TIIE SCRANTON TRIIIUXE-ATIIRDAY MORNING, FEimUAItY 29, 1300. C Je (itxanton CriBune tmt WMklf. 9 Baaday aluoa. putlkM at ttrulu, Fa., by lt THbane Pnb. ilahinf Company TtlDUOO ButUlu. mak . my, VuMK K. P. RINOStOHY, Put, nitn't Mm t. M. NIPPLC, mo Taua. UVV . RICHARD, Cerraa. W. W. DAVIS. Ruamm Maaaeta W. W. YOUNO. An. maaa'a. imW At MMTOrVIOI AT lOKAKIOI. .. A SJODIID-SUaS MAIL HATT11L Frtattnr I"," the leoofnlied Journal fcr aaw tame, rata Taa BcatKTea Taiauva e Uw teat TtctMnc medium la North MUrn Ftnaeylra aav "JtlnW laa" kaova. hi WmLT TniacK, IssnI Every Saturday, OOBIAlOB Twelre H.ndioni. Paw", with Abllll eaaoe of Newt, Fiction, and Wrll-KdltiM Mkicet lany. Fat Tnoee Who Cannot Take Inn Daily Taiacaa, lb Watsty It BecommendBd aa tha Ban Bargain doing. Only l a Year, m Advance. It lor BAl Dally At to IX, L. and W Btadon at Betaken. BCRANTON, FEBRUARY 28, 1896. Th Tribune 1 the only Hepubllcan dally la taekawaaaa Couaiy. The emphatto vote by which the sen ate ytsterdaj; passed resolutions rec ogrnlzlng the Cuban patriots as bel llgrents and! pledging ne Eod olIlceH of the United States In the effort to se cure Cuban Independence Is a fair re flection of publics Bentlment. Though It mavy UlHpleaso tho Spanish govern ment, It will! do no wrong; and If Bpalna' dlsllke shall, as has been feared, lead to a decoration of war, the con flict Will be cheerfully welcomed as a labor of love by Americans who believe from heel to head th aelf-governraent on Republican lines, Interest on Public Funds There cannot be two honest sides to he proposition thnt Interest on public unds should ba collected for the pub ,!c'8 benefit, and should not go Into he pockets Of any lndlvlduul. This trlnclple Is recognized In the state of ennsylvanla, and the) next leiflsla lure will be asked to enact a law tak from the state treasurer the power select depositories for state bal ances, and stipulating that such bal ances shall draw fair Interest on de posit, said Interest to become the prop erty of the commonwealth. An ordinance decreeing a similar condition of affairs In the municipal finances of Scrnnton was recently In troduced In councils, and on Thursduy night It was killed. Kvery Democrat In common council voted to kill that ordinance. For the benefit of citizens Who may wish to keep these men In ' ml'ad.we repeat their namest JAMRS GUIER, JOHN ItKOAN, M. P. CILKOY, ROBERT ROB1NSOJT, P. J. NKALIS, LORENZ ZEIDLER", JAMES P. NOONE, P. J. HICKEV, THOMAS NORTON1, JOHN J. I.OFTUS. The treasurer of the city of Scranton receives a. salary or $4,000 a year,' to gether with enough legitimate commis sions to make his income exceed that of a member of the national congress, and almost equal to that of a member of the national cabinet. Why should he 'expect more pay than this? Why Bhould there be objection from any quarter to the enactment of a law Which would make it certain that the city would hereafter receive interest on its deposited funds? Let Us hear from the people on this subject, now that "reform" is the order of the day. The Republican party needs every honest Vote it can get; but it can well pare deliberate and premeditated traitors, For National Defense. Tht decision of the house committee on naval affairs to recommend the building of six new battleships and fif teen torpedo boats will be approved by the country as a wise and timely ac tion. To be sure, it means t,he expen diture of $40,000,000 at a time when the treasury has very little money to spare, yet even this circumstance Is out weighed by the fact that $40,00,000 spent now in strengthening our small navy may and probably will be the ultimate means of saving ten times as much to the country in case of trouble. Taken in connection with the action of the senate committee on fortifica tions in reporting favorably the Squire bill appropriating $80,000,000 for coast defenses, the house committee's action Indicates that the lesson of recent events has nut gone to wuste. No doubt the peace-at-any-prlce element will object to these measures as evinc ing an unjustifiable catering to the brutalism called war. Words to this effect have, in fact, already been spoken in reference to the matter. But they do not voice a majority or even a