The Scranton tribune. (Scranton, Pa.) 1891-1910, February 28, 1896, Page 4, Image 4

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    THE SCU ANTON TRIBUNE FRIDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 28, 189C.
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Mi WsslUy. No Sunder Mitton.
rnblwat si kuM, P . Tns nana
Ushlnf Companr.
Rev Tak Mot: Ttl.un. BulMlsf, rank 8.
lUnacs.
t. P. KINIliuKfi Pun. ass tl Mu.
t. N. RIPtHt, Sir Tumi
UVT . niCHARD. Csrrsa.
. W. OAVin. Iokmw aUttuia.
W. W. VOUNQS. Am. MiM't
. imm at tn rosromos at cramm. fa., a
WOIMUM MAUt MATTSB.
Ikk the rsconlisd Journal Ibr sow-
tlM, llllt Til KIUTM TlllimiVIMMl
sararllilnf medium Id NurthMaWrs PMujylt-
aia. -rnnionr ur aaswa,
fan WmLT Taisnws, lamed Every Saturday,
Onntalaa Twrin H.ndume hn. with an AtMin-
t M News, Fiction, and weii-Jcauea J
kH ffn ThiaK Wh. Pknnnt Take Til 1M1LY
Tsisons, the Wee.lr li Recommended u the
an Bsnjsia uoiux. unijr si a ear, in aiwx.
ha Tsunra Ii Ibr Hal Dallr at th D., L. and W
BtattosslHaboken.
SCRANTON. FEBRUARY 28, 1894.
Ths Tribune ia th only Republican
daily in Lackawanna County.
REPUBLICAN STATE CONVENTION.
To the Republican electors of Pennpylva
nia.
The Republicans of Veiinsylvaiilu, by
their duly chosen reurmaeiitatlw, win
meet In .mute convention Thursday, April
13. IS!;, lit 1U o'clock a. in., In I Iim opera
bouse, city or llarrlsburg, for th pur
pose of iioinluatiiiK I wo cuuUlduten lor
r.-uieselilallve-ut-liuire ill coiikiv! una
tblily-tuo caiiilbbileM for presidential
electors, the selection of clKlil di'leyaies
Qt-luim- to the Kciiubllciill nutioiiul coll
Venllo!!, mid lor the transaction of BMcli
other buslneHS as jnuy bo presented.
By order ff the state onunlltee.
M. S. vji iv.
Attest:- Cha'rsiir.n,
Jere H. R"r.
V. It. Andr.iv,
Under the Urooks law the number of
licensed miloons In I'lttladelpjilu. luts
declined from 5,773 In 1XS7 to 1.770 In 1Nr.
and there ure almost no speuk easles
Jtut there Is u difference between Phila
delphia and ftrrunton In this ronneo-
tion-In Philadelphia the Urooks law 1b
enforced.
The Patronage Issue.
The Scranton Republican, t)em., yes
terday said: "We repeat our statement
of Monday concerning last fall's cam
palen, that notwithstanding: the utter
Ignoring and cold-shouldering of the
Republican by Connell's candidates,
and all In special charge of their elec
tion, and the fact that not a dollar of
campaign printing was given us by the
county committee, we supported the
ticket without complaint."
The senior proprietor of the Republl
can, Dem., did complain. To a repre
entatlve of the county committee, who
visited him to ascertain If his paper
intended to light the ticket, he made
grievous compluint, on the pcore that
he had not been permitted to dictate
the personnel of the ticket. lie even
threatened to Ignore the ticket, but fill'
ally agreed to accord It a nominal sup
port, reserving the right to tight It
Individually. That he tried hard to
defeat Uurtl Is a matter of history.
As to the patronage issue, our books
how that The Tribune received fur
work done for the county committee a
total amount of J 16. GO, the Items being
as follows:
fW Letter C'lreuurs W'M
2m) Letter Circulars, ex. corn.. 2
tuO Members' Notification.....' 3.1:5
tOO Letter Heads, Linen, 3 colors 4.50
ttW .Envelopes, Linen ".M
Total Jl'J SU
If the loss of this smull bill of job
Work is the cause of Mr. Scranton's op
position to Republican candidates 111
this city and county, as he alleges, we
re willing. In the Interest of harmony
to buy him over by remitting a check
for the whole amount and donating our
work. Scranton's fidelity may not be
worth $16.50, but we are willing to give
that, If he will agree to stop knlilng the
party that has contributed more than
$300,000 to his support since he first en
tered politics.
