4 tall? and Weekly. No Sunday Edition. TfcUIl.ed at Ecnnton. Pa, by Tbs Trtbuna Pub. jbOitug Company. C. . KINGSBURY, Pat, ana GtN-t Ma. C. M. RIPPLC, ana Tun. UVV S. RICHAROi tairoa. W. W. DAVIS, wikiw M W. W. VOUNOa. ao. Maaa-a. Kew Vort Office: Tribune Rulldluz. Frinfc a Oray, Uaiiacer. IMimu at tub poaroFVini t scRavroil. pa.. AS SIC0HD-CLAfc3AI!.UATTlH. SCKANTOX. SEPTKMUBR 29. 1S9& THE REPUBLICAN TICKET. NATIONAL. President-WILI.JAMKIXI.EY. Viee-Presldent-UAKIIKT A. HuUART. STATK. Congressmen - nt - Large GAU'SHA A. GROW. BA.Ml'lOL, A. DAVKXI'UHT. Ol N'TV. Congress WILLIAM CON SELL. Commlsslnners-S. V. lloBKKTS. GILES KOBKHTS, , , Audltors-A. E. K1F.FEH, FRED L. WARD. i.Ft;isi,.vrivF. Senate, 21st M'trict-COL. W. .1. SCOTT. Hepresntutlve, 1st Plstrlet JOHN R. PARK: I'd District A. T. CONNKLL: 3d District lK. N. C. M.U'KKV; -tli District John p. ri:ynolus. It Is announced that if Uryan at tempts to make a speaking: tour of In diana ficneral Harrison will follow him. Uryan had better take warning- In time. Court Costs. The work of the last grand jury was especially praiseworthy in Its refusal to saddle the county with costs In ig nored assault nnd buttery hills. Of the MS lilll.s which this prand jury threw out of court more than !I0 per cent, rep resented simply petty spites and the jury properly declined to make the county a partner in the expense of air ing private Ill-will. Hut whut can be said of the commlt tins magistrates who send before the prand jury nt each quarter session such n raft of trivial litigation? How Is their acquiescence to be excused? To be sure. It is money in their pocket and under our beautiful petty magis terial system a premium seems to be put on the manufacture of law suits with a view to the festive fee. Accord ing to this view the public Itself may be the flnul claimants tr the blame: nut until It can realize its own delin quency In tacitly acquiescing In such an obsolete and Inefllclent system, there Is some measure of satisfaction in vent ing one's disgust on the ietty magis trates themselves. P.Iennially, just about election time, we are accustomed to hear from am bitious lenlslators, who take pains to inform the community of their Inten tion of framing legislation for the re duction of excessive court costs. This year this customary declaration of in tentions Is missing. Has the task been given up as un Impossibility? The report thai there will be no fu ture lowering of the price of standurd high-grade bicycles should be told to the marines. No Compulsory floney. Where compulsion supersedes consent, security doc not lie; where security noes nut i!i', society as represented by govern ment loses lis purpose; anil Individual um l.ltlon nnd emulation will stop their ef forts. Prom a Hook Called "The Way Out." Here we have In few words a crys tallization of the whole argument ngnlnst fiat money of whatever kind. That money Is sound money which does not need the "thou shall" of statutory law to compel It3 acceptance by the creditor. That money Is unsound money which forces Itself Into reluctant hands by virtue of a legal tender act. No American citizen, be his political beliefs what they may, hesitates to ac cept gidd money or Its equivalent in discharge of a debt. Altgeld, Sewall, Stewart, all the prominent advocates of fifty-cent unlimited silver dollar coin age, require by contract that those who owe them shall make paympnt In gold. Their leases without exception have the gold clause. The bonds which they purchase In business transactions are Invariably gold bonds. They demand gold simply because they know that when they get It they get a form of nio-iey which will not lose value by sudden fluctuation In public confidence. Jfo one has ever hpard or read of a sane man expressing distrust of gold money. There Is no record of a man going from one country to another with gold In his pocket and finding at his journey's end that his money In the meantime had fallen so low In public estimation as to be shorn of Its pur chasing or debt-paying value. With gold, compulsion does not supersede consent; there is no need of compulsion at all. The gold as bullion will do quite as well as a medium of exchange as the gold stamped by government Into coin. But how Is It with flat money? The old state bank scrip was Hat money, and Its value used to vary between the rising and the setting of the sun. Con federate notes were flat money, and at one time It took $100,000 In those notes to buy a suit of clothes. The silver dollar of Mexico Is In part flat money, and while legal compulsion makes it pay a dollar's worth of debt In Mexico, the moment It crosses the Rio Grande, It becomes worth in American gold standard money only the commercial value of Its smelted bullion. Even In Mexico prices have risen to meet the dollar's fall, so that If tomorrow sliver should fall fifty per cent., It would take twice as many Mexican dollars to buy an article of