THE SCB ANTON- TfilBUNE SATURDAY - MORNING, DECEMBER 14, 1895.' 9' 'London-:Bus-: as a -Colginie of " Vantage, Miss Kaiser Describes Some of the Types of Character Witnessed in One. "fW Corejpondencp of The Tribune. Tjjjonjloii.. Npv. SO. Lpndon has many . . JtingulsbJi;(eaturt:3jand perhaps one of the most striking ,1s comprised In 1U -tiuu llme nd busnes. Nowhere In Amerlrn Is tin-re a city that can show 'pfccQ laiw, lortuOihT winding. razy. j.fRtle StreJf9(: Inch a number of MlinJ" ?tpnroUKhfifr4s such . narrow, insutllcl eiit Ji(lewlksor nu;hja complexity of 4fJ anil ea4s, timi Itorths and east- itf8, w'es-eiiters and so on to the end of the chapter. In Its addresses, all tending to confuse the newcomer In finding his. VitW about;, to consume his "'. patience anf lime nnB driv- him. at last, to the protecting winR of a father ly, though, may hap, designing "cabby," who next consumes his cash, a deplora ble thing', indeed, unless he chances to b one of thotie few fdrtunotn mortalB ' ,who have an. ulntntlamp of that article. ,. Yet notwithstanding all these queer and puzslinsf streets. ;and the appar ently consequent dllHculty In Betting from place to place In a town- so quaint ly mystifying; as this, tnVre Ip. I believe, no other -larg city on the face of the globe, where travel nhd communication from one to all parts of the place, are mad,' so ! cisy and' convenient, and above all, cheap in the last decree. London's Two Greatest Resources. What would London be without Its busses, I wonder! They and the Lon don policemen are the two greatest aids to safe travel, I thlnkiJbnt there are existing here. Of course, as I said be fore, there are the cabs and cabmen, but they .cost so nnu'hnxniey. There C j W tt ttndferoumlYiftraf , a won j .derfuV .boon- here, whure the. surface . travel wan long 'n!r congested on every street. "Hut its one great drawback is, 1 that It Is' underground with , a ven geance, for a descent into It Is a liberal education In all the cuuses and eltects cf asphyxiation. As forjhe busses, they, are .of all kinds and descriptions, and run In all dlrec- .tlons. all oyer the surface of London, ' from seven In the morning until after , midnight. There are no specjal inter vals of time, during which one ran catch a bus, as they are going so ron- ' Ctantly',. especially In tne lmibi parts of town that a wait of a minute or two, -If at all, at a comer where, they ntop, : Is all the time required for- getting one. Of cotirse, they do not run In a hap , hazard ' fashion. Just , anywhere and everywhere, but eaclkind of bus has its own particular route, running from one part of town-to another distant part and back, pjying thus between the . two all.duy long, and one only has to : become -acquainted with the colors of the different busses, or, if too lazy to do ' that, simply to read the names of the 'places on the route of the bus, which . arc iialnted on the outside, to know . and decide which one to take for any , particular, destination. Those running 1 on one route are painted red, -while those on another are white, and on an , . other yellow, green, blue, white and -. blue, white and red, and so riti, with , endless variations; while a very popu lar and excellent line of bunwfl.of which I know, and on which I often travel, .. ban-a large umbrella perched orer-the driver at a certain angle, and which per forms the double office of shielding the driver from the weather and of effectu ally distinguishing the busses of this line from those of the others. Though it Is not their proper title, they gradu ally become knowu and spoken of as the "Umbrella busses' 'and enjoy the repu tation' of being the most comfortable ones In London, as' well as being the ones that give the longest penny ride. Guarding Against Overcrowding- Kach vehicle of the London bus fami ly, no matter what its color and route, is built for carrying only a certain num ber of passengers, twenty-six being the limit. Here being room inside for twelve and outside on the top for fourteen more. This Is the very largest number t hut Is allowed by law to ride on one bus besides the driver and conductor, and if a bus Is Been to be overcrowded by even one extra person, a policeman has the right to stop It and arrest Its con ductor, or report him to the secretary ot the company. Even a civilian has that light If he Is so far