1 ; f THE SCEA25TON TRIBUNE THURSDAY MOUNTING, JUNE '-'7, 1305. 400-402 Lackawanna Ave., Scranton. 400-402 Lackawanna Ave., Scran ton. FA TO The Fair FOR BARGAINS. n TO The Fair FOR BARGAINS. , 1 1 -'ftt""m'""- l ir i - : . , . . - r ji i THE 1 ioo pieces Bleached Twilled Toweling, Honday - 4b ioo pieces heavy cream Shaker Flannel, Mon- 03ft 4b day ioo pieces Merrimac's Light Prints, Mon- H3ft day 100 pieces heavy, yard wide, bheeting, Q3ft U4b Honday ioo pieces Calico, ind- digo blue, best qual- Don - iJ40 ity, Honday ioo pieces Cashmeres, -ard wide, (all col- . ors) 25c. quality, iLn Monday GREAT BARGAINS IN Lawns and Bedspreads. 5oo dozen Gents' Seam less lt Hose, worth 10c. a pair, on Mon- OCa day 6 pairs for - OUU 50 dozen Ladies' Seam less Hose, fast black, worth i2c, Honday 4o dozen Ladies' Fan cy Wrappers, worth 98c, Honday - MILLINERY. Ladies' Trimmed and Un trimmed Hats at less than one-half price. 5.000 yards Japanese Wash Silks, for ; Shirt Waists, worth HQ I 50c. yd., Monday fidu GREAT BARGAINS IN Books and Laces. ioo dozen Gents' Un- laundried Shirts, 50c. each, Monday only 40 dozen Ladies' Black Silk Mitts, extra good, worth 39 cents Monday 25 dozen Ladies' Wrap pers, worth $1.50, (M Honday - $ FLOWERS. 25c. Quality at 10 Cents. 50c. Quality at 20 Cents. 75c. Quality at 21) Cents. $1.00 Quality at 40 Cents. Lace Curtains, Lace Para sol Covers, Lace Pillow Shams Reduced 25 per cent. GREAT BARGAINS IN Parasols, Etc., on Monday. 100 dozen Gents' Hand kerchiefs worth 12JC Monday 4 for - 25c 200 doz. Ladies' Hand kerchiefs, worth 5c. 01 a and Se.each, Monday j2u 8 dozen Ladies' Duck Suits, worth $5.00, nr Honday - JZ.IO Boys' 50c. Shirt Waists and 50c. Knee Pants, QCn on Monday - QuU ALL DRESS GOODS REDUCED 35 l'Elt CEXT To Close Out. GREAT BARGAINS IN On Monday. 50 dozen Gents' Bal briggan Shirts and Drawers, worth 39c, QCn Honday 90 dozen Ladies' Em broidered Handker chiefs, worth 2 sc. Ill I6ZU Monday Ladies' Capes. Ladies' Skirts, Ladies' Suits At Less Than Half Price. FULL LINE OF Children's Dresses At Prices That Will Surprise You. 5,000 yards all-silk Velvet, worth $1.00 rn yard, Monday - 3(JC 10 gross best quality Buttermilk Soap, 4 cakes in box, for Monday day C 5o dozen Children's Lace Caps, worth 23c, Honday - lllC l5 dozen Children's Lace Hats, all colors, OC worth 49c, Monday fijC 2 cases Corsets, sizes 18 to 30, drab and white, worth 50c. QC JJC 25 dozen Ladies' as sorted Night Gowns, worth 9SC, Hon- Cfl c 50 doz. Ladies' Chem ise and Drawers, as sorted, worth 50c, Hl Monday C Copyright 1SD5 by Irving Bnrlnllir.) CHAPTETl IV. THE MTT.DER HT THK WATERSIDE. It wa3 no more than nn hour aftfr clay when I was surprised by the earning of the younjr man Philip Stamlflfielfl to my chamber door. He rame In without knocking, and leaned upon the holf.r,t. There he wecprl and cried, and though I cannot pay that I bad any opinion of Ms qualities before I was somewhat affected by his penitence. Indeed, I could not but suppose that, even thus late, my words of rebuke had taken ITect uprm the hardened and Indurate herrt of this helnaua sinner. With this comforting thought upon me, I a?ked of him when the Kracp of Tppentance had been Riven to him, and told him that I had a vision during the night of demons that had wre?tled. for his soul, but which by my watchfulness and pravrr had fled away battled and vanquished. For, very clearly, I saw the meanlntr of It all now. I hnd of a surety been sent to the New Mllns to deliver the soul of this yountf man. At last Philip Ptandsfleld ceased his Bitching and grieving, and I looked for tome words of Trace. Itut he said: "Alas! Mr. Hell, Sir James, my dear father, has left hU chamber during th9 night nnd wandered abroad, so that we fear he has done himself a