'-m ' -'mtiiHF''"'' " ' i W"iiiiw?wp- , "Vr "," f -w9H't Vip wgti ni'niiWR Hwrwffwi'wmPi THE SCRANTON" TRIBUNE-MOND AT MORNItfa, APRIL ll, 1807. 0e JScranfon CriBune I til) lxl WMklr. No Sunday Kdlf on. By The Tribune Publishing Company. WILLIAM CONNKLL, t'nililent. bin crk IteprMcntiitlve: KIIANK . CHIAY CD, Jtoom 4V, Tribune llulldlnc, New York CUT. imirid at tii rosTorrirs at scrantoh pa. MC08D CLASS MAIL UATTIR. AS Tho Trlhuno rctolves over n special wlro lending Into It nllleo the complete reimrt of the Amounted 1'rem, tho greatest now col lecting nrhiinlrntlnn In tho world. Tho Tribune win tho first newspaper In North eastern rmhsylvnnlr to tontrnet for thin Nervlce. .TEN PAGES. SCRANTON, APRIL. 19, 1837. The secret of the Cuban peace reports from Madrid Is out Spain Is trying to negotiate another war loan. Very Probably Trus. The report Is cuncnt at Washington that President MrKlnley will yet re voke some of the precipitate oh II ter vlce orders of Ills predecessor which were aimed to entrench Democratic ap pointees In federal olllce. Should this rumor he orllled, It will not Invohc n brckwnrd step from honest civil ser vice reform, but rather a rscuo of the civil &ervlce fiom one of the most In sidious of possible abuses When It became apparent to Mr. Clovclnnd, after the Chlcnso conven tion, that hf could hope foi nothing In the futuie, he began, as will bo remem bered, to fix the civil service so that the bands of the succeeding admit Islratlou would be tied. Federal employes who bad displeased him were summarily bounced, their places filled with ad ministration fuvorltct and then the po Fltlons placed by eecutlvv order on th'a classified lint. It was his hope thus to anchor his sutelllteo on the public payroll Indefinitely, his theory and the theory of his subordinate- being, pre sumably, that tile Incoming eecutlc would not dare to risk the revocation of these manifestly partisan oulers, for fear of Mugwump criticism. They rea soned, no doubt, that Major McKlnley was a timid man, and that he would draw his ideas of executive policy from the editorial w rltlngs of Carl Schurz, Richard Watson Glldti, Larry Oodkln and tho othei mogula In the uclcct circle of Clew land vvorshlnpeis, who would of course view an depaitur tiom the Cleveland programme; as a public cal amity nnd a protan.it lor. In puistiance of thlj Idea., It will bo recalled tb.it no soonei was tho major elected than these voluntcr advisers at once began to Inform him how to run the government The taiiff was to be reformed on "revenue onl" lines, with protection virtually eliminated; the greenbacks were to be retiitd ah soon as he reached the vv hlte house and tho business of issuing paper money put at onc3 into the bands of the national and btatc banks; the active and effective generals In the Republican paitj such m,en as Quay and Plait and Toraker were to be frowned upon us bold and wicked corruption! -its unfit to be spoken to after election; and the entire scheme of proeedure elaborated with fetich dis astrous consequences by the Inspired fisherman of Buzzard's Ray was to be continued without material alteration, McKlnley being: only Giover'3 under study. Unfoitunately for tho Mugwump cult, though fortunately for tl e remainder of the country, the quiet gentleman of Canton, In his courteous, and dignified way, saw fit at several points to differ from tho lniti uctlons of Harper's Week ly, the Century Magazine and the New Voik Evening Post. He listened with patience to what these Journals had ti say, but afterward went right on just ns if they had i.ot been. The tariff whkh be asked congress to pass was a tariff with protection foremost; the project of wild-catting tho currency was relegated 1 ir into tho background; the edict of binlshment was not pro nounced on the men who had by their loyalty, fidelity and political aFtuteness made patty victory possible; and It would be Jut IIko William McKlnley in his plain, modefet way to refus to let tho favorites of G'over Cleveland long er toast their shins before the flies of offlclil emolument while good Repunll cans, In every way their equal, nr. bhiverlng on the bleak outsld. President Krueger's action in sup pressing a' newspaper that he didn't like has been revoked by the high court of the South African republic It re malns to be seen w hether "Ooni Paul" will try to suppress the court. Taking the Starch Out. It will be remembered that Governor Black, of New York, in his first annual message, took the bieath of the Mug wump fraternity away by asserting. Tho value of practical civil service Is be yond question. The work of