4 THE SCBANTON TBIBtJNE-WEDNESDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 13. 1895, Dslljrene Weekly. No Sundir KllUoa. Fublbtad at Scnnton, P, by The Tribune Pub- lWilnc Company. Hew York Office: Tribune BuUdlac, Frank a Gray, Manafer. I. . KINO.SBURV, efcie, e Oca'l C. H. RIPPLC, Bo' Taua. LIVV S. RICHARD, Cerre. W. W. DAVIS, Business Kuun. W. W. VOUN0.S, An. Mm' nrriBBD At thi posromos at bobaito. as SSOOSD-CLAES UAH. MATHS. "Prtm.ia' Ink" (ha neogalnd Journal rbr adver Itoera, nice Thb Hcbamtok Tbiblus s the tw sdv.rtl.ln- medium In North taucra Pennsylva nia. rnuir uia- t u'inri v TmTtiuirK. lamed Brenr Baturdar. nulna Tw.lv. Hatubnm. Pane, with an Abun dance at Sm, Fktloa. aud Well-Billed Mlsoel- laiijr. or Tncee who uuwot hi uu" Thibuhc, the Weekly la Keeommended a th Heal narsain uous muysie seer, w aynum Tax Taurota Is tor Bale Sally at the D., L. and W. button al uoooiun. uni6n SCRANTON. NOVEMBER 13. 1S95. The congressman from this district ought to feel proud of himself now that he has descended to frequenting secret caucuses in order to bark at his bene factor. "No Seat, No Fare." Street cars are proverbially crowded In all large cities at certain hours in the day, no matter how large the cars or the number running. It follows that frequently passengers are compelled to stand, there not being seats enough to accommodate all who crowd into a car. In Philadelphia and some other cities the cry of "no seat no fare," is heard at this trme. It Is suggested that pas sengers refuse to pay fare until -they are provided with seats. It is always easy to raise a cry against a street car company, or, in fact, against almost any other corporation supposed to be In existence for the convenience of the public. Now to us it seems that there is very little sense In this cry of "no Beat no fare." Circumstances, which a street car company cannot forseo or provide against, frequently double and quadruple travel on their lines. A street car will teat a certain number of people. If a person is unwilling to stand he should not enter a street car whose seating capacity is already occu pied. Surely no reasonable man ex pects a eompany to carry free all who voluntarily crowd into It knowing that there are ho seats for them. As a rule companies run as many cars as they And .profitable, and they cannot be expected to run more. Doubt loss some companies exercise inade quate Judgment in their management They should run more cars at certain periods of the day than at others. Some companies give the publlo inadequate service and wretched accommodation, but there is no sense In raising a hue and cry against a company because in the morning or in the evening there is a rush and the cars are so crowded that some of the passengers must stand. When people enter a car that is already full they should either uncomplainingly stand up or leave that car and tako their chances on the next one. Mr. Davles la mistaken when he in timates ,that the only places In which he was cut last fall were the "Yankee wards." The returns show that .he was ,also cut badly In Hyde Park. The' Third Term Bee. ; ' One week ago, in a dispatch to the Chicago Times-Herald, "Walter Well tnan, the- Washington correspondent, declared in most emphatic terms and "upon the highest authority" that Mr. Cleveland not only did not want put would Hot accept a fourth nomination. Re now prefaces a long dispatch with these Interesting words of recantation: "It loofca.now aa if an organised effort la to be made by the Cleveland wing of the party to thrust a fourth nomina tion and third term upon their ideal This effort Is to be started and direct ed from the cabinet, and with the knowledge and apparently with the ap proval of the president Doubtless every federal officeholder In the count try will be expected to do his share of the work. The third term experi ment ls-now on, aure enough, "In one week there has been a change of base en the part of the administra tion, amounting to revolution. Before the election the members of the cabinet, almost without exception, believed and said the president did not want a third term, that he did not believe in a third term as a matter of principle, and