respectable minority sentiment. Those who are willing to look at facts as they are, realize full well that while It sounds nice to talk about arbitration superseding "the grim arbitrament of war," and 'about the rule of reason gaining the ascendancy over the rule of brute force, the time has not been reached In the history of mankind when any self-respecting nation can afford to discard its warships and its cannon. We do not look for that time to come during this or the ensuing generation. Our children, like ourselves, will, in in ternational politics, exercise authority to the extent that they can command ' it, and no further. The musket and the Catling gun are yet and will for many years to come be the foundation stones of national prestige and the bul warks of national Bafety. Orators may tickle the fancy by as serting otherwise, but their beautiful talk does not alter th cold and Im placable fact. Hence we cannot afford to huve either an inadequate navy or a defenseless frontier. Tho Democratic notion of munit lpnl reform In this city evidently is that it is a good tiling- so long as It btays away from home. Fixing the Issues. That the administration Democrats would like to luy down the Issues uixni which next fall' presidential battle will be fought Is nutural enough. There aiv some things that they don't want men tioned. They don't, for example, want much said about the tariff, because that might lead the Republicans to remind the country that the last throe years of Democratic tariff tinkering have cost It more than the entire prosecution of the war to rave the L'uion. If the ad ministration IJ oerats can. have their way, the tariff will not be an issue In the next rainpniKn. Another thlni? which they would like to keep in the background n much-as possible Is t'lcvvUiid'H foreign policy. Except la the Venezuelan Issue, which he was forced to take up or else lone for his party every vestlse of hope, the president has in his conduct of foreign affairs, been notoriously unfortunate and un-American. The administration Democrats would be pleased if nothing were said in tho next campaign nbout Mr. Cleveland's outrageous treatment of Hawaii. They would relish the complete suppression of Queen I.ll. They would (float over the occulation of Paramount Commissioner Blount. Nor would they care to have much said about Armenia or Corinto or the way tit-out Britain buncoed us In the Beh rlng sea business, or about Bayard. These are themes they would delight not to dwell on. Finally, we have our doubts whether any real earnest Democrat, If he hud the power of covering up those things in ills party's recent record which might prove embaiTuaslng to him on the Btuinp, would want to go before the people la an attempt to explain or ex tenuate the three issues of bonds since Cleveland wus elected president. We suspec t that It would prove a great re lief to the Democratic party It' it could make the country forget that. In a time of profound peace following a period of unexampled national prosperity ns exemplified during the administration of Benjamin Harrison, it had reversed the Republican policy of surplus accu mulating and tho paying off of the na tional debt, and had added to the debt of the nation, in principal and Interest, almost half a billion dollars in three years. Fortunately, the Republican national convention will meet first, and can fix the issues to suit Itself. It is not likely that the silver ciuestlon will cause it to be deflected from a merited arraign ment of Democracy's manifold dere lictions. Bayard himself will soon drop out of sight; the point in censuring him is for future reference. Through College While You Wait. The proposition of the faculty of Harvard college to shorten the college term to three years has been hailed by suggestive marks of popular favor. There can be no gainsaya that radi calism is now dominant lrj educational circles. Not content with discarding the classics and insisting upon the co education of the sexes, this spirit of re volt against time-honored traditions has undertaken to reduce by twenty five per cent, the period necessary to the acquisition of the baccalaureate de gree, and the mention of this change, far from challenging