THE GCIIANTOIT TMBCTNE WEDNESDAY MOKNING, AUGUST 7 1635 citune MraadwaaUy. atoaay Bdlaoa. nu. fa, by lb Tffboae Fob IklSf Ceaspsay. . Tmmn nuiKnag, mw Omy, t. . RtnUWIRT, Pm ana Oswi Man. I. M. NIPPLC. Sn' aa. Tasaa. UVt . RICHARD. fane. M. DAVIS. eWa.es alaaaeea. W. W. XOUROD. Aav. tamao at tbs foramoa at scnaima', ra. At UOOMHIbAIS MAHi MATTMk Malm' mi 1" the icoirnlei Journal te ilw dean, ratw Taa BcaajiTOH Tmhuhb u the bet advertising medium la Northeotem Feaoaylv at. "Prutem Iak" know i Wmu TmiiiOHB. It"l Every Betnrday, Csatalas Twelve Henseome Vum, with " A,0" tan of News, Fiction, and Well-Mltrt Mlaoel lany. For Thoa wne Cannot Take Th Dailt Taiaoaa, the VsaMr 1 Recommended a. to BaMBtrtaiaOoiac Only tl a Yaar, In Advance. tofnmllaiHi Deny at lb D, L. end W. aaalloa at Haaoksa. BCRANTON, AUGUST 7, 1895. , l . . - 'lAndrewa tell me I have more than W majority," eaya Senator Quay. An drews either misrepresents or else he doesn't know. United-Powerful. The TVilkes-Barre Record, we are pleated to tee, reproduces with approv ing' comment th suggestion of The Tribunes that the two great nnd Im portant counties of Luzerne and !Lacka wanna Btand united politically and eert the potentiality In state politics to which they are entitled. The occa sion will seldom arise when there will be clashing interests, and at this par ticular time there are none. On the oontpary. It is of the very highest im portance that they make common cause land stand together harmoniously In de Kenat of the interests of each. In mak ing the appointments to the bench of the new Superior court, Governor Hast ings bonored tooth counties, conferring upon an eminent citizen of each the most daftlnculshed favor in his gift. In addition to this he placed upon his military staff a representative citizen of etach of the two counties. It was not to toe expected, In the face of this, that Lackawanna and Luzerne counties would, at the demand of Senator Quay, tab In the back the governor who had Chu8 favored them. It is cause for congratulation and rejoicing that the Republicans of Luzerne and Lacka wanna have declared their purpose to stand by the governor and show the gratitude and manly appreciation that adhere In true men. Now let the party In these two g-reat counties deter mine also to stand by each other. United they will be invincible, and can always command Just recognition. Uackawanna and Luzerne counties combined today contain a population probsJbly exceeding 400,000. Five years ago, when the last national census was taken, their united population was nearly 350,000. Had not Senator Quay defeated the new apportionment bills Luzerne would hereafter have eight representatives and two senators, and Lackawanna six representatives and one senator In the legislature. Both counties fcave been robbed of a. consid erable proportion of the representation to whWh they are entitled under the provisions of the constitution. No two counties In the state have a more sub stantial grievance against the man at .whose arbitrary dictation a subservient leglsVatusB perpetrated this great 'wrong', Lacfeaiwahna and Luzerne must Btontt Id gather hereafter In peremptor ily dtmaodlnafthelr right to equal rep rjsentaUuiiln e legislature with other oeSmftea. ' Betfi counties contain worthy and de aervlng Republicans who cheilsh honor able uM conunendabla ambition for preferment In state and national polWcs. It fa decidedly In the interest and to (he advantage of these Republl cs Mr twth counties that they stand harmoWously together. Both' counties Rill fate all' the better as (the result of audi unity. There may come times when Interests will clash, but If the proper aplrit prevails such differences can, In nearly every case, be reconciled. This splrtfrwaa manifested In a marked degree in .the recent appointment of Superior court judges. When Judge IvVUlardMfrlendt brought him out as a candidate cor Judgeship (Judge Rice IWM mot then In the field), he received the hearty endorsement of the Luzerne Republicans. When Judge Rice sutose uruently appeared as a candidate the Lackawanna Republicans treated him with the Utmost fairness, and sought no advantage whatever Tor Judge WillarG at the expense of Judge Rice. Both were appointed, and In Lackawanna county the success of Judge Rice gavs almost as much pleasure as did that of Judg Willard. . . In the approaching state convention the Lackawanna delegates will give as hearty a support to Judge Rice as they will to Judge Willard. There it every assurance that the Lucerne dele gates wlH support Judge Willard as heartily as they will their own splendid candidate, Chief Justice Rice. United, these two great counties will prove In ylnoibls. Their delegates In the state convention on the 28th can, and we be lieve will, manifest a spirit of unity that will be lasting Irf its effect . If the Quay delegates were as numer ous as the Quay claims, the result would be all one way. . . 