THE SCBA2JTOX TK1B U JS WEDNESDAY MOENINGr, MARCH 11, ; 1890. tf STATE MP FOR DUMPS The Economical Method of Handling . the Drink Problem. . MERITS OP THE KEELEY CURB Btatlatles Show That 03 Par Cent. of Those Who Taka It Kentala Cared. Why Not Assist Poor Inebriates to Recover Freedom? Written for The Tribune. The evidence of oft repeated failures in the old method of establishing total abstinence In the Uvea of men who were victims of the drink habit Impressed uu . t-im 1 uMa V ICMlfiV of the uiv lamuus 1 - . . . . - Inadequate power of thousands of men to extricate tnemseives out oi me icm ble maelstrom of ilrlnk In which they unfortunately had been caught. Dr. Keeley's cui as a scientific discovery Is conceded to be by prominent physi cians and teui'hcrn In medical colleges a- handmaid for the amelioration and restoration of th drunkard from a ca reer of shame, whether it be brought on by Intermittent or contlnous debauch ery, to a life of hope, health and strength) the happy restoration of manly confidence and self respect. Many eminent Roclologlsts admit that Inebriety Is more prevalent today than at any preceding time. To suppress this mighty evil that spreads dishonor, dismay and destruction everywhere the Christian philanthropic thought and endeavor of the century have been In adequate. Hence the old methods up to date demonstrate their inadequacy. DRUNKENNESS A DISEASK. The "cause of Inebriety Is disease. The medical profession asserts that from a physiological standpoint it Is a dis ease. Moralists who look at It from a moral and nodal standpoint pro nounce It un evil. Magistrates and custodians of law and order look upon Inebriety as a flagitious violation of law, punishable by lines and imprison ment. Penal treatment does not reach the Beat of evil nt all; it does not miti gate the evil in the drunkard, but rather Intensities It. because the evil, the appetite, the disease Is as deep seated bb ever. To this unhappy con sciousness of degeneration, morally and physically, when liberated, Is added the stigma of being cut oft from tho asso ciations of respectable men. In the dark ages gross ignorance con sidered insanity a vice and thrust Into prison or banished into exile victims who suft'ereil from what we call today a disease of the nervous system. But as the light of civilisation dawned more and more the humane voice of medical science pronounced Insanity a disease, and today it is treated as such by the inedlcal profession. This mode of treatment which was In vogue In the dark ages in connection with insanity Is analogous to th p-"s-ent Indiscriminate method of the day In trying to cure or reform an Inebrluie by Imprisonment and Its adjuncts, iron bars, bolts, stocks and manacles. Does not the Increasing yearly death roll of the drunkard demonstrate that such a system is utterly Impotent for good and tremendously potent for evil, In perpet uating social evil In the victim's pro eny, such as Insanity, mental imbecility and criminality, besides tilling peniten tiaries. Jails, workhouses and millions of unknown, uncared for, dishonored graves? MISGUIDED ZEAL. Penologists, crlmlnollglsts and sociol ogists of the present day. In their ef forts to arrest this terrible evil In the land, lay hold of the effect and not the cause, a task as hopeless In this case as an attempt to arrest the course of a river at its mouth instead of at Its .source. , When a man Is under the in fluence of liquor he cares not what he does; he is as a wild beast; his passions are beyond control; he knows not what he does; wholly oblivious of conse ' quences he goes on, his reasoning pow ers overbalanced by his Impulses and passions. Drink is the most prolific source of crime. Then the associations of the drinking man are of a degrading tendency, and many evils that lead to crime spring from this source. I be lieve that three-fourths of the crime committed in Scranton comes originally from the drink habit. We know that from a physiological standpoint dissipation from drink af fects the vital organs of the body, the brain tlsBU. the stomach, the liver, the kidneys. By autopsies that have been performed on men who have died drunkards It has been demonstrated that certain changes have taken place In their organisms by the action of al cohol In their stomachs. It has been proven that the drink appetite Is a disease. It Is true that great good has been done on moral grounds for the up lifting of men to better lives. But how ever mush can be done for men by mor al and religious means, we know that a new set of vital organs can never be talked Into a man, however much he may desire to reform morally. The only proper thing that can be done for such a man Is to reform him physically. V'e know that can be done in the case of a drunkard. . . WHAT OF THE POOR? Since such a great discovery has been made and such a cure established, ought It not to receive welcome In all lands? "For it has on it the mark of the approval of the Lord God Al mighty." We know that it will eman cipate the slave of the drink habit. But this new method of treatment, the Keeley cure, based on scientific prin ciples, is only within the reach of the fairly well to do, those who can pay. There Is no opportunity for the poor to receive this new treatment; there Is not a place In Scranton where the drunkard without money can be treated with this great