Interested in the keeping of the laws as to take the trou ble of uppearlng against the conductor In the matter. So you see the Hpertarlo of a crowded Droadway car, with its dozen or so of outside passengers, look ing like so many human leeches cling ing to It, Is never Been here at all. Whether the regulation was made for the sake of the horses or of the busses themselves. I do not know, but It Is cer tainly a very good one for both, not to mention the passengers as well. Another thing peculiar to the London bus is that there is no door, or rather no door that opens and shuts, the entrance being simply an open one all the year around, and I suppose It Is good that it Is so, for as the bus windows do not open the entrance is its only means of ventilation: save for an occasional con trivance for that purpose, seen In very occasional busses. Almost nil the busses belong to a very large and powenful company, called the "London General "Omnibus Company, Limited," which has Its busses all over London, running on routes which rami fy from center to circumference. It Is a very well managed concern, I am told, and certainly one has every reason to believe so, from Jts service. The horses are always big, powerful animals, well fed and cared for. The driver and con ductor are paid a certain fixed salary; the passengers are never overcharged in their fares; and at any time of the day or night a company's Inspector is liable to board the bus, examine the conductor's and passengers' tickets, and see that all Is according to the rules. Each conductor Is numbered, tvearlnnr the number where It can be distinctly seen, and passengers are re- I quested, In a notice printed Inside the bus, to report him to the secretary of the company should he chance to offer passengers any incivility, fail to pay them due attention, or be remiss in his keeping of the company's rules. Different Types of Busses. But there are other busses with slow, creeping horses and engaging, In sinuating drivers on the watch for un wary passengers. These are generally old and rickety vehicles, which fact one tiocs not take note of In the hurry and excitement of catching it, until one is inside. When, however, the conductor comes to collect the fare, and charges tup-pence for a penny ride, or four pence for a tup-penny ride, it suddenly dawns upon your disgusted Intelligence that you have inadvertently got into a "Pirate" or bus that goes on its own hook, or rather that of its conductor, who is its owner, and that It is not a company bus at all. This error can al ways be guarded against by looking for the words: "London General Omnibus Company" on the outside of the bus, and if they be not there, why, of course, it's a Pirate. There would not be so much that is mortifying in finding one's self on a Pirate, if the extra fare were all the difference; but a Pirate generally goes so slowly that it is an actual waste of precious time to ride, the conductor and driver are not bound to be civil if they haven't a mind to, and the horses are generally so skinny and weak looking that one has a sneak ing feeling that he ought in all Justice be arrested by the first Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals officer that comes along for riding behind them. Sometimes the Pirate conduc tors are anything but civil, and some times on the contrary, they are quite as nice as the nicest company conductors. The bus is generally one of the London company's worn-out ones, which they have bought, and which they, with the help of the driver, run, taking all they can get for fares, and either sharing it with the driver, who may be half-owner, or giving him a salary. Owning the bus themselves, they are monarch of all they survey, every possible passen ger Is fair game, and as all they get Is their own, they get all they can, and how they get It does not much matter to them, though such an arrangement may not be agreeable to their passen gers. Not a Delightful Career. Taken at Its best, the life of these bus conductors and drivers is not a de lightful one. They drive from early morning until dark, eating their meals cold on the conveyance, and in severe and stormy weather are afforded little or no shelter from the elements. The driver, of course, has it much harder than the conductor, unless he be one of the favored employes of the "Umbrella Busses," which Is