THE' 8CB ANTON TRIBUNE FBIDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 18, 1896. Eallyaud Weekly. No Sunday Edition. FsblUhrd t Bcranton, P . by Tbt Trlbeo Vtb lUliluf Company. C. . KINOSBURV, hn. 0,i C. H. MIPPLC, Sjee-v Tmu. LlWt . NICNANO, Kuroa. W. W. DAVIS, HUmms. W. W. VOUNOS, Am. Mtn'a- New York OfflCR Tribune Fulldlni, Ttwk & tiny, Manager. tSTKKBO AT TH FOSTOrTICi AT 8CTUNT0K. PA.. 6IC0ND-CLASS HAIL UATTIB. SCRANTON. SEPTEMBER 18. 1890. THE REPUBLICAN TICKET. NATIONAL. Presldent-WILUAM M'KINLET. Vice Fresldent-OARRET A. HOBART. STATE. Congressmen - at - Large aALUBHA A. GROW, SAMUEL A. DAVENPORT. COUNTY. Confrress-WII.I.TAM CONNELU Comnilssloners-S. W. ROBERTS, GILLS Auditors-A. E. KIEFF.R. FRED I WARD. i.euislativi:. Senate. 21st District col- W. 3. SCOTT. Representative. 1st District JOHN It. FA11R; M District A. T. CONNELL; 3d Dlstrlct-UH. N. C. MACKE. Mr. Thaohrr, the Democratic nominee for governor of New York state, went to Chicago a gold man, but Is now run ning on a five coinage platform. He Is not. however, likely to run fnst enough to create much Interest In the race. Frank lilntlf will have a walk-over. Mr Merrlfield Acc;p.s. The nei.eptuuee by Mr. Horrific! .1 yeotcrduy cf the Democratic congres sional nomination ppvns up a fair and square IseU" to the voters of this coun ty. On the one hand stund Protection to Atii'i,lci,n Industries, an honest cur reTicy w orth 100 cents on the dollar the world over, reciprocity, resolute en forcement of law and order, nn Imie liendent and unsullied United States Supreme court and a business Ilka and competent administration of the a flu Irs of lhe national government. On the other hand stand half-lint money, un checked mob rule In time of riots, a packed Supreme court and a tariff iys tcm which In thfpe years of operation has cost the country In direct money Ions more than the comblnel money costa to North and South of the great civil war. The Issue, It will be per ceived, li one of principle, rithe - than of men. Hence It Is to be hoped that the canvass will be kept free from mean personalities, and that the deci sion of the people may a reached fair ly and In good spirit. We are sure that by such a decision Mr. Connell and his miiIorter will cheerfully abide. The antl-Platt Republicans ot the Twenty-seventh New York district, re inforced by the Democrats, have nomi nated Hon. J. J. Belden, of Syracuse, fot congress, against Major Poole, the rcpular Republican nominee. The fight is a revival of an old factional trouble and In either Issue a good man is sure to win. Hut to an outsider dis claiming detailed knowledge of .the situation It Is amatter of regret that this test of factional strength Is not deferred until some more Butiable year. The Eclipse ot David B. mil. There is more truth than poetry In th- Washington Post's remark that "six weeks ago lion. I). II. Hill was one of the most important men in the United States. Today he stands shorn of all bis consequence an Insignificant and imponderable Integer without weight or Intluenco or value. Six weeks ago Mr. Hill could have created a sensation and exerted an influence by announcing; his plans and purposes. Today he Is a mere individual voter, like any cabman or roustabout. The Democratic organization vyalted for him to speak waited with anxiety as for a great and skillful leader. He has failed to speak, and the procession has passed him by. No matter what he Says af ter this, he will not be heard or heed ed." In Intellectual ability Hill is a great man. In the subordination of all ap petites, instincts a fid other considera tions to the Indomitable and relentless motive of political ambition he has Jons; been foremost among the human phenomena of our time. But as in the case of most men who make a god of their sreed for power. Hill has lacked the saving quality of conscientiousness, and therefore at a critical moment has failed where a man of greater regard for principle would have scored a pro nounced success. Hill ha no one to blame but "himself. A man capable of winning the highest . respect and possessed of gifts that would with proper direction place their possessor on a pinnacle of popular ad miration and esteem, he has deliberate ly chosen the role of the opportunist in politics; has deliberately sought to trifle with the moral verities upon which alone true success is builded. In fair weather his sandy structure loomed up picturesquely, but it needed only a storm to demonstrate its in trinsic flimsiness. Infinitely superior in brain power to his historic rival, Cleveland, Hill to day presents toward Cleveland a pit iable contrast. Cleveland at least has been true to his convictions. He com mands even in misfortune not a little personal admiration. ' But as for Hill, there la none so poor as to do bint -rev e renee. He trilled with an emergency, and It in return has shot him Into the depths of popular derision and con tempt. ; It is possible that the far South may remain solid for Bryan. It is a com munity still largely at the mercy of the Ignorant and