that In case circumstances seemed to require It he would make publlo announcement of his views and of his refusal to run again. Now It Is a different story. The Hay after the election the' members of the administration began talking of a fourth nomination. They said the pres ident in view of the result of the elec tions, was the only man who could lift the Democratic party out of Its slough of defeat and despondency. The vol ume of this sort of talk has visibly' in creased for some days. It broke out with great force after Friday's cabinet meeting, at which It is known the presi dent and his official advisers spent nearly two hours talking over the polit ical situation, if it is fair to Infer the motives and plana of an official family by what the members of it have to say, then a movement for a third term was virtually decided upon at that meeting of the cabinet and may now be consid ered afoot'- - It would b entirely In line with Mr. Cleveland's ostentatious ; record of "consecration" to duty if he should, aa la herein Intimated, regard the cleaning out of all possible Democratic rivals as a kind of Inspired. Invitation to head the fight once more himself. This view would coincide with his colossal egotism and make due recog nition of the curious element of luck which has so many times played In hie favor. If we belonged to the Democrat ic party we should favor Mr. Cleve land's renomlnatlon, If for no other rea eon than that It would give the party the benefit of the Inexplicable yet very palpable prestige associated with hie With CtereUad as theeeeadU date, the Democracy could make at least an appearance of fighting; with any other Democrat aa the standard bearer the campaign woul4 scarcely become Interesting. The country will await with curiosity the working out of this problem. Choosing a time when the men he would abuse are absent in a distant state, Mr. Joseph A. Scranton has made another of his characteristic exhibi tions of backbiting. It is to the credit of the gentlemen who met on Monday evening to prepare an "antt-Connell" slate for next spring's city election that most of them took no atock in Mr. Scranton'a remarks on that occasion. There probably wore in that secret caucus several men who were sincere in their beliefs. However far they may be from the truth, they are not hypo crites; they are candid In their error. It can readily be believed that to these men the blatant talk of Mr. Scranton, with Its overflowing suggestion of baf fled malice, consummate selfishness and rank ingratitude, was grossly distaste ful. One of those who were present doubtless voiced the general feeling when, after the meeting was over, he called the ingrate down by asking him to whom he owed his present seat in congress. Aa Excited Pastor Rebuked. There was both courtesy and grace in the manner in which Rev. Dr. Mc Leod, of this city, albeit a Presbyterian, replied in the New York Observer to the attack of Rev. H. R. Hawels, a Broad church Anglican clergyman, upon, the brethren In his own ministry. Mr. Ha wels, in the Contemporary Review, had uttered a scathing Indictment of , the Episcopal clergy, both in England and the United States, saying among other things that Its "social and Intellectual decline" was "an Incontestable fact," which "the bishops freely admit and be wail," but cannot prevent, and which, as he asserts, is "growing worse every year." "This accuser of his brethren," re marks Dr. McLeod, "throws aside, the amenities and the proprieties which a clergyman, above all others, should never forget, and he allows his unruly member to run riot. He hurls at his brethren such choice epithets as 'un scrupulous hypocrites' and 'dullards' whom 'the laity despise' and upon whom they look, not exactly as 'liars' or 'idiots,' but as a mixture of both. To an outsider it would seem that after graduating at Oxford, the Rev. Mr. Hawels must have taken a post-gradu ate course at Billingsgate." We shall not follow the doctor through his masterly refutation of these broad charges, although to do so would be a pleasure. To Americans, familiar with the high grade of scholar ship and character and the rare devo tion to duty which characterize