V';.V THE SCRAHTON T4itBllNB-SArl UK I) AY ilOititfO, NOVEMBER t), 18l3. 8 To" Women Symposium of Partly Gossipy uoTnEcnooD: I One morr.ing fa'.r, my baby Climbed up into my bed, - And down upon my shoulder She laid her little bead. . She had her precious dolly Clasped in a close embrace; Che told me how she loved it. She kissed Its battered (ace. I naked her if she couldn't. For oniy one short day, 0 ve me her precious dolly To take with mo away. Che slipped her arm around me. And ears came to her eye, 6he battled with them bravely And sweetly said, "1 11 try! "But, mamma, while my dolly Is Kone away from nu , Is there some other dolly Whose mamma I can ber 1 wondered If as bravely My sorrow I could bear If asked to give my darling Hack to my Father's care. Midland Monthly. AocoroMng to Jud2e Lambert Tree, of Chicago, the ''new woman" Is exclu sively an American product. If I un derstand the subject arlsht," he- tells Walter Wellman, who In turn ells the public, "there Is not and never has been suci a thine In Europe. I have pent, years at a time In the different countries of the old orld. I am Just now on my return from e summer tour of the continent, tout so far as I have observed there to no such thins on the other lde of the water as what Is known In a newspaper and popular senso as the 'new woman,' exoeiit, per haps, In a very limited and much more serious sens la England and in an offensive tense in France. As far as business ' goes, women In Europe all have ibeen of more Importance than woman in America. Amons the lower classes, a we all know, the heaviest share of the work fails on them. I have seen them working In the fields hitched to iplows wUh oxen, hitched to carts with horse drawing burdens through the streets. I have often seen a woman at the 'top of a ladder laying brick, while other women mixed the mortar and carried It to her in hods. But they were -not posing. No notice was taken of them, no comments made, no newspaper paragraphs written. It Tas a simple matter of necessity Then, hi France, lor instance, M Paris is tYance, and London is England, wo men have for yeara been not only clerks In many business houses, but manager Tilve large hotel is often managed by a woman. That means more than It does in this country; for in Europe one head in a hotel di rects everything every question as to asslgrwirant of rooms.' paying of bills, etc.. Is referred to one mind. OinLHOOD: ' Thine cyos are filled with dreams. nnauoweu 'Dy irese 01 uirii.iucn.-v u., I;:ko the gross by woodland streams , .Thy look 'is thoushtfulness unatalued with care; Clear on thy face Are written tenderness and love and grace. As In the Cawn's flr.it glow A forecast of the nlorious day we see, So with a f.lance we know The porfeLt womanuood fore'.')'u la thee; Nor know we yet .Whether to wish thy growth or to re grit. Arthur L. tJalmon. "It la true," adds the Judge, "that to day In France there is a movement toward something whtoh has a slight rraambtence to the 'now woman.' But there Is no possibility of her becoming there what, according to a neyspaper icoDunt, there is a possibility of her being here an incongruous anomaly, a Flout, elderly femaite, with bloomers tiJii pink parasol, who demands her rl'glits to itttie latchkey and ballots. The VjvDCh new woman is fantastic pi quant, chic, a thing of chiffon and Off Morton vivacious, 4nterestlmg In short, French, 8ho Is untranslatable. Bhe calls forth the rapier thrusts of Fronoh newspaper wit, compared to which our newsnaDer humor on the came topta might be classed as the meat-ax variety. In comparison witn women, new or old, of other countries, however, the women of America have a most favorable showing. They ore the quickest in any social predicament, the most self-confident, if I may coin a word, the most 'self-protecUonlst.' They always know what to do. The American woman 4a like a cat She al ways lands on her feet. While in dilplo matlo service I have seen American women to trying plaoee ait courts, In the presence of royalty. 