THE SORANtON TRIBUNE-SATURDAY MORNTHTGr, JULY 0, 1807. Clje jcranfon CrtBtme Idlj-inct Wttkljr. NoBundar niltloa. By The Tribune Publishing Company. WILMAM CONNEIX, President. til Itcprwntfltlre- I HANK - OIIAY CO. Toorn 41, Tribune Hull'llnc, New York n" SUBSCRIPTION PRICE l Dally i;ocent n month. Weekly., $1.00 a year. imisio t Tn roiTorriru at stiiantoh. m.. as UC0HD-CIAB2 UAIL MATTrR. TWELVE PAGES. SCllANTON, JULY 3. 1807. Tho next filiinip In prices oupht to be In the typo writer market. It seems ridiculous that a machine which, out side of roynltlcs, costs not more than $15 should fit ictnll brine $100. The Brightening Outlook. While the new tariff bill which Is now so near completion has made un precedented progress, yet the peculiar circumstances which it was framed to meet occasion Just Indignation, that It was not speeded through the Hnato even more quickly During the con sideration of prior tailff acts the gov ernment lovenue was ample, the tieas ury had a largo surplus nnd senators could take their time without doing the country any damage. Hut under present conditions it Is estlninted that ench day of delay In i caching n final ote costs the country $200,000 In lev entles, to say nothing of mental sttnln, worty and uncertainty. This estimate Is Mr. Dlngley's. 'iFlgutlng on this basis," wiltea one nleit conespondent. "It has cost tho country $15,000,000 for the senate to amend and consider the bill since It passed the house. The bill was passed by the house on Mnrch 31, and Mas jeeelicd by the senate the next day. For .V! rta)s the Fenato finance com mittee held It. This lnoled a lo'-s of $fi000,000, and much of the labor of tho committee was useless, for the rrtmse lates which they deslied to change hae in many cases been re stoied. The committee leported the bill to the senate on May 4, but It was 21 dajs later when tho debate began. This delay cost $4,200 000, and was duo to the dlcoeiy of ertors In the comparative statement of Imports nnd levenues that accompanied the bill The debate began on May 23 To hear the senators talk nnd to al low them to place themselves on rec ord before their constituents has cost the country $7,400,000 during tho 117 dns. Inclusive of five Sundays that have elapsed since the debate com menced. So, taking Mr. Dingle) 's esti mate of the amount that the Impoit crs have gained and the go eminent has loss through the slowness of the senate It appears that It will inn up to more than $20,000,000 befoie the bill becomes a law. Most of this loss has been sheer wastefulness, for the sen ate will finally adopt the bill In prac tically the same shape that It passed tho house." If It were not for the cheering news which comes fiom tho treasury this exemplification of wanton wasteful ness In the senate would provoke Im patience. But that news, hanplly. Is reassuring. On July 1, 1S9C, the gold reserve was only $102,000,000; today It is $141,000,000 and not a cloud Is In sight to thi eaten Its continuance ap pioxlmately at that leel. One ear ago the available cash balance in the treasury as $JG7,000,000, tho amount be ing so laige on account of the sales of bonds under the Cleveland admin istration. Notwithstanding the fact that there have been no sales of bonds meanwhile, tho available cash balance on July 1, 1S37 was $237,452,000, or only $30,000,000 less than a ear ago, when the treasmy still contained a con fclderablc part of tho money iccelved for the bonds. The receipts of tho government have greatly Inci eased dutlng the past jear, showing a gen eral i clival of business among the people. The total icccipts for the fis cal year ended Juno 30, 1S9G, were $325,000,000. Tho total lecelpts fot tho j ear ended July 1, 1S97, hue been $343,800,000, an Increase of $19,000,000, or C per cent. Although the expendi tures haie Increased also, the net gain is oi er $5,000,000, nnd that under a tar iff law admittedly Inadequate. 1'iom these figures wo can derive hopefulness as to the consequences of the enacted Dlngley bill, notwithstanding the cost ly delay In the senate. Justified, then, are these words of Secretaiy Gage, uttcicd Wednesday night: "At the end of this fiscal jear the condition of the government Is all that could be desired. There Is no trouble with the gold reserve, that barometer of confidence. The business men, capitalists nnd investois, not only of our own country, but of the w oi Id, are content with our situation and prospects All the nervousness which formerly held us In Its tolls has disappeared. In its place we have con fidence In tho futuie, confidence in the government, confidence in ourselves." The blame, In other woids, will be our own if prosperity shall not re turn steadily, from