TIIE SCRAXTOtf TTITBTJNE-- MONDAY MOTtNlTTO, DEOJfiMBJSU lRflr;. lilly and Weekly. NoSuuday Edition. Published at Scranton. Pa., by Th Tribune Publishing Company. J'ew York Cffltf: Trlhmie Bulldln. Frank a Unty, Maiiaiter. XNTIR10 AT THD PO3T0Fi"ir AT SCRAHTJH. PA.. AS tuoKucLAfis u ah. UArrip SCRANTON, DUCEMnUK 2S, 1800. I We do not consider the rrpcirt of u Kui'opean ulllum-e to dictate American imllcy with reference to Cti1.a worthy tif more than passing notice. Htmijio knows bettor. Wnnamakerism Up to Date. Of all the untrue assertions which have lcen called forth by the pending contest for a United States scnatorshlp in this state the falsest Is the statement that those who op pose John Wunamaker do so in a spirit of antagonism to religion. It Is true that Mr. Wanamaker has so adroitly traded on his reputation for fane ttty that many religious citizens ac cept him at hia own valuation and look upon opposition to him as being equiv alent to irreverence. Hut when the factsastohlsrecent political operations shall be fully established and one by one they are coming to the surface it will become plain to men of clear judgment thut religion can receive no better service than to be relieved of such dissembling champions. llr. Wanamaker has said on different occasions that he had not spent and would not spend a cent In the senator ial contest corruptly. Yet It is in evi dence that lieutenants bearing his cre dentials have offered billies right and left, in such prolusion as to suggest nioie than an Innocent connection be tween them and the Wanamaker mil lions. Since the proof of their nefarious work has been put before the people, there has been no sign of repudiation or disclaimer from Mr. Wanamaker, but, on tile other hand, he Is about to bilk arms with them in a grand inarch to Hnrrlsburg, with the avowed pur pose of capturing the legislature with oil that that phrase implies. Asked to explain tile significant at titude of the newspapers In which he udvertises, Mr. Wanamaker promptly grows sporty and offers n thousand dollars to charity for proof that he has ever sought to muzzle the press. Yet all this time Senator Kaufl'man, of Lancaster county. Wanamaker's right hand helper In the senatorial con test, and billed to lie one of the front row participants In the forthcoming udvance on the state capital, stands publicly convicted on his own confes sion of having bought the Insertion in many papers of Wananiakerish edi torials at from $.1 to $23 apiece. Finally, when emissaries in his in terest are hauled up in court charged with circulating anonymous scandal ngalast his rival for senatorial honors, this man who poses as an exemplar of the Christian virtues says no word In disapproval of their contemptible work; lilts no voice of protest against the attempted conversion of church organizations by false rep resentations Into mechanisms for the forwarding of his political ambitions; and even has the hardihood to arrange to speak In public as the representative of the morality of the commonwealth. F.xposure of shani Is an unpleasant duty, but Wanamaker lsni has rendered Its performance nec essary. The recent street-car strike at lios ton, on tile day before Christmas, when Interruption of the facilities for travel was most kneenly felt by the public, was not only, If the facts are correctly set forth, without cause but was also ac tually vicious. Still, wedoubtlf the com pany olllclals, after the men saw their mistake and repented of It, wilt mend matters by taking the men back only to discharge them by degrees as public opinion cools down. The best way to get along in this world, in all lines of business, is to live and let live. Forecasting the Next Cabinet. According to Walter Wcllman, whose predictions heretofore have proved more thun ordinarily uccurat,e, the cabinet which Major McKinley has selected In his own mind, subject to change through unforeseen contingencies, Is as follows, the secretaryship of the in terior not yet having been decided up on: Secretary of State-JOIIX SllEItMAX, of Ohio. Secretary of the Treasury NELSON 1)1. SULKY, of Maine. Secretary of Wor EX-GOVKKXOR WILLIAM It. MEKKIAM, of Minnesota. Secretary of the Navy COHNEL1L S N. ULISS, of New York. Attorney Oeneral NATHAN GOFF, of West Virginia. .