It looks as If the Quay men In Alle
gheny had stoen a march on Mr. Magee.
They have got Into the Held first with a
complete county ticket and declare
their Intention of standing by thut
ticket until the polls close. The vote
at the primaries ought to afford a fair
determination of the relative strength
of Quay and Magee in the hitter's own
territory.
The Retirement of Senator Porter.
State Senator Charles A. Porter, of
Philadelphia, David Martin's ally in
the so-called Quuker City combine, has
announced hla unqualified retirement
from politics. Mr. Porter Is a rich
business man. Who got into politics
through loyalty to friends, and once in
found for many years no suitable op
portunity of getting out again, without
deserting those who had stood by him.
He has been abused, caricatured, ma
ligned and misrepresented with a per
sistency worthy of a better cause; but
those who know him have never had
their faith shaken for an Instant in his
Integrity or In his manliness.
In the celebrated Philadelphia may
oralty fight which divorced David Mar
tin from Senator Quay, Senator Port
er's opposition to the nomination of
Penrose was open and above board. He
never promised Penrose his support
and never agreed to acquiesce in his se
lection. Upon the contrary, Mr.Porter
emphatically proclaimed, weeks before
the mayoralty convention. Ills belief
that Penrose, if nominated, could not
be elected. Although the Penrose ieo
ple, in their bitterness ct the sudden
turning of the convention from Penrose
to Charles F. Warwick, trained their
batteries upon Porter quite as viciously
as they did upon 'Martin, who aione
acted In an appearance of bad faith,
it is an incontrovertible fact that Por
ter, In the whole episode, conducted
himself fairly and honorably, and was
abused with an entire absence of jus
tice or provocation.' "' v . ' r -
In the senate Mr. Porter was ait able
tad resourceful legislator, who added
weight to the upper branch of the state
congress. The hounding to which he
has been subjected Is as disgraceful as
It will, In time, prjive damaging to the
party which tolerates and encourages
such personal methods of warfare.
The real secret of the revolt of the
group of Republican silver senators
who defeated the Dlngley bill Is ex
plained by the statement that inasmuch
as the sllverites will control the senate
for four years to come, they propose to
stand as a barrier against any tariff
legislation whatever until they can
force the Republicans into accepting a
free coinage rider. If they can carry
out this programme they will be big
men. But can they?
Municipal Themes in the Schools.
Is It desirable that the public schools
and colleges should teach the princi
ples underlying wise municipal govern
ment, and also Inform their pupils how
the municipality Is conducted? This
proposition was recently mude by May
or Swift of Chicago, in a speech wherein
he unmercifully castigated the critical
stuy-at-homo element which Is never
satlsllcd with municipal government
yet does nothing to help improve it
and It occurred to one of the Chicago
papers the Times-Herald to follow
the suggestion out by soliciting opinions
f.'om the leading college and university
presidents concerning the advisability
of such a course of Instruction.
President Charles Kendall Adams of
the University of Wisconsin, heartily
approves the Idea, which hus already
been put into practice In the Institution
over which he presides. Says he:
This year, in the University of Wiseon
sin, threo courses lire given by a geiitln-
liKin who has devoted three years of sya.
tetnatic study of the subject, having pur
sued his work partly in this country, part
ly in KuMland, unl partly in continental
rOiuopc. One course is devoted lo n com
parative study of administrative law In
the I nlted Slates and Hie leading cities
of JCuiiipe, with special reference lo the
ui Kiiiilr.at Ikii of statu and provincial de
partments. The s nd cuurse Is devote
lo an examination of the municipal sys
tem of tlio leading states of Kurope ami
the various syslemn prevailing in tin
American states. This course Is a com.
puratlvu study of the relations und po'
era of various organizations us they up.
pear In important modern municipal sys
tenia. The third course Is devoted to mu
nicipal administration, following the sem
inary method, with a study of statistical
ami administrative reports of the largest
cities of Kurope and America. The prob
lems discussed are municipal budgets, sys
tems of communication and lighting, the
problem of dwellings, distribution of pop.
illation, etc. These courses are given part
ly uy systematic Investigation, carried on
according to the seminary method, the
whole occupying two hours of lectures and
class work per week. Tills course fur
nishes a good opportunity for every stu
dent who desires systematic Instruction
in methods of municipal administration.
