THE 6CHANTON THIBlfNE SATURDAY MORNING. .TITNE ii2. 1895. 0 It Of and About the Makers of BookSo Notices of Recent Interesting Vclumes-nnd- Chats Concerning Literary Men and Women . BIOGRAPHY IN MINIATURE. Through happy accident the review er' eye has had the pleasure of a first Introduction to the enjoyable "Little Journey" upon -which Elbert Hubbard monthly, with the aid of G. P. Putnam's Song, conducts many thousands t grateful readers tu the "Homes of Good Mrn and Great." In the assumption that some of the readers of these Hues me as benighted as he himself hus hitherto been toiii'liing this churmliiR terleB of vicarious itineraries, the re viewer will explain Unit the llrst Jour ney was made weven niun'tlis iiro, when Mr. Hubbard Issued an outline sketch of George Eliot, compressed lutii a neat 32-pnire folio of the Chup-Book type, nnd Illumined with personal recollec tions of a real visit which Mr. Hubbard, as an enthusiastic ptlffrlm-worshlpper at her shrine, had onco made to Mrs, Lewes' home. That venture was so cor dially welcomed that It was followed, In turn, by similar treatments of Cnr lyle, Ruakln. Gladstone, J. M. W. Tur ner, Jonathan Swift and now. Victor Hugo. Future visits are promised to the homes of Wordsworth, Thackeray, Plekens, Oliver Goldsmith and Shakes pea re. Mr. Hubbard possesses nn enviable knack of dramatic conciseness in his narrations. In a few words, following each other naturally yt with , rare choice, he presents a vivkl and Intelll Klble picture of a character or u condi tion; yet with a certain buoyancy that readily carries the reader's Interest along from scene to scene. Let a speci men or more of his workmanship be introduced In evidence. Here Is a plc tureof thehousein which Victor Hugo's mother lived In 1S0S, when Victor's fa ther. General Hugo, was off to the wars with Joseph Bonaparte, in Spain, and when Victor himself was a lad of C: It wasoneof those peer liar old places oc casionally seen In France. The environs of London have a few: America none of which I know. This house, roomy, com fortable and antiquated, was" surrounded with trees and a tangle of shrubbery, vires and flowers; about it all was n high stone wall and in front a picketed iron nate. It was a Mosaic a sample of the sixteenth century inlaid In this; solitary as the woods; quiet as a convent; sacred us a forest: u place for dream", and rev erie, and rest. At the baok of the house was a dilapidated little chapel. Here an used priest counted hi beads, said daily mass, and endeavored to keep moth, rust, and ruin from the house of prayer. This lu lest was. u scholar, a man of learning; he taught the children of Madame Hugo. Victor Hugo was named In honor of General Victor Lahorle. who stood as godfather at Madame Hugo's request, a request preferred by letter even be fore Victor was born. It is necessary to understand General and Madame Hugo's friendship for General Lahorle in order to fully comprehend another scene which Mr. Hubbard depicts: Another man lived in this chapel. He never went outside the gute, and took ex ercise at night. He had a cot bed In the phelter of the altar; beneath his pillow were a pair of pistols and a copy of Tacitus. This man lived there summer or winter, although there was no warmth save the scanty sunshine that stole in through the shattered windows. He, too. taught the children and gave them little lectures on history. He loved ths young- i.ut tw-iv hi. knilinn nnrt wnnlil nacri. him dm his shoulder and tell him storleB of 'deeds of valor. One day a Hie of soldiers ame They took this man and manacled him. The mother sought to keep her chil dren Inside the house, so that they should not witness the scene, but she did not suc ceed. The boys fought their mother and the servants in a mad frenzy trying to rescue the old man. The soldiers formed In columns of four and marched their prisoner away., Not long after, Madame" Hugo was pass ing the church of St. Jaques du Hant J'as her youngest boy's hand was in her's. She saw a large placard posted In front of the church. She paused, and pointing to It said, "Victor, read that!" The boy read. It was a notice that Gen eral Lahorle had been shot that day on the plains of Orenvllie by order of a court marshal. General Lahorle was a gentle man of Brittany. He was a Republican, nnd live years ore had grievously of fended the emperor. A charge of conspir acy being proved against him, a price was placed upon his head, and he found a tem porary refuge with the mother of his god noil. That tragic Incident of the arrest nnd of