TIIE SCRATSTTON TRIBUNE-WEDNESDAY MORNTNGr, SEPTEMBER 8, 1897. (Se &cwmfon n6tme ltll) and Ufeklj-. No Sunday I&tltlon. Dy The Tribune Publlihlng Company. WILLIAM CONNKLt 1'rcMdont SUBSCRIPTION I'RICUl Dally go cent n month. Weekly $i.oo a year. imerid at rnr rosTorrirs xr scnANTOt ta., MCCHD CLAH3 MAIL MATTXR TEN PAGES. RCnANTON, SEPTEMBER 8, 1897. TIIE RF.PUBLICAN TICKET. Mute. Stnte Trcasurci-J. S. UUACOM, of Westmoreland. Auditor Ounoral-iEVI O. M'CAULl.1, of Chester. Count)'. Sherlff-CLAllENCU E. 1'lUOIt, of Scranton. District Attorncy-JOIIN It. JONL3, of Ulakely. r-rothonotary-JOHN COl'ELAND, of Carbondalc, ' Trcasurcr-V. S. LANaSTAPP, of Si-ran-ton. Clerk of the Conrl THOMAS I. DAN IELS, of Scninton. Recorder OHAKLKiS UPESTEIl, of Scranlon, IleRl-tcr WILLIAM K. BECK, of Jlos cow. Jury Commissioner CHAHLES WIG GINS, or Scruntcn. Election day, November 2. "Resolved, Thnt the platform adopted fit tho-'ntlonnl convention of Democ racy in IMG be endorsed fully nnd without reserv e "Plank Second In the Platform of the Lackawanna Democ lacy, adopted Auk. !M, 1SD7. The Convention. The key note to the proper nttllude of the Republicans of Lackawanna county n sounded In the forceful speeches of Permanent Chaltman .Lovvry nnd Captain Molr; n good na- tured canvass has been made for the various nominations the convention has Indicated Its choice, and the duty of Republicans It to accept the vet diet find fall Into lino. Some momenta! y d'sappolntment Is Inevitable after so fplilted a contest, but when this shall have passed away the same cot dial Mippoit of the common p.uty cause may not unfalily be expected of the vanquished ns they themselves, would have expected, nnd rightfully expect ed, of the present victors had the con test lesulted differently. The ticket choen j esterday Is one that Invites public confidence and can be supported b every slnceie Repub lican conscientiously and with enthus lasm. Messrs, Piyor, Jones and Huest cr arc alicady known to the voters of the county In an official capacity and their respective iccords .speak eloquent ly for them. Of their colleagues, the nominee for prothonotnry, Mr. Cope land. Is one of the best known and most public spirited citizens of Carbondalc; Mr. Langstaff, the nominee for county treasuier, has by long .seivlce on the school boaid and In other positions of public usefulness, made hlnu-elf de servedly popular In the city of Scran ton; Mr. Daniels, the nominee for clerk of the courts, Is n bright young Re publican of the West Side, whom the party Is most happy to promote aftei his long and faithful service In the clerk's office as deputy; Mr. Beck, the nominee for leglster, Is a ciedltable representative of the staluait Repub licanism of south of the mountain; and Mr. Wiggins, the nominee for Jury commissioner, Is an active and deseiv lng type of the aleit young Republi canism of the central city. Consideration In detail of the local Issues entering Into the county enn oss this fall may well be defcued until the campaign shall assume def inite shape; but at this time it is pioper to say that the Republican party of Lackawanna county, In support of Its piesent excellent ticket, Is pie pared to wage an aggressive battle all along the line, and will roll up In No vember another splendid victoiy. We venture to pi edict that our friends, the local enemy, will not realise on this uutumn's ciop of political ex pectations. A Grave Danger. The Irony of fate Is Illustrated by the startling announcement that yellow fever has made its appearance at a fam cu health resort of the South. Oeean Spilngs, Miss., Is situated on Blloxl Bay, about eighty-four miles from New Orleans. It Is a wateilns: place much fought by fashlonnblo society nnd that thp visitors should leue their homo In sen ten of it-vivifying sea air only to run Into the arms of a scouige from which they would lice across vast continents, is a pathetic instance nf the uncertain ty ot lite, and nn added proot to the mind ot the fatalist that it Is useless to attempt to avoid destiny. The victim whose case hns been so thoioughly diagnosed as to wnirnnt the plllclal bulletin of yellow fever was a lad of 10, sou of n piomlnent New Oilcans family. He was removed to his homo, while suffering fiotn the fever, thus,lncioaslng thu danger of infection. Every effoit has been made to pi event Its spread In Now Oilcans and It Is ex pected thnt as this was nn Impoited case Iheio will be no fuithur cause for alarm. Ocean Springs was dcseited as soon as the truth was known that u number of persons weie suffering or had died fiom attacks of yellow fever. Quaran tine has now been established and the boaid of health considers that the scouige will soon bo stamped out, par tlculaily ns the lateness of the season Is n point in favor There are conflicting statements made regaidlng the Invasion of tho ills case. One of the sources alleged Is that tho drainage of Ocean Springs Is dis charged dliectly Into the bay and that the rolns wash a large amount of ex cieta. upon the urea where temporary oyster beds nie located. These oysteis are 'consumed by lesldents of Ocean Springs and tho disease Is thus spread. It is now claimed that tho first cases of the fever were light attttckH' In which ullbustering Cubans wete the sufferers. They recovered "but the disease ic uuilned. Another theory which seems to be given tho preference Is that the government Is to be blamed in allowing constant Intercourse between Ocean fiprlrigSund Ship Islarid.wheie a United Stnteti Government quarantine station Is located. If a rigid quarantine had been enforced by the Mississippi board of health and the representatives of the Marino hospital between theso points It Is affirmed by Southern physicians high In authority th'at nothing worse than dengue fever would have to be fought. Dengue, sometimes called "dandy" and "btoalt-bono" fever, Is a febrile epidemic disease occurring chiefly In tin) West Indies and southern slates. It Is characterized by severe pain, partic ulate In the Joints, and an etuptlon