spirited opposi tion, meets with almost unanimous acquiescence. Truly, ours Is the elec tric age, when speed and tlme-st 'ing boldly outweigh considerations of thor oughness. There can be no objection to acad emies and high schools adapting their courses of study to accommodate the great American principle of hustle. These are popular institutions, which from their nature ought to reflect with accuracy the caprices of the rabble. If it be the wish of Tom, Dick and Harry to get through the public schools and then through the seminary or academy at such a high-pressure rate of speed that when they finally emerge their heads buzz and ache with the Ill-digested conglomeration of facts crammed into them, so to speak, on the wing, that certainly is their affair and they must face the consequences. The public. In their case, can simply hope for the dawning of a wiser day. But from our Kreat universities, like Yale and Harvard and Cornell, it seems to us that we have a right to expect some measure of real regard for scholarship and some freedom from the dominant Vice of "the pace thnt kills." If these, too, are to enter the general scramble, and enst off every elegant vestige of culture in the fran tic endeavor to strip for fast racing, where shall we loyk for true leanii.it;? Must sprinting wupersede thinking r.s the rule of our American higher inrtl tlltiuns of learning? Time Is vindicating the piedietion that the organization of the senate by Republicans without a safe reserve ma jority would prove a great political mis take. A Prostitution of Justice. Sharp and apparently deserved criti cism Is heard with reference to the sentence passed by a Washington court on Miss Elizabeth Flagler. The facts are as follows: One year ago Miss Flagler saw a little colored boy In her father's yard, stealing a pear. She shot at the boy and killed him. She was indicted for manslaughter, tried and convicted. Before the oblig ing court called her up for sentence it notitled the young woman's father to have $.'i00 In cash ready. Then it opened a half-hour earlier than usual, to avoid a crowd, and after imposing a tWO fine, sentenced the prisoner to three hours in jail. She was taken to prison in her father's carriage, and served her sentence In the matron's room, where her friends gave her a reception. Af terward, she was entertained at a swell luncheon. The Chicago IJecord truthfully ob serves: "It is just such sentences as this that breed distrust in the efficacy and justice of the courts. Suppose the colored boy had been the one who flew into an 'ungovernable passion' and shot the girt Would he have been treated in this fashion? If he had got off with three years' Incarceration Instead of three hours In Jail, It would have been because the court had consideration fcr his extreme youth. The sentence was worse than a farce. It was one of those deliberate defeats of Justice which cre ate suspicion as tr the Integrity of Un law and encourag" further wrong-doing." The jude who thus prostituted l.ls high office to oblige an aristocratic family should be Impeached. His imle fcurlble action needs flinrp correction. If the facts wne as Spain allig.-s, what object would there be In muz zling the Cubau col respondents? Hemp Neckties tor BooJlers An Innova'lcn which may work for good has been made by the Washing ton Reform club of Cleveland. O. In that city a notoriously unfair fifty-year street railway franchise crdinanc- Is pending and the Reform club lh- other day avvolnted u committee to notify the .-ounciluie-i tha. it would hung the first one of their number who should vote for that ordinance. H-rhups this method of lnlluem-lng leal.