I regard the course as of the utmost value
The suggestion Is also approved by
Presidents Cut ter, of Williams, North
rop of the university of Minnesota, fill-
man of Johns Hopkins, Angell of the
university of Michigan, Uuckham of
the university of Vermont, Rogers, of
the Northwestern university, Andrews
of Rrown, Harper of the university of
Chicago, Schurman of Cornell, Smart
of Perdue and several others. Not all
of these educators believe that It would
be necessary to establish a separate
professorship of municipal government,
but all concur In the proposition that
the trend of Instruction In the higher
Institutions of learning should be such
as to qualify, rather than disqualify
the gWuluatte for the practicnl and
prosy duties of citizenship for the
party cuuetts, the city council chamber.
the constableship, or for nny office or
line of work within the range of local
government.
As usual. President Eliot of Har
vard strikes a discordant note. This
dyspeptic academician replies: "It
does not seem to me that municipal
government Is a proper subject for a
professorship. It Is a branch or de
partmi-nt of public administration In
which our free Institutions have failed
and on that account we take, for the
moment, a special interest in it. It is
to be hoped thut this great evil will
be corrected before long, und then,
think, the narrowness of the subject,
as only one topic In public administra
tion, will be more clearly seen than it
Is now." We hope that President
Eliot's prediction will speedily be real
ized, but we fear that Its realization
will come. If at all, In spite of rather
than because of the kind of teaching
wrought by the mugwump executive
of Harvard.
In the Boer republic, 14,000 male Bo
ers, mainly a conservative, pastoral
people, have the exclusive suffrage,
while 120.000 Ultlnndcrs, modern in
every particular, have no voice what
ever In the government of affairs. But
the Boers were there first. It Is their
land and their government. If the Uit-
landors are not satisfied to "squat" In
peace, justice would seem to indicate
that they ought to get out, Probably
they would, were it not that the Trans
vaal happens to contain the richest gold
Ileitis on earth fields that Great Brit
ain covets and Is determined to absorb,
by fair means or foul.
Farming in Days to Come.
The Electrical Student prints a pic
ture showing a trolley car preceded by
half a dozen hay wagons, potato loads,
wood loads and miscellaneous vehicles
conveying farm produce, nil impelled
by electricity after the fashion In vogue
in our city streets. The picture is la
beled: "The Farmer of the Future Go
ing to Market at the Rate of Twenty
five Miles an Hour." The Student sup
plements its picture with some very in
teresting reading, in the form of an
interview with the late Colonel James
M. Clark, of Cincinnati, a most In
structive person. The colonel was com
plaining of the backwardness of the
farmer's lot as compared with the resi
dents of our cities when he said:
K very body else bus his dully moil, his
daily paper, his access to comforts, his
club and nil those things that go with the
easy assemblage of iieople at any one
point. But the furmer is practically where
he was 100 years- ugo. He has things a lit
tle more comfortable in some respects, but
he gets very few of the luxuries, be he
rich ur be he poor. Ho in too fur away
from other folks, and I say It Isn't fair.
Besides that, he won't stand it much lon
ger. He is bound to Insist upon having
his daily market report, so that he can
buy and sell his produce on the fluctua
tions, the same as other people. He Is
bound to have the means lo dump 2,000
bushels of wheat into the elevator In a
half day any time he tlnds the market
right. It's got to come to him, and elec
tricity will bring it.
