THE SCBAXTOJT TRIBUNE-WEDNESDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 14, 1S9. J tsllraod Weekly. Ko Sunday Edition. Published at Scranton, Pa., by Tht Trlbanc Publishing Company. Ktw Toil Office: Trlbnn. Building, Flank S. Ormy, Manager. , UWRID AT TBI POSTOmOl T 9CRNTO. FA,. . UOOHD-CLASa UkU. MATTIR. SCRANTON, OCTOBER 14. 1896. THE REPUBLICAN TICKET. NATIONAL. Presldent-WILLI AM M'KINI-ET. Vice-President OA RttbT A. HOB ART. STATE. Congressmen - a - Large GAyj?.3A,r GROW. SAMUEL A. DAY EN PORT. COt'NTV. Congress WlLLIAxTcONNETJi. Commls?loners-S. W. ROBERTS. GILES ROBERTS. r.r. T Auditors-A. E. KIEFER. FRED I WARD. LEGISLATIVE. Senate, 21st tllstrlctCOL. W. J-SCOTT. Representative, 1st Dlstrlct-JOHN K. FARR; 2d Dlstrlct-A. T. CONNbLL. Id Distrlct-DR. N. C. MACKEY; n Dlstrlct-JOHN F. REYNOLDS. Con a city like Srranton afford to take risks at Harrlsburg next winter by sending to represent It In the Irgis latuie a man without experience In leg islative matters? Why not make sure of effective representation by re-electing Alex. Connell? Vote the Straight Ticket. Voters Interested In Republican fup oess will readily see the dunfier which lies In the efforts of the Democratic candidates for county commissioner to pet them to divide their votes between the parties for this office. The Repub lican, for example, who agrees to vote for one of the Robertses and also for one of the Democratic candidates, vir tually agrees to vote for two Democrats, since as a result of similar trades If one Democrat Is elected the other would tie almost sure to be, also. The object of all persons who propose trades and compromises of this kind, with refer ence either to the commissioners or the auditors. Is to weaken the Repub lican strength and fortify the Democ racy In local position. The Democrats last spring captured the city government and now they are reaching out for the most important county office that of the commission ers. If by any hook or crook they can pet the control of this office, they will be in excellent trim to make trouble for Republican candidates and Repub lican policies In the future. It will be the fault of the Republicans themselves If this ruipose shall be attained. The candidates presented on the Republican ticket nre both trustworthy men, who have demonstrated their ability and In whose hands the fiscal Interests of the county will be perfectly safe. No Re publican who wishes to see his his par ty strengthened for future fights will play Into the hands of the opposition by yielding an Inch to any Democratic overture. This Is a good year for Republicans to make their ballots emphatic by vot ing them straight. Favorable reports continue to come from John F. Reynolds' canvass In the Fourth district. If his friends will keep steadily at work, ho will undoubtedly be elected. The Question of Plurality. If Mr. Connell w" to be elected to congress next ii.iith by only a small plurality, th i .ivwe would be that ri oieetlon hud ccdeed to Intel est the voter of Lackawanna county, and en couragement would thus he given to the free traders like Mr. Bryan to plan new campaigns against the welfare of our Industries. A small plurality would be as good as a million so far as seating Mr. Con nell is concerned. Therefore so far as lie Is personally concerned he no doubt could stand It to see the Republican vote kept within the normal propor tions. But his feelings In the premises are a minor consideration one way or the other. He stands simply as the temporary representative of cer tain public principles, and it should be -the concern of the people of the district, who expect from a triumph of those principles to derive' a new period of prosperity, that the majority rolled up In their behalf shall be unmistakable In Its emphasis. Consequently it Is not enough to feel convinced of Mr. Connell's election. That in itself, while important, 1 not the only nor even the chief considera tion. The objective point of the energy of every local believer in Protection and an honest currency should be from this time on the casting three weeks hence ,of such a sweeping mujorlty for