lWM0 THE SORATSTON TRIBTTJSTfl-WEDNESDAY MORNINC, SEPTEMBER t, 1897. (II) Hid fklr. No PnniUr Kdltlon. By The Tribune Publishing Company. WILLIAM CONNL'LL. President. SUBSCRIPTION PRICUl Rally 30 cent a month. Weekly $1.00 a year. 1MIRXD Jit TIIB rOSTOrFIOll AT OCRANTO'J fK, A3 CIC0S1D C1A3 HAIL MATTER. BCHANTON, SEPTKMHEIt 1, 1897. REPUBLICAN STATB TICKET. Stato Troasurcr-J. S. UEACOM, of Westmoreland. Auditor General-LEVI O. M'CAULEY, of Cheater. Election day, No ember 8. Ttesolved, That tlio platform adopted nt the National convention of Democ lacy In 1S9G bo endorsed fully and without reserve." Plank Second In the. Platform of the Lackaunnna Democ racy, adopted Aug. 24, 1897. That Bear Dance at Reading;. The incidents at Reading yesterday, conservatively described In another place, Ulusttate the chaotic character of the present Democratic party a party bound together by no clearly-defined and vital principles, and existing chlefttrfor the purpose of exhibiting to the coifntry a hoirlble example of mls dlroctd energy. Mr. Ilarrlty, the chief victim In the rcrlmmage, emerses w 1th the bruises of conspicuous martyrdom and there- forcwlth the prospect of not very dls- tnnt triumph oor his piesent persplr inff'Dummelers. The attack upon him lifiVItiiriVlfHn In Jealousy and gathered foro'e 'from that fanaticism which would sooner -w rfck a cnuse than allow for honest dlffuonces In opinion. We have no hiteiest In Mr. Ilarrlty, In one way or anotliei, except that cuiloslty which Is otdlnaillj excited by a forceful per- . onallt U&Idk to high position from humble beginnings. Trom n Ucpubll enn standpoint It makes little or no difference w hether the name of the leader of the Demociatlc forlorn hope in Pennsylvania be Ilarrlty, Garman or fcomethlng else. Hut looking at the Heading coiuentlon's work from a humanitarian standpoint it seems ciuel, brutal and shameful, and we expect to see the better element In the Demo cratic patty tepudlate the agents and insttuments of It and moe to recon struct the tuins of their party on a broadet and braer basis In the meantime it Is now evident to all that the exttemlsts are in the Demo ciatlc saddle, and those who don't have the Inclination to ride to their self-de-structhe quickstep should bo made welcome in the Republican fold. To the Reading platform we shall refer here after. The Rev. Dr. Swallow's opinion of the other state candidates this fall can readily be conjectutcd; but what the public has yet to leatn Is the clerical gentleman's opinion of himself. Judge Willard's Resignation. The announcement that Hon. E. N. AVillard will today by resignation re tire from the bench of the Superior court, while it Is not unexpected, nevertheless supplies a fit occasion for a btlef wotd of comment upon his rec otd as a Jut 1st. Called to the hfjich by appointment j two ears ago, from a career of active and successful practice at the bar, it Is simply otcIng what will be gladly attested by colleagues and practitioners alike to say that Judge Willard ex hibited from the first judicial qualities not merely confirming tne wisdom of his selection but even exceeding the sanguine expectation of his friends. Astute and accutate in his Intetpreta tlons of the law, he had moreov er that practical siasp on the essence of jus tice which Is of paramount alue on any bench. To the adjudication of Issues arising ftom the peculiar con ditions of the anthracite industry bo natuially brought special knowledge, and much of I1I3 time was devoted to cases of this character; but In the gen eral business of the couit his clear judgment pnd sane view of the under pins equities wete soon recognized and appreciated, and In his retirement the court will experience a loss of not easily measurable dimensions. That loss, howexer, will be Sctanton's gain; for It will restore to the bar of Lackawanna county easily Its foremost representathe; ond to the community a citizen whose public spirit constitutes a resource of inestimable auc. Chicago's Latest AUirtler Case. A trial destined to become famous Is now in piogiess In