1 Third Term Sam's Convention. Third-term Register and Recorder Wright's county convention avt Mont rote, yesterday, did The Tribune the exceeding honor to pass a resolution de nouncing it In ' Third-term Sam's ohefeeat language, for which The Trib une bows its acknowledgments. The proceedings of thai 'convention-, would not hays been happily rounded out without that particular resolution, and Ms, Wright doubtless Csels s muoh teaea at does a matt who h&a been re Mered Item ma attack of nausea by. the worn or aa etsiUo. Tester day's ' convention belonged' to Mr. Wright, and It obeyed him as Implicit ly as Mr. Wright obeys orders from Senator Quay. The Wyoming; house bargain has been consummated and Mr. Wright is ready to. deliver the "goods," In accordance with the con tract. The only concession Third-term Sara was compelled to make was to side-track his bosom friend. Tommy Kllrow. and. substitute Representative Moore. The friends of Judge Stewart, of Chambersburg, seem to feel confident that Mr. Stewart will be named by the state convention for a Superior court Judgeship In place of George B. Orlady, of Huntingdon; but It is our belief that Judge Stewart himself would spurn a nomination forced at the expense of one of the governor's appointees. From Acid to Honey. After trying, without avail, the tac tics of abuse, during which period no previous governor has been treated to the vituperation poured out upon Gov ernor Hastings, the Quay shouters have apparently received orders to try a new trick. They are now, with surprising unanimity, calling to General Hastings, with blandishment and compliment, to desert the men who promptly ranged themselves beside him In his battle for fair play, and are urging him to get out of the field while Senator Quay, to use his own words, "wipes up the floor" with Mapee and Martin. The artifice would be clever. If It were not so readily transparent. The sena tor. In pursuing his plan of trying to "pull one of the triumvirs of the Com bine out," first approached David Mar tin, which, however Inconsistent with his past denunciation of Martin, would have been shrewd politics, as .Quay politics goes, had the senator moved with sufficient circumspection to avoid publicity in the premises. As it was, the overture not only failed, but the fact of Its failure has become public, and this ought to (fortify Governor Hasting, as It undoubtedly will, against any effort by the senator to Include him In a similar programme. It 1s too early to predict whether Mr. Quay will subject himself to the further humiliation of a third rebuff by finally making propositions to Mr. Magee. That he would dare the hazard if ho deemed the prospect of success suf ficient to Justify it there can be no doubt. The senator Is manifestly des perate. The battle has become one of life or death with him. He no longer Is fighting to punish the governor and to exterminate David Martin. The Issue now 19 the protection of his own scalp; which will add zeal and energy to his already earnest campaign. Hence the transformation In his or gans of the acid of gubernatorial abuse to the honey of homage and compli ment. But, as we have said, the trick will not work, because It Is too transparent. The Quay organs that are attacking Captain John C. Delaney's official work as Superintendent of Public Buildings and Grounds, apparently forget that it was the senator himself who Is Captain Delaney's strongest lndorser. The Luzerne Judgeship. The Republicans of Luzerne yester day nominated Lyman Hakes Bennett for Judge to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Judge Charles E. Rice. Several years ago Mr. Bennett was nominated for the same office, but was defeated by Judge Lynch. Among the attorneys at the Luzerne bar at this time there is admittedly no man better qualified for a seat on the common pleas bench than Mr. Bennett. He pos sesses In large measure the qualities that gave Judge Rice the high rank he has attained. Mr. Bennett has a strong competitor in William S. Mc Lean, the Democratic nominee, but there ought to be "no reasonable doubt of the election of the former. The two Judges now In commission in Luzerne are Democrats, and the Republicans feel that their pollticalopponents should have conceded at least one of the three judges to them without a contest, es pecially in view of thenon-partlsan rec ord of the Republicans in Judiciary elections In former years. On at least three occasions they either endorsed Democratic candidates for judge