commerce after the fall as were required before. This leaves nobody better off;- It ' simply makes for uncertainty and Insecurity In business. . . Vo we want a currency In the United States which has to be forced oh people by government flat? j Must compulsion supersede, consent? Does the man who works for a living want the law to put Into his employer's hands fifty cents' worth of silver with fiat power to pay a dollar In wages? Is not it the right plan in a government of freemen to have money so good that everybody will be glad to take It at what its stamp says It Is worth? . Republican newspapers will not make much capital trying to spread the Idea that Bryan has been discourt eous to the clergy. When a clergy man goes Into politics he must ex pect to receive blows as well as to give them. No clergyman when outside the pulpit ought to interpose his cloth as a shield against a reasonable criti cism of his controversial utterances on secular topics. This Year's Lake Traffic. Some facts in relation to this year's, lake traffic have been collated which will Interest all persons who take pride In the development of Inland com merce, and especially those who have made the voyage by water from r.uffa lo to Uuluth. A careful estimate com putes the lake tonnage of 1X96 at S.OOO,- 000 tons In excess of last year's ship ments, which were In that year far In excess of the average. L,ake Superior's share alone of this Immense tratllc, from the opening of navigation to Sept. 1 was 10.67S.859 tons. 2.000,000 tons larger than for the similar period last year and 4,000,000 tons larger than on Sept, 1, 1S'J4. The footings for the other lakes are not yet given, but it seems fair to assume that the ratio of Increase was general. More vessels pass through the St. Clair ship canal during the eight months of lnke navigation than float on the Thames at London during the twelve months of the year. An aver age of one vessel every seven minutes, day and night. Is the record nt this arterial point in the chain of lakes. The new American lock at the "Soo," which cost $5,000,000, Is 500 feet long by 60 wide, and which lifts or lowers the largest vessels from one lake level to the oth er In twelve minutes, was thrown open to traffic In August and is expected to be a mighty developing force In the di lectlon of augmented tonnage. The government Is wisely expending liberal sums of money In deepening the chnnnels of the St. Mary's and St. Clair rivers and In widening the approaches to Important dorks. Hut the need of redoubled ' energy along' this line Is made apparent to every traveler by boat through the shallow pluces be tween the main parts of the great lakes. It perhaps Is significant In this con nection that most of the freighters now ailoat between Huffalo and Uuluth fly McKlnley streamers anil carry Republi can crews; for under Kepubllcqn ad ministrations the federal revenues are nut In the habit of sinking so low as to necessitate the abandonment of im portant dredging operations and the postponement of other channel Improve ments that the character of lake navi gation Imperatively demands. Tne New York Sun gives currency to a story that liryan Is mentally dis eased. This Is carrying- opposition too far. We can differ from the other fel lows without necessarily reaching the conclusion that they are crazy. An English Opinion. It Is a well-known fact that the worst ed Interests of Bradford, Eng., bene fitted decidedly by the lower duties of the Wilson bill. To them Its enact ment came as a regular godsend, caus ing Immediate revival where there had since the enactment of the McKlnley tariff been stagnation and even dis tress. Perhaps many who read this will recall how viciously the Bradford papers assailed McKlnleylsm four years ago. They were more violent In the expression of denunciatory opinion than the press of any other English city, a fact which lends added interest to a paragraph which we shall repro duce from an editorial published In the Bradford Daily Argus of Sept. 5. The editorial contrasted the financial views of the Republican party In the present American campaign with those advo cated by Bryan and went on to say con cerning the tariff Issue as represented by McKlnley: Had any one predicted four years ago that it would be possible for the Bradford worsted industry us a whole, depending as It does so largely for Its prosperity un u free entry to American ports, to bo found arrayed on the side of McKlnley and high protection, there would have been rea sonable ground to express douhta us to his sanity. But Impossible us such a change of sentiment would have appeared four years, or even a twelve-month ago, It has actually occurred. Bradford wishes no evil, to the United States, and Hrudford lans would prefer to seea perpetual reign of McKlnleylsm especially the McKlnley lsm as Interpreted by the recent letter of the Republican candidate and the recent declarations of