THE ONLY REPUBLICAN DAILY IN LACKAWANNA COUNTY. n - MOT SCR ANTON, PA., MONDAY MORNING, JUNE 29, 189. EIGHT PAGES 84 COLUMNS. TWO CENTS A COPY. Special Offering in Seasonable MBB0N& FANCY ILtd 11 d o OPENING ON SATURDAY, JUNE 27TH including everything choice, novel, and up-to-date. These features will make our display worth the at tention of every well dressed woman in town .but there Is an additional charm this time, and that Is values which are far and away beyond any' thing ever offered In this city. BSg Lot Persian and Dresden Ribbons, clean, fresh stock the nobbiest new shad ings and effects. They go at less than half price. Width No. 12 16 20 40 or 60 Price 15c. 19c. 25c. 29c. New Laces French and Plat Valencienes Laces, all widths, Immense assortment of patterns In White, Butter, Linen and Black. 1 c to 60c a yard Orientals Rich Laces In White or Butter hades; also net tops in Point de Venice and Maline Laces. Wonder ful wealth of new designs. ' Lace Edgings Narrow Chantlllys In Black oi White, at specially low figures. Chiffons The latest things in Linen embrold ' eries and Plain Linen Shades. MoMslin De Sole and Fancy Chiffons, all colors, In eluding Black. New Collars Fancy Yokes, Collars, fronts, etc. showing every new fad and fancy in' Plain or Embroidered effects. Not a desirable style wanting and not a number In the lot that isn' a bargain.' Description Is simply impossible. See them, and a glance will settle the whole question. C3,LOBE -'-AtBPUSL "' EIGHTY MINERS ENTOMBED Terrible Result of a Shaft at Pittston Junction. NO HOPE FOR THE IN ossibllitj of Bringing any of Them to the Surfaci Alive is Very Slim. Three Hundred Man are Engaged in the Work of Securing the Mine so that the .foetid Portion Can be Reached Xames of the Dead Hen so far as Conid be Ascer tainedScenes About the Shaft. Interview with Mine Inspector McDonald Eqneszing Resumed at 1.30 This Horning, Stopping Progress of Rescuing Party. Between seventy and eighty human lives were blotted out early yesterday morning In the Twin shuft at Pittston by a cave-In. It is the numt appalling mine disaster that has occurred in tills portion of the anthracite coal Held since the mine Hre at Avondnle on Sept. 6, 1S69, when 108 mine employes surrendered up their lives. The Oaylord mine disaster of Feb. 1. 1894, at Plymouth, when thirteen men were killed ana tne acciuem ai West Pittston llfteen years ago when twenty-six men were lost, sink Into In significance In comparison with the lat est durk spot on the history of anthra- Ite coa. mining. So great Is the loss of life and so fright ful the suddenness with which the har dy mine workers were cut off that It Ib hard even for the people of Pittston whose dear ones are in the ill-fated mine to realize the full force "of the terrible disaster. They stood about the mouth of the opening yesterday after noon as If benumbed a.nd tiled to llnd comfort In the hope thut after all the men might be brought out alive. Ev ery man who came out of the pit was pulled aside and asked the prospect but the answer was always the same, they were merely timbering about the fool of the shaft and had not been any where near the spot where the men are supposed to be. The grief depleted on the counten ances of the relatives of the entombed miners was heartrending. Although most of them were Induced to leave the vicinity of he shaft early in the morning there were some for whom suspense was more agonizing than a knowledge of the worst, and all day long a little group of a dozen or more sad-faced women sat on a pile of mine props and anxiously watched the car riage as It made Its noisy ascent from the pit below. At first their expres sions of grief were terrible in intensity, but as the hours passed they subsided into stilled sobs, broken only occasion ally by the louder wall of more poig nant suffering as a keener knowledge of the terrible (ate which had befallen her husband forced Itself on the mother of some fatherless child. Among the little group was one sweet-faced wo man, younger and seemingly more del icately-nurtured than the others, whose grief was too deep to vent Itself in sobs. Silently, while the others conversed, she watched the work of the men and listened to the ominous rumbling noise of the carriage as it descended to tin; cavernous depths where lay burled all that was dear to her, a husband to whom she had plighted her troth but a little over a year ago. By her side sat another womun wlthababe In her urms yet even she with her fatherless infant was not the object of more heartfelt sympathy than the bride of a year whose grief was heightened by what would, had not the terrible calamity oc curred, soon have been her crowning Joy. The portion of the mine affected by the fall comprises the fifth and sixth veins, the outef portion of the fall de