THE SCB ANTON . TRIBUNE MONDAY MORNING, AUGUST 3, 18f(J. M7 and Weekly. Ko Suadey WK hMUH at Benmton. P-, hy The Trfeeae M limbing Company. Cow Tock OtBct: Tribune Building, Tmmt kV t. A. RINORRURV, Pais, ae Cn't Mae. S. H. RIRRLC, an- ana Taets. MVVR. RICHARD. Carre. RJ. W. DAVIS. Sudan luuM. W. W. VOUNOR, Am. RUaera. nruii a tbi aoBioffioi at scaainos. ra,. SS00SP4UM MAIL UATTIB. Pilateis Ink. the mcojiiIikI Journal to adve. uene, rata Tna Soianto tibuns the best edventtng enedlura la Nortbauura tvamjln ate. "Fftaten luk" know, Van Wntu Taibcns, Iwutd Every Saturday, Contains Twelve Handsome hn with no Abmi auo of Kews, Flctlou, and Well-lilltiHl MImvI- Ey. For Those Who Canuot Take T11U Daily hum k, (be Weekly Is KrcoruuicnJeJ as too UBafgaiaUolBg. only l a Year. 10 Aavaooe tanTaiauas la lot Sal rally at the O, L. aad W. KtationalHobolMa. SCRANTON. AUGUST 3, 1S96. THE REPUBLICAN TICKET. NATIONAL. I or President, WILLIAM .Me KIM. I V, of Ohio. I or Vice-President, GARRET A. IIOUAHT, of New Jersey. STATE. Concrcssmcn-nt-l.arge. GALl'SllA A. GROW, of Susqnolmimfl. AMI tL A. OAVENPOUT. or trio. Election I'oy, Nov. 3. THE REFIULICAX PLATFORM. 1. Tariff, not only to furnish ndequntu revenue for the necessary expenses of the government, but to protect American la bor from UecruJatlon to the wage level Of other lands. 2. Reciprocal agreements for open markets anil discriminating du ties In favor of the American merchant marine. 3. Maintenance of the existing old standard and opposition to free coin age of silver except by International Agreement with thu leading commercial nations of the world. 4. Pensions und preferences for veterans of thu I'nlo'.i army. S. A firm, vigorous and dlgnllied foreign policy "and all our Interests ;n the western hemisphere carefully watched and guarded." l. The Hawaiian Island to be controlled hy the United States; the Xlcaraguan canal to be built; a naval sta. tion In the Weft Indies. 7. Protection of American clt!jns and property in Turkey. 8. Iteassertlon of the Monroe doctrine. Eventual withdrawal of European powers from this hemisphere and union of all English-speaking people on this continent, . The United States actively to use influ ence to restore iieace and give Independ ence to Cuba. 10. Enlargement of tho navy, defense of harbors and ceaconsls. 11. Exclusion of Illiterate and Immoral im migrants. 12. Heapproval of the civil ser vice law. IS. A free ballot and an, honest count. 14. Condemnation of lynching. 13. Approval of national arbitration. US. Ap proval of a free homestead law. 17. Ad mission of tho remaining territories, rep resentation for Alaska and abolition of earpct-biipr federal otllccrs. IS. Sympathy with legitimate efforts to lessen lr.tempcr. nee. 19. Sympathetic reference to "tho rights and interests of woman." Con densed by the Times-Herald. The Wilson bill s July deficit was $13, 000,000. Yes, the tariff Is an issue. Safety in Railway Travel. Newspaper verdicts concerning the Atlantic City railway accident have been rendered in abundance, but they do not amount to much. It affords email elucidation to say that some one blundered (which is self-evident) and that if he be discovered and is not already an inanimate victim of hl.i own mistake, he should be rigidly pun ished. More to the point Is the positive order of the Reading railroad that hereafter under no circumstances shall engineers of that company engage in racing with competitive trains on par allel lines. It seems that it had been customary for engineers on both the Heading and Pennsylvania railroads to race with each other while entering and departing from Atlantic City. The two line run close enough together for ome distance to give itest to this dan gerous form of rivalry, nnd while the officials of both roads have tried hard to discourage the practice the public (has tried even harder to encourage, it. Of course If the signals were never at fault, this racing would not involvo the possibility of a collision at the crossing, but even then It would be a risky policy, that should be frowned upon. If the public would co-operate as far as possible with the railway officials in demanding a careful rather than a speedy runr.lnjf of trains. Its own safety would be promoted. The "flyer" Is a creation of the public. The call of th6 public Is for fast travel; it should