--Vost master General HEXRY C PAYNE, of Wisconsin. Secretary of Agriculture JUDGE WAY MIRE, of California. With the exception of the last one. every name on this list Is well known for ability and experience in public affairs, for high personal character and for meritorious party service. Judge Waymire Is said by his more intimate acquaintances and Indorsers to be fully qualified In each of these respects for cabinet honors, but he Is not widely known. Unless unexpected emergencies shall arise during the next four years, the cabinet departments upon which will fall the most exacting demands will be the state and treasury secretaryships and the attorney generalship. While opportunities for brilliant service will not be lacking In each of the other de partments, the success or failure of the McKinley administration will. In the ordinary course of events, be largely determined by the quality of work di rected to be done In these three office. The generally conceded assignment of Chairman Olngley of thp house wuys and means committee to the secretary ship of the treasury Is received with such manifest public favor as to re quire little to be said in explanation of the choice. Mr. Dingley is a man very much after the president-elect's osvn heart honest, studious, conscien tious and patient; not given to bitter prejudices, but firm in line of duty and high-minded In political habits and am bitions. He has opponents, but not enemies; he would as the successor of Mr. Carlisle not only prove an able and conscientious finance minister along Republican lines of policy, but also n genuine helper to his chief and a strong I link of peace between naturally con flicting party elements. It has been the wish of many lVnn HAivunlnns that the attorney general ship mlghtj.be proffered to and accepted by J. Uny Ilrown, of Lancaster. Mr llrown, to be sure, has not expressed nor encouraged such expectations him self; but those wlio are aware of his very unusual ability In directions which point to thut position as offering the largest scope und Incentive have nevertheless cherished the hope of his appointment. I'.ut If the choice of the president-elect should full Instead on hisotbcrfrlend and long-time colleague. Judge Nathan lloff. there will be no one who could question either the political litness of the selection or the power of Judge ('.off himself to do effective and aggressive public service. We come, now, to the most Important position within the bestowal of our presidents; a place which has in recent years risen to a plane of Importune. second, perhaps, only to one other sim ilar position in civilization tin? secre taryship of state. It may be thut at this time a larger weight of responsi bility rests upon the man who super vises the diplomatic conduct of Ureal Britain's foreign affairs than presses upon the chief cabinet olllcer ut Wash ington; but at the present rate of changes in international politics it may not be long before the relative rank wlil be reversed. There is reason to believe that Major McKinley has found more dllilculty in tilling this position satisfactorily than any other, or than all the otheis, in his cabinet. The review of Its require meiits, which we reproduce els-'wiicn on this page from the Philadelphia Tress, will suggest by he has weighed the problem carefully and with recur ring anxiety. In many respects Senator Sherman is I lie ablest statesman in the nation, us he is also the most eminent. Hut ills special Held of study and uchievenn ut has bud to do with finances rather than with the broad prob lems of diplomacy. Only within very recent years has he directed close atten tion to foreign affairs. He has, beyond all question, the ability and the ex perience to make a great state secre tary, provided also ho has the physical strength and the diplomatic tempera ment. If there were now within cull a man like the Ulalne of tssn.how It would simplify matters both for the president elect and for the nation! The courts have Just canceled an ordinance passed in Kansas City to fine non-voters at municipal elections. Hut the good people who. by abstaining from the pulls, enable shysters to tri umph will get mulcted quite as ef fectually, though not so directly, us If that ordinance had been pronounced valid. One-Han Power. It is significant of the tendency of democratic government to transform itself into one-man uower that in the draft of the proposed charter for Great er New York, which Is now under dis cussion in the neighboring slate, au thority is centralized in the oflice of the mayor. That olllclal Is to have power to appoint all the administrative and executive olllcers of the city except the comptroller, who Is rendered elective by the people every four years, so that the treasury and linances will constant ly be in the hands of an independent department. The mayor Is to have su pervisory control over the various de partments, and an enlarged veto power upon the nets of the municipal assem bly. His patronage and his power ore so great that he will in these particu lars be a dlirnilary second only in Im portance to the governor of the state or the president of the United Stutes. The mayor Is to be given absolute pow er to