the placard announcing General Lahorie's death, burned deep Into the soul of the manllng. and wh6 shall suy to whut extent it colored his future life? It would be pleasant to follow Mr. Hubbard through all his Journey. Hut our aim Is only trt give the reader Home sample notions of his quality as a guide. His characterization of Hugo, after pages descriptive of his stormy career prior to the banishment to Guernsey, is terse and Just: "He knew history by heart and toyed with It; nolltlca waft Vila delicti Tint U la a mistake to call him .a statesman. He was bold to rnshnesn, Impulsive, Im patient and vehement. Because a man Is grea.t is ho reason why he should be proclaimed perfect. Such men as Vic tor Hugo need no veneer the truth will answer: he would explode a keg of powder to kill a fly. : He was an agita tor. But 'these zealous souls are need ed; not to govern nor to be blindly fol lowed, hut to . make men think for themselves." - RECENT FICTION. It Is not easy to understand why snne men should deem It worth while .to write, print or read such books as "Sister Gratia," which Charles Edgar Snow 'hast written and Charles H. Kerr & Co., Chicago, have published In paper covers, yt is the story of a feeble minded individual who, without know- ItltT It mott&n hfa rt n nlatnMi nf A O t iiiiii i icn i ir u rrin 111 ( j i u, French count whose wickedness takes on such melodramatic forms as abduc tion, seduction, duel-fighting, black mailing and burglarious entry; and of a half-dozen other characters of one kind or another who do and say Impos sible things In Irrational manner, with painful waste of white paper end print er's ink. A favorite author of our grand mothers reappears In the little vol ume om the Llpplnotts' press enti tled osiah's AVrm and Abel Perry's JAmprUl," by Joslah Allen's Wife. Jo sluh, as pictured In this book, is the same visionary, obstinate,, self-willed old an that he tvat foretime, and his wife the same faifn'.uV patient, long tiufferln.g' partner, a.s for the humor of It all, that nhows not a hint of exhaus tion. .. )' y .. . ''''.' ' ' '' . aim? tnap-uuuK lor juntf 10 completes the Stevenson and Henley farce, "Ma- eaire. . following out nis threat, Ala- calre, as he supposes, fatally knifes the marquis, runs afoul of a brigadier and his company of gendarme's. Jollies them Into permitting .hlmseJf .andBertrand to paBS, and lt on the threshold of es cape when a cry from the marquis' room apprises the company of the as sault and Macalre's way is blocked. At the very end. he unavullliigly tries to shift the cl ime-upon Bwitand. then In sheer bravado announces himself In his true character and In a rush for liberty Is shot from behind. The mar quis la not killed, but Mueulre dies with his head resting on Bertrand's breast, defiant to the last. This third act moves too BWlftly and Is too busy with Incidents und events to permit, that charming flow of bumptious philo sophy from Macalre's' llps In whlrh Stevenson's touch Is so clearly and fe licitously perceptible. One, however, hopes soon to hear and see It all repro duced on the Piage. ume months ago there appeared a little volume called "Pugan Papers," the author of which was set down as Kenneth Orahanie. No one to speak of then lcntw Kenneth Grahame, but this dearth of acquaintanceship was not for long. The "Papers' possessed such manifest charm, nnd so clearly betok ened genius In their author, that Ken neth Grahame, nrter much less thun the traditional probation. Js already well on his way toward fame. IStone & Kim ball, In a delightfully printed book, have Just Issued a second collection to tales , by Mr.. Grahame, entitled "The Golden Age." The significance of this title lies In the fact that the tales are mostly all of childhood; and ure so exquisitely etched that with the sim plest materials as, for 'Instance, a lit tle girl playing with two dolls, In the tnle called "Sawdust and Sin" the au thor, by his admirable tact and sym pathy, will enchant one Into taking his effect all very seriously, and will per ceive In the simplest doings and think ing of children new and Important sig nificances. "The Golden Age" Is a vol ume which no normal man can read without both pleasure and profit. MISCELLANEOUS. Scranton, as one of the pre-eminent bear centers of the United States, ought to take kindly to the "One Hundred Bear Stories" which Murat Halstead has edited for publication In paper cov ers by the J. S. Ogilvie company. Mr. Halstead confesses that once, when a younger man, he made the great mis take of refusing to print bear stories in the paper of which .he was then editor. Later years of more sympathetic appre ciation of the possibilities of bruin in literature have Inspired him to make the partial atonement embodied ,ln the present engaging compendium, 'which will please all who are pleased with reading of Its kind. "Jewel Don'ts" Is the self-descriptive name of a pamphlet from the pen of Edmund Russell, theaesthete, and from the press of the Bramberton Publishing company. 