this time forward. Fltzslmmons agrees not to kill Sulli van; but there aio those who think he Is unnecessarily forbearing. The Price of Bicycles. General comment Is made concerning tho recent drop In blcjcle pi Ices and many Ingenious theories have been constructed apropos; but the subject can be surrounded by the single state ment that tho blcycle-rldlng public finally got tired of paying $100 for a pleco of merchandise not north moio than $75. The hundred dollar pi lec was an artificial pi ice which should have been punctured long ago. Noth ing In the bicycle's const! uctlon has Justified such a price, Eventually tho figures will drop yet lower. It will not be many years before for $50 a man can buy as good a n heel as American Ingenuity can furnish. Another thing which can bo regard ed as settled Is that the bicycle "craze," go-called, will not collapse. Tho wheel has como to say. Its use Is too general to bo accounted for on the hypothesis that It Is due to a passing fad," Tho roller skating mania supplies us with the model of a fad, and by comparing the wheeling "crazo" with It wo per ceive that there is nothing In common between tho two. To skato on rollers It wob necessary to frequent certain crowded places and endure all tho risks nnd discomforts of Indlscrlmlnato associations Tho wheel, on the other hand, offers Itself either as n Instru ment of utility to the busy worker or as a vehicle of pleasure to those so cially Inclined. One can go with It where one please, when one pleases and In such company as In satisfactory. It rnnnot, therefore, fall Into disfavor until n better mode of conveyance shall arise In Its place. All the more desirable Is It, therefore, that the price of a good wheel should como within the range of the poor man's pocket book. The discovery Is being made that tho alien tax law should not have been passed until there had lcen established In Pennsylvania a uniform rule gov erning naturalization nnd preventing the granting of citizenship to aliens of a low grade of Intelligence nnd morals. The fact that the naturalization courts have In many localities during tho past few days Issued papers of citizenship Indiscriminately to applicants eager to avoid tho alien tax recalls a scandal of the most menacing proportions. Reform of Our fllnor Courts. Among the several Interesting papers read hefoif the Pennsylvania Bar as sociation nt Cresson Springs, one by Thomns Patterson, of Pittsburg, on the Inadequacy of the Judicial wotk of the average Justice of tho peace com mands especial attention. "The pres ent status of these courts," said Mr. Patterson, "Is the direct lesult of the law, much more potent than any upon the statute books, that a man will i-eek and get gnln where he may do so free from risks of punishment, with out embarrassment from lellncd ethi cal consldeiatlons The nvernge man who fills the position of Justice of the peace has his clientele, and like ou and myself Is anxious that It should Increase nnd multiply. IIke us he Is de-ious that business shall be brought to his shop, nnd that he may be well and favorably known In the quintets whence such business originates." Un der the prnetlcnl woi kings of this sys tem, Mr. Patterson said, the judge Is the adviser and counsellor of those who bring business to his doors, and, so far as the substantial results nre con cerned, "a slot machine which would allow the depositor of a small sum to draw n. blank judgment for a limited nmount would do juvt as well, and be economical." One of the evils of the system, he said, is the disrespect it in spires in tho public for the adminis tration of Justice as a whole, and nn other evil Is tho congesting of the common pleas courts with a mass of trilling litigation, cases ordinal lly in volving no Impoitnnt questions of law. Mr. Patterson offered as a lemedy for this system tho suggestion' that Pennsylvania copy the English small debtors' court system. In these courts, of which there nre 5S In England, jur isdiction Is given of debts, demands and damages to not more than $100, but actions of ejectment or actions in which any corporeal or Incorporeal heiedltament, toll, market or franchise Is brought Into question are excluded, as are also constrrrctlons of wills, set tlements nnd actions for malicious piosecution, for libel, slander and se duction, and for breach of promise of mat i Inge. The judge Is appointed for life or good behav lor and all fees go to tho state Mr. Patterson argued that this small debt court could bo trans planted In Pennsylvania with satlsfac toiy lesults under a law providing that before it nil causes of action arising out of conttact, express or implied, to an amount not In excess of $300 could