unsophisticated vote. But sooner or later the ' South will have to desist from. Its traditional sec tionalism and get In step with the times. It will have to do this for its own sake.' It cannot afford not to do It. The Case of the Farmer. It is figured out that the average consumption of wheat in the years 1894 and 1895, in this country, when times were bad, was 33 per cent, lower thnu in 1890, when times were good. The per capita consumption In 1895 was 4.C4 bushels; in 1894, 3.41 bushels; average for the two years, a trllle less than 4 bushels. In 1890 the per capita con sumption was 8 bushels. In 1894 and 1895 the price of wheat averaged about 60 cents a bushel. In 1890 it was OS cents a bushel. I will be been that the deollne In price corre sponds very closely with the decline In the home demand, although also af fected In the long run by the vast In crease In the world's wheat acreage which hag been taking place in recent years, and with which our surplus crop is brqusht Into competition in foreign markets. This brings us to a subject which every farmer can understand the fall ing off in the home demand. What caused It? Who Is responsible for it? Not the gold Btandurd, for that had been In compltfo operation for fifteen years. Not the Republican Protective taiiff laws, for they produced the larg est per capita consumption of wheat by the busy tollers of the land on rec ord. What could It have been, then, but the "dehelt only" Wilson tariff bill, supplemented later by the agitation In favor of a debased currency? No legislation under heaven can can cel the consequences of natural over production as Illustrated in the great lvent Increase In the world's wheat growing area. One of these Inevitable consequences is a fall In price. But Piotectlon and Sound Money, as rep resented by McKinley, can put the mills and the factories at work again, cause Idle labor to And re-employment and thereby make It possible once more f?r hungry mouths to get the required amount of food, and all this is sure to b.'peflt the American farmer. Bryan threatens not to appoint a man like Carlisle as his secretary of the treasury. Probably Altgeld would be more after his style. Let Us Have Peace. At the conclusion of his victorious fight against the Penrose-Durham con tingent In Philadelphia David Martin said: "This is the end of Republican factionalism, I hope, and we will all now drift together for the good and welfare of the city and the country." It Is possible that this remark has a deeper meaning than appears on its surface. It Is well-known to persons familiar with state politics that within a comparatively brief period of recent time overtures have passed between Mr. Martin and Senator Quay for a truce and If possible a peace in the fruitless and bootless war of the Phila delphia factions. Just what farm these mutual negotiations have assumed can not be told, but on both sides it is be lieved there is fiank recognition of paBt errors of judgment and confession that party Interests as well as personal In clinations require a speedy termina tion of the strife. At that time, however, factional riv alry had already set up opposing can didates for party honors in connection with the county nominations and the campaign had progressed so far as to render Inexpedient the retirement of either ticket. The subsequent victory of the followers of Mr. Martin comes as an expected consequence, and clears the field for a renewal tf negotiations in the direction of party harmony. From every standpoint of party Interest it is to be hoped that the importunities of understrappers Interested personally in the prolongation of hurtful dissensions will not be permitted to avert a recon ciliation nor force upon the party the unwelcome and undeserved burdens which such a continuation of purely per sonal animosities would carry with it. It is the rule of good politics to pay small heed to ancient history. Tho man who makes a practice of nursing private grudges In political life sooner or later comes to grief. Between lead ers of the experience and sagacity of Quay and Martin it ought to be possible for an understanding to be reached which would involve neither personal reproach nor future peril to the party. Both have the ability to comprehend the futility of Indefinite .guerrilla war fare and the manifest advantages of a new era of reconciliation and reason able subordination of personal to party ends. Colonel McClure has not forgiven Judge Gordon of Philadelphia for sun dry passages at arms that have oc curred between in the course of pro fessional business. After alleging that 75 per cent, of Judge Gordon's unaided decisions have been reversed on appeal the editor of the Times says: "A judi cial automaton, with a guessing ma chine attachment, could decide cases correctly about half the time, an at tainment that Judge Gordon has not reached; and such a judge would have other advantages than those of greater accuracy. An automatic judge would make no stump speeches; would end the vocation of the shyster; would make Insult of witnesses