"You say, why doesn't the farmer build
good roads and get near to nil market in
that way? Huh, a farmer never built
roads anywhere. Take France, road
very line, but built by Napoleon for mili
tary purposes. Take Knxlun 1. roads start
ed by the Ituir.an voldicrs ai:l completed
by the same interests that are bu!l llns
railroads In America today unj have bullc
all the good roads the commercial Inter
ests. It Isn't the farmer's turn to build
roads, und ho won't build uny until he can
hold the stork in them like other folks.
Another thing, whers would the farmers
of the great prairies get material to make
roads? hy, It would be about as cheap
as anything else they could get to pavo
them with gold. No sir, a few ties and a
puir of flat rails and there it the farmer's
road of the future. Put twenty or forty
loaded wagons behind each other, hit -h
a motor In front and uway you go, twenty
Hve miles an hour. If you've ever sen
a wagon running along on a street car
track you can imagine how smoothly n
train of loaded lumber wagons would i.klm
along a country road on street car rulls.
Your farmer muy live twenty miles from
town, but if the market suits him he can
get up at a decent man's hour, take In
his entire crop, sell It, bank his receipts
and be at home In time to kiss bis wife
over his fat certificate of deiKisit before
dinner Is ready. That would be living.
That would mak farm life attractive
enough 'to keep the tjoys at home."
The colonel ininuines that the resl
dents of the various county seats. In
agricultural districts would subscribe
for the stock to build radial trolley
lines reaching1 Into the country, since
It would centralize the trn:Hc of tl w hole
county In one town, enable the steam
roads to build large warehouses and
cause a general but a substantial
"boom." As to the question, will these
electric rouds pay? Colonel Clark says:
"It pays the steam roads to haul the
produce und people out of town, doesn't
it? Then why won t It pay the electric
roads to haul them in? Steam roads fur
nish their own. rolling stock, ut that, but
with the electric road the furmer would
of necessity desire to own ami furnish his
own wagon, for It would mean only one
handling of his load between his granary
and it lie elevator. If be lived oil' the ele
trie line he would build a short stretch of
road himself, hook a pair of hordes to bis
wagon, haul bis load ito the. main line
and zip, his grain would be In town.
Steel rail Is one of the cheapest thlii'-ts
In this country now. but I want to trdl you
mai'adaiul'.ed roud is high uipI too slow
for the age 'that Is now beginning, the
ago of electricity. Willi his dally paper.
his telephone ami Ills eleMric road tin
laruier or the future will be as well post
ed as the mini who buys und sells on the
board of trade In Chicago, New York or
Liverpool. That Is. be will If lie has
the bruins, und I guess you can trust
our furmers for brains.
It cannot be denied that this Is an
Inviting prospect, for the farmer; but
It would go hard with wheelmen.
-
The United States senate needs nn
Injection of Reed's elixir of legislative
life. If Reed cannot be president he
ought to be nominated for vice-president,
on an agreement to bring order
out of chaos in the asylum of vagaries
and disorder known as the American
senate.
Our exports of breadstuffs and pro
visions for January were nearly SO per
cent, larger than they were in Janu
ary, 1S9.". The American nation Is too
big to be kept down, even by the Dem
oc ratio party.
Senator Quay has begun to complain
of Major McKlnley's "fool friends."
What prominent man lacks them?
Secretary Carlisle declares that "the
Democratic party is not dead." It
owes him no thanks for that.
KOOSEVELT1SMS.
From an Address, at Chicago, Feb. 22, on
"The Duties of Citizenship."
As yet there Is not within ken of human
vision so much as the lirst dawn streak
of the day of universal peace; und woe lo
the nation with blind eyes who believes
that the sunburst of such a day Is at hand.
As yet life is strife, und every man who
succeeds, und who does good to his fel
lows, can only succeed, und can only do
good, by striving mightily nnd by holding
bis own with a ready band In the war
for righteousness. As yet we need wise
laws, well administered, to keep the
wicked in check, and to prevent the wreck
of decent men; as yet we neetl. as every
nation needs, to stand ready to defend our
honor and our Interest with the sword If
we do our work well In that grim und
painful but necessary struggle through
which nil of us, Individuals und nations
alike, ure moving slowly forward toward
the unknown goal which the future
shrouds from the most far-sighted.