the legisla ture necessary to render effective tho pro vlslon of tho constitution should bo done promptly and in good faith, not with ref erence to Ideas so delicate us to be worth less in actual practice, but with a vlow solely to tho elevation of tho public ser vice and tho highest discharge of tho du ties of every public oflico. Every means must bo adupted to tho end desired and in my Judgment civil service) will work bet ter with less starch. A scheme Is not nec essarily effective or high-toned because It lqcks common sense, and they aro not nee essarlly hostile who think that common sense would Improve It An examination for a public place should bo suitable to tho kind of service required, and ifflclent margin snouip he given those making np polntrnentB so that tho most competent help can bo selected. Experience, charac ter, tacl, pnd even muscle may be of more Importance In some cases than tho frac tjn of 1 per cent, In an examination In geography. Tho discretion of tho ap pointing power shouM not be entirely sub ordlnated to the marking system, If an examination has disclosed tho fact that a certain number of men are qualified to fill a given position, the place would be mora likely to be properly filled If tho ap polntlngomcercouldaelcctfrom among tho whole number so qualified than If ho was limited to a quarter of that number. Fur thermore, it would reduce tho chances of Injustices an applicant whose qualifica tions, on the whole, -were superior to tliaso of his competitors who had out ranked him on the paper. Civil service 1 Intended to sepure for the public, at a- reasonable cost, unquostloncd Integri ty and approved skill, enlarged by conJ tlhuous service and not to exploit any particular Idea. .The legislature, at Albany now has bofore It a bill embodying Governor Blank's Ideas" of a civil service scheme with the starch out. That bill Is sum mnrlzed ns follows: In all examinations for appointment and promotion In tho civil service, the merit of all applicants shall bo determined by examination conducted under the civil service commissioners or examining board, Upon oil examinations to determlno the merits of tho applicants no higher rating than 60 per cent, shall be given to any per son The fitness of the applicants shall bo determined by examination, to bo con ducted by tho person or persons holding tho power of appointment or promotion or by sojiio person or board designated by tho pprson holding such power of appoint ment, and the rating n such examination for fitness shall not exceed, In any cane, CO per cont, Tho rating upon the examin ation for Iltne ss shall bo added by the per son or persons holding tho power of ap pointment or piomotlon to tho rating given each applicant, respectively, by tho civil service commissioners or examining boird, ns provided In section 1 of this act All examinations shall bo competitive so far ns practicable nnd shall bo practical In their character and shall relate to inoso matters which shall fairly test the Intelli gence, competency, sultublllt, and char acter of the applicants to discharge tho duties of that service for which they seek to lie appointed Tho civil serv Ice comml''- sloneis of the stnte, with tho approval or the governor, shall determlno when exam inations aro not practicable. Ono month after this not shnll take effect all existing eligible lists for appointment or promotion In the civil service of the state, or In nns of tho cities thereof, shall be null and void It will be perceived that tho salient feature of this bill Is the adaptation of fitness to the position sought. A man might be a walking encyclopedia of miscellaneous Information of an abs truse character and yet be unfit to ad dress envelopes or fold papers. He might know tho position of every planet In the heavens nnel the chemical for mula for every substance In the uni verse nnd yet not be worth a pinch of rock salt as a bookkeeper, window elerk or private- societal y The qualities most needed for effective service In public no less than In prlvnte employ ment are qualities that would never re veal themselves In formal examina tion papers Many of the shrewdest Judges of human nature In New York state, and some once holding high po sition, have been men who could not parse a three-word sentence and could hardly write their names. Grammar ians and penmen can be hired by the thousands on almost your own terms; but you cannot get such men ns these in every academy. They have what schools and books don't teach. There will be a bowl, of course, there 1" one, In fact, already over the Black bill It comes mainly from the thoci