c THE SCBANTON TBIBlNB-WEDNESDAY MORNING. OCTOBER 21, 1898. WEEKLY SALAD FROM WHITNEY Kuuets of Newt from the Fair Hills of Susquehanna County. THE TEACHER KILLS A WILD CAT Exciting Straggle of Miss Grinrell With a Feline MonfterOf Interest to the Railroader Matt Riley Yells lor BryanShort County News Notes. Special to the Scranton Tribune. Susquehanna, Pa.. Oct. 20. Miss (iriniull, a sprightly school teacher rietir Pleasant Mount, Wayne county, hail a lively experience a few mornings since. Going into a shed to procure rome wood, she was amazed to see a Ntraiifte animal upon the wood pile. She ;ened the dour to allow the animal to scape, when It at once attacked her, teurinu; her flush und clothing quite hurily. During the butlle she succeeded in getting hold o un iron pokor, with which she soon killed hnr antagonist, which proved to he a wildcat weighing forty puiinds. Miss tirinnell is the he mine of the neighborhood. RAILROAD TIDINGS. The F.rle shops were on Monday .luted un eight hours' time. It is to be hoped that low water mark has been reached. The Erie's winter time table will take effect Nov. 1. The Erie is reported to have placed tin order for 1,000 curs with the Michi gan 'Peninsular company. There are in the I'nlted States more i hull 873.000 men in the railroad busi ness. The popular vote for president i'ouv -years ago was a little more than I .'.000,000, so that if all the men en gncred in the railroad business voted, i hey cast nearly one-fourteenth of the total vote of the nation. The Susuehanna Locomotive Firemen will hold their annual ball, Oct. 30. It will be a fine affair. New "Mother Hubbard" locomotive. No. 904, has just emerged from the Misiiuehnnna shops. A new style combination parlor and sleeping coach is being exhibited in New York. It possesses several new features. Krle trainmen are being measured for their new winter uniforms. POLITICAL SUNDRIES. Matt M. Riley, a Susquehanna boy, but now of Milwaukee, is vociferating through the boundless west for Bryan and tree silver. Matt used to be a Republican, but for some time he was in partnership in the law business with the late Frank Hurd, the great free trader. That accounts for the milk in the cocoanut. Captain W. D. B. Alney, of Montrose, delivered a rattling good speech before the Thomson Republicans on Friday evening. The attendance was large. A Susquehanna man, who went to Khighamton to put in a "political day," ways that in the morning he was a Democrat. In the afternoon he remem bers that he was a Populist and at night he has a dim recollection of be ing a middle-of-the-road man. Today he is a Prohibitionist In theory. Congressman James H. Codding and George V. Ray will address a Republi can rally in Susquehanna on Thursday evening next. When the ballots all shall counted be Upon election day, We'll wonder why wo could not see That it would go that way. ' THE MOTIONS ONLY. A few days since a vicinity farmer went over to a neighbor's, a good old deacon, to see on what terms he could trade a stone boat for a fanning mill.' When he arrived at the deacon's barn he was amazed to see the old gentle man going, through a series of gym nastic pyratlons such as he had never before seen outside of a circus. He would strike his fists together, paw the air, Jump up and knock his feet together and almost froth at the mouth. But he never uttered a word. In a few minutes the old man suddenly stopped and fell back exhausted upon a pile of oats. Then the neighbor saw that it would be safe to approach, and he did so, saying: "Deacon, for the Lord's sake, what have you been doing?" "Well," was the reply, "I've been the maddest just now that I have ever been in sixteen years, and with good reason, und I have been doing just as a good many other men do when they are mad, only I didn't swear, I merely went through the motions, and it has done ne just as much good. Of course it was foolish, but it was human nature." The neighbor went away with a new idea. ABOUT THE COUNTY. The wood acid factory at Stevera Point,, belonging to Mrs. C. D. Mum ford, of Starucca, was destroyed by tire