those principles as will settle for all time the question as to where Lacka wanna stands. Mr. Vldaver, another time, should in sist upon a gold clause in his contract. Making the Rich Richer. Since the Sherman law was repealed the government has cleared $5,700,000 in profit on its silver coinage. In other words It buys silver at the mar ket ratio, 32 to 1, coins it at the coin age ratio, 16 to 1, and pockets the dif ference. This clearly Is a sensible ar rangement, which benefits all the peo ple, Blnce what is the government's is the people's. Rut this doesn't satisfy the silver syndicate. The members of that gi gantic trust are nut content to accept' the market price for their products, the same as other folks have to do. They want the law to let them take CO cents' worth of silver bullion (mar ket price) to a government mint, and have it coined free at public expense Into an alleged dollar which Is to be made legal but not equitable tender for 100 cents' worth of debt. . The dif ference between actual and'1 nominal value would represent the silver mine- owner's margin of profit through Bry an's election. It is a SO per cent, pick up which would soon run into the mil lions, and it fully explains why the silver syndicate has tapped Its barrel in Bryan's behalf. It may be that the laboring men of the United State, captivated by Bry an's palavering talk, will be willing to vote CO cents out of every dollar they own or earn into the pockets of the two-dozen multi-millionaires who con trol the silver mines of the United States, but we must say that we doubt it like sixty. It will be a pleasure for our citizens tomorrow night to welcome, at the Frothlngham theater Republican mass meeting, so admirable an orator and so worthy a gentleman as Hon. Charles Emory Smith. Mr. Smith, since hla en trance Into the present campaign, has won the most favorable opinions wher ever ho has spoken, and the recollec tion of his brilliant speech here two years ago will doubtless be sulllclent to pack the theater in anticipation of his coming. Wages and Prices, The workingman has been told time and again by the free silver orators that his condition not only In bad, but that it Is getting worse. This Is true to Just this extent: The Democratic war upon the Protective tariff, begun in 1S92, has reduced wages and lessened employment, and since then times have been hard. But It hasn't been the fault of our money system, for prior to 1N92, In the years when there had been a good Protective tariff, the condition of the workingman bad been steadily Improv ing. He nad been earning more money and that money, when earned, had bought more than at any other time In modern history. The federal census on manufacturing wa-cs shows that In lSliO the annual average Income of hand workers in American factories and mlllB was 247; In 1SG0. S2S8; In 1870, $377; In 1SS0. 340, and In 1890, $484. The high figure in 1870 covers a period of green back inflation when $377 in paper meant only about $302 in gold. This shows that wages have increased under Protection and the gold standard. But how about prices? We could quote table after table showing the gradual Jecline In prices within the past twenty or twenty-five years, but it is unneces sary because Bryan and his colleagues all admit that prices have fallen and make that the basis of their chief at tark upon the present monetary stand ard. We will, however, offer Just one thing In evidence, a series of extracts from the day-books of John Rusby, a retired grocer of Franklin, N. J., to gether with some comments made by him. Any workingman forty years old ur older can from memory readily veri fy the entries. Under date of October 17, 1SCS, Mr. Rusby made this entry: "Patrick Cot foe bought 4 pounds butter, $2.20; 1 pound green tea, $1.25; 1 pound black tea, $1; 21 pounds brown sugar, $3.42; 1 pound washing soda, 6 cents; 2 pounds candles, 40 cents;. 