Ists who construct Ideal systems In the privacy of their comfortable studies and can't see why the blaisted Ignor amuses who do the real work of the woild do not older things accoiellngly. But such bowls raiely amount to much except as pastime. They are really tilbutes in disguise. The denial of Japan that she wants Hawaii deserves to bo taken with sev eral generous pinches of salt Fair Piny for Yankee Railroads. In dread of tho possibility that con gress may soon take stops to abrogate tho bonding prlv liege under w hlcb Can adian railroads aie enabled to ship fi eight into American territory duty free, and thus, beln? subsidized and tax-exempt, to underbid American car rleis, to the lnjurj at once of American capital and labor, these railroads, through their agent, Edvvaid Farrer, of Toronto, have submitted an Ingenious statement to the senate committee on Interstate eommeice. Its aim Is to show that the bonding privilege Is a good thing, a real good thing, for us. Among the claims involved In this statement are that the privilege has been recognized from time Immemorial and Is neccsaij because of the peculiar configuration of the continent, that only nbout 10 per cent, of the traffic of the Canadian roads Is from state to state and therefore Is not a source of peril to American railways; that those roads ate not heavily subsidized, and finally that they all observe the letter and spirit of our Interstate commerce law in their dealings with freight for American destinations. These claims are duly reinforced by a sunning array of figures In the manipulation of which the Toronto writer Is a recognized ex pert. In an Issue of this kind, where the word of American Interests Is pitted against that of foielgners, It seems to us a reasonable belief that congress ought to give credence to the former. The managers of American trunk lines say that the Canadian Pacific and Grand Trunk lallvvuys aie depriving them of much profitable through frelsnt by their ability to offer lower rates be cause they are not subject to the re strictions of the Interstate commerce law, and can make up by high charges on local traffic what they l03e on the long haul; also because they are heav ily subsidized by the Canadian govern ment and are exempt from taxation. They assert, for Instance, that the Canadian Pacific, operating some 7,200 miles of road, with telegraph lines, ele vators, steamships, ferries and various other contributing enterptlses, does not pay a dollar In taxes, while the Union Pacific, operating 7,690 miles of road, Is compelled to pay an average of Sjl, 648,274 to tho various states through which It passes, which Is equivalent to a dividend of 2V& per cent upon the cap ltal stock of Its Canadian Jlval. The New Yoik Central, operating 2,098 miles, pays $1, 000,144 In taxes, and the New York and New Haven, with SIS miles, pays $S45,S58 annually. It is ar gued, too, that If the freight that Is now shipped from one point to another point in this country by the Canadian roads were seiit over lines that run wholly In the United States It would give employment to several thousand more men, require the construction of sevoral hundred new cars annually and the disbursement of several million dol lars In wages, Why should not congress believe the American as opposed to the Canadian testimony? It will bo noticed that it takes a cold day at Washington to deter Pennsyl vania from supplying at least oncan dldate for every office. The Baltimore American blames the Kentucky deadlock upon tho present method of electing United States sena tors. It would be quite as fair to blame the Hayes-Tllden eplsodo upon the present system of electing piesldenW, In each case It Is not the system but tho multitude which Is to blame. The bcautv nbout an advertisement In The Trlbuiw Is that for your money you get value received. It reaches the people. Tlu Beet Sugar Outlook. In view of what wo printed a few days ago concerning the chances of de veloping In this country a domestic beet sugar Industry which will keep at homo all or much of tho $100,u00,0u0 now sent to other countries annually In pay ment for sugar Imports, some addition al Information Just received through an agricultural department bulletin will possess Interest at least to some of our renders. This bulletin says that In 113 factories reporting In Germany the mean net profit for each factory was $32,240 for the past year. The price reported for beets Is usually fictitious, the best growers owning the factory and pre fer! Ing to shate in the general profits than to charge a higher price for the beets First-class beets rarely