or made no nominations against them, the more recent case being that of four years ago when Judge Woodward was not opposed for re-election. Mr. Mc Lean Is an excellent man and would make an honorable and able judge, but he ought not to be elected at a time when his success would give Luzerne a full bench of Democrats. Mr. McLean should have waited until the term of one of the Democrats expires. The Tribune confidently predicts the elec tion of Lyman Hakes Bennett. If Martin were as much afraid of the Quay senatorial probe as he 1s repre sented by the Quay organs to be, he would undoubtedly have consented to the senator's proposition that the LexoW committee be sent to Europe. As it Is, he appears to prefet that It be sent to Philadelphia. Justice for the Red flan. One of the most consummately brutal epigrams yet coined by -our self-proud civilization was the dictum, recalled by the recent Bannock troubles in the west, that "tfie only good Indian Is a dead Indian." By this heartiest phrase, it has been the endeavor, of In grate whites to excuse their often wanton murder of a race whose lands their fore fathers stole' and whose "rights they themselves often ignore, or shamelessly abuse. And whenever, after a series of new encroachments abetted as often at not by trading Indian agents and scala wag land office officials, the nation's oopper-oolored ward essays, perhaps somewhat Indiscriminately, to protect himself, the old brutalism is again called Into service without so much as a fleeting blush of shame on the part of those who use It. V But for disproof of this phrase one does not need to travel farther than to the Indian school at Carlisle, where hurtdreds of bright Indian boys, re ceived Into the school In a state of pris tine savagery, art In the course of a very few years transformed Into In telligent, law-abiding, and industrious men, equalling most whites and aur passing a great many. It Is possible at this, ataaoik of the' ytar Jto meet these Indian pupils on the fertile farms of the Cumberland valley, where many of them labor during; their midsummer's vacation; and the almost uniform testi mony of their employers Is that, upon the whole, they are a distinct Improve ment upon the average white labor available In the process of agriculture. Other Indian pupils, preferring to re main In the Tillages, seek service as coachmen, household servants or ap prentices In the various trades, and meet with a degree of success nothing less than marvelous in view of their rude early environment and Inherited Instincts. The officials of the Carlisle school say it is extremely uncommon for an edu cated Indian to relapse Into his original condition. If an accurate census were taken of the whttes who after enjoying all the advantages of the publlo and collegiate schools, deteriorate Into criminals or drones, It Is probable that the percentage of failures would be bound to exceed that which obtains among the schooled Indians. Tbls fact In Itself should forever silence the dis paraging clatter of those who argue that extermination is the only safe so lution of the Indian question. The time Is certainly opportune for a larger ap plication of common sense and common justice to this problem. Brutality and prejudice, covering hundreds of years, and forming a record that will perma nently blot Christianity's record In the New World, have failed to make the live Indian good; now let education be tried, Instead. The Quay organs are just now boast ing of the victories they are going to achieve In Montgomery and Lycoming, preclsi-ly as they did in Bucks, Center and other counties. In Bucks they were going to knock out Gilkeson with out half trying, and In Center they were not going to leave Hastings a leg to stand on. When the primaries were held in those two counties the Quay followers did ' not elect delegates enough to make It worth while to take them out of the column for the "scat tering." iNow they are going to anni hilate Attorney General McCormlck In Lycoming and Adjutant General Stew are In Montgomery. When the dele gate election returns come in It will be found that Quay has accomplished Just about an much In those two counties as he did In Bucks and Center. The Quay organs do all their boasting be fore the battles are fought. The defeat of the administration del egates In (Huntingdon county, has set going a number of stories to the effect that Judge Orlady, feeling the Blight Implied In this selection of hostile dele gates In his home county, will resign. The authenticity of these rumors Is dubious. But the circumstance Is at least of sufficient moment to afford Lackawanna Republicans cause for self-congratulation at their own suc cessful battle for fair