THE SCBANTOX TRIBUNE -WEDNESDAY MORNING, MAY 20, 1896. 10 Cciyjltht. Iff A by Bachaller, PART I. Methuen wrlgcled himself Into a cor ner of the hut. rested his shoulder against the abode wall and made him self as comfortable as the rawhide thonrs with which he was tied up would permit "Well. Calvert," said he. "I hope you quite realise what an extremely ucly hole we're In?" "Garcia will hanp the pair of us be fore sunset," I replied, "and that's a certainty. My only wonder is we haven't been strung up before this." "You think a rope and a tree's a cer tainty, do vou? I wish I could comfort myself with that idea. I wouldn't mind a simple gentlemanly dose of hanfrlng. But there are more things In Heaven and earth, Calvert" He broke off and whistled drearily. I moistened my dry, cracked lips, and asked him huskily what he meant "Torture, old man. That's what we're bclnir saved for. I'm very much afraid. A Peruvian guerilla is never a gentle-minded animal at the best of times, and Unrcla Is noted as being the most vindictive fellow to be found be tween the Andes and the Pacific. Then. If you'll kindly remember how you and 1 have harried him, and shot his men and cut off his suplles, and made his life a torment and a thing of tremors for the past four weeks, you'll see he had cot a big bill against us. If he'd hated us less, he'd have had us shot in sight when we were caught: as It is, I'm afraid h felt that a couple of bul lets in hot blood wouldn't pay off the score." "If he thinks the matter over calmly, he'll not very well avoid seeing tht If he wipes us out there'll be reprisals to be looked for." "And a grat lot." replied Methuen, grimly, "he'll care for the chance of those. If we are put out of the way, he knows quite well that there are no two other men In the Chilian service who can keen him on the trot as we have done. No, sir. We can't scare Garcia with that yarn. You think that be cnuse we're still allvo, there's hope. Well, I've sutliiiont faith in my own theory for this: if anyone offered me a shot through the hnl now, I'd accept It nnrt risk the chance." "You tnke thf gloomy view. Now the man's face is not altogether cruel. There's humor In it." "Then probably he'll show his fun nlnesa whn he takes It out of us," Methuen retorted. "Remember that punishment In the Mikado? That had 'something humorous' in it. ilolllng 1 oil. If I don't forget." Involuntarily 1 shuddered, and the raw-hlile ropes cut deeper Into my wrists and limbs. I had no great dread of being killed In the ordinary way, or I should not have entered the Chilian army In the middle of a hot war, and I was prepared to risk the ordinary woundlngs of action in return for the excitement of the tight. Rut to be caught, and held a helpless prisoner, and be deliberately tortured to death by every cruelty this malignant devil Garcia could devise, was a possibility I rHE EARLESS MAN SWUNG INTO THE HUT. had not counted on before. In fact, as the Peruvians had repeatedly given out that they would offer no quarter to us English In the Chilian service, we had all of us naturally resolved to die fight ing rather than be taken. And in deed this desperate feeling paid very well, since on two separate occasions when Methuen and myself had been cornered with small bodies of men, and would have surrendered If we could have been guaranteed our lives, as It was we went at them each time so furiously that on each occasion we broke through and escaped. But one thinks notKlng of the chances of death and maiming at those times. There Is a glow within one's ribs which scares away all trace of fear. . "I suppose there's no chance of res cue?" I said. "None whatever," said Methuen, with a little sigh. "Think it over, Calvert. We start out from the hacienda with an escort of five men, sing out our ad I oe, and ride away to enjoy a ten days' leave In the mountains. The troops are left to recruit: for ten days they can drop us out of mind. Within twelve hours of our leaving them, Garcia clev erly ambushes us in a canyon where not three people pass In a year. The poor beggars who form our escort are all gastados." "Yes, but are you sure of that?" I Interrupted. "I saw them all drop off their horses when we were fired upon, but that doesn't prove they were dead. Some, might have been merely wound ed, and. when the coast cleared, it is just possible they