1 pound starch, 14 cenls; 10',i pounds pork, $2.10; 4 pounds currants, 42 cents; Vi pound mustard, HO cents; 1 broom, 5 cents; Vi gallon kerosene, 25 cents. Total, $12.39. At l.sflG prices the above would cost $5.96." On November 2, 1SC8, he wrote In his account book; "Stephen Balls bought 2 pounds lard, 4S cents; 50 pounds Hour, 3.50. Total, $3.98. I'reBent price, $1.43. John Corb bought 7 pounds brown sugar for $1.10. Present price, 35 cents. Jacob Kierstead bought 1 barrel of Hour, $1C; 1 gallon molasses, 95 cents; 7 pounds granulated sugar, $1.20. Total, $18.14. Present price, $5.63." It is unnecessary to multiply instanc es of the greater purchasing power of wages today, under the gold standard, than under the depreciated currency in vogue right after the war,-although they could be multiplied indefinitely. The point for present consideration by every workingman who has not yet wholly made up his mind on this money question Is simply this: "If free silver would raise the prices of what I have to buy, what assurance have I that It would raise my wages In proportion? If it does raise my wages In proportion I will be no better off, relatively, than now. What I gain by Increased wages would bo wiped out by increased ex penses. But If It doesn't raise my wages os fast and as high as it raises my expenses bow will I profit by it? Won't I be actually worse off than now?" Mr. Bryan talks a good deal about his friendship for the workingman, but he has not yet found time to explain how It would benefit that workingman to have his cost of living doubled with no definite assurance that his income will double correspondingly. Until he makes this point plain, his whole argu ment will lack a leg to stand on. Senator Quay's first ofilcial prediction of next mouth's result isn't as long as his great tariff speech, but it is quite as interesting. Growing Desperate. Over his own signatur- Major Moses P. Handy, the veteran Journalist. w-'ies: A The desperation of the Popocritlc man agers Is such that almost anything may bo expected of them in tho last days of me campaign, i nave reason to believe that they are already contemplating the advisability of fomenting some great popu lar disturbance which will unsettle the public mind, throw the masses into fren.y agnlnst the classes and provoke federal Interference as in 1891, for preservation of law and order. Among the schemes un der consideration are local Btrlltes lit Cleveland and Milwaukee, In which It Is hoped Hanna and Payne may be involved, and another genernl railroad strike. They argue that capitalists and business men generally can be no more antagonist!!' to Bryan than they are and that a Inbor dls. turbanre like the Homestead strike or the Pullman strike, with ineldentai disor der, may, through the medium of a sym pathetic strike, dislodge organized labor from the support of McKlnley. Charged with this design, a man prominent In the management of tho Bryan campnUn frankly admitted that If the way could hp found he and his associates would not hes itate to bolster their fulling cause by such means. "A geheral strike and a panic," said he, "would not be too high a pries to pay for the electoral votes of Illinois." One docs not like to believe a charge so serious as this, and' yet there are many considerations which tend to render It probable. Having deliberately started out with tho intention of set ting the poor against the rich in a conflict of tho classes, It would be only a logical outgrowth of this 'purpose if, at the last, as a final blow, a violent! strike should be fomented. To his ac tion In a former strike, disgraceful as It was to law-abiding citizens. Gover nor Altseld owes his present strength In politics. By that course he won the favor of the unthinking and the law less, and It would be no surprise If he should consider that a repetition of the episode would clinch his grip on that element and bring it to the support of the whole Popocratlc programme. The Bryan campaign having failed to develop strength along the lines of rational argument stands In need of something out of the ordinary to bolster it up. Defeat to its leaders means permanent political exile. No other party will ever give them shelter. The Democracy itself, when it shall come to ItR sober senses, will regard them as its betrayers and they will not be able to look for asylum In that quar ter. Their situation Is therefore plain ly one of desperation, and in such an emergency one Is justified In expecting extreme measures. The Btrike story If not true Is entirely plausible. The South Carolina ' Legislature Is expected at its next session to make an Investigation of the dispensary system of regulating the liquor traffic, with a view to the discovery of great leaks In the funds. It will be remembered that this was "Pitchfork" Ben Tillman's system. He Is responsible for its adop tion and for its subsequent enforce ment and control. Some one In the purchasing department Is charged with having received large sums of money from the distilleries in the form of re bates. Tillmanlsm, therefore, may soon be on the defensive. Socialism and Anarchy. The Buffalo Enquirer, although sup porting McKlnley, does not believe with General Harrison, Bishop New man, ex-President White and Arch bishop Ireland that the Chicago plat form Involves the menace of anarchy. "If tho sentlnent that prevails so large ly In the south and west were," it asks, "really that of anarchy, what guar antee would we have of the continu ance of the republic? On the character of the people of the United States de pends the safety of the nation, and If the people of a great section of the country, strongly supported In all parts of it, are anarchists, then the outlook Is hopeless. The prospect is a clash, If not this year then in the future, be tween the conflicting systems and the probable establishment of an empire. We prefer the homely philosophy of Lincoln that you may fool some of the people all the time and all the people some of the time, but you can not fool tho whole of tho people all the time." Our contemporary perhaps misinter prets the tenor of the objections to Bryanlsm offered by the four gentle men previously mentioned. It is not claimed that the masses who support the Chicago nominee and platform are conscious and wilful anarchists. The only claim made is that In tendency the Chicago deliverance, as dally reiterat ed and expounded' by Bryan, makes for disorder rather than for order, and bids for votes In a manner dangerous to republican Institutions. It Is a fair construction of the Chicago programme to say that it proclaims the powerless ness of tho national executive to en force federul law unless Invited to do so by the governor or legislature of tho state In which the violation takes place. It is equally fair to say that it encourages the idea of "packing" the United States Supreme court for the purpose of influencing its decisions on questions Involved in political contro versy, as for instance, the constitu tionality of a tax on Incomes. It Is also fair to say that it solicits the suf frage of workingmen as a class under cover of an Implied promise of exemp tion from the law when applied as in the case of strikes. These faults of the Chicago platform certainly do noj en courage law and order or make for the security of our government. They are essentially seditious and anarchistic In general tenor and trend; If successful at the polls, it is reasonable to Infer that the men who should have won power by puch faint suggestions of the communistic spirit would grow bolder nnd more outspoken at the ensuing gen eral elections, until In time all checks to lawlessness would be gone. The revolutionary spirit, when oncearoused, is not easily placated. Like the appe tite for strong drink it has to be fed always with increasing allowances. But if Bryanlsm were not positively dangerous In its avowed doctrine, what shall be said as to the men and influ ences most prominently masked behind it? Can wo call tho blatant and blas phemous Tillman a conservator of peace and prudent restraint? Is Alt geld a type of reassuring statesman ship? Do Senator Stewart, Coxey, Pef fer and Tom Watson suggest a con servative and well-ordered administra tion of the national government? Is the activity In Bryan's behalf of Debs and other fomenters of trouble and discord a guarantee that his election would stay tho hand of vio lence and pour balm upon bruised pub lic confidence? Are the fiery harran gues of Bryan himself, in studied ap peal to class prejudice, calculated to en force the wisdom of his election to an office of supreme responsibility? Not all Bryanites are anarchists, by any means; but surely the bent of Bry an's canvass Is in the direction toward lather than away from anarchy, and that fact alone is enough to condemn him. "Robbers and thieves" Is the polite term applied by last) evening's Times to supporters of honest money. "Mur derers" and "traitors" will probably come next. . If Alex Connell had not been elected to the legislature two years ago tho Scranton poor district would have been K17.000 the poorer. Work like bis de serves a re-election. The Sctnnton Times will have hard work trying to convince Its readers on the South Side that tho steel rail busi ness Is already too prosperous, s We still thlnkvthe chnnee of a life time was missed when Vldaver wasn't paid In Mexican dollars. It would be Interesting to know the real reason why Bryan did net come to Scranton. . ' Was Vldaver's check after .all only an Iridescent dream ' - - Bryan Reftifed by Cold f acts To the assertion of Mr. Bryan at Cov ington, Ky., Oct. 2. that "prosperity has never followed the gold standard," the Louisville Courier-Journal makes tho following reply: The total wealth of the United States was 3O,0.iS.518,5C7 in 187a It was W5,U37,09l,iJT In 1890. an Increase of over 100 per cent, under the gold standard. The we.ilih per capita of the United States was J7S0 In 1870; it was $1,036 in 1, an Increase of 'il per cent, under the gold standard. Our foreign trade increased from 1878 to 1890 44 per cent, under the gold standard. Tho coal production of Iho United States Increased from 53,822,839 tons In ISSil to llO.K.S2.72a tons In 1S90, an in crease of 121 per cent, under ten years of gold standard. The Iron production of the United States Increased from 2,74l,sT)3 tons in 1879 to t.2i2.73 tons In 1890. on in crease of ZS& per cent, under eleven years of gold standard. The savings bank depo sits of the United States Increased from tra9.87l.308 In INTO to 11.810,597,03 In 1WJ, an increase of ubout 230 per cent, under tho gold standard. The number of depositors In the savings banks of the United States Increased from l.li::,SW In 1870 to 4,875,519 In 189.1, and tholr savings per capita Increased in the same time from $14.20 to $25.88. Hut this Is not all.' The public debt of the United States was $1,922,517,324 lb 180 or $;;8.33 per capita; In 1MW It wus only $915, !;2,112, or $II,G3 per capita a reduction of more than 50 per cent. In the totnl and of 01 per cent. In per capita indebtedness tinder the gold standard. Tho state debts of the United States amounted to $24.500, 074, or $5.79 per capita, In 1880; in 1899 they amounted to $132,3.'lii.C89. or only $3.50 per ca pita. The net federal, state and county In debtedness in the United States was fci.Xltl, 849.034 in 1S80. or $10.59 per capita; in 1S90 it was l,2Sf,li2ii,8lu, or $20. IU per capita a re duction of over 50 cent. Farm property, Including lands, fences and buildings, were valued at $9,2i:2,K),iW In 1870, and had In creased to $13,279,iw0,00O in 1S90. Farmers owned $320,000,000 worth of improvements and machinery In 1S70 and $l9l,900.0l)i) worth In 1890. Farm live stock amounted to l,525.fWO,000 In 1870, and to $2,2os,iHW,ii"o in 1890. Tho acreage of farm lands In 1S7J was 4117,7:15,041; In 1899, 023,218,019 an In crease of over 50 per cent, llulldlng and loan association deposits were of little consequence in 1875; in 1892 they reached a total of $500,009, OUO, and In 1S9I! amounted to $750,000,000 all under tho gold standard. Moreover, the exports from the United States have increased 131 per cent, since 1872 under tho gold standard. Farm pro ducts grain, cotton, tobacco, meat, live cattle, sheep and hogs worcex ported In 1872 to Iho amount of $:!53,908,.17; In 1892 $754,480,843 worth of these articles went abroad. Freight rales on wheat from Chi cago to New Yorw have been reduced frora 19.19 cents per bushel by lake and canai in 1873 to 4.11 cents In 1895; from 33.2 cents, all rail, In 1S73 to 12.17 cents, all rail, In 189.1, Average wages In manufacturing In. dustrles increased from $128 In 1870 to $ISI In 1890, or 39 per cent. The purchasing power of wages at the same time Increased from 4.1 In 1S70 to 172.1 In 1MM, taking IS) as a basis of comparison at 100. A one horse plow that 0.4 bushels of wheat, or 19.1 bushel of corn, or 27 bushels of oats. In 1873, could be bought In 1X89 for 3.8 bushels of wheat, 8.5 bushels of corn or 11.5 bushels of oats. A binder that cost the farmer 277.7 bushels of wheat In 1873 could be bought for 184.9 bushels In 1889. A one horse cultlvntor that cost 6.8 bushels of wheat In 1873 could be bought for 4.7 bush els in 1SS9. A two-horse plow that cost 17.0 bushels of wheat or 52.9 bushels of corn in 1873 could be liuiiKht In 18s for 13.7 bushels of wheat or 31.2 bushels of corn. The volume of money In clrctilatln In 1872 was $728.Mi.5l9. or $18.19 per capita. Includ ing depreciated paper; In 1890, June 30, It was $l,5oo,o:il,n20. or $21.10 per capita. Counting the money in the treasury there was in the United Slates In 1872 $18.70 per capita, which In 1MW had Increased to 'S1M per capita. Money has Increased In sup ply so much more rapidly than the demand that Interest rates have declined 25 per cent, since 1873. No other nation on earth can match this story of progress. LAW AMI VALUE. Secretary J. Sterling .Morton. The power to liquidate debts is con ferred upon money by law. This much legislation can do for a currency. It can not, however, create value uny more than it can create health. It cannot eradicate the bad and instil tile the good In human nature. Tho theory that the dollar Is val uable only because of the law, and that a metal may be doubled In value for mone tary uses by a statute, is absurd. Value depends upon demand. Demand depends upon desire, and lawmakers can create valuo for silver in the arts and for orna ments equul to that of gold Just as easily us they can create value for silver as money equal to that of gold as money. DEDUCTIVE REASONING. New York Commercial-Advertiser. If a man Is in doubt about his vote let him pause and consider. Ho wants to voto for the good of tho country. Those who want to vote for the good of the conn, try are the law abiding element, the law abiding element Is the respectable por tion of the community, tho respectable portion of the community are the best Informed people, the best Informed peo ple are the educated and the educated are out and out for McKlnley. TllAT ENDEAVOR CONVENTION. From tho Jermyn Tress. Nothing was left undone that might In tensify the cordiality with which the broad-minded people of Scranton wel comed the unsectarlan visitors. There Is nothing narrow about Scranton and when a society which Is also broad-minded on 1 evangelical In Ha views honors the city with a visit the opportunity to reciprocate is not thrown awuy. . STRANG!'. IIF.DI'LLLOWS. From the Washington Post. Dear, dear! How wonderful are the re venges and the transmutations of free government. To think that, within so smnll a space of time we should find Wat terson. Hill, Palmer, Cockran, Pat Oieu Fon, Herr Host, the tuneful Glider, and the snarling Uodkin spooned together In one bed! HONORS EVEN. From the Washington Post. Mr. Bryan's law partner seems to be every bit as sentimental as Mr. Sewall's son. HYGIENE. I cannot ent but little meat, By microbes It Is spoiled: And suro I think I cannot drink, Save water that Is boiled; , And I'll endure low temperature, Since by the doctors told That to live long and keep us strong 'Tls better to be cold. So let bacteria scourge and scare, With ailments -.dnlfold. To do us good v.e'll eat no food, And keep our bodies cold. I lovo no roast except dry toast, And that at slated terms, And little blend 1 eat. In dread Of pathogei.' germs; Of milk no whit I take, lest It Zymotic Ills enfold, And fevers breed; yet most I heed To keep my body cold. A keen east wind I never mind. And fifty Fahrenheit Is the degree that best suits me, 13y day nnd eke by night; Thus wise I strive to keep alive, And haply to grow old, With beef uncarved, athlrst and starved, And perished with the cold. So let bacteria scourge and scare, With ailments manifold. To do us good we'll eat no food, . And keep our bodies cold. - - , St. James' Qasette. . GOLDSMITH'S Golden Fleece Is the brand of a New Hygienic Underwear of which we are the exclusive agents in this city. Its Fleece is Wool in its natural state, thereby making.it warm and healthful. The results and beneficial effects of these garments when worn by rheumatic subjects, or those who suffer from pulmonary diseases, is indeed truly wonderful WE HAVE THEM FOR LADIES, GENTS AND CHILDREN. in both separate pieces and in combination. They are warranted non-shrinking and non,irritating, and the cost of them is but a trifle more than for the cr- dinary Underwear. PITS An Inspiration Is almost lost when your pen catches and your ink spreads on j our paper. GOOD STATIONERY Is one of the necessaries of civili zation that is indispensable. . A favorite location for all classes is that of Reynolds Brothers, where a fine assortment of every thing in first-class Stationery and Office Supplies can be purchased. Students, lawyers, commercial men and society in general get their supplies hetc, as everyone can he suited, both in price and quality. Reynolds Bros., Stationers and Engravers, HOTEL JERMYN BLILDINO. PI 1 1 SO YOU WOULD SEE IT. Pants to measure, $3.00 And Up. Suits and Over- i coats to order, 1 ,uv' First firm in the city to make clothes to order at popular prices.'' Over two years of success prove we are the best. GREAT ATLANTIC PANTS CO., 3lo Lackawanna Ave. Christian Endeavor STATIONERY Man. und Souv.nlri ol f cranton. New York and Philadelphia paper.. Full Proceedings of convention. Four Dollar Teacher'. Bible, beidlemanTthe bookman 417 Sprue St, Opp,Tbt ComaaoawMltB. ' I Immense Variety, Latest Novelties, Perfect Fitting, Excellent Rock GREAT EASTERN IT AND PANTS C01PANY Branch 14. 427 Lackawanna Avenue, Scranton. Branch 14. FINE TAILORING WITHIN REACH OF ALL D.-- r At Is dow In demand, DlLie I Jell and It should bo,for la.t degree. We are snpplyinv tbla domaud along wiita orery other iu our line. See flood. In Show Window. The demons, Ferber, 0'malley Co., I'll UCKAWANNA 1VE. WOLF & WENZEL, (31 Linden., Opp. Court House, PRACTICAL TINNERS and PLUMBERS Sols Agents for Richardson Boynton's Furnaces and Kangea, No Charge for Alterations. PHILADELPHIA MANUFACTURERS FOR CLOAKS AND SUITS BARGAINS FOR THE COMING WEEK: We are now ready for a busy, busy trade. We Intend offering; the greatest bargains ever seen in this city of first-class goods. Skillful buying in large quantities for ready cash and selling to you at bar gain prices that's our policy front now on. Watch us. AM, WOOL KERSEY CAPE3 lull sweep wran and stitched Ffams InlHld. velvet collar. OR liwtend of J'UP 3O.VO BLACK BEAVER DOUBLE CAPE Trimmed with braid ml fur, S f Qjl full kwiti; c!i"H! Ht St.on, at JAUNTY JIEEFEH FRONT COATS-Flna Hondo and Axtraklinn cloth, silk lined, made to suit at $111 CCS Oft Our price J.VO BLACK BEAVER COAT-Box front, f-mr buttons, storm collar, cheap CI ns atJT.OO .. 'vo Bl,Oi;tiK AND NORFOLK WAISTS Mixtnros and Shepherd's l'lsids, lined tlirouKbout,cheap CI OS at 8.'. Our tn'ce pi.J TAILOR MADE Sl'lTS-All Wool Cloth, newest sliailiw. brown nnd preen mix. turtw duublo breasted Kcefcr .Tarketa. silk 'need; cheap at CCS OA SUM. Our price P.fO STYLISH rUIT8-ln new mixtures, chev iots, oil wool erce, box end roofer jck.te three-frmrth silk lin'd: fnll skirts lined end bound, rcg- CQ QQ tilr price 12 Ml at PO.VO JUST RF.CE1VF.D-A now lot of Figured JJohnir skirts in tvitono effects; also plain hacks, rut fnll, lined and bound Homo values up to 13 C OA and to. at 9lVO Taffeta silk hhirt waists-io rUnnneabl. colors, lined, well made, can be worn with attachable coI lars and cnfTs. elsewhere $0.00. i AO our price t.ty I MEM, PROP. 421 LACKA. AVE. BAZAM Workmanship, - Bottom Prices. MASCULINE HANDS NEED C0VEFI13. CONRAD Has the stock and can satisfy most any one. 305 LACKAWANNA AVENUE BLANK BOOKS Of all kinds, manufactured at tnojf notice, at Tbo Tribune Office. ( -
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