THE "SCBANTOK TBIBUNE-SATTTBDAT MOBNINOr JTJLT ' 25, 1896.1 V - FIELD AND FflNHING'S dONIOR. i 5 BY JOHN PAUL BOCOCK. S N Copyricht, 1898, by the Bacheller Syndicate.! S PART I. " . I was asked one morning by my legal preceptors. Potter & Patterson, to help prepare for trial a law suit they had brought' against .the Children's In dustrial Home. I was not yet eld enough to be admitted to the bar, hav lac barely passed my twentieth birth day, but I had assisted Mr. Patterson in the trial of a number of Important cases and was thoroughly competent to look up and digest authorities as well as to Beek out and examine wit nesses before trial. I knew how' to col lect italierit facts and brief leading au thorities, and I looked forward eagerly to the day when I could open a case, as making' the first argument is oalled, with my preceptor and friend Bitting by, making - ready for the closing speech. ' Lawyer Patterson had already warned me With a laugh against "open ing" a case "so wide" that he. "could not close .it"" But I fairly ached for the chance.. I. didn't see much of inter est ahead, however, in this suit of "Wil son H. Peckham and Wife against the Children's- Industrial Home." It was a fine May morning and I could not help thinking that Isaak Walton's gentle lore was .mure to my taste Just. then than Sir William. Blackstone's. Of course,. 11 r. Patterson had a gen eral Idea of the facts on which our bill in equity, the first paper In such a pro ceeding, was based, for Mr. ltter had talked them over with him before draw ing the pleadings. Mr. Potter always drew our pleadings; Mr. Patterson said an advocate who was sure of his plead ings had his case half won. . But he thought It just as well that I should call on Mr. and Mrs. Peckham that morning and make careful notes of the facts an dates which he would have to depend on them to prove under oath. I found them on the porch of the handsome villa Mr. Peckham had taken the spring before. I was struck by the mournful beauty of Mrs. Peckham's face and the graceful melancholy of her voice and gestures. I suppose the near approach of the date when the sad story of her life would have to be told, in public, at the county seat, fifteen miles away, had opened the-old wounds. And when I remembered that the ob ject of this very suit. In whose prepara tion I was now assisting, was to compel the managers of the Children's Indus trial home to reveal to Mrs. Peckham the fate of her baby boy, committed to their charge by a false friend nearly twenty years before, I realized sud denly how gentle I ought to be in my treatment of so painful a subject. Mr. Peckham was a handsome man of military bearing and dignified man ners. He came to meet me as I walked up the lawn and shook his head when I explained my employer's Instructions. "I suppose it can't be helped," he said, "but I am exceedingly sorry that Mrs. Peckham must be harassed In this way. She has seemed to me unusually de pressed In spirits-of late." The lady herself showed no hesitation when her husband, leaning over the back of her long porch chair, explained what I had come for, . . . "I will tell you, as best t can," she said, slowly, ''of this great grler of my life."' Her eyes sought those of her husband, who sat by her side, hold ing her hand with that delicate ten derness which Is a husband's highest compliment to his wife. Phe read en couragement in them and went on: "I had been living; happily. In the town of P for nearly two years, when my first husband. Captain Kste, received a cablegram, one Friday night, announcing the dangerous illness of his mother, in Milan. He was her only son and the thought came Into the minds of us both, by a 'lightning flash of sympathy, that he ought to go to her. A steanwr sailed from New Tork the next day at noon, and. although the last train to the city had gone down that night. It would be easy for him to catch the boat Saturday morning. iWe kissed our baby boy, Just a year old, as he lay asleep in his cradle and et about packing my husband's trunk.. He thought he would be back again in a month, surely,, andi somehow the dreadful shock of the parting had not yet come over me. "Weeks passed and I heard no more from him. I tried to imagine him Over come by the death of his mother, but I could not understand how he could be forgetful of his wife. A month passed, and I wrote to the American1 consul at Milan, asking