-lation Is a trifle drastic, but it is open to the recommendation of i tiaiirlit forwardness. It gives the victim amnio warning. It puts the alternatives fairly and frankly before him; honesty or hanging. If. then, he deliberately chooses the latter. Is not his blood on his own head? This Cleveland proceeding was doubtless copied from an episode hi Denver, some years ago, when upon the night appointed for the final vote on a fraudulent franchise, several hundred of the best citizens, each uinied with a coll of hempen rope, visited th" coun cil chamber and fat throu-:hoi:t the deliberations. They said nothing; hut somehow when the franc hise mr.u- up every member voted agulr.at it. l'erhai.s a little of the Deliver detcr- I minution in the protection of public i rights would not come In uiniss In Seianton. The efforts nf the State Liquor league to wipe out the speak-caslw. in Luzerne county will command close at tention in Lackawanna county. We perhaps do not have as large a ratio of sm'h places as they have in Luzerne, but we have more Hum enough. The licensed dealer Is the one who sufiers most by Illegal sales of liquor. It Is to the Interest of his poeketbonk that the "hole-in-the-wall" be closed. The York Dispatch, one of the most progressive newspapers In the state, Is sued on Thursday an Industrial num ber of twenty-four pages which would do credit to the largest city journals. It Is a splendid example of 'Pennsylva nia energy. The series of Illustrated letters on Yellowstone park, begun today, will, we trust, prove un Interesting feature of the Saturday Tribune. The writer of them,Mr. Richmond, has an appreci ative eye for the beauties of nature and a skilful j)en In their description. One would think that a mnu who had received :iU0,00U from his party would not haggle over $10.50. But Mr. Scran ton seems to be an exception to most rules. - QUAY, HASTIXOS AM) CAMERON "l'enn," In Philadelphia Bulletin. According to the plans of Senator Quay, It Is his Intention to hnvo Governor Bant ings perform the nominating oratory at St llouls, when Pennsylvania presents the name of its "favorite son" to the na tional convention. Hastings distinguished himself on the platform of the lleago auditorium eight years ago on behalf of John Sherman, to whom tpiny had given most of the delegates from this state. He will perform thi- function for Quay well if he shall do it with anything like the vim an.l the ring which he put . Into his speech for Sherman. Yet it will le one of the amusing episodes of the con vention when the delegates stop to thlnK of what the governor was trying to do with uuav as late as Inst August. Omiy, however, is rarely vindictive; ho helievs In converting his enemies rather -thin piinlshlngthem. and If tha governor chjfr.s himself to the triumphal ear of the sena tor, he will not be dragged In the dust, especially as quay has regarded him and ha dealt with him from the first In a certain strain of magnanimity. Kanie of the ctaunc-liest Quay men In Pennsylvania were thoi-e who enlisted in politic tis Ills opponents. Bis faithful personal servi tor, for example. Frank Willing Leach, llfteen years ago wa a rabid young re former clenouiielrg Cameron and iu-ty by .lay and by night, und h Is only a specimen of a score or more of bright poli tician here and In the etate who rtarle.l out against Quay, and who row, aside from 'self-Interest which may have orii:l nally won them over, have something bk'. an honest admiration and cvn uft'ectlon for the man. The governor will t'nit:i have plenty of companion who h ive b.-e.i t.l niltU'd Into the Inner circle of the l.may political hoii hold niter Vlliaii't,' refp.-.-t-fol!y at 1he front ilour hell h n they found thnt they could not break thloef.h tiie buck windows with a Jimmy. Ami yet even Qusiy hlmniir furni.-hes a not tif-odmilar ev:er!r:iet;. Ho h.el hist tarlv I raining in polllLi under an ifli!:i I. iti aiion :.t ibirrisburg v. hh '.i fougl i f ir i longer and more vlgoroii dy than il.is;ii;5s agaln-'t the insehlm- whlcn Mis ooi.in jnu I lie iteimlilieanii- Jii of renus.yh .:i.n f..r the past thii'iy-fix y :.. lie w in ;::i I hii!it of Curt III. his per.-on.:) twr -tary ai.d t.dlileal dependent, an I an a so lale I of A. K. .Mi Chile's In th.' coi.llil.ei e i,f lie- war gov-nu.r ill III lljihls aj-ain.q Hie elder Cam. Men. line -f the icao:is why the Times has supported l.-iiay .i.it.v la: !: to tin- friendship In iv.i n Mm X!.--Chue when bid'a wire young airi Cara.r on hov.'Lrs at the ctat - ap:t:d. Alicot thirty years as-J. ht-:i the wool - i.,v r of the Cui'tlii f.irre.i was raid!.- I to or ganize the .'g!?l.itiire against Cam tea's ehetloil to the senate, (jcay. who liu.l been elected to the low r house from l'r t ver county, was p: i,t up as th dr ranJidate fer speaker. He was defeated the only time, by the bye, h.? was ever deffntoj as a candidate; the antl-Cunirrr.n combin ation was brokrn; tji;iy went back to Ueavir to his country newsni-per, and from that lime on h- liegan his caret r aa u prop and pillar of the houe of Camer on. The r-st of the Curtin men who didn't take service with Cameron end the elm afterward drifted Into the libiral move ment or became I'einoerat.i. Quay thenceforth became a Cameron man. who ntver wavered, and win was n faithful mnlerllnr for fifteen years until the primacy fell to him In the fulness of tiint-. When Quay will go to Harrlsburj In April to i-ee that the delegation to Sr. Louis Is perfectly stamped with tho SI. 8. Q. trad --mark, he will do pretty muc h the eame ct- Simon Cnnieron succeeded In doing In 'the spring of MfM. The second na tional Republican convention wus almost ns full of favorite sons as the one next June will be Seward. Lincoln, Chare, Kates, Collamer, Bayton, McLean. The light between Seward and Lincoln wis as uncertain, and In Its sectional and political condition, n well as Its uncer tainty, were not unlike that which Is now opening between Reed and McKlnley. It was in this situation thmt Simon Cameron set out his presidential flower-pot with fur more audacity than can now be Jiwtly said of Quay by Ills worst enimy. Cam eron's popular reputation as a Jobber, briber and purchaser of the Democratic vote that belonged to John W. (Forney for entranro Into ths I'ilcl States cerate In 1i7 v.aa extrr m.-ly maiolorous; cer tainly crp than Qei' has ever boeii under tho most iole::t oc.'ositiou. Hut the IVtiiO'LanJa iKpta.ion solid for Mm: he dispose! of nls votes ct the rifUt time for Llnco. a, ar. I . L'reoin. who In p'il was i-.rxrly the managing politician' hi.-al of an ccsy-gjlng c indidat .-, end wh'i undouhtenly organised his administration accordlr.; to the men practical rule of tho proft?!on, called Cameron Into his cabinet and opened unto him access to pretty muehiill ;he Kedi ral belongings and luovabl'.j In Pennsylvania. Ills niici-cm In p'.uyi:;,;- Ids .;:.; t!ci la that ei Icbrut'J convention I? aw iii:n tile .'!: which .he maintain-. I oa th.? K-puUkan parly la penT.!., Ivaaiu v.it.l hardly more than a pas.tn, interval lor r.lneu.-n years, or un 1:1 fce foiiii.Uly livid.- way ut r.early four core tor Lcii Camoron'a sucessij.i. it Quay i.in play his strategy at 3t. Louis as Well, he may be in lor aa equally long reiii. for he ii now no older than Cam eron was when ho made hiJ barla with Lincoln. Qfay. moreover, Is an ubler man than the h'.-r Cam -ran. He piob.ib y dopsa't understand the w. ikne rea and folllei of men orViuw to play on thi -n any niir ef fectively birt lie Is a neater an I adroiti r cial'ttnian at th.- bail- ss. Il:a ml ml It far m're cultured; Ida methods far U.n violent; his t. ;i:;Hi' mar.- un b r control; his sei;f of oiiil athiti and gratitude nut less laxrabic I and hi vindictive feellupt more hi I I In hand by a hr, w I and good nature. I philosoj hy. Ho can forgive a man with n masnai'Imlly which neither of the Cameron was ever able to do BiacclYlly or ! i.im at ell Without boiih compulsion, lie ha nl-o gained an ex traordinary hoid i n th. b .Mt r men of his type thioii'dioiit ;he country. Simoa Cam el -on, ill his palnilcM days, which were under the C ant administration, never had C'e , ouMde've and admiration ot managing politician i all over the land, tauh as Quay's personality as well as his t.Uci es.4 hail lilawn to hint in the last fix or seven yea.''. In Intellectual grasp and laastiiy of inni and tfl'afrt there will be no nam named at St. Lulls who will surpass or eipial Quay except Reed. Thoe who Judge n;.-n yliuiily b their Impics slv ness ot ii: -in net'. Hi If fluency of tuiu lo a:id thi Ir prof. -snioii of sentiment may think thli is an utravaeant htatmicnt. I 11:1:1;, however, that there will not be many eool-heuiicd men familiar with the re. oriis of Qcny on I his contemporaries and callable of unprejudiced observation wiio will not agree with it. livery man who has watchid him chxely has been more unj mure lmpre.-'eil with ipialilles of mind and tc in, ckmcM unusual, if not clippie, what, wr iiisy Le II. -Ir vi iv i of hid political moral.'-. TOI.I) !iY Till: HTAKS. Daily Horoscope IHiiiin hy Ajajhm, Tho 'li ihiinc Astrologer. AstrukitK- cast: il.M a. m.. for Saturday, Kcb. sii, lS'.iti. Ail offspring of this day will sing of twittering bird and early I'pring, I nless u chill iun.c In a trice Ami puts his song of spring oa Ice. At the pres-iK rate the skin of he Re publican editorial elbow will soon, be worn off entirely In nudging people who are expected to laugh at The Tribune. It Is lo be honed that no om will at tpmpt to counterfeit cotton seed oil. Mr. llurke's recipe for smoked Herring Is not copyrighted. Ajncchtts' Advice. If any cooking expert has convinced you that bread Is unhealthy, eat cake or die. HILL & CONNELL 131 AND 133 N. WASHINGTON AVE. Builders AND Makers OF AND OFFICE SOPPLIES III I II Ii! AND :S3 IJ. Wf lMliiGTON AVE. LI Something New. . O 0 1 fl MisktiL hilt ibfiL mliilo For I'enuauent Decoration. Also u fine line of Jardinieres. THE HI v ;i-ii e IliiLLLI MARCH MAGAZINES NOW IN. Read Today's critic t cf- Iccttpr! Anthony Hope'i dUM IMUCU, Comedies of Courtship BEIDLEMAN. THE BOOKMAN, 437 Spruce St., Opp. "Th Commonwealth." 7 oar i rv1 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 cur Skirts to measure 6 1-2 yards around. Your inspection is kindly asked. Dress Trimmings and Buttons. Just opened a great many Novelties which are worthy of your attention. Every Street Car Stops at the Door. THERE IS NO HALF WAY BUSINESS ABOUT Shoe Sale Hut a great houseful 01" Good Shoo? that must bs sold. Our object makes us reckless in tho sacrifice of prices. THINK OF IT! 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 of Shoe Hav ers All the Time ? 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 vince Yourself. BANISTER' CORNER OF Lackawanna and Wyoming Avenues. j Stationary onary. That Isn't Stati Nothing Htutul slill at our establish nieut. It very luivly happens thnt wo ril.se priees, hut 11s to lowering them well, Just call nrotiiul tuul nee list, unci wo think we eau interest you. We iiie now lwatoJ in the WYOMING AVENUE, RFYNftI ft BBfiS Stations a::d Ecyavsrs. OTSTEftS W urn Heacliiurt.T8 fur Oj-jturj aaJ aid liniullliiu tku Celebrated Dttck Rivers, Lynn 11 a vein, iCcyt'orts, illill Ponds; uIho Shrews bury. Kockaways, .M:mri;j Kiver Cove;, Western thorcs and 111 tie Points. RfWe nmko Specialty of dellvorlaj LI 110 Point on lir.lf ulicll In carrier. PIERCE'S MARKET, PEKN AVE . $25,000 WORTH OF FIDS 10 WIS riust be sold in thirty days. Call and see our prices. 91 a 1, Lacka. - Ave, Bicycle Repairing. In a short tltno the riding Reason will open. Then wo will get our wheel out and find thnt It wonts some repairing. We would suggest that you look It over now and If it needs anything done, sueh ns nlrkel plntlng or enameling, have It done now before you need It. We are In shape to do tlrst-elass work. If you huve no bicycle call and see It lias no Imitations; everything Is original. 0.1 FL0REY FOOTE 222 Wyoming Avenui Y. M. C. A. BUILDING. M iS 0:2 Of couPMrs SMC mm, 505 LACKAWANNA AVE. Ill I ne in TELEPHONE 555. 326 Washington Ave.; . SCRANTON. PA. Ml NEVER BREAK. Buy One And you don't have to spend good money get ting it repaired. Come and see it. & SHEAR CO. WASHINGTON AVENUE. Do Yott See As Well flsYofc Would Like? IF NOT Consult our Optician, Mr. 0. P. Adams, wlio will lit your eyes I ct Icctl y by scientific methods charging notliint; for fitting, fur uishing Spectacles and Eyeglasses iu modern styles and best quali ties at low prices. lani I Ifca MJ a Mm U.ij.lbblll 307 LACKAWANNA AVE. lERCEHEAl) & CONNELL After April 1 at No. 132 Wyoming Avenue, Coal Exchange. ON THE LINE OF THE I in CANADIAN PACIFIC R i r looatod tb flnMt KAlna no aoatlaf gronadi, la tho world. Detorlptir book oa pi)llction. TickaU to all poinU la Mta tnd and Mritim ProTlaww, HtnnMpatit. bt Paul. Canadian aud UoiUd Stataa Norta waato, VancooTor, Beattla, Taooma, forUani, Or., San FrancUoo. attioh.d to all through trains. Tourit aara fully fitted with bedding, curtains aad p tally adapted to wants of families may ba aaft with aacond'Claat tickets. Bates always Us than via oth.r Unas, For fall iaforataslatv time tables, eta., en appUcatlea to R. V. 8KIMNCR, a. K. A. S&3 ISOkOWlV. NEW TOM. XT