scribing a fall with a slope connect ing the two veins near the rim of the circle. E. L. Fuller, of this city, secretary of the Newton Coal company, which operates the mine where the disaster occurred, said last night to a Tribune reporter: "This accident is an awful blow. Since the moment we heard of It we have been using every energy to reach the men who were entombed by the fall and have not given up hopes of getting at least a portion of them out of the mine alive. For the present we are compelled to confine our atten tlon entirely to making the place safe about the foot of the shaft and that will be accomplished before midnight. We can then press on toward the point where the men are and hope to make good progress.. The work will be prose cuted just aa rapidly as possible you can depend upon that." At midnight the rescue party was working near the head of the slope which la about 1,100 feet from the point where the first gang of men were -at work. The cracking and Squeezing had almost subsided. -U . Tl rmmnmnA hnwr hntit 1 Xfl tble Cave in the Twin morning, making any progress almost Impossible. It is safe to say that none of the men entombed In the mine will ever come out alive. STORY OF THE GREAT DISASTER. Name of the Men WhoAre Entombed in the Mine. The most disastrous cave-In In the history of the Wy..mlng coal regions occurred early this morning at the Twin shaft of the Newton t.'oal com pany at the Lackawanna and Blooms burg junction, rittstoii. The number of the victims can not be positively stated as all the busses, in cluding General Superintendent M. J. I.angan. lire umoug them, but careful estimates places the number between seventy and eighty, ubout one-half of whom were foreigners, whose names It is Impossible iy present to get. The list of missing mi far compiled Is as I follows: M. J. LANft AX, mine superintendent and mayor pro lein of I'ittslou, married, leaves wife and ten children; 41 i North .Main street. M. J. LYNKTT. mine foreman, married. seven children: 412 North Main strict. AI.KX. MVOK.UK'K. Hie boss, married, ten eliililren: 48 Union street. v THOMAS TENPENNV. assistant lire boss, married, three children. THOMAS C'ARDO.V, assistant lire boss. married, leaves a n'fe. JOHN o'llOYXK assistant lire boss, two children. ANTHONY KAN 14, driver boss, elude. THOMAS ML'KPHY, driver boss, wi dower. ONKY M'OriRK. track layer, married, four children. JOHN HILL, married, two children. .MICH A 101, HfliHKS night lire boss, mar ried, one child. JAM ICS DAILY, footman, pillule. MICHAEL CONN vi fool man, single. JOHN HAHT, footman single. M. O.VrUHAN, footman, single. JAM ICS UOLDRN, married, two children. JAMES WALL, married, eight children; and son Thomas. JOHN KE1IOE. married, six children; and his son. Frank. CDWAKD DKLAXIiY, married, four chil dren. PKTKH MARTIN laborer, single. MAKTIN (HLimiDK. laborer, single. DOMINICK O'MALLEY. miner, single. JA.MK3 M' DONALD married, two chil dren. THOMAS BATIRKTT. miner, single. JOHN AND THOMAS QAEFNEV. broth- em, former single, latter murrled, seven children. PKTKH JOYCE, laborer, single. !TKU KKLLKY. laborer, single. JOHN SILVESTER, murrled, three chil dren. PATRICK C'OSTKLLO, miller, single. F. O'BKIBN. wife, no children. TIMOTHY DERKIi', laborer, single. PATRICK HL'AXK, marrleJ, seven chil dren. JAMES BURKE, laborer, nlng'.e. MICHAEL IJI'KKB, miner. single. EDWARD KILDEA, mauled, two chil dren. THOMAS DEWHJ, laborer, single. ROBERT H ASTON, master mechanic. single. DANIEL WARD, machinist, married, two children. ANTHONY TOLLASKI, married, one child. PETER SAVISK1. married, five children. ANDREW SLOMASKI, married, two chil dren. SIMON MASCOVITZ, married, two chil dren. JOHN CANDAXISH. single. ANTHONY GORDON, footman, single. OWEN LKE, door boy. DAN GAVIN, miner, single. MICHAEL FORD, miner, single. JOHN O'BOYLK, laborer, single. J. W. HART, married, three children. JOHN HOISTRICH, married, three chil dren. JOSEPH ZUHINDO, married, five chil dren. HOW ESTIMATES ARE BASED. It Is known that a gang of twenty- six Polanders and Hungarians went In at midnight and that llfteen or twenty others were on the early shift. It is on the strength of this Information that the estimates of the total number of victims are based. That all the bosses and such a large nu:v.ber of men were at work at this fx? Is accounted for by the fact that there was a bad "squeeze" and efforts were being made to prevent It from reaching serious proportions. The fall occurred in the sixth or lowest vein commonly called 'the Red Ash vein and the "squeeze," the fore runner of a fall, began Saturday morn lug. Operations were at once begun to prop up the "working" roof and It was continued all day. At 7.30 o'clock In the evening a night shift of thirty men went on to continue the work of fight ing the squeeze. About 11 o'clock It