bell for leys than $5 a ton. The Western Beet Sugar company, of Watsouvlllc, Cal , stated that in the season of 18S8-S9, the' cost of mnnufactutlng sugar from the beets amounted to $80 80 per ton of Hiignt. The department holds now that with tho best machinery and most econ omical processes, beet sugar can bo made in this country at a cost of from 2 to 4 cents per pound, when tho price of rich beets does not exceed $5 a ton. In Hurope tl.e cost of erecting a factory with tho most model n nmchlncry, of .i capacity of at least 300 tons of beets a day Is about $200,000. In this coun try, owing to Increased cost of trans portation, and the higher price of lnbor, the cost w ould probably be $250,000. The icport discountenances cheap manufac turing processes and holds out no rea sonable hope to farmers of successfully establishing a homo beet sugar factory but predicts that the co-operative fac tory methods practiced In Europe, In which beot-grOwIng farmers hold part oi a majority of tho stock, will eventu nllv come Into use her. Of 11,672,S1S metilc tons of beets delivered to Ger man factories In 18')5-90, theie were 2,CS9,004 tons grown by shareholders. Pcveral beet sugar factoiies are in op eration in this country and four others are building or contemplated The rate of increase In sugar consumption for 23 years has been 27S per cent. In the United States, 112 In Fiance; 1G9 In Germany; 10f In Austria and 90 In Eng land. Though tho cash profits from such an Industry should not be largo after Its thoiough establishment, the presence of such factories in such statps as Kan sas and Nebraska, with farmers as stockholders, would have an education al Influence for pe'ace and quiet. It would have a tendency to allay the Popullstlc hallucination that the man who inns an Industry Is necessarily a bloated arlstccrat with nothing to do but clip coupons and nothing to emt but the livers eif his victims. In this way, If In no other, It would work for the betterment of rural sentiment, lead to more rational views of things and open the way to new development of the country beyond the Mlssls&lppl where now enterprise has largely gone to seed. Tho successor to Street Commissioner Kinsley should at all events be a man who will consider that his office Is a public trust. And now, lookln;; back over It all, what a miserable mistake that Tllton Beecber scandal was Gossip at the Capital Special to tho Sertnton Tribune. Wahlngton, April. 18 Tre appointment of Senator Wolcott, of Colorado, ex-Vlee-Presldent Stevenson, of Illinois, and Hon. C. J. Paine, of Massachusetts, as commis sioners to pavo tho way for nn interna tlonal conference has been cordially com mended. Until this week nobody knew definitely what the president's plans wero In regard to this question. It was known that ho was etremcl anxious to take the pioper steps towards carr Ing out the pledge of the party looking lo Internation al consideration of the silver question, but Just how ho p-oposed to bring this about or to take the Initiative nobody was able to saj It now appears that, as usual, ho has chosen tho wise plan, and ono most likelv to bo successful. Not onlj has he chesen the plan most likely to be success ful, but the ono llkelj to be most succesi ful Rj this is meant that If ho Is ab'a to cprry out the plans thus Inaugurated tro International conference will be brought lo tho doors of every American voter. President McKln!c's hope Is that It may be practicable to hold this con fereneo In the United States and In tho city cf Washington. If thl shall happen oveiy American citizen will havo the full benefit of tho discussion which thero aris es. It will be as thocgh tho meeting of tho rcprercntatlves of the great nations was brought to his own doorjard With press associations can i Ing the full pro ceedings of tho conference, and tho hun dreds of special conespondents In Wasi ln(,ton commenting upon the proceedings in tho papers which they represent, every citizen who feels tho slightest Intel est In this question wculd bo blo to follow tho pioceedlngs and fetudy them In their prop, er light, thus knowing for himself that tho work was well done. The commissioners who aro to go abroad to try to bring about nn agreement for a conference aro highly commended by members of all parties as especially Judi cious selections. Mr Wolcott, by reason of his long study of tho question and dis cussion on two previous trips abrewd of this samo subject, will bo of much greater value than any man who had not had these experiences; ex-VIco-Presldent Stevenson, representing tho sl'ver element of tho Demociacy and