135 Greenwich street. New York. It comprises directions as tu the proper use of precious stones for pur posts of personal adornment, together with quotations, etc., concerning Jewels. A readable essay entitled "Madame de Stael, the Rival of Napoleon," by Mrs. Helen Hinsdale Rich, a Chicago lady of some eminence In letters, is published In convenient nnd dainty pamphlet form by Stone & Kimball, of that city, after the manner of their now celebrated Chap-Book. Mrs. Rich Is exuberant In her eulogy of the subject of her essay; and can find everything to praise and nothing to censure in her heroine's ca reer. But for all that, the paper is readable, and Just brief enough to es cape from becoming monotonous. It has come as last, after much expec tation. Ignatflus Donnelly has Issued a book on the money question. - "The American People's Money" (Chicago: Laird & Lee). It is an ingenious resume of arguments in behalf of the free coin age of silver, put Into the form of a dialogue between an Eastern banker and a Western farmer, who are Jour neying together In the same car. Prob ably the best things In this book, as also in "Coin's Financial School," are Its pictures. One of them represents Washington and Jefferson holding up the Declaration of Independence, with the words, "Alt men are created equal," before an audience of .monopolists, landlords, king and nobles, who scowl and turn away. As Illustrating the equality that exists at present In-the ITnited States, there In a picture of Uncle Sam pointing to a cage full of monkeys, labeled Astors. Sage, Goulds and Vanderbllts. l.'pnn a pile of gold, In another picture, Plutocracy, with tail and trident, sits holding In his left hand a number of strings which sever ally terminate at the ears of the great editors, who are stirring a pot In which they are "cooking the lies" of gold mon ometallism. In answer to the claim of the gold bugs that our currency Is ampler now than at any previous time, Mr. Donnelly tells the story of the col ored man who, having caught a Chop per of a cnt-IWh, secreted It In a .'little pool beside the river and went further oown ine stream. Hy und by a picka ninny camealong.saw the big fish In the pool and exchanged it for a little one which he himself had" ciyught. There Is a picture expressing the mature ne gro's astonishment when, having re turned and pulled out his fish, he ex claims: "Dls In de same place. DIs Is de ame poplar, pis Is de same string. Dls mus' he de same fish. Hut, Jerusa lem! how he hab shrunk." The "crime of '73" is Illustrated by the picture of Justice trying to awaken a number of somnolent senators while a sneak thief, representing the gold bugs, In manipu lating the bills. Very pertinent, Indeed, Is the picture called "What We Are Coming To." It represents John Bull and Baron Rothschild kicking Uncle Sam down stairs, and underneath Is this dialogue: , '. John Bull: "Get off the planet, you bold fraud. You were conceived In a blunder and your existence Is ft reproach to the money power of the world. Get out I" Rothschild: 0et away with you! Der Is no Got but Mammon, and Chon nnd me aro his prophets. Here, take your Tecla radon of Independence mlt you. It's all n lot of lies." y ' . ' ;Oi the Whole,' MY. Donnelly's book has been ;8hre'vdly 'planned to command a large ea.e, . , .:;:iv wi ' C. R. Tuttle has prepared and Charles H. Kerr & Co., Chicago, have published In book form an Official report of the recent Illlonls Free Silver convention. It Is amplified by Mr. Turtle's own ideas und predictions on the currency ques tion. Needless to say, he believe free silver will win. AUTHORS AND PUBLISHERS: Tolstoy Is dangerously 111. .Grant Allen is dramatising "The W;j mon Who Did." RomuntlclBt Stanley J. Weyman is pub licly interviewed by Robert H. Sherard, In the July Idler. Hall Calne's new novel, "Unto the Third and Fourth Generation,'" ha begun in Munsey's Magazine. Critic William Winter's forthcoming "Shadows of the Stage" is described as a history of the stage in America. Beginning- with the July number the Cosmopolitan Magazine will be sold at 10 cents per