him to cable me as soon as he had anything definite to communicated ' No cable message came, and one day In my desperation I turned' to my neighbor, Mrs. Bartlett, PA1H CORED IN AH 1HSTAKT. Lrt Radwsy-s Ready Relief be used the . Ilrst Indication of Pain or Uneasiness t H threatened with Disease or Sickness, the Cure will be made before the family doctor would ordinarily reach the house. CURES THE WORST PAINS in from one to twenty minutes. Not one hour after reading this advertisement need any one SUFFER WITH PAIN. 7 ACHES AND PAINS. For headache (whether sick or nervous), toothache,- neuralgia, rheumatism, lumba go, pains and weakness in the back, spina or kidneys,, pains around the liver, pleuri sy, swelling of the Joints and pains of all kinds, the application of Railway's Ready Relief will afford immediate ease, nd Its continued use for a few days el fact a permanent cure. A CURE FOR ALL , . Summer Complaints, Dysentery, Diarto, Cholra Morbus. A half to a teaspoonfu of Ready Relief In a half tumbler of water, repeated as often aa the discharges continue, and a flannel saturated with Ready Relief placed over the stomach and bowels will afford Immediate relief and soon effect a cure. Internally A half to a teaspoonful In a half tumbler of water will in a few mln ' utes cure cramps, spasms, sour stomach, nausea, vomiting, heartburn, nervousness, sleeplessness, sick headache, flatulency and internal pains. . flats rla In Its various forms cured and Pro vented. Therfc 1s). trot a remedial agent, in the world that will cure Fever and Ague and all other Malarious, Bilious and other fe vers, aided' by RADWAY'S PILLS, so quick aa RADWAY'S READY RELIEF. Travelers ahould always carry a bottle Of Radway's Ready ReHef with them. A few drops in water will prevent sickness or pains from change of water.' It fs better than French brandy or bitters as a stimu " . ..: " Miners sua lumoermen snouia always M provided with" It. Pries U cents a bottle. Bold by all drug gists. .( - , ... . as Bhe sat on my little vine-covered piazza, comforting me, and cried outi 'Oh, Fanny, will you keep little Henry if I go to Milan? If I don't do some thing, I shall die! I can't sit here and Just wait any longer Then I re member I burst into tears and sobbed on Fanny Bartlett's. shoulder until she soothed me with a- speedy acquiescence in my prayer. My little boy, she said, should be as dear to her as though he were her own. And. God forgive me, I believed her! "With no less haste than fop my hus band's I prepared for my own depar- 4- J 11 rU.V mm 4i m i f rjf 'ft VImfiflW "HE SMILED AND COOED. ture. ' He had left me a hundred or two dollars in ready money, which I also left In the local bank to Mrs. Bart lett's credit. My diamond earrings, my husband's present to me a short time before, on my birthday. I took straight into New York to the great Jewel house from which I knew he had purchased them. I explained the circumstances and received for them in cash. $400. He had paid $r,00; but I was delighted with the bargain I had made. ' I made a few hasty purchases, bought a ticket to Genoa and hurried home to my baby. The next day but one I was to sail. ThP night I slept but little. All the next day It was Friday, June 13 Fanny spent with me. She had no chil dren of her own, and her husband was away from home weeks at a- time on business.. My house was to be Bhut up and my baby's nurse was to go to Fanny's with baby. "Saturday morning, the 14th, I kissed my brave little laddy, my blue-eyed baby, good-by and hurried to the train. In an agony of tears. Fanny petted me and cheered me all she could, and hold him up so that I could see him almost all the way to the station. . lie smiled and cooed." Mrs. Peckham's voice choked: and, on looking up, I perceived that her head was resting on her husband's shoulder and that tears were stream ing down his cheeks. There, thought I, is a Becond marriage whose happi ness may yet make up for the misery of the first. - "I made a quick voyage," MK Teck ham went on; by and by, "and reached Milan without misadventure. I drove straight to the American consul's and was most kindly received. After watch ing for many hours' nt the bedside of his dying mother, my husband hud himself expired suddenly oh the day of the funeral. They ha been burled in one tomb. The mother, havlnfr been a resident of Milan for so many years, her friends, in the confusion