impossible; would bring no scandals on the administra tion of justice, and would be sublimely economical. True, about one-half the cases tried In such a court would have to be tried over again, but Justice would be hastened over Judge Gordon's ad ministration by reason of its greater accuracy In the aggregate." The bar of Philadelphia, however, doesn't share Colonel McClure's opinion, nor is there any danger that a judge who has no opposition at the polls will fall of re election in consequence of one jour nalist's bias. On June 24 of this year at Saratoga the Democrats of New York In state convention assembled declared them selves "opposed to the free and unlim ited coinage of silver in the absence of tho co-operation of other great na tions." On Sept. 17, of tho same year they "unreservedly endorsed" at Iiui falo a national platform, adopted In the Interval, which "demands the free and unlimited coinage of both gold and sil ver at the present legal ratio of 16 to 1, without waiting for the aid or con sent of any other nation." From June 21 to Sept. 17 Is not quite three months. It might be well for some one to In form the Democratic nominee for con gress in this district that It Is nowhere proposed to continue the "ruinous finan cial policy of Grover Cleveland" an other four years. He is evidently mis Informed on that point. The intention of the Republican party Is to substi tute for Mr. Cleveland's "ruinous" pol icy a policy which will enable the na tional government to pay current ex penses without the sale of bonds, and which will afford to the producers of America adequate protection from de structive foreign competition. The cry of "full barns but empty pockets," to which Mr. Merrlfield al ludes, began to be heard about the time that the Democratic party set to work to reconstruct the tariff. It has been heard with increasing emphasis ever since, but no one had for years heard such a cry prior to the last election of Grover Cleveland. This doesn't bear out the contention that it arises from the operation of the gold standard, for this country has been on a recognized gold standard since 1879. Says the Buffalo News: "The way the York state sllverltes clamored for an endorsement on the back of the Chi cago ticket recalls the practice of a newspaper man down In Scranton, who made all his checks payable 'only after personal presentation to me.' He used to pay the checks, but when they were Issued they were no more than a decla ration of more or less remote intention. They had to be ratified by him later on." Couldn't you give the newspaper man's rame? The thanks of The Tribune are due to William O. Johnston & Co., ot Pitts burg, for a copy of a pamphlet pub lished by that firm entitled "The Vot er's Guide." It is the compilation of Hon. Jesse M. Baker, author of the Baker ballot law, and in addition to giv ing a thorough explanation ot that law it answers almost every question that can possibly arise in connection with election usages in this state. It Is a rich bargain at the price of 25 cents. Tho theory once was that Bryan was no politician, but the way in which he larrups the administration bolters and bids to the feeling for party regularity In the South shows that he is by no means as young as he looks. He will be defeated, of course, but he will leave behind a nice mess In the inner precincts of the Democratic party. It is true that this government has lost over $150,000,000 while trying to prop up a limited coinage of sliver; but it isn't true that it intends to remove either the limit or the props. It is announced that Gorman's health will not permit him to take an active part in the management of Bryan's canvass. This announcement follows the Maine election. In New York city 13,000 children were turned away from the public schools on opening day because of lack of room. Tammany must be ex pecting recruits. They are calling Palmer's the cam paign of the Four Hundred. ThlB may truthfully express its elite quality but as a mathematical proposition isn't it rather large? Senator Faulkner avers that Secre tary Carlisle's parity letter will give the Popocrats thousands of votes. They will need 'em. The secret of Bryan's coming to Scranton Is probably that Garman needs him in Luzerne. One thing at least is certain. David B. Hill cannot much longer refuse to fish or cut bait. Concerning Maine, Bryan "had nothing to say." But then, what could he say? WILLIAM J. BUY AN. William J. Eryan may his tribo de crease Awoke one night from a sweet dream of pcaee, And saw within the moonlight's silver gleam An angel writing In a book of gold. His last great speech had made Will Bryan bold, And to the presence In the room he said, What'writest thou? The vision slowly raised Its head and in a voice all made of sweet accord an swered: "The names of those that love the LorJ." "And is mine one?" said Bryan. "Nay, not bo." Bryan spoke more low, but cheerily still. And with that tremulo In his voice he said: "1 pray thee. then, write me as one who loves his fellow men." The angel wrote, and vanished, and