well known by reputa tion and In person abroad, will Instantly command attention; whllo Mr. Paine, as a close student of this subject, will provo equally useful and Influential. It docs not follow that these men who are selected for this work are to be tho representatives of the United States In an International conference If they aro successful In bring ing ono about; on the contrary, It Is ex pected that othor men will be selected to rcpresent,the government In that confer ence. The people who aro assuming that the tariff bill Is likely to drag through tho summer and keep the business of the country In an unsettled condition awaiting final action may be disappointed, The nex week or ten days at the furthest are likely to seo the bill perfected by the Re publican members of the finance com mittee and It Is likely'" to get Into the senate before the month ends. Prospects now seem to be good for a final vote upon It In June and its completion In time that It may go Into effect at the beginning of the fiscal year July 1. The changes made by tho senate committee are much less In extent than had been expected. Tho ores- sura for a reduction In tho duties on wool has not been successful thus far and tho chances seem to bo that they will not be. Tho demand of tho sugar trust for changes in the schedule advantageous to them has been promptly rejected. The wall of the Standard oil trust and of sun dry other corporations1 of this character hao passed unnoticed, Thoso Democrats nnd Populists and other enemies ot tno Republican party who had hoped to bo nblo to make political capital by charging that tho tariff bill was favorable to cor porations and trusts are disappointed. And they contlnuo to bo disappointed, Whllo things aro moving on smoothly with tho Republicans, thero Is troublo among the Democrats. Tho breach be tween tho Bailey and tho Bryan factions In tho houso has been widened, and tho Populist allies of that party havo been given tho cold shoulder. Tho sockless Simpson, finding himself fast losing tho notoriety which his eccentricities havo awarded him, developed a now freak nnd attacked Speaker Reed beciuso of his fail ure to appoint committees when commit tees wero not needed. Tho Bran wing of tho Democracy, being so accustomed to co-operating with the Populists, wanted to support Jerry, but tho Bailey wing op posed It. Mr Bailey, who last fall op posed tho consolidation of the Populist and Dcmoorntlc psity In tho campaign, re tains the same views today and put tnem Into practical operation. As tho leader of tho Democratic sldo of the house, he called a caucus at once, nnd by a vote ot two to ono adopted a resolution declining co-operation with Simpson and his fol lowers, thus again defeating the Brjan ltes In their attempt to control tho Dem ocracy Ir. tho house. SPECIAL FEATURES OF THE POSED ROAD LAW.' PRO- Prom the Lancaster New Era, While most of our readers havo heard In a general way of tho provisions of thu Hamilton road law, we also know thit there Is somo prejudice against It, meiely because its provisions are not fully un derstood by the majority of rarmers and others Interested. Its author has Issued a circular. In which some of tho pro visions of the bill are moro fully elab orated, and wo shall speak of them hero becauso wo believe when they are fully understood they will go far towards dis arming criticism and removing existing objections to tho bill. It Is very generally admitted that opo of tho evils ot tho present law Is that supervisors In most townships go out of olllco annually. A good man may bo superseded by an Incompetont one. Thero can be no permanent Improvement under such a system. This bill provides for a. continuous body, or board, composed of the most capablo men, under whose di rection an effective system of road mak ing can be organized nnel carried out. Under the prcent law supervisors can levy a road tax not exceeding ten mills on tho dollar, but In addition to that they may Incur a township debt to an un limited amount. They can also levy a special tax to pay such debt. Under tho proposed law their powers In this direc tion aro limited. They may levy tho ten mill tax as now, but beforo they go fur ther they must make application to tha Common Pleas court and show cause why they want to levy moro tax, and this gives every citizen an opportunity to como forward and be heard, whether In opposition or otherwise This protects the citizen against having townships In volved In debt against their own will. As the law Is at present, supervisors raiy r enquire one-fourth of tho tax to be paid In money The proposed law