attendant on the double fatality, lost sight en tirely of the home and the loved ones the son had left In a foreign land. No body knew, so nobody thought any thing about me and little Henry. When I learned that my husband was dead, I fainted. The consul had not seen or heard of him. It was a long time before I was able to talk of my troubles. The consul was very kind. He didn't know any thing about my baby boy at home, and I couldn't tell him. 1 was for weeks in a weary dream of uhcohsclouiuiess, I y- Wng motionless, speechless, on 'the hos pital cot, waklng'now and then to the reality of my iwoe and again . lapsing Into feverish visions and black depths of nothingness. Brain fever, the doc tors callled It, In those: days. When I could sit up In my -cot- and brush my hair before- a hand-mirror I didn't know myself. "You poor thing, you poor, emaciated sufferer, I thought, you are indeed to be pitied. The angels must, weep for you, here alone, friendless and. help- "OH, GOD, MT BABY BOY!" less, a widow In a strange land! Toil thought to And him here, your protec tor, your husband,, and you found him dead! Your only welcome was the grave. "Now, as I sat so, commiserating my self, I could see in the mirror a, fright ened look steal into my own eyes and I grew cold and trembled. What else was there? What other, fiercer, sharp er grief was this, that had been gnaw ing at my heart-strings - these long weeks of oblivion? What was it that thrlled me now with terrible anguish. "All of a sudden the hand glass dropped to the tiled floor and broke In to a dozen pieces, and I shrieked with allmy strength: "My baby! Oh, Ood! my baby boy! and I fell back once more into merciful oblivion.". PART) It "All throgh the racking pangs and frenzies of the yet more dreadful fever which now preyed upon me," continued Mrs.Peekham, "I talked and sobbed and prayed and shrieked of just my baby boy. "There was nobody there that knew me, except the consul; he didn't know anything about my wee lad so far away or how one little bit of news from him might have healed up the poor stricken mother's heart and soothed the throbbing of her brain He was gentleness and kindness itself, all that a manly, courteous gentleman should be; and I'll never, never cease to be grateful to him for It." Here Bhe patted her husband's shoul der as he leuned over her chair and held her hand in his, looking down all the while in her beautiful, melancholy eyes of gray. So you were the consul, my fine fellow, I thought. "The doctors quite gave me up this time, and when I did regain consci ousness, they say I had forgotten all about baby and home and husband. I could only sit on the long portico and look out through the stone pilasters to the smiling bay. - "It was October before I was strong enough to be moved, and when I start ed for Havre, the consul and his good patient sister, whom I had learned to love, went with me. It was they, too, sir, who brought me back here to P safe home again. But not to baby I have never Been my boy since the Sat urday morning when Fanny Bartlett held him up, In her arms.laughlng and crowing, twenty years ago. Mrs. Peckham's voice brokct Into a sob, and. Indeed, I too was much af fected. Her husband, who I now un derstood, had resigned the consul ship at Milan to accompany her back to the United States, took up the story here for her. "We found, sir," said he, nlowly and distinctly, "that the Bnrtletts had gone to Sun Francisco to live. v Not hearing from the child's mother, they had at first marveled and fretted, and finally made what may have seemed to them proper disposition of the child. My wife had no near relatives living and no other close friend here, for now, you see, we have chosen our home not far away from where she and the Bartletts then lived. They hnd not written to her about the boy because they had never heard from her. They could not know that she was ill among strang ers, unable to write, borken down mentally and physically under Intense sufferings. So they placed the child In the Children's Industrial home, a highly respectable private Institution, as you know, and it Is to find out what became of him that this suit you are now preparing for has been brought. For when we reached here, the boy also had disappeared. "For eighteen years we have sought him In vain. We followed the Bartletts to California and thence to the Sand wich Islands, and would have