crawled back to our post with the news, Still I own it's a small chance." "And you may divest yourself of even that thin rag of hope. Whilst you were being slung senseless across a horse, I saw that man without the ears go round with a machete and well, when the brute had done, there was no doubt about the poor fellows being as dead as lumps of mud. Ah, and talk of the devil." The earless man swung Into the hut. "Buenos, senores," said he mocking ly. "You will have the honor now of being tried, and I'm sure I hope you will be pleased with the result." "I suppose we shall And that out later," said Methuen with a yawn, "but anyway I don't think much of ymir hospitality. A cup of wine now after that ugly ride we've had today would come in' very handy, or even a. nip of aguardiente would be better than noth ing.!' "I fancy it might be a waste of good liquor," was the answer, "but you must ask Unrcla., He will see to your needs." A guard, of twelve ragged fellows , armed with carbine and machete had followed the earless man Into the hut, and two of them, whilst he-talked, had removed the seizings from our knees and ankles. They helped us to our feet and we walked with them Into the das- ling sunshine outside. "I'll trouble some of you for my hat." aid Methuen when the glare HrBt biased down on him; and then as no one took any notice of the request, he lurched against the earless man with a udden swerve, and knocked his som brero on to the brown baked turf. "Well. I'll have your," Mid at; "If, better f.onsn j Thieves J Johnson sail BcheU than nothing at all. Tick up the thing, and put It on my head." The guerilla bared his teeth like an animal, and drew a pistol. I thought he would have shot my comrade out of hand, and by his look I could see that Methuen expected It. Indeed, he had deliberately irritated the man to that end. But either because the nearness of Garcia and fear of his discipline stayed him, or through thought of a finer vengeance which wbb to come, the ear less man contented himself by dealing a battery of kicks, and bidding our guards to ward us more carefully. In this way, then, we walked along a path between two fields of vine, and passed down the straggling street of the village, which the guerillas had oc cupied, and brought up in a little plaza which faced the white-walled chapel, i In the turret a bell was tolling dole' m IP' cJ'L THE GUERILLA BARED HIS TEETH LIKE AN ANIMAL. fully In slow strokes, and as the sound came to me through the heated air, it did not rod u Ire much Imagination to frame it into an omen. In the center of j the plaza was a vast magnolia tree, filled with scented wax-like (lowers, and splashed with cones of cural-pink. We drew up before the piazza of the principal house. Seated under Its shade in a spllt-caue rocker Garcia awaited us. a small meager dark man, with glittering teeth, and ringers lemon-colored from cigarette Juice. He stared at tm and spat, and the trial, ttui-h as it was, began. 1 must confess thut the proceedings astonished inc. Animus there certain ly was; the guerillas as a whole were disposed to give us short shift; but their chief insisted on at least some parade of Justice. The Indictment was set forward against us. We had shot, hanged and harried, and in fact used all the harshness of war. Had we been Chilians fn the Chilian service this might have been pardonable. 'But we were aliens from across the sea; were freebooters, lighting not for a country, but each for his own hand; and as such we were beyond the pole of military courtesy. We had earned a punish ment. Had we any word to speak why this should not be given? Garcia looked towards us expectant ly and then set himself to roll a fresh cigarette. PART II. I shrugged my shoulders. It seemed useless to say anything. Methuen said: "Look here, sir; you've got us, there's no mistake about that. It seems to me you've two courses before you, and they are these: Either you can kill us, more or less barbarously, In which case you will raise a most pestilential hunt at your heels, or you can put us up to ransom. Now, neither Calvert, hero, nor myself are rich men, but If you chose to let us go with sound skins, we're prepared to pay ten thousand Chilian dollars apiece for our passports. Now how does that strike you?" Garcia finished rolling his cigarette, and lit It with care. He Inhaled a deep