bo bi ought, the adjudication of tho Judge to be final on questions of fact, but to bo subject to levislon by ii lit of eiror to the common pleas couit of which his dlstilct Is a pait on questions of law, where the amount In dl'putt exceeds $23. He contended, fin ally, that in this way small eases could be adjudicated "without gi eater ex pense to the community than is now expeiienced In the useless litigation before justices of the peace." The waste of time and money to tho litigants and the state by the crowding of the common pleas calendar with these small cafces would nlso be avoided. Like most refoims, the foregoing proposition, excellent ns it appeats, would bo fought lgorously by those whose levenues It threatens, but wo believe tho better Judgment Of the peo ple would eventually sustain it. m In addition to his other recommen dations the new librarian of congress has lately gained the honor of tho Springfield Republican's contempt. As Viewed from Afar. That the icputatlon acquired by the lecent Pennsylvania legislature has not been maligned by the btato press Is shown by the following comment from a disinterested souice, tho Syiacuse Post: "The lawmakers of Pennsylva nia, who have earned a reputation dur ing the recent session of being one of the worst legislative bodies that weie ever Inflicted on a much nfillcted state, passed, In response to public sentiment, a good loads law after u great deal of agony, and before completing the work took care to add an amendment which makes the law practically good for nothing. The Hamilton good roads law chatters on for 2,000 words or moie about tho levying of tax partly In money, partly In woik, and nbout tho township officers to be selected to see to the collection and disbursement of tho funds. It Is provided, with far-seeing benevolence, that If one set of township officers wish to buy a large roadrollerorsonrethlng of tho kind they may co-operate with tho road super visors of tho next township. The maxi mum gtado of the roads Is fixed (with a proviso that a steeper grade may bo used if preferable) and tho treasurer of tho board of supervisors Is told how much of tho funds ho can appropriate to his own use. It Is a poor system, but It Is enough better than the one now existing In Pennsylvania to mako It worth while. "At tho end of all these provisions Is attached tho fatal clause: 'The provls Ions of this net shall not go Into effect until the sum of $1,000,000 bhall have been appropriated by the Assembly or shall have been received Into the staU treasury from taxes for road purposes, the same to b distributed unions; th townships,' etc. In other words, the Hamilton law Is not worth the Ink It was printed in, nnd the people of Penn sylvania, like tho people of New York, will have to wait another year, at least, before any attempt enn be mndo to convert tho ditches and sink holes over which they tide nnd drive, Into high ways. Now York Is better off than Pennsylvania In one thing. New York has no good loads law. Pennsylvania has one which Is worse than none, for it Is a deliberate piece of fake legis lation." If the people of Pennsylvania had to wait only one year for the beginning of good road making It wouldn't bo so bad; but they will have to wait nobody can tell how long It Is very probable, however, that before the next legisla ture Is elected the good roads advocates nnd tho candidates for legislative hon ors will come to an undci standing on this point. Tho president of tho Pennsylvania Bar association, P. C. Knox, In his an nual nddress at Cicsson Springs Wed nesday, discussed nt length tho law In Its relation to labor nnd trade. After showing that the right of contract n.s between employer nnd employe is fully safeguarded "by law In this country, he took up tho subject of trusts, or com binations through contracts In restraint of tiade. Ills conclusion was that these could not be successfully assailed. If he shall live long enough we think he will discover to tho contrary. Wheelmen shoutti be kept oft the side walks. Part the present condition of Mulberry street between Webster and Madison n 10111103 is such that riders to and from the boulevard have to take to the sidewalks else run the risk of slipping In mud or going head over hoels because of the bricks and stones that line the middle of the rood. Mr. Dunning might see what can 1k done to make this stretch of road passable. In the article on this page yesterday concerning the appropriations nt Har rlsbtiig for- Lackawanna charities we were misled Into placing the West Side hospital appropriation at $6000 Instead of $7000. One teport hud stated that the figure had boon thus reduced, but It was Incorrect, As a matter of