copy, or $1 a year. Professor William P. Trent, of the Uni versity of the South, has written a vol ume on "Southern Btatesmeli of tha Old Regluiu." Jose d Heredla, tint Creole sonneteer, who bus Just been welcomed Into the French ueudemy, celebrated his udvent uinotig the Immortal by a eulogy of Lu. mat t Ine. Robert Bridges and V. J. Conrthope are rival candidates for the ehulr of profes sorship of poetry at Oxford, which Francis Turner I'algrave Is about to retire after a decade's incumbency. The dramatic story of the rise of the Tweed "Ring" to such power that it was able to steal over Sl'.OOO.uoo, and then of Its complete exjosure and overthrow, will I told In Mediae's Mnguslne for July, . The famous Molly Maguire movement In the c-'ul legions of Pennsylvania ! (Iruniutlmlly uinmarlred In the current Scrlbner. Tie greut railroad strikes of 1S77 are ulso deserinco, With a Very te Ing picture of the great roundhouse siege In Pittsburg. Airs. Rebecca Harding Davis' new story, "Dr. Warrick's Daughters," which will begin In the first number of Harper's. Bii; sur for July, opens In Pennsylvania' Im mediately after the Civil War. The seen? will later Bhlft to the picturesque region of the fair southwest. Rlchurd Le Gulllcnne has been ndded to the staff oft department editors of the Cos mopolitan. Mr. I.e Unllienne will write each month a brief critical or light philo sophical article such us those now con tributed by Agnes Reppller. H. H. Roye sen, Andrew Lang and I. .ungwill ..' The publishers of McClure's Magazine announce, to begin with the July number, a reduction of price to 10 cents a copy and $1 a year. They explain that they are able to make a magazine of the highest quality at this price, and that they propose to give the public the benefit of this abil ity. Dr. Burggraeve, professor of medicine In the University of Ghent, Is 99 years old, und in active practice as a physician. He hus written a book on longevity, and Is now seeing his "Reminiscences" through the press. He smokes, drinks wine, nnd takes his little glass of gin. New York Sun. The Chinese quarter in Pan Francisco Is 'Introduced into literature in the cur rent Century by Chester Bailey Fernuld. "The Gentleman in the Barrel" Is the pre cursor, .It Is whispered, of a series of 1'hlnntown stories. They should be en titled "Pig Tales," the Philadelphia Record thinks. McClure's Mugnzlne for July will con tain an illustrated article by Sir Robert Ball, professor of astronomy in the Uni versity of Cambridge, England, showing how recent scientific discoveries tend to beae out early speculation in favor of the existence of life on other planets than the earth. The same number will contain also some very interesting Stevenson mat ter. Mme. Recamler's correspondence has been put up at auction In Puris. It em braces a number of live letters written to htr by Lucien Bonaparte, Bernadotte, Mussena and Benjamin Constant. - The letters of Prince Augustus, of Prusslu, who wished to murry the famous beauty If she would obtain a divorce from her bankrupt husband, are not among the collection. New York Critic. Kngelbert Humperdlnck, the oddly named new Wagnerian star of Germany, and his fairy opera of "Haensel and Gretel," are discussed in ,the current Strand Musical .Magazine. Humperdlnck has written two other fairy operas, as well as a drama, "The Kings' Children," which Is shortly to be produced. The magazine's frontispiece is a portrait of Tschulkowsky, who contributes a "June" Barcarolle. "Slate Supervision for Cities" is the sub ject of a paper by Professor John R. Com mons, just Issued by the American Acad emy of Political and Social Science. It Is an argument In favor of establishing a state municipal board to be composed of the governor, uttorney general, auditor and from six to ten unsalaried citizens. The duties of this board would Include re?- ommendlug the suspension or removal of officers, the uudltlng of tihe books of the city officers, the upprovul of tlnanctul measures, the Investigation of compluina.s and abuscnand the conducting of the civil service examinations. The Proofsheot suspects that the making of a dictionary Is a larger undertaking, both financially and with reference to the actual labor involved, than most persons Imagine. It says the composition of the types for the Standard dictionary cost about $0.711 per page: Including proof read ing, about 111 per page. The alterations. Including revising by proofreaders, cost PI per pnge. The amount of composition was about (M.OOO.iKXl ems.