bo also for sate travel, with a preference for safety rather than speed If ft cannot have both. In this connection it may not be amiss to recommend to railway managements In general the principles so successfully established by General Manager Wil liam F. Hallstead among the employes of the Delaware, Lackawanna & West ern company. He insists with all his energy upon the maintenance of sched ule time. When that time is unavoida bly departed from he emphatically dis courages reckless attempts to 'make It up." The secret of safe travel, in hi opinion. Is uniformity and regularity In the movement of trains. His com pany has fast trains, but they are run at a steady rate of speed and tho track la cleared for them. Under the most careful system, some accidents are Inevitable, but there Is no reason why all roads should not be relatively as free from- them' as the Delaware, I-ackawanna & Western Is If all roads were operated- with equal . Insistence upon the cardinal principles that gov ern Its management. Many banks In Canada have already refused to accept fur deposit American silver coins, fearing that If Bryan wins those coins would fail to their bullion value, whereby the banks would sustain a loss amounting to SO per cent. Of course this fear is unreasonable, for Bryan will not be elected nor will any coin bearing the stamp of the United States government be permitted by that government to cheat Its holder. But it exhibits In advance one of the conse quences which would follow Democratic success ' next November. Hitherto American money has been regarded the world over as good as gold. The Scranton Times does not like The Tribune's cartoons. That is natural and also gratifying. They are not pre pared with a view to capturing Dem ocratic applause. "The money of the I'nited Slates, and every kiad or form of it, whether of paper, silver or gold, must be as good ns the best in the world. It must not only bo current at its Cull face value at home, but it must be counted at par in nny and every commercial center of the globe. The dollar paid to tho farmer, the wage-earner and the pensioner mast continue forever equal in pun-hnsing niid debt-paying power to the dollar paid to tiny gov erunirnt creditor."--Mclilnloy in Hit Speech of Acceptance. The great trouble with the free silver project as a political issue is that it will not bear investigation. The Opinion of a Statesman. It Is worth while to repeat what James O. Blaine suld in the United States senate. Feb. 7. 1S78, on the silver question, at a tlma when the bullion value of a silver dollar was 39 cents more than It is today. Said ha: Our line of policy in a joint mowment with other nations to remonetlie sliver las proposed by the ttt. Louis platform Is simple and direct. The dilllcult prob lem is what we shall do whun we aim to re-establish silver without the co-operation of !0m-o:caii powers, und really nn advance movement to coerce these powers Into the same policy. Kviduitly the first dictate of prudence Is to coin such a dol lar ns will not only do Justice among our citizens ut home, but will prove n pio tectlon, nn almost barricade against :he gold monometalllsts of Europe, who, when. ever the opportunity offers, quickly draw from us the l1tiu.uiiu.uiJ0 I now iil2.W.UO0 of gold coin we now hold. If we coin a sllvor dollar of full legal tender, obviously below tho current vulue of the gold dollar, we are simply opening our doors and inviting Europe to take our gold. With our gold (lowing out from us we shall be forced to tho single standard and our relations with the leading commercial countries of the world will not only be embarrassed hut crippled. The proposition then before congress was the free, unlimited and Indepen dent coinage of silver dollars of 412V& grains each. Mr. Blaine continued: At current rates of silver the free coin, age of a dollar containing 4l2'(i grains, worth In gold about 92 cents, gives an :l legitimate prollt to the owner of the bul lion, enabling him to take !2 cents worth of It to the mint and get It stamped as coin and force his neighbor to take it for a full dollar. This Is an unfair advantage which the government has no right to give to tho owner of silver bullion, and which defrauds the man who Is forced to take the dollar. It surely follows that If we give free coinage to this dollar