 7, 1895. B3 MS Moon rises 9.13 p. m. A child born on this day will be poor un til he reaches the age of forty, liy that time he will be used to It and won't mind. His future circumstances, thezvfore, will bo a matter of no concern. The people still refuse to become alarmed over tho results of tho silver craze. Grover will need to speak a little louder. Those who have noticed the antics of the Turk In Armenia will be unanimous in the opinion that he Is harem scare 'em sort cf a fellow, anyhow. Ajucchll9' Advlco. Keep an eye upon the individual who announces that he is "out of politics." It Is usually evidence that he Is preparing to spring from his perch. AT Conneirs, 131 AND 133 WASHINGTON AVE Tho Best of Them All Is the ZERO Porch Chairs and Rockers. Fine Reed Chairs and Rockers. A Few Baby Carriages Left at Cost. Cedar Chests, Sloth Proof, in Three Sizes. Hill & Connell, 131 AND 133 WASHINGTON AVE. YES.. IT IS WARM But if you will use a charcoal-filled Jewett's Refrigerator it will add much to your comfort, aud with less expense than any other make in the market. WE ALSO HAVE A Large Stock of Water Coolers. Hammocks, Baby Carriages, an Rock Bottom Prices. THE I fcjlllbll, V lllllbbbl VV LIMITED. 422 LACKAWANNA AVENUE. DR. HILL & SON ALBANY DENTISTS. net imn( .). iiv , mai rwi, vo, ivi and teeth without plates, called crown and brldno work, call for prices and refer ncs. TONALGIA, for extracting teat without pain, mo stner. jno gas. OVER FIRST NATIONAL BANK. THAT WONDERFUL in Tone Is found only In he W E B E R Call and see theseTlanos, and some fine se ond-band Pianos we Bae taken ia exohange for them. GUERNSEY BROTHERS, 824 Wjro. AT. GOLDSMITH'S 5,600 Pieces Muslin Underwear IN OUR SUMMER BARGAIN SALE. Beginning Saturday, June 8th, and lasting only one week. The occasion that the ladies of Scranton and vicinity watch for each season. There will be greater values than ever before. Everybody knows that every garment we offer is well made, full in size, beau fully trimmed aud contains good material. See our window display of Gowns at 39c, 49c, 59c. and 68c. Ladies' Drawers at 17 cents. Elegant shape Embroidered Corset Covers at 25 cents. Chemise, Skirts and In fants' Slips and Dresses correspondingly cheap during this sale. HJCSThese special prices will positively prevail for only one week many lots will probably be sold iu less time. Though we are selling hundreds of Men's Light-Colored Summer Suits, at remarkably low prices, we are also serving a great many discrimi nating patrons of genteel tastes with the Medium and Dark Worsteds and notably Imported English Serge Suitings model cut, scrupulously made, reli able sewings, hand-made button holes, permanent buttons, and in every detail rivaling any Suit made to measure. OUR PRICES RANGE FROM $12.00 TO $20.00, And we invite the inspection of the skeptic as well as the connoisseur. "TUE QAMTERQ" I 111. UnifllLliOy An $S.50 Extension FOR $6.00 CO.'S. Special sale df Dming Room furniture, THIS WEEK ONLY r Some bargains and unna Uosets, HULL & CO. IRON AND STEEL Bolts, Nuts, Bolt Ends, Turnbuckles, Washers, Riv. ets, Horse Nails, Files, Taps, Dies, Tools and Sup plies. Sail Duck for mine use in stock. SOFT - STEEL - HORSE - SHOES, And a full stock of Wagon Makers' Supplies, Wheels, Hubs, Rims, Spokes, Shafts, Poles, Bows, etc, TTEHBEIDER SCRANTON, PA. ME PROPS m TIES OAK BILL STUFF. tup rnniifluwPrti th i iihrfb rn 1 iiu uui.iMuiiiiunuiii uuinuun uc TELEPHONE 482. EVERY WOMAN gecMttaiM qaadi a nllablf , atsathlr, ntrolatlns medlolua Only barmlaas $M Iba tusitdiiigs ahsald b ue4. '. If Joa waa tba bati, ol Dr. Poal'c Pennyroyal Plllo TW an Mont, sate mi mrtala Theaaaaliia(Dr. Fail's I anar dlsap oolat Tflaa aa rwaars, 11.00. For sale by JOHN H. PHELPS, Pharmaelat, eor. Wyoming Avenua and Sprue Straat, Sofa n ton Pa. Ht5rThrough courtesy Celebrated R. AND 6. we are making the grandest window display of Corsets ever placed on exhibition, one which is worth traveling miles to see. square dealing clothiers, HATTERS AND FURNISHERS, Table for $6.00 at HULL & in Sideboards, Tables, Chaif s inis yvtfcK uil,y. ,11 23 Commonwealth Dlit'il CamhIai Da Addiaai t aai. uasMoaa usM ueTwaau, v. 1 CO.. BAZAAR of the manufacturers of tho Fine Stationery Blank Books, Office Supplies. EDISON'S MIMEOGRAPH And Supplies, TYfE WRITERS' SUPPLIES ill IIU UUl fL IN ALL ITS BRANCHES. REYNOLDS BROS., Stationers and Engravers, 317 LACKAWANNA AVE. ARE THE BEST COASTERS. Consequently they must run easier than any other wheel. Call and examine them. C. M. FLOREY, 222 WYOMING AVENUE, C. A. BUILDING. TAKING A COOL MILLION Is batter linn picking up a hot penny, and Ufa with a cood refrimirator is better worth llvinl than without one. Wo have some refrigera tors that we are nicknaming "Ice ronnoniis era." Their other name is Alaska. Yon know what that rneana We will alas give yon oredlt for knowing what first-olaes hardware is. Have you ever been in ountorof Yon have here aa opportunity fur erclaln your Knowledge yea anu your admiration aim as tonishment about such thlnoi ai gas. and oil stoveet tt. Don't be covetous, though. 119 WaSulDotOB lit. CORSETS BICYCLES n