There Is great need for the exercise of
criticism, both by public men and by the
press; but there Is even greuler need that
this criticism should be honest and should
bo dignified lu tone. .Many of the inon
prominent newspapers In the laud, and nut
a few politicians whose voices ure heard
even In the bouses of the nutioiiul legisla
ture, make us hang our heads tor shuiiio
as Americans by -the foul Indecency of
their ussuults; ussuults mudH quite as
frequently on the best us on tho worst of
our public servants. These writers und
speakers are u disgrace to the community
which seriously respects Washington's
great name; though it Is a comfort w hen
we are Inclined to feel loo gloomy about
the life of tho present time to remember
that these base creatures of our own day
had their prototypes among the newspaper
writers und politicians who slandered
Washington while he lived.
This country stands In very little danger
of tyranny or loss of liberty. The un
scrupulous greed of some great corpora
tions or some individual la whom t)ir
ninuey-gettlng faculty Is imn Jiolesum Iv
developed while the higher and letter
qualities ure completely uthrnphicd, m ty
at times cause danger: but the- evil thus
caused can always, tinder a system of pop
ular BiitTrage, be remedied by the election
of olllcers who are Just and decent. If our
Judges are both Incorruptible Find also de
sirous to do substantial Justice, rather
than 'to weave webs of lechiilcullty; If our
If glslators are at the same time free from
the spirit of demagogy, and yet bent upon
sternly punishing uny man who takes
advunlage of his wealth to wrong either
the public or persons of le?s mentis, then
the days of the improper power of wealth
will be brought to a speedy close. Hut t in
spirit of uiutrchy and lawlessness is far
more powerful. It muy at nny time be
come a real danger: and moreover it
should always be borne in mlml. especlal-
y ny tne deuiugOKtc denouncer of riches.
t'hat the iower of corrupt wealth Is ten
fold more effective in a community iriien
over lo lawless disorder than it Is else
where. "I lie surest friend of the criminal
rich Is l lie monetarily successful repre
sentative of the criminal poor. The high
est political, ofliclul who encourages a
mob, or who condones the acts of the vio
lent nnd. disorderly classes, is nure to
rouse u spirit of reaction which may
cause almost as much damage, as his own
wicked folly. No man so much us the hon
est citizen of small means Is Inter -st -d
In the wax against the anarchist, the nnb
leader and the demagogue. No public of
ficer who falls to do all In his tiower t..
suppress acts of violence und lawlessness
should be pardoned by decent people, for
ne is n more ueaoiy ioe to our country
than the worst criminal he pardons or the
worst scoundrel whose deeds he nheis
So on the other hand, tho high govern
mental officer, whether he bp a senator.
like Senator lnvls, or a Judge, like Judge
Oary, who wars fearlessly on anarchy, is
the best and truest friend of the people.
Washington was on ltie whole the great
est nnd purest champion of orderly liberty
that the world has ever seen; but he was
relentless In putting down disorder.
Washington stood, ond now stands, for
the elemental moralities, for the elemental
nrlnclnles of right, for the elemental vir
tues of honesty, truth, strclghUorward
ness,. courtesy and. fearlessness in de
nouncing evil and upholding good. Ho
was no mere theorist : he was an eminent
ly practical man. Llk thut other great
American, tho niluhty son' of Illinois.
Abraham Lincoln, he never refused tu do
the best possible mcivly because lie did
Hot think It was the -Ideal bed, llaai
pered and worried bv the timidity, folly.
reltishness of the pjlltlcluns, und too often
of t tie people, of his day, h did not there.
fore scornfully refiiHe further to work
for the country or demand impossible can
dl lions before he would go into public life.
Ho presevereil, and, though he never lost
his own lofty ldculs. he made ullowunc
for men of lesser moral stature.