Chicago. Assuming that not all our readew are familiar with the principal facts in th case a few words in tevlew seem admissible. The defendant, Adolph L Luetgert, a manufactutcr of sausage, Is under in dictment for the alleged murder of his wife, who was last seen alive In the eenlng of May 1, when she bade her welve- tar-old son good night. The 'prosecution chaises that Luetgert -Wlledliei and destroyed her body In a vat containing chemicals In his saus nge factory. The defense challenges the prosecution to proo that Mis. Luotgert Is dead. The two had quarreled. Luetgert had left the home which shelteied his wlfo "arid children, and taken up his resi dence In the sausage factory. The fac ,'tory had bean idle for some weeks prior to May 1, but on that night Luetgert had flres made, and twice during the night bent the night watchman away on ei rands. Luetgert spent most of the night In the front part of the basement, where the vats are located, and he himself turned on the steam. Several weeks before a laborer named Frank Oberowsky had, under orders fiom Luetgert, broken up the contents of a barrel of stuff delivered at the factory, different from anything Oberowsky had ever seen used in the manufacture of sausage. This stuff had burned his hands, leaving scars. Later a slimy substance was found in one of the vats, and some of this corrosive chemical. Such are the facts admitted by both J Bides. The prosecution presents cer tain other alleged facts which the de fense strenuously disputes. It claims, for example, that In the vat which the police searched were found bits of bone, an artificial tooth and two gold rings, which were afterward Identified as rings whlc) the missing woman wore. A passerby on the night of May 1, It Is also alleged, had heard a muffled scream. Luetgert and hla wife had been on had tcims and he had, it Is asserted, expressed a wish to get rid of her. In the preliminary hearing a chemist testified that the chemicals Indicated in the vat consisted of crude caustic soda and caustic potash. In support of the chemist's assertion that such a solution, properly heated, would de stroy a human body In from two to three hours, a solution was mixed ex perimentally and the corpse of a pauper thrown in It. In three hours nothing was left except a few pieces of bone nnd a thick brown ooze, similar to that found In the sausage vat. The lino of defense will be to prove that the chemi cals were used for the destruction of certain black sausage and that the missing woman has been seen since May 1, alive nnd comparatively well. One Ilohmrlch, a law student, Is pre pared to testify that on May B at Ken osha he had seen In the railway station n woman whose description as to per sonal appearance and clothing tallies exactly with the appearance of Mrs. Luetgert. The woman had reached Kenosha the night before on a north bound train, had slept all night in the station, refused to give her name, but said she had a sister living In Chicago, named Mueller. Mrs. Luetgert had a sister by that name. This testimony, it is said, can be corroborated. It Is nnnounced that during the pres ent trial the jury will be asked by the defense to witness an experiment In the at In the basement of the sausage fac toty. This Is to be the result of an ex periment conducted by Luetgert's at torneys Saturday. The body of a man about Mrs. Luetgert's ago nnd weight, was taken to the factory and lmmftsed in a solution of caustic potash. The experts relate that after boiling the body in n 15 per cent, solution of the potash for the same length of time, thii and one-half hours, and under the same circumstances as the state alleges that Luetgert disintegrated the body of his wife, the complete skeleton of the cadaver remained intact, and that the solution hnd but little effect on the clothing. As a result of the test, the defense, It Is said, will ask Judge Tuthill to remove his court and the jury to the basement of the big saus age factory for a few hours and wit ness another experiment, which the de fense claims will completely disprove the state's