play In politics. It would serve Huntingdon county right If as a result of its flop to Quay it should be deprived of representation on the Superior court bench and this is not improbable. For the splendid work done In Lu zerne county for Rice, Willard and the state administration, much of the credit belongs to Hon. Charles A. Miner. Mr. Miner Is one of the small class of men In politics who do vastly more for their friends than they care to do for themselves. The Luzerne brethren did not do quite so well as those In Lackawanna; their delegation Is not absolutely solid, but eight out of a possible nine Is very commendable Indeed. That delegate from the Fifth Luzerne will feel exceed ingly lonely when he gets to Harris burg. Hon. Henry W. Palmer wouldn't get off the fence and so there was nothing to do for the convention but to give tilm an assisting hand. This they did in the most accommodating way. Gen eral Palmer Is not, however, a Quay man and never has been. BLAMES THE MEW MAN. "If I understand what Is meant by the new woman, I do not Hke her." So, as Walter Wellman announces In a Bar Har bor letter to the Times-iHerald, said the American who more than any other Indi vidual In the world Js responsible for whet Is known as "the new woman movement" In this country. Considering that Mrs. Potter Palmer has been a sort of high priestess of the modern cult that a womttn is strong and bright and masterful enough to de almost anything, you may Imagine my surprise when, sitting on the piazza of the delightful "Mercer cottage," over looking the finest scene on all the Atlantic coast, she uttered this sentiment.. Prob ably no one will deny that by organizing and carrying through to success the wo man's part of the Columbian exposition, bringing order out of the most dreadful chaos that ever was, hammering and coaxing discordant and unwieldy elements into harmony and effectiveness, Mrs. Palmer gavo a tremendous impetus to What is sometimes called the emancipa tion of woman; that she afforded an object fcasom In the capabilities of the sex which set the world to thinking, and In Hs al most Inestimable moral effeot hastened by many years the coming of the new order of things. "Can It be poslble," I thought, "that ithls leader of the forces which ef fected a breach In the wails is sorry for the conquest which followed?" But Mrs. Pointer swept away all doubt as to the nature of her views, "There are timet," she said, "when I am horrified at the change In the relation of the sexes which this advanced woman movement has brought about. W seem to have grown completely away from the old-time Idea. When I was a girl K was the privilege and the duty of the men to do all the seeking. The men were ever the aggressors, while the girls waited to be bidden. There was a well-denned line over which no well-bred girl dared step, even If she wished to. Now K seemes to be almost the other way. The social world, so far as the relation of the texes are concerned, Is quite topsy turvy. In this I am not guessing or using the Joke and gossip of the day. I am depending wholly upon my personal observation. It Is positively true at least In the society In which 1 have moved-that the girls are now making more advances than the men. They do It very sweetly and In a womanly way thank heaven for that but it's a shame they have to do it at all. "The girls oan't help It, you may be sure," continued Mrs. Palmer; "It Is not thrtr fault The conditions have been forced upon them. Either they must make the advances or be left alone. Here In Bar Harbor, and I daresay In every fashionable summer resort, It Is the girls who arVange the parties, the dances, the picnics, Vhe drives, the tennis, lbs boating sxpedtUdf s. It It alarmingly true mat the young mta like to get oft by themtetvet at the Ktbe Valley, elub, esT their yachts, er In their drives and sports. Evan the fashionable aad society-bred young men are getting to despise the dress coat la sjummer. The girls have been forced to accommodate ' themselves to the tastes of the men. They had no choice between that and Isolation, le order to hake them aelves fit and comfortable companions and comrades of the men they have taken up men's amusements: they have learned tennis, mastered the wheel, bcome pro ficient In boating, have devoted them selves to. golf they have, in fact, done everything they could In decency to be near the young men, to maintain the re lations of InHmacy and cordiality which are theirs by right of their aex, their aweetness and loveliness, and which should be pressed upon them instead of being sought at their hands. "Why, If this tendency increases, the first thing we know the young women will be compelled to make proposals of mar riage or remain forever single. They have come dangerously near it already. The half-concealed seeking, the management, the tact, the Ingenuity, the leading, are now all In the hands of the girls and their mothers. Nothing remains but for them to seise a fitting moment, to kneel at the young man's feet, declare undying love, and propose matrimony. It makes my heart sink within me to hear girls tele phoning for young men, begKing for th;ir company at tennis, or in a drive, or out boating mere devices and pretexts for getting at the young man himself. It makes me sadder still to hear the remarks which young men make on receiving these summons. 