the only line which boasts of umbrellas at all. All the rest, though they may have oil skins and rugs In plenty, are not sufficiently shielded, either from the wet or cold, and last winter, which was the coldest that Lon don had seen for many years, not a few bus drivers were discovered frozen to death In their places, and with the lines still In their helpless hand. Both con ductor and driver are In every case shabby, for their salaries are. by no means magnificent, their only virtue being their unfailing regularity, and one can see that their sufferings from the cold in winter are Intense. Never theless the company ore never at a, loss for a new man, for as one falls out of the ranks, killed, perhaps, by long con tinued exposure, a hundred more are ready and begging with actual prayers for the vacant place. The wages are beggarly, but In this city, where pov erty In all Its most hideous aspects stares one In the face at every turn, these posts are fought for with a dog gedness and a determination and des peration that are terrible to see. Somo Picturesque Characters. They tell me that It is very peculiar and well not comme i faut to keep noticing the people I meet on the street and In the busses. . However, I cannot help It, and I dare say it does not much matter, but I always have to take note of my bus conductor every day. I al ways have to think and wonder about, him. He Is such an Interesting person ageshabby, as I said before, and sometimes obviously 111, though on deck nevertheless. Sometimes, too, he is as brown and evidently as tpugh as leath er, having been seasoned to the out door work through years and years of service. He is always cockney,- too. Never, in all the hundreds of bus rides which I have had, have I encountered what could be called a- "gentleman con ductor" for in the code existent over here, no one is a gentleman or gentle woman who drops his "h's" says ialdy" for lady, or "die" for day, and so on. Setting that aside, however, and re membering that "kind hearts are more than coronets," I have many and many a time been permitted to ride on the bus of "one of nature's noblemen," and have been honored to receive his polite and courteous attention while under his thoughtful care. He helps you in so carefully, answering your questions as to route with equal patience and polite-' ness; helps you off again, and carefully directs you on your way if you have still farther to go, and takes oh! such good care of the old ladies and gentle men and the poor mothers with chil dren, as they get on and off. Many a time have I wished that I were the Queen of England, that I might carry that little sword of hers about with me, ride Incognito on the busses, and some times knight a deserving conductor on the spot. Studies in Human Nature. . Again, there are the Jolly, humorous conductors and drivers, not too refined, who chaff each other In friendly way, and sometimes so well that the passen gers, try as they may to maintain a properly grave outdoor demeanor, are often fain to break Into a smile at some sudden sally of genuine wit. Only the other day I overheard a driver re proaching . another in most melting terms for making him move '"Igher up" the street corner, saying that he had the somewhat unique family of "six teen children and a widow" to support and therefore needed all the passeng ers at that corner. It Is seldom that any of their chaff Is levelled. at a pas senger, but In extreme eases it Is, and to a ,good purpose, too. For instance, the other day a young man signalled the bus from the middle of the block. We stopped and waited for him to Jump on. Now, you must know that a bus rarely stops except at corners; It is a concession on the part of horses, driv er and , conductor when it ; does, and people are expected to sufficiently ap preciate it to Jump on In a .very ex peditious, If not, dignified manner. Our young man was very sweetly gotten up, however, with palo, glossy waxed moustache, immaculate broad cloth, and a correctly frowsy chrysan themum In his buttonhole. Ho picked his way daintily over the road, and then proceeded to mount the stairs to the outside, In a manner best calculated to prevent the bagging of his trousers at the knees, which you may know was more leisurely than not, instead of fling ing hlipself on and up in the approved breakneck way of boarding a