Republican newspapers rather than see a people united to this country by so many ties of blood, tradi tion, and commerce, plunged Into tho whirlpool of national disaster and nutlonul dlsgraco which would Infallibly be Its futo if the people were foolish enough to adopt the policy of Mr. Bryan, a policy as Im possible of realization as It is crude and shallow in the theories on which It Is based. But that Is not all. Hear this: We may go even further than this and say that Bradford manufacturers as a whole approve on principle of the .McKln ley policy, as It has been interpreted by its author and some of the leading Journals attached to his cause. That principle as recently explained does not embody tho imposition or prohibitive duties, but such a tariff as will place producers In America on a fair footing with their competitors here, having regard to the higher rate of pay which prevails for most descriptions of labor on the other side of the Atlantic. It Is to be n duty which will hundlcap Bri tish manufacturers to the extent of de stroying any advantage which they may possess through cheaper lahor, but not such a will Interfere with "keen and healthy competition" between the native and the Imported goods, McKlnley also recognises in full the principle of reci procity. We not only fall to see any Just argument which can be urged against a policy honestly carried out on these lines, but It Is such a policy as has often been advocated In these columns for the United Kingdom, and for the Kmplre at largo under the proposed Imperial Trade Feder ation. It is a sensible policy of encourage ment to native Industries, where such en couragement can be given without dispro portionate cost to the nation at large, of equal play to native and foreign Industrial skill nnd enterprise, and of selling the right of trading in native markets to. those competitors who are willing to give an equal consideration In return to native traders In their markets. It Is n common sense policy, If carried out on reasonable lines. It Is, Indeed, the only common sense policy. And It Is one which tha Bradford manufacturers and the Bradford workers would like to sen adopted In this country, although they lack the courage, wr It may b only the leaders, to sdvocata publicly opinions which are freely ex pressed In private on all hands. We do not imagine that It makes any particular difference so far as the peo ple of the United States are concerned what the manufacturers of Bradford. Eng., "think of American politics so long as they keep hands off of our cam paigns. But the foregoing expressions are certainly Interesting as Indicative of a rapid change In English opinion on the tariff question. When Joseph Chamberlain made that recent speech of his declaring with surprising frank ness that Great Britain might yet have to return to a Protective tariff If she would lireserve her Industries, he evi dently spoke by the card. One year ago Rensselaer county. New York, had 250.000 surplus money In Its treasury. Today It has only $200. The loss of the difference Is explained by the fact that the county treasurer, George H. Morrison, one of Troy's foremost citizens, Is In Jail on a charge of em bezzlement. Morrison had been In of fice only one year. In completeness his crime pales even that of John Bardsley. The Tariff Not Sidetracked. Because the Republican press has lately devoted much attention to the free coinage fallacy It Is not to be In ferred that It has forgotten the tariff Issue. In due time that will resume Its proper place as the leading issue between the parties, and the country which In IS92 rejected Protection by overwhelming pluralities will In 1806 re-adopt it by pluralities still more striking. It will do this because It will have learned by experience on which side Its bread la buttered. A brief re view of Home interesting statistical facts based In the main upon official reports will serve to put this matter In a clearer light. Since the election of Cleveland In 1S92 on an antl-Proteetlon plutform the ag gregate business of our clearing houses has sustained a total shrinkage of from $40,000,000,000 to $50,000,000,000; our for eign commerce has diminished by nearly $1,000,000,000; our agricultural products have suffered a depreciation In value of over $1,000,000,000, to which mils-be added also nearly $1,000,000,000 depreciation In the value of our live stock, $60,000,000 in the value of our sheep and more than $46,000,000 In the value of he wool crop. The number of new railroads being built has been reduced about two-thirds; the number of passengera carried has decreased al most 32,000,000 In three years; there has been a decrease of over $31,000,000 in the net earnings, $50,000,000 In the net re ceipts, $31,000,000 In the receipts from passengers and $12,000,000 In the div idends. There has been a decrease of 4,079,983 In the number of messages sent by telegraph, and an Increase of one cent