A man who Is a brilliunt phrasemuker
and uses his tulent to udvaiice wnut is
low and base is unfit for public life In a
commonwealth which seriously puts
Washington forward an an example. This
is true of the politicians who otlvocate
what Is evil, it is true to an even greater
extent of the bolder politicians who nc
tually do what Is evil. The man who
steals n legislature, the man who wins
a governorship by wholesome fraud and
violence lit the polls, the mun who buys
a senator-ship by bribery, whether with
money or olllee, each and every one of
these will be repudiated by uny communi
ty which puts into- practice its belief In
Washington's greatness-.
Wealth is a gooil thing, but it is ill to
acquire It at the cost of losing the power
to see that there are other tilings which
are even better. Heltnement and cultiva
tion are also good things; they are quull
ties which we should strive In every why
to acquire; nnd we f-.-el nothing but con
tempt for tho fo.il who Jeers at education
but this fool la partially Justified by the
worse fjlly of the man who really doei
strive to shape educution so that it ahull
eliminate tho manly -qualities. Cultiva
tion ami retlnrnifnt are too dearly pur
chased if they ure bought at the cost of
the loss of the great righting virtues, or at
the cost of the loss of a spirit of intense
Americanism.
The man, whether politician or editor
or private citizen, who would hesitate to
draw the sword for his country when men
need by a foreign foe ur who condones or
practices dishonesty in public life, or who
subordinate the nation's welfare to the
welfare of an imli vl.l u tl or a faction, or
Who either improperly defends bad men
or slanderously and wantonly assails good,
Is himself uu enemy of" the nation.
The politician and the soldier who try
lo live up to the principles which Wash
ington Illustrated by word und deed alike
lire showing themselves tit to be called Ills
cooiiliyiu. il. i;ut i would be impossible
to regard with too contemptuous aversion
I nose men who now and I lien on rarudi
occasions express devotion to VYushliig
tun's memory, but w ho by the whole tenor
of their lives show their Indifference to
an mat he thought muit vital.
The question of putting on the statute
books tiny laws, on whatever suDJect,
which nre bitterly distasteful to certain
classes Is one on which honest men may
differ; hut there should be no difference of
opinion n"iong honest men us to the tn
forcemem of law. '
No man is a good citizen of the com
munity who lacks either the will or the
capacity to wage rough warfare against
lawlessness and ugainst the roes or order
no less than against the foes of liberty.
A HYMN OF Pl'ACi:.
rWrittcn bv I'rofes.-or Oeorge Hunting
ton, of Carlton college. Northlield, Minn.
as an International song for Knglish
speaking people; ulr, "America."!
Two empires by the wea.
Two nations, great and free,
One anthem raise.
One race of ancient fame.
One tongue, one faith, we claim
One Clod, whose glorious name
We love and praise.
What deeds our fathers wrought,
What buttles we have fought,
Let fame record.
Now, vengeful passion cease.
Come, victories of peace;
Nor hate nor pride's caprice
Unsheath the sword.
Though deep the sea. nnd wide,
Twlxt realm and realm, its tide
Hinds strand to s-trunil,
So be the gulf between
tlray coasts ami islands green,
(Jreat populace and queen,
Hy friendship spanned.
Now, may the flod above,
(itiard the dear latuls) we love, ,
Or east or west.
Let love more fervent glow,
As peaceful ages go.
And strength yet stronger grow,
Hlesslng and blest.
HILL & CONNELL,
!3I UNO 133 N. WASHINGTON IVL
Builders
AND
Makers
OF
AND
OFFICE
SUPPLIES
131 AND 33 ft. WASHINGTON AVE.
Something
New. . . . .
For Permanent Decoration.
Also a fine line of Jardinieres.
THE
OflK fill 'OUT CO..
422 UCKIWANNA AVENUE.
:
Illlf bl
111 pus
GOLOSH'S
C
loak
SUITS AND SEPARATE SKIRTS
Advance Styles now daily arriving. We have taken .
great pains to have every garment correct in shape,
fulness, workmanship and materials. You will find
some of our Skirts to measure 6 1-2 yards around.
Your inspection is kindly askect
Dress Trimmings and Buttons.
Just opened a great many Novelties which are
worthy of your attention.
Every Street Car Stops at the
anisters
THINK OF IT I
All our Men's and Ladies' Shoes that
were $6.00, now $3.98.