followed them to the bottom of the sea if the gale which wrecked their steamer hud not spared ours. We advertised and we hired detectives and employed law yers. I hnd no children, and I longed to welcome the lost darling of my dear wife. It was not until last year that we found that he had been placed by the Bartletts In the Children's Indus- "NO, NO, NOT THAT!" trial home Just before they started for San Francisco. It nearly broke my wife's heart when the president of the home informed us that by the advice of counsel he must decline to tell us what had become of the boy. He acknowl edged, however, that soon after the Bartletts had entered him, under an as sumed name, the lad had been removed from the home. By whom he refused to say. And that is the history of the law suit which is to be tried next month." I went back to the office of Potter & Patterson wondering at the existence of statutes which allowed such cruel ties to be perpetrated in the name of the law. Field & Funning, the attor neys for the home, took the position that he should not now be unsettled In "his present family relations," having gro,wn up In absolute Ignorance even of his baptismal name. This was tho only hint we had had that the babe had lived. At the opening of the term the cal endar, or list of cases to be heard, was formally culled. Peckham versus Tlvi Children's Home would probably be reached the third clay. Field & Fan ning protested, through a Junior part ner, whom I had not seen before, that they could not be ready at that time, but the Judge declared that the case must be tried when reached. I took this as an augury In our favor. Field & Fanning's Junior left the courtroom when I did, and I was filled with envy when I heard that he was going to try the cose, himself for his firm. It seemed he had Just been admitted to partner ship and was very anxious to succeed In this his first serious undertaking. 1 was equally determined to relax no ef fort in behalf of Mr. Peckham. OC course, Mr. Patterson was to bear the brunt of our side of the case. When court opened on the day of trial neither old Mr. Field nor Mr. Fanning was present; they had left everything to their Junior. President Carter, of the Children's Home, a venerable-looking man of great wealth and many charities, sat by his young counsel with several of the board of directors. Mr. Carter was a retired lawyer himself, and I was rather sur prised to learn that Field & Fannlng's Jvnlor was his son, and that President Carter had been young Lawyer Cart er's first client. The old man had asked Field & Fanning If they were willing to trust his son with the conduct of the case, and they, not without some mis glvings, it turned out, agreed to let young Carter manage It. Well, we put In our evidence, and Mrs. Peckham's story, told In court much as she had told It to me. brought tears to many eyes. Young Carter, as handsome a youth as I ever saw, cross examined her with dignity and Intelli gence. His sympathetic yet searching questions moved her greatly; when he asked her if she did not think that Mrs. Bartlett was warranted by her long and unexplained absence In believing she had abandoned her child, Mrs. Peck ham's emotion became uncontrollable. Khe stretched her soft white hands ap peallngly out to him from the witness box with such a look In her eyes of agony as no beholder could forget. "No, no, not that!" Bhe moaneu. l thought I saw her cross-examiner turn pale. As his lip quivered for a moment I imag ined he must have thought of his own mother. Yet I knew old Lawyer-Car ter had been a Widower for many years. The dignity of the law soon reasserted Itself in the court room, however, and the case proceeded. When it came to his closing speech In behalf of the home and the beneflclent statutes which had created and sustained it, and the benev olent men who directed it, young Car ter s tact was masterly. Mr. Patter- son on our side had appealed for the broken-hearted mother, her lifetime of anguish, her heart hunger still unsat istled, her alTecttons still clinging to the babe she had prayed and wt'Ot for mi : "MADAM, THERE IS YOUR SON. this score of years. He did all that any man could do and would have carried any Jury irreslstably. But the Judge wns Imperturable. Young Carter pleaded for the future of the boy whose legal adoption had given others a right to his love and obedience, who had learned to regard his