the clergy of the Protestant Episcopal church, the fiery accusations of the Rev. Mr. Hawels reply to themselves. But It may be noted as a delicate in stance of growing sectarian liberality that the first reply to these unworthy assertions should come, not from one within the attacked circle, but from the pastor of a separate and In certain respects perhaps we may Bay a rival denomination. There is reason to believe that the Reed boom is on the mend In the south these days. The Investigation Mania. The unanimous adoption by the Pitts burg Chamber of Commerce of a reso lution calling for all independent in quiry into municipal affairs In that city Is a passing indication of the agitation which is prevalent In municipalities generally. Much -of this unrest la doubtless without sufficient cause, and it is possible .that the multiplication of Independent Inquiries, each following Its own ideas but all having the event ual effect of unsettling publlo confi dence, will do more harm than good. But this seems under our prevalent system of government to be about the only way in which the public's curios ity as to the transaction of its official business can be satisfied. There are epidemics of investigation as well as of measles and scarlet fever; and the peo ple of the closing decade of the nine teenth century are manifestly in the midst of such an epidemic. It Is char acteristic of epidemics that they give more or less pain while they last; but it is also characteristic of them that they leave the body politic in a fair degree of health and strength. We do not know anything about the local political conditions in Pittsburg. It la probable that there is provocation for an investigation. In few cities la there not Corporate control of councils, the enrichment of favorite men or com panies at the expense of the general taxpaylng public, these and allied evils are common to all cites, varying from city to city in degree more than in prin ciple. The people, of course, are them selves at fault, and In the strict ethics of the case should punish themselves even more severely than they occa sionally punish the revealed chief of fenders like Tweed and his ilk. But they do not see that, and there ia noth ing to do but to let them gain the knowledge of their duty in the costly school of experience, The Philadelphia "Lexow" investi gation Is certainly proceeding slowly. Let us hope it is also, progressing surely. Penny and Two-Cent Newspaper!. The Chicago Times-Herald has re duced its price to one cent per copy, but promises to make no reduction in the quantity or the quality of its contents. It waa forced to do this by business competition, but we cannot see that it Is a result to crow over. The Times Herald is probably the most expensive American newspaper. At a rough guess we should estimate that Its weekly ex penditure ia fully (10,000; it may reach 115,000 or even 120,000. It la the best illustrated, the best printed and the best edited paper In the west and Its pre-eminence costs money. It is not well supported by the advertisers of Chicago, although its advertising pat ronage Is growing. Ite circulation la not 70,000 dally, and at 1 cent per copy, for twelve and sixteen pages such aa it prints, the more copies It circulates the more money it will lose. Under these circumstances it ama fair to remark that the business oondl ties' U to be deplored whloh forces this, excellent paper to sell its wares below the cost of production. It is well worth two cents a copy. It would be cheap at ten cents. To sell It for a cent means that Mr. ICohlsaat, the alert proprietor of the Times-Herald, will have to draw on his personal bank account to cover the discrepancy between the paper's income and its outlay. It happens in this particular case that the propri etor's personal aooount la sufficiently ample to sustain any probable demands of this character; but none the loss the condition la anomalous and should not continue. The newspaper business la pre-eminently a cosuneroial business, subject to tho samo laws that govern other branches of trade. Tho primary idea behind It is to secure a reasonable profit on the time, capital and anxiety invested in It