-v.- ..-,,-'' V -' ; ':..-;'V--, ' :;rv-r- ' f - . . - .;t TUB SCBANTON TBIBITNE TUESDAY MORNING, JULY 16, 1895. RE AT CLEAKOG SALE ! .. 1 400-402 Lackawanna Ave., Scranton. 400-402 Lackawanna Ave., ' Scranton. FAI ' 1 """ MtMMtiim.m...M....A. , . . .......... . . J- ---- ----- - ..-r........ . ... mttMiiMtitmittmnimmtt.t............. . . - jj . v. . - . . : ; : ;.. : ' ' : : : : il i i i aaaanaa J I II -eat --tw . ' . . . THE 1 it I I MM II I Ills' I I ml I I iiiffl i it I I V 1 n7 o I tiif rniin Mil I ) Commencing Vlonda), July 15, 1895. Our Annual Summer Clearing Sale, Which usually commences about August 1st, owing to the large stock which we now have on hand, commences July 15. The stock must be re duced 50 per cent within 30 days. The entire stock consists of over $50,000 worth of Dry Goods, Notions, Ladies and Gents' Furnishing Goods, Millinery, Cloaks, Wrappers, Infants' Wear, etc., has been marked down to a price lower than ever seen in Scranton before. Be low we mention a few of the bargains only, to give you an idea of what we are selling. Hun dreds of other bargains just as good in every department lo cases Bleached Twilled Toweling, Only lie per yard 5o pieces Cashmeres, i yd wide, worth 25c and 29c Only 15c. yard 50 doz. Ladies' Laundried Shirt Waists, worth 7sc Only 40c S bales Unbleached yard wide Sheeting, Only 2!c per yard 50 pieces Silk Velvet, worth $1.00, Only 50c per yard 45 doz.Ladies' Wrappers, worth $1.00 to $2.00, Only 90c 2 cases Bleached, yard wide Muslin, Only 31c per yard So pieces Japanese Wash Silk, worth 50c. Only 25c per yard 5 00 doz. Ladies' Fancy Handkerchiefs, worth 5c to 8c, Only 2k 100 pieces Check Apron Ginghams, Only 21c per yard 75 doz. Boys' Waists,ioo doz. Boys' Pants,worth 50c. to 75c, Only 35c 2 cases Ladies' Hose,seam less and fast black, worth i2jc. to i5c, Only 7zC 10 pieces Bleached Pillow Case Muslin, 16-inch wide, Only 7aC per yard 200 doz. Gents' White Un laundried Shirts; worth 50c, Only 29c 2 cases Ladies' Summer Corsets, worth 75c, Onry 39c 25 pieces Sheeting, 2 Unbleached ds wide, 2 yds Only 10?i c per yard 500 doz. Gents' Seamless Yi Hose, worjh 10c. pair, Only 5c 1,000 doz. Sewing Silk, all colors, 100 yd spools, Special, 2 for 5c GREAT CLEARING SALE 1 V) 1)1)) I M mm ivnnr xmw w tCopTricht 1S0B. 1r Irrlng BactaeUar. Our train had been anow-bound for nearly two day. At first most of us . irare Tery naturally restle?s amd lm ".. ftatleat; but, the "hours drifted by, ' M crew phUoaophicatly resigned. Two f the trainmen, together with several ' (MMngrs, bad volunteered to fight tbalr way to the nearest station and . brine relief; ao there wa nothing to do tat occupy our mind with, oarda, con- versaitlon and amoka, and try to forget .' Wiat our tomchs bad been put on abort allowance. With this aim several men gathered aU one end of the smoker and took to pinning yarn, first humorous, then of - adventure, andi tfinwlly drifting Into . wbat are known as "detective stories." , There Were flva of us besides myself; .two drummers, one from New York and on from Chicago; a Frenchman, - Who had been "doing" the country; a ' fussy oM rentleman on hla way east to : attend alt daughter's wedding which lift was pretty reasonably sure to miss, ' and a gaunt, powerfully built man, with a sombre, nervous face and gray hair, who suggested a cross between a New Tork stock broker and a Ken tucky colonel. The Frenchman one of the best com panions;, by tn by, I ever met, Mad . Just concluded, amid an avalandh of . weirdly accentuated English and a cy- clone of gesticulation, a "true" atory of the moat pronounced Gaborlaiu type, when our sombre, nondescript cleared ' Bit throat. He dad shown no lnteret (whatever to the humorous tales of the drummers, and had paid little more at tention 'w'hen ithe theme shifted to travel and adventure. The detective ' vetn seemed, however, to rouse him somewhat, .- though hitherto he had evinced no disposition to bear his share of the tellings Therefore, when he did apeak, we all turned to him with the greater alacrity. ' l suppose some of you will recall the . name of John Phillips T" he said, look- - Inf around. ' . "The big etectlve who died a few 'i years agoT lure!" put In oat of the v drummere. . "Ifes. continued the first rpeaker; "We greatest, perhaps the only reilly treat detective this country has ever prodoced." . "Let ane see ut was ha an Amerl einr I asked. " eni to me 1 heard oace that he waa an Italian." "N. Htt father waa a Neapolitan. - tebaattaa PhrUlph name as orlg- 'fWiapH," on the other. 'V.baatlan came; to New fork when yoqna, Married A Botrthertt wo 'l -A, and want Into the busaaeis of Im T ftlrf fret from OcHr. Hli aon waa T aera ttl tB Old. enough, made .a tie father ahlps. y ,i ' fct had qcarttl with one of the captains once, deserted at lle?alna, and wasn't heard of for over a year lived among the peasants in the interior. So, you see, he was an adventurous young fellow, even .In those days; but the experience was just what was needed to make him what he afterwards became. Take the subtle Intelligence of an Italian, and add to It an American mother and an American education, topped off with several years of life right down among the lower classes, and you've got the bet foundation for a good detective that 1 can Imagine." "Well, he was a good one," Interrupt ed drummer No. 2. "Somebody told nn once but, pardon ma, sir " "I wa going to tell you of perhaps the most remarkable case that John Phillls ever unraveled." said the som bre man. "Let's have It by all means," came from us In a chorus. In which the of fending drummer Joined heartily. The sombre m&r leaned back (n his aeat, half closed his eyes and began: A number of years ago I as residing with an elder brother at a certain vil lage situated on the Hudson river not far from the northern end of the Pali sades. Our family was composed of my brother Robert, hi daughter Mary, myself and a negro servant of the name of Pompey Augustus Anderson. My brother's wife had died shortly after the birth of my niece, who was, at the time I apeak of, a remarkably hand some though delicate girl. She was clever, too, and, at times, erratically brilliant; but she was a creature of Gilmores Aromatic Wiito A tonic for ladies. If yon 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 tasting strength. Sold by Matthews Bros., Scranton. ' strange moods, and there were days when she would hardly speak to any one of the household, and would either hut herself up In her room or wander off through the fields and woods, even managing to return late for meals so as to avoid sitting at table with us. My brother worried a good deal over these eccentricities; but I used to con sole him with the idea that young girls of from 15 to 18 were apt to be dreamy and morbid at times. Well, we lived in that way for up ward of four years; and the only ex citement that broke In on the monotony of our lives was my niece's first love affair. The young man, a New Yorker, had been rusticated that fall by one of the New England colleges which he "Nothing 'tint My appearand Preveatod a Personal Ensounter." was attending,' and his family had sent him up to our village with a private tutor to spend a few weeks In study and contemplation. 1 never considered him a positively bad fellow, but he was certainly, a very lively one, and some of his escapades, of which we learned later, had been startling and original, ever for a collegian. It as the most natural thing In the world that he and Mary should Imagine themselves In love with each other. There was practically no masculine so deity for her In the village, and she was the only young'woman .there of refine ment, beauty and education. There fore, Jack Ralph, aa we will call him though that waa not him real name spent a great deal of time at our house. . My brother, aa people are apt. to do, paid no attention to the affair, pooh poohed all my warnings, and burled himself In his books. . Then, too, he was very much exercised at the time over his qaarrels with a new railroad which waa runnlag Ita llaa through our place, and had made a mos't unsightly cut about, two hundred yards from the house. He had fought the matter In the courts and had been beaten. The dispute now was aa to the company's bridging"' this ut, which they had agreed to do, but which they delayed so persistently that there seemed to be considerable malice In It. - In fact, I may say all the, work had been prose cuted In a most dilatory way, and for several months we had been subjected tothe annoyance of having gangs of Itllans tramping around our lawns and making us feel that -It was unsafe for Mary to go out Unattended. Amid such far from soothing content platlona, my brother waa dumbfounded by a point-blank request from young Ralph that he might become engaged to Mary. Then there waa a scene. Rob ert was, am bound to say, a selfish father, and 1 doubt whether any suitor would have been received with much favor; but he was also Inclined ito be puritanical In his