author izes the supervisors to levy one-half to be paid in cash so that Implements and machinery may bo purchased and labor bo patd. A large majority of the super visors who have been asked their opin ion whether the road tax should be paid in money, declare that If that was done they could do moro with one-half or two thirds of tho present tax than they can now do with It all. While many persons and communities favor that tho tax bo all paid In money, the proposed bill asks that only one-half shall so bo paid, and the other half In labor. Besides, under the present law many taxes run as low as ten, fifteen and twenty cents. It Is almost Impossible to collect such sums. Tho new bill proposes to tax every male taxable one dollar per annum. At pres ent supervisors aro expected to see to It persona'ly that men work out their tax. This often prevents the best men from accepting tho office. It doesn't pay them. The new law places this duty on a road master, who is appointed by tho super visors, and who Is In a position to exact the full measure of service from all. Under the present sstem the roads are liable to be neglected at seasons of the year when they most need attention. Tho new law proposes to district the town ships Into seet'ons not exceeding twenty miles of road to each section, and placo on that section a good common day la borer, who Is to keep tho road In repair and supervise tho labor that reports to him, und seo that everj thing Is done in accordance with the directions that ho re ceives from time to tlmo from tho board of supervisors This will Insure that whatever Is done will be kept In placo un til tho next season, and additions mado year by year will gradually bring our roads Into fine condition. These are the leading features of the bill proposed. It Is believed that this law will meet the gen eral sense of what Is needed In the way of road legislation at this time. Unusual Interest has been manifested In It by nil classes of our citizens, and tho attitude of the formers of the commonwealth to ward this proposed bill may be Judgd from the fact that out of one hundred and eight granges who havo replied to a momorial asking their view of the bill, one hundred and ono have answered In its f av or. THE TRIBUNE'S SUCCESS. Trom tho Plttston Item. Tho Scranton Tribune has Just put In ono of tho celebrated R. H. Hoe's presses and has mado other additions and Im provements in its plant, which hal baen previously one of the best equipped In this part of the state. These changes havo been made necessary to meet the demands of Its largo and growms circula tion. Wo are glad to notlco thesa evi dences of our contemporary's prosperity, as it Is always pleasing to seo real merit win pronounced and substantia! success. From Its birth Tho Tribuno has been a model newspaper, clean, bright, able and conservative. Typographically, It Is a gem; locally, It Is uccurato and complete; editorially, It is an Intolligont and able leader of thought In Its vicinage The keen and graceful pen of Editor Llvy S. Richard, well and favorably known to Pittstonlans for his excellent Journalistic work while In this city, has done much to elovata the literary character of his own department and to glvo weight to the editorial utterances of the pape- In politi cal and Journalistic circles thioushout the state Under Its present management It has forged to the forefront amongst the ablest newspapers In Pennsylvania, 'Ihe Item extends Its heartiest congratulations to Tire Tribune and to Bdltor Rleharl. .11 Y PUT. OP DIU1AMS. From my pipe's engraven bowl Glddj fantasies unroll, Tancles strange, enchanting, luring, Evanescent, unendurlng, Emanating from the hole In my pipe's enclosing bowl. While It's gaily bubbling ball, Binding me within Its thrall. Sends up censer smoko that curling Graylsh-bluo, and writhing, whirling, Heavy-Bccnted, covers all With tha maglo of tho ball. Ah! that tiny, conoid bowl Grants mo but a niggard's dole, Vet I'm ever, ever dreaming Of tho Joys that He In seeming, Ploatlng from the subtle soul Of tho devil In the bowl. Raloh Alton In tho Lotus. GOLfeS MOT Tlh Spirit of Spoil Is everywhere manifest throughout the store. Every stock !s at Jts best, and beckons you with tempting brightness. Dimes or dollars, it matters not how much or how little you spend here so that we can impress you with the fact that you are receiving an honest return for your money. We want your all-the-year-round, patronage, be it great or small. Want you to at all times connect this store with your buying needs. That Busy Garmeet Room We've planned for business this spring as