Other purposes are In' cluental and subsidiary, as they should be. No public should expect a good thing for less than a fair price. When it is encouraged to expect such a thing for leas it la encouraged in a line of thinking the logical end of which is fraud. A newspaper not worth two cents is not worth having. Some years ago the Century Maga zine published anonymously a novel which became famous. It was "The Breadwinners." For years the maga zine-reading publlo has been cudgeling its brain to guess w&o Its author was, Suspicion long attached to Colonel John Hay, and it took years for him to re move It Another man who had often to protest against the embarrassment of a false credit was the late Colonel Harris, of Cleveland. Now, however, comes the Cleveland World with strong proof that the real author,, after all, was the late Rev. Dr. J. W. Menden hall, for many years editor of the Mis sionary Review. Dr. Mendenhall was well known to many Scran tonlano; if he wrote "The Breadwinners" It must have been by an inspiration which had no parallel In his career. The Harrlsburg Patriot adds fuel to the anti-Harrity flame by refusing to believe the national chairman's denial that he had anything to do with the election of Judge Smith or the defeat of the latter's colleagues on the Demo cratic ticket. The Patriot, In Its eager ness to fan a religious conflagration among the ruins of the Pennsylvania Democracy, is exhibiting a seal really worthy of a more creditable under taking. Colonel Trumbo, who will probably be one of Utah's first BenatorB, says that the free silver Republicans of the west are willing to accept defeat when It comes to them In a fair flpht; but they don't want to be pronounced dead be fore the contest commences. Colonel Trumbo is not the only man who sus pects that more will yet be heard of the so-called silver Issue. Mr. Whitney's daughter has married an Englishman; but unlike many of the winners of dowerlcd American brides young Paget la a gentleman and the union la one of hearts, Russell Sage may bo for McKinUy for president, but wo haven't yet soon hid cheek mcntlonad in the Hat of donations to the cause. - In view of the fact that even the Eng lish papers are moved to denounoo him, Dunraven must be an ass indoodl The Kentucky Republican who wants to lucoeod Blackburn had better begin to Dtook up his barl. England has ofnolally declared war on Ashanteo, John Bull shrewdly takos a foe ho can handle. , , PENNSYLVANIA AT ATLANTA. From the Chicago Timea-Horald, Atlanta, Nov. 10. Perfoetly understood by every true oltlion, and rot peculiar in itself, is the homaio ana rivoreaoo wnlcli Is paid to the oia Liberty Bell by tiia maMos or tht poopio. Under tn white poruoo of the Pennsylvania building, ear roundea toy heavy railings and guardod by blue-ooatoa officers, the Llborty Hall la a constant tsiagaet, and there arejtew vis itors at the fair who tall to lee this rello of revolutionary times at some Urns dur ing their stay at .the exposition. Yet among those who oome and stood before tho old bell, It is amusing; anil at the earns Urao saddening to see how few really know Ita history or reoosniio its impor. tanoei When the dlrootors of the exposi tion wore dlieuaslng the advisability of having the Liberty Well brought here, the ?ueition of oxpenss came up, and it waa ound that It would mean a large outlay if the boll was transferred temporarily from Philadelphia te Atlanta, One of the dlrootors, after hearing the arguments, fro and con, took the floor, and insisted hat to Mm tho Idea appeared absurd tht paying out of no muoh money to have that ben brought down to Atiaata from Phila delphia. TWfay," said he, "I saw It at Chicago two or fares tlmoi, and tht eld thing is cracked. If you are going to spend ao muoh money any way, why not f et a new bell that would bo worth some blng, and bt done with It J" Fortunately, he waa tho sole member of the directory who lookod upon tho rello in that light. i Pennsylvania, of 'ail the states repre sented at tht exposition, msdt tho largest appropriation, 38,00Q, whloh hoi boon about equally divided In tho creation of the state building and tho different ex hibits of tht state. The 