discovery of the age and sent out Into the world a man again. What a grand good thing It would be If the poor people who suffer most from the drink curse, but are helpless to free themselves from it, could, by signify ing their willingness to be treated, be made physically aa If they had never been drunkards. It would be their own responsibility If they again forged the chains to en slave themselves by a diseased appe tite. We have proof that of the thou sands that have been treated by Dr. Keeley's cure 93 per cent, of them have lict again bartered away their regained freedom and manhood for whisky. Men are cast Into prison for months for crimes arising directly or Indirectly from the drink habit, and they go out Into the world again no better morally than when they went In, but worse for their experience In some respects. Blnce this la the condition of things, that penal treatment does not reform the drunkard, for It will be only a question of time before he, owing to the diseased condition of his body, again becomes a menace to the peace and order of the community he lives in, suppose the state or city should take the matter in hand and say, "For our own well being this la our opportunity. We hove men who are diseased inebriates; we have medical facilities and proof that the diseased criminal can be cured. The criminal Is to be guarded and protected, lie la a ward of the state. He is both as a question of moral- responsibility a ad social economy, therefore we will try and cure the criminal.; , A NEW ERA. This would be the dawning of a new era of prison reform. This Is a new field for the press of our city to enter with Its mighty Influence for good In society. It remains with you to tell It nut with power and truthfulness of the thousands and thousands of people who have been cured by Dr. Keeley's double . chloride of gold from the disease of In ebriety. His achievement Is unparal leled; Its efficacy Is wonderful In re newing the physical man from a dis eased, enslaved drunkard to be once more a sound man If he wants to be one. It Is the only safe path of deliver ance for men In bondage to alcohol. Edwin Thomas. Hyde Park, March 10. NOT HIS KIND. The Oeeaaloa Was Ooe When lie Might Not Be Coagenlal. From the Detroit Free Press. I was sitting In a cobbler's shop In one of the little towns on the side of the Cum berland mountains, when a native got off a mule at -the door and came in, and said: "Now. Joe, I h'ar that you folks is gnin to hev a dance some ulghl next week?" "Yes, Tom," was the reply, '(.wan to be a crowd 7" "Right smart, 1 reckon." "Axln' most everybody to come?" "Yes; mow everybody." "But yo' hain't done axed me." "No, Tom, I hain't," slowly replied the old man. "I jest reckon I'm swine to leave yo' out. , "Hu! What yo got agin me, Joe?" "Xuthln", 'cept one thing, Tom. If yo' git to that dance yo' I bound to got -x-clted and beklu to shute und hurt somo body." "Yaas, I alius git excited and shute," rupllfd Tom. "If iwas a shutln' dance yo'd be count ed in. of co'se, but. you' see, it hain't. It's Just fur a few olu folks who don't want any shutln'." "I see." "And that's why we hain't dun axed yo to cum up. Hop thar" won't be no hard feelln's. Tom?" "Of co'se not. I doan keer for dances without shutln'." "iiecause," said the cobbler, as he threw down the boot he hud finished patching "because, if thur' was gwlne to be any hard feelin's yo' might cum up to the bend of the road and hev a pop at some of "he folks as they was gwlne home arur the dance." Tom reflected for a moment, and then said It would be all right If 1 saw the point and invited the two out to have a drink with me. SOME POPILAR EXPRESSIONS. Curiosities of American Speech Aceord log to a Dialeet Boelety-Illuatratlons Showing Uow the Vernacular Is Per verted. From the New York Sun. Is a pancuke fried or baked, or simply cooked? Is it, after all. reully a pancake and not rather a griddle t-uke. a lluunel cake, a buckwheat ur a. flupjuck? What Is a doughnut? When you tear your trousers on a sharp point what Is the first word you Instinctively apply to the re:' tungulur rent; trap patch, barn door, or weewary. as says tho New Knglander, or Is it wlnklehnwk or nlcklehuwk, us New Yorkers say? What do you mean by ding toals? How widespread Is the use of the shimmy? Such are the problems set by the Amerlcun Dlulect society In part eight of its notes, which will bo published In a few duys. Three distinct recipes for the prepara tion of doughnuts ure promulKuted by the society. Dough, raised with yeast, sweet ened and spiced, cut Into cubes, which, when fried in a deep vessel with hot fat, bucome round lumps, forms the doiiKhntit of Connecticut. Hy substltulng soda ur saleratu for yeast, and cutting the paste lino circles or twists, you have the dough nut of Massachusetts, which a he Uutch settler calls the olykoek and others the cruller: while the native of Connecticut distinguishes between the twisted biled cake and the round Jumble. If merely un seasoned dough, be used, you huve the fried bread of Massachusetts, called on Cape Cod seventy-fours, and elsewhere, it seems, doughnuts. The dingbat has had an adventurous career. Sturtlng as a ball of dirt on the legs of sheep In Ver mont, it becomes a smart spunk to the northern New Knglander, a squable, a fly ing missile and money to the Maine lum berman, .the biscuit of the