became so bad that the men could not work except In spells and as a genernl cave-In was threatened unless heroin measures were taken it was decided to send for reinforcements. Messengers were dispatched for Su perintendent Langan. the bosses and all the men living adjacent to the mine. How many responded to this call Is not known, as the foreman who took their names went In with them, carrying the time book along. The engineer, John Ford, says that he did not take par ticular notice of how many he let down, but is quite positive that there were over thirty. ONLY ONES WHO ESCAPED. Of all the men who were In the mine at the time the only ones who escaped were the water boy, Frank Sheridan, who was returning to the wen with his two palls of water; John Rleker, a driv er, who was hauling out some cars; Jacob Adams, a car runner, the pump runner, who was at the foot of the shaft, and a couple of miners who re fused to work any longer on account of the danger, and who were on their way out at the time of the fatality. One of these was Michael Hughes, whose brother, Edward, is Included among the victims. All the rest are either burled beneath the fall, or, If they escaped this, which Is not likely, doomed to an even more terrible death, aa their egress Is blocked on the one side by the fall and D . rfjt.n fly '', -l.f ..-11 f m . .. rounds them In the worked out portions of the mine. ' There were three large falls, each of which caused terrific concussions and reports that were heard and felt In the heart of Pittston. a mile away, shaking the houses and arousing people from their sleep. There was also an almost constant succession of smaller falls, which kept the whistle of the speaking tube In the engine room blowing at in tervals fur several hours. FIRST FALL AT 2.G5 A. M. ' The first fall occurred at 2.55 a. m., the second and third following In rapid suc cession. Then the small falls set In and continued almost unceasingly until daylight, when the force of the "work ing" seemed to have spent Itself. "Squeezes" have continue 1 ever since, and were still continuing at nightfall. Men were at work in what Is undoubt edly the very center of the fall as they were attacking the workings which were the most active and consequently which must have been the most affected by the cave-In. This point Is about 2.250 feet from th- toot of the shaft and Is figured to be directly beneath V'amp bell's Ledge. ,11 !. reached by a zig-zag road, two stretches of which are steep slopes and Is 4"4 fet from the surface. It was about COO feet down the third and lust slope that the men were working. There M a split In the vein and the rock that has fallen forms the roof of the lower part of the Vein and the Hour of the upper portion. The bottom, it might be suld hus dropped out of the top vein known as No. a, into the working of thu lower vein No. 6, where the men Wti-e at work.. The rock between the two portions of the vein averuges twelve feet In thickness and the men who have pushed their way to the region of the settling say that this whole twelve foot deck rock has gone down. The first fall started the second, the second caused a third and so It kept on until now the whole vein Is supposed to have caved In. The disturbance begins nt a point one hundred feet from the foot of the shaft and extended over a region that can onlybe surmised, but which Is not less than thirty acres. ITS THE LOWEST VEIN. The Red Ash Is the lowest vein worked, and there are only two veins worked out above It. Neither of these nor the surface show any effects of the cave-in. The work of rescue, although a seem ingly hopeless task, is being pushed with all the vigor that is possible. Immediately nfter the calamity oc curred the- men on the outside of the mine caused a fire alarm to be sounded In order to bring' asu' .ance and soon the mouth of the shu was surrounded by a large crowd. Four of the first ' .on to arrive on the scene, Michael Finnan, John McCor mlck, John Doyk- and John Daley, des cended the dust-choked shaft, but could not venture far owing to the fact that they were not provided with good safety lamps. They saw enough, however, to convince them that there was net a living soul within the mine. Upon reaching the surface, they with Sheridan, the water boy, and Bicker, the driver, told what they knew of the situation below and plans were made accordingly. It was out of the question to attempt to reach the men then through the present worklngso It'wns decided to push along an old gangway through the abandoned purt of the mine yid then cut off through 'the worked out chambers to the rear of where the fall occurred, It being thought it was pos sible that the fall to the rear of the men might have not been as heavy ns in front and the rescuers could therefore get nearer to them. There was also the faint glimmer of a hope that the men or some of them might not have been caught In the fall and were working their way out from the rear along the face of the mine and through the old workings by which the rescuers would approach. LEADERS ALL GONE. There was no leader to show them the way as every man who was competent to direct them was entombed. So with only an Intricate map and their own vague knowledge of the mine these daring men begun their dunger-fraught Journey. But It was all In vain. They had proceeded only a short distance in the old workings when they encountered gas of such density that it was suicidal to attempt to pass through It. They retraced their steps and resolved to face the fall and dig their way to the en tombed men. This work Is now going on. The operations had to begin at a point about one hundred feet from the foot of the shaft as the fall begins at that point Large pieces of rock are falling con tinually about them but they are not deterred In their heroic work by any thought of self. All they seem to re alize is that seventy or eighty of their brothers are emboweled In the earth and must be rescued if alive and If dead their bodies must be recovered. They are making slow progress ow ing to the difficulties which only super human effort can overcome and it can not even be conjectured when, if ever. the men will be reached. One cannot repress the emotion which arises from a contemplation of the work of tliese rescuers. Nothing could be more heroic, nothing more self-sac rlllcing. It is even chances that death or serious Injury will be the lot of any man who enters the mine in Its present condition but, despite this, all day long little bands of miners could be seen tramping along the railroads or across the fields dressed In their working clothes and armed with their tools bound for the ill-fated shaft to volun teer their services In the noble work. And not Infrequently at the company's office can be heard "Some more man you want? Me and my butty, we come. You tella us when." NUMEROUS VOLUNTEERS. So many have already volunteered that there are names enough on the list to keep up regular reinforcements for several days. The rescuing party is divided Into several squads of tlx, each 'Continued on Pa. tJ WILLIAM C WHITNEY VERY DESPONDENT Has But Little Hope of Checking the Avalanche of Silver at Chicap. THE RESULT OF ITS ADOPTION Recognition of the White Metal by the Convention Will Break I'p the Democratic PnrtyThe South nod Went Have Apparently Paused the Point ol Dixcuftsion. New York, June 28. The hopeless con dition of the affairs in Democracy's camp has never been more freely shown than in the despondency of Willium C. Whitney, who undertook some time ago to stem the free silver current that Is sweeping over the party. The Tribune today publishes an Interview with Mr. Whitney. In which he talked despond ently of the Democratic prosfwets. al though he declared he was going to Chicago to aid in a most determined light against free silver. The Tribune icporter tulked with Mr. Whitney In his home, at No. 2 West Fifty-seventh street. "How Is the campaign getting on?" asked the reporter. "Like ISiliO, the truth must be told," Mr. Whitney replied. "What are the chances of sound money In Chicago'." "Unless the situation changes, and our southern and western friends are disposed to reason with us, no chance whatever." "What do you hear from the south and west'.'" 'Judging by the letters I ' receive. there Is no apparent disposition to dis cuss the matter at Issue.I fear it has gone beyond that point." COULD DO NOTHING. 'Have you ashed Senators, Gorman and Ilriee to attend the convention as a party duty?" "No. They have no reason to believe that they could accomplish anything. None of us have." If a free-coinage candidate Is nom inated on a free-coinage platform, what will be the result?" "Practically It will disrupt the Demo cratic party. No power on earth can either coerce or persuade sound-money Democrats to forsake the fundamental principle of Democracy. They do not regard this question as either factional, sectional or political. The mainten ance of national credit Is a matter of national honor. The Saratoga plat form emphasizes this fact. It says that the ligld maintenance of the present gold standard at the present time is 'essential to the preservation of our national credit, the redemption of our public pledges and the keeping Invo lute of our country's honor.' That Is New York's position. It Is as positive as words can express. And It cannot be changed." COMPROMISE IMPOSSIBLE. "Then you do not look for a com promise?" Compromise Is Impossible. Debase ment of the currency would be more than monstrous In effect. It would be abandonment of principle. It wculd disgrace evrry citizen. It would not be merely dishonest, it would be dis honorable. And you cannot compro mise a question of honor." "What do you expect to do In Chi cago.' 