'building Itself la a low struoturo, finished in pure white, with a broad tllod veranda and a doublo portleo extending forward from each end of the building, under one of which I tho temporary reetlng place of the Liberty Bell. Having made suoh a munificent ap propriation, tho Keystone state received What is considered the choicest location of any of tht state buildings, it being on tho bluff immediately to tht south of the Piedmont clubhouse, suroundod by largo water oab treos and overlooking the plaza. Innumerable flags float from tho cornice above Its fiat roof, and tht word "Pennsylvania," in raised gold lotters evor the doorway, Is studdod with eleotrlc lights.'' A bat relief adorns the entrance, showing tht butt of Benjamin Franklin tnclroled by a laural wreath, htld by two ehtrubs; upon the right tht Liberty Bell; upon the left tht declaration of independ ence. Many takt this to bo tht state arms of Pennsylvania, but It Is merely a pleas ing conception of tht artlet. ills A larga rtceptlon room occupies tht en tire front oortion of tho tmlldfne. finished In tan color, tht columns in lighter shades and the vaulted celling of light drab. Tho windows are suriainea in Diut ana wnitt, the matting, rugs and cushions, as well an many nieces of the wicker furniture. showing the same combination of color. a Dow in srepiace mrw tngravta tne names of the Pennsylvania commission, of whloh Governor D. H. Hastings Is president; Lieutenant Governor Walter Lvon. vlce-nrtsldtnt! State Treasure a. M. Jackson, trtaturtr, and T. J. Kttnan, jr., of tht Pitttburg Prtsa, storttary. The txeeutlve committee eentitti of J. Henry Cochran. Alexander Dempster, William T. Hareneui, wiiuam connell ana Harvey H. Hvtbtrt A malt figure of herolo list In baa rtllef above the fireplace It tht most striking feature of the reception rooms. With an olive branch in one liana, la the plifted right hand It bears the torch of liberty, or tnllthttnmtat, whichever may have been tht conception of the artist A fine picture of William Ptnn In ell wan copied from the original painting In tht coeaeseton of Robert Henry Allan, of Blackweil Hall, County Durham, England. Among the Inttrert'tng documents dis played is the original Indenture or quit nam mow wmmwjw win wwii ymemg, par nearly all ef tht signatures, save teat of Janes, nave feed te as to bt scarcely dawn Tn tbi iwn, wim or xorjr and Albany, to William Peon, Aug. V. isa. Tht scaoll work udob tht Indenture i discornlble. This document, preslous to Pennsylvania!!!, was brought from tbe state library at Harrlaburg. The letter which Preeldont Urant wrote in 1875 to General Harry White, chairman of tht Republican central committee of Penn sylvania, in which he discuBsen tne possi bility ot the third term for a president. Is read bv nearly vprv ono who vlalts the Pennsylvania -building'. The admirers of freeiueni neveinno gain great consola tion from some of the statements made by General Grant. A typical Goorela "cracker" and his wife paused before this presidential letter. "What Is that?" aeked the head of the house, putting on her classes and scanning It closely. The ma tron replied: "It seems to be a tatter of acceptance which President Grant wrote to tne president or the uepuoucan party." "limn: is mat allr sum tne -:racicer," and they moved oa perfectly saiuneu. DEFENDING THE DEMOCRATS. From the Cleveland Leader. When Ell Perkins urns aokod last even ing about the prospects of the Republican party in Now York he said:,- "I'm a Democrat, you know, and rnly Iteep truck of our prosperous Democratic party. The Democratic party Is doing wen." "In what resneet?" asked the reporter. "Why, we have made a deficit of $300, 000,000 since Grover got In and borrowed the money to pay It. we are enjoying our elves, and we ara sroine to let the Re publicans do the walking later on. The Republicans paid $2,000,000,000 on the na tional debt, and I guess they can pay this littlo three hundred million deficit." "But what has becomo of tho $1S2,000,000 in (told which you borrowed? wns asketl. "Well, we out it with the S8i.000.000 which we had in the treasury, making 206,000.000 In frold, ar.d we have spent it all but $91, 0?La O to pay running expenses. Instead oi 7 klug In enough money at the custom t.y sco to pay for running the government we hired gold from the English at 4 per osnt. Oh, we Democrats are smart, we are! "We Democrats don't pay greenbacks and silver to American farmers for wool," continued Ell, "but we send $81,000,000 in goia a year to Thibet ami Australia. "What are yo.u Democrats doing with the (treat Industries?" asked the reporter. "Why. we are knocking them out. We've killed the Yankee lace factory at Wilkes-P-arre, and are buying ship load of win dow curtains In Nottintrhnm. Wo have snut up a third or the woollen rnctories In Massachusetts and Rhode Island, and the Hrltlsh steamers come loaded with woolen cloth from Bradford. Why, last year we shipped 85 nur cent, more woolen (roods from Knirlnnd than we did under McKlnley in IK We Democrats are keep ing the woolen mills In Deeds and Man chester going day and night. And see wnat we are ilolna; tor our sheep at home. The slauKhter houses of Kansas City and Omaha are killing millions of sheep from New Mexico and Wvominor dallv. And wooll Did not our grasping? farmers use to get aa cents ror it under McKlnley, nna now we are sending; gold to Australia and buying Swan River and Van Dieman's iana wool l&r 10 and K cents. I tell you, we Democrats are running- thlnes wild. We have to, for we know you Republicans are coming witn tne Keciey cure in m ONE VIGOROUS FOREIGN POLICY. From the Chicago Times-Herald. What constltutea a vleoroua forele-n policy? Opinions vary, but we are bound to say there never was a policy more vigorous and Invigorating than that of the French minister at Constantinople. A rumor came from Armenia that French residents had been butchered. Whereupon ine amoBsiauor s messenger tnunuerea at the door at Glldls In the middle of the night and the "shadow of God" read this note: "if Frenchmen have been murdered In Armenia I shall demand the head of the governor of the province." There's vigor. Probably if the same course had been fol lowed a year ago European boureex would not now be in a panic over the Turkish loan. Advertise Now. There are wonderful things we are going to do, Borne other day; And harbors we hope to drift Into, Some other day. With folded hands the oars that trail We watch, and wait for a favorite gale To Mil the folds ot an idle sail Some other day. Trade Magazine. Inexhaustlblo Supply. From the Boston Standard. It costs 11,000,000 a day to run the gov ernment, but this Is not very much for a man who can borrow as freely as the secretary of the treasury. No Ont Thinks of Them. From the Washington Star. Have not the English young women some rights which these American-marrying nobles ought to rospect? A Simple Transfer, From the Detroit Journal. The duke's haul will not bo Included In this month's deficit. TOLD BY THE STARS. Daily Horoscope Drawn by Ajaeohns, Tht Tribune Astrologer. Astrolabt cast: 118 a. m for Wednes day, Nov. 13, 1895. A child born on this day will no douftt often realize that the 13th of any month Is an unlucky date for one's initial bleat. If the infant, upon arriving at years of supposed understanding, keeps out of pontics and poker games ho will probably never want In cose he succeds In marry ing a plumber's daughter. It has now been several days since the friends of Wade Finn have Insisted upon his acceptance of a nomination In advance. AJaoehus' Advlct. Do not txpect to Inhale ottar of roses from an election cigar. - Do not look for gratitude when past favors are considered. Modern gratitude Is an advance article altogether. Do not Imagine that the world Is totally depraved. There are, a few ot us left yet. PARLOR 111 ALL THE NOVELTIES IN NEW STYLES AT ' s HILL & GONNELL'S 01 ADO 133 R. WASHINGTON AVENUE. Large Stock to Select From. To close a Tew patterns we have made toe following redactions : 1 6-plece Suit reduced from 1285 to $227. 1 S-plece Suit from $110 to $95. 1 I-plece Suit from $210 to $175. 1 S-pleee Suit from $200 to $150. ' 1 4-plect Suit from $58 to $35. 1 l-plece Suit from $198 to $175. 1 S-plece Suit from $145 to $100. 1 4-plece Suit from $150 to $100. 1 4-plece Rug Suit from $115 to $50. 1 S-plece Rug Suit from $112.60 to $50. 