the next night came again with a great awakening light and showed the names whom love of God had blessed, and lo! Will Bryan's name had been rased I ' . From the Times-Herald. Is It Triie That ' Gold Is Cornered ? From tho Times-Herald. One of the stock statements In common use among the silverltes, volubly made alike on the platform and on the streets, is that gold Is cornered. That the Roth schilds, the Uelmonts, the Morgans and other conspirators, generally known as "the money power," have formed a com bination to make gold scarce and dear, thus oppressing all who have to borrow and all who are In debt. The object of these conspirators is to ruin debtors and confiscate entirely such securities as havj been put up. thus bankrupting those to whom they have loaned money and bring ing untold disaster on the world. The sll verltes allege that this is the result of "tho crime of 1S73," and was the object in view when that "crime" was committed. When asked for proof of this astounding conspiracy they only offer the addltionnl allegation that there Is no gold In clrcula tion among us and that banks will not pay It out of their depositors In the usual course of business. Now. If gold Is cornered It must be cor nered In Europe as well as In the Cnlted Btiites, in London and Paris as much as in New York and Chicago. To coiner a commodity of such world-wise use as gold It must be made scarce everywhere, so that those who want It must be compelled to go to the cornerers and pay their price for It. else there would be no protit In the adventure. When men have attempted to corner wheat they have had to forestall the supplies of that grain coming from all quarters and It is because, as a rule, they have not been able to do this that wheat corners have proved disastrous to their projectors. But there Is not a tittle of evi dence that the gold supply In Loudon and Paris, in Berlin and St. Petersburg, is any less than It ever was, or that men hnve to pay premiums to obtain It. That this la true is evident from the largo shipments of gold now being made to this country In the usual course of business. They must have plenty of It over there. To corner gold the conspirators would hnve to obtain possession of or control all the gold In the world, not only that which Is now In the form of money, but that which can almost Instantly, be turned Into money. Tho mere statement of such a proposition shows Its absurdity. To go no further back than the discov ery of America, the gold production since 1192 amounts to about 88,Oti0,0U0,00O. Some, of course, has been lost or destroyed but there Is today In form of money over l,(W0,uuo,0uo of it, while In other forms there must be nearly as much. And this enormous amount, which the mind can not grasp would have to bo under the mastery of the cornering syndicate. Not only so, but they would have to buy the output of the mines, now amounting to jaw.WJO.OOO annually. If an ordinary wheat or pork corner, embracing crops eon siimcd almost as fast as produced, works illsastes to Its projectors, what must be the result of a gold corner, where the arti cle Is always Increasing and can never be consumed? Would not those who would dream of such an enterprise be almost as hopelessly lunatic as those who assert that It has actually been accomplished? Some years ago an attempt was made to corner copper by men who had almost illimitable resources, and they were bank rupted, some of them being driven to shameful deaths as the result. The gold corner is a myth conceived only by men who never see gold because they have nothing to exchange for It. Gold does not clrculato among us at the present tlmo to nny great extent, not because It Is Cor nered, but because there Is no temptation to investment In Industrial enterprises, while its owners are feurful that we may come to a silver basis, when gold will go to a premium. It Is the Bryans and Tel lers and Stewarts who have driven gold from circulation In the United States, not the Rothschilds and the Morgans. POLITICAL NOTES. Senator Palmer will speak at New York next Tue9day evening. Senator Teller will in a few days begin a stumping tour for Bryan In Kentucky. Senator-elect Foraker Just returned from Europe, says he believes Ohio will give McKinley 200,000 majority. A secret ballot taken among the 1,800 employes of the Crane Elevator works at Chicago, showed less than 100 votes for silver. Clarence S. Darrow, the Populist who was uttorney for Eugene V, Debs at Chi cago, has been nominnted for congress by the Democrats of the Third Illinois dis trict. Evangelist Sam Small has written Ken tucky friends that he will make a thor ough tour In the interest of Bryan. He expects to spend considerable time in Ken. tueky, which he considers a field demand ing much plowing and harrowing. Senutor Gorman's refusal to attend the Bryan reception to be held in Washln ton on Saturday Is rather disheartening to the Democratic managers, who have per sisted in trying to make It appear that the Maryland senator Is an active director ot the liryun forces In the