'Oh, I siiH'ose I will have to go, but I'm dashed If 1 like It,' says one. Very, very sorry, I'm sure, but I have un enKSKement at the club,' replies another over the wire, smiling at his own smart ness. 'I'm charmed to accept,' 'phones a third, then ringing off and adding, In a lord of creation sort of way: 'These girls are always up to something. Why can't they let a fellow alone?' "These are the things which make mo sigh for the good old d:iy In which women waited confidently 'to be compiered nnd did not have lo'go telephoning from cot tage to cottage and from hotel to hotel in order to secure an escort or companion of the male sex," continued Mrs. l'nlmer. "I do not complain because they have been forced to take to these amusements In order to protect themselves against abso lute neglect. The girls are Just ns sweot and lovely as they ever were. They are meeting the new social conditions with as much tnct and refinement and modesty as are possible under the circumstances. Tho pity Is, as I view It, that they have to fane the aggressive Bide at all. "In such society as that which we have at Liar Harbor It Is not so much tho ne,w woman that afflicts us ns the new man the man who thinks more of his sports, his clubs, his mule comrades, than of his sisters and other men's sisters. I say It with pain thut tho tendency of what Is known as our higher Boelcty Is toward the European system. Some of the principal phases of European society are abhorrent. It will be a sad day for America when they are adopted here and already they are much Imitated, especially In the east. Are our well-to-do young men in the first stages of the Kuropean process? Do tht y believe that their early manhood should be devoted to roaming and license, and that matrimony should come only with weariness? I hope not." POLITICAL BRIEFS. The Times will please take notice that The Tribune is not grieved beyond hope on account of the elections in Susque hanna county. The Tribune has planted the good seed In that county and the har vest will come In due season. Gubernatorial booms are not worrying Mr. Wdlllam Conncll, but he could not fail to be pleased to know that so many Demo cratic papers agree with their Republican contemporaries that ho would mako a very good governor. Even Hazleton went for Hastings. This Is tough on Editor McCarthy, the father of Quay county, Times. Not at all tough; McCarthy himself became a convert long ago and was a Hastings man. Mr. Whitehouse, a somewhat prominent Schuylkill statesman, Indignantly denies that he Intends to climb the fence into the Quay camp. He Is not that kind of a WMtehouse. There Is no good reason why Senator Don Cameron should appear on the sur face In the present fight Jutrt as Senator Quay Is about to go under the surface. Ex-Attorney General Palmer would rather sit on the fence any day than be a delegate to a state convention. He enjoys the fence. Now for Montgomery and Lycoming counties. Success there will land Gilke son clean out of the woods. COMMENT OF THE PRESS. "Knrnel" Hob as a lXplomnt. Wllkes-Bnrre Record: "Robert Scran ton took a hand In Luzerne county poli tics on Saturday. He was down In the Fifth district trying his untrained hand in Quay's Interest. For a man who got walloped so badly In his own county Rob ert displays an unusual amount of youth ful gall. Luzerne has no moro use for this budding boss than Lackawanna, and that's not very much." ' . Leader of Ills Party. Wllkes-Barre News-Dealer: "The Scran ton Free Press says William Connell should be put forward by the Republicans of northeastern Pennsylvania as their next candidate for governor. It Is only recently that Mr. Connell has taken an In terest In state politics, but he has already demonstrated his potentiality and Is rec ognized by the leaders of both faotlons In the state tight to be the leader of his party In this section of the state.' II AT Hill & ConneH's. M0 133 WASHIRGtOII AVE The Beat of Them All la the... ZERO Porch Chi'n and Rockers, Ffes Reed Cfcairs and Rssksrs, AFevBafy Carriages Left atCcst Cetfar