breath of smoke. "Senor," he said (the words coming out from between his white teeth with little puffs of vapor) "you do not appear to understand. You fight as a soldier of fortune, and I am merely in arms as a patriot. I am no huckster to traffic men's lives for mon ey, nor am I a timorous fool to be scared Into robbing a culprit of his Just dues. "Very well, then," said Methuen, "murder the pair of us." Garcia smiled unpleasantly. "You may be a very brave man." said he, "but you are not a Judicious one. To a Judge less Just than myself this Inso lence might have added something to your punishment; but as it is I shall overlook what you have said, and only impose the. penalty I had determined upon before you spoke." He lifted his thin yellow fingers, and drew a fresh breath of smoke. Then he waved the cigarette towards the mag nolia tree in the center of the plaza. "You see that bough which Juts to wards the chapel?" "It's made for a gallows," said Me thuen. "Precisely," said the guerilla, "and it will be used as one Inside of ten min utes. I shall string one of you up there by the neck to dangle there between heaven and earth. The other man shall have a rifle and cartridges, and If, standing where he does now, he can cut with a bullet the rope with which his friend is hanged, then you shall both go free." "I hear you say it," said Methuen. "In other words you condemn one of us to be strangled slowly without chance of GARCIA SPRANG TO HIS FEET. reprieve. But what guarantee hav we that you will not silt the second man's throat after you have had your sport out of him?" - Garcia sprang to his feet with a stamp of passion, and the chair rolled over backwards. "You foul adventur er!" he cried, "you paid mankllles!" and then he broke off with a bitter "Pah!" and folded his arms and for a minute held silence till he got his tongue In hand again. "Senor," he said, coldly, "my country's wrongs may break my heart, but they can never make me break my word. I may be a hunted guerilla, but I still remain a gentleman." "I beg your pardon," said Methuen. "We will now," continued Garcia Icily, "find out which of you two will play which part. Afterwards I will add an other condition which may lend more kill to what follows. I will not coerce you. - Kindly choose between yourselves which of you will hang, and which shoot." II My comrade shrugged his shoulders, "1 like you, Calvert, old man." said he, "but I'm not prepared to dance on nothing for you." "It would be simplest to toss for exit, I said. "Precisely: but. my dear fellow. 1 have both hands trussed up, and no coin." "Pray let me assist you." said Garcia. "Senor Calvert, may I trouble you for an expression of opinion?" He leaned over the edge of the plassa and spun a dollar Into the air. I watched it with a thumping heart, and when for an Instant it paused, a dazsling splash of brightness against the red-tiled roof, I cried: "Heads!" The coin fell with a faint thud In the dust a yard from my feet "Well?" said Methuen. "I congratulate you, old fellow. I swing." He frowned and made no reply. Gar da's voice broke the silence. "Bueno, Senor Methuen." he said, "I advise you to shoot straight or you will not get home even now. You remember I said there was still another condition. Well, here you are: You must cut your friend down with a bullet before he is quite dead, or I'll string you up be side him." Methuen gave a short laugh. "Re member what I said about that fellow in 'The Mikado,' Calvert? You see where the humor comes In? We've had that coin spun for nothing. You and I must change positions." "Not at all. I take what I've earned." "But I say yes. It works this way: I took it that the man who was hang ing stood a delicate chance anyway, and I didn't feel generous enough to risk It. But now that the Benor here has put in the extra clause, the situa tion Is changed altogether. You aren't a brilliant shot old man, but you may be able to cut me down with a bullet, if you remember what you're firing for. and shoot extra straight. But it's a certain thing that I couldn t do it if I blazed away till doomsday. The ut most I could manage would be to fluke a pellet Into your worthy self. So you see I must wear the hemp, and you must apply your shoulder to the rifle butt laugh," he added, in English. "Grin and say something funny, or these brutes will think we