of Inferior value and put It In circulation we do so at the expense of our better coinage In gold; nnd, unless we expect the Invari able experience of other nations to be In some mysterious way suspended for our peculiar bentdlt, we Inevitably lose our gold coin. It will How out from us with the certainty and force of the tides. What gain, therefore, should we make for tho circulating medium if, on opening tho gate for silver to How In we open n still wider gate for gold to flow out? If I were to venture upon a dictum on the silver question I should declare that, until Eu rope remonetlzes silver, w cannot afford to coin a dollar as low as 4124 grains. If we coin too low a dollar before general re. monetlzatlon our gold will leave us. If we coin too high a dollar after general remonetlzation our silver will leave us. It is only an adequate value before and after general remonetlxation that will preserve both gold and silver to us. If that was true of silver dollars worth 02 cents, how much more fool ish and dangerous would be the attempt to give free coinage to dollars worth only 63 cents? Mr. Blaine further said: Were congress to pass a law today de claring that every legal tender note and every national bank note shall hereafter pass for 95 or W cents on the dollar, there is not a constituency In the I'nited States that eould re-elect a man who supported It, und In many districts the representative would b lucky If he escaped merely with a defeat at the polls. Yet it is almost mathematlcully demonstrable that tho same effect will follow from the coinage of an inferior silver dollar. Assurances from empirics and scientists In finance that remonetlzation of the former dollar will at once nnd permanently advance Its value to par with gold, aro worth little In the fare of opposing and controlling facta. That remonetlzation will have a considera ble effect in advancing the value of the sil ver dollar is very probable, but not enough to overcome the difference now existing a difference resulting from causes Inde pendent of our control in the United Slates. The difference then between the bul lion values of the gold and sliver dol lars was only 8 cents; to-day It Is 47 cents. If we couldn't bridge: an 8-cent chasm by independent free coinage in 1878, when many nations were favora bly disposed towards silver, how can we hope to bridge a 47-cont chasm now by such action in the face of the opposi tion of the principal nations of th world ? Will the Scranton Times, which loves to quote from Mr. Blaine's speeches, please answer? Senator Cnffrey of Louisiana regards Bryan as the candidate who favors "pri vate robbery, spoliation and public dis honor." In view of the fact that Sen ator Caffrey Is a Democrat, his testi mony is evidently entitled to Democrat ic consideration. On the Right Track. We are glad to welcome the acces sion of the Philadelphia Press to the list of Republican journals which de cline to regard the money question, as It has been presented In the Chicago platform, the paramount Issue of this campaign. It now says what The Tri bune has contended all along, that "If it were not for Democratic tinkering with the tariff there would be no silver question worth bothering about." Our contemporary, with Indisputable cor rectness, adds: . . Tho strength of the silver movement now It wholly with the farmers and planters, whose complaint Is low prices. Nothing has contributed so much to that result as the tarjff leglslatkm which closed faotorks and mills and lessened' the demand for these agricultural products while opening the door to lnc;tased Importations of for eign agricultural products. The receipts exceeded the expenses ns long as the Re publicans were In control But when thy went out deficits began. The $1UJ,G(K,000 gold reserve, never before trenched upon, was depleted to meet expenses. Bonds had to be sold and distrust and business para lysis followed. That took place before the repeal of the silver purchasing act, demonstrating that It was not the effe:t of the rental of that law, and the same condition continued after that law way repealed, showing that the sliver question figured very little In the matter. The tar iff was to blime. The lack of revenue, tn9 closing of m'.liy nnd lack of work, the loss of confidence, the lessened demand f.T American products at