- As It wus neces sity to keep about CIO pages (Vtxn(, inches) contlntiully In type, over H,I) pounds of type were used. To hold the matter In type at one time l.itno galley were required, and there was an average of forty-seven persons employed In the com posing room for two and a half years. SEVEN SKELETONS FOUND. tvldonccn of an Indian Massaero Dis covered in Colorado. Brighton, Col., June 21. The skele tons of seven persons, four adults and three children, have been exhumed In a field a mi'le and a half from here, near an old trail where It crossed the Platte river. , The character of the skulls Indicate they were white people, and It Is be lieved they are the remains of a mur dered party of emigrants, probably a family massacred by Indians and burled by subsequent emigrants. No means of identification were discov ered. DENIES HE WAS HYPNOTIZED. Paul Goldsbury Talks of Ills Long Handclasp with Mrs. Wescuor. Northfleld, Mass., June 21. Paul W. Goldsbury is none the worse for his eighteen hours handclasp with Mrs. A. J. Wesener, wife or a professor In the Chicago College of Physicians and Sur geons. He denies that he was hypno tized by Mrs. Wesener, and says the test was one of Christian science against natural will power. His story of the affair makes H seem all the mora remarkable. i . The couple were In Warwick, a small town near here, one evening recently, when Mrs. Weeener, 'Who is 28 years old, challenged Goldsbury, who is 25, a graduate of Williams college and it member et Dwlght I Moody's College quartette, to a contest, she asserting thut, with the assistance of Christian science, she could demonstrate that her will ..was .stronger than his. . They clasped hands, and, incredible as it may seem, there are several competent, witnesses to prove that the clasp con tinued eighteen hours, and then only by force were they neparted, both being exhausted mentally and physically. Goldsbury says of the affair: "We had been to the top of Mount Grace to see the aunset and came home in the moonlight. I know that the world will scoff when I say that our souls have an affinity for each other. I mean this In no vulgar sense. Our souls have faith, each in the other. The affair was an outpouring of God's holy spirit of truth, faith and light. Hynotism had nothing to do with it." Speaking of the handclasp, he said : "Our friends pleaded with us to separate, but I could not take the advice of anyone because I knew that we were following God's directions. We did not eat sup per after our return oi breakfast in the morning. There was nothing Improper whatever In our conduct. We were moved by faith in God." MODERN OPPORTUNITY. Patriotic Work Compurabto to Any Ever Performed in the Past Awaits tl o I.diicnted Citizen of Today Who Is Willing to Do a Cition's Duty. Speaking Inst Tuesday to the gradu ating class of Vanderbllt university, Chauncey M. Dcpew, L. L. D.t said: "The student of today, as ho Htudles the great Issues of the past, and the stirring story of conflicts In congress and In the Held, Is apt to believe that the opportunities for patriotic work no longer exist. That etudent must re member that we live not for the past, but for the present and future; that ev ery period fous Its problems to be solved, Its dangers to be met and Its oppor tunities. What seem to us the com monplucesi of tho day will add to or diminish the happiness of those who shall come after us. Anarchy, social ism, taxation, currency and the rela tions nf lubor and capital ure questions ns difficult, requiring as much Judicious and patriotic consideration and de manding as much of the time and at tention of the colleges and the college men of the country as nny wihleh have agitated the nation since the founda tion of the government. It Is not for all of us to bo legislators, or governors, or cabinet minister or presidents, but It Is for all of us In the sphere in which we move to take that Interest In public affairs which voices the opinion that guides legislatures, congresses and presidents. "Public service Is not alone in the holding of office. In the hot competi tions of our American life. In the obli gations which a man owes to those about him and dependent upon him, in the duties and happiness which come from marriuge aitd domesticity, no man, until he Is assured In some way of Independence from the emoluments of office, can afford to enter public life. The most lamentable wrecks which I have seen In thirty odd years since I was graduated have been the men who have abandoned everything for the public service, only to be thrown out by the change of politics