1 knew every thing was new and strange to them, but I have never seen one of them make a false step. I have often rea soned on this peculiarity of American women, and have arrived at this theory; It Is due to the fact that Amer ican women are not coddled when they are children. They are early thrown Into the world to think and decide for themselves. Their parents have no time to devote to them. They early learn that money and xank do not mean everything, and that the child of the floor man can measure swords of wit, keenness and (beauty with the child of the rich man. They learn that It is to themselves above all others that they owe the. duty of self-protection. With-American girls It as a race, and the fittest survive. Many, of course, re ruined by the test, but those who do survive are the cleverest, brightest, most eelf-polsed, self-competent wo men in . the world." TO A CliEVEn GIRL; She paints a little glorious things. Which nature ne'er produces; Che's also musical and sings . . When asked, nor makes excuses. A'nd yet hot pictured canvas shows The coloring delicious, IWhich 'rreath her skill so practiced grows Upon the dinner dlahes. . No melody is half so sweet As that whose notes come streaming Out of the kettle, small and neat Where cheery coals are gleaming. Upon your charming, gifted youth The world with Joy is looking; But of your dainty arts. In sooth, . The daintiest Is cooking. Exchange. . "Amber," that gifted contributor to the Chicago Times-Herald, Is Inclined to believe that woman, as she existed up to fifty years ago is a lost type. "A new race," she says, "is entered on the scale of development, and as surely as the demands of today cannot limit themselves to the requirements of yes terday; so surely the new type cannot be happy under the restrictions and laws fitted to the old. Like the old wo man of nursery rhyme who failed to And happiness even In unlimited ra tions of victuals and drink, the woman of today scorns the measure that suf ficed to ' make the happiness of her grandmother. Where Eve needed only Adam arid a fig leaf, the woman of to day finds Adamafter a year's trial, an unmitigated ' source Of annoyance and cheerily turns him down and demands a new deal. The simple tastes that wore amply satisfied with a fig leaf now aemand a wardrobe, a classical educa tion and a career. The Question is. which type comes nearer the gaining or me nentage or peace Heaven in tended for all and whether a faithful A Sam and a fresh fig leaf did not typify the true requirements of a sensible Eve better than many Adams and an elab oration of lis; leaves.1 The closer we seep to nature tne freer we are of both .auacfcM and heartaches." Information, Partly Grave, and Partly Gay. "There Is," says "Amber" In another connection.-"nobody in the world who has greater reverence for a big, sweet woman than I have, nor greater con tempt for a bad man. Be sure a man Is bad, however, before you condemn him. Because he happens now and then to find pleasure in talking to a woman who is not his wife, or because he takes supper with somebody to whom he Is not bound by adamantine fetters, I should not set him down as derelict to honor. Cannot you see the difference between a suspicious, nag ging woman, who scents evil in every glance and word, and a large, free na ture that thinks no evil and Is slow to impute the wrong motive to any deed of friend, lover or husland? If you are always looking into the heaven to find hawks, you'll find hawks, but if your mind is fixed on star gaxlng you will overlook the hawks and find the stars. Suspicion is the promoter of more trouble than one likes to believe. Jeal iOUS, unfounded, perverse and nagging suspicion is the destroyer of more mar tial peace than actual unfaithfulness." ABOUT DUE NOW: Of all the Jokes the dearest That bans on memory's wall The old, old Joke of the summer Sin It scemeth best of all. The ships have passed In the night time; lllg sleeves are getting fuissc; Trilby has gone to the bow-wows And bloomers have had their day. We look with longing fondness At what we spurned last fall. And the old, old Jake of the summer girl 6eracth the best of all. , New York Press. This Is how Binhop Seymour, of Mln nesota, regards the bloomered new wo man; "God created male and female in the Image of God. The image of God unites them, and the hand of God dif ferentiates them in making two halves of a whole. Each has Its place, the bet ter place, as she is tho 'better half.' Having said this, I wish to add that God, In making woman, implied her place in her physical constitution, or ganic functions, and practical duties. These lines are drawn by the Divine hand. Human hands may seek to ob literate these lines and Bucceed In ob scuring them, but they cannot destroy them. Man may apparently suspend for a time the luws of God by his pre sumption and folly, but he cannot re peal them, and human genius and abil ity cannot create a new man, much less a new woman. They may seem to do so in a wretched counterfeit distortion, which may seem for a time to be a suc cess, and gratify and perchance amuse those who covet novelties, but In the end it will be, and must be, a failure. As a son, as a brother, as a husband, I bless God for the place which He gave woman In creation, and to which He re stored her in the person of Jesus Christ In the' blessed Gospel. As a woman as God made her and as Christ dignified her, she is all glorious within, and pro tected by the reverence and affection of the civilized world: As the new wo man, she will be divorced from the home, from her children, from her brothers, from her husband, from her former self, and become a creature inde scribable." GOOD FOR THEIR HUSBANDS: The dawning era of woman Is a very fortunate thing for some men, for heaven knows what would become of them If tho wives did not earn the living. Cass Coun ty Tribune. SELECTED RECIPES: Sweet Cream Pie. For an old-fashioned sweet, cream ula Is commendable. It is a savory bit either for the home or tho com pany luncheon. Make a sponge cake us follows: Beat separately the whites of three eggs, to tne yoiKs auu one tca SDoonful of susar. one teaouoonful of flour sifted with one tea&poonful of baking powder. Add lastly tho beaten wmtes. Stir lightly and bake In Jelly tins. When cool, spilt with a sharp knife and between the layers spread thickly the following filling: Boil one pint of milk and pour slowly on two well-beaten eggs, stirring constantly. Return to the lire, and thick en with cornstarch till the mixture is of the consistency of soft custard. Flavor with extract of vanilla and spread be tween the layers of sponge cake. Over the top sprinkle powdered sugar and serve vory coiu. The Flageolet Bean. Sometimes at the grocery store one sees a mass of dried beans. They are considerably longer than the common white bean, and are a pale bluish green in color, so that they look almost like a product of the mineral rather than of the vegetable world. They are shining and hard, and are Just the color or our lasnioname gem, tne enryso prase. Not one person in a hundred can tell what these vegetables are, yet there is always a demand for "flageolet" beans In the shops. These beans make a good puree, or may be served as a vegetable. They are a French bean, very seldom If ever raised in our country, but imported In a dry state from Franco. When used as a vegetable they may be senked In cold water ovor night, and bollod slowly for about one hour In water enough to cover them. At the end of this time a little pepper, a teaspoonful of salt and a large tablespoonful of butter should be added to a pint of the beans, and they should be cooked two hours longer or until they are perfectly soft and tender. The equally picturesque red beans which also come from France, are cooked In exactly the same way, except that a glass of claret should bo added when they are half done. Scalloped Eggs. Have some ham or tongue chopped very fine ;add to It a few bread crumbs,' .pepper, chopped parsley and some melted butter. Moisten with tongue chopped very fine; add to It a few some patty pans or scallop shells with the mixture. Break an egg carefully on each, and put a pinch of salt on them and sprinkle cracker dust over this. Place the shells In a pan and put in a moderate oven and bake until tne white is set. Vanilla Jumbles. Half pound of butter. half pound of powdered sugar; one tea spoonful of vanilla, two tablespoonfuts of sncrry, in roe eggs anunine ounces or nour. Beat butter and sugar to a cream until very light; beat the eggs without separat ing and add to cutter ana sugar. Add tne sherry, vanilla and finally the sifted flour. Beat well and hard and drop In small spoonfuls on a lightly greased paper. Bake until a delicate brown in a moderate oven. Veal Cutlets. Cutlets for breading should be cut thin, and then cut in pieces the Drooer size for serving. Cover them with boiling water, and allow them to stand Tor nve minutes, Drain ana ary. Din them into beaten ears and bread crumbs. Beat the eggs only enough to blend the yolk and white and add one tablespoonful of water to each egg. Saute In dripping, using not enough fat to cover, but fry first on one side and then on the other. When tho cutlets are dipped so that the egg covers them fully, as well as the bread crumbs. If the grease is hot enough the covering win adhere, BO SAT WE ALL: ' If the new woman Is going to carry flow ers to the cells of criminals there will be quite a general demand for the return of tne oia woman. cnxago i imes-fieraia. HOUSEHOLD, SUGGESTIONS: take one teasooonful of ground mustard and three of flour, with enough water to make a good stiff paste.' Spread between two cloths. For an adult, use one part mustard to two of flour. Mixed with the white of an egg It will not raise a blister. If you hate "mussy" things for your children to play with, get some carpenter to cut an men piece 01 oressea nara wood Into various lengths for you. hav ing, say, half a dosen pieces two feet long. Have a jk.et for the child to keep the pieces In, and show him how to build rail fences, block houses and corn cribs. Soda Is tke most Important thing In the whole kitchen. It Just halves your work only don't let It get Into the laundry; It's forbidden there. For example, you put a lump of It In among the dishes when they are to fee washed after breakfast. You'll notice, of course, that ws have provided one of those nice paper dish pans for you that' way cups keep tneir bandits la this kitchen, and why a doscn glasses last more than a week you don't bang thorn against sine or Iron, With il the dlshos gathered olf the kitchen table Into this Hint dlshpan, a lump of soda laid on tup, and the hot water cock turned on full for a minute. Just a turn or two of the. mop makes things clean and ready for the towel. A lump or even a pinch of It In each pot cuts the grease, out as If by magic, ana witn us pot wasning oaa no terrors. More of it goes Into the water with which the table is scrubbed, and is used In the water for mopping the floor, washing the windows, scalding the re frigerator, and before you go to bed at nieht we always look to have you pour a little hot toda water down tho waste pipe of the sink, for there grease la apt to clog and grow rank, and maks disease and bad smells. Harper's. Some cooks are making crusty oreaa In sections of stovepipe These utensils are cut in the required length at the tin smith's, and the edges turned ovor so the hands will not be Injured. The dough, made Into a loaf somewhat shortnr than the pipe. Is placed In It. From tills ap parently crude affair comes crusty bread of excellent quality, If the cook knows her business. THE LATEST RIVALRY: "I don't care If she did try to cut me," said one girl. "lias she any reason for It?" asked the other. HEALTH HINTS: Corns can bo cured; wear a stocking and shoe that Is too long for tho foot and you will not have corns. The best remedy for a pimply and a rough complexion is a dally bath from top to tee, ar.d a four-mile walk. To prevent tho skin "chapping" wipe It until quite dry. If you are exposed to tho wind wear a thick veil. Camphor lco is an efficient and pleasant remedy for rough skin caused by exposure. To cure perspiring feet, bathe the feet In cold water night and morning; dry and dust with a powder composed of salicylic acid, 30 grains; precipitated chalk one ounce, talcum one ounce. To check excessive perspiration, take a sponge bath from head to foot, using hot water and arlnegar, a teacupful of vine gar to two quarts of water, every night at bedtime. Use precipitated chalk as a dusting powder. Take a two-grain quinine pill every other day for two months. For nervous dyspepsia, take ton drops of the tincture of nux vomica In a wine glassful of water before every moal and at bedtime every day for six weekn. Two hours after meals take a tcaspoonful of the phosphate of sodium In a teacupful of boiling water. Take this also for six weeks. Eat oranges and grapes', (do not swallow tho seeds or skins) every day. Walk, ride a wheel you require active ex ercise every day. Whenever you have an attack of biliary colic drink a tencupful of sweet oil and apply hot poultices (keep a poultice hot by placing a bottle or bag of hot water upon It) over the painful area. Tnka the phosphate of sodium steadily for six months, a tenspoonful In a teacupful of hot water half an hour before each meal for ono month, and during tho remaining five months take but once dally before breakfast. Drink alkaline mineral waters; drink no wines and eat no fatty sub stances. Eat plentifully of green, crtrp vegetables and fresh fruits. Take exercise out of doors every day ride a wheel or walk four miles dally, regardless of the weather. CONTRARY: ' '" Some joys of life make me moit sad, When I think of how I miss 'em. The girls I want to kiss are those Who don't want me to kiss 'cm. Life. IN DAYS TO COME. . Just Drop a Penny In tho Slot ond Get an Mmctio. .. We have rt yet done with automatic novJj&ei U: cwtuira, tfiys Who Ladles' Pictorial, and 'ihe very latest of the frjCTjmy-On-'lU-s-s.toit" TnuichOnes open up an entirely new field for 'tho Ungenlous dnver.ixr. What the medical Journals, who so Jealously and so righteously guard the preserves of Aeaouiaplus, will say when they hc'ar that an auto matic doctor Is the last new Idea, I cannot imajrlne. Of course (they will predict eifher sudden death or aggra vated 'Indiepoalitlon for everyone who consults the "q:nny4n-the-slot" doc tor, and prcibaibly their prediction will not be far wrong, as each patient, of course, diagnoses his own case, and rr.ny Iturn the handle round for liver physio when his complaint is reany heart disease, and vice versa. Perhaps in time we shall get an auto matic ambulance class machine, so that In cme of accidents we can take a man who has been halfdrowned or run over or accidentally poisoned and get him "fixed up" as the Americans say, by turning a handle, whereupon emet ics cir tur.ido.jre or other remedies will mcit only come forth but apply them selves as required. In time, we may be able to get our holr cut, ur teeth extracted and our boots 'blacked on the caime principle, only If the machine g'tl.'j out of order amd putts out molars lnotead of dloantng boots (there may be unpleasant scenes! . : NOT THEIR STYLE. A Negotiation in Which Proxies Wero Not to Do Thought Of. From the Chicago Post. "Did you read about the engagement of Miss Consuelo Vanderbtlt to tne Duke of Marlborough?" he asked as he looked lovingly Into her eyes. "Yes," she replied softly, feeling that the momentous occasion was at hand. "It was all arranged for them by mu tual friends," he went on. Wos It?" she asked. . "Yes," ho answered. "The Duke didn't make love to her himself at all.' "Didn't he?" "No. Ho got some other people to at tend to the matter for him." There was a brief Interval of silence, during which he looked at her and she looked at the floor. ' "I don't think much of the duke," he said at last. "I wouldn't have such a fool man around," she returned quickly. A moment later she looked up Into his eyes, sighed and said; "We don't want any European Innovations, do we?" "No," he replied, as he drew hor a lit tle closer to him, "and I never did taka much stock In proxies, anyway." THE COLONEL WAS MEAN. For a Big Man llo Played a Small Triek with Ills Car Tlokots. From the Chicago Tribune. Colonel Blank was a big pompous man, as it behooves one to be who as plres to a military title without the drawbacks of a military life, He was always calling people's attention to his marked facial resemblance to James O. Blaine, "the greatest man, sir, this cen tury and this country have produced." And people Ill-natured people, that is thought the Colonel had a vivid im agination. There was a prodigality about his physique that one somehow expected to see repeated in the Colonel's character. And to hear the Colonel hold forth from the end of the boarding house table over which he presided, the unsophisticated boarder would never have doubted that such a reasonable Beauty Found and ....: v. la . . . Purity Cuticura 4 tlimflMvt n vmU Knhfli ttfwtt 9, Wtw expectation would be realised dn closer acquaintance.' ,. What. then, was this unsophisticated one's surprise to hear the doughty' colonel, evidently In a high good humor with himself; say one day:' - . "Well, I earned my faro down-town' today." . - That the Colonel would ctooti to earn a nlccl was remarkable; that he should boast of It was incredible. , - "You see," proceeded the mail of mil itary asplratlor.c, "I went down In the carttte. Getting In at Schiller Street tne carette was empty and I went way up to the front and bought six tickets for a quarter. One I had dropped In the box. Then as the car filled up I was exceedingly useful to those who sat fur ther down, passing their fares up and depositing them. An exceedingly po lite man they all thought me. - And so I am, so I am. But Instead of dropping their nickels in the box I dropped my tickets in until I had used up my five tickets and confiscated five nickels. ' I had regained my quarter and paid my fare. After that I was not so polite. I let people drop their nickels Into the chute which the company provides for that purpose. Awful nuisance, that chute. But It's not my business to play conductor If the company's too mean to'hire any." And the Colonel called for another cup of tea and the unsophisticated one gasped to think of the smallness of which such greatness was capable .. HE COULDN'T DEAL.; . The Insuranoo Company Did Not Stem to Core About Making a Trade, From the Louisville Times. A man with a red nose that looked chronic and had the air of being legiti mately acquired, caned at the office of a big life Insurance company and, ad dressing the first official he happened to meet, said: "Sir, I am Insured for $5,000 In your company." "Well." "The policy, strange to say, Is made out in tne name of my wife. She has possession of it." "Not strange at all, but eminently proper," said the oflicial. "And if I could get hold of the policy I would hook it," continued the man with the red nose, "but she keeps it hid I am here, however, for liie purpose of making a proposition to you, and the whereabouts of the policy is neither here nor there. Are you open to a deal?" , "We are," answered the official coldly. "Well, here is my plan. Since I can not raise anything on that policy, t spring upon you the following situa tion: Before nightfall I shall be a dead man, and you'll have to pony up that 15,000." "How do you make that out?'! de manded the oflicial, in tones of surprise. "Simply because I cannot get a drink," replied the policy holder. . "if whisky Is not forthcoming I perish.' I simply He down and stiffen out and you lose your money. A quartet of a dol lar, however, will save my life and save you B.QOO bones. Twenty-five cents fixes me and I live. Without It I breathe my last and prove a dead loss to you. If I survive, however, my wife will go on paying premiums, and who knows but what I may become a cen tenarian?" He looked affably at the official, but the latter seemed to be frozen solid.- "Do I get the quarter?" he demanded atfer a pause. , "You do not," was tho reply, In Icy tones. - . "Very well," and he sighed heavily; "that settles it. Make out your death claims and things. Fill up the check payable to the order of my weeping widow. Charge mo to profit b and loss' He walked heavily out. BETTER THAN A DEED. lie Hold the Land by shotgun Logle and tho iooJ Old Oordor Pisa. From the Detroit Free I'res. Within a few miles of the North Car olina state line I stopped at a poverty-uirk-iken cabin to s.noke a pipe and ciiit for a few minutes wtith the tallest and rag'gede2rt native I ever caw In the soulii. It was evident from 'the looks of ahiings that he was at h-ird-iMn and below, and after some general 'talk I queried: ' t "Why don't you go tut .it and fix up your cabin to as to make i; comfort able?" "It does look shaklety, ond that's a flact," he replied, "but I'm tryln' to sell out, yo' see." "Is that the reason yoil have no crops?" "Yes, that's tine reason." "And (how much land do you own here?" 1 - "Well, Bah, 'I can't 'zictly ay how much, bint a powerful lot, I reckon." "But don't you know where your boundary lines begin and end?" "They nvlg'ht be&in down thar' by the creek isjnd cr.'I up 1 ll'.iir' by li'-.iiii taitf tree," he replied In doubtful tones. "Your deed ought ito show,". I said. "Yes.- Tut I hain't got any deed." "Didn't you get a dc-ed when you bougie this propcjUy?" ' "So, a.h no deed." "Then how can you say yfci own ttV ''How kin I say how kin I say?" ho I'opeated. "Why, r3h, I -cum, 'long yere arter the van and liked the looks of j:-.ie plate ainld squmOklJi on S'.r.vie that time three different critters hev casm up from 'Miai'.potwIJe to h'.st rn" off, and I hev killed two and wounded Che t'other and held right on. If that hain't ownin' the property then I'd like to know! No ah, I hain't got no deed, but I hev got a 'double-foarrelcd shot-gun, and I reckon thar' Won 'It be any disputes about ownerrWp whett'I Ond a critter who wants to buy I" HERE'S A PECULIAR SECT. They Affeet Xudltv and Dcsiro to Live Llko Primeval Man. Paris, Oct. 19. An illustration of the degeneration preceding new life may be found in the antics of a new sect, which has its headquarters In Mont martre, In Paris. The members of this sect see the salvation of mankind In a return to tho habits of our remote an cestors who were In the state of na ture. The sect was founded by a mis understood nrtlPt, nnmed Oravelle, who is a great admirer of Rousseau. He has attracted so many disciples that he conducts a weekly paper devoted to expounding his opinions. In which the naked savage Is contrasted with men of modern types to the immense disad vantage of the latter. The police naturally have prevented the members of the sect from carrying out their theories in regard to clothes in Paris, but Gravelle la taken so seri ously that a land owner tn the center of France has put his estate at the ser' vice of the sect tn order that a prac tical test may be made. A party of Oravelle's disciples set out from Parle a few days ago to make the experiment of living In a Btate of nature, and some of their companions are about to Join them. . They propose to wear as little cloth ing as the weather permits, to subsist so far as possible, upon the natural products of the fields and woods, and to do no work. This last point la the most Important of all, for most of the members of the sect are rank anarch ists. -. Jj. For 1 0 Months finable to tie Down in M. A Toronto Citlssn's Awful Esperlenee . with Heart Disease. r - L. J. Law. of Toronto, Canadl" arsj--"I consider It my duty to give the public my experience with Dr. Agnew's Curs for the Heart. I have been sorely troubUd with heart disease snd unable to lie down In bed for eighteen months, owing tq smothering spells and palpitation. Safin night I -would have to be propped up by pillows in order to keep from smothering. After treating with several msdloal man without benefit, I procured a bottle Of IBs Heart Cure.