Eastern states. When asked as to whether tho dispatch from Little Rock, Ark., to the effect that Sewall would be withdrawn within a week, and be succeeded by Chief Justice Clarke, of North Carolina, printed In the morning papers, was correct, Chairman Jones said: "Tho story has been printed before and Is not correct, at least so far as I know." On Tuesday thero was a conference In Washington between Senators Jones, Tel ler, Dubois and Gormnn. Senator Teller expressed his opinion In language which could not be misunderstood that the cam paign has been Improperly managed thus far. Jones admitted the charge was true. Ho said that he was a tyro In the con duct of nutlonnl campaigns and that he would gladly resign his position as chair, man of the national committee if Senator Gorman would consent to accept the man agement. Senator Gorman replied that he would not attempt to manage the cam paign unless he could be assured that Mr. Bryan will listen to his suggestions and as he Is convinced that Mr. Bryan is not In a listening mooil and as Mr. Bryan has de clined up to the present to tako advleo from anybody he did not see how it would be possible for him to acquiesce In Senator Jones' suggestion. Says Walter Wellman: "I speak where of 1 know when I say all the Democratic managers now in Washington are begin ning to fear they are to be overwhelmed by a great tidal wave. When the people get started in a certain direction they travel faster and go farther than nny one calcti litts. It ws so in 'SO, In '92, in '91. The ma jorities In those years, first for the Dem ocrats and then for tho Republicans, were greater than the most optimistic obser ver had dared estimate. The Indications today are that the people are about to re peat their performances at the last three clsctlons. There are wholesome rigns that the tidal wave will run as strongly through the remainder of New England as It has run In Vermont and Maine, that It will sweep New York by 200.1MO or 300,001, New Jersey by Ki.OOO and Pennsylvania by 2.MMKV), that it will-take In Maryland, West Virginia. Kentucky, Ohio and Michigan. As It reaches the central west It may di minish somewhat in force, but no one doubts now that It will run over Indiana, Illinois, Wisconsin and Iowa. Mnncsota, Nebraska and Wyoming are nil likely to fall within the Republican column, and there are hopes for even Missouri and Kansas. The Democratic managers ad. mlt that the hardest thlnr they will have to contend against henceforth will be the general belief that Bryan Is whipped and that the only question remaining to be decided Is as to the size of McKlirley's majority." MRS. BRYAN AND IIEIt PASSES. From the Des Moines Capital. In traveling westward from her eastern tour with her husband Mrs. W. J. Bryan, of Lincoln, Neb., the wife of the Popo cratlc presidential nominee, lost her pocketbook containing all the money she had, also a vast number of railway passes and her Pullman pass. Mrs. Bryan, being GOUSMS Rlack Our new stock now complete. It comprises all of the latest weaves, such as Lizard Cloths, Crepons, Basket Cloths, Boucles, Camel's Hairs, Cheviots, Cravennettes, Vicunas, Brocades, Serges, Henriettas, etc., etc. It will be a pleasure to show them. Special Sale 200 Dozen designs. Every Street They say we are crazy, selling such Suits, Overcoats and bants at such low prices. Well, let us be crazy. Craziness has been our suc cess. Therefore we continue to be crazy. GREAT EASTERN SUIT AND PANTS the wife of a staesman who Is devoting his life to the destruction of the pluto crats, of course, travels on gilt edge an nual passes. She discovered at Galesburg, 111., that she had lost her passes and she was supplied with a trip pass to Pacific Junction. Nobody in Illinois could sup ply her with a pass on the B. A. M. In Ne braska. A gold bug on the train gave the conductor a $20 gold piece and told him to go and give it to Mrs. Bryan, telling her that her husband could repay It In silver dollars after he got home, provided he paid it before election. But the conductor be ing a silverlte would not make the pro. position. CURRENCY AND PRICES. From the Post-Express. Treasury reports show cleardly enough that more money, both In the aggregate and per capita, is now In circulation than In 1873; and that owing to the purchase of silver under the Bland and Sherman acts, we have had more silver and more circu lating medium than ever before in our history. A few llgures will set this forth: Money in Per Year Circulation. Capita. lKtt) H.TS.OOU.OUO lStlii 714.000,000 20..17 1X70 075,000,0110 17.50 PJ7J 7.11,O0O.0UO 18.01 JSSO 973.000,0(10 19.41 8V l,292.0UO,UU0 23.02 1890 l,4U!I.OUO.00O 22.82 1S93 l,CO2,O(X),0tf0 22.93 In the light of these statistics It Is Im. possible to assert that our currency has been inadequate. As a matter of fact there were coined but 8.0ih,oOO silver dol lars from 1792 up to 1S73, while from 1S?S we have added 430,000.000 of sliver dollars to our stock. The alleged "crlmo of IS73" therefore has not curtailed our supply of money but It has been In creased, until