remove at will every administra tive olllcer, irrespective of the pre scribed term of oflice, during the llrst six months of his administration. Af ter that he can make removals only on charges, with the approval of the gov ernor. The mayor's power, under this chnr tcr, In fact covers almost every con ceivable branch of municlnal govern ment save finances. In addition to his other prerogatives he appoints the cen tral board of education, which has charge of all school property and equip ment in the community of 3,000,000 souls embraced within the proposed limits of Greater New York, as well as the live sectional boards whic h supervise the educatlotinl conduct of the schools. Ho will consequently have greater prob lems to deal with, and ones further out reaching In their ultimate consequen ces, than came before the first presi dent of the United States. Well may the Hon. Thomas Collier I'latt look for ward with satisfaction to the time when, from behind the scenes, he or some t lever man of similar talents will pull the strings" which will operate this massive mechanism of municipal au thority, while in national politics he is fortititd in the legislature and execu tive mansion at Albany and has a title in his own name to a United States senatorshlp at Washington, with the prospect of ultimately naming his own colleague. There w ill, of course, be the usual outcry against such a focusing of re sponsibility. We shall hear a good deal about "bosses" and "czar.." Hut thos who have studied history will be well satisf.ed to see the municipal govern ment nl America's foremost city so ar ranged that when the taxpajers thereof neglect to vote into power n lit can didate for mayor, they may themselves shoulder Ihe blame and suffer the con sequences. The fire which destroyed St. Stephen's Episcopal church in WHkes-Harre on Christmas morning could probably have been checked with slight loss when the fire companies first reached the scene had the water plugs not been frozen. As it was, the firemen had to wait several hours before they could get water in sufficient quantity to make an Impression on the tlames. It is to be hoped that this-public lesson will not be lost. Perhaps the most sensible thing yet elicited during the Cuban controversy Is the decision of Senator-elect Money, of Mississippi, now a member of the house committee on foreign affairs, to visit Cuba, Interview Weyler. ask for an escort and flag of truce to enable him to reach the Interior and hold In tercourse with the Insurgents, and thus to gain by personal Inquiry accurate knowledge of the situation of affairs in thai island. The attempt should have been made fully a year ugo, by the executive, to dispatch a commis sion to Cuba for this very purpjse, Then there would have been something substantial in way of Information on which to La.se further uction in the premises. Nathan Straus, the New York phil anthropist, has reopened his coal yards for the poor, which give them the op portunity to purchase coal In small uniounts at cost. Any doctor practicing among the destitute of New York city can write an order on a prescription blank for a patient and It will be good for free coal. It Is not easy to Imagine a more helpful practical charity than this. Several hundred good columns of American newspaper space have lately been occupied with stories of how tin: Princess of Chlmuy, who was formerly Clara Ward, of Detroit, ran off with a gypsy. Now that it is clearly under stood that she has done this and that the gypsy is willing, suppose we give the subject u rest. Kx-Oueen LUIoukalani sal's she doesn't want her crown restored and Is confident that Hawaii will be unnex ed to the United States; but she would like a nice, plump pension. No doubt she would; but liking and getting are vastly different things. The New York press has much to say concerning a woman . and her daughter who have Just walked all the way from San Francisco to Gotham. The feat certainly was a curious one liut in the llrst uluce, was there any sense In uudcrtakiuu: It? If ever the courts pass on the claim of the Jamestown, N. Y., woman that an itinerant hypnotist mesmerized her into a mai l kmc without her knowl edge or consent, it Is a safe guess that they will make short work of it. Authorized denial Is made of the re port that Mark Hanna is sick. He will continue to invest the other side with the real symptoms of illness. THE SECRETARY OF STATE From the Philadelphia Press. The progress of events has brought tho I niteu Stales to u place where its for. elgn affairs are of the llrst importance, This nation has become one of the great powers of the world, not merely In its intrinsic strength, nut In Its relation to other powers and to the development of '(,'lvillzatlon. There have been special periods of our history like the civil wur when the delicacy anil danger of our situ ation required a great secretary, like Sew- Hi'il. There has ulways been in the con duel of our affairs the opportunity for a fertile an,l masterful statesman, like Webster or Marey or Itlaine, to make a strong Impression, lint during much of our history, with our traditional policy of noil-interference and with the obligations and opportunities of oar mission not fully realized, it has lu'cn safe to go along with a second-rate commonplace secretary, like Clayton or Frellnghuysen, This, however. Is no longer true. The world Is moving forward in Its Inter course. Nations ore becoming more close. ly associated and mutually dependent. The modern forces are bringing them Into more intimate communion nnd deal' ing. The extension of trade, the devel opment of commerce, the rivalry of mar kets, the growth of navies, the need of naval stations and of outlying protective bulwarks these and many olher lull cnees are compelling all the great pow ers to be more watchful and nlert. While we adhere as far as practicable to our traditional policy, we cannot escape these currents and necessities. This govern ment holds the primacy of the American continent with all the obligations it In vnlves. We are bound to exercise a dom inant Influence, and assert a dominant voice. In the questions which are con stantly arising Involving the integrity and destiny of AmerUnii states, we are constrained from the very nature of our position to exercise u paramount author ity. All this lifts our foreign affairs to capital rank. We have seen how great a part they have played under the present administration; and we have seen difference between feeble and incapable management on Ihe one hand, and strong and competent management on the other, In the signal contrast between Gresham and olney. Under the former the nation wiUU-ssed rentel blunders. actual losses and constant humiliation. Under Ihe latter a virile nnd forceful direction, always robust thoimh sometimes lacking in tact, has broiiuht increased national dignity, prestige and power. Much, Indeed, depends on the presi dent himself. Major McKinley has the experience, sobriety nnd unfailing good sense which are needed In the supreme ami responsible direction. Tut very much depends also on the character and qunl- Ity of the secretary. Under Mr. Cleve land we have had both good and ha I administration of foreign affairs, depend ent on the mental and moral qualifications of the head of the state department. All these considerations emphasise the Importance of a wise selection. The in quiry must be directed not merely to the public standing nnd Intellectual equip ment of the man but to his temperamental organization. The secretary should pre ferably lie n party leader of the hlgh"st rank. Mr. olney has In the main been a success. thom;h he had no public train, lug and v.ns In no sense a party chief tain. Hut lm is what Ihe Emperor Alex ander called a beneficlent despotism "a happr accident." It was an experiment which In this case turned out well, but which on another trial might prove very unfortunate. The secretary who has the prestige of a career and of high represen tative position will start with n grent advantage. Then he should have nptitulo and training for lids particular service. must cope with the oldest men o' other nations, and he needs not only amide knowledge but alertness nnd dexterity In the broad Held of national negotiation and opportunity. He should have the rinht temperament and the riht concep tion of our national mission, the pru dence which Is not precipitate nud the progre.'slvenrss which meets new situa tions, the firmness which can hold fast and the flexibility which can adapt Itself to changing requirements. There Is no place where personal attributes as Well as public qualifications need to be so, care fully considered. TIIK THAXslKXT TRADKR. Pittsburg Commercial-Gazette. In response to the demands of local mer chants for fairer play, and following so cial raids of traveling fakirs on local busi ness, some towns have recently passed or dinances which Impose heavy license fcs on transient dealers. It is proper that this should be done. The local merchants pay a license or tax both If they are property owners and when any public enterprises or charities are proposed the merchants are always the first ones called upon to subscribe. It is not fair that, for a mere, ly nominal license fee, peripatetic fakirs, who have no Interest In a town except to ftteee all the lambs to be found In It as quickly as possible and clear out, should be permitted by license to work the public so easily. Hut there is another phase of the question which Is also to bp borne In mind. These fakirs do not capture any lambs by force. The lamb', led on by the old seductive salt represeni.il In brash, errdullty anil the hope of getting some thing for nothing, press forward volun- tarlly to thy shearing racks with their fleeces. Whether the transients be dealers in shoddy, snide Jewelry, bogus bankrupt cies, gold bricks or any of the rest of the stuinlard iamb-catching specialties, they sell nothing which somebody does not buy. There can be no sale without a purchase, no catching of suckers without suckers to catch. .Most of the combinations In trade ugalust which people complain have been built up by the people who have permit ted themselves to be fooled by the buit of cut prices. It Is the same with people who allow themselves to be buncoed by the wandering sharps, ordinances which serve to shut out these sharps are good things, but the complete remedy is in the sufficient growth of common sense to en able people not to be impose ! upon by I hem. .Meanwhile the best thing local dealers can do to hold and enlarge their trade is to continue to deserve It, and to discourage any tendency among their number to palm off on custuniers goo-Is which are made no better by being sold b them than by the nomadic fakirs. hiikki-: it r. t o mi is m:edi:ii. From the Philadelphia Times. The reproach upon the bar of Pennsyl vania Is not so much upon Its want of legal knowledKc or general equipment In prac ticing the profession as upon the methods which have become disgracefully common by a number of the members of the bar of admitted ability, und claiming respecta bility In their liiuh calling who. as sworn olllcers of the courts, habitually bring n -proach upon the administration of Justh-e, ami make it. measurably at least, a mutter of baiter and trade. No convention of judges or of the bar can correct those evils by resolution fixing u high standurd of attainments for adpiisslon to the pro fession. This stain thut affects alike the legal profession nnd the administration of Justice in Pennsylvania, is wholly the re sult of the tolerance on the part of the Judges In permitting the violation of sacred obligations by an attorney and the prostitution of his power to the perversion of Justice In her own sanctuary.. True, these wrongs are seldom clearly presented to judges when sitting in court, but no such practices can be habitual without coming to the knowledge of the judges themselves, and they should be prompt and resolute In correcting them. The lawyer Is us ktilemuly sworn to per form his duties with fidelity, not only to his client, but to Justice, as Is the Judge himself, and the lawyer who asks for an unjust judgment, knowing It to be so, !s perjured alike in law and morals. That there has been a gradual decadence of the bar of Pennsylvania In this regard will not be disputed by any Intelligent observer of the general administration of Justice, but it Is wholly the fault of the Judges in tolerating what they know tithcaii assault upon Justice and u degradation alike of the profession und of the courts. W A X A MAKER'S M ETIIODS. Harrisburg Letter, Pittsburg Dispatch. The prediction Is conlldently made here that Wanamaker's nuine will not be pre sented to the caucus. It Is quite certain that If the millionaire merchant become awure of the muss of evidence that i:s accumulated in regard to the operation of his agents, little of which is yet known to the public, he would hesitate to In vite the criticism of which he will un doubtedly be made the target when mat ters grow red hot at Harrlsbiirg. It Is asserted by one eminent legal gen t'cniau who hns been Informed In a some what specific manner of the character of this Information that if it were pos sible for the great merchant to compass his election at llarrlsburg presentations would easily be made which would be an absolute und effectual barrier in the way of his taking his seat In the senate. A si.idix: SCAI.K. From the Pittsburg Dispatch. The other day It was stated that Wano mnker's ultimate ambition was the presl- .i........ I.,,, nl nrnai.nl II Is noised abt'OIld that he Is llrst aiming at the governorship. This is something new. and probably next it will be said thut he wotiiu iiae to ue coroner. 