London bus. The conductor, collecting fares on the to:, fumed at the loss of time, and when the young man was at last In his seat, relieved his feelings by delivering himself to the rest of us in this wise: "Some o' these young fops, d'ye knuw, are worse than any o the ladies. They stops the bus. Instead o' jumpln' on, as they might do but law! their mothers says to 'em, 'fore they come out, 'Take care o' yourself, dear, and don't go jumpln' on the busses, for fear you'll 'urt yourself, d'ye know." Poor young man! We were all on' a broad grin for five minutes after that, and I doubt if he ever was deliberate again. Tho Other kind. I can recallalso, conductors who can only be descrlied by one word as I think SSThi OldlUllabto. 2? Dlneaiie is an effect, nofaennse. Its origin Is within; Its manifestation without. Hence, to cure the disease the cause must fee removed, and In no other way can a cure ever be effected, Warner's SAFE Cur li established on Just this principal. It realizes that 95 PER CENT, of all diseases arise from deranged Kidneys and Liver, and It strikes at once at the root of the difficulty. The elements of which It iscomposed act directly upon the. great organs, both as a food and restorer, and, Dy placing them In a healthy condition, drives disease and pain from the system. For the Innumerable troubles caused by unhealthy Kidneys, Liver and Urinary Organs; for the distressing Disorders of Women; for all Nervous Affections, and physical derangement generally, this great remedy has no equal. Its past record Is a guarantee for the future. WARNER'S SAPB CURB CO., London, Rochttttr,Melbourn,Franlfort,Toronto,Parl3. of them vltuperous. They answer sharply, they Jerk you up into the bus, they scold and Jeer at passengers who do not know exactly the way to go, and they scorn to help or direct anyone. I have had such strings of hard language, Buch volleys of ironical vocal abuse lev elled at me by Irate conductors as I re member with painful distinctiveness for weeks after. After all, busses are not for those who wish to hold back their skirts from tho contaminating touch of the mob. If you are rich you may lux uriate In cabs, or if you are richer you may have your very own personal vic toria, but if you arc poor, you shall travel in the penny bus your neighbor on one side, perhaps a sweet faced sister of charity; on the other, a painted grls ette upon whose tricks of attire you look with a fascination born of wonder and horror, and wish you could look away. There Is a clergyman here, a grimy workman there, some students over yonder, un East Indian In this cor ner, and in that an absent minded per son who Bits calmly talking his thoughts aloud, oblivious to everything but his own thoughts, of which he Is giving us all the benefit. Down by the door is a man who has taken his ticket, asked t.ift conductor to wake him at such a corner, and then immediately collapsed into tiimbcr. his face and whole body, in fact, indicating terrible fatigue. People sleep, study, and sometimes eat on the bus. It was made for all sorts and con ditions of men, and I say: Long live the London bus! Sadie Estelle Kaiser. Peruvian Bitters. LaFayette, Ind August 0, 1S93, Aunt Rachel Speer: I have been using your Peruvian Bit ters of late for malarial fever that I have not been entirely rid for the past two years until now. I must say your bitters beat everything. I used it only six weeks and began to Improve the first week. I am now well and hearty and feel young again even now in this very hot weather. MRS, JANE NEWMAN. Scranton Gas and Water Company i Hyde Park Gas Compan Scranton Electric Light and Heat Company ffleadoi Brook Water Company 11! W. W. SCRANTON, President G. B. HAND, Secretary and Treasurer WYOMING AVENUE. THE FASHION 308 La(kau)anna fluenae 308 t SCRANTON, PA. Good Goods, Plenty r.of Them, Low Prices Dress Goods Event. Of course it's sensational.. See the goods and your won irler will grow. Some of the richest stuffs of the season. Not all exactly at half price; some one-third. One lot o( DRESS GOODS in a choice line of colorings, 38 inches wide. Special good value at 6oc. For the holiday trade only 39c per yard .One lot of changeable and overshot DRESS GOODS Value 65 and 75c. For the holiday trade 49c peryard .One lot of silk mixed DRESS GOODS, never made to re- , . 