on Friday morning. The plant cost $15,000 some twenty years ago. It was insured for $31,000. The origin of the tire is unknown. Near Montrose, a few days since, I,in Stevers shot an albino or pure white pheasant, a freak of nature sel dom seen. Mr. Stevers Is on the trail of a white blackbird as a silver Re publican, both rare birds. Great Bend has quarantined its half dozen cases of diphtheria, and the dreaded disease Is not spreading. Some portions of the county are drinking wood alcohol. Tou can do it if- you have a copper-lined stomach. In the old cemetery in Harford Is one of the strangest epitaphs ever writ ten. The stone was erected to the mem ory of John Gawes, who died Novem ber 19, 1843, aged 67 years, and reads: "Death is the end of human life, It separates man and wife. In deeds of love he was not barren, He lmitiated Moses and Aaron." LOCAL) SUNDRIES. On Friday morning the Oakland Side burn of Frank Andrews was fired by FOR INTERNAL AND EXTERNAL USE CURES AND FBIVCNTS Colds, Coughs, Sore Throat, Influents, Brnn chitlg, Pneumonia, Swelling of the JoluU, Lumbago, Inflammation, t "uuimuuiiij FROSTBITES, CHILBLAINS, HEADACHE, TOOTHACHE, ASTHMA, DIFFICULT BREATHING. CURES THE WORST PAINS In from one to twenty minutes. NOT ONE HOUR after reading this advertisement need any one SUFFER WITH PAIN, kadway's Ready Relief Is a Sore Curs for Every ran, sprains, cruises, Pains la the Back, Cheat or Limbs. It was the first and Is the only PAIN REMEDY That Instantly stops the most excruciating pninn, aiiaya innammauon, ana euros con gestions, whether of the Lunrs. Stomach. Bowels, or other glands or organs, by one application. A half to a teasnoonful In hair a. IiihiMm of water will In a few minutes cure i ramps, spasms, Hour Btomacn, Heart, burn. Nervousness, Sleeplessness,' Sick Headache, Diarrhea, Dysentery, Colic, Flatulency and all Internal naina. ' There Is not a remedial agent In the world that will cure Fever and Ague and all other Malarious, Bullous and other levers, aiuea Dy kauwaih PILIjS. so quickly as KADWAY'S READY RELIEF. Fifty cent per bottle. Sold by Druggists. RADWAY A CO, as Elm Straat. Naw York. an Incldentlary and destroyed, togeth er wMh Its contents, four horses, a coW, hay. grain, 'etc Loss $1,000; in surance 1400. Colonel George Vr. Bain, the silver- tongued orator, of Kentucky, will de liver a free temperance lecture lu Sus quehanna October 30. The past sachems of the Improved Order of Red Men of Susquehanna county have organised an association. F. I. Lott and W. S. Mazey. esqs.. or Montrose, on Saturday evening ably addressed the McKlnley and Hobart club of this place. cards are out announcing tne mar riage In Keene. New Hampshire. Oct. 21, of Miss Ella May Wheeler, ot Keene, and Mr. Fred J. Medway, formerly ot Susquehanna, but now of Cambridge, Mass. Mr. Medway has Scranton rela tives. EVENING UP. There comes from over the hills the cheerful Intelligence that the prospect ors for oil near Tunkhannock, having failed to strike anything oily, have en countered a rich vein of rank mineral water, which they will at once proceed to place upon the market. That's busi ness on the wholesale. The sharehold ers can recoup for the losses sustained by jabbing for oil by selling the rancid water to people who have imaginary ailments including "that tired feel ing." Now if the Brooklyn oil well peo ple, after discovering nothln? except the bottom of their purse, had put on the market a new brnnd of cod liver oil or gilt-edged axle grease, they might be roiling in wenlth today, instead oi "Gnashing their teeth:" and when the Starrucca coal miners, failing to discov er any black diamonds nearer than the Erie coal cars, did not go to work and unearth a quarry of castile soni or a living spring ot Florida water, they gave evidence to the world that they were not ud to date. Let the South Cnnaanltes profit from the experience of their fellow prospectors and strike a fountain of perpetual youth, and snow to the world that, while the people of dear old Wayne mny not send her sons to congress very often, they know how to recoup for