in the opinion of financial men it has been Bince 1S93 In over-supply, beyond the needs of business. This redundancy of the currency is one of the secondary causes for the large exports of gold during the last three years. Clearly enough In the United States the demone tization of Bil ver did not decrease our stock of money, and there Is now no shortnge to fill; henco prices could not have fallen from that cause and could not now be raised by any addition to our circulation on a gold basis. Debasement is the only chance for such a rise. It Is credit wftleh constitutes tho real medium of exchange in the greater part of the United States today, and It is this credit which is the most valuable thing In our trade that a change In the standard would destroy. THE MACHINE AND THE MAN. From the Washington Post. , J. M. H. Frederick has an article In the American Journal of Civics for August and September In which ho takes the un tenable ground that Invention and ma chinery ore Inimical to the happiness and prosperity of tho people. He quotes John Stuart Mill's remark that "It Is question able If all tho mechanical Inventions yet made have lightened the day's toll of any human being," and follows this with Rus kln's familiar proposition: "Though Eng land Is deafened with spinning wheels, her people nre not clothed; though she Is blaek with the digging of coal, her people die with cold; though she has sold her soul for gain, they die of hunger." There are better authorities than Mill or Ituskln on a question of this kind, and no man's opinion Is to be accepted any farther than It accords with universally accepted facts. There is not a man in the United States whose memory goes back forty years who does not know that, con temporaneously with the grand march of applied science, the condition of labor has Improved. The Introduction of labor-saving machinery has always had Its oppo nents. Their predictions of disaster have been sounding ever since the first cotton spinning machine was Invented. They have Incited some of tho Ignorant and cred ulous to riots for the destruction of ma. chtnery as the deadly foe of man. But as years have passed on the Intelligent work tngmen of this country have learned that invention, instead of enslaving them, has been their best friend. They have shorter 'day's work, more comfortable and whole some places to work In, better homes, bet ter food, better clothing, better schools, - Goods Point De Venice Handkerchiefs, in 15 Your Choice, 22 Cents. Gar Stops FINE TAILORING AT POPULAR and In all ways, a larger return for their work. ITS PENCHANT 'OR"FREE"D01H From Barcus' "Boomerang." Mr. Bryan, why Is It that you Democrats always want something free? During the war your party fought for free labor didn't want to pay anything for It wanted actual slavery. After that you wanted free trade; I, e., since you could hot get the work for noth ing you wanted It for the smallest pay possible by putting us In competition with the pauper labor of Foreign countries. Now, having partly accomplished that, you want free sliver, bo as to give us our reduced wages in half-priced money. Let us see then to sum up: 18C1. Free work equals no pay equals absolute slavery. 1892. Free trade equals one-half work ct one-half pay equals three-fourths slavery. 1896. Free silver equals one-halt work at one-half pay, and pay worth one-half equals seven-eighths slavery. THE SULTAN'S FORESIGHT. From the Washington Star. The Sultan's defence consists in bringing forward either of two propositions, as the occasion may require. That there are no outrages In Armenia, and that if there are it Is nobody's business except his own. A BOLD POLICEMAN. "I wonder,' said the policeman who knows more about the local regulations than about Biblical history, "why It was that Joshua made the sun stop?" And the member of the bicycle-squad ex panded his chest and looked learned and answered: "That's easy. He probably arrested it for scorching," Washington Star. LIGHTNING FRUIT JARS 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 K2 UCKAWANM AVc Sweetheart Travellers, A Charming New Juvenile by S. R. CROCKETT, Author of Stlckit Minister, Lllao Sunbonn.t, Tho Raiders and The Fluy Actress. The greatest jnvenile since Mrs. Burnett's Fauntlorojr." It takes by storm the hearts of all the children from baby to grandma. BEID1K THE BOOKMAN 437 Sprue St.. Opp.Thi CtasioowMltb. . BAZAAR. at the Door. CO., 429 Lackawanna Ave. PRICES. As four needs suggests anything In the way of H.tlontiy, Blcnk tcclm or OIB Supplies, and when your list Is full bring it in and we will surprise you with the novelties we receive daily. We also carry a vory neat line of Calling Cards and Wed-iing- Invitation at a moderate prica. IB R. Stationers and Engravers, HOTEL JERMYN BUILDINO. CONRAD IS SHOWING HIS FALL HATS GOOD HATS Never So Cheap. CHEAP HATS Never So Good. Houses for Sale and for Rent. If you contemplate purchasing or leas Ing a house, or want to Invest In a lot, sec the list of desirable property no page s el Tb Tribune. " f iTE IT Mil