and to find that their places in the professional and business world had been occupied by younger men, leaving them helpless and stranded. But every town caucus, ev ery village primary, every ward or county convention Is the opportunity and the duty of the educated man. He must belong to one or the other of the great parties, because In representative government it Is only by such organiza tions that wise policies can eventuate In wise measures. Municipal Purification. "We hear much too much of rings and bosses. They are the natural re sult of the- neglect of the primaries by the citi;.tns. The boss and the ring on one side, In secret partnership with the ring und the boss on the other, present tickets mude up of thieves or tools and then hliout for us to vote for the one or the cthtr in the name of protection or free ttade, In the name of mono metallism or free coinage of silver ac cording to i ur party atllllations. It the s.lueated men of the country who are ministers, lawyers, doctors, Journalists, business n-cii or farmers would per fcrm their duties lu the primary school nf the caucus we never would experi ence that despotism of a machine which blights ambition, destroys honest effort for good government, and plunders im partial partisans and antagonists. "I we have neglected our duty to the community, to the state and to the na tion by neglecting the beginnings of government, we ure not without rem edy. Then Is the time for those, and they exist In every community, who have been trained in the schools to formulate their ideas and to express them upon the platform, of through the press or by the pamphlet, to say to the people 'protection and free trade can wait; they have walled and wavered for a century. All other questions can wait as they have waited and wavered for a generation. Thieves are in pos session of the statehouse. robbers are Intrenched In the city hall. Unite, dis card party, dlsregurd cries, shibboleths and phruses, nnd so rescue the state and the? rlty.' The efficacy of this method, though a lute one, nnd on un necessary one If the educated brains of the country attended to their du ties, hnB been seen within a year under the inspiration of seventy Independent citizens in New York, a hundred Inde pendent citizens In Brooklyn, the triumph of civil service in Chlcugo by the popular vote and other equally sig nificant manifestations of the resistless power of a combination of Independent voters." IF- If all the boys and girls you know, Would romp, and play, and run, With you all day, I'm sure you'd say, "My, what a Jot of fun!" And If all the Utile boys and girls On dnys when they must go To school, would study liulf ns hard My, whut a. lot they'd know! Womankind, MTJNYON'3 Rheumatism Cure never falls to relieve in three hours and cor In three days. MUNYUN'S Dyspepsia Cure is guar anteed to correct constipation and cur 11 forms of indigestion and stomach trouble. MUNYOITS Catarrh Cur soothes and heals the Bill ic ted parts and restores them to health. No failure; a cure guaranteed. MUNYON'S Kidney Cure speedily cures Jialni in the back, loins or groins and all orms of kidney disease. MUNYON'H Nerve Care cures nervous ness and builds op the system. MUNYON'S Vitollzer imparts new life, reitoret lost powers to weak and debilita ted men. Price $1.00. . No matter what the disease Is or how many doctors bare failed to curs you, ask your druggist for a U5-cent vial of one of Munyen's Cures, snd if you are not bens filed your money Will bs refunded. The Only Remedy in fhe World That Re Japds Purchase Price if It Fails to Ciire the Tobacco flabif It Ciires While Yod Tobacco. , The greatest discovery of the agel A certain,' pleasant, permanent cure. A lifetime's snllerlug ended for $5.00. Why smoke and spit your life away? Why sutler from dyspep sia, heartburn, aud drains on your vital forces? Stop using tobacco, but stop the right way! Drive the nicotine from your system by the use of this wonderful remedy. Narcoti-Citre is warranted to remove all desire for tobacco in every form, including Cigar, Cigar ette and Pipe Bmokiug, Chewing and Buuff Taking. Use all' the tohaeco you want wlillo under treatment, und iu from four to ten days your "hank ering" and "craving" will dlsap-pear-the weed won't (aste good. Then throw away tobacco for ever. Nahcoti-Ccre is eutiifly vege table and free from injurious in gredients. It never falls to give tone and new vigor to the weakest constitution. Remember Narcoti-Cure does not deprive you of tobacco while effecting a cure; doesn't ask you to buy