losses sustained In wild cat prospecting. And half the world is just aching to be humbugged. VARIOUS MATTERS. Over the York state line a couple made four attempts to elope, but were caught each time. The fifth time they went away on bicycles and were suc cessful. Glass tombstones are the latest, but the inscriptions upon some marble monuments In Susquehanna are very transparent. . Somebody pays how many tilings we hear of everybody that would have made us wealthy and famous if tney had only thought of them first. When the Scranton pilgrims returned from Canton they brought with them a portion of Major McKlnley's picket fence. When the Susquehanna pilgrims go to Canton they will present the ma jor with a new lawn. That's the dif ference in people. A Lanesboro man advertised to give his furm to any woman who would marry him. A Binghamton widow ac cepted of the offer, but after the bridal tour to Carbondale discovered that the farm was both fenced in and mort gaged. The new bride will not do noth ing rash until she consults the mem bers of the church sewing society. WHITNEY. QUEER ELECTION BETS. Some o! the Odd Conceits of Voters , Who Think Their Opinions Need Substantial Backing. From the Times-Herald. One of the queerest bets which has been recorded is that made between a man and bis wife In Colorado. In the centennial state the women are allowed to vote and many of them differ In their political views from those held by their husbands. Sometimes they have long arguments on the political issues of the day. Such a dispute arose be tween a man and his wife in Denver. For days they debated the question, but the man failed to convert his wife and the other was just as obstinate. The public library was ransacked for arguments to hurl at one another's heads. Finally after many a meal had been spoiled by a lengthy discussion of the stiver question they agreed to drop the topic, although of course the man was forced to consent that the wife should have the last word. Then they fell to discussing the question ot who would be elected and one day the man remarked that he was going to make a bet on Bryan. "That would be foollsh,"satd the wife. "Tou will lose your money and you need all that you have. If you want to make a bet, make one with me, and the money will remain in the family." "All right. It's a go,"replled the hus band. But then It dawned upon him that he would have to furnish her the money to pay him if she lost and so he would gain nothing. He told her this and then Bhe had a brilliant idea. "I'll tell you what we'll do," she said. "I'll make this bet with you. If Bryan is elected I will promise to chop all of the wood for the fires every morn ing for a month. On the other hand If McKlnley should win you must prom ise to do the family washing every Monday for the same length of time." These terms were agreed to, and if McKlnley is elected he will do the fam ily washing each week, while if Bryan Bhould win she will chop the wood for the fires every morning for a month, A TEXAS WAGER. There are two men in Dallas, Tex., who are as different In their physical build as they are in their politics. One Is a McKlnley gold man and the other is a Bryan silverlte. One Is short and fat, not more than five feet four inches j iu neiKUi, uiijiuugn lie weins ramer more than 2-"0 pounds. The other is as slim as a rail and could make money as a living skeleton In a dime museum, as he Is six feet two inches in height. The two men are great friends, how ever, and one day while engaging in the luxury of a joint debate on the is sues of the day the fat man proposed with the thin man that they make a wager. The terms proposed were that if McKlnley won the fat man wan to wear a suit of the thin man's clothes for a month, while on the other hand If Bryan were to come out at the top of the poll the thin man would wear the other's clothes for the same length of time. Their friends are very much interested in the outcome of the novel wager, although It is suggested that the thin man has rather the better of the wuger, for he will be covered, ex cept at least as much