4 'tail for less than $1.00. , For the holiday trade only 75c peryard One lot of Boucla DRESS GOODS, 45 inches wide; the latest craze; retail price $1.50. For the holiday trade it.-'.' x 98c peryard One lot of all wool Henrietta, in all colors, 40 inches wide, 50c. value. ; For the holiday trade 32c per yard One lot of Black Henriettas and Serges. These are special ' good value, retailed the world over for $1.00 per yard. t For the holiday trade . 69c per yard .v. Fnr thn llnlirtav Trade. , $l 25 Black Fail Silk, ...... special . . $1.25 Black Saijn, extra -a. . . value . ; . r $2.00 Black Satin Duch ess, 27 inches wide, 98c 98c $1.39 THE FASHION 308 Lackawanna Avenue 308 SCRANTON, PA, i . THE GREATEST HOLIDAY HIT OF ALL Our line of HOLIDAY HANDKERCHIEFS in Wen's, Ladies' and Children's cannot he duplicated in the the city, comprising Plain, Printed Borders, Hemstitch, Embroid ered, Mourning, Initial, and at prices to Satisfy any Pocket book. - CLOVES GLOVES Ladies' Kid Gloves in Black, Tans, Grays; well worth $1.00. For the holiday trade Seyentyrflie Cents Our $1.00 KID GLOVES for Ladies are special value, in all the leading shades. - Don't miss this,. chance, ; Every pair guaranteed; .well worth $1.25. We have a complete line of KID AND MOCO MITTENS for Ladies and Misses. For the holidays. Prices ranging from Oj to $1.25 per pair The prcatest line of POCKETBOOKS AND SHOPPING BAGS in the city. Special for the holidays. Prices ranging from 25c to $i.50 Bear in mind our line of UMBRELLAS for Ladies and Men comprises all the new novelties. Prices ranging from 75c to $5 FEATHER BOAS. We are acknowledged by all head quarters for same. Prices ranging from 49c to $12 . An ICE WOOL FASCINATOR makes an elegant Xmas present. We have an elegant line. Prices ranging from. 50c to $3- In HOSIERY, AND- UNpERWEAR we cannot be beat in styles and qualities .and our prices as low as the 7 lowest; 'more often imver; ' l'f- l "' THE FASHION 308 Lackawanna Avenue 308 SCRANTON, PA. BIG-HEARTED BARGAINS AT BIG-HEARTED PRICES A new line Men's TECKS and FOUR-IN-IIANDS in light, medium and dark colors. Special for the holi days. Why pay 35c. for same when we will duplicate them for 23 cents each 45c. will buy an elegant MEN'S TECK or Four-in-Hand -in all shades. Special for the holidays. Cannot be bought elsewhere for less than 75c, .MCFFLKR WpII fr ht. Mnnf xvtr fir ctrJrflv !n .Jf .i, . Wldt is nicer thim an. cler-aiit Silk MUFFLER for a cold Xmas morning. Prices 'ranging from 50c to $2.50 each I Our line c(f Men's KID GLOVES, lined and unlined, has no superior and at popular prices for the holidays. 50c to $1.25 per pair Just take a look at our line of WOOL FASCINATORS and HOODS. It will do you good to see the low1 price tags on them. Choice From 50c to $1, in all colors MUSLIN UNDERWEAR. This is one of our special lines and we will give special low prices for the holiday CORSETS. You cannot duplicate our 39c. corset in ihe city for 50c. Why not buy of us at this price. 39 ce Customer after customer has tried to match our corset; as yet they have never done sofor less than 75CA What is nicer than an elegant Sateen or Flannel Skirt for . an Xmas present , We have them from . 49c to $3 eacti THE FASHION 308 LackauJanna Huende 308 SCRANTON, PA, Something for Eyery Person and Every Parse TABLE LINENS. We will offer special inducements 2a same for the holiday trade. Prices ranging from 23c to $1.50 per yard Napkins. Our line is most complete. Before buying giv this line a few moments of your time. You won't tc gret it Prices from 50c to (5 per dozen Take a look at our 39c. Drawn Work Damask ToweL Special value for 50c Why pay 75c. for an elegant Damask Towel, extra large size, assorted patterns. We will duplicate any at the above, prices at 50c. Just ask to see them. , 1 . : Coats and Gapes. Our line of Jackets and Capes & still com plete. On prices we defy competition. A $7 Cape, fur trimmed, for $4.98 A $10 Beaver Cape, spe- , cial for . . . 5.98 A $12 double-braided Cape for . . 8.98 A $7.50 Kersey Jacket for 4.98 A $10 Boucle Jacket for 7.50 A $14 Frieze Jacket for . 9,98 A $14 Fur Cape, special 9,98 A $25 French Seal Cape for .. . . . 16.50 A $30 Electric Seal Cape, marten collar . . I7.50 A $50 Baltic Seal Cape, marten collar . . 32.50 A 50 Wool Seal Cape, marten collar and edge 32.50 "J BB 'IIDT FAIL Tfl 8EI; DOB DISPLAY OF UOt l AY GOODS. A J umuu