we have never planned before, and the logical result is we are getting it. More new lots for you to in vestigate. This means another week of busy buying. Misses' Spring Jackets at $1.23 and upwards Ladles' Spring Jackets at $4.98 and upwards New Capes at $11.23 and upwards Suits at $4.98 and upwards Separate Skirts at $1.49 and upwards Our Dress Goods stock has received some important acquisitions during the past week, among which are 20 different colorings, all Wool Star Checks, 38 inches wide, at 39c; 10 shades of double fold Bicycle Suitings at 20c; 12 shades of All Wool French Vigogne Suitings, 48 inches wide, at 50c. Also a fine lot of Silk and Wool Novelties, regular 75c and $1 goods, at 50c. $5isrSince everybody knows that we are going out of the carpet business, the rush has been so great that we have been overworked, but have now added to our force so as to serve you promptly. FINLEY SPECIAL SALE SILKS KM s. In special novelties and staple wearers our stock was never moro complete or attractive than at the present moment. In fine English Tweeds, Covert Cloths, etc., which are In dolly demand, we can show you every color or combination that Is desirable, and at the right price. Choice line of Black and Colored Drap d'etes and Drap de Moscovlenne Cloth, the very latest for fine tailor-made gar ments. In Silk and Wool Novelties, Wool Gren adines and Etamines, our stock Is tho most complete this side of New York city, and every suit EXCLUSIVE. Elegant lino of Silk Grenadines in blacks and colors. Theso goods havo been one of the most active sellers In the depart ment this season and are getting scarce. Seo Dress Goods window for another special drive In 23c and 48c suitings. Strictly all wool. The immense trade done on these two lines would clearly Indi cate that there's nothing to beat them. 510 AND 512 LACKAWANNA AVENUE CALL UP 0082. Maloney 031 and Manufacturing Co. S, Office and Warehouse, 141 to 101 MERIDIAN STREET. M. W. COLLINS, Mgr. DIXON AMERICAN GRAPHITE PENCILS, AMERICAN and 1IE3T, Bee Our Window. man, 437 Hpruoe Street, The Rotunda, Board of Trade Dulldlng. ) "M GOOIS 9rs 'ISo - -A BUSY oooooooooooooooo Easter . Greet! eg You Will Enjoy Easter Eggs In a Palr of our Enfcter Shoes. Lewis, ReiHy k Mvfes, 114 and 110 WYOMING AVENUE. Telephono No. 2 102. ASTER c TIE RAINBOW OF ME LENTEN GLOOM. Easter Is the only generally recognized holy-day, tho celebration of which Is purely spiritual nnd admits of no worldly festivity. A CARD presentably embellished and In scribed with n motto in keeping with tho Spirit of the season sent to a friend, will do much toward keeping In 'view the meaning oftheobservnnce. Teachers, Sunday School or Secular Insti tutions; mothers to sons, eons to mothers, friend to friend absent or nt home to these n dainty Eawter remembrance Is worth far more than Its trifling cost. Easter Cards and Easter Booklets at Reynolds Bros STATIONERS, Hotel Jermy n Building. Tie Eiiest Lime of dt Btackles Ever seen in Scranton. Silver Qlit and Silver, set with amethysts, Carbun cles, Garnets and Tur quoise, mounted on Silk, Leather and the Latest Thing, Leather Covered with Silk. May Be Found at E Ageuts for Retina Muslo Iloxes. 130 Wyoming Avenue. BAZAAI Alteration SALE. Sweeping reduction In all lines to turn mov Ing stock, on account of extensive alter atlons on our first and second floors. Now Is the time to buy China, Glassware, Bric-a-Brac, Lamips, Silverware and House hold Goods, Cheap. Economical housekeepers will do well to attend this sale. Two 10-reet Illack Walnut Counters and 120 feet of good Shelving for sale cheap. TIE CLEMONS, FE1RBEE ALLEY ca, 42'J Lackawanna Avenue. HENRY BELiN, JR., General Agent for the Wyoming District for OUP0NTS POWDER Mining, IllaBtlng.Sporting, Smokeless and tho Rcpauno Chemical Company's HIGH EXlPLOSIfES, Safety Fuse, Caps and Exploders. Rooms 212, 213 nnd 211 Commonwealth, building, Scranton. AGENCIES: THOS, FORD, JOlINlLRMITIKtSON, . E. W. MULLIGAN, Plttston riyrnouthi Wllkes-llarra ?rrn n W ILt Garden Barrows, Garden Rakes, Lawn Shears, Trimming Shears, Lawn Seed, Fertilizer FOR TIE IE. Carpet Sweepers, Carpets Whips, Floor Brooms. Feather Dusters, Scrub Brushes, Furniture Polish, Brass Polish. FOOTE k SHEAR CO. : I II PLEASANT D)AL AT RETAIL. Coal of tho best quality for domestls usa and ot all sizes, Including Duckwieat and Dlrdseye, delivered In any part of tho cltf at the lowest prlco Orders received at the Office, first floor, Commonwealth building, room No 6; telephone No. 2621 or at tho mine, tele phono No. 272, will bo promptly attended to. Dealers supplied at the mine. T, SI M