as the average bicycler exposes, while the fat man could not get into the thin man's rai ment without bursting it Wheelbarrow bets are common, but a score have been made In every city, under the terms of which the winner is to be wheeled by the loser through the principal streets, but two Philadel phia men have Invented a new varia tion of the old theme. They have agreed that after the election the loser Is to walk on his hands from Philadel phia to Wilmington, Del., a distance of thirty miles. Meanwhile the loser will follow after trundling his feet as if he were a wheelbarrow. Such a journey will occupy rather more than three days, during which the loser will re pent that he was rash enough to be lieve In the success of Mckinley or Bryan as the case may be. The employes of a circus now In win ter quarters became involved in a dis pute on the result of the forthcoming election and out of it grew a bet be tween two of them by the terms of which the loser, if Bryan were elected', was to drive a cart, to which eight donkeys, representing the triumphant Democratic party, would be hitched, through the principal' streets of the city. But If McKlnley were successful the other man agreed to drive as many elephants hitched to a chariot through 'the streets. It is suggested that the man who Is betting on Bryan believes that the police will prevent the exhibi tion. IN YANKEEDOM. An odd bet is that arranged between two merchants In a Connecticut town. The parties to it are rival merchants. and one day after a dispute at tne ciuo the McKlnley man ottered to agree that if Bryan should be elected he would parade the streets of the city eight hours eai-h day for a week wearing a sign proclaiming the virtues of his ri val's goods. . If . McKlnley won the tables -ere to be turned and the Bryan man would be the aandwtchman to ad vertise the other's stock of goods. Over" In Walsenburg, Colo, where there are coal mines and where humor takes a very, practical form and a joke often Implies a cracked crown, two miners, John Welch and Tom Carberry, have made a most peculiar wager. The loser agrees to go to the bottom of a 200-foot shaft and, detaching the bucket, take the rope In his teeth and allow the winner to draw him to the surface by means of the windlass. The only condition imposed on the winner Is that he shall use as much care, ex pedition and caution as he would In bringing to the top of the shaft a bucket of coal. Dodge City, Kan., has a wild record, but that is another story and has long been atoned for by a sedateness worthy of a New England village. However, there Is a good deal of fun left In the Dodge City man yet, even It he does not take the direction of "a man for breakfast." This fact receives confir mation In the report of an election bet which has just been made between F. K. Powers and E. R. Prowltt. Powers Is a red-hot Populist, while Prowltt is an old school "gold bug" Republican. The wager is on the general result and is handicapped by no conditions. If McKlnley Is elected Prowltt wins, and If Bryan is elected Powers wins. The winner Is granted the proud privilege of wheeling a baby wagon along the prin cipal streets of the town while the loser rides in the wason with a child's rattle in one hand anil a nursing bottle in the other. The bottle is to be filled with sour milk, and the loser must im bibe all of this milk through a small rubber hose before the triumphal march is finished. ONE BUCKEYE BET. If there Is a matter of fact town in these United States, that town Is Liber ty Center, Ohio. Imagination is an unknown quantity and invention en tirely foreign to that environment. To wager money on any event is consider ed the vilest of gambling, for everybody in Liberty Center belongs either to the Methodist Episcopal church or the Uni ted Brethren. But these good people are strong political partisans, and in order to emphasize their beliefs they must bet. Under these circumstances It came about that Deacon Weekly, who has a long beard and strong Re publican convictions, mndo with Elder Clover, who has a smooth face and who Is a particularly