'Do everything In nur power to save the party and protect the country. That Is the plain duty of every Democrat who goes to Chicago; and It Is none the less the duty of those who stay at home not to hamper the efforts of those who go. And by those who stay at home I mean not merely Democrats; I mean to Include every good citizen, regardless of politics or prejudices. The crisis which has come uuon us Is the most serious menace to national prosperity and the welfare of the people since 18C0. This is the time when all men who love their country must stand together to avert. If possible, public disgrace and the wreck of hundreds of thousands of homes throughout the entire country." "You do not despair of BUceesE, then?" "No. We cannot yet tell whether the knowledge of the attitude of eastern Democrats will affect the determina tion of the southern and western Dem ocrats, who have nut known until with in the last week how strong the feeling here Is. The vigorous expression of our position may cause hesitation, especial ly among the rank and tile of the Dem ocracy, who, I cannot believe, want to drive all eastern Democrats out of the party. I know some of the leaders of the movement assume that attitude, but 1 am not yet convinced thut the people are behind them. And, If not, they will muke their wishes known and felt." MR. TWJRMAN'S OPINION. He Itcgnrds Mr. Vthitiicy's Interview us Harmless in Effect. Columbus, O., June 2S. After reading the interview given by ex-Secretary W. C. Whitney in New York yesterday, in which Mr. Whitney said there seemed to be no hope of saving the Democratic party from disruption unless the south ern and western Democrats would listen to reason on the coinage question. Allen W. Tliurman gave out the following statement tonight: There Is now going on In this country an Irrepressible conflict between the British standard (gold) on the one side, and the American stamlurd (gold and silver), the money guaranteed by the constitution, on the other. Shall the Democratic party de clare In Its platform thut It favors a vio lation of the constitution; that the people shhll not obey It unless the governments or Europe give them permission to do so, This Is what all this talk about an In ternational agreement really means. This Is what the Republican party said at St, Louis. Shall tho Democratic party mere ly echo the voice of the Republican party, Is a question that cannot be suppressed and which will overshadow all others In the coming campaign. If so, why should we go to Chicago at all? Such Interviews as Mr. Whitney's will frighten no one. On the contrary they only Intensify the Issues, and his writing about the dishonesty of those who differ with him will only make them more determined. The sliver men of the west and south have long known that the Dem ocrats of Mr. Whitney's school would much prefer seeing a gold Republican president rati.jr than see a sliver Dem ocrat In the presidential chair. Mr. Whitney's Interview will make this "rfectb? elsr to every delegate who will be at Chicago, and while all will regret that Mr. Whitney has determined to leave the party they will bear it rather than to put their principles into his keeping. CALL TO SILVERITES. Mr. Diffenisrfer llrxes Friends of the White Metal to Orjaoiie for the Coming Campaign. Philadelphia. June 28. R. E. Dlffen derfer. the Pennsylvania member of the national committee of the National Sil ver party, has Issued an address to the "friends of silver in Pennsylvania," In which he scores both the old parties vigorously, charging them with being in the hands of gold monometalllsts, cor poration "bosses." money lenders and the banks. Continuing, he says: "But the people are thinking. They are reading. The press of the state and nation, with few exceptions, are In the hunds of our enemies Hessians and Tories. We must strike now for the protection of our homes and our Hag. We must organize to meet this stupend ous greed and banking grab at the polls. There are thousands upon thousands of earnest silver men In Pennsylvania and we lack organization. I, therefore, call upon all the friends of silver In each county of the state to form organiza tions within the next fifteen days and select representatives from each con gressional district for the convention to be held in St. Louis July 22. While we may not secure the electoral vote of Pennsylvania, we can elect a num ber of congressmen who are favorable to free coinage, and enough members of the legislature to hold the balance of power so as to dictate the election of a senator who will be as favorable to the white metal as our present courageous senator, the friend of the people,. J. Donald Cameron." STUCK OiTa