cared for them." But I was Incapable of further speech. I could have gibed at . the prospect of being hanged myself, but the horror of this other ordcul turned me sick and dumb. And at what fol lowed I looked on mutely. There waa a well on one side of the plaza and the earless man went and robbed the windlass of its rope. With clumsy landsman's fingers he formed a noose, took It to the great magnolia tree and threw the noose over the pro jecting branch. The bell of the little white chapel opposite went on tolling gravely, and they marched my friend up to his fate over the sun-baked dust. They passed a thong around his ankles, the earless man lifted the noose to hi9 throat; a dozen of the guerillas, with shouts of laughter, laid hold of the hauling part of the line; and then a voice from behind fell upon my ear. Garcia was speaking to me. With a struln I dragged my eyes away from the glare of the plnza. and listened. He wan smiling wickedly. "So your pluck has oozed away?" he was suying. as the cigarette smoke welled up from between the white walls of his teeth. "Well, of course, If you do not care for the game, you can throw up your hand at once. You've only to say the word, and yu can be dangling on that bough inside of a cou ple of minutes. It's quite strong enough to carry more fruit than it bears al rendy. But it's rather hard on your friend not to try" My wits came to me again. "You fool," I cried, "how can I shoot with my arms trussed up like this? If the f hole thing is not a mock cut me adrift, and give me a rlrle." He beckoned to one of his men, and the fellow came up and cut off the lashings from my wrists and elbows; and then, with a sour smile, he mo- THE FEARLESS MAN FITTED THE NOOSE TO HIS THROAT. tioned some of the others, who drew near and held their weapons at the ready. "I dare wager, Senor Calvert," he said, "that If you'd use me for a mark, you would not score a miss. So I wish to Insure that you do not shoot In this direction" He raised his voice and shouted across the baking sun light: "Quite ready here, amlgos. So up with the target." PART III. Now up to this point I am free to own that since our capture I had cut a pret ty poor figure. I had not whined, but at the same time I had not seen my way to put on Methuen's outward show of careless brazen courage. But when I watched the guerillas tighten on the rope and sway him up till his stretched-out feet swung a couple of hand-spans above the ground, then my coolness returned to me, and my nerves set like Icicles in their sockets. He was sixty yards away, and at that dis tance the well-rope dwindled to the bigness of a shoemaker's thread. More- ovpr tha llnnor t urn-1 1,1 ...la I i ..... " " '""UD vi iv in visible because It hung before a back ground of shadows. But the eighteen uiciius uuuve my poor mends head Ktnnrl mir nlnar anrl , . l . ........ u uiounti usKiiim 1119 white walls of the chapel beyond, and u. u snuyeu 10 me pulsing of the body beneath, it hnrnel it a,, if ... .... sight till all the rest of the world was uiuneu uui in a rea naze. I never knew before hour thi,.ni,ki - - .. .vivugmj a man could concentrate himself. i ney handed me the rifle, loaded and cocked. It was a singe-shot Win chester, and-1 found out afterward, thought I did not know It then, that either through fiendish wish to further hamper my aim, or through pure fnr getfulness, they had left the sights cocked up at three hundred yards. But that did not matter; the elevation was a dtttAll tf ml .was handling the weapon as a game- nnwi hits, wun neaa up, ana eye glued on the mark, and rifle barrel following the eyes by Instinct alone. You remem ber that I had no stationary target to aim at. My poor comrade was wrlih- 1 n if nnrt nwnvlnv o f th. n .1 A 1.1. tether, and the well-rope swans hither unu winner line some contorted pendu lum. Once I fired, twice I fired, six times, ten times, and still tfee rope remained uncut, and the bullets rattled harm lessly against the white walls of the chapel a tinkle of broken Rlas. and the bell, after a couple of hurried nervoi's clangs, censed tolling altogether. With the thirteenth shot a shout went up from- the watching crowd. I had Btranded the rope, and the body which dangled beneath the magnolia tree be gan slowly to gyrate. Then came a halt In the firing. I had handed the Winchester back to the fellow who