fact the West Side Institution came near getting $12,000, which would have been none too much. Thanks to Secretary of Agriculture Wilson's effective booming, a London film has placed a big order for Iowa butter. Rut our European friends will never dlscoier what the teal thing In butter tastes like until they stock up with the colden pioduct of Susque hanna county. A Chicago councllmnn wants that city to stop spending so much money on incine viru, and spend more on sanitation and sonp. The Idea may be unscientific but the advice Is bound. The abandonment of the nnti-trust amendment to the tariff bill does not mean that the Republican party has decided to let the matter drop. Theie are other and better methods of action. Accoidlng to the chairman of the re cent Ohio Popocratlc convention sound money Democrats are either "dudes or dotards." Let the harmonizing pro ceed. Boat Racing find 0fh?r Sports. from tho Sprlngfiild Republican. Roat lacing holds a peculiar plnca among college sports. There Is nothing essentially aristocratic about It, since any one may lace who can find a tub, a. sheet of water and u competitor; but In colleges a successful career In boat rac ing calls fcr 30 many elements, such ns vicinity to smooth water, a largo corps of students and abundant financial means, that only a few of our leading universities pay It any attention. Harv aul, Yale, Cornell, Pennsylvania, and Co lumbla have long held the sport In high esteem, but Princeton, owing to her land locked position, has never entered the lists with a clew, while such colleges as Urown and Bondoln, although well lo cated for aquatic sportb, hove taken i,o rank becaus-o of their Inability to endure tho demands racing Imposes upon the student bod). Such an Institution as Williams Is naturally debarred from this branch of sport, and Amherst Is not likely to take It up again, although what may be accomplished under great dllllcultles by an Inland college Is shown by the le markablo record of tho Amherst crew of tho early seventies. o Our English friends ate very much de- loted to boat lacing, placing It In the foio of Intercollegiate athletic events. Tho annual race between Oxford and Cambridge, so famous for many jeais, and the Henlej regatta, renowned tho world over, show how the tport is re garded abroad Its attractive features are too obvious, perhaps, to reqiPro ana lysis, hut if wo call attention to the ter illlc struggle of a boat race und the scien tific precision with which a crew Is mado Into a machine, nicely udjusted and woik lng harmonloi sly In all Its parts, we point out the essential i caserns of Its popular ity A boat race Is a test of physical en durance of the most strenuous and cx haustlio sort, surpassing In this respect all other sports. A crew Is expected to row Itself "to death" In order to win; ev ery ounce of strength Is called for; and this fearful strain upon heart, lungs and muscles must continue so long as tho race lasts. Tho science of It all consists In making eight men drive a boat with the least waste of energy, and the problem for tho trainer Is nothlrg more nor less than to mako so nearly as possible a perfect machine. The stroko Is the sccrtt of this part of tho problem, and us the trainer Is responsible for tho stroke, It Is clear that boat races aro as much contests be 1 11 con trainers as between the crews themselves. o Opinions must vary widely as to the comparative meilts or boat racing and other college tpoits, considered from the standpoint of the participant rather than tho spectator. It will bo found, neverthe less, that us between boat racing nnd foot ball there aro many college men who legard tho former as much less desirable than tho latter. It may seem surprising to many people to pronounce boat racing more "brutal" than foot ball, ot In a certain sense It l ndcubtedli Is so, A cer tain Yule graduate and old 'vnislt) play er, who loved to piny foot ball when 111 college, after three years ns a substitute on tho Yale crew, withdrew from boating, when ho hob sure to mako tho 'variety eight, simply because he had become con. vlnced that tho physical strain of train ing und racing was dangerously severe upon tho great vital orguns of tho body, especlully tho heart. If the facts could bo published, 110 think thut tho percent age of college oarsmen who collapse phys ically nt an early ugo utter graduation would bo found to be considerably lugor than tho percentage of foot ball players. Wo havo certainly heard of Yule oarsmen becoming phyMcal wrecks before reach ing middle llfo because of heart trouble or tho decline of physical vitality, but never of such cases among1 the foot bill men. 0 The foot ball player enters a game of