theory of disintegration. Comment on such a case cannot well be made until a verdict Is reached. But It Is evidently going to be a famous case, both for Its horrors and its fine points in criminal law. Brother Gatman's victory Is an empty one and moreover It drhes into tem porary tetreat tho ablest general of them all. The Second Gubernatorial Entry. The second formal aowal of a Re publican candidacy for the guberna torial nomination In Pennsylvania next year has been made. Congressman Charles W. Stone, of Warren, ha!ng hurled his gage of friendly battle Into the political arena, his namesake, the gentleman from Allegheny, Hon. Wil liam A. Stone, now does likewise and calls upon his friends throughout the commonwealth to rally to his support. Colonel Stone Is a man of robust per sonality, mentally and physically, and has behind him an extended record of conspicuous and useful public service at the national capital. His Identifi cation with the cause of immigration restriction, a subject upon which he may be said to be an expert, has been one of the means by which his fame has traersed the state and given him strength politically in quarters where personally he is little known. But his equipment for the executhe office is not limited to a special line of legis lative woik; his mental development and his experience In public affairs are well rounded; and if geographical and factional reasons do not finally opetate to lender his candidacy futile, ho will undoubtedly make a first-rate goer nor. It has .been said of Colonel Stone that he Is the "slated" candidate, but this assertion Is rendered ildlculous by the obvious fact that in a Held likely soon to bo occupied by representative men from every section of the common wealth no slate could at this early time be made, een If thete were a dispo sition to make one. The field Is open, the way Is clear and it will no doubt be the public's purpobe to continue these faorable conditions until it can select the candidate most satisfactory to it and proceed to place him in nomin ation. There are men In the Democratic party of whom It can be said, as It was said of the Bourbons of Fmnce, that they neither leatn nor forget. This class voted for Andrew Jackson until Billy Bian arose, and It will no doubt shout for Btyan and 1G to 1 long after Bryan himself Is gathered to his fath eis and tho free silver issue burled un derneath half a century of oblivion It is this clement which is now in tho paity saddle in many localities and in sheer self respect the sound money Democrats in those localities will have either to co-opetato with the Republi cans until the zealots in their own party tun their course and disappear, or withdraw from political activity al together. Says Governor PIngree: "If some thing in tho nature of the responsibil ity Imposed by the national banking law upon banks could be applied to all corporations I believe that much of the odium which now attaches to corpor ations in general would bo removed." If Governor PIngree were a corpora tion doing business In Pennsylvania he would not have occasion to lament the laxity of legal oversight and Inter ference, Will the friends of Ilarrlty In Lacka wanna sit quiet while he is being per secuted for having had the courage of his convictions? Wo notice that a number of grammar ians have flats In each other's hair con cerning the split infinitive, as used In such phrases as; "To properly under tandi" "to fully comprehend." They will quarrel, of course, because quar reling l.s part of a grammarian's pusl ness; but notwithstanding and never theless, tho writer who writes chiefly for tho purpose of conveying thought will contlnuo to split .his Infinitives whenever It suits his purpose, Just as ho will end his sentences with prepo sitions when 'it is more direct, lucid nnd effective than to reclothe tho thought In a moro conventional drcBS. The grammarians make us tired. Confronted this week with the larg est criminal trial list In tho history ot Chester county, Judge Hemphill offered pointed advice to the grand jury. After