All our $4.00 Shoes now $2.48.
All our $3.50 Shoes now $2.28.
All our $2.50 Shoes now $1.78.
All our $2.00 Shoes now $1.38.
All our $1.50 Shoes now $1.08.
Is It Any Wonder Our Store Is Full or Shoe Buy
en AH the Time?
BANISTER'S,
Stationary
Tbat Isn't Stationary.
Nothing stauds still at our establish
tueuL It very rarely happen that
we raise price, but as tu lowering
them well, just call around aud see
um, aud we think we can Interest you.
We are now located iu the
IIYMD'C
WYOMING AVENUE.
REYNOLDS BROS,
Stationers and Engravers.
OYSTERS
W ara Headqoartera fur Oyftara and
arc handling tbs
Celebrated Duck Rivers.
Lynn Havens, Key ports.
Mill Ponds; also Shrews
bury. Kockaways. Maurice
Kiver Coves, Western
Shores and Blue Points.
l"Wi mxke a Kpecinlty of deUrartnj
Blue Point on bait nh.ll in carriers.
PIERCE'S MARKET, PENN AVE
$25,000 WORTH OF
PIANOS AND ORCHIS
flust be sold in thirty
days. Call and see
our prices.
i
L'Lacka. - Avitelephore as.
i ' I ... t ' 2 '
THERE IS NO HALF WAY BUSINESS
5
Shoe
But a great houseful of Good Shoes that mast be
makes us reckless in the sacrifice of
Lackawanna and
Bicycle Repairing,
In a Fhort time the riding; aeaaon will
opn. Then we will Bet our wheel out
and find that It wants nomc repairing.
We would HUKSeat that you look It over
now ana If It needs anythlnir done,
xiich as nickel plutlnc or enumellnc,
have it done nnw before you need It
We are in shupe to do first-class work.
II you liuve no bicycle call ana Bee
It ha no' Imitations; everything; is
original.
e. r.i. florev
222 Wyoming Avenue.
Y. M. C A. BUILDING.
326 Washington Are.,
SCRANTON, PA.
11s is 1 or
CONRAD'S
SPRING STYLES.
305 LACKAWANNA AVE.
1111
II (ill
Door.
ABOUT
sold. Our object
prices.
Sale
Children's Shoes for 58c. and 68c. that
are worth from 75c. to $1,00.
Misses' Shoes at 88c. that were $1.25.
Boys' and Youths' Shoes at $1.08 and
$1. 18 that were 1.50 and $1.75.
And Other Bargains Too Numerous to
Mention. Come and Con .
vlnce Yourself.
Wyoming Avenues.
NEVER BREAK.
Buy One
And you don't have to
spend good money get
ting it repaired. Come
and see it.
FOOTE SHEAR CO.
119 WASHINGTON I VENUE.
Do You See As Well
AsYod Wodld Like?
IF NOT
Consult our Optician, Mr,0. F.
Adams, wbo will lit your eyes
rertectly by scientific met bods
charging ootbing hr lilting, fur
nisbing Spectacles and Eyeglasses
in modern styles and best quali
ties at low prices.
307 LACKAWANNA AVE.
After April 1 at No. 132
Wyoming Avenue, Coal
Exchange.
ON THE LINE OF THE i
CANADIAN PACIFIC R'Y
ara located tbs flneat Bstataf aad hoatfaf
trouadt ia the world DeserlptlT books oa
application. Tirksts to all poiau la aUtaa,
Canada and Maritims Proriaoaa, Minneapolis,
1 Paul. Canadian and United StatM Moris'
wort, Vancoarsr. Beattls, Taooaa, Portland,
Ora Dan Francisoo.
First-Class Sleeoine and Dining Cars
attached to all through train. Tsunst sara
fall fitted with btddins, curtain, aad ip
lalljr adapted to wants of families msf bs aad
with second-clus ticksts. Rstss alwarslss
than Tls other linos, For fall inform tl as.
tiBM tsblss, st an application to
C.V.8KINNBR, O. K. A.
IS3 BR8UWIT. HEW YOXL
MERCEREAU CONNELL