mischief." But I comforted him aaytng that be like Sir James "had been disturbed by the same noise of demons which I had heard, and had1 jrone abroad to see more of them, even aa I had done my elf. - At this Philip looked somewhat etranfrely at me, and so went bis way for that time, so that I was left alone. Then I dressed me in my bettermost clothes, being the Sabbath day, and went downstairs to go abroad. As I passed through the gate nnd went along the causeway that lends to the manu factory, one came running to say that they had found Sir James lying frozen In the water with his face down, and oil the breath gone out of his body. Thither I hasted with great lament for my kind friend nnd patron, remember ing all his kindliness and hospitality to me In past days, and grieved to think that all was at an end. When I got to the place there was already a great crowd, and Philip Standsfleld standing by ordering them to have him taken out.' Sir James lay ' with his face down, frozen In firmly on either side, with little on, but a great thick coat of blue done about him.' And when they drew him to the Bide, ne lay . on (he bank so dismal a night to behold that my heart bled for him. and my tears (ran frevly down upon the ground. At this moment I got a sudden sur prise, for aa It had been, the thought of demon' Philip StandcfUM came and caught me by the s1pve, crying out, "Here star.ls th? murderer of my fa tl ?r. lie it. was thut enticed him hither, and h.th, for his own wicked ends, chiked and worried him to death nn l dung him into the river!" Then certain that were hi Philip's fact! m. (ieorge Johnston, whom I heard th"m call "the devil's tailor," nnd mi? N'lohols, came and cau?ht me, punhlnic m? rudely, and riving the good blnck cloth's off my back, crying out all th.? while, "It Is the murderer! It Is tha murd -rcr! See his countenancel He cennot find rneooh to deny It." And :t a verity speech had departed frum me, as well It might from one that 1:4 suddenly accused of the death of his brut friend, from whom he part ed In all love and amity only the night befire. Sj they hauled mo along the path, and making mo touch the body they de clared that blood came from It, which was mmlfes'Jy fains, for none was to be psen, save where the glass of the wmdow had cut my own hand In re turning during the r.lght. "It In. fiod's ordinary mode of discov ering crime," nld Philip Standsfleld, and he wiped his own hands on hla sleeve, for he had been standing beside IT13. So they took me, along with the body of my late beloved friend, Into the waukmill; and there, saying that they hud caught me red-hand In the act, Philip Standsfleld was for straightway hanging me, by virtue of his warrant as a magistrate of the county, having been chamberlain and deputy Rhertff to his father. But this others debated 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, upon .s doing 'things with a high hand, and without color of law. Then, so wonderful are the ways of the evidence of things and circum stances, that they found one of my shot-s down .by the waterside where I had stood behind the tree. This they asked of me to explain, a dozen crying at once, "Did I deny having been dur ing the night- near to where the dead body had been found?" I told .them that I did not deny the truth. But I begged of them to listen while I told them how that evil nplrlts, to my knowledge and In my sight, had dragged a burden down to the water edge and set it afloat on the river. But at this they all laughed aloud. Even thofi? that were not Ill-affected to me were sunken In their belief by my rambling words, which seemed to them to bear guilt on the, face of them. I cried and protested that they should never think so bae a thing possible, as that I should