pointing out to It the fact that tho multiplicity of petty cases plainly bespoke the rapacity ot committing magistrates for fees, ho urged It to Ignore every one of these cases and put tho costs on the prosecutor. This may sound rough, but It Is tho one way to get public sentiment on tho subject stirred up. The suggestion of tho French deputy that Franco and Russia take In the United States In a triple alliance to preserve the peace of Christendom dur ing the Twentieth century is, wo fear, more complimentary to this country than practicable. So far, however, as the United States Is concerned wo guess the pence Is pretty safe, unless sutnt! other power shoves us. The Washington Star puts columns into a sentence when, with nn eye on tho Gotham mayoralty fight, It says: "Mr. Piatt Is a great politician, but he has not tho genius for reconciliations shown by Mr. Quay." Tor all around astuteness the latter may have a superior, but If so tho public doesn't yet know it. Captain Mahan, the naval expert, professes to see Into futurity far enough to distinguish that In tho twentieth century there will come an armed clash between Christianity and Mohammed anism and the stake will be the domi nation of the world. Some men are al ways seeing big possibilities afar off. That was a sensible suggestion of Superintendent Howell to tho board of control the other night that salaries ot principals bo graded according to merit. The same might bo suggested as to all teachers' salaries, but the millennium in school management Is not yet so near. The chief duty of tho United States government in reference to Cuba seems at present to be to aid Spain in the cir cumvention of the Insurgents. But we venture to predict that this unholy alliance will not last much longer. The announcement that Tom Watson will "forever retire from politics" Is certainly tough on politics. THE KLONDIKE GOLD BUG. Editorials and News. The bojs who havo been prospecting up Dead Dog Run report poor success. Tho nuggets found thero are not larger than goose-eggs, and tho claims are hardly considered worth working nt present. It is probable that tho entire region will soon be turned over to China men and Eastern capitalists. Tho editor wishes to apologize in ad anco for any errors that may creep into tho columns of tho "Bug" today. Henry Eppsteln, a clerk at tho "Royal London nnd Paris Clothing house," is learning to piny on tho cornet. As the "Bug" offlco is situated in tho "Rojal London and Paris Clothing house" block, and we are behind two months on our rent, and Henry Is a nephew of the proprietor, tho reader can easily see why we hesi tate at taking radical measures and plac ing tho compress upon the young musi cian's misguided nmbltlon, which is driving us to paresis, Ephrlam Pratt, a young upstart from Seattle, who Is a regular subscriber to Ajcr's Almanac and tho "Klondonlan," has recently been taking on tho airs of the literati, and has gone so far as to accuse the editor of the "Bug" of plag arlsm. We are not at all worried over tho prattle of this tenderfoot Insect. We aro willing to wager our weekly pan of nuggets that ho does not know the meaning of tho word "plagarlsm." Eph's friends should look after him at once. Ho hns a bad caso of fatty degeneration of tho head. CALENDAR FOR SEPTEA1BER. 1 Yo ojster allows his name to appear In tho R-Jolce column. 2 Uncle Joo Scranton begins to trade at Major Ballej's grocery. 3 The bugs on the Nay Aug Park foliage become mugwumpish. 4 Colonel ritzslmmons writes tho 555th chapter on the "Life and Times of Dick Little." 5 Chief Robllng commits tho blue laws to memory. G Wjomlng county money makers de cide to go out of business, as silver Is too cheap to bo counterfeited with prof it. 7 Recorder C'andldato Mike Griffin cuts tho string on hla resignation recently tendeied tUo Democratic party. S .Mr Gorman and Mr Ilarrlty decide that it wlU bo less expenblve to write on po&til cards. 9 Chatles Schadt secures tho services of nn expert nt opening campaigns. 10 Mr. Vettcr's Klondike cadets pur chase bear-skin overcoats, 11 Candidate Horn buys a barrel of campaign buttons. 