two SO-mlnuto hnlits, the contest mny be severe and niton ml In "hard knocks" upon arms or let's or nose, but no player Is held for even live minutes In succession to an exertion that reaches every Instant tho maximum of his powers. The ball moves to the other end of the line or down tho Held; the piny stilttn and changes In scores of wain, nffordlng on opportunity for tho plajer to rMix. Hut the oirsmen must exert hlmelf to the utmost limit of his strength for 20 minutes, or within 10 as many ns one-half of a whole Toot ball game. That 20 minutes Is a long time to undergo such n strain will he appar ent to any one who will watch the minute hand of his watch for that period and Imagine himself cllmblnK a rope while the hand almost Imperceptibly moves. o From the standpoint of the participant, furthermore, boat racing seems much In ferior to foot ball or base bull, because tho Individual Is so completely auborrltn ated to the machine of which he Is a part. Tho oarsman In an elght-oarcd crew Is a mere cog In the mechanism; he has no opportunity for Individual head work, no great crises to rise to unless h drops overheard when his oar breaks. He faces a physical strain, too, which Is monotonous In tho extreme from Its lack of variety In detail, and lohslclor the ef fect of this upon the mind. Now In foot ball, baso belt and rorre other land ppoits, the Individual player, while of courso trained to woik In harmony with an or ganization, has manv opportunities for Individual effoit which alone may turn a defeat Into a victory or a victory Into a defeat. And, what Is quite as Important, the game ho Is playing has Infinite va riety, sudden changes, meteoric twists nnd turns, which afford an excellent men tal stimulus, refreshing Indeed when compared with tho dull, methodical, never-ending swing back and forth, of the man at the oar. o Rxcitlng ns a bot race may be and fascinating ns a science, those collegts which do not practice It probably lose lery little. It may bo doubted that the sport will eirr asiimc the leadership or tho rank In Amorlein college life which It his attained abroad. BITUMINOUS .HINBUS' STU1KK. Prom the Philadelphia Stockholder. It Is difficult at this e-irly stage of tho bituminous miners' strike to estimate Its extent an I Importance. There Is ground for the opinion thit It will nume vety serious proportion". Competition has forced prices to so low a point as to re duce the pay of the miners below a liv ing bisls Their condition Is known to be most deplorable, und It would seem that nothing remains for them but to strike by way of protest. The soft-coal orerators concede that they are paying wages hardly sufficient to sustain life, but urge that thev are helpless In the mat ter by reason of the condition of the mar kets Many of them will welcome u gen eral strike as a shoit cut to a realjust ircnt of prices nnd methods. Good opin ion Is that soft coal will be forced to re cede from tho strong position which It has recently taken ns u competitor with an thracite, unless n way shall be devised for producing bituminous at even lower cost than now prei ailing Mining opeiallons haie not participated In tho economy In piodtictlon which has extended Into nearly all other fields of Industry. Employment of machinery In tho mining of soft coat Is declared to be entirely practicable and copible of effect ing a reduction of more than W) per cent. In the cost of coal at the mouth of the mine. The- pending strike Is likely to have the effect of forcing developments In this direction. The Immediate result of tho stilke. If It sKill Involve, as seems prob able, the Pittsburg, Ohio nnd West Vir ginia districts, will be very favorable to tho anthracite Interests. An advance of considerable proportions In tho market prices of anthracite securities may be looked for If the strike takes on, within tho next day or two, the Important char acter which is generally looked for. Tho mere elcmonstratlon of the fact that, for tho present, soft coal has reiched the ul timate low point In price will hive a ten dency to check its more general adoption as a substitute for anthracite. TOLD BY THE STARS. Dally Horoscope Drawn byAjucchus, The Tribune Astrologer. Astrolabe Cast: 3 IS a tn , for Saturday, July 3, 1697. 