New England boarding school, while In Georgia it has turned to a mother's kiss, and you may say of the girl you admire; "She is a regular dingbat." TENNESSEE IDIOMS. It must not be Inferred that culinary and domestic matters alone engross the society's attention, though it is at home that the careless words and phrases are most likely to be used which deviate from mouth to moulh since man first spoke. Tliis part of dialect notes contains no legs than tjoo new words and usages, collected throughout the land, some poetical, many rdciuresque, and all curious and interest ng. ' ) In the Tennessee mountains, streams flowing from the east are sunrise waters, a mule that you can trust Is a confidential mule, a railroad trains Is a smoke wagon, a kiss is a smouch, cheese Is plural, with a singular chee, sugar is sweetening, but molasses is long sweetening, a man sub ject to tits is fltifled, and very much Is a heap sight, or a good few, or some several, or way yander. A man points to a hillside and tells you that he "lives on yon coast" and has a "good scope of land;" he greets you with "How do you come on?" anil asks you to "come In and rest your hat." A toothbrush to htm means a snuff stick, 111 means cross, Juberous timid, ilsty mean, popular stylish, his past tenses are fotch and holp and seed and squex and swole; he tells you that "sickness is mighty in terruption;" that It is "a gash wet spell," nd "hit's too-my-goodness cold," that he has "t he beatenest boy and tulkenest old woman ever you see," and that that young flirt Is "tryln' to git a chaw on a feller." The sty-baked or -stay-at-home Jersey matron coosters or potters around the house, calls her preserves do-ups, pork (pack, her husband. If- need be, a lob scouse or leper, meaning a worthless fel low. She sides up or cleans up or gos strutting, wasting time about the village, but she cares not a Dutch cuss nbout go ing down country, that is, to New York city. OTHER VERBAL ODDITIES. Coof Is the name for an off-islander In Nantucket, on Mt. Desert the summer visitor Is a rusticrata, a stupid Vermonter is a dodunk, a goober gruber digs peanuts In Tennessee, When a man is confused he is mommixed in Kentucky, he is muxed up In Otsego county, galleyled In New Hedford, stodged in Indiana, and wtizzled In New York. "I don't hurt fer it," means "I don't care" in Mississippi, while "I don't mind it a bit" Implies terror in North Carolina, where a great calamity Is scan dalous. The sunset Is day down on the Virginia coast. A man has large money In Cincinnati, he has scuds of It in Missou ri, and a session of it In Georgia. REMEDIAL EDIBLES. Celery Is invaluable as a food for thoe suffering from any form of rheumatism, for diseases of the nerte, and nervous dyspepsia. lettuce for those suffering from insom nia. Watercress Is a remedy for scurvy. Peanuts for Indigestion. They are es pecially recommended for corpulent dia betes. Peanuts are made into a whole some and nutritious soup, are brown -d and used as coffee, are eaten as a relish simply baked, or are prepared and served as salted almonds. Onions- arc almost the best nervine known. No medicine is so tiycful in cases of nervous prostration, and there is noth ing else that will so quickly relieve and tone up a worn-out system. Onions nrc useful In all cases of coughs, colds and in fluenza; in consumption, Insomnia, hydro phobia, scurvy, gravel, and kindred liver complaints. Eaten every other day tlirv soon have a clearing and whitening effect on the complexion. Spinach Is useful to those with gravel. Asparagus is used to Induce perspira tion. Carrots for suffering from asthma. Turnips for nervous disorders und for Scurvy. - With sugar and lemon Juice tha beaten white of egg Is to relieve hoarseness. Raw beef proves of great benefit to per son of frail constitution, and to those suffering from consumption, it Is chopped fine, seasoned with salt, and heated by placing it in a dish of hot water. It as similates rapidly and affords the be.st nourishment. Kggs contain a large amount of nutri ment , In a compact qulikly available form. Beaten up raw with sugar they ure used to clear and strengthen the voice. Tomatoes are a powerful aperient for the liver, a sovereign remedy for dyspep sia and indigestion. Tomatoes ure Inval uable In all condltons of the system in which the use of calomel is Indicated. Figs are aperient and wholesome. Thrv are said to be valuable as food for thosie suffering from earner; they are used ex ternally as well as Internally. Apples are useful In nervous dypep!it; they are nutritious, medicinal, und vital ising; they aid digestion, clear the voice, correct the acidity of the stomach, and are valuable In rheumatism, Insomnia and liver troubles. An apple contains as much nutriment as a potato in a pleusanter and more wholesome form. drapes dissolved and dislodge gravel and calculi, and bring the stomach and bow els to a healthy condition. Pie plant is wholesome and aperient; Is excellent for rheumatic sufferers and use ful for purifying the blood. Housekeeper. VIEWS IN RARE BID GENOA Sights Which Reveal the Ituly of Mediaeval limes. MANY FAMOUS OLD BlILDIXCS Art Galleries That While Not Famous. are Still Worth Seelng-A Bright Letter of Travel from a Land of Ulstorie Interest. , Special Correspondence of Tho Tribune. - Genoa. Italy. Feb. 22. The city of Oenoa Is one of the many Italian towns which, while exceedingly Interesting in themselves and well worthy of a visit from anyone wishing to see something of the old Italian life, still have no great galleries of pictures to attract the average tourist. There are so many mote of these galleries In Home, Florence and Venice that t tenon, nis toricully one of the most Interesting of Italian cities, is usually passed througn hurrledlv. Hut there Is perhaps no place In Italy where anyone who cares for the Italy to be seen outside of the galleries and churches, the Italy of the streets aud of the people, can see it better than in the old. narrow, winding streets of Oenoa. The old portion of the town, down near the wharfs, remains as It was in tne days when Genoa warred with Venice for the possession of the trade of the Mediterranean sea ana was usually suc cessful In thut war. NARROW STREETS. These streets are probably the nar rowest in proportion to the height of the buildings In all Rttrope. They run In width from three feet to perhaps thirty, but It Is only a few of the older streets that can boast of this latter width. The buildings run up a hundred feet Into the air, seven and eight stories, and the effect of a street Is somewhat like a crack b-f t by an earthquake. Through these narrow paths, for that Is ull we would think of calling them in Americu, How steady streams of peo ple, all walking, for Genoa. In the mat ter ot cabs and horses. Is almost as badly olT as Venice. As Is the usual custom In Italy, everyone walks in the middle of the street, which Is paved with large, ttiangulnr blocks of stone and is practically only a sidewalk all the way across. There are many old historic buildings scattered through these winding streets, palaces and churches, all remi niscent of the families of traders and warriors who made Genoa a great na val power. The Via Garibaldi and the Via Balbi are flanked with perhaps the finest palaces, archlteturally, in Ituly. Walking up these streets, between the painted and frescoed walls of the pal aces, looking Into the magnificent courts and up the grand italicizes, one gets a good idea of what the Italy of the middle ages was. RARE OLD HOUSES. Many of the palaces are occupied by the same families which built them. Most of them contain galleries of pic tures, with no great masterpieces, per haps, but still galleries such as one could never hope to see in America. The all-powerful half franc will open the door of any of them, and you can wander around through the superb apartments, hung with tapestries and pictures. Genoa has a great many nf the works of Rubens and of Van Dyck, who both resided here several years, and who painted many portraits of the Genoese nobility. The Van Dycks are especially good. One of his equestrlun portraits of a member of the Balbl fam ily has a rther curious bit of history connected with It. After the portrait was finished the family was banished by the republic, something that quite often happened to Genoese families, and Velasquez was employed to alter the picture, painting in the head of Philip IV of Spain over the original. This painting thus represents the work of two of the greatest masters of art. There is a very charming vist to be seen through the door of one of the pal aces of the Interior court, with a beauti ful sculptured renaissance fountain, covered with moss, the green of which Is in beautiful contrast ta the old browns and soft yellows of the marble Many of the courts are planted with orange trees and the views from the in terior windows down Into these courts are very pleasing . GENOA'S CHURCHES. The churches of Genoa are none of them of any great architectural quality, but they are all very richly decorated, and the cathedral, though a mixture of many styles and built of black and white marble, a method of building rather unpleasant at first to northern eyes, has a certain lmpresslveness. Down near the wharfs stands the old building of the Bank of Kt. George, one of the first. If not the first, banks of Eu rope, established In the early years of the republic of Oenoa and at one time so powerful as to threnten the overthrow of the popular government. Over the windows of the building tho old colors of the crOBS of St. George are still visi ble, the cross which is In the armorial bearings of so many royal families. IN MODERN GENOA. Modern Genoa is a prosperous, busy town, for, unlike Its ancient rivals. Pisa and Venice, Its commerce has nev er deserted it. and its harbor presents a busy scene. Through the munificence of the duke of Gnlllera, who left twenty million francs in his will for that pur pose, the harbor has been greatly Im proved anil is now the best in Italy. Fifteen thousand vessels pass In and out of the port every year, and the im ports are nearly four hundred millions of francs. The most modern streets of the town are straight and well paved and lined with fine new buildings, not as fine, of course, as tho old palaces, but still very creditable buildings. The steamers of the German lines sailing from Genoa to New York have been a great help to the town, and many trav elers now come direct to Italy by that line In preference to the Kngllsh lines via Liverpool and Southampton. An excursion to the Villa Pallavlclnl Is one of the great attractions of Gen oa, It Is made by way of the tram lines to Pegll, seven miles distant, and on the trip the traveler will become very well acquainted with the thoroughly European custom of town duties on food. The line passes through a num ber of small towns, and at the entrance of each town an officer boards the car to see that no one is carrying anything eatable into the town without paying duty on it. The town revenue is col lected in this way. but from the number nf men it takes to guard the gates It looks as If the expense of collecting It must be as much as the revenue itself. At the other side of the town the same thing happens and it is all an illustra tion of how the people of Kurope are taxed at every oportunity. , Here in Italy every price mark that a merchant dlHplnys in his show window bears a stamp, every hotel bill antl a great many other tilings too numerous to mention. Truly Italy Is puylng for its position In the triple alllunce. ONE'S TROUBLE REPAID. But If It Is a bother to get to the Villa Pallavlclnl, the beauty of the pluce re puys one. It Is on the sloping mountain side, and there, with the snow-covered Alps rising back of It and the blue Med iterranean at Its foot. Is the finest gar den In Italy. Winding walks, bordered with tropical plants, lead up to the sum mit, which commands a magnificent view. A grotto and a beautiful minia ture lake around and through which you are rowed In a boat are other at tractions of the place, on which twenty gardeners are continuously at work. It Is certainly one of the sights of Italy. . Then there Is the famed Campo Santo, or cemetery, where there are tiers upon tiers of burial caskets, each with its inscription, and hundreds of very elab orate marble monuments. The senti ment which prompts a living widow to hue a very life-like modern Btatue of herself ntude, representing her as weep Ing overthe. grave of her husband, Is very strange to us, but It Is one of the Italian customs, and you can sometimes see the living original standing before her own statue. Take It all In all. the Impression left Dy uenoa is tnat of a busy trading city always active and money making, and ot a city wmcn wen represents what the Italy of the middle ages was. Wlnford J. Northup, THE IXFLl'EXl'E OF COMETS. t:idence Which Tends to Show to Super stltloua Minds That Their Coming Portends Good or Lvil. From the Times-Herald. The approach of Perrlne's comet. which is speeding toward the earth at the rate of l.Gou.OOO miles a day, and wnicn is tiue to strike this sphere on March l.'i, naturally raises the uuent!in to what extent, if any, this earth of ours Is lnlluenced by these strange den teens of heaven. That they have some ltinuence nas been stoutly maintained by astrologers of all ages. Albumazar tells us thut comets, be coming first visible In Aries, signify evil to tne countries ruled by that slen and that drought will be es pec lull y prevalent. :sow, tne comet of 1K70 au. peered In Aries, the sign of Germany and In that year the Franco-Germun war was begun and several districts In Europe suffered severely from drouirht Donates comet appeared In 18"8, and was followed by the Italian war of IS'.s. The appearance of the great comet of isti coincided with a most destructive conflagration in London, und was im mediately followed by the outbreak nf tne civil war in this country. The nu Kasuluatlon of President Llncotn be longs to the same epoch. This comet appeared In Ueinlnl, the sign of the United States and London. The great comet (comet B) was first seen In Ge mini on May 22, 1881, and on July 2 or the same -year President Garfield was shot. The same period was noted for its Violent storms and hurricanes. Now, me ancient astrologers taught that the appearance of a comet In Gemini al ways signifies severe tempests and the death of some Illustrious man. NAPOLEON'S COMET. Evidences of a llkn nntnra ni.n,,.i l history. A comet tenanted the heavens mr nuvcrai mouins nerore the birth of tho great Napoleon anl an other one of vast splendor became vis ible at tho beglnnlna of September. 1811, when he was at the height of his glorv. More curious still. It attained Its great est luster In the latitude of Paris, and It vanished over the latitude o Cor sica. When Napoleon was dying a comet appeared again for the third time In his notable life. In ItiOfi A f-onipt BlmmiMil In 1.nlnn.l I r M, 1 II I , IH IIU In the watery sign Scorpio, and soon tiierwaru mere was a terrible Inunda lion In Bristol. Somersetshire. Nor roig and the eastern counties. Nos tradamus, by the way, predicted this flood In 1555, fifty years before It took place. Oriental potentates have for centur ies been swayed greatly by comets, llinour, when one appeared, consulted Abdullah l.lnsnn n riimmi. nu,....i. and was informed that it presaged the un. i. mi uiaasicrs 10 nis enemies and es pecially to the Ottoman empire. Ab dullah nredicterl th.nn ,uln tt,.,t .i, comet was In the west of Tlmour's do- minions ana in tne sign Aries. Timour prepared for war, entered the enemies' terrltorv Hrwl iirtprlv nvaHhi-aw - 'III I . i 1 1 1 1 1, In the reign of Selim II. (1572) there ap- pemeu a comet, wnicn nad the bright ness filirl mnirnltiiflM nf whi. excited the monarch's apprehensions, which were augmented by the predic tions oi ins astrologers, wno foretold this phenomenon announced the calam ities Which eXPPRSil-.. rnltl Wnnl.l Inlllnl upon, the empire. "Forty days after- wuru. ays me nistonan, "they