1IARI AT WORK. From the Washington I'ost. Stories from several of the rural Penn sylvania counties show strong truces of the business man ill politics. TIIK PROPORTIONS. It Is a rule, somewhat severe, ltut free us Deuteronomy; There's Just one month of Christmas cheer, And eleven of economy. Washington Star. HE WILL XKMI IT. From the Washington Post. If we were Hun. Joe Choate we would carry a good line of Insurance on thut senatorial boom. TIIK SIX HILL SIII.N'E AGAIN lly Rev. D. I). Jenkins. I Music by Prof. George Marks Evans. Have you trouble upon trouble. Is your heart weighed deeply down; Keep up courage, still be noble, Hark! Your ills ure overthrown. t'HORlS: For the clouds will soon pass over. And the sun will shine again: For the Lord Is always watchful. And he loves the sons of men. Does Dame Fortune frown upon you, heels of business slowly run; Fortune soon will smile upon you, Uooa time s coming has begun. cno. True It Is. maybe that you never w rote a nook or sang a song; To perform a deed that's greater, lour mission comes ere long. C ho. If you've never proved a hero horn the world would long adore. You may live in deed of kindness, in live on rorevermnro. CHRISTMAS Rush is over, but we still have a lew choice goods in LAMPS, CHINA, BRIC-A-BRAC, COT GLASS That will do nicely for a New Year gift. THE demons, Ferber, O'Malley Co., 34 tackawanna fvc. SANTA CLAUS Bends his book or ders to our HOLIDAY STORE an Wash. Ave.. Opp. Court Mouse. BE1DLEMAN. THE BOOKMAN 4J7 Spruce Street. BUT NONE IN SCRANTON which can compare in any way with our mammoth tailoring establishment. Our line in Suitings, Trouserings and Over coatings is as complete as you will find in any city. Our patterns and fashions are up-to-date and the very latest only. Should our price? be too low let us know and we will make the necessary correction. Our work and fit we guarantee. We don't allow a narment to leave our place except perfectly satisfactory. Ituying facilitiei enable us to sell at 111 IK'll lower lllil II lOUl'st prices, Iicnce here, like everywhere els?, our immense success. IT Branch 11. IT WONT PAY To carry Holiday Gootls iu stock for twelve months in otvler to sell them at a profit. Fkklo fashion may decree a change in form, shape or style by that time. No, wo won't run the risk. What we have left over JTU5T GO. 110 Washington Avenue. Our Great Offer. Prices Ke dtieed on All (iood.s. Suits and Overcoats to order $i4.oo. l'ants to .Measure $3.QO. GREAT ATLANTIC PANTS CO., Brrs'h! 319 Lacka Av3. rr?3c" CALL UP 3682i CO. 0 OFPICC AND WAREHOUSE. Ml TO 151 MERIDIAN STREET. 1L W. COLLINS, Manager. OR. C. W. GREEN, Electrical Treatment a Specialty. Offices, 607, 608 and 639 Mean Building, SCRANTON, PA. The most complete equipment of Elcctric.il Dacbinea and appliance for medical use to be ojnd In a pnysleian'a office outside of Near ntk. Medical and electrical treatment fur all eaten amenable to either or both. C. W. GREEN, M. D. COT, 608 and COS Mean Buildin?, Scranton. Hours-V a,m, to 12. 1 p.m.to5; 7.30 tot 11 I If If 11 J 115 4 8 oooooooooo oooo All Holiday Goods left over from the Christmas trade must be disposed of within the next few days. We take Inventory the first week in January and will not pack these goods away. Therefore come and take them at your own price. III III I 427 Lackawanna Avenue, Scranton, Willi every pair of Skates we will give a ticket . . which w ill entitle the pur chaser to one tt Chance on a Spalding Bicycle, 1897 flodel. We have a full line of in door Games lor the Holidays. Florey's, wtL, y. n. c. a. BJiLoriG. Our Holiday Display a" useful an J ornamental articles was nevjr sj lart;c a this season's exhibit. The advjiitat'c -of having so large ami varied an assortment to select from will be apparent to all who content plate giving presents of a substantial and artistic character, or buying for their own use. Writing Desks. In-essiiiK Table., Chcvul (ilu.sacs, Couches, Kockcrs, Kccliiiino; nnd Easy Chaii'.s, .Musi.: Cabinets, I'arlof Cabinets und Tables, Work Tables. Curio Case. Tea Tables, 'crnis.. Martin Cabinets, Parlor and Fancy Inlaid Chairs, (lilt Reception Chairs, Parlor Suits in Gilt, Pedestal. Jardinieres, Hook Cases, Shaving Stands all markeJ at moderate prices in plain figures. HILL UONNELL, 131 & 133 Washington Ava, WOLF & WENZEL, Sit Linden., Opp. Court Houss, PRACTICAL TINNERS and PLUMBERS Sole Agents for Richardson Boynton'i Furnace and Haugea. BAZAAR. D. LOWENSTEIN Proprietor, Branch 11. Pa. Fountain Pens Oxford Bibles Catholic Prayer Books We have the Largest and Most Complete Line of Holiday Goods in the city. Reynolds Bros. Stationers and Engravn HOTEL JERMVN BLILDINU. ESTABLISHED THIRTY YEARS. NOW IN OUR NEW STORE, 130 WYOMING AVENUE. Coal Exchange. Opp, Hotel Jenny a. We hoTe the fineat store and most complett atock in all this section, c! WITCHES, Flflt JEWELRY, DIAMONDS, STERLING SILVER WAR:, STERLING SILVE3 NOVELTIES, F.ICH CUT GLASS, CLOCKS, ETC. Our Prices arc always bottom. If you have not seen us In our new store It lll pay you to call. YOU CAN SAVE KIDNEY BY B J YIN 3 NEW AND SECOND-HAND CLOTHING Ladies' and Children'! Wear. Seal and Plush Sacques, Carpets and Feather Bed- From L POSNER, 21 Lackawanm Ave.