smooth Democrat, the following compact, which in simple parlance would be called a bet, viz.: If McKlnley is elected Clover Is not to shave for four years, but if Bryan Is elected Weekly is to shave every morn ing of his life from the fifth day of next November until the fifth day of Novem ber four years from that date. The re sult Is sure, whoever is elected, that Liberty Center will have either two long-bearded or two closely shaven men for the next four years. Perhaps the most peculiar bet of any yet recorded is one made, last week be tween two waiters in a' Chicago res taurant. The loser binds himself to purchase 100 oysters in the shell and to open them for the winner, who is to eat them as fast as they are opened. It is a moot question which man will have IN THE WILD WEST. There is a man in Oklahoma who does not care very much whether he wins or loses a bet he has made. In the town of Perry. O. T.. dwell Alice Younger and Thomas Stanton. These young people are engaged to be mar ried and are recorded as having made a marriage bet on the result of the na tional election. The first proposition is naive in its conditions. Miss Younger agrees to marry Stanton If Bryan is elected, and Stanton agrees to marry Miss Younger If McKlnley is elected. This is a shrewd application of the ancient principle of "six of one and half a dozen of the other." However, the second proposition is unique, for Miss Younger agrees to pay all the wedding expenses tf Stanton wins. Another odd bet Is reported as hav ing been made In Lexington, Ky. na turally the blue grass region furnishes a wager concerning horseflesh. Hollo way Brothers have sold to William M. Wallace a bay yearling colt by Onon daga, dam Patty. The colt Is valued at $750. If Bryan is elected Wallace is to pay Holloway Brothers $2,000 for the colt. If McKlnley wins then Wal lace gets the colt for $500. This Is big odds in favor of McKlnley, being in reality 12,000 against -'50. There are some circumstances under which a silver man will give a gold mortgage. Such circumstances ap pealed to an enthusiastic Bryan parti san of Jacksonville, Fla., who gave a gold mortgage on a piece of real es tate to raise $800, and this money he offers to wager at 1 to 3 that Bryan win carry the solid south and every state west or the Alleghenles. DOWN SOUTH. Montgomery, Ala., has evolved a var iatlon of the 16 to 1 Idea in the shape of a wager, offered by a confident, sound money man, who bet a silver man six teen silver dollars to one gold dollar that McKlnley would be elected. An. other Republican wagered thirty-two ounces of silver to one ounce of gold that Bryan would be defeated. The Democrats of New York city are not disposed to bet on the general re. suit, but one of their experts has in. vented a "catch" wager that presents a somewhat alluring aspect. This fin ancial genius otters to wager $1,000 that Altgeld will carry Illinois, and $1,n00 that Bryan will curry Illinois, and $3, 000 that Bryan will carry more states than McKlnley. This Is one bet with three propositions, and all of the prop, ositlons must be accepted or the trans. action will not be closed. The man who makes this offer expects to lose the two $1,000 bets, but believes that he will win the $3,000 wager, thus clearing H.ooo on tne entire bet. This is not tin reasonable, for Bryan might carry twenty-eight states und McKlnley only seventeen, and yet even under these circumstances the latter might be elected. The BestMs Prepare f Qd with the bos tliebest v n Has CotWlen. trade Mirks are CMMstaa stser's lua tn ettum-pfnt wraaM on tverytlak . THI U.K. PAIRSAMK COMPANY, Chicsfs, (, isrt, rhllasoLifcle, Mttotoua, us smile nil Him gnu tun THIRTY YEAR 5 PER CENT. FIRST MORTGAGE GOLD BONDS, FREE FROM TAXES. INTEREST PAYABLE APRIL 1 AND OCTOBER 1 The Spring Brook Water Supply Company offers to the pub lic ONE 1IUNDBED THOUSAND DOLLARS of the above described bonds. The company torn isbes the entire water supply of the Lackawanna and Wyoming Valleys, from Scranton the following cities and boroughs, to wit: WIIkes-Barre, PIttston, West