12 Tho good government society re turns from Its summer vacation, 13 Manager Long cuts tho councilmen down to 0110 theater pass a week. 11 Editor Roland enters his name as pr'vato student In the "Times" school of calamity-howling, 15 City Solicitor McGlnlcy sees the Von Storch Joke with sufficient distinctness to hazard a smile. 10 Attorney Vldnver re-estnbllshcs cor dial relations and telephono privileges with Manager SUHman of tho Traction company. 17 Tho fall poet begins to open the chestnut burr. IS rrom various school rooms arise loud reports as the young Idea is taught to shoot. 19 Tho respective candidates for coun ty office begin to learn now facts In their own biographies. 20 Tho Scranton Times considers the advisability of resurrecting Sam Hud son's campaign cartoonist and the "dol lar a day" fake. 21 Arthur Prothlngham's cycle path way to Hawley confounds the prophets, who scouted Its construction. 22 Dr. Swallow teaches tho old fash ioned calamity howlers a few up-to-date points. 23 Tho woodchuck and the Scranton baso ball rooter go Into winter quarters. SI Carbondalo curfew will not ring to night. 25 City Engineer Phillips finds another shoe-button In the Columbia asphalt and Btops tho paving on Mulberry street for ono week from date. 25-Another physician is graduated from the Lackawanna hospital, 27 The board of control votes to raise a roof garden on tho high school and lower the salaries of Grammar A teach ers. 28 Tho park commissioners plant a patch to Bummer squashes, winter boom Jets and spring delegates, 29 Janitor Hormnn Nots washes the windows at No. 10 school, 30 Tho frost gets on tho pumpkin and tho fodder, it la shocked Truth Which Can Discotinf Fiction The legal point raised In the Luetgert murder case, dn Chicago, that tho corpse has not been seen, cither In wholo or In part, and that thcreforo a murder cannot bo presumed, suggests to John Northern Billiard, a contributor to tho Times Herald, tho nnrratlvo which follows; Be tween 1 55 and 2 05 p. m. on the last day of Tebruary, 1S91, William Wootton, a wealthy cltron-ilrowcr of Fresno coun ty, California, disappeared as suddenly nnd mysteriously from his homo as a coin is slipped from tho palm of a wiz ard. To this day not tho slightest trnco of tho man, dead or alive, has been found, though twenty detectives have scoured this country from tho Pacific to tho Atlantic Shortly after Wootton s dlsappearanco thero were rumors of foul play. Ho had been last seen In company with a friend named Sanders, and tho latter was arrested, but becauso of tho absenco of tho body of tho offense, the corpus delicti, ho wns discharged. He waB rearrested immediately on the chnrgo of having forged Wootton's name to a draft for $1,100, ond wns convicted. The case wns appealed, and it dragged along as such cases will where thero Is money enough to keep up tho interest of tho lawyers, and only last month I saw a dKpatch in tho Times-Herald to tho effect that ho had been taken nt last to prison to serve out tho long-delayed sent ence. Tho hunt for William Wootton has not been abandoned. Some aro searching for his skeleton; others expect that ho will return some day and remove tho stigma from Sanders' name, . o Tho story, ns told by tho evldenco In this case, Is extraordinary, nnd, ns Judge Hensbaw nsserted In his charge, In somo respects It Is without parallel. Tho de fendant, Sanders, Is a man GO jcars old, who has resided In California for moro than half of his lifetime. Ho was prom inent In educational circles, and for many jears ho had been a teacher in tho schools of tho state. Ho was well edu cated and possessed moro than a local reputation ns an agriculturist and horti culturist, and as a business man his word was considered as good as any form of security. Ho wns married, nnd tho fa ther of children, who wero growing up about him In bis homo In Fresno coun ty, where ho had lived for many years, and whero he seems to havo enjoyed, up to the time of Wootton's disappearance, the regard and respect of his