notions, and, from what he had heard of Ralph's exploits, that young man would have been the last to overcome his selfishness. There were too many and too plausible grounds for rational objection. If I tell you also that my brother had a violent temper, you can perhaps imagine what occurred. There was much strong lan guage on one aide and Anally some flippant Impudence on the other. Noth ing but my appearance prevented a personal encounter. I finally got Ralph safely out of the house; but the situa tion' was awkward enough. He was ob liged to remain In the village until re called by his family or college, and our prospects for peace and comfort during the balance of his atay seemed poor enough. Mary was, naturally, highly Indignant nil, aiuwtng wuthln herself, aa w Iher habit, refused utterly to hold an; out .trB moat necessary InteraAu-i with ua or to make any promise aa ti not aeelmg' her lover. Then there were more arenes threats of personal con finement my brother" part, and moody stubborn resistance on my nlece'e. I evi?n began (to wonder whether we weren't all a bit "ofT by Inheritance from a gre&t-grandTnobher of Robert's and mine, who was known to have been manitally unsound. Four days passed; and then a terri ble event happened. My brotluer was found lying dead in the railway cut aa 5HALLER THAN USUAL lllliputian, la fact, are Doctor Pierce's Pleasaat Pellets. Dr. R. V. Pierce, Chief Consulting Physician to the In valid' Hotel and Surgical luntlttitc, of Buffalo, N. Y., was the first to in troduce a Little Pill to the American feople. For all axative and ca thartic purposes these aurar-coated "Pellets" are superior in a great many ways to all mineral waters, sedlits powders, salts, castor oil, fruit syrups, laxative teas, and other purgative compounds. Made of concentrated vegetable ingredients, tbev act in a mild, natural way. Their second ary effect I to keep the liver active and the bowels regular, not to further constipate, as is the case with other pills. Tliey don't interfere in the least with the diet, habits or occupation, and produce no paiu, grip, iug or shock to the system. Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets cure bil iousness, sick and bilious headache, dii tiness, costiveness, or constipation, sour stomach, loss of appetite, coated tongue, indigestion, or dyipepsia, windy belch iugs, "heart-burn," pain and distress after eating, and kindred derangements of the liver, stomach and bowels. These "Pel lets" are easily dissolved in the stomach and absorbed into the blood, stimulating a flow of bile from tbe liver, and arousing to activity oil tbe glandular secretions. Thus they set in nalurt'M own way. In proof of their superior excellence, it can be truth fully said, that they are always adopted as a household remedy after the first trial. Put Up in glass vials, therefor always fresh and reliable. - , One little " Pellet " Is a laxative, two are mildly cathartic. As a "dinner pill," to promote digestion, take one each day after dinner. To relieve distress from over eating, they are uneqnaled. . Tbev are tiny, stirartcoated grannies; any child wilt readily take theat. , Omtt mud, tltvayt tit favor. Accept no substitute that may be re com mended to be "lust as good." It may a bttler for Ik dealtr, because of paying hint a better profit, biit be is not the one who help. ...... the foot of ithe rawn, with a ragged, contused wound In his right temple and' a very extensive fracture of the skull. The whole village was, of course, in tensely exKkted. Nothing so interesting "My Brother Waa Found Lying Bead." had happened Itheire within the memory of ithe oldest Inhabitant, and the theo riata of the country etore argued the matter over among ihemaci vea and with the reporter it hat came up from the city. fPU-nt wertj rtwo very decided opinions thalt found adherents in not unequal force. A email majority held that my brother hod gone out for tiho walk 'Which N oilnuya took befor breakfast, had fatten Into the cut and been Milled. Qutte a large majority, which Included, however, most of tha foreign and repertortaJ talent, looked myotcirlcua a.nd Mimaited that the dead man had been hi a gtreait deal of hot water, and that It waa mora than likely he hud been: knocked on the bead and then thrown down the embankment. The coroner convened Ma Jury of local wtoeacrea and the utnial Intelligent ver dCot (waa propounded, toH. Tholt "Robert" (Smith, tot ua call hint) "came to his doaith from a fracture of the skull caufl?d