was reloading, but some how or other the exploded ratridire had Jammed in the breech. I danced and raged before him In my passion of hur ry, and the cruel brutes yelled in ecs tasles of merriment. Only Garcia did not laugh. He re-rolled a fresh olgar- ette with his thin yellow fingers and leisurely rocked himself In the split cane chair. The man could not have been more unmoved If he had been overlooking a performance of Shakes peare. At last I tore the Winchester from the hands of the fellow who was fum bling with it. and clawed at the Jammed cartride mvself, breaking my nails and smearing the breechlock with blood. If it had been welded into one solid piece, it could scarcely have been firmer. But the thrill of the moment gave my hands the strength of pincers. The brass case moved fr m side to S'.de; it began to crumble, and I drew It forth and hurled from m a mere ball of shapeless twisted metal. The one of the laughing brutes gave me ano ther cartridge, and once more I shoul dered the loaded weapon. The mark was easier now. The strug gles of my poor friend had almost ceased, and though the wll-rpe Et II swayed. Its movements were compara tively rhythmical and to be counted I FIRED, AND THE BODY FELL TO THE GROUND. upon. 'I snapped down the strhts, put the butt-plate to my shoulder and cud dled the stock with my cheekv Here for the Mrst time was a chance of some thing steadier thnn a snap ehot. I pressed home the trigger as the well-rope reached one extremity of Its swing. Again a few loose ends sprans from the rope, and again the body be gan slowly to gyrate. But was It Methuen I was firing to save or was I merely wasting rhot to cut down a mass of cold dead clay? I think that more agony was com pressed for me Into a. few minutes, then than most men meet with In a life time. Even the overlooking guerillas were so stirred that for the first time their gibing ceased, and two of them1 of their own accord handed me cart-' ridges. I slipped one home and closed the breech-block. The perspiration wad running in a stream from my chill. Again I fired. Again the well-rope was snipped, and I could se the loosened strands ripple out as u snake unwraps Itself from a branch. One. more shot. God In Heaven! I missed' why was I made to be a mur derer like this"' Garcla's voice came to trw coldly. "Your last chance, senor. I ran be kept waiting here no longer. And I think you are wasting time. Your friend seems to have quitted us al ready." . . Another cartridge. . T sank to one knes and rested my right elbow on the other. The :laza was hung In breath less silence. Every eye was strained to see the outcome of the shot. The men might be inhuman in their cruetly, but they were human enough In their curiosity. The body san to one end of its swing: I held my fire. It swung back, and the rifle muzzle followed. Like some mournful pendulum It passed through the air, and then a glow of cer tainty filled me like a drink. I knew I could not miss that time; and I fired;, and the body in a limp and shapeless heap felj to the ground. With a cry 1 threw the rifle from me, and rr.ced across tho sunlit dust. Not an arm was stretched out to stop me. Only when I had reached my friend and looeiened that horrible ligature from his neck did I hear voices clamoring over my fate. "And now this other Inglese, your excellency," the earles man said, "shall we Bhoot him from here, or shall we string him up In the other's place?" But the answer was not what the fel low expected. Garcia replied to him on a shriek of passion. "You slaughter ing brute," he cried, "another offer likp that and I'll pistol you where you stand. You heard me pass my word: do you dream that I couud break It? They have had their punishment, and if we see one another again, the meeting will be 'none of my looking for. We leave this puebla In live minutes. See to your duties. Go." The words came to me dully through the heated air. I was almost mad with the thought that my friend was dead, and that the fault was mine, mine, mine alone! I listened for his breaths: they did not come. I felt for a heart-throb: there was not so much as a flutter. His neck was scared by a ghastly ring. His face was livid. And yet I would not admit even then that he was dead. With a cry I seized his arms and moved them first above his heud till he looked like a man about to dive, and then