home, and thcritul latory legislation which shut out our products abroad, the Increased taxation from the iaU of bonds, the stoppage of public works, nnd the general paralysli of business were due to the tariff tinker ing. Tho threat of free silver has helped to mUe matters worse. H"t to ay that a cvre ren be brought about mM"vit tariff legislation Is almost as ridiculous as to say that It can be done by the frot and unrestri i.d coinage of silver. The silver question has figured In the problem to this extent: It has enabled the Democratic free traders to shift the Issue away from the responsibility rest ing upon them as n consequence of tho mischief wrought by the Wilson bill. Th Press hns hitherto helped the Dem ocrats out of their dilemma by ucce:t Ing their challenge to charge the sub ject tf debate. It evidently begins to perceive that this was a mistake. It now apparently discovers that the re peal of the Sherman silver purchasing act. Involving as It did Republican stultification, was n gratuitous work that would never have been rendered nrcessnry had Protection heen let alone. U discerns that Republican co-operation In Mr. Cleveland's unnccersary war on sliver lias had the effect to force the Republican party Into a semblance of hostility to the white metal that finds little favor among the Republican masses, and that lias had the unexpect ed effect to push Into prominence a proposition, with strong backing, for unlimited free coinage which would not have gained serious vitality but fur the precipitate willingness of the Republi can leaders, two years ago, to enroll themselves under the Democratic ad ministration's anti-silver banner. While in this mood of accurate rea soning, the Press would do well to re mark that with Protection again re stored, carrying with It abundant reve nues, increased business activities and a renewed balance of trade In this coun try's favor, it will In all likelihood be possible for the next Republican admin istration to resume the coinage of American silver In such restricted amount as will involve no Jeopardy to the Interconvertlblllty of all our dollars. Such a statement would not only be In the direction of reasonable prophecy, but It would also tend to break the force of the claims of the free silver men that the Republican party has put itself under the thumb of the limited Wall street clement which appears to have captured the present administra tion, body and soul. Proper as it 13 to oppose with i mpha sls the rash suggestion of independent and unlimited free coinage at the im possible ratio of 16 to 1, the fact should not be Ignored that the traditional pol icy of the Republican party is in favor of safe bimetallism, which means as liberal a coinage of silver as can be sus tained at a parity with gold. There cannot be too many dollars, provided they are all good and honest dollars. "The Republican party stnnds for honest money nnd the chance to earn it by honest toil.".. William McKin ley. Representative Dolllver, of Iowa, sat next to Mr. Bryan when the latter was In congress. Mr. Dolllver says: "The burden of his talk was 'calamity,' 'wipe out the tariff and prices will double.' That was the panacea. Free silver was not mentioned by Democrats then. Then the Democrats said: 'You are lame, but our Dr. Bryan can fix you.' We believed them; they put us under the opiate of 'boy oratory, and when we came out our leg was gone. Now they say: 'Dr. Bryan was slightly In error; come Into his office again; he cut off the wrong leg." He says: 'I have a new remedy, discovered in Idaho, called 18 to 1 or the C0-cent dollar, and war ranted to kill or cure.' " But with one leg off through his previous quackery, the American voter is not now yearning for a new operation. A free silver writer complains that New York state has $300 per capita while Arkansas has only $12. But we don't see how the relative difference will be changed one particle by the enact ment of a law cutting both states' money down Into BO-cent dollars. Do you? Mr. Singerly, candidate for elcctor-at-large on the Democratic ticket, predicts that McKinlcy will have 400,000 plurality over Bryan In Pennsylvania. If this is the Democratic estimate, what figures shall Republicans employ? THEIR WAGES IN PERIL Chauncey M. Depew, president of the Ntw York Central railroad. Is very much