several bottles to be entitled to a guarantee; doesn't require u month's treatment; and, linally, . doesn't enable you to stop tobacco only to And yoursslf a slave to the I nauu oi taoiei onewing. EVA M. HETZSL'S Superior Face Bleach, Positively Removes ill Facial Blemishes. ' ' to -saw rafeLW No more Frerltles, Tan, Bunhurn, Black heads, Liver Spots. Pimples and Sallow Complexions if ladles will use my Su perior Face Bleach. Not a cosmetic, but a medicine which acts directly on the skin, removing all dtxcoloratlons, an one of the greatest purifying agents for the complex ion In existence. A perfectly 'cli-ur and spotless complexion can be obtained In every Instance by Its use. Price, $1.00 per bottle. For salo at E. M. lletzel'g Hair dressing and Manicure Parlors, SSU Lack awanna ave. Mail orders tilled promptly. SUDDEN DEATH on The best wearing, most stylish, and the greatest alue of any $3.00 Men's Shoes on tho continent. ( Best calfskin, dongola tops, solid leather soles, with all the popular toes, lasts and fastenings, and Lewis' Cork filled Soles. Each pair contains a paid-up Acci dent Insurance Policy for100, good for OOdavs. Wear Lewis' Accldont Insurance Shoes once and you will never change. The Insurance goes for "full measure." Talk with your dealer who sells Lewis' Shoes. i L ' FOR SALE AT Globe Shoe Store 127 UCKA. AVE., SCRANT0.1, PA. EVANS POWELL, Prep'is THE TRADERS . national Bank of Scranton. ' ' ORGANIZED iCoo. CAPITAL 250,000 SURPLUS, $35,000 SAMTTETj KTNE8, President. W. W. WATSON, Vlce-Preeldsnt. A. B. WILLIAMS, Cashier. DIRECTORS. Samuel Hines, James M. Kverhart, Irr Inn A. Finch, Pierce B. Klnley. Joseph J. Jermyn, M. 8. Kemerer, Charles P. Mat thews. John T. Porter,. W. W. WaUon. Ui LIBERAL. Ttila bank Invites the patronac bus men ana nrms jpraeraiy. S Okleheater'e Baclleh Dtaaaoad Braatf. miNYROYAI, PILLS -7K "ngiaal aaa waujr ejeauiaa. UrmiM k rleMr' Din ,m4nnt In ated OM uttillfe' lb.xn. h.M with klu. rilibun. Take alfek iila. ia.M. ffMAu. rilUMU MlhlNfM. N - .... j .iii... - - . J In luaipe Ibr jt.rll.ulwt, uatiaal!fl a.it " Bailer rar IjmUm," ( lmr. by ratora IfaJI. 1A.A4II1 ThiImmIiIi. Jfaa. Km. '.ivi-i ... in. M-JI I MVaUUealBiegjMe. ... tklimiaVi 1 PROMPT. ffiffllC. rail IC 2 it in 4 to 10 Days Is Continue th? list of With Narcoti Cure, whsn you are through witli tobacco, you are through with the remedy. One bottle cures. Bend for book of prominent tes timonies like the following: Huntinotom, Mam., March 18, 1803. TnB i AIK OTI CHEMICAL CO., Kpringfleld, Mass. . Gentlemen; I have uwd tobacco for over twonty flTd yean, cbtwilor and smoking evnry day from 7 a. m. ta 9 p. m. utoppliiK only for ineslt. On Monday, Feb. 4. I called at your office lu Kiiringfleld, and bought m hot' It of the ( L'liB which 1 uud an directed, nn1 on tin tenth day the dralr for to bacco bad left ine and it hiu Dot re turned. I did not lone a meal while tak ii.g t ne Cutis. My appatitihaa improved anil eiuaiclar Naik oti-C'uiie a grand ttilotc- Very respectfully. (.'HAH. L LINCOLN. Mr. Frank H. Morton, of Cblcope Falla. Mum., late Ir.aiuitor of public buildings for M aasachusetts, aajra: I mod tobacco for twanty.flve yean, and was a confirmed sniok.r. In Juat eight outs' treatment with Nascoti tins! wai through with tobacco, in fact the ilualre for tobacco vantahed like a dream, Vorv rapactf nllr. FUAXK H. MORTON. If your druggist is unable to give full particulars about Narcoti Cure, send to us for Book of Par ticulars free, or send f 9.00 for bot tle, by mail. ' THE NARCOTI CHEMICAL CO., Springfield, Mass. Spring House V. E. CROFUT, Prop'r, Heart Lake, Pa. Altitude nearly 2,000 feet. Fine grove snd beautiful scenery. House new ana well f ur nlaiied: but three minutes' walk from D., L. & W, station, and 1L0 feet lrora the lake. GOOD BOATS, FISHING TACKLE, Dancing Pavilion, Swings, Croquet Ground,, etc., FREE to Quests. COLD SPUING-' WATER AKD PLENTY OP MILK. RATES REASONABLE. Writs tor circular. SECURITY, CONVENIENCE, PRIVACY. THE Safe-Deposit Vaults OP THE 404 Lackawanna Ave., OFFER exceptional facilities (or the safe keening of Securities. lioxes of all sizes and prices. Large, light and airy rooms for the use and convenience of cus tomers. Entrance only through the Bank. "gratr REVIVO RESTORES VITALITY. Made a lstDftj, tj,n as.. jucn maul 18th Day. ffV 0f Me. THB QRCAT 80th bar. prodncea the above reaulta ln'30 days. It aoti torfullr and quickly. Cuna whan all other, fall. Youna man will malu their lent manhood, aad old maa will Ncovar their youthful visor hy tieing KKTIVO. It quickly