murder my well-beloved P 1 K S6 They Took Mo. friend, and that wholly without reason. But they went and pointed out the double track of my feet to the water side, and again with one shoe gone from my right foot, back again to the win dow, j "I will have his life, tor a black hearted rogue and the murderer of my fatherl" cried Philip Standsfleld. And he bado bring a rope, which put me In great fear when I aw, Nichols run off to do his will. For they took me out to the dule-tree, and Qarred read a kind of wiu-r&nt about finding me red-hand In the act,, while I stood on a wooden tub 'that was used for washing, with the rope about my neck, and the other end rove over a branch. I was In much tumult and perturbation of spirit when I thought that .In another moment I should find myself In Abraham's bosom, for which, In my present state, I knew I wafl desperately ill-fitted. Presently, ttandlng thus with my thoughts whirling about me, I heard a voice I knew speaking loud and angry at the outside of the throng. It was the voloa of Umphray Bpurway, the Eng lishman. And f hat was small comfort to me, for the mam had' never liked me. Indeed, Englishmen,, for common, have small kindness for ministers: So that I looked for no pause or mercy. Never theless 1 cried to the man that I asked for trial with color of law. And I took all that were there present to witness, that It should lie upon him, that was a man of substance and responsibility, If he should allow mine enemy to shed my blood without trial. Then the Englishman, who had been trained, as they all are, to fine Instinct of law-abiding, cried out among them all: "Let the man be taken to prison. Let him be kept close till he have fair trial, j A man Is surely Innocent till he be proved guilty. In every country save In this uncouth land of th Scots, where they set a man to hedge and shoot him, or string him to a. tree and try him as he dangles. Give the man to my hand, and I will keep him safe In mine own house, and produce him upon warrant, for which I shall be surety to the whole extent of my goods." So In spite of Philip Stamlsfleld and his cabal, I was let go with Umphray Spurway, for he was an urgent man, and Imperious so that very few dared say no to him In all that country side. So as soon as I got him alone In his own house I began, to tell him all the tale of the demons, at which relation, first of all, he cried "Pshaw!" and "Clotted nonsense," with other expressions I can not repenit, being unseemly to be writ ten down byl a minister. - But after he had thomght n little, he bade me repeat It all again from the be ginning, nnd Indeed several times over, questioning me of what I hud seen, till now I said to' him, "Ah, Mr. Spurway, bldo a little, nnd you will come to lc lleve In the demons." "Tut! gull-head," ho said very rudely to me, that am a minister (though till lately Without charge). "I will find your demons for you when my good friend the commissary comes from Edinburgh." Then he tokl me how It had been re solved to hush the matter up now that Philip and his clan hud been balked In the Immediate killing of me for the fact but that he, Umphray Spurway, had taken It upon him to write to one Mr. eorge Hume, merchant In Edinburgh, who was great with my Lord Advocate Dalrymple, to have him order n public examination. "Then It will go hard If I grip not your devils, for you, minister, as read ily a a .herd thnt grips sheep at a narrow slap In a stone dyke." These things I set down ns he said them, for tlnu-t wait his strange nnd lm mHlest way of speech. But I deny mt that the man treated me well enough all the time that I abode In his house by the cloth manufaotury, to which he went and came at stuted hours, ns reg ular as the clock, which Is the uw and wont of Yorkshire men. It was about 12 that night of the Sabbath the strangest I hnve ever een, and Ood and the angels keep me from seeing any stranger thnt Um phray Spurway wnked me out of sleep. He stood by my bedflde, with William Bowman, his servant.' I feared he'hnd come to tell me thnt I was to go to prison. But Instead he asked me to rice, and be a witness of a strange transaction. So soon as we came out of the house and.he door was shut behind us, we saw a great many fitting lights at the door of the place of New Miln. As we went nearer we heard also the tram pling of horses and a concourse of peo ple. . " , , By the way we met a'maft hurrylnjr greatly. Ho would have passed us by without speech, but- William llowman tripped him up, being a Cumberland man and skilled In such plays. ' ' I heard Umphray Spurway say to him, "William Robinson, whither way so fast? What goes forward with so great a concourse at the house of Sir James Standsfleld?" Then the mnn, being held so fast at either side, muttered that Philip had given orders for the bringing out of the body. And they were burying It secretly In Morham Kirk thnt night. "For," said Philip Standsfleld, "It my father was not murdered by the rogue of a minister that set hlm against me ncgnn to Tell lllm. nnd played .tnle-pyet to my doings why, then, he made away with himself, and, having died like, n dug, he shall be burled like a dog." "We will e'en go our ways down," said Umphray Spurway, and I mind that his beard was red as fire where the pitchplne lights caught It ns we followed the procession to the kirk. It was a gruesome sight we saw when we got there. Two women went dancing before with torches In their hands. One of then I knew not, but the otluf was the buxom besom Janet Johnston whom we had seen with Philip Standsfleld In tho chaiigehouso. Then enme the corpse, white-sheeted nnd cofllnless, looking twice tho ordinary length of a man, borne upon the shoulders of six men, and with the hend not stiff but wagging from side to side like a twig with a broken top. It was a memory for a man to carry to his grave. And a thou sand times when I sleep alone I wish that I had never seen It. Then the unseemly procession went Into the klrk-yard with Jest nnd levity, stumbling over graveyard stones, being most of them well touched wlh drink. Cursing and swearing they went, like men thnt are not In love with their job, and would take out their nnger upon the dumb stones among their feet, fTo lie Continued. 1 A i nl,net I,,atnnt1 Gimmllltf riirlllff the Civ, mm"', r,-. j n must obstinate cases, Llieuinatinrn cured In from 1 to 8 days. Dyspepsia and all stomach troubles quickly rolluvod. Catarrh positively cured. Ilcndncho cured in 0 minutes. Nervous discuses promptly cured. Kidney troubles, Tiles, Neuralgia, Asthma nnd all Female Complaints quickly cured. Munyon's Vitallzer imparts new Ufa and Vi;:or to weak and debilitated men.' Ask .our druggist for a SVcent vial of one o( Munyon's Cures, and If you are not bene fited your money will bd refunded. This Company puts UP A euro for every disease Tie Weeklyf ribune '12 Paiiou-SSl u Ycur. " TifrtrngcrorTHrPAnnFFC UNEQUALLED AND UNRIVALLED PREPARATIONS FOR THE HAIR AND SCALP. A distillation from the South American pnlm tree. Kreo from mineral m i-heinlral coin. iioiiikIk. An Infnllible rr), for llxlrtnenB, Hulr-Knlllng, Dandruff, Thin or IMirnln Hnir, Kcxenia, letter, nnd nil di( mihcs of tho lliiir nnd Sculp. I'lm-Chrioti SnAwroo for beiiuiKylne tho Hair; a dclizlitful. cool nnd rrfreahlng Mmmpooi exiiMtn odor. All ?urchiiser8 of the Pat.m-( uniim PtlFTAli ions me entitled to five treatment of tho Sonlp. Shampooing nnd llnlr lirclng, at any ct our Hull-Dressing Parlors. PALM-CH RISTT CO . , rnn.A. paki.oksi ot chkstnct st. 1. 