- Aftor taking the first dete 1 retired and slept soundly until, morning. I used one bottle and have not taken any of the remedy for seven weeks, but the heart trouble has not reappeared. I oon rtder It the grandest remedy In eslstetfte for heart disease." It acts like ma- a d by can ereai ana au arttawuu. SCRAHTON Ms. we 3,088 Loaves of Bread baked ia Easter Dockash Range, (style shown above,) in seven days with Range standing in street Longest day's baking n hours. - V 4 , Weather warm, Stove Trade dull. If you want a Stove or Range within the next year, now is your time to buy. 2,000 Stoves will be offered at foundry prices for the next thirty days. We want to keep our shop running this winter, as usual, and must sell the goods now on hand. THIS WITNESS THAT II. D. SWA11TZ & CO. Are tbs Leading WhoUule Agsnti la i mokeless Powder, - GUNS, RIFLES, REVOLVERS. HEADQUARTERS FOR L C. Smith's and Remington - Cans, Clay Flscous aud Pigeon Tra;3. telephone 2723.' Opon Evening. litH Spraoa Street, batwooa Poon anl Wyo ming Avenue THE NEW NO. 2, Contaist all that baa made Hammond Work fittr-ons, snd NEW, NOVEL and I SUFUL inv ptovemtuU. "Hammond Work the Criterion of Haainand Superiority." "Hammond Kales the Criterion of Hammond Popdarity." Ham mood Mo, ft, "The Ptrfest Typewriter. Ex amine It and be convinced. Fhl'.adelpbia brttek of The Hammond Typowritar Co., 118 I, Sixth street F. A. & A. J. BRAND A, f.'t;V;''' ; ; 4U timet It, Seriates ReprtNsUthts. n; .. ' CALL UF 868X . IXEHI EfBD OILS,. tt.i Win trap HiMMdND TYPEWRITER ! '"' .w e a aawirii m . .0- o ' AND CIDER. - trtCZ AND WAREHOUSE, t v ' Ml T9 HI MERIDIAN ti-,VA OOUINO, IVI'cfft ' V - ' : - . . .: . mm us. n. J. BREWERY. llaaBfactnrers of the CoIebrateA PILfjENER LAGER BEER CAPACITY f oo.ooo Barrels per Annum Our Stock in TraSe Mainly Consists of Watches, Clocks, Fins Jewelry, Diamonds, Sterling SllYarwirj, Sterling Silver Miles, Silyjr Plated Wars, Fins Cat Glass, Art Porcelains, .Fine Leather Goads, ' ' Banquet Lamps. Wo carry tho UtrftiKt rariety In all of thru lines. No cour.ru Dearer thin th great citien call ahonr such ft Tni-ltty . ' Or.r word is oar bond. Nearly tbi'ty years of aiiccrestul bul' m as ebonld be proof enough tiiat our i-ood. andprlcoaare right, acd always fcs.v bean rltfiit. 307 UCXlWlfM All mra sues w..ik,p- cspKai, ti kUUT OI.BA WIOK IK THE WOKU -A dmllMr mm,d it a dmUnr TUeLadtos MM ficach Doac KU ea Doe deUmes hm aayvkere Is the U.S.. os eel piofUeaa, Nose inner, or 1'ueul Xou far tut Kqnale erery way tie ao ta U Mall Mere, for .. We stake Ula bee niaeleaa, therefore we alii tt JM, Hwk 4 sod If any aas fa sot aaueaeei wo will feiewv aaaeeaatsorpaw. ypan lees 1 te I sea aaal a. aeaa-ye oeef M WiJfU sva. man eiee . caaa. I lofw. "w nil frieM lifai I J'it . iil .Haeeiae amTawet,r-' 'ee.ew florae note, Aasea, Cue t-to fcoeth" Hair lalUairt Write Walwit Cm set Map OMU.TtlBtu.J .ai I I I I IIIW III illi 11 LAGER BEER HKii rail I. . - M fir yiVT I dlUJ X" ?tljlH Have arranged with the follow ing city dealers to sell our Stoves at foundry prices. No stoves sold at retail at foundry: STRONG'S FURNISHING HOUSE, 320-322 Fenn Avenue. W. G. DOUD &.C0., 589 Lackawanna Arenac FOOTE & SHEAR CO, ' 119 North Washington Ave 124 South Slain Avenue. !en!i B cents for fwiple package. Faultless Chamlcal Company. Balti more, Md. ill OF SCRANTON, IE Special Attention Given to Business end Personal Accounts INTEREST PilD 01 THE DEPOSITS. "sarREVIVO frfTS RESTORES VlTaUTT. Made USDs. St AJ'rVf awen w I II ft A aav uthw.KtfJ , of Me. TMI ORIAT Mtk ! jB2UmQ03B ZtJBEDkCEiS'J prexliMws the abora nealte ta'SO days, nertf Mwetf ally and ealekly. Carea aea all attatafall Toes nea wiU rafata ta.tr last siaeaeeseadeld tea will Noseer tkelr yovttfal etoet BEVIVa MeleirisralriwtNeJfcene eaas. Last Tltalit. Xatsoteaar. KIbtS Masqat. Lost fewer, FalUaf Humor. Warto Weeeses, sad it edWta el self-abase or aseeaisad larfteawttsa. aetealreeresky laasroat aaml Jm hart fth atak - I .wrtat fee flre of youth. V yruUettrinmltr tad Oaatasistloa, lastst ea eerie; KBTITOiae Mfeer. A sea so earned la eat feoaket. aV aeU 1.M r Makes, erets tee wttfcavae le writtea rurutte ea ear e IwJaael ttosaeaey. CbnUltm, Aadwas MYM. eUOIClNt CO.. II Mrer , CffiOJrM. Hi. t fttSfl r aettteejaeVe. i 919 Wl TsSt IX. "f 9 Wjr r mmTM 3: ft, f 1) baT r (f o.