Plttston, Avoca, Daryea, Wyo- mlnftLnzerne, Kingston, Edwardstllle, Parsons, Miner's Hills, South AVIlkes-Barre, Ashley, Sugar Notch, Warrior Bun, ete. The bonds are secured by mortgage on the entire system. The company has no hesitation bonds as a safe and desirable investment The history of the companies in the system shows thit water companies are free from the fluctua tions and disturbances that affect industrial and railroad enterprises, A thor ough investigation of the Wilkes-Birre Waler system, covering a period of forty-five years, shows an annual increase over the previous year, without exception, and this through a period covering several financial panics and the Civil War. The company is taking care of its demand tor a good and pure water supply, a sufficient number of bonds being held in the treasury tor this purpose. Sealed proposals will be received bonds offered, until Wednesday, October 28th, 1806, at 10 o'clock a. m., at its office, at Scranton, or any of the following banks, wh;re further information, if desired, may also be obtained: SECOND NATIONAL BANK, Wllkes-Barre, Pa. PEOPLE'S BANK, Wlikes-Barre, Pa. FIRST NATIONAL BANK, Plttston, Pa. MINERS' SAVINGS BANK, Plttston, Pa. DEPOSIT AND SAVINGS BANK, Kingston, Pa. SCBANT0V SAVINGS BANK & TRUST CD., Scranton, Pa. TUIRO NATIONAL BANK, Scranton, Pa. MAXWELL & GRAVES, Bankers, US Liberty St, New York. aii bids should be addressed to Company. The company reserves the bonds for which bids are accepted are to Oct. 28th. The officers and directors of th; orapiny are as follows: L. A. Watre. President, J. Rogers Maxwell. Pres. C. R. R. of N.J. C. D. tiinipson, Geo. Lemuel Amerrnan,Vice Pres. W. F. IIallstead,tien.Naa.D.,L. 4c VV.lt. R T. II. Walking, Secretary. John Welles Ilollcnbaclt. Samuel T. Peters. Robert C. Adams, Treasurer. . Morgan B. Williams. THE SPRINS BROOK WATER SUPPLY COMPANY, By L. A. WATRES, President JAMES MOIR, lias MevM te His New Quarters, 402 Lackawanna Avenue. Entraaea on aids next to First National Bank. Bs has bow In Comprising; everything requisite for Bos ftlerehsnt Tailoring. And the urn. can bs shown to advantage in bla apian dial fitted up room. A SPECIAL INVITATION Is Extended te All Readers ot The Trtb mnt to Call oa "OLD RELIABLE" In His New Business Horns WHEELS WHEELS BICYCLES. ON AND AFTER SEPT. 1ST, 1806, WE will effer all ot tbe following wheels we may have in stot'k at Joblier's Brlc-es : Wolf American, Pierce, Iver-Johnson; VJaverly and Fratherstone Line. Tbls is an opnortnnltv to t,et a good wheel cheap. Wo stilt have the famous "Crawford," wheel that runs a light and eany and wears equal to any S:u machine on the n-arltet. Cou,e and se what ws can du fcr you In our lino. t i nhl 321 m si. ON THE LINE OF Tilt CANADIAN PACIFIC R'Y are located the finest fishing and hunting; grounds In the world. Descriptive books on application. Tickets to all points In Maine, Canada and Maritime Provinces, Minneapolis. St. Paul, Canadian and United States Northwest, Vanvouver, Seattle, Tacoma, Portland, Ore., San Francisco. First-Class Sleeping and Dining Cars attached to all through! trains. Tourist ears fully fitted with bedding, curtains and specially adapted to wants of families may be had with second-class tickets. Rates always less than via other lines. For further Information, time tables, etc on application to E. V. SKINNER, Q. E. A.. 333 Broadway, New York. The St. Denis Broadway and Eleventh St., New York. Opp. arses Cburcb.-Eurepesa Plan. Rooms $i.oe a Day and Upwards. Xn a modest and nnobtrnstve way there are few better conducted hotels in the metropolis than the St Denis. The great popu arity it has scqulred can readily bo traced to its unique location, Its homelike atmosphere, the peculiar excellence ot its ouislno and service, and its vary moder ate prices. WILLIAM TAYLOR AND SON. in ib to Kanticoke, Including among others, in offering and recommending thtse the increased growth of the valley In for the whole, or any part of the The Sprln? Brook Water Supply right to reject any or alt bids and all be paid for within five days after F.Baker,Pre.lst National Banlc.N.Y A CHEAT SLUMP IN '81 CI P Has beea predicted all through the season lust past. THIS IS THE WAY HUMBERS HAVE BEEN REDUCED. 