8. Our pnrlors are In ehni pn of spectnl Ms on HlFectlens of the Hair nnd tk-alp. All ail vice. fiee. -Viile fur circular. our Hair Difosnm enll upon ttlaru can mak appointments bv addressing MATTHEWS BROS.. Sole Agents for Scranton. Business Booming. Wo are pleased to any that our business la increasing daily. Our spot Cash buying and small expenses is tho beuoflt to our customers. LOOK AT THESE BARGAINS : Ladies' Shoes only $ .75 Ladies' Fine Shoes 1.S0 Ladles' Fino French DoiiKola Bhoosouly 12.5(1 Men's Klioes only .75 Men's Fine Shoes....... 1,10 Men's French Calf Shoes 2.50 Men's Jtusoot Shoes from $ 1 .50 to .50 Wo have a large stock of Boys', Mlssoa' and Children's 8hovs in Kusaot and Dontrola at re markahly low prices. Oive us a call and wo On overy pair of Shoea you buy from ua. Ro. iiiombor, there la no trouble to allow goods, and you will (inve money by it. DAVIDOW'S 3k 140 Penn Avenue HORSE - SHOEING REMOVED. Moosic Powder Co Rooms 1 and 2 Commowealth Bld'& SCRANTON, PA. MINING and BLASTING POWDER MADE AT MOOSIC AND RUSH DALE WORKS. Lamin A Rand Powder Co. "a Orange Gun Powder Eloclrlc Ttntteriea, Fusoa for explod ing blasts. Safety Fuse and Rcpanno Chemical Co.'s Riga Explosive. taear mr mt HiHtrr Mioiui Imaatmi sneitnioLiNHflija KEADACHES iujilki win euro j on. a wonderful boon to fuffrrer froraCoUi, ftoreThroat, or HAY FEVER. ATr4 Imrnediatt rtlicf. An efficient hi porkK. mtlT to m on Brt indicmuoa of 'joid. Cat1ntie4 li ltct PnaaBat Care. Fatl facUoarnininteed or money refunded. Price,, ct. Trial tro at Umui'ta. Ilecltr0 raalU V oeut. 1. H CSiiil, Kir., 7km lirvt, Mica., V. S. 4, cxraiTMAiv'fl MCUTtJflt Thu lures, and itfc-rt r toed 7 for fc.I1 I nUU all skin diwseiJKewaia,lU'a.8it Rheum .nil ftnrea, Hurnt, Otu. Woaderfal rem d for PILES. Price, ft 6 eta. nt Dnuj nil aj giita or ry mull pretifcirt. Atldren ainboTi. Pft u H For sale by Matthews Bros, and Johr H. Pheics. WaV f 1 "var"i.r- 3WJ ROOF TKIMG IITO SOIBEBIIC AH done awny with by the use of HART MAN'S PATKNT PAINT, which conalata of Ingredients well-known to all. It can be applied to tin, xnlvanized tin, sheet Iron roofs, also to brirk dweliliK. which will firevent absolutely any crumbling, craok ng or breaking of the brick. It will oul laxt tinning of any kind by many yearn, ami It's cost does not exceed one-fifth that of tho cost of tinning. Is sold by the Job or pound. Contracts tnken by ANTONIO UAHTilAJ;.N, &.1 Birch St. Complexion Presetted DR. HEBRA'S VIOLA: CREAM Bemorei Fraekltt, Pimales, LW MoiM, Bieekk.aaa; unburn and Tea, and re An the akin to its crlil- nal beshneta, produetug a, Clear aua urauar wm- plrxion. Bnperior to all fi fmaratlona and .perfectly irugglita, or maUoa lor SOcu. VIOLA 8X1 SOAP to d.ptr iMwnbb - a Ua urllriu Sua, ulM . tM MM. namt a SVL M Um Tiumry. Aimi, r" tf b'Imh m wi Ainii. PHne23C.m. G. C. BITTNER4 CO.,Tot,ioo.O. For sale by Matthews Bras, and John M. Phaiss. harmlcai Send lor 1 At all Clrcolai, (AOTION ft TO our patrons: Washbtirn-Croshy Co. wish to assure their many pat. rons thttt they will this year hold to their usual custom of milling STRICTLY OLD WHEAT until the new crop is fully cured. New wheat is now upon the market, and owing to the excessively dry weather many millers are of the opinion that it Is already cured, and in proper condition for milling. Washburn-Crosby Co. will tuktf no risks, and will allow the new wheat fully threa months to mature before grinding. This careful attention to every detail of milling hoi placed Wnshburn-Crosby Co.'n flour far above other brands. ,' , DR. JOHN HAMLIN, . The Acknowledged Expert Jn liorseshoelng nnd Dentistry, Is Now Permanently Located 011 West Lackawanna Ave., . . Near the Bridge. MEGARGEL CONNELL Wholesale Agents. 1 . 1 1 " 1