neighbors. Wootton was unmarried, and lived upon his land with only his hired man. Sand ers nnd Wootton wero friends. Somo tlmo prior to Wootton's disappearance Sanders purported to net as an agent for a cer tain John Knausch of San Francisco, who was contemplating tho purchase of tho Wootton land. Acting, as he rep resented, for Knausch, Sanders mado an examination of tho land, platted It, show ing its sources of water supply, fences and other Improvements, describing tho naturo of the soil, in short, collating such Information as a purchaser unfa miliar with tho property would care to possess. This Information ho sent by let tor to Knausch. Wootton wns reluct ant to sell, and Sanders, by, letter, sug gested to Knausch that when ho should como to bargain In person with Woot ton for the property it would bo well for him to bring $20,000 In gold coin, tho sight of which would tend to exclto Wootton's nvnrlclous naturo and stlmu ate him to sell nt a bargain. Knausch be- ins uiuamuiar wan the Wootton land Sanders also suggested to him, that when no came, ho should not drive directly to tho Wootton house, but should proceed up a alley In tho southern slope of tho ;rmJ. a,v.. tho bUfr' thcro nnd cross tho high hill that Interposed between tho valley and Wootton's house. By this modo of approach ho would bo enabled to take a comprebenslvo lew of the property, and thus sao much tlmo which would be spent otherwise in travel and inspection. 0 On rob. 1, lsoi, Sanders was at Woot ton s house and waited tho coming of Knausch, as ho claimed In tho evidence At noon Rohloff, tho farm hand, came In from the field. Tho dinner was eat en, and Rohlolt went back to his work Sandnrs agreeing that when he should leave for homo ho would tako somo sacks of seed grain to him upon his buck board. After Rohloff bad gone John Knausch appeared, accompanied by a man named Graves, tho two havinir crossed the hill. Tho subject of tho salo or ootton's ranch was speedily broached There was somo haggling 0". er tho price, when Knausch opened his valise and poured tho gold upon the ta ble. Wootton became greatly excited and agreed to trade. Tho papers were pre- P .0n th,1 8po.t- Wotton took tho $20,000 In gold and a check for $25 000 Ho was to nccompany Sanders and Knausch to Tresno, whera it could bo cashed. Knausch and Graves left tho house, walking back over tho hill to the valley, whero they had left their vehicle. Sanders harnessed his mules to his buekboird, loaded tho seed grain for Rohloff, and drove down tho road accompanied by Wootton. The money was In tho valise at Wootton's feet. Rohloff had used up his seed grain and ho noticed Sanders driving hurriedly down the road. When he reached tho spot where the grain was to be un loaded Sanders climbed over tho seit of the buckboard, holding the reins In bis hand, and without dismounting from tho vehicle kicked nnd thrust tho sacks to the ground, some of them striking the uui ui-u-w iro icnce. Tne buckboard was then driven hurriedly by Sinders to a gate, which was closed. Hero Sanders, dismounted, opened tho gate, drove through, closed tho gate, and then climbed Into tho buckboard and drove off, not onco during these operations re leasing his hold on the reins. Rohloff noticed that Wootton. whose habit It wns never to leave tho ranch without Informing the hired man of tho date of his return, sat stiffly In the seat, star ing straight ahead. When Sinders drove away from the field Rohloff looked nt his watch. It was Just 1 55 p m. This was the last seen of Wootton. A mllo down the road two farmers plowing nenr tho country road saw Sanders, nnd they testified that he was driving alone. Ono of the farmers, Wiseman by name, chnnced to bo look ing at his watch at the time. It was 2 05 p. m Within the Interval of ten minutes Wootton had disappeared as ef fectually as If tho earth had suddenly jnwned and engulfed him. Tho caso has another mysterious side. It wns brought out during tho trial that no one In tho oountry had ever seen Knausch and his friend Graves. Sinders testified that ho had known Knausch for many