In the cost per message. Our ex ports of agricultural products have de creased $290,780,000. Unfortunately, we have not the statistics to show how disastrous has been tho effect upon our manufacturing Industries; we know, however, that In many Industries the production and prices have decreased almost one-half. Undoubtedly the business depression of the past three years has been mater ially aggravated by the doubt which the free silver agitation has cast upon the future soundness of our currency; but it Is to be remembered thut this agitation did not take on proportions of seriousness until the revolutionary tariff policy of the Cleveland admin istration had shaken public confidence, brought on general panto and afforded a fertile field for the propogatlon of new heresies. Had Protection not been assailed we question whether Bryan would ever have got the chance to roam about the country preaching the gospel of class antagonisms and striv ing to set labor and capital nt each other's throats. The time is coming when the American people will see these things. To be sure, Thacher got a lot of ad vertising out of It, but it cannot be called free, for it was purchased at the cost of his reputation, A Parallel. Major Handy doesn't take a great deal of stock In the current assertion that Bryan's large audiences menace McKlnley. He remembers a parallel to Bryan's cnmpalgn In the candidacy of Clement L. Vallandlghnm for governor of Ohio. "In the midst of war," he writes, "Vallandlgham was a peace candidate. When nominated he was a fugitive in Canada with a price on his head. Nev er was there a more, audacious stroke in politics, and Its audacity challenged admiration and staggered opposition. There was a widespread belief through out the country and even In Ohio that Vallandlgham might win. Fear stirred the Republicans to unprecedented ex ertion, but do what they would the Democrats seemed to make tho moat noise and their meetings were terrify ing in size. John Sherman in his mem oirs recalls that on the eve of the elec tion Brough, who was the candidate against Vallandlgham, was so im pressed with the. magnitude of the Democratic demonstrations that he re duced his estimate of the Republican majority In the state to 6,000 a figure recognized tn such a vote to be the danger line. But when the votes came to be counted Vallandlgham was found beaten by 100,000, the Republican ma jority being the largest ever known. So much for noise and big meetings as signs of how an election Is going." There la this difference, though be tween Vallandlgham's campaign nnd Bryan's. Bryan Isn't scaring a soul. AN ANXIOUS INQUIRY. Oh, William, Sweet William (we call no last name), Will your kindness In April continue tho same As It was when September made golden the wood. While you sought to find out where tho populace stood? Will you still have the smiles that you lavishly strew? Will you shake every hand that's extended to you? Oh, William, Sweet William (and no one shall see If the next word begins with an "M" or a "B"), Will you think of the generous promises tossed To the crowd when the year became Bilver with frost? Will you still have the graess that mov - us to sing? Will you blossom as sweetly, Sweet Wil liam, in spring? Washington Star. Plea for Cotirfesy in Political Debate The editor of The New Unity, a Chica go denominational journal, recently at tended a political rally in (country town. 'The appaicer." he writes, "was heralded by tlamlng posters which pronounced him tne 'Urlliiunt orator from New York.' He came with the Indorsement and under the appointment of the 'Central Commit tee." The meeting was under the auspices of the local Club.' Venerable men. repre senting the solid citizens, cat upon the platform. A public-spirited physician of the village acted as chairman and pre Rented the speaker with courteous words. Through rain and mud the farmer people for six miles and ten miles around hud come; a goodly representation of women wore present; school teachers, students, the best that an intelligent country com munity could yield were In attendance. All parties were represented. An intel lectual, oratorical treat was expected by ail, enlightenment on a dark subject by a few. It was a literary event In that countryside looked forward to. Children In large proportion, boys and girls, came to hear. They came not with blare of trum pet or bung of drum. There was no un easy demonstration, no lawless expression of a rowdy element. The audience dropped in quietly, soberly us to a Sun. day meeting. There was no rudeness, no profanity, no coarseness. The men took off their huts like gentlemen and sat with their wives and daughters. "The speaker was evidently a man cf considerable mentul truinlng. The How of his language was easy, the swing of his sentences rhythmical, his pronunciation accurate and his grammar proper. To the thoughtful It was a momentous occasion, looked at In its psychical and ethical sig nltlcnnce. The village hall was tilled with four or five hundred representative minds, many of them honestly perplexed In the presence of a problem which they con fessed to be too Intricate for their solu tion. Here was nn occasion which might be made protltuble to nil, memorable to some. The present writer recalled some of the flattering things that Emerson and others have suld of the American toAn meeting and mnde mental comparison be tween this orderly meeting of the repre sentatives of both parties coming to hear one side, with the slouching, noisy, pro fane, hat-wearing and cigar-smoking word meetlna in Chicago, with which ho wns familiar both as speuker and auditor. Hut the speaker began with a much wo.-n, irrelevant nnd somewhat coarse Btory nnd proceeded to characterize the opposing party as apes, monkeys, fools, 'thorn chaps,' cranks, demagogues and similar rhetorical epithets. Scripture was quote.) with Insolvent levity; Bible texts made to enforce fur fetched Jokes and partisan re. torts. The devil, hell, damnation and other theological stage properties were freely handled. The address was not with out argument, and some important ques tions did not go without recognition, but the arguments were presented In such a confident and dogmatic way, with the com. plucent nlr of one who knew It all, and knowing It, It was so easy and plain that It appealed only to child intelligence. For two long and weary hours this 'orutor' from the city, a man who had, according to his showing, hob-nobbed with the great, traveled extensively, was familiar with people of culture and rellnement, Insulted tho Intelligence, brutalized the sensibili ties and blunted the sense of fairness of that audience. To the credit of the audi ence let It be said that they did not laugh at many Jokes, and but slightly responded to his oratorical climaxes. "This "polished orutor' of the handbill closed his address with an elaborate de scription of a mnd dog Intercepted on his way to eat up a lot of women and children on the picnic ground, by a giant .athlete, who choked 111 in to death, which athleto was made to represent the presidential candidate In the Interest of whom he spoke, of course the mad dog which this candidate Is to choke is the other party. It Is not necessary to inquire Into the party limitations of this orator. We had every reason to believe that he Is too typical a character. His like is to be found on both sides und It is all the more humlllut ing to contemplate this spectacle when be speii ks In the Interest of what seems to '.he writer or the listener the right side, Tho saddest humiliations of a political ram puign are the humiliations of Felix Holt, when he found 'right opinions sustained by wrong methods.' The political friends cf this orator, and not his political foes, had cause to hung their heads und to pass out disappointed. "We have dwelt thus long on this pic ture, not because it is nn exceptional one, bue because It Is a common one. It Is true, the speaker had depreciated the Intellec tual and moral currency In that communi ty. He had lowered the standard of cour tesy, had blurred he fine reverences, nil of which Is very sad; but the saddest thing Is that he did this, not In response to the local call of the countryside, but under the sanction of the polished gentle men of the 'Central Committee.' Ho rep resented the strategic methods of the Held marshals. In point- of spiritual dignity, ethical and aesthetic standards, this speech was no far nbove the cartoons ex ploited by our metropolitan dailies nnd thrust by them Into our homes every morning. Indeed, a minister in a out-runt magazine article, pleads for the cartoon and the epigram as the needed help to advance the right cause. With such ho would strike the popular mind nnd save the country from n catastrophe. Uod help the country saved In that way. The Amer ican people are not to be swayed by a Joke or moved by slang and vulgarity. Fortunately there are presented for iho suffrage of the American people In this campaign men of clean lives, gentlemen with honorable record nnd nt least pas sable ability. They represent honorable constituencies nnd Issues that plow deep Into the anxieties of the American heart today. That the Issues are grave and that much depends upon the result of the cam paign, right-minded men on all sides agree. Hence the first duly of the 'Central Com mittee,' as well as public speakers and newspaper editors, Is to treat theso Issues with becoming gravity. "That there Is selfishness and baseness on both sides goes without the saying; that there Is an unconscious element of egotism In both sides is unquestionably true. We cannot expect to expurgate this spirit from our politics while It remains su?h nn Immense factor In our religion, but that these nre the dominant forces that will dictate the votes of next November, we do not believe. We must have convl.;. tlons. We must stand by them, If needs be, tight for them. Hut let us take Into the tight our courtesy, our fair mlndedness and our ability. Better fall with rig'it methods than win by false." (illAM) JUUY'S GOOD WORK. From tho Wllkes-Barre Record. The grand Jury of Lackawanna county adjourned on Saturday after having been In session for two weeks, disposing of 33 bills. Some Idea can be formed of tho Industry of the commltlng magistrates In that county nnd also of the class of cases they return. This particular grand Jury must have been composed of the right class of citizens. AV'e question If a similar report has ever emanated from a grand Jury In any other county in the state. There were 1011 cases of assault and bat tery, and In only three cases were true bills found, while In the other hundred the prosecutors were mulcted !n the costs. If the authorities will sec to It that these costs are collected there can be no donht that It will have the effect of greatly dimin ishing this class of petty litigation. v The I.nckawanna grand jury, as It seems to us, has rendered an Inestimable public service In disposing of so large a portion of these cases In the summary manner indicnted. The costs Imposed upon the prosecutors In these cases should be mer cilessly collected except In cases where It Is clearly shown that the grand Jury has erred, or where exceptional hardship would result. It must be apparent to any thoughtful person who scans the grand Jury reports nnd the trial lists In theso two counties, from time to time, that somo action Is necessary to diminish the voltttno of lawlessness that Is constantly developed among these foreign elements. We would not Imply nor bs understood that there are GOLDSMITH'S Of Interest to Every Lady IN LACKAWANNA COUNTY, AND To Dressmakers Especially We are offering a publication to our friends, which it will not be out of place to state that it is the most unique work ot its kind ever issued in America, mainly for one reason, "that it gives American ladies, for the first time, a knowledge of coming European fashions in advance of the season." The great costuniers or modellers of Europe have heretofore never been willing to display their coming designs of fashion before the shipment of their models, May 8th for the spring, and September Sth for the autumn. This, of course, has always precluded the possibility of our being in the same season. The magazines there and here have endeav ored to divine the coming costumes of the great masters of fashion, but the latter (the mod elers) have always iealously guarded their designs, and consequently the magazines have had to depend almost entirely upon guesswork. In consequence, last year a syndicate of the greatest dry goods houses of America sent a representative to Europe to remedy this trouble. A small fortune was applied, and, to be brief, this is the result. The color process applied in these pages is the first successful work of its kind known, and the book speaks for itself. The contributors to the work are almost all court costumers, and each illustration is authenticated by the house from which it emanates. In conclusion, we trust that our friends . will appreciate our efforts in securing the rights for this great publication, which will appear each year, April and September, for the spring and autumn respectively. i This work will be on sale at Trimming Counter at only 10 CENTS PER COPY. ITS THE And the fit that takes in the Merchant Tailoring business. The Price is what takes in every business. Good reason for our great success. Our stock is the Largest, and having a constant buyer in the market we show Styles the Latest. Yours Truly, GREAT EASTERN SUIT AND PANTS CO., a .125 Branch 4. 427 Lackawanna Avenue, Scranton. Branch 4. not many orderly and reputable, peoplo among the Hungarians, Poles, Russians and Italians in theBe cool regions. Wo nro well aware thut there are many such, but as we have said, the nationalities named contribute entirely too lurge a pro portion to the lawlessness and to the crim inal business that comes before our courts. A halt must be called In some way, and the sooner this Is done the better for the fair fumo of this section of the state. II' LINCOLN ,VKHE ALIVE. From the Washington I'ost. We think It Is stretching probabilities somewhnt too far for the opponents of national banks and bond Issues to Insist that, If Lincoln wero ullve, ho wousf take purt In their warfare upon what they de nominate the "money power." It was during Mr. Lincoln's administration, and, of course, with his sanction, that tho greuter part of un enormous bonded debt was contracted. Is It reasonable to sup pose thut he, ir living, would oppose tho Issue of bonds to meet deficiencies In rev enue? Is It reasonable to suppose that. If he were president, and congress made appropriations In excess of revenues, he would decline to make up the deficit by Issuing bonds? And what Is