BARGE. The Cunarder Umbria Delayed Ten Hours Near Gedney'g Channel. Defect in Steering Appartus. New York, June 28. The Cunarder Lmbria, Captain Dutton, bound out, with 479 passengers In her first cabin and 210 In the second, was stuck more than ten hours yesterday In Oedney's Channel. She left her pier, foot of Clurkson street, at 9 o'clock, In charge of Pilot Josiali Johnson, tuck fast at UM5, came off at 8.35 o'clock in the evening, and went to sea at 10 o'clock. The I'mbrla Imd struck the wreck of the conl barge Andrew Jackson, sunk by collision with the steamship Vedra on the evening of May 22, about two miles off the Hook, at the west end of edney s Channel. The position of the wreck was well known to Pilot Johnson and to Captain Dutton. The wreck was marked bv a red-und-white-stiiped spar buoy. The buoy was In plain sight In the clear morning as the Umbria approached It. But just before the ship reached the wreck her steering gear took an unac countable freak and refused to work properly. The Umbria was .to have passed to the north of the wreck, but she took a sharp sheer to starboard and aimed straight at it. Captain Dutton and Pilot Johnson saw that she was go ing to strike the wreck, and the order wus signalled to the engine room to stop nnrt then to back full speed. But her headway was too great, and the blir Lunarder went crashing over the coal barge. The barge lay almost along the chnn nel. with the bow at the endge of the channel and the stern pointing diagonal ly out Into It. The Umbria struck the wreck on the starboard quarter and went diagonally across It, three-fourths of her own length. Then she stopped Her bow was well clear of the old barge. and she went down by the head so far that as her stern came up the broad blades of her propeller were vlsiole above the water. The Umbria Is the swiftest of the Blngle screw fleet. She was designed bj Sir William Pearce, and, on her trial trip, she made 21 knots an hour, de veloping 13,500-horsepov.er. On hor maiden voyage, completed on Nov. 2, 1884, she covered the Queenstown route In nine days. This was considered a fast winter trip. TORNADO IN KENTUCKY. West I.cwisville Visited by n Cyclone. Several Persons Injured. Owensboro. Ky., June IS. West Louisville, u little town near here, was struck by n tornado at I.SO o'clock yes terday afternoon. The house of C. L. Clark was wrecked and Miss Pearl Hicks, who was sitting there, was In stantly killed. Clark was knocked senseless and will die. St. Alphonsus' Cutholic church, at St. Joseph, was completely destroyed. A great many residences and outbuildings were de stroyed or badly damaged. St. Jo seph's academy was ulso destroyed. It Is impossible to get a complete list of the injured. THE M:VS THIS MOItMNU. Weather Indication Today : Fair; Rising Temperature. 1 Eighty Miners Kntomhed. Whitney Predicts a C'ollupse. Call to Silver Advocates. Stuck on a Barge. 2 Great McKinley Rally at Canton. Anson's Cust-OITs Became Stars. Jumped from a Train. 3 Eighty Miners Entombed (Continued). 4 Editorial. Comments of the Press 5 Merolo's Life Near an End, Murderer Tonl Sentenced. Christopher .MofTutt Killed, Co. A. Scored the Higheat 8 (Sports) Seranton Defeated Base Ball Kossl;i, After the Fight. 7 Suburban News; Market and Stock Reps $ News Up and Down the Valley. ' " LI Hung Changes His Tour. Butler Knocked Out In One Round, FINLEY'S Special. Sale of SnTTTTftpir WAISTS Our stock Is uiiBurDaased In atvlfv workmanship and assortment, and to close the season we offer fecial Miceiaaits To Purchasers. .... Aa the following prices will show, wo guarantee them to be the very best values offered this season: Taney Lawn Waists, all colors, 48c. Fancy Percale Waists, all sixes, Uc. Better quality Percale Waists, 95c. Fancy Stripe Lawn Waists, $1.19. Extra Fine Waists at $1.38, $1.45, $1.65. The Celebrated "King Waists." in Percales, Lawns and Dimities, at $1.44, $1.75, $1.98, $2.15. These goods sell themselves. Plain,. White Waists In Batiste and Dimity, Plain Black Himalaya Waists, Silk Jacquard House Waists; also a su perior line of Children's Dimity and Lawn Dresses, Boys' Kilt Suits - la Pique and. Fine Galatea Cloth at great ly reduced prices. 510 AND 512 LACKAWANNA AVENUE Our Nation's Greatest Holiday will soon ""ere. We have everything In shoes for Bum mer except feet, and our patrons are furnishing them handsomely. Here are shoes for all, for all occa sions, for anywhere and everywhere. iEW!S,ffiilYAVIES 114 AND 116 WYOMINO AVE. A LARQE AND WELL SELECTED STOCK OP FINE CAN BE SEEN AT 8 S When you pay for Jewelry you might an well get the best. A fine line of Novelties for Ladles and Gentlemen. W. J. Wenchel 405 Spruce St. s ill, 9 9 Fi Ready Mixed Tinted Oloss Paints, Strictly Pure Linseed Oil, Guaranteed.
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