by sudden contact with eonw dull instrument or mater ial." During the twenty-four hours when all this was transpiring I had been thinking hard; and I could not get lid of the Idea that there waa aometnlna: wrong In the affair something more than mere accident. At the same time I waa disposed to admlit to myself that my n;cn waa baaed rather on intui tion than on any really good reaaoiis. To be sure I bad been a wltneae of the lilt'er quairel between my brother and Jnc"t Hfl'lb: but it aeemod Impossible t auspecl the young collegian of sui h an net. 1 ben. too, hla attitude waa the UMt to te adopted by a guilty man who was not elso a lunatic, He went around tlio vl'mge announcing more or less openly that he gueased the old man bad been k'iled by some one he had inauk ed, and that, from tola own expMence. he wasn't disposed to be very hard on the party who did tt. To all questions aa to what his own experience had been be utterly refused to vouchsafe an an swer. Thlai waa pretty nearly enough; but when our servant, Potrlpey Augus tus Anderson who had been, since my brother's death' In a. condition of nerv ous excMement bordering on nyateno, tufnna h lnatlnn of the na and deposed thr.it he overheard tha qu ar- reu Between an master ana xvarpn, am gave Its details wtth very reasonable, accuracy, the latter waa promptly ar rested and confined in Justice Bennett's , hentta sending hO iremoval to the , county Jnll. Then I felt that it was time to have some dstectlve talent su perior to that of the village constable set to work on the case. I waa well ac quainted with the superintendent of tha New Tork police department; In fact, I had some influence int getting him his a opolntment Therefore, a telegram from mo, asking that he tend bis best man at once, waa promptly , honored and, wiKCvin thirty-six hours i of theflndlngof m yb rother'a body, John Phillips walked Into the library where I waa i tt ting. fTo Be Continued. No matter what the dlnease is or Ro many doctors nave faiied to cure you, as' your druggist for a 25-ccnt vial of one Munyon's Cures, and if you are not bene fited your money will bo refunded. Thia Company puts up A'cure for every disease "srar REVIVO RESTORES VITALITY. Made a JDa. -fri bay. Well Man of Me. USDs?. UtkDsy. THa QMAT Both strsMtaeas the sbove resale la'80 days. It set powerfully M4ulckljr. Curtswhtn all other fall Vob will nMa tkalr lost nubood.aml old nn will ncorar their too th nil vtor by using REVIVO. It euleklr al suraly rMtora Nmw dm. Loot VlUIHr, Impotraar. Mlfbtlr KrotwIMis, Lost Fow r, FilllDf Memoir, Wutlns Diseases, ana1 all eflkcts ot Mlf-ebw oruceesand ladleeretloa, whloh aaat oae lor Mud v. bnelneas or marries. It not oalr cure h? atertls at ta eeat of eleeeee. bnt U street aene tnala end blood builder, brlof lat tees to plak glow to pate check and re eterlne She flrw of wanth. It ward off Jaeultf ana Cnramsttoa. Insist oa harlot Bit VI VO, no thr. It eta he eerried ta feet socket. Br atll, IMOsr pecks, or els tot IM, wltk a post live written goaraatse to oars es sefand taasMBMy. areolar ere. Adsrs ROYAL MEQICINI CO., 63 llm M., CM0M0. ILL ffsit aala by afaMBw Rroa Dtwgist CwMtWHW PToVotfoJ DR. HCIRA'S VIGLA ChEATI Ba-pjjkjasajaea PaSaaVflawa SlRaBaaMTSaS totes tne saut lo its or.gf sal frtshnaaa prodoain( a iaar aaa neutny aonv kdH. staearlfassaailem lirtaattoM sad, son wnwlitj.or ailed tot VMLA KM O' fcsaay lsiiasmtasi.a O. O. BITTN trV MC0T, T.lbdo, 0. tUVUSmiL ttthwt M Jn' amiuswt ViOltjWa XMnCttk ooaloTo "o4 -'ioi,kilfor aroora of evaa. CauMMI nueorodalaoi t-y (AUTiON TO our patrons: a ataaJ Washburn-Crosby Co. wish to assure their many pat rons that they will this year hold to their usual custom ot milliuR STRICTLY OLD WHEAT until the new crop is fully cured. New wheat is now upon the market, ana owing to the excessively dry weather many millers are ot the opinion that it it already cured, and in proper condition for milling. WashburnCrosby Co. will taka no risks, and will allow the new wheat fully three months to mature before grinding. This careful attention to every detail ot milling hag placed Washburn-Crosby Co.'s flour far above other brands. MEGARGEL CONNELL Wholesale Agents. IRON AND STEEL Bolts, Nuts, Bolt Ends, Turnbuckles, Washers, Ri 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, Wkeela, Hubs, Rims, Spokes, Shafts, Poles, Bows, etc, TTE1BE11 SCRANTON, PA. EVERY WOMAN Far aala by JOHN H. PHELPSi "liarmads. ear. Wyeralni Avaaaa ana ftarvea SMrwa, Baraniait Pa, , - y ..' r ". 1