3 & A child torn on this day will wonder why tho Christian Endeavor excursion ists encountered three wrecks on western roads while the Oorbett-FIUslmmons prlo light enthusiasts escaped without a sciatch. When In her dizzy flight The eagle stops to scream and burn Some powder. The small boy doth plrouetto nt tight, And as tho lockets flash will learn To yell tho louder. A scanoal monger Is In position similar to that of the employe In an odoriferous bono factory except thit the scandal operator enjoys tho stench of his occu pation. The Sunday rnpers will havo a hcoop on the usual Fourth of J'iy editorial this y ear. Tho cannon cracker 'and the fool are having their Innings. AJncclius' Advice. Give the small boy a chanco today. Tho aftermath of court plaster and lina ment will be forgotten a year hence. EXPECTATION. "Tls fortunate we cannot know the cruel truths that trown When the fond mirage of fancy turns the future usido down. We di earned of June by night and sang her blnudlsrments by day, And neglected to be gratetul to kind, comfoi table May. Wo propleslcd 0 state wherein the bu- man ruco should find A world embowered with beauty, and an atmosphere so kind That wlstfulness slculd vanish as It met perfection's plan But tho only ono that's happy Is the sodu-water man. Ay, here It Is; the season of the spring time poet's dream, When the dcw-diop hits the pavement with a little puff of steam. Tho Juno-trdc, when we noto with feel ings of icgretand puln. A perspiratory deluge and a mournful dearth of rein. The (loners that we longed for, with their perfume, soft and sweet, Havo given up and withered, for they couldn't stand the heat. Our balmy zephyrs we must manufacture with a fan, And tho only one that's happy Is the soda water man, Washington Star. TIE CLEMONS, FEREER ceLisffl PTH inrndL for S iru Shirts, 5hirt Waists, Collars, Belts, Neckwear, Hosiery, Gloves,' Parasols, Umbrellas, Etc., Etc., can be found here in endless profusion and at prices lower than any other place In the city. POSITIVELY 1AST WEEK OF OUR GREAT MUSLIN UNDERWEAR SALE Garments at 39 cents, worth 75 cents. Garments at 59 cents, worth $1.00. Garments at 98 cents, worth $1.50. We. will also include in this sale a lot of LADIES' FINE RIBBED VE5T5, with crochetted and ribboned necks and shoulders, at 10 cents, or three for 25 cents. Store Closed Homiday, TT LLJR4 Waist To enable us to close out our entire line in short order we have cut prices to the lowest notch and will offer every Shirt Waist in stock cheaper than the cost of manu facture. Remember, we carry no low priced or trashy goods at any time, and those mentioned be low comprise the cream of the two most popular brands on the market, viz., the "King" and "Derby" Waists: One lot reduced to 69c. One lot reduced to S5C. One lot reduced to $1.00. One lot reduced to $1.39. One lot reduced to $1.50. One lot reduced to $2.00. In connection with Shirt Waists, we are showing the finest stock of Belts, and at the right prices. 530 AND 512 LACKAWANNA AVENUE Try a Triwie A, The White Excellent Cream jincl frozen in 4 MINUTES with the IJII'ItOVKD WHITE MOUNTAIN FUKHZllIt. Iluytho best: they nro thw I'heupest. WALLEY CO., 422 Lackawanna Avenue VT TTVOA Y' Special Sale of Slilirt Want My V V VyiAili" Aii-VMi. V O Quick RettsriSo tEo ISs tic Fourth itore will be Closed ALL DAY Rw BOYLE & I 436 LACKAWANNA AVENUE, Lewis, RenHy & DavieSo ALWAYS 11CSY. n AMERICAN WEEK. American Shoes for Anierlonn feet. Our rourthor Jul) utft-KIItE L'KAt'KUlUs for the boys on July the fitli. LEWIS,REILLYAVIES WHOI.KSAU: AND RETAIU SHOES. SHOES. HENRY BEL1N, JR., General Asent for tho V)Otnlnj District for DUPONT'S POWDER Mlulns, IlluhtlnB.Sportlng, smokelosi n ml the ltcpmiuo Cbemlcul Compan)'s HIGH EXPLOSIVES, fcufety I'use, C'niisnnd Exploder Itooms SIS. 'Jin imil 'Jll Commonwealth Ilulldlngi hcruntuii. AGENCIE-j. T1I0, lOItl), JOHN 11. SMITH A-bON, E. V. MULLIGAN. rittston PI) mouth WHUes-llarrs We would like to call your atteutiou to our win dow display of Noto prlcen. Hotter than nil other, ) ft rluuper In price. A1.-.0 tui.t, r.l.M. of UAUtiTOVUk- HMHE k SHEAR CO. zfLSh on stoves BAZAAR s, Judy gtk !: ;:' Jfi' !' MONDAY, JULY 5fh i' 8i' i' We trust that our patrons will bear the above in mind and attend to any purchases before that date. h '" ' 1 1 MUCKLOW, - i)i 1 S, AMWHCEMEHS. Printed and engraved promptly at reasonable prices. The stock we use is the very best we can buy. Also Reception, Vis iting and At-Home Cards, lYionograms, Addresses, Crests, etc. Rey molds Bros Hotel Jermyn Bldg, V)ornlnc Ae., Scranton, Pa. II PLEASANT COAL AT RETAIL. Coal of tho best quality for domestls us and of all sizes, Including Buckwheat and Blrdseye, delivered In any part of the city; at tho lowest krlce Orders received at the Ofllce, first floor. Commonwealth building-, room No ; telephone No. 2621 or at tho mine, tele phone No, 272, will be promptly attended to, Dealurs supplied at the mine. , I SI nwmmnm Beside Ice- Cream, hundreds of frozen des- 55 serts can be quickly S and cheaply made In RUNS EASY. mwrfca : LlSlill FbiI
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers