TIIE SCRATrTO tRIBUNE-TUESDAY MOTtNlNG FEBRUARY 1897. v l'Blljnd Weekly. NO Sunday lilltlon. Published at Scranton, Ph.. by Tile Tribune Publishing Company. Kiw Votkltcprcsenlatlvo! l'JIANK a OltAY CO. lloom 15, Trlbimo iwlldlnir, New York City. INTMED AT THIS POaTOrriOB AT SCIUNTOU, PA., AO EJC0ND-CLA83 MAIt. MATTER. SCnANTON. FRUHUAIlY 2, 1S9T. Tho attempt of forelsn stcaniBlili) companies to prevent the restriction of Immigration, bolus known, will simply hasten It. The Arbitration Treaty: What It Means. The slcnlflcanco of the fact tlint a treaty Is now before tlio American eoiiKri'PS and the Bovernment of Great Jtiltuln to adjiiHt hy Judicial process all differences which do not Involve the In tegrity or honor of either or both na tions, It Is Impossible to overestimate. The treaty has been carefully drawn, and Is carefully guarded so us not to In volve any secret capture or construc tion which shall compromise cither na tion, In all that either may hold sacred for the especial type of civilization or government which either has been placed by Providence to represent be fore the world. All objection to the tfcfitv Himh as that It Involves tho Mon roe doctrine, or the Nicaragua canal, or territorial limits or uncompromlsauie honor have been fully answered by able jurist? and statesmen. The Brent think ing and conservative musses of both nations are In favor of the treaty. Hun dreds and thousands of orBanir.atlons, clubs, churches, Boards of Trade, civil and social organizations, posts of the Brand army, women's organizations, the tiue and honest heart of every Chris tian home, are in full sympathy with tills stupendous fact that at the close of this nineteenth century the two greatest nations in size and Christian civilization have said to the world: "We mean no more war." It Is not that this treaty Is absolutely perfect (none at llrst ever is); it is not that Lord Salisbury and Mr. Olney, within a twelve month on the verge of war, have recanted and before High Heaven and the world of nations have said "lot us have peace"; It is not that armaments are necessarily now to lie done away with, and a careless guard ing of the citadel of liberty and good government is possible; It is that, as a fart, tho two pre-emlnontChrlstian gov ernments of the wot Id have clasped hands for the reign of tho Prince of Peace. This fact means that the cry from tho sacred homes of America and Great Britain that has gone up to Heaven against the cruel desolation and hatred of bloody war has been heard on earth, anil In l espouse to human and divine power and inlluence rulers have yielded; and the higher natuie of men has responded to the divine inllatus In poets, s.ige3, prophets and teachers from the sodb of the Hebrew to the last utterance of a human heart crushed by war and tyran ny. Is it possible to contemplate this fact as an epoch In history In all its significance? "When two strong and stalwart brothers In a great family stand up and say to their less apprecia tive brothers, "as for us, there shall lie no more fighting in tills family; we two at least shall abide In peace and broth erly rivalry and love henceforth and forever," it means something for them; and It means something, too, for the rest of tho family. The chance It gives to show that peace has its victories no less than war is a tremendous chance on the side of which God and the angels do not look with Indifference. This fact lias another towering sig nificance. It means that righteousness and peace have kissed each other, that with all our slanders and leproaches on the religious, the busy, the political, and the social life In this nineteenth cen tury's close, religion, business, politics, and social life may unite in working out their best for tho development of tho race. Men may argue, oppose, criticize und hinder, but not one true and honest word can be uttered against the effort and tho motives which actuate the American and British nations in plac ing the possible fact of peace and ad justment for all differences on public record. Admit, if you please, that there Is Anglopho bia, or Americaphobla In existence, that with some there is hatred and envy and jealousy. Are they comfort able, pleasant or happy frames of mind? Do they conserve religion, policy, plenty, profit and property? When two brothers are In fighting mood, is it not just tho time to apply the judicial process and the benignant smllo of an overpowering adjuster? That tho fact of arbitrament is now made so prominent between nations Is due more largely to our free American Ideas than to any other governmental Influence on the earth. AmeMca has always favored adjustment by Judicial process. We spread It broadcast to the world in our written constitutions from 177C to 1783 when we subjected thirteen distinct and