1 Mahogany Chair from $22 to $18.50. 1 Mahogany Chair from $25 to $18.60. I Mahogany Chair from $20 to $15.25. 1 Mahogany Chair from $22 to $16.30. S Mahogany Chairs from $18 to $13.25. I Mahogany Chair from $25 to $18.60. 1 Mahogany Chair from $20 to $14.75. Co tify. 2t thsct we tzihllt CCfS Ct SsSOl V Hill & Connell POCJIVI'.TMIVE, Special Part ol the charm of buying Silks here is that you not only find what you want, but don't find what you don't want. You select from a selected stock. Come and see the wide range of Novelties that we are showing at prices that are bound to catch your loose dollars. At 57 Cents We are now offering several patterns and colorings in changeable stripes and figures and chameleon effects, the usual 75c. kind. At 79 Cents Some of the handsomest heavy Groi? de Londres covered with sprays, flowers and dainty figures, At 98 Cents Nearly all of our to make the Silk &Our line of Black Brocaded Satin Duchesse at 98 cents, for width and quality were never equalled. Lamps, Silk Shades, Fancy Globes. Our Line Is Complete. . We are now showing the largest line of Decorated Din ner Sets ever seen in Scran ton. Our leader, 100 PIECES, $6.98. LIMITED. 422 LACKAWANNA AVENUE. NEW LINE OF FOOT BALLS Also Big Stock 0! Guns, Revolvers and Ammunition. C. M. FLOREY 222 Wyoming Ave, ' NOT INVITING, BUT CONRAD'S ARE AT 305 Lackawanna Avanua. THAT WONDERFUL, mem Tsm Is bma dr Si lb WEBER o fh snfl sits th . n nfl JJJj Flaaoa w asn takaati asaaaa , I LaU.I L..JI lA'J. WjST at ifjilii PIABIOS as ale of Sis $1.25 Silks have been marked Counter an interesting spot for Roe Stationery Blank Books, Office Supplies. EDISON'S MIMEOBIMPH And krapsltts. TYPE WRITERS' SUPPLIES lEiii copper pine nn IIAUITS BflflSCHEi REYNOLDS BROS., Stationers and Engraves, 217 LACKAWANNA AVE WE INVITE YOU To Iosptot Our OomplsM Lin of THE J. S. TURNER CO.'S PERFECT FITTING SHOES For Osnts' wear, Ths Patrat Lsstksr Show triad by this eonesrn sr far tnpsrlor to aor similar lino on tho market, Tboss who bar worn them far th past two rears will bear at out in this statement It y on hve irregular feet we can nuke shoes toyonr spicial measure aad suersatee rou perfect satisfaction. The Lackawanna Store Association, LIMITED CORNER LACXA. AND JEFFERS0X IVES. KELLY & GORMAN FUNERAL DIRECTORS AND EOALMERS. LATE OF PITTSBURG. FIRST-CLASS LIYERY II C0H1ECTI0I 523 Spruce St., Scranton. OYSTERS e We are Beads Barters far Oietete end are hanillBartn Celebrated Duek livers, I.vnn Hana Vmrm Mill Pondcs aleo Shrews River Cows, vVewtera Shores and Giua Points. Hr-We make a apetaUiwef deUverlaf Mae FetotowfcwaUehea to. eeewtere. and Satin Duchesse grounds, the usual $1.00 quality. down to that figure in order the next few days. VELSBACII LIGHT Spcclillj Adapted lor Head!, and Sevlnfi. Coniumts three (8) feet of gat pet hoar and Rivet an efficiency of sixty (00) candles. Saving at least 83) per cent, over tht ordinary Tip Burners. QUI and See It. HUNT j COU CO., 434 LACKAWANNA AVENUE. Manufacturers' Agents. THB SCRANTON VITRIFIED BRICK TILE MANUFACTURING CO sunrn or SHALE PAVING BRICK ANDBUILDINQ BRICK Ofllest 329 Washington Avenue. Works: WayAag. B. 4 W. V. B. R. M. H. DALE, General Sales Agent, Scranton, Pet ELECTRIC, VAPOR AND GlToa from I a. a. to I p. sa. at the ) Oreen Ridge Sanitarium,, 720 Marion St., Green Ridge. For Ladles Snfferia from Names Diseases. -MtSrfhel and ItkeaaiaUo Oostplaiats speoUl a'ttMttoa ilTea. MISS A. C. JORDAN, (Oraanate of the Boston Hospital TraiatasT School for Nurses), Superintendent WILLIAM S, MILLAR, Alderman 8th Ward, Scranton ROOMS 4 AND B, Qaa ana" Water Co. Building, COMER iTOMlM ATE. AMP CEXU1 St OFFICE HOURS from T.te a .to t p. to, 0 hoar lntsnaloskm for eUtnsr and sapper.) Particular Attentita Gireato Collwtlou Prompt tetdosaoat Oaareateed, VOURBUSINESS IS RESPECTFULLY S0UC1TQ Telephone No. ISA C-aL . IT BAA EIHX P6INK9 ' out toToaspoetanaasetaWaMsoTBMro tasi OPS tfarS ware Is aot eoM by aeTkoep- set OB, Tea sw Ite, total aadaoV te eaUeer kite of Bardsrare bettor thea sapeae else aad yea eiast aet S0adlf we hen sseehat' apea the eatjeee, Cum. aee aeesW weeeeelf j Pi ... T ECODDiCQl S9SSeBaSaBs9SS9S999B9BsBsBJ9CB9,