interested In the effect thu passage of a free silver measure would have upon iha railroad employes of the country. Be says: "It would affect them worse than any other laborers. The reason Is plain and can easily be understood. The rail roads of this country owe altogether t.0UO.0(X,O0O worth or bonds, which are al most all payable In gold. If we receive pay In silver for our work In carrying freight and passengers we will have to buy gold to pay our Interest, as gold, of course, will be driven out of the country. That will compel us to economize In every direction, unless the public permits us to charge silver rates or double prions. Un der such conditions we would have to pay the men In sliver. As the price on gold au vanced, as it would, steadily and surely, employes' wages would be reduced from one-third to one-half. "When M comes to what men may buy, the silverites tell the farmers that with free silver they will obtain twice as much for their food products. Grant that to be true, and see In what condition the rail road laborer will find himself from the on. eration of both forces. He will receive from 03 to W oer cent, less money each montl and will have to pay twice as muchjfor what he eats. This Is not an Idle argument, for there are more than 800,000 men in the employ of the railroads of this country and on the coy rolls. Their em ployment Is better than that of the expert mechanic, because it 1a steady. The car penter Brd meson and others suffer from labor strikes and hard times. Then there are seasons when the wenther prevents work, and they are Idle many days in the year. The railroad man, however, has work ell the year. "In the Argentine repu'bllc when It went to a rasr basis, which was Irredeemable In gold, the railroads were permitted to double their rates to meet tho changed conditions. The railroads at once fixed thefr rates of currency In gold, and, as the prices fluctuate to A better rate, meet the difference. That would not 'be permitted In this country. Fancy the New York Central asking permission of the legisla ture to make the fare from New York to Albany S8. Yet that Is the only manner In which we could keep up the pay of our employes. "The populist has an IdeA that th rail road han some mysterious manner . of making money. However, we have no source of Income except the money we re ceive from freight and passenger traffic. For the year ended June 30, 1SW, the New Vnrlr rVmtrnl crnol tif .Sill OM Out nf that we paid fui.OOO.Olk) to employes. The operating expersej, taxes and wages amounted to JSluKV.eOO. The Interest on cur bonds, payable in gold, amounted to t4.170,'XJ0. The rental of lensed linos, pay able In gold, amounted to Ji,88.iW0, so. you see. P. fre sMver bill would cost us J10, CCO.iCO a year, ptrt of which would have to ccrne out of ths employes. "Railroads, h vvtr, are not the oniy corporations which nre r'.milarly situated. The telegraph rcmj.unles are In exactly the same boat. Thev employ nearly as n::iny m.?n as liio railroads und their em ployes' wages would be cut the sanie way. As a niftter of fact, eight-tenths of the ecr xnations have bonds which are paya ble in cold, nnd five silver would have tho same effect on all of them." ttli. CONNKI.L I'Ull CONGRESS. From the Wilkcs-Uurre Record. The factional discord that has for years been so acrimonious, und only last spring so rent the party in Scranton us to re store the Democrats to full power in thu municipality, has seemingly disappeared, at least from the surface. William Con mil Is now apparently In complete and undisputed leadership, and unless all signs fall he will on Tuesday be nomlnat. ed for congress without opposition. Mr. Council has had a long and severe struggle to uttuln the supreme leadership In the party which he now holds practi cally undisputed. He is today not merely the acknowledged leader of the Republi can party In Lackawanna, but a more potent factor In state and even national politics than any other man in northeast em Pennsylvania. We assume that William Council will be nominated and elected to congress. His election will add a practical tumlners man to the house of representatives, and there can be no cuestion that he will be the same forceful man In congress that he has been In every position In which he has been placed In the business and finan cial world, where he came In contact with strong and brainy men. AN EXPENSIVE LUXURY. From the Troy Times. The Troy Times calls attention to a comprehensive article on the fifth page of today's Issue from the Scranton Trib. une. It presents an argument that is un answerable and can be- well and profit ably studied by all voters. Special atten tion Is called to the fact that under the last Republican administration there was no scare from the export of gold. It is well to remember, moreover, that under President Harrison the national debt was greatly reduced, while under the present administration there has been an increase, principal and interest, of over $T00,000,000. According to the well authenticated fig ures of The Tribune, the change In ad ministration has cost the people nearly a billion dollars. It has been an expensive luxury and now the voters are asked to perpetuate the power of Democracy and add thereto the experiment of free coin age. REASON WILL CONQUER. From the Times-Herald. There will be a speaker on every stump this fall. The rural achoolhouses will throb with the perspiring eloquence of the young men, and half the people of every county will assemble at their county seat at least once to hear some man of broader fame discuss the Issues of the hour. It will be a great campaign, with blind un rest yielding to sober reason's guidance In the end. WHAT IT WOULD MEAN. From the Times-Herald. Bryan's election would mean the fore closure of every mortgage, tho tightening of the grip of money-holders on their funds, loss of confidence at home and abroad in short, the intensifying of hard times. WHILE THE HEART BEATS YOUNG. While the heart bents young! O the splen dor of the Spring, With all her dewy Jewels on, is not so fair a thing The fairest, rarest morning of the blossom time of May Is not so sweet a season as the season of today While Youth's diviner climate folds and holds us, close caresseu, As we feel our mothers with us, by the touch of face and breast; Our bare feet In tho meadows, and our fancies up among The airy clouds of morning while the heart beats young. While the heart boats young! While the heart beats young! O green and gold old Earth of ours, with azure overhung And looped with rainbows! grant us yet this grassy lap of thine We r-oiid be still thy children, through the shower and the shine! So pray we, lisping, whispering, in child ish love and trust. With our beseeching hands and faces lift ed from t'ie dest, By fervor of the poem all unwritten and unsung. Thou glvcst us In answer, while the heart beats young. ,Tn nn. s Wliltcomj Riley In August La- I dies' Home Journal. LIGHTNING FRUIT JARS 4 All good housekeepers use Lightning Jars. Why? Because they open and close easy, and are perfect sealers. The re sult is they never lose a can of fruit. THE LIMITID. 422 UCMWMnn AVE. GOnTlfS poken And Some Dress them. All In I LOT 1. Genuine Punjab 'T) ;hable Silks A Washable Silks LOT 2.The Best 23 Printed Habituai Silks THE NEW WOMAN'S SHOE r dl cith in 1 DL OUR IU The Most Perfect Fitting Shoe Made. Al Full Line in All Widths at BANISTER'S WHITE IT DOWN A yonr needs suneests Anything in the way of Stationery, Blank Books or Offi Supplies, and when yonr lilt la full bring it in and we will snrprisa you with the novel ties we recclvo daily. We also carry a very lioat lino of Colllnif Cards and Wed ding Invitation! at a moderate prlo. 5 Stationers and Engravers, HOTEL JERMVN BUILDINU. THE HATTE SELLS AT CUT PRICES. 305 LACKAWANNA AVE. 1 TRUNKS MERCHANT TAILORING Sprint And Sammi, from 130 up. Troasar ton and Overcoats, forxlfa and doinestio brica, mad to ordar to suit the moat far Mdloas In prloa, fit and Workmanship. D. BECK, 337 Adams Ave. Lot rf Silks Lengths and a few Waist Lengths among of them at half price to close them out. IIS Hi l : : IIS SI WINDOW. or nnnnrn n DL HiTliL D HOME-GROWN TOMATOES PEAS, GREEN CORN, CELERY, BEETS AND CARROTS, FAN CY "JENNY UND" AND GEM CANTELOUPES, WATERMEL ONS, CALIFORNIA FRUITS, 1 1 PIERCE, PI ML MARKET 326 Washington Av3 SCRANTON. PA. TELEPHONE 553. PROFESSIONAL CARDS. Dentists. C. C. LAITT1ACH. StTKCS KON DliNTldT. No. 115 Wyoming avenue. R. M. STRATTON. OKI'ICK COAL EX ehonfre. Physicians nnd Surgeons. DR. A. TRAPOLH, SPECIALIST IN Diseases of Women, corner Wyoming avenue and Spruce street, Kcranlon. Of fice, hours, Thursday ar.d UuturJayi. B a. m. to C p. m. D n. "com kc y3 opfTck-" no." '337" n. Washington uvp. Hours, 12 m. to 3 p. m. Discuses of women a cptclalty. Tele phone No. 8232. DR. W. 13. ALLEN. "612 NOKTH WASH inxton uv.'iaip. Dll. C. L. FRHY. PRACTICK LIMITED isensi-s of the Kyt. Ear. Nose snd Vhrout: ollli-e 122 Wyoming ave. Rest. Oer.rc. f2!l Vino Mreet. DR. L. M. OVTEH. Ko WASHINGTON avenue. Oillce hourn, 8 to 9 n. m 1 io to 3 nnd 7 to 8 p. m. lteuiJcnco 309 Madi son nvtnue. DR. J. C. BATKSON. TUESDAYS ; AND Fridays, at Ma Linden street. Ullico hours 1 to 4 p. in. DR. S. W. LAMEREAITX, A SPECIAL 1st on chronic diseases of the heart, Iui.ks, liver, kidneys und gcnlto urinary orKtniF, will occupy tho ofllco of Dr. Itoos. 2.12 Adams uvenue. Ollice hours 1 to B p. m. j WT'O. ROOK. VETERINARY SUR treon. Horses Cattle nnd Dogs treated. HoBplt.il, 121 Linden street, Scranton. Telephone 2C72. SeeJt. O. R. CLARK 4 CO., SEEDSMEN AND Nurserymen; store HI Wushlnjton ave nue; itreen house, 1350 North Main ava nua; stora telphone 78!. Wire Srcctw. JOS. KUETTEL, REAR til LACKA wanna avenue, Scranton, I'a., manufac turer of Wire Screens. Hotels and Restaurants. 1111 IE I. THU ELK CAFE, 12 and 127 FRANK- lB AVnuo. Rates reasonable. R ZEIOLER. Proprietor. SCRANTON HOUSE!, NEAR D., t,. W. pajsenger depot. Conducted on tha European plan. VICTOR KOCH. Prop. WESTMINSTER HOTEL. Cor. Sixteenth St. and Irvine Placo, Now York. Rata. $3.50 per day And upwards. (Amarl OAS plACi, B.N.ANABLB. , rrvprtator. fit I) - inch YOY can pin your confi dence in the Great Clearing Sale of Summer Footwear at the 8: JERA1YN BUILDING REPAIRING. Spce St Lawyers. WARREN A KNAPP, ATTORNEYS And Counsellors At Law. Republlcaa bulldlnir, VVashinfiton avenua, Scran- ton. Pa. . JESSUPS A HAND, ATTORNEYS AND Counsellors At Law, Commonwealth building, Washington avenue. W. H. JESST7P, HORACE K. HAND, W. H. .TESStrp. JR. PATTERSON ft WILCOX, ATTOR. neya and Counsellors at Law; offices I and I Llhrnry building. Scr.inton. Pa. P.OSEWrtLL H. PATTERSON. WILLIAM A. WILCOX. ALFRED HAND, WILLIAM J. HAND, Attorneys nnd Counsellors, Common wesltli bulldlnK. Rooms 19. W and 21. FRANK T. OKELL, ATTO RN E Y-AT. Law, Room S, Coal Exchange. Scran ton. Pa. . JAMES W. OAKFOUD, ATTORNEY-at-Lnw, rooms 63, 64 And 65, Common wealth jhiillrtlnr. SAMUEL W. EDGAR, ATTORNEY-AT-Law. Office. SIT Snmo t.. Rorspton. Pa. "ETa. WATERS, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. 453 Lackawanna av.. Scranton. Pa. URIE TOWN8END, ATTORNEY-AT. Law, Dime Hunk BiilldlnR, Scranton. Money to loan In large sums at 6 pap cent. C. R. PITCHER. ATTORNEY-AT. Iaw, Commonwealth bulldtnc. Scrantoa. Pa. ' C. COMEOYS. 921 SPRUCE STREET. D. B. REPLOGLE. ATTORNEY-LOANS rcpotlnted on real ctato security. Mears' hulMlnp, corner Washington Ave nue nnd Spruce r.trcet. x B. F. KILL A mTaTTO RNEY-AT-LAW, 11(1 Wyn?n4tt'r Pcn-ftn TN. JAS. J. II. HAMILTON, ATTORNEY-AT. law, 45 Commonwealth hM'n. Scranton. f. M. C. HAWK. 13 WYOMING AVM Architect. EDWARD H. DAVIS. ARCHITECT. Rooms 24, 25 and 2t. Commonweal:) tiutldlnff. 9-ranton. B. L. WALTER. ARCHITECT. OFF1CS rear of COS Yashlngton avenue. ' LEWIS HANCOCK. JR.. ARCHITECT: 4S5 Spruce at . eor. Wash. ave.. Scranton BROWN A MORRIS. ARCHITECTS? Price building-, 126 Washington avenua, Scranton. Schools. SCHOOL OF TUB LACKAWANNA. Scranton, I'a,, prepares hoys and Kirls for college or business; thoroughl trains younK children. Catalogue at r QumL .Opens September t. REV. THOMAS M. CANM. WALTER H. P.UF.LL. MISS WORCESTER'S KINDEROARTEM and School. 412 Adams avenue. Spring term April 11 Kindergarten $19 per term. Loans. TUB REPUBLIC SAVINGS AND Loan Association will loan you mon-y en easier terms and pay you better oa Investment than any other association. Call on S. N. Callander. Dime Bank building. Miscellaneous. BAUER'S ORCHESTRA MU8IC FOR balls, picnics, parties, receptions, wed dings and concert work furnished. For terms address R. J. Bauer, conductor. 117 Wyoming avenue, over Hulberl's music store. MEOARQEE BROTHERS, PRINTERS' supplies, envelopes, paper bags, twine. Warehouse, 13U Washington ave., Scran, ton. Pa. FRANK P. BROWN A CO.. WHOLE, sale dealers In Woodware, Cordage and Oil Cloth. 730 West Lackawanna ve. THOMAS AUBREY, EXPERT AC Williams Building, opposite postofflo Sc. 35c. Shoe tie fRl w us mm W KKiinsuisner. Y r