'o6 Prc. '97 Price. Roadster, $110.00 $115.00 Tourist, 11Z50 117.50 Lady Humber, 117.50 12Z50 Racer, 125.00 150.00 Prices seem high, but then you know it's H17MBEK QUALITY. CHASE & FARRAR 515 Linden Street. E. ROBINSON'S Lager Beer Brewery . Manufacturers of the Celebrated tti jp to CAPACITY) 100,000 Barrels per Annum " ' Cf O lr. Van Felt's Mon PUM thlv Regulating Veg. 1 A 'Stain ""Hi etable Granules coin- WVViVI EL. IN uiand and maintain n enntiiinuuH trud a ai-ecutiprative inexhaus tloo and debility peculiarly inciunnt tr wumui ui lenunr i'uii&liluliuii iiituu un iu oiu ag. luer nave no equal. J no lacuity .atronulv rerrmmend them. Descrintive cir- ' polar tree, ent fecnirly seeled. Juvenia loiifi co., Dept. o presnyterian ttiog.. m. t What Sarah Barahard aaya SONS Grand Reptablicani Rallies Will Be Held as Follows: ODD FELLOWS' HALL, DUNMORE, Friday, Oct. 23d, 1896. Speakers of the evehiing will be Hon. B. F. Hughes, of Philadelphia; R. A. Zimmerman, esq., E. H. Shurtleff, esq., and. John F. Reynolds, esq. The issues ot the campaign will be discussed in the fullest manner by able and eloquent orators. Let no person neglect the opportunity of being fully informed upon the questions at issue. All are earnestly and most cordially in vited to attend. 2,000,000 BARRELS Made and Sold In Six Months, ending ilarch 1, 1896. Total Product of nnnwi: The A Mill Alone produced 1,000,000 Barrels, Largest Run on Record. Washburn, Crosby's Superlative la sold everywhere from tho Pacific Coast to St. John's, New Foundland. and in England, Ireland and Scotland very largely, and is recognized as the best flour In th world. WARM WHOLESALE AGENTS. WE CARRY ALL SIZES OF Burden, Phoenix, American, Juniata Steel, X.L. Steel, S hlO Toe and Side Weight Ailv NEVERSL1P CALKS, BLACKSMITH AND WAGONMAKERS SUPPLIES. 1 THE DICKSON MANUFACTURING CO SCRANTON AND WILKES-BAPIHE, PA Maaufactursra of Locomotives, Stationary Engines, Boilers, HOISTING m PWING MACHINERY. OeaeraJ Office: SCRANTON, PA. EVERY WOMAN eomeMoeenwIiaroHable, monthly, reznliUny medicine. Only hiralees Sal the puieai drigs should bs need. 11 you waul tho but, get Dr. PcaB's Pennyroyal Pills 5 Tbev are prompt, safe awl certain in retail The genslno (Dr. Peal's) DerareUstS nuiuw Eeut aujwlicfe, IM, Audiou Vlu. atssiusa Co CleTtland, O, For saia by JOHN H. PHELPS, Spruce Street, Scranton, Pa. MT. PLEASANT COAL AT RETAIL.. Coal of tbe best quality for domestlo usa and of all sizes, Including Buckwheat and Utrdseye, delivered in any part of the elty at the lowest price. Orders received at the Office, first floor. Commonwealth building, room No. (; telephone No. 2824. or at the mine, tele phone No. 272; will be promptly attended to.Dealers supplied at the mine. WM.T. SMITH. BLANK BOOKS Of all kinds, sfsctarsd tt kotf Mac at THe Tribute OSce CONNELL H orse co , PA. Pharmacist, cor. Wyoming Avenuo an lbTITV RESTORES VITALITY. Made a .' j am ST-AlJ a w irtDay.jjryweii Man lStbDay.fMffc Of Me. Tr:e opeat m r m "- - ----- 80th bay. ?4av prodnres tbe above resold la 80 days. It arts pow.rf uilr sad Qulrklr. Cures when sll others fall. Voting meu will regain their lost manhood, and old min will recover their youthful visor by using Hi: VIVO. It quickly and surely rentores Nervous ness, FiOst Vitality, Impotency. Nightly KiauMoas,! Lost Power, Failing Memory, Wanting Diseases, and all effects of oelf bue or eicei and ladlscreUen, wblch unilts one for udy. bo.ln.ss or asrriage. II' not only curee by .'arting at tbe aeat ot eVsesae, snf lssgrest ncrv. tonic and blood bnildir, btiag' iig back tbe pink glow to pale check, and r"1 ktoring the lire of youth. It ward, off InwaiV inU Consumption. Ia.i.t on having RRVIVO.ae' other. It can be carried in veat pocWt. By autfj S 1 .80 per package, or sis for afl.00, with peel-, tive written guarantee to car or eiaSdV 'Jisaaoaey. Circular free. Address WAL Mr DICINE CO.. S3 stiver ft, CHrCMC. I For Sale by MATTHKWS BKOS Drag gist setsatos. Fa.