imag ined themselves threatened with a uni versal delllOTP! tlleeaunnt ralnu flowed the monarch's dominions In Eu rope and Asia, laid waste three of his chief cities, swept away men, cattle and hmiMPH nnd ertn,l.,ea,l 1. a h.l,lnaB and public roads Impassable for several nccita. wnisinii nas conjectured that the deluge mentioned In the Bible, was Dl'OdUCCfl llV the I1MP nnntvtanh rt a comet to the earth, and he further sur mises mat me ena or tne-worm may be proaucea ny tne approach ot a comet llt'ndlirlnllHlv heated In Ita rtm-lttnllnn It is interesting to compare his views on tne stiDjert witn tnose expressed by M. Flatumarlon, In his book entitled "La Fin du Monde." VIEWS OF THE ANCIENTS. Even the great Charlemagne regarded comets as portents. Seeing one appear a few weeks before his death, he con sulted his astronomers, and In reply to his secretary, Eginhard, who urged him not to grow uneasy, he said that he was not dismayed at such signs, but feared the divine framer of them, who, being incensed with anger against a neonle or a prince. Is wont In this waV to admon ish them or His wrath and to call them to repentance. Other famous men held similar opinions. Cicero writes that "In the civil war between Octavlus Augus tus und Mark Antony it was observed that comets were the harbingers or the miseries that then befell them," and expresses the opinion that "such ap pearances foretell great events." Plnly writes: "A fearful star, this comet Is, and not easily expiated, as It appeared by the late civil troubles when Octavlus was consul, as also a second time by the Intestine war of Pompey anil Caesar, and in our days about the time that Claudius Caesar was poisoned and left the empire to Domitlus Nero, In the time of whose reign and government there was a blazing coinet continually seen." Seneca exclaims: "Some com ets are very cruel and threaten us with the worst of mischiefs; they bring with them and leave behind them the seeds ot blood and slaughter." Socrates, wri ting of the siege of Constantinople, says: "So great was the danger that hung over the city that It was foretold by a huge blitzing comet, that reached from heaven to earth, the like of which no man ever saw before." Anna Com- nena, the daughter of Emperor Alex ius, spenking of a comet that appeared before the invasion or.tno Hauls, says: "This happened by the usual adminis tration of providence In such cases, for It Is not fit that so great and strange an alteration o" tlilnjrs as was. brought to pass by that coming of theirs should be without some previous denunciation and admonishment from heaven." FEARED IN ALL AGES. Machiuvelll, writing on the same sub ject, says: "Experience shows that some great commotions are the conse quence of such signs as these." Mllll chius, a noted mathematician, says: "Much experience and observation shows that comets announce great slaughter to the world, such as suck ing of cities, subversion of kingdoms und other public disasters." The learn ed Grotius observes that-"Comets and fiery swords and such like signs are wont to be the forerunners of great changes In the world." Kapha'-! tells us that "The great coinet in lfisu. fol lowed by n lesser in 16x2. was evbleiilly tlie forerunner of nil those remarkable and disastrous events thut ended in the revolution of itixx. "A coinet appeared Just nt the time our unfortunate Churlex of Ktiglund wu defeated by Cromwell, nnd In ixl't a ctlimt appeared in the summer pre vious to the death of the excellent Duke nf Kent and of his majesty, George III.". Many other examples could be given of the popular belief that comets are harbingers of tremendous changes in mundane affairs. Tills belief Is doubt less not as widespread as It was a cen tury ago, but there are still some who cling to the old so-called superstitions, nnd even st sceptical must ad inlt that things have hap- pened on comets were blaz- ing in t B-OSJ vd able jj Viu politics mm of old It Didn't Differ Much from the Polities of Todav. HOW HISTORY REPEATS ITSELF Doodle and Fraud Charged Just as Vociferously la the Campaign of 1840 as in Any More Reseat Presidential Contest. From the New York Sun. The presidential campaign of 1S40 was the longest in the history of the count try, and, excepting that of ls0, alto gether the most exciting. It began eleven months before the election with the nomination of General W. H. Hnr rison at Harrlsburg in December. 1839, a nomlnutlon effected by the most ex traordinary of sharp political contriv ances, ingenious and complicated be yond anything ever since attempted In anatlonalconventlun; that was intended to defeat and that did defeat Mr. Clay, whose nomination, except for this con trivance, was almost certain to have been made. The operation of the contrivance re ferred to was us follows: Each of the delegations In the convention selected a committee or three or its own mem bers, to which committee the members of the delegation delivered their several "views and opinions" as to the nomina tions for president and vice president most desirable to be made. The com mittees, thus selected and Instructed, met together In one body, and after re celving nnd comparing the "views and opinions" of the delegates proceeded to formulate their own. These were re ported back to the delegations. The delegations, enlightened In this way, then proceeded separately to ballot for