separate sover eignties voluntarily to the one arbi trament of tho Supreme Court of the United Stales. It Is true the rebellion tried to break it up, first through the judicial tribunal itself and then through blood, but it signally failed and that distinguished tribunal still holds Its power on tho supreme luw of the land, viz., tho written constitu tional treaty. Whom does this great treaty con cern? First of all, It concerns the trade and business of the nations; and ty that is meant trade and com merce In Its largest and widest sense. It only can flourish in peace and safety. It means that traveling to and fro of men by which knowledgo shall be Increased; It means the white wings of commerce with all their frelnht and interchange of products and commod ities, bibles, missionaries of all lands, truth, liberty, human aspirations for all that Is worth acquiring and holding In this life; it means the mul tiplications of avenues of labor, In genuity, skill and tho widening of hu man .wants In a higher and better civ ilization to bo met by human hands, brains and hearts. It means for tho United States tho dissemination of all her surplus products and long yeais of peace and prosperity, and the re ception of the comforts and products brought bark within the rench of the poor and hopeful toller In nil our mills, factories, at all our desks and In all our homes. In a word, It means nil tho opposltes to what war brings and en tails In the long list of broken hearts, crippled frames, shuttered constitu tions and characters, and long years of misery and hatred down which no estlninte of loss can bo fathomed, A war announced today between Eng land and America would shock and paralyze all trade; tho Very shadows of It In the Venezuela matter postponed for two years the on-coming era of prosperity, which eighteen months ago dawned upon us. It does not concern boards of trade? What pensive mind ever conceived such a thought! That board of trade or ariy other organization which can successfully shelve -a courteous Invita tion from 'the leading member of tho chamber of commerce to express Itself at this time of opportunity, Is not to be envied in the future glory which awaits the successful establishment of International arbitration as a llxed fact In human government. It may have had twenty-five years of exist ence culminating In self glorification, but It cannot long endure such n blot on its history. It will, no doubt, soon correct It. More than three hundred organizations of every kind of social, civic, religious and business nature memorallzed the president of tho United States of America nnd the queen of. Great Britain on the auspic ious date of Washington's birth last year on behalf of tills subject and re ceived their personal nnd representa tive expression of favorable influence In return. There is not a man, woman or child In the present or future day of tills republic that Is not as deeply in terested in tills matter, whether ho feels It or not, as In any of the sensi tive and physical attributes of life which mean hope or happiness. If our senators do not listen to the influences which their constituents have the right to press upon them, they deny their representative character and the na ture of our institutions. God forbid! A. H. An extra session of congress Is no where opposed. Even free traders, knowing protection is sure to be re stored, want It over with. The Man for the Place. It is not often in these enterprising days that the olllce Is disposed to seek the man; but an exception must be made In the case of Chauncey M. Do pew. He has so frequently, declined proffers of public place that an In clination exists among many Influen tial IJepubllcans to Insist upon his se lection for und acceptance of the posi tion of ambassador to England. This position Is always one of great delicacy and responsibility. It demands of Its occupants line and uncommon gifts. To fill It even passably well Is no small achievement. To have it filled as It should be filled, with nice discre tion, amiability, thorough tact and with a self-command equal to every duty and every emergency, is to make the choicest history. . Dr. Depew Is the one American who could brliiET to the necessary require ments of this foremost trust In our for eign service an ample qualification for every serious duty, with something else. He Is the one American wo has an Ir resistible personality. He is a diplo mat both born and made. It Is impos sible to conceive of a contingency in tlie olllclal relationship of the Ameri can embassy with the Court of St. James in which the Interests of Amer ica would not be incalculably safer in the hands of Dr. Depew than in those of any of his contemporaries. If it be war, where else could we find so successful a pacificator; if peace, where else so charming an exponent? The fitness of the suggestion that Pres ident McKinley should choose Mr. De pew as our representative at London grows dealer the longer It Is studied. It is one of those happy inspirations which may not lie ignored. In naming Louis F. Payn to be state superintendent of insurance, Governor Black, of New York, ban again demon strated that ho has back bone. The press of Now York state Is almost a unit in opposition to Payn, but Black Is under political obligations to him and does not shirk the fulfilling of them. He is a wise politician who stands by his real friends. drossly Unfair. "In other branches of the law," writes Mr. Azel F. Hatch, a prominent member of the Chicago bar, "the per petrator of an Injury to another through a mistake Is held for the ac tual damage resulting from that mis take, but he is not lined or punished by punitive damages without some alflrmntlve proof of malice or of gross negligence. In the law of libel, how ever, if the defamation Is of a char acter tending to cause an injury it Is said to be libelous per se and malice Is conclusively presumed without proof. "If the plea of Justification or of privilege Is not Interposed, the verdict In a libel case must bo for the plain tiff and the jury Is at liberty to pun ish the defendant, in addition to full compensation for tho Injury done the plaintiff by the Infliction of such an amount of punitive damage as they may see fit to impose. In other words, the presumption of law that a man Is Innocent until proved guilty of a ma licious Intent Is reversed, and the in nocent publisher of a mistake Is pre sumed to have u malicious Intent without proof beyond tho mere fact of publication, In addition to the pun ishment of a verdict for punitive dam ages, tho publisher Is also lluble to criminal prosecution nnd to line and Imprisonment, If found guilty." This Is the present libel law In Penn sylvania. Can any fulr-mlnded man wonder that publishers should wish such u law to be amended so as to put them on a footing of equality with other citizens? For several years Vice President Frank Thompson, of the Pennsylvania Railroad company, has performed the duties of the presidency of that road, tho lato Mr, Huberts having been in poor health. Ills ability, sound Judg ment and practical familiarity with tho duties of the position clearly point to him as the next president of that com pany. 'On the llrst page we reproduce from the Philadelphia Press a good por trait of Mr. Thompson. One of the stories put In circulation by Gonernl Alger's appointment as a member of the McKinley cabinet was that he received from General Harri son In 1SSS the promise of n similar ap pointment, but that the latter subse quently broke faith. Can this be true? Senator Hill Rays that the Democ racy, to win, must get bark to "llrst principles," But has It any? General Alger was a great Blaine man, Ho will counterbalance Gage. STATE LEGISLATIVE TOPICS. A measure Introduced last week by Ufp rcsciitatlve Smith, of Jefferson county, to enable tux collectors to collect tlio taxes ustessed against foreigners Is strongly approved In ninny quarters. "No class or people," remarks tho Pittsburg Times, "make proportionately so much expense for the state or local governments as the foreigners who work nbout the mines und big plants or various kinds where un skilled labor Is u prominent factor. They get Into tho police courts, into Jail, Into all sorts of scrapes that entail costs, they have to bo taken care of when times are hind, their children must be'sont to school, nnd in one way or nnother they ndd more than a fair proportion to the public bur den. Now It Is all right for tlie.se people to share In the advantages of the schools for their children, and in the rewards of the court when they have been cutting each other to pieces at a christening or a wedding. But they should pay their sliaro of tho expenses Involved. In tho rural districts, where the most of them are em ployed, they are assessed and a tax charged against them. But they put off tho collector, or deny their identity, or hatch up some other pretext to save their money and escape the tax collector mull the amount collected from them Is hardly worth going after." Mr. Smith's bill would make it the business of the employers ol nllen labor to pay the taxes for them, and take the amount out of the wnges ouniPd, that they might iiy a fair proportion of the expenses to which they put the local and general governments of the state. -::- Tliere Is truth as well ns humor in what the Pittsburg Times says about over abundant legislation, "everybody who has a grievance, everybody who has a hobby, has a bill to remedy tho grievance or to promote the hobby. Every 111 physical, moral, mental, Intellectual or .spiritual is to be cured by a bill. There are bills to regulate everything from the manner of the wearing of hats to tho method of trimming trees and planting onions; bills to regulate drinking and eat lug, buying and selling; bills concerning births and bills concerning deaths; bills affecting every action during life, and bills that concern the rest of the dead; bills of all sorts by the hundreds and thousands; such a quantity of bills that If all of them were passed they would turn the world upside down. This Hood of legislation Is the result of the growing belief that somehow or other we live by law and that ills that are due either to the Inherent defects of human nature or to our own carelessness und neglect of our duties as citizens can be cured by legislation. Undoubtedly in every state there Is a great deal of room for wise remedial legislation which would better condltons and conduce greatly to the pub lie welfare, but the majority, of th.it which Is proposed Is crude, unnecessary and unwise and, should it be enacted, would bring upon us unknown Ills greater than those from which wo fly. No com munity or state 'can be happy and pros perous without good laws but there 13 nothing truer than the adage 'That peo ple Is governed best which Is governed least,' and no laws can supply tho place of energy, enterprise, thrift, prudence und Intelligence." State Treasurer Haywood has all the data prepared for his annual report of the business of his department for the last ilscal year. It shows the apparent debt of the commonwealth to bo 5.0,8,15,305.47, of which the .'i',s per cent, currency lonn, duo 1912, contributes f 1,642,900; the 4 per cent, currency loan, due the same year, $1,521,200; tho C per cent, agricultural college scrip bond, payable 1922, $000,000, and proceeds from sale of eastern and western experi mental fauns, with interest'ut G per cent., $17,000. These Items run the interest bear ing debt to KCS1.150. To get at the total debt there must bo added items on which Interest has Ceased, including the relief notes outstanding of tho $2,220,261 Issued by thirty-four banks under the act of May 4, 1S41, amounting to $9fl,132; Interest certi ficates outstanding and unclaimed, $17, 5S3.77; bonds, $20,114.70, and $2j owing a do mestic creditor. With these items added to the interest bearing liabilities, the state debt amounts to $G,S15,303.47. Toward the cancellation of the state debt there are In the sinking fund $1,300,000 bonds of the Allegheny Valley Itailroad company; $27,OS3.31 interest on the same; $2,770,000 United States 4 per cent, registered bonds, at 109, and JS12.347.19 cash on hand, making a total of $0,16I,1S0.53, and leaving the net debt of the commonwealth $1,051,121.91. Of (he relief no'tes outstanding $8,401 nro cred ited to the Exchange bank of Pittsburg, $1,333 to the Merchants and Manufacturers' bank of Pittsburg, and $9S1 to the Monon gahola bank of Brownsville. These three banks originally issued about $317,000 of these relief notes. In his report State Treasurer Haywood says tills of the condition of tho treasury: "Tlio balance due to common schools for tho current appropriation year, to Phila delphia on personal property tnx, tho quarterly payments for tho next six months on appropriations made by the last legislature to charitable, reformatory, educational and training Institutions; tho salaries to Judges and stnte oflicers, to the National Guard, etc., together with the expenses of the incoming legislature, will not only consume all the above balance ($4,250,257), but will require In addition a largo portion of the receipts for the same poriod. There were no new sources of revenuo during the year. On the other hand, appropriations were made to a num ber of new institutions and those already receiving state aid were In some cases In creased. The total of the impropriations of the two years reached about $23,000,000. The net receipts for tho same period wore a little less than $20,000,000. This excess may to some extent have been occasioned from the fact that under different acts of assembly certain moneys nro required to bo paid into tho treasury which are again returned. The total receipts. If taken as a basis for appropriations, are therefore mis leading. The largext of these sums Is tho three-fourths of tho state personal tax returned to the counties. Of the $2,710, 207.91 received from this source and In cluded In the receipts for tho year but $1,G79,051.!)9 ran be classed as actual rev enue. In addition thero are tho personal fees and commissions paid Into the treus ury by the secretary of tho common wealth, insurance commissioner and at torney general; also, tho tax on sale of fertilizers, which 13 drawn out and ex pended In the collection of samples and making analyses of tho same. Tho total of these Items, Including a few minor ones not mentioned, amounted during tho year to $2,09,010.35, leaving a not revenue of $10,170,745.74, It can be readily seen, there fore, how the legislature could have been misled by supposing that the total receipts as :eported were available for tho pay ment of appropriations Instead of the amount only. The net estimate for tho year 1690, made by tho nndltor general and my predecessor, was $9,743,C4S. The actual net receipts available for tho payment of appropriations woro $10,170,715.74. Of this amount about $SC3,00 was collected from delinquent corporations through the cill. clency of the auditor genoral'a depart- meat. As It Is not likely that this amount enn again bo collected, the net estimate for the j cur 1S97 1ms been put lit 9,7CS,S3l)." THIS MONTH'S MAGAZINES. The leading fcaturo of tho Forum lor February Is a paper by Senator David 1J, Hill on "The Future of thu Democratlo Organization," In which ho rips open tlio Bryan campaign In tho most unsparing fashion ever witnessed und predicts that Democratic restoration can come only by adherence to the traditional tenets of Democracy. "The Present nnd Future of Cuba" Is tho title ot n paper of exceptional Interest nnd timeliness. It Is written by Fidel a. Plerra, chairman of tho Cuban prt3n delegation In this country, and It presents facts In such a light as to call for the Immediate abandonment by our stuto department of Its present overtures In behalf of Spain. A third palier worthy ot especial recommendation Is that In which Assistant Secretary of State Hoclt blll designates evils that need to bo rem edied In our consular service and points out how the remedies may be applied. o The February Century Is a banner num. her. In addition to General Porter's Per sonal ltecollectlons of Grant, Dr. Weir Mitchell's serial and the ending or Marlon Crawford's "A Hose of Yesterday," It con tains a strong paper by dipt. Mahan On "The Battle of Copenhagen;" some sprightly ltecollectlons of Samuel Lover by his daughter, Mrs. Schmid; a graphic artlclo on Hedouln life In the great desert; one by Julian Hawthorne on life and scenery In Jamaica; a stieliuous war tale hy Stephen Crane; a paper by V. J. Still man descriptive of the unties of two pet squirrels which Is one of the most read able bits of natural history printed la years; and linally, a symposium of opin ions by four Confederate and three UiiIom generals as to why the Confederacy failed. Every one of these special features In well worth reading. o A publication along new lines has been begun by the Continental Publishing com. pany at 25 Purl: Place, New York, In Cui rent Thought, n monthly "magazluo ot Individual opinion and research," whoso purpose it is to "give the views or tlio best thinkers," to "be a forum for the public trial of new theories, a place lor the presentation of new discoveries;" In short, to afford circulation at a low price to the "best contemporary thought on vital topics, expressed in simple, non technical language." It alms to print one paper In each Issue whose length precludes Its appearance In any of the ordinary re views. The Initial paper Is entitled ".Men tal Training; a Ilemcdy lor 'Education'," and Is by William George Jordan. Jt !: u just arraignment of palpable defects In contemporary methods of public Instruc tion. o Since Chap-Hook resolved to take Itself seriously two Issues have appeared, and we legret to say the llrst one of those was better than the second. Beyond the book reviews In the Issue of Feb. 1 which ure admirable, especially the one on Ibsen there Is little to sustain the journal's am bition to lip tin Americanized Saturday He view. Its notes are pert and saucy; it permits somo of Its space to be utilized by unimportant correspondence and it Is not happy In Us essayist. Still, its book le vlcws alone are worth the price of admis sion; and one ought not to be too exacting with a second number. Chap-Hook Is to be praised for having the courage even to attempt to "subject American literature to the highest standards." a With Its Issue of February the Bookman completes Its second year. It has In that time fully demonstrated Its merit and has become anchored In the affections of book loveis. lis book reviews have been Im partial, Judicious and satisfactory; Its critical papers on authors and critics have been Instructive and analytical; Its poetry has been better than most that finds its way Into the magazines, and its book chat and gossip about authors have without vulgarity satlslled tho demand of the American public for personal Information. The American who desires to be kept ill touch with the literary movements of his time cannot do without the Bookman. o The very llrst article In the Cosmopoli tan Is of Interest in Scranton, because it introduces Major Wlnt of the United States army, who has relatives here and is per sonally acquainted with many Scrantonl ans. It Is by Frederic Bcmlngton, and 13 entitled "Vagabonding with the Tenth Horse." Other noteworthy features are Doyle's serial; Edgar Fawcett's charming paper on "Winter Days In Florence;" u paper by Daniel Frohman telling how actresses are aided by the camera, and another of Theron Crawford's instructive Modern Fairy Tales. The number as a whole is excellent, being well above tho average. o To the large list of publications devoted to subjects mystic another has been added tho Occult Science Quarterly, which promises to consider hypnotism, spiritism, theosophy, somnambulism, ghost stories, telepathy, palmistry and astrology from a scientific standpoint. The Quarterly is published in sixteen-page, semi-newspaper form by the Light of Trutli l'unilsiiing company of Columbus, O., for the certuln- ly modest price of 40 cents a year, Ttie first Issue goes largely into hypnotism, spiritism and kindred phenomena, and, whether convincing or not, Is at all times interesting. o A work of patriotism Is being performed by the publishers of St. Nicholas In print ing for young readers papers on Abraham Lincoln. In tho current issue, ueorgo h. Yenowlne describes Lincoln's birthplace and with a few simple strokes puts betore liis readers the central lesson In Lincoln's whole career that. humbleness of origin is not of Itself n bar to high achievement. Vo trust that tho start thus made In fa miliarizing tho younger generation with tho Impressive career of this greatest of Americans will be followed up. o Apparently the mlnlaturo magazluo fad has not yet run Its course. The latest specimen of tills curious fnshiou comes from Lansing, Mich., and Is called tho Clack Book. Its pages are a foot long anj only 4 Inches wide; Its art Is Impression istic to the uttermost taste and its letter pressbut what does letter press matter in such a connection? The Clack Book Is temporarily Interesting as a curiosity, and presumably that Is us far as Its mission extends. o McClure's is now "featuring" George Washington. In Its current number it offers thirty orb.hial portraits or tho father of his country, with explanatory notes, beside a paper on Washington by Professor Trent. The two other features that stand out In this Issue are Gai land's biography of Grant which In the present Instalment treats of the Mexican war, and IT. J. W. Dam's paper describing how Oxford bibles aro made. o A biographical and critical study of Verdi, by Professor Aplhorp, und n paper by Helen Marshall North on "Tlio Sons of Wales" aro conspicuously Interesting Items in tho Looker-On's February table of contents. Perhaps wo should mention alFO Arthur Hoeber's article concerning "Tho Outlook for tho American Artist," a forecast not altogether roseate but in tho main accurate. o To cover the wholo field of scientific dis covery from month to month with thor oughness, accuracy und readableness Is the aim of Popular Sclenco News; and It Is steadily realizing that aim. This Intor estlng und valuable publication Is fully lit to be Included In the schools us n supple ment to tho science text books. o Physicians who are Interested in psy chic phenomena will doubtless read with satisfaction a paper In this month's Meta physical Magazine" by Dr. Frederick A. Paullg, entitled "A Psychological Study of Delirium." POINTS A I.IISSON. From tho Philadelphia Times, Scrunton's board of trade, which celo. brated a few days ago Its twenty-fifth an niversary, Illustrates tho work that can be accomplished by such u representative i LP OUR Have Been Put Into Four Big Lots and Will Be Closed Out at the Following Extremely Low Prices : LOT I, Your choice of .the best garments in the house for merly $10.00 to $15.00, Closing Out Price, $6.73. LOT 2. Your choice of over 100 Jackets, formerly $10.00 to $12,00, Closing Out Price, $5.73. LOT 3."Yur choice of over 100 Jackets, formerly $8.00 to $12.00, Closing Out Price, $4.73. LOT 4,""rur choice of over 75 Jackets, formerly $6.00 to $10.00, Closing Out Price, $3.98. Children's Garments, all ages from 4 to 12 years, corre spondingly cheap. t"We are making preparations for the Greatest Special Sale of Ladies' and Children's Muslin Underwear ever held in this city. Over 2,000 dozen have been manufactured to order for us for this great sale. Announcement of the ex act date will be made in a few days. body in developing a city. Since Its in ception the board has been identified with every step of the city's advancement and growth, and to the zeal and energy of Its members Scranton Is Indebted In a great measure for Its recognition us the metro polls of northeastern Pennsylvania. The story of Scranton's growth Is ex pressed In the contrast used by one of the speakers at the celebration the other night: "Then the frog pond; now the pa latial buildings," and her board of trade In making a city which Is an honor to its citizenship, have made a record of which its members may be proud. The board's success points a lesson for other loss pro gressive cities that have boards of trade in name but not In deed. SHOULD UKCOJir, A LAW. From the Wllkes-Iiurre Times. We are glad to see that there has been Introduced into the state legislature a bill compelling traction companies to en close both front and rear platforms of their cars in the winter. It was Intro duced by Iteprcsentativo Council, of Scranton, who has spen In his own town thu sufferings or tho unprotected car man. It will no doubt pass and become a law. KKCOH1) TO III! lMlOlflJ OF. From the Fasten Free Press. Scranton's board of trade has been In existence twenty-five years, has been of vast advantage to that thriving city, and lias a record to be proud of. A l'OOll STICK. From the Sun. The American In whoso veins no drop of jingo blood Is flowing, In whose soul no Jingo sentiment Is ever felt, is a poor creature Indeed TOLD UY THE STARS. Daily Horoscope Drawn by AJacchus Thu Tribune Astrologer. Astrolabe cust: S.1S a. m., for Tuesday, Feb. 2, 1S97. & & A child born on this day will be of the opinion that Editor Hlchard Heamlsh's picture of the Klectile plant fire must have been touched by a live wire. It will be Useless for the geographical student to look for the map of "Utile Fgypt" anywhere except on theatrical posters. Luzerne's crop of "new county" mlcrobs appears to have been frozen out by the recent cold wave. People who havo no faith in the ground hog predictions nro usually tho first to shudder at their own shadows. A.jncchus' Advice. If you wish to ba convinced of tho job lot cheapness of talk in about 9S;K cases out of 100 .request a loan from tho Individ ual who offers sympathy. Odds and Ends, we find while taking stock, are being sold at greatly reduced prices to make room for new spring goods. Have some good Dinner Sets we are closing ont very low. $15.00 Sets, with a few pieces short, now $10.00. THE demons, Ferber, O'MaSley Co. 422 Lackawanna Ave. fin Antltoiiy Hope's Now IiooU, Published Today, .THE 437 Spruce Street. OrpoiltcThe Commonwealth. BARGA mm, ENTIRE STOCK SPECIAL PRICE OF $1.00 FOR A SAUL!. LOT ONLY AT g 305 1 I.ncku. A emit: HOT QUARTERS. You must have. You must keop tho?a chil dren warm. Don't risk tlielr youns Uvea on cold floor3, In cold rooms, Vory few quarters buy hoatora now. Wo nro closing thum out. Yon ninko yonr own price so long as you don't get below cost. Wo must have tho room thoy take, Foote & Shear Co, 119 Washington Ave. BOIiCllluLL At Our New find Klcgunt Storeroom, 130 WYOMING AVENUE, Coal Exchange, Opp, Hotel Jerniyn. "Old firm in new surround iiiKs," like an old "stone In new settings," shines more brilliant than ever, and "shines for all." Diamonds, Fine Jewlory, Watches, Silverware, SIlYer Novelties, Rich Cut Glass, Clocks, Fine Leather Goods, Opera Glasses. When you see our Net Prices you will ask for No Discount. All Arc AVelcome. - Un ON THE LINE OF THE III PACIFIC n nro located tho tlnont ashing and hunting (.'rounds in tho world, Descriptive books on application. Tickets to nil points in Maine, Canada and Maritime Provinces, Minneapolis, St, Paul, Canadian and United States Northwest. Vanvouver, Beattle, Vacomo, Portland, Ore., San Francisco. Rist-Class Sleeping and Dining Cars attached to all throught trains. Tourist cars fully flttod with ueddlntr, curtaina and specially adapted to wunts of families may bo had with second-class tickets. Rates always lees than via other lines. For further Information, time tables, etc.. on application to E. V. SKINNER, Q, E. A., 353 Broadway, New York. & Doublo felfj Scated j; JOran'ev)MM and Vl iKIDNEVff PROTECTOR I '"fjtt V1U outwear mj H two pair 0 n? -5a, ordinary w Drawers. Sr' 'Alijzerhekmttihghills SjFK . E:lot!'f'js. y' OF BYRON WRITING That ''slicol'' was paved with gooil intentions, probably realized the truth of the assertion. Don't let your good resolution to buy only the best It till tv Books, OiHce Supplies, Type- Writing Supplies, etc., at our store be a paving stone. We keep the best hi variety and quality. V'c also tnnice a specialty of Draughting Supplies. .e ros., Stationers and Engrave, IIOTBL JBRMYN I5UILUINU. Lodge and Corporation Seals, Rubber Stamp Inks, All Colors, Daters, Pads, Pocket Cutlery, Scissors, Revolvers, Razors, Strops, Padlocks, Bicycles and Supplies, Umbrella Repairing Athletic and Gymnasium Goods, AT 222 WYOMING AVENUi Lager eer Manufacturers of the Celebrated CAPACITYl 100,000 Barrels per Annum WOLF & WENZEL, 531 Linden. 1 Opp. Court lloui;, PRACTICAL TINNERS and PLUMBERS Solo AgouU for Klchardson Boyntoa' Furnaces and Ksul-o. PlBf If n