Chests, Moth Proof, In Three Sizes. HU1& Connell, 11 FU IlilUlflLMS'v Great Waist and Wrapper Sale The balance of our stock, representing the productions of sev eral leading manufacturers, At About One-Half the Cost of the Material All garments offered are perfect in finish and shape, as they can be. We simply ask an inspection to verify the above assertions. The prices put upon these goods will insure their positive sale within a short time. Ladies' Cambric Wrap pers with double ruffle, worth $1.00, at AT Ladles' Wrappers in French l.uwn with double ruffles and scalloped shoulders; worth $2.25, your choice at $ 1 .49 Gold Band White China At Cost. , . . We arc selling our entire stock of Gold Band White China at cost. Parties having Tea Sets can now add a few pieces and make up a Dinner Set; or those having Dinner Sets partly bro ken can mutch them up at a very small cost. Come early and get the pieces you need most. THE LIMITED. 422 LACKAWANNA AVENUE. Clarence M. Florey, the sporting goods dealer of Wyo ming avenue, has devised a scheme to keep the boys in terested in the matter of base ball. With every ten cent ball or bat he will now give a fine cap and belt, which are uniform. Among the hustlers is Mr. Florey. SURMOUNTING I DIFFICULTY la accomplished In this cam, aa both bora and rider are aqnal to the emergency. All dlffl-, enltlca ahonld ba anrmonntml whether ther be eaiy or otherwise, W. make It rerjr easy to get orer the difficulty of aavlng money by oar (rand tain of SO-CENT NECKWEAR. . Mention thia Adr. and yon can bay any THREE 50c. TIES In the Store for $1.00. CONRAD, Lackawanna kit. THAT WONDERFUL Tone Is foaaaaalr mta WEBER IB) Call tad aee thee PUnoa, aad end-band Plaaoa we have taken la esoaaaa far them.. . . . HnpniiAPU aaavnaa .4A BELT, Off 1MB BALL eenat iaeae AT 19c. 150 dozen Ladies' Waists, laundried and unlaundried, comprising Lawns, Dimities, Per cales and Chambray in stripes and checks; also plain and striped linen effects, immense large sleeves with yoke back and full fronts. AT 73c. Mil Special -Mention Gl?en to Business and Personal Accounts MEREST PUD OH TUB DEPOSITS. THB TRADERS Iatlonal Bank of Scranton. ORGANIZED 1890. CAPITAL 250,000 SURPLUS, $40,000 AlffTTBTj HTNES, President W. W. WATSON. Vloa-Praaldeatj A. & WILLIAMS, Caaoiar. aBBBnaaan 1 DIRECTORS. Samuel nines, Jamna M. Brarfcart. Irv ine; A. finch. Pierce B. Flnley, Joseph I. Jermyn. M. 8. Kemerer. Charles P. Mat. Uxws, John T. Porter, W. W. Wataon. hpi. Mti, um ml UIEUL. . Tale Vaak Invite the patroaaca of kaa i ana nrna aanarair. ON THE LINE OF THE CANADIAN PACIFIC R'Y are located the finest Ashing and banting grounds In the world. Deecrlptlve books on application. Tickets to all points In Maine, Canada and Maritime Provinces, Minneapolis, St Panl. Canadian and United State North weata, Vancouver, Seattle, Tacoma, Portland, Ore., baa Vrandsoo. First-Class Sleeping and Dining Cars attached to all through trains. Toarlsl ear fully fitted with bedding, cnrtalna and spec tally adapted to wants of families may ba had with second-class tickets. Kates always leas than via other lines. For full Information, time tables, etc., on application to EC. V. SKINNER, Q. EC. A. 353 BROIDWIT, HEW TORL Moosic Pov;i.3r Co, Rooms 1 and I CosstTealtl Bid'tY SCRANTON. PA. CJ ELASTIC POWDER KADX AT MOOStC AND RUBJaV DAUB WOHJU. Lafflia Kaa4 Powder Oa.1 Orango Gun Powder Klsctrlc Batteries, Pose tor lanlaS ' las; blaata. Safety via aai teoCts&l Ct.'i EltnEi;!!T3 Id till it OF SCRAM. Ladies' Wrappers In beat Percales, stylishly made, worth $1.50 to $1.78. your choice AT 49c, Ladles Washable Suits, separate waist and skirt, made of fine Jacqunrd and Diagonal cloths, formerly $!l, your choice 98c. Fine Stationery Blank Books, Office Supplies, EDISON'S MIMEOGRAPH Aad Supplies, TYPE WRITERS' SUPPLIES inn IH ALL ITS BRANCHES. REYNOLDS BROS,, Stationers and Engravers, UTUdUWIRNUVE Sweet Potatoes Home Grown Tomatoes And Green Corn, Fancy Jenny Lind Cantelonpes, Bartlett Pears, Peaches, Etc. PIERCE'S MARKET, PEN N AYE DR. HILL & SON ALBANY DENTISTS. Set teeth. $5.50; best set, : for gold cap and teeth without platea. called crown and ncaa. TONALGIA. for extracting tat Wllnout pajn, no ewer, tin . OVER FIRST NATIONAL BANK. ' PLEASANT TO COOK with an ell or gas stove. Mo smoke, dirt or smell. It dossthe work so well Tse price, n. la mlrtn-nrovoklna in its littleness. Oar Hardware stands in the front rank. A pot or kettle, tin can or pan, doe Its duty er talB) according as II is rightly made of th right material, Th right kind are what w are sailing. Aa lor prices, we bars made them so slim that tlwy need support, and we'll have to raiee them to get support, bat little prises bfiag Ugbastnes. . . .