candidates. The results ot theso bal lots were laid before the committees again, aggregated Into one body, who, after comparing and deliberating upon them, formulated further views and opinions for the Information of the del egations. The delegations assembled for the third time, und, further Informed, again considered and balloted, and again Bent their ballots to the aggregated com mittees, who again compared, consid ered and formulated. This general process was repeated until a majority of the votes was found to have been cast for a particular candidate. UpVn discovery ot a majority the fact was communicated to the delegations In general convention assembled "for their consideration," the majority of the delegates from each state casting the vote of the state. It was by means ot the foregoing singularly elaborate and remarkable system of procedure that Mr. Clay was defeated and General Harrison nominated by a majority ot 42 over the united votes of General Scott and Mr. Clay, Scott receiving 16 votes, Mr. Clay SO and General Harri son 148. AN EXCITING CAMPAIGN. The campaign that succeeded was one of extraordinary excitement and Inci dent. According to Mr. Benton It was conducted on the Harrison side by banks and their agents, who "used money In fabulous amounts and in ways not dreamed of." In an address to the country Amos Kendall declared that "contempt of the people lay at the bottom of the whole Harrison scheme ot electioneering." "We have seen vast assemblages collected together," he said, "at great labor and cost, not to re spond to any principles, or to listen to any argment, but to drown the voice of reason in the shouts of revelry and to lead captive the feelings of the people In a senseless excitement aroused by the hauling of log cabins, canoes and cider barrels through the streets; the display of banners with unmeaning mottoes; the singing nf doggerel rhymes, nnd the exhibition of vulgar pictures; riot and drunkenness. Joined with mummery and mockery all alike disgraceful and Insulting." Above everything else, however, according to the same author ity, was the "use of money without stint, the abuse of official station, and privilege without restraint, and the vio lation of law without reserve;" alto gether forming "a flood of demoraliza tion," In "some of the states resting in stagnant pools, contaminating tho at mosphere of liberty, and threatening death to everthlng virtuous, noble and free" even to the republic itself. This was putting the case very strongly, hut no doubt Mr. Kendall devoutly believed all that he alleged. The Harrison men otherwise the Whigs were not In the least moved by the complaints and charges of the Dem ocrats, otherwise the "Locofocos," but continued to hold their big meetings, to exhibit their vulgar pictures, to sing their doggerel rhymes, to drink their hard elder and to drag their canoes and log cabins on wheels through the streets and along the country roads. They "got back" at the Locofocos with charges quite as serious as those against which they were called upon to defend. ' COUNTER CHARGES. They declared that Mr. Van Buren whose father had kept a country tavern was an aristocrat; a monarchist, in fact, who lived in royal style in the white house, who ate his soup out of spoons or gold and his pie with knives of silver: who honored the rich and de spised the poor; who demanded a standing army of 200.000 men under his own control, for what sinister purpose of enslavement of the people Is easily Inferred. He had wasted the public revenues, had Increased the public ex penditure, and had added S20.000.000 to the public debt. He was hostile to the churches In all their sects, and sought the destruction of the ministers of re ligion. He was the enemy of free la bor, who aimed to bring the wages of American workmen to the Europeun level and to destroy the profits of American farmers. Among the minor charges were two: That he had estab lished new mints In which It cost 40 per cent, of the value of gold eagles to coin them and that turned out ten-cent pieces at a cost of thirty cents each! And a great deal more of the same kind, ending with a declaration that one term wa3 enough for any man. In fact, however, the real issues of the rnmpalgu related to currency and banking nnd the tariff. As to the lat ter, the Harrison (or Whig) doctrine was Immensely removed from what Is noSv called "McKlnleylsm." General Harrison's position on that subject was authoritatively stated in these words: "He Is In favor of such Judicious tariff regulations as siiall provide for the ac tual wants of the government and pro tect the national industry, vithout af fording the recurs of extravagance, or a surplus beyond what may be neces sary to discharge Its current land ex isting obligations." holding It "to lip the duty of the government to keen Its expenses within Its ordinary revenues." It was. however, the opinion of Gen eral Harrison, and his supporters thnt even upon this motlciute view of tariff leglHlutlon n sufficient pio- icciiou miKiit no nad to give to fanners protitnble prices for their products, and to the a'ilsuns ami l.-ibr.rers of the country constant em ployment, fair waj.'i'i ami prompt pav In short. '$-' a day and roast berf " The Industrial state of the country was one of great depression; and as Mr. Van Buren was hld responsible for it. It Is not surmising that he was beaten badly both before the peoplo and In the electoral colleges. Out of a total of 2.411,700 votes, of which 7.0f.9 were for an antl-slnvery candidate. General Harrison had a majority of 14G.:tlf. and in the electoral colleges 234 votes against GO for Mr. Van Buren. r -11 la f.A 1 . -1- , V. . 1. iiu.ii in .lie iai Kmi ji nif puuiiiriii re public. It Is said to have more navigable rivers than -any other country in the world. Hio de Janeiro Is the principal i-ur, mm lb iiua iicuriy 1,WV,IMI lllUHUHUIlls, O '-'Knocks Out The. Large Piece and High Grade of "Battle Ax" has hjura! the sale of other brands of higher prices and smaller pieces. Don't allow the dealer to impose on you by saying they are "just as good" as "Battle Ax," for he is anxious to work off his unsalable stock Moosic Povdor Go, Rooms 1 and 2 ComajieaUi BM'J, 8C RAN TON. PA. MINING and BLASTING POWDER MADl AT MOOBIC AND RUUft. DAJLB WOftXa lAffltn Rand Powder Co. Orange Gun Powdof Btectrte Batteries, Puses for ernlod lac blasts, 8af ety Pas and iepuuoCiemieil Co.'s Hiiti Explosives AYLESWORTH'S MEAT MARKET The Finest In the City. The latest Improved furnish lags and apparatus for keeping meat, batter asd eggs. 223 Wyoming Ave ROOF TIMING 1RD SOLDERIHC Jweiwe; with by tha uaa of KARTV KAN'S PATENT PAINT, which consists f Inrredlente well-known to all. It caa ba aaolled to tin, galvanised tin, sheet Iron roofs, also to brick dwellngs. which will prrrent absolutely any crumbling, crack la or breaking of the brick. It will out last tinning- of any kind by many yearn, and It'a coot does not exceed one-fifth Utai of tha coat of tinning. Is sold by tka lab or pound. Contracts taken by ANTONIO HARTUAKN. IS Birch It nrm ran co., infp. ctptui. i .owawi uar vi-ao siior i this woblo. "A ilUw Mioii it a iWJor tarwrf TMaLerflM Sol Id French Doavt Kid Bao 1 aalliei is pee enywaw la ae u.w er l'tMUl Mete ter tijo. mud every war me Kooai old la ell retail -teres fer t.W. We mtkm Mt beet oarMtree, therefore we Mf anlet ihtJU.ttyU and ww, end If en one te sot euuflvfl win niuaa un nm ereeodsBoUMTpelr. Op Tee er voaaoi mbm. ne 1 to I ed hall zee. 0myeref IJU yea. unemMO lone CaiQ Srse Go., 43 FEDERAL ST.. mwrnw. ajrfgTflf urwu (0 xUoraw at HBO. WW, Al'iwlllve Wrlll-a j-i.' Ginrautertl 1'urc to LOST .MANHOOD i uJT ftttmitiutr niiiiioiiti. both of youug and lukl.llo re'l men and women. 'Ilia nvrfril. fftuudf Ynrniirrr. Ul C IMS, Nervous lability, Mf-fatly Draiajiof:3, Consumption, nrunltv. EibaUKtinir riratnfiinl liwtnf thiwm nr tlinll.ni. trttlve'O reams uriMtlnic ono for rtud v, tmliiei aud mai rlAKiifi4iIckIyriiredhyir. (;odi ucapatiUh Srrvm dritliM. Th nut onlyiHirc by ftUrliPtfatilio wr of if t S.'. but troa eivnt M.l.' TO.N14J oud ULOUlft I ILli:i:f brintfint: lck Dm pink ijluw to pai li J fvtoniifcf Hie fr'lltK OP VOlJTII to tha ratWut. hy mail, !.(( per bos r! for with rlt ifii atiifipantec to i-ute fir refund tt mtinei. Iluolt Uvr. SyuejiiliAerfHiralnCt., iiu 2uU0f .ftciv Yuri For talt by John If. FheipH, nruegtet, Wyoming uvemn und Sjuupp tnt t. French Injection Compound Cares pMltlTtly, qnlrklf. (not merely cliwkj.) tiurantaud r niuuey refundiil. Avoid ditiifti-rmi reaii-tllei). Prl'-B fniir bottle. Nis Itofllr (xlll cure totrrot win itciuM. iwurefroiii ebtcrretlun. with nuljr .clcuulkmly uuuo )ruigo, teeuyeJdrttsforti.uo. , DR. LOBB'S BOOK FREE To all nnftVreri of tRKOKSOF YOUTH, LOST VftiOH end OISLAStS Ol- MI.N AM) tVOMEIV. a8 nag; eloiu bound: aic.it uly valid end inn 11 frer. TruaKtivut lr ui til .tilrt'.y confiuiuitial, net n loaltiTeqnlrk i-nrn u antHvd. luuuttr how long standing, I will poiitlfely cure you. Write or call. 10 tflDD U2U N. ISth St., IMiilada., ln. Jilt liUDO year' continuous practice. 1 mm All Others O O 5. lUantactorors of tha OtUbrata PILSENER LAGER BEER CAPACITY I oo,ooo Barrels per Annum DUPONT'S RIIUI6, BLASTISG MD SP0RT1R6 htanaf actnred at the 'Wapwelloma Mills, Le sarae oounty, Pa., and at Wil mington, Delaware, HENRY BELIN, Jr. General Agent for the YT yearning District. IM WYOMING AVE Scranton, Pel Third Mataenal Beak Batlatng. Aaaatnaai OB. 70111. Httoton. Pa. THO KiHN B. 811 ITU A f-'ON. PWavmtk. Pa. X. W. MCLLJOAN. Wilkes Barre. Pa. Areata (or im iwueaua uieaueai fjaav'a Hit h bpkartes. REVIVO RESTORES VITALITY. Made a ISttDay. Of Me. TNI ORIAT 80th bay. prodaeee the above results ln'30 daya. It act gewerfnllr aud quickly. Cures wban all others (ell. yonac aiea will regain their !nt manhood, aad eld men will recover t'uolr youtbfnj ngor by ualug BBT1TO. It caicair and aurely rettoree Nervous aces. Lea Vitality, Iiavotnacr, Nightly Eiaiaelonm, Loot Fewer, railing Memory. Wetting Oiaeuee. aad ell effeote ot aeli-abuae or aisose and Indiscretion, waieh caltu one for study, kiwluaaa or maniaae. It net only eurm by etarting at Ibe seat ot dleeaee. but Usenet gtercatoalo and blood bnlldor, bring ing back tin pink Blow to rata ckewke and re storing; the Ore of youth. It warda off Jnaanlt and CeasumMlon. Inalut oa baying RE VIVO, no other. It can be carried la mat pocket. Br geelt, 31.00 ver package, or all for ejd.oo, with a poal tlva written ansrauitee to eeuro ear refund tho money. Circular free, illdriie ROYAL MEDICINE CO.. 63 River St., CHIUSO. ILL. 9m y Matthews Bretv, Dsla ejenautaa JTa- , Jt a. . tw ill i7i?r; SOLD " g '.fesSmiflitftffd HfEravl r?& tlll'S IS LAGER BEER BREWERY, POWDER W