present protectors as his parents, and whose life had been ordained by Providence, in accordance with the laws governing the Children's Industrial home, amid new scenes and faces. "I do not know," he said. In conclusion "where or who that lad may be, or Into whose kindly hands he has fallen. I am assured by the president of the lnsti tution, the venerable man you see here before you, thnt the babe has fulfilled the fondest wishes of his adopted par ents and that he is Ignorant that others ever had a claim on him. God In His Infinite wisdom has seen lit to separate his path from that of lils fond mother who bore him. We may wonder, but we may not repine" At this point the extraordinary char acter of the scene around him disturbed the speaker in his nrdent eloquence. Everybody else had been watching it with growing amazement. The Judge's eyes were fixed on Mr. Carter, sr. The latter's face was convulsed with emo tlon.hls eyes seemed starting from their sockets with anguished Intensity he gazed at the sobbing figure of this mother, who for twenty years had mourned her son, dead only to her. With a violent effort,- a hoarse cry, the president of the children's home arose to his feet and fairly shrieking: "Mud am, there Is your son," pointed to the Impassioned orator who at that mo ment paused, turned ns white as this paper on which I am writing, and with a look of unutterable regret, of piteous entreaty, fell Insensible over the table And to him, sobbing:- "I knew it, I knew it,' flew his mother Indeed. For a few minutes there was a re laxation of tense nerves and a general unbending of brows and drying of eyes It rarely falls to the lot of any man to see such a spectacle. Court was In stantly adjourned and nn entry made on tho minutes of diseontlnance by mil tual consent. And to the now smiling mother, the light of happiness tenderly glowing In her fair face, the wretched old man explained how he had himself adopted the boy, not long after Mrs, Bartlett had placed him In the home. and had grown to love him as his own until he had been unable even after her suit was brought to confess nnd surren der. And thut's the way Mrs. Peck ham's case was won for her, unwitting ly, by her own son. HOUSEHOLD HINTS. Worsted mats can be washed without failing by Using salt in the water. If a piece of camphor gum Is placed In the drawer, where are kept dress waists that are trimmed with steel It will prevent the steel from tarnishing. The Wedgwood pottery has taken on a new form.- In addition to the familiar blues It now appears In a sage green that is eminently cool looking and suited to summer decoration. Potatoes baked in their skins should have a piece cut off the ends to allow the steam to escape. This assures their coming out dry and mealy. They should never be placed on the table in their skins. . The oilcloth on a kitchen floor Is a fre quent source of perplexity, yet there Is a simple way of keeping it clean and bright. Go over it twice a week with a tlannnel wet in warm water. Then wipe the lloor perfectly dry and after ward rub it well with skim milk. A mixture of cloth, pumice stone and common soda well pounded and passed through a sieve, then made Into a paste with water, is excellent for removing stains from marble. It should be rubbed over the marble, left for a few hours, i44MMMHtMIUMllMtMMHM SPECULATION MADE SAFE Lwn ImHiitliiiL'. TjTfstnra' CharUreit Com puny, Cat it tnl tH0,u mi. jnctiriMirated iwr r tint U.h of llie HUt vt New York. (iaarnntfe Denirtm-nt Thin- Company jr an ran t4n inf rtoin ami xiHvuintorw in .tomtit, ttiockR, Unttu. Cotton, 1'ruviMtnox, Milling hnrew ami all Corn Uirxlltiet dealt In iion return !,. Kirlmntfen afro hint uirttn iiiivmunt of a numU iremluni, tliyrr-by i-ut hit? thorn with idle fund of wliuirv.T amount tc pfH-rat' In any Market without aunilriR ,Ui risk Guaranty Bond fiav'itleln UM Ixmieri t vtry fllt-nt Particular m.it kxl f n-- to nnnUcnntu, I.WtT4lKH Cll KTr'Kr:i COMPANY,) llrood St-,Nw Y.,rk MMMMtlMMMMMMMHMMMti MT. PLEASANT COAL AT R ETA I U, Coal of the best quality for domcstlo use and of all sizes, Including Buckwheat and Blrdscye, delivered in any part of the city at the lowest price. Orders received at the Office, first floor. Commonwealth building, roam No. 6; telephone No. 2C24, or at the mine, tele phone No. 272. will be promptly attended to.Dc-alers supplied at the mine. WM.T. SMITH. AYLESWORTH'S MEAT MARKET Tbe Finest In the City. The latest Improved tarnish' Ings and apparatus for keeping meat; butter and eggs. 223 Wyoming Avenue. KCIf" la Taonf wulioiitJ? I then washed oft with a soft cloth and a little sweet oil. A good way to peel ripe tomatoes Is to put them into a frying basket and plunge the basket for a second into boil ing water to loosen the skins. This is particularly the best way when one Is preparing a quantity of tomatoes and wishes to keep them all firm and hard. If the boiling water is poured over tljem In a pan the tomatoes at the bottom are quite sure to become soft before they are peeled. Window screens of Japanese cedar fretwork are in favor; they are used either in the natural light color or fin ished to resemble olive wood, cherry, ash or mahogany. Slumber rolls of down, also rolls stuff ed with curled hair and covered with good ticking are offered ready made for covering. They are easily covered and make a rich accessory in furnishing by any clever housewife. Picturesque trllles in furnishing often give a touch of refinement; for Instance, there are the lovely little porcelain can dlesticks, in the form of a full blown pink rose, resting on a spray of green leaves in fine porcelain. Very decorative screens, threefold. In scarlet silk embroideries with long trail ing branches of blossoms and with trop ical birds, all in tine silk, are attracting enthusiastic admiration. They are es pecially handsome in large parlors where they light up sombre corners most effectively. Where windows are built low, as In very old fashioned houses, leaving con siderable space between their tops and the celling, pretty railed Bhelves make a pretty furnishing. They may be eb onized, mahoganlzed or decorated to match the woodwork of the room. The newest iron bedsteads which are making their appearance are very deco rative, and not unreasonable In price, Besides the brass finish these bedsteads are finished In enamel effect and all the delicate colors used in enameling fur niture, and this finish is associated with ornamentation In btass knobs, balls, bars and spindles. Much more pleasing than the ordinary cheap frame for pictures Is a frame made of nicely marked pine, stained by rubbing into it with a woolen rag bronze-green oil paint, thinned with turpentine. This paint, thus applied, brings out all the beauty of the veinage or the wood, giving a pleasing effect. The frame should be finished by a nar row burnished gilt beading or molding may be purchased by the foot at a rea sonable price. To prevent a bruise from discoloring apply Immediately hot water, or, of that Is not at hand, moisten some dry starch with cold water and cover the bruised place. When baking cake, on removing It from the oven place the tin containing the caKe on a damp towel for a moment and the cake may readily be taken from the tin without sticking. MANLY VIGOR NCB MORE In barmen ' With the world. OOOb completely cared niea are singing happy praises for ma Kreu!ffc, grand est and most auo cessf ul cure for sex ual weakness and lost vigor known to medical science. An accouatof this won dr.rful discovert;, la book form, with ref erence and proofs, will hAMnt. Tn 1 1 f- ferlng men (sealed) frte. Full manly vigor permanently restored. Failure impossible, ERIE MEDICAL CO., BUFFALO.N.Y. m A tMswbat ails you? Have you a feel ing of weight in ' tbe Stomach Bloating after eating Belch- ing of Wind Vomitingof Food i Waterbrash i Heartburn Bad Taste in tbe Mouth j in the Morning Palpitatioa of the J Heart, due to Distension of Stomach S Cankered Mouth Gas In the Bowels j -Loss of Flesh Fickle Appetite I Depressed, Irritable Condition of the 1 Mind Dizziness Headache Con stipation or Diarrbna? Then yon have ' nvcncnci a 3 u i rcrjiA t la f Its ai.ny fiiras. Th nt pMltln J ? cart for this dlitrcitifii ctsiplal.t Is Hewn Dyspepsia cawmi by malt, f repaid, to receipt ef JJ ceats. rmi. Stkufr. lintel 1miwrlfil. Vw i 'York, gays: "1 swiirei Immbly from rtyt-f i iptia, tut Acker's Tablet, taken after . mean, nave curea mm. i Acker Medicine Ce., .MS Chaaiben St, V. T. DUPONT'S RIMING, BUSTING MO SPORTING POWDER fanufaotured at the Wapwallopen Mills, Luierne county, Pa., and at Wil mington, Delaware. HENRY BELIN, Jr. General Agent for the Wyoming- District II WYOMINO AVENUE. Scranton, Pa Third National Bank Building. AGENCIES: THOS. FORD, Plttston, Pa. JOHN B. SMITH A SON. Plymouth, Pa. E. W. MULLIGAN. Wllkes-Barre. Pa, Agents for the Repauno Chemical Com pany's High Explosives. ASKFOfcTRE B&KLETON 01 GIVE5TI1I1 FOR SALE BY THE ATLANTIC REFIN ICQ SCRANTON STATION. I I illlUlll QHUM U,, 4l.r...U. tor Infants and Children; ' MOTHERS, Do You Know that Paregoric Bateman's Drops, Godfrey's Cordial, many so-called Soothing 6yrops, aad ' most remedies for children are composed of opium or morphine? ' P Von Know that opium aad morphine are stupefying narcotic poisons A ' Be Tea Know that in most countries druggists are not permitted to sell narcotics without labelling them poisons ? ; Po Yon Kimwt that you should not permit any medicine to be given your. Child unless you or your physician know of what it is composed r . 1 o Vow Know that Caatorla Is a purely vegetable preparation, ml that a Ust of Us ingredients is published with every bottle ? Vo KtiOMr that Costoria is the prescription of the famous Dr. SAMTTEt. PrrcBEa. That it has been la use for nearly thirty years, aud that more Costoria is -now sold than of all other remedies for children combined? , ' Po Von Know that the Patent Office Department of the United States, and of other countries, have issued exclusive right to Dr. Pitcher aud Ms assigns to use the word Castor la and Its formula, and that to Imitate them is a state prison offense ? ' Po Von Know that one of the reasons for granting this government-protection -was because Costoria had been proven to be absolutely barmleasr '' Po Von Know that 35 average doses of Castoria are furnished for S cents), or one cent a dose ? Po Von Know that when possessed of this perfect preparation, yonrcbildtes Will be kept well, and that you will have unbroken rest ? Well, these things) are worth knowing. The facsimile atgwatnre of tm oh every" wrapper. Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria. TM CtWT.UW COMMIT. TT UT .TKCtT, MCWVORK CITT. 3 3 4 3 UP TO DATE. Establishid 18GS. Ovtr 26,000 in Uso. THE (5ENUINE PIANO At a time when niauy manu facturers and dealers are making the most astounding statements regardingthe merits and durability of inferior Pianos, intending pur chasers should not fail to make critical examination of the above instruments. EL C. RICKER General Dealer in Northeast era Pennsylvania. New Telephone Exchange Building, 115 Adams Ave., Scranton, Pa. nwwffwnnnTrw"wtTwnnwnffWTmfiwnn"n iinmimiiiummmiiiiiiiiiuimiuuiiimiiui 4 3. 13 C3 4 3 ea ea ca a sttiisiiisiaiicuuiniiUHstJia'W'iiiMuuiusicuiiiuuiwuiiUUiiiiuiiiiiiiis 61,827 BARRELS OF FLGUR days' run at Plllsburj'S "A" Mill, aud over One Million barrels in tho past six months, running Six Days a Week, tho highest record of any mill in the world. Mr. Pil la bury, tho manager of the Tillsbury "A" Mill, Challenges Ail)' .Mill in tho World to como within 13.000 barrels of it in a six days' run. Tho Pillsbury Washburn Flonr Mills Co., Limited, not only own the largest mill in the world, but make tho BEST FLO I It. I best mm c PI z o o H X i C. P. flatthews Sons & Co., SCltAXTOX, pa. Mill Agent, Northeastern Perm's nscrsid st Twi HioHirr MtoieNL Aimiosmir, 3 Xf H lASTMMMtnmnnn HEADACHE nH'iiir IxnAI.in will core yon. A vuDUrrrnl boon to pufffrtn from Colds, HoreTb rout, InllnnM. tlrnneliMla. orUAI FfTVCU. 'ir.U tmmf (Hate relief. Anefficieni rpmeilr. fnn ronton! tn mm IB socket, resijr to tl on Ont Inillrstion of cold. ratMe4 tJee l-aete Permanent rnre. Satlsfaotloneiifcrnnteed or monoy refunded. Price, ete. Trlul free nt DnteiriL9. KcgiAtorcd mnil. W cants. a.D.CC3El,ll!r.,Ikn.R,Tn,sjctL, O.S.4. rmnMiWAW) aa lirilTlini The sarent and safeat remede for Itlbn I nUL allpkindlseanes, KrTems.ltnh'.mit Rheum.otd Pores. Murna, 'nta. WoneVrful rem dy for PI I.F.H. Price. CS eta. at Drne- nil "lets or by mall prepaid. Addrpaaasaboyn. OF I ' For sale by MATTHEWS BROS, and JOHN H. PHELPS. Scranton. Pa, Complexion Frcscnred DR. HEBRA'S IIIMI ftnanDl Villi H -kfa't.V1 Yuiraw Remove Freekle, Fimplst, 'it Liver Moles. Blsckhssd; V Sunburn and I an, ana n.- storca tho skin to l! s origi nal IriKtincss, frmucir.? i ..Inn .nil hpnltllT C ITU preparations and ponortiy hamiPM. At all UrugKiAUi.ur mailed fur SOiU. ticwX for Circular. VIOLA 8KIM SOAP l inrly lweraM as Ain unrt I .In. Hoao. unecnnVd for tn toih. aod vHkoat 8 ,1 fcV UN Srwy. !hrtT M and dkaUr cud. AUramH-s Price 25 CeMs. G. C. BITTNCR& CO., Toledo, X Por fiale by MATTHEWS BROS. aa4 JOHN II. PHELPS, Scranton, Pa-