clapped them against his sides; re peating this an infinite number of times; praying that the air I drew through his lungs mlf.ht blow agnlnut some smouldering Epark of humanity and kindle It once more into life. The perspiration rolled from me; my mouth was as a sand-pit; the heavy scent of the ninjnolla blossoms above sickened me with its strength ; the sight departed from my eyes. I could see nothing beyond a small circle of the hot dust around, whllch waved and danced In the sunlight, and the little green lizards which enme and looked at me curlouly and forgot that I wa human. And then of a udden my comrade gave a sub, and his cheat began to heave of Itself without my laborious aid. And after that for awhile I knew very little more. The sun-baked dust danced more wildly In the sunshine; the liz- "WHAT HAS HAPPENED?" HE GASPED. ardB changed to darker colors; the light went out: and when I came next to my senses Methuen was sitting up with one hand clutching at his throat, looking at me wildly. "What has happened?" he gasped. "I thought I was dead, and Garcia had hanged me Garcia. No one is here. The puebla seems deserted. Calvert, tell me." "They have gone," I said. "We are alive. We will get away from here as soon as you can walk." He rose to his feet, swaying. "I can wallt now. -But what about you?" "I a man old man," I said, "wearily old. In the last two hours I have grown a hundred years. But I think I can walk also. . Yes, look, I am strong. Lean on my arm. Do you see that broken window In the chapel? When I tired through that the bell stopped tolling." "Let us go inside the chapel for a few minutes before we leave, the village," aid Methuen. "We have had a vary 1 it r 1 narrow esraae, old man. - I I 'feel thankful" There was la faint smell of Incense In side the chapeL The odor of it lingers by me still. AN ECLIPSE OF THE HONEYMOON When I went to see the little bride the other day and found her weeping into her best Turkish sofa cushion. I knew that something was seriously wrong, and drew my face down into the proper expression of sympathy. "What is it?" I asked. "It's Tom." she said. "And breakfast." I amended. "Did he tell you?" she demanded, sternly, sitting up and wiping her eyes. "Surely not," I answered; "only you see, my dear Annette, you are not the first bride 1 have had the pleasure of knowing In the course of life." "I never claimed to be a good house keeper or know anything about cook ing." she began in an explanatory fash ion. "And he said that he wanted that lit tle hand never to do anything harder than play with flowers or soothe his fevered brow," I added. "Why. how did you know he said that?" Bhe asked. I smiled. "If he was looking for a good domes tic girl, why didn't he marry Mary Smith?" she said, recurring again to her woes. "Why not. Indeed?" I echoed. "She's hideous," announced Annette, with satisfaction. "She would never put too much soda In the biscuit or have the steak over done," I said reflectively. "She has red hair," remarked Annette invlevantly. The butcher would never be able to sell tough meat and undesirable cuts to her," I went on In an admiring tone of voice. . "She has light eyes and no eyebrows to speak of," said Annette, as if it were a matter of Importance. "She would have made pies like his mother ust'd to make," I continued. "She has pale green freckles," re marked Annette triumphantly. "Of what avail." I asked mournfully. "Is beauty when one has dyspepsia from bad rooking?" "Why didn't he ask me If I could cook before we were married?" de manded Annrtte, resentfully. "My d.'ar child," I said, "men always demand everything In a wife they didn't ask for In a sweetheart" "He used to laugh when I didn't know things, and say I was a darling little puss," she remarked, reflectively. "Now he thinks you are stupid if yiu don't know about the silver question and whether the insurgents are going to win in Cuba," I put in. "What does It mean?" she asked with a tremble in her voice. "It moans," I said, "that you have married a man Instead of an arch angel. You needn't cry about it," I added, brutally; "you probably would not have found an angel very congenial, but. you have got to come down to a realization that the man who told you that he would make your life a dream of bliss, tilled with delight and per fume, has foi gotten he ever said It, and expects