j ears and had "grub-staked" him In the early days when Knausch was a miner and Sanders a school teacher. De tectives scoured tho state for Inform ation regarding Knausch, but the search was In vain. They could find no one who had ever seen or heard of tho man. Tho theory nnd arguments of the prose cution, then, was that Knausch and Graves wero myths; that Wootton was done to death by Sanders on the first day of Tebruary, 1891, and his body con cealed; that each and all of these acts were part of a preconceived and elab. orately executed design to obtain the property, real and personal, of William Wootton. But tho law emphatically says that before a man can bo convicted It must be clearly made out that there was a murder. If it was a murder the cor. nilH dpllntl vuna rlftrnv.rl TfAnAa Oam ers" escape from the death penalty. Would Prove nn Alibi. Lawyer "I'll defend you, Sambo, in this bigamy case, but what defense have you?" Sambo "I kin provo an alibi," Lawyer "An alibi? How will you prove It?" Sambo "By two odder wives what I had," Adams Freeman. Merciless. "If you had half tho nerve this tooth has," said tho dentist! to the quivering wretch In the chair, "ybu could have, this all over In about five seconds." Pearson's Weekly GO iWMirntp lLd Great pecial Sale We have made aeotheir pMrclhase of a maoMfqctMrer's eetnre stock of about 400 Ladies' Dress Skirts, coesistieg of Heavy Crask, Buck aed Pique, Wlhidhi we will punt oe sale this moreieg5, August 28th, at 51 69 ME FINLEY Mew Opei FOR ispecti TH an advance Hne of Prlestly's Plain and Fancy Black Goods for the Fall Trade. Also an elegant line of NOVELT WhJch cannot be dupli cated. 530 AND 512 LACKAWANNA AVENUE Jardimiieres AND Pedestals See our new line of Celebrated Dickens Ware; also Austrian, Wedgewood, Japanese and other Imported wares. Fere Dishei In many decorations and prices to suit. Common Clay Flower Pots, from 3 In. to 16 in. for replanting use. We give exchange stamps. EXCLUSIVE OiLSKEI SUITINGS TIE CLEMONS, FEEEEM, MALLEY CO., 422 Lacka. Ave. 'Lpo 1 79 dllJldi. Worth $1.50, $1.75 and 0E1TEB A Fit if tie Blues I if; oooooooo 'J;! Our Summer Clothing is all cleaned up, except a few Blue Serge Suits. It will pay you to call and see them and Try (Me ; oooooooo I s BOYLE I MUGKLOW jj; 416 LACKAWANNA AVENUE. ; Lewis, Reilly k DavieSo ALWAYS BUSY. they Weak our shoes as oyv to school they go, "all the boys, all the girls LOVE THEM bO," SCHOOL SCHOOL HOES HOES LEWI&REELY&MVIIES 114 AND 110 WYOMING AVE. Well! Well! Just TMok of It OOO-rAGE LONG DAY BOOKS, LEDG ERS OR JOURNALS, FULL DUCK BINDING, SI'RING BACK, GOOD QUALITY I'Al'ER, FOR 95C. Then TMok Asraio A LETTER PRESS, BOO PAGE LET TER BOOK, ROWLAND BRUSH COM. PLETB 0NLy $5.00. ft M Jmmmmmm. M W & I W ' TIME W Reynolds Bros Stationers and Engravers. Motel Jermyn Bldg, 130 V)oinlne Ave Scrnnton.Pa BAZAAH Jllllllu'o $1.98. FOOTE $l SHEAR CO., Headquarters for SIEGLCY PLANES, DAILEY PLANES. GAGE PLANES, CHAPLIN PLANES, SARGENT WOOD PANES, DISSTON SAWS, WITHDRBY CHISELS GOODDELL SPIRAL SCREWDRIVERS, CHAMPION SCREW DRIVERS, STARRETTS MACHINIST TOOLS, BRADE'S BRICKLAYERS' TROWEL ROSE BRICKLAYERS' TROWELS, DISSTON PLASTERERS" TROWELS. PLASTERERS' DARBYS PLASTERERS' HOCKS, PLASTERERS' TLOATS, EVERYTHING IN MECHANICS' TOOI No extra charge for special orders. FOQIE k SJHEAit We Give E'sclmnBo Stamps. HENRY BEL1N, JR., General Agent for tho Wyomlnj District for Mining, Wasting, Sporting, Bmolcolojl and the Repauno Chemical Company's HIGH EXPLOSIVES, hnfety Puse, Caps nnd Exploders. Rooms 212, 2KJ nnd 211 Commonwealth Building, Scranton. AGENCIES. THO, KORD, JOHN B.SMIfH& SON, E. W. MULLIGAN, Plttston Plymouth WilUes-Barro II PLEASANT COAL AT RETAIL. Coal of the test quality for domestlo ui and of all sizes, Including Buckwheat and Blrdseye, delivered in any part of the city, at the lowest price Orders received nt the Office, first floor. Commonwealth building, room No t; telephone No. 2621 or at the mine, tele phone No. 272, will be promptly attended to. Dealers supplied at the mine. I mow '(' IIPI1T1 PiliEU . 1 SI