and eurely reelore, Narroua neaa, Lot Vitality, Impolenoy, NUftitly Emlaalona. Loat Power, Falling Memory, W a. tint Oiaeaaea. aud all affeota of eelt-ebuae or eieeea aod Indlacratton. whisk untta one for atuilr.bualneaa or niarrtai. It not only cure, hy itartlnc at the aaat of dlaeaaa. but la a treat nr tonle and blood builder, brlnf leg back the pink glow to pule eheeka and re atorlng the fire) of youth. It ward, off fmanlty and Consumption. Inalut on having RKVIVO.no other. It can be carried tu veal pocket. By mall, 1.00 per package, or all for 0)5.00, with poel tlvs written guarante to cure) or rafuud tho money. Circular free. Addraas 0OYAL MEDICINE CO.. 13 River St., CHICAGO, ILL Wot sole hy Matthews Bros DftaUlat Scrauluu . rt NT. PLEASANT AT RETAIL, Coal of the boat quality for domestic ase, end or all aisea. delivered in any part of the city at loweat price. Ordrra left at my Office NO. 118 WYOMING AVENUE, Rear room, tirat floor, Third National Bank, or gent by mall or telephone to the nine, will receive prompt attention. Special contracts will be made for tha lale and delivery of Buckwheat Coal. WM. T. SMITH. JOHN L HANGI, ENGRAVER, OFFICE AND SHOP 311 Look. At- and Stewart's Art Store. Photo. EDgr-avi for Circulars, Books, Ctla j ' logucs, rltspapars. Half-Tonaa and Llna Work. jl emir mt 1 tv 17 V M am GOAL iHMKI'lg Have you Bora Throat, Plmalea, Copper-Colored Bpota, Aohca. Old Bores, Vloera In Mouth, Ilalr fVlllnrT Write r-K Hrmedr V-. BOt Me eMtTaile,C)aisa,Illnf or proof, of cures. Capital aaOO,0OO. PatlanUcaredalaaTcara awertTBndanwell-p)lft- DR. E. GREWER, The Philadelphia Specialist, and his asso dated tuft of Engllah and German physlulans, are now permanently located at Old Postoffice Building, Corner Penn Avenua and Spruce Street. The doctor Ih a KraUuue or the ITniver. Ity of Pennaylvanla, formerly demon atrator of phyalology and Hurgery at the Medlco-Chlrurgical college of PhlladeL phla. Hie specialties are Chronic, Ner vous, Skin, Heart, Womb and Blood dis eases. DISEASES OF THE NERVOUS SYSTEM The symptoms of which are diszlness.lack of confidence, sexual weakness In men and women, ball rising in throat, spots floating; before the eyea, loss of memory, unable to concentrate the mind on one subject, easily startled when suddenly spoken to, and dull distressed mind, which unfits them for performing tho actual du ties of life, making hapuiness impossible, distressing the action of the heart, caus. Ing flush of heat, drprejsion of splrus.evU forebodings, cowardtc, fear, dreums.mei. ancholy, tire easy of company, feeling as tired In the mornlr.g as when retiring, lack of energy, nervousness, trembling, eonfualon of thouvhl.depresslon, constipa tion, weakneKs of the limbs, etc. Those so affected should consult us Immediately ard be restored to perfect health. Lost Manhood Restored. WeakneM of Young Men Cured.' If you hav been given up by your phy. Ician call pon the doctor and be exam "d. He cures the worst cases of Ner. us Debility, Scrofula. Old Sores, Ca tarrh, Plies, Female Weakness, Affec tions of be Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat. Asthma, feafness. Tumors, Cancers and Cripples i every description. Consultations free and strictly sacred and conOdenlC Office hours dally frem a.m. to p.r. Sunday, to 2. Enclose Ave -cent sumps for symtpora blanks and m.r book called "New I,if " I will pay one thousand dollars In gold ia.y.1.ne, whom 1 eannot cure of EPI LEPTIC CONVULSIONS or FITS. DR E GREWPR. Old Post Office Building, corner Pansi avenue and Spruce street, SCRANTON. PA. VELSBAGH LIGHT Specially Adapted for Beading and Sewing. Consumes three (3) feet of gas per hour and gives u efficiency uf sixty (60) candies. . Saving at least 33 per cant over tha ordinary Tip Burners. Call aod See It. Tfi 434 UCKtWiNNA (VENUE, nanufacturers' Agents. . lien's tf BREWERY. Manufacturer! of to CelabrateA PILSENER LAGER BEER CAPACITY 1 foo,ooo Barrels per Annum DU FONT'S IfllMNG, BLASTING AND SPORTING POWDER Manufactured at the Wapwallopen Mills, Lo same connty, Pa., and at Wil mington, Unlaw are, HENRY BELIN, Jr. General Agent for the Wyoming Dlatrlot. tlS WYOMING AVE., Scranton, Pa, Third National Bank Building. AOEHCIBH : THOB. PORD, Mttatoo, Pa. JOHN B. SMITH ft SON, Plymouth. Pa, K. W. MUI.L1UAN, Wllkaa Barre, Pa. Agents for the Rttpaono Chemical Oosa assy's Blgh Explosives. HORSE - SHOEING REMOVED. DR. JOHN HAMLIN, The Acknowledged Expert lo Horseshoeing and Dentistry, is Now Permanently Located on West Lackawanna Ave., Near the Bridge. Jjl I Pie lis MIEN 9 taiitiii.