you to forget. Furthermore, he wants his dinner on time, and his house to be as well and economically managpd a if he had mnrried Mary Smith or any other of the domestic and homely girls he never looked at." "Doesn't he love me still?" asked the little bride, desperately. "Surely." I made anwer; "neverthe less, I advise you to read the papers and buy a good cook book." Dorothy Dix, New Orleans Picayune. They Are Marked This Way 1 Elwlqid ril. iwariv , INTERLINK ' Tlio genuine interlined collars and culls Willi a "Celluloid" surface, and the only water-proof collars and cull worth buying. saan ELluloIO AfARK. INTCRLINED Tuey aro worth buying, because they wenmlx times longer than linen, keep clean longer, mid when soiled, you can clean them yomself. TRAOf w nnift AfARK INTERLINED You can cleun thorn yourself with wet cloth sb easily and quickly as you can wusii your bunds whether at homo or alintad. TRAOf AfARK INTERLINED At homo or abroad, you'll find tliein more comfortable, morn convenient ami mora economical titan any other collars nnd culls niiiile. LULOi MARK- INTERLINED Accept no Inillfctlutit. Marie in nil atl ftii'l tltei. Soli vi-rj where or .ot tj u. dtrrol. ( oll.r. 300. each. CulR 4tc. pair pcttid. Hutc ttie tnd otrl. TIIK CELLULOID COMPANY. SKW TOBtt. IS A fair I m ithohitolne OArULIU furthMoiw.cU.... II LAWN M0 WEIL Tr fitted with nn improved Cutter Bar of sol 111 too) hip I tempo ej In oil. Tho Knlve hare a positive hear" cut nnd urn rc nl itnii bv it putvut Improved "Micro nometer Adjustment." 'Hie Shaft run In Phosphor-Brants br InKa, add na uroaily. to nthnemi in running. This machine lias a new maUVable Iron liau-dln-biace in nno piere). In simplicity nf construction, o.isa and accu racy in operation, durability nnd fiuUh. this mower i undoubtedly the ucst "litflit" mow er in the market. PRICE- 10- Inrli, $3.00 12-Inli, 3.25 11- lnch, 3.50 1G-Inch, 3.75 FOOTE i SHEAR CO., 119 WASHINGTON AVENUE. DR. LOBB'S BOOK FREE To all safferora tt KRRQK'S OF YOU IU, LOST VIUUN and WSLAStS UP MEN AND WOMEN, IMS pann: cloth bound; atoaroly oalad and uia l.d ires. Tratmot bv mail trlctly eonfidoatial, and a .oltlvqnlok caro ins ant red. jto matter how ions atandinf, I will ponitlTaly our you. W rit or oall . ,'ID I APR 828 N- Sth St., Philada., Pa UBt ItUDD 10 ytara' oontlnaou praotio XeKLLULOIII m i in ( 13J WASHINGTON AVENUE, Elegant Assortment ;hoice of amv 50c. SHIRT WAIST FOR 25 CENTS. Every Horning Until 11 (V Clock. We supply Moth Proof Bags Free with Capes, Cloaks, Suits and Jackets. . New York Cloak and Suit House, Francis Fitz Gibbon, 132 Wljll ML 2,000,000 BARRELS Mads and Sold in Six Months, ending ilarch 1, 1896, Total Product of 1 inane. The A Mill Alone produced 1,000,000 Barrels, Largest Run on Record. Washburn. Crosby's Superlative is sold everywhere from tho Pacific Coast to St. John's, New Fotindland, and In England, Ireland and Scotland very Largely, and is recognized as the best flour in the world. . , MEGARGEL wholesale agents. Appropriate Buildings Contribute Dividends Exceptionally Fair. General HOME Industry Justly Keeps LUMBER Moving Naturally. Our Present Quality Retains Steady TRADE Upon Value. With Xpectancy, Yours Z-zling 422. &c Richards Lumber Co., Gomith Bldu Scranton, Pa. THIRD NATIONAL BANK OF SCRANTON. Capital, Surplus, Undivided Profits, Special attention given Accounts. 3 Intert st Paid on ROM AMD Bolts, Nuts, Bolt Ends, Turnbuckles, Washers, Riv ets, Horse Nails, Files, Taps Dies, Tools and Sup. plies. Sail Duck for mine use in stock. SOFT STEEL HORSE SHOES and a full stock of Wagon Makers' Supplies, Wheels, Hubs, Rims, Spokes, Shafts, Poles, Bows, etc. TTEMBENDER SCRAN Wfetn tn doubt what KssuU la 4 wmIu. "ry ts.es order e run. Msuiuna For sals by JOHN H. PHELPS. vpniM evtti. soranMn ra. t v ..w i c?yrA at - av jm m rH marr aUiM in CD CONNELL $200,000 300,000 64,000 to Business and Personal Interest Deposits. STEEL TON. PA. RESTORE LOST VIGOR to um for Nvrvmn Debllttv. t.nn of fltml Povtr (In Itlwt get), litipoitncv, Atrophy, Varicocele nrt nther wcaknestw, from tny came, uh &iln f illi. Dritm checked nd full kigot quickly restored. If neglected, such tiQUblei mull fetal I v. Meitfl anvwhrr. talod. futti.ooi ftbaaee fur Is.ao. Witt give a. lef al uamntee to ture or ref tn 4 the money Addree . i - v., v.ieveiaun. vmo. Pharmacist, oor. Wyoming AvanuM an n