there in Lin coln's record on which to base the belief or assertion that, If he were president, he would decline to strengthen a depleted gold reserve In order to maintain the na tional credit? Where, In all that survives of the written or spoken words of Lincoln, Is there a line or word that justllles the claim that, if ho had heen president under tho circumstances that surround the second Cleveland administration when It came In, he would have paid out sliver to meet coin demands In violation of the pledge to maintain the parity between gold and silver coins? And whut did Lincoln ever say, write, or do which Jus. tlllea the claim that, it he were here now, he would be In favor of the free, unlimited, and Independent coinage of silver ut a ratio almost a hundred per cent, above the liullion value of silver? W have given some attention to the life, character, tna public services of Mr. Lincoln, but we have not found anything In his record that in duces us to believe or suspect that. If be were participating in this campaign, he would be against the party which achieved Its first national victory by electing him to the presidency. IIIKMAKCK'S LETTEK. Rochester Democrat and Chronicle. Prince Wsmnrck has written a letter as sorting his belief In the desirability of In ternational bimetallism, nnd Intimating that us a means to that end Amenins ought to Ivy the experiment of Independent action. Shrewd old prince! Ills counsel recalls Artemus Ward's willingness to solve the slavery problem If it took nil his wife's relations. Hismarck Is willing enough to let other nutlons burn their fin gers so long as the fatherland's hands tire safe. Scranton Tribune. This comment would be very much to the point If it were based on an accurate report of Hlsmarck's utterances. The vet eran ex-chancellor did not intimate that the I'nited States "ought" to tuke Inde pendent action. He asserted that his In dividual predcltetions were for bimetal lism, anil expressed a belief that Interna tional agreement might be promoted if the people of the I'nited States should "find It compatible with their Interests to take Independent action In the direction of bi metallism." This Is not a recommenda tion; It Is merely n cautious suggestion. However, the remarks of the Scranton Tribune would come In very pal If anv foreign statesman, whose own country nd. Gft i f p,endid Y Display.. rink sa" (j TABLETS. BE1DLEMAN. THE BOOKMAN 437 Sprues St., Opp.Tb Commonwealth. MAKE-UP heres to the gold standard, should have the Impudence to tell the people of the United States that they ought to go It alono In adopting; the silver standard. AFINESHOW Of the latest in China and Silver ware for wedding or other gifts. Dinner Sets, Chamber Sets, Cut Glasses, Silverware. Brie-a-Urac. THE. , Ri, OHEY I'll UCKAWANM AVE. No Charge for Alterations. OF Cloaks and Suits, 421 Lackawanna Ave., Scranton. Corns and Examine Our Slock First. Little money possesses a marvelous ca pacity to do big things here now. Our suit department Is now stocked "with suits galore; prices that will please the hurd-worklng girl and styles that will please the most FASTIDIOUS. COMIC und be convinced. Drown Covert Cloth Suits, velvet trimmed, silk lined, latest style; else, where $S.(KI, Our Price $5.98 Xew lot of handsome cloth Suits, wool and mixtures, all colors, a4 lined with tuffeta silk, tuilor made; elsewhere Our Price $7.98 Very pretty Suits, box front, piped with velvet, extra stiff Inter-lining, skirts perfectly adjusted. Any color you , wish; elsewhere VSf, Our Price $9.99 In our Skirt Department we have 300 different styles of material. We begin with Plain Black Sicilian at II. r. lllack Figured Mohair 1.49 Heavy Cloth, good for winter wear .... 1.98 Uood serviceable wide wale 2.49 Our assortment at :!.fe!i and $3.9H are too numerous to mention. Come and see them. Our waist department Is well supplied with Waists, Just the proper thlnf for this season of the year. Norfolk flan nel waists, In black, blue, brown and green, cheap at $2.20, Our Price $1.49 Our fancy Dresden silk waists have been such an elegant success that we have added to our stock a greater va riety than ever. We are now prepared to show the most beautiful of the sea son at 13.98 and $4.98; your choice of changeable silk waists at 13.49 and 14.49. ZWEING ART, Proprietor. ' " ' 11TE . IT DOWN As your needs suegtsts anything In the way of tim'croy, Eltnk l etVi or 019 Supplies, and when your list la full brln It In and we will surprise yon with tha novelties we receive daily. Wo also carry a very neat lino of Calling Carda and Wed ding Invitations at a moderate prioj. 1 Stationers and Engravers, HOTEL JERMV.N BUILDINO. John 3 S",m" THE STETSON SOFT HAT. NONE BETTER. SELLS THEM AT 303 LACKA. AVE. THIS IS THE MILLER STYLE NONE NICER. WOLF & WENZEL, SJl Linden.. Opp. Court House, PRACTICAL TINNERS and PLUMBERS Bel Agaots for Richardson Boyntoat Furnace and Baogia, I Conrad