resembling measles. The attack 1b vio lent but brief, nnd seldom fatal. Now York nnd Philadelphia boards of health upprehend little danger from the dis ease In the North nnd every precaution hhs already been tnkon at the ports. The Immunity enjoyed from epidemics of nil kinds in our greatest cities of the North is a witness to the prompt measures nnd vigilance of the officials In charge of the health departments, nnd their example could be Imitated by the South to the welfare of the country. The gieat Imptovement in the foreign demnnd for American meats Is another of the pieces of good news thnt began to appear In print shortly after the In nuguiatlon of McKlnley. An Important Problem. A w rlter in the Globe-Democrat, nf ter citing figures showing, the extraordl nniy security of ceieals In Europe, a shortage which cannot entirely be sup plied by exports of American wheat lmge ns these exports will be, states a timely fact when heusseits the neces sity for lenewed ffort, first to popular- iz American corn in Europe nnd next to ptovlde a better system for Its dls tiibutlon In our own country. "That," says he, "there Is always a demand for every bU3hel of coin the West can pioduce, cveiy one who knows the real condition of the consum ing maikcts knows. Last spilng, when cases of starvation were repeatedly re ported In New York nnd London, great piles of corn lay In the furrows along the Western rallioad tracks, unmuiket eil ot the beginning of plowing for this year's crops. No explanation of why it was not marketed has reallj' explained anything at all. All that can be said with any appioach to accuracy Is that we could not do It because we did not know enough. With millions starving In India and more corn In the West than can bo fed to the hogs into which the West is endeavoring to convert it to cheapen freights and raise Its price, It is ceitainly not oei production, but undeidistrlbutinn, which tioubles us. Wp have- studied pioductlon until, with hlgh-pilced labor, we can give a larger output than any other country, but In doing so we have got far lvtyond our abilities to market. Our wheat surplus 1" fairly diagged out by a demand which, at one pi Ice or another, takes all we can spate, but when it Is a ques tion of getting our corn to people who are staivlngfor it wo show that though we hae become by all odds the best pioduceis In the world, we are still ut the very beginning of our education as dlstilbutois." Just how this education is to be facil itated save through the operation of necessity the. Globe-Democrat corres pondent does not say. But with a corn crop exceeding 2,000,000,000 bushels, much of which goes Into the stove as luel in default of a niutket ut the same time that millions In India, thousands in Euiopo nnd not a few In the con gested centeis of our own population are cither statvlng outright or suffeilng from lack of (ufllciency of nutritious food, the ptoblem which this writer outlines Is indeed an inipoitant one, and we may sifely nssnme that It will not long l emain insoluble. This seems an especially opportune time to urge Its solution. If the oyster Is proved to be the 31s stinlnntor of yellow iVv.t his fcur months' neatlon will be Indefinitely extended. An Excellent Chance. One of the two or three places which President McKlnley visited when In Philadelphia iccently was the school of Industrial art connected with the Penn sylvania museum, and after an exam ination of Its w oi kings be expressed gteat satisfaction. There Is reason to suspect that the excellence of this in stitution's methods and facilities ii insufficiently appreciated throughout the stnte, a fact which is our warrant for the few woids of explanation that follow. The dlffeient couises offeted by tho school cover all forms of ait and de sign: painting, sculptuie, lnteilor dec oration, architecture, book and maga zine illustration, etc. Young men and loung women are admitted to nil couis es on equal terms. Tiie school is es pecially stiong In the Instruction which It piovldes In all blanches of textile design and manufactuie. Its textile depaitmcnt, constituting a complete school in itself, is not only the oldest and most complete textile school in America but one nf tho best schools of this kind In the woild An appropiiatlon made by the last legislature enables the Institution to of fer one or more flee scholarships to each county of Pennsylvania. At least one scholarship Is available for each county In the state and for counties having moie than one senator, as many scholarships are provided as there aie senutotiul districts. The appointments to these aro made by the governor of the state usually on tho lecommenda tlon ot tho senatcn and at least one rep lesentatlv from the dlstilct in which the applicant lesldes. Blank forms of application and all information tegard ing details will be furnished by Piln clpal L. W. Miller, at the school, Broad and Pine streets, Philadelphia, to whom ull communications should be address ed. This opportunity Is wot thy of tho attention of some blight resident of Lackawanna. The Nevvbuig man who, with seven stitches In his head, resulting from an accident iccelved a few days previous, persisted in tiding In bicycle races on Monday, seems to bo the hero of that region Just now, as ho was a winner. If ho had imperilled his life for the tescue of others or hud endured ex posure and suffeilng In behalf of humanity, there would seem to be some reason for applauding his act, hut when a man Is so foolhardy as to enter races with no other object but greed for prizes or cheap fame, under such peril ous physical conditions, there really seems to bo no special call to surround him with a halo. The Pittsburg tnnn who attempted suicide on his wedding Journey with a bride whoso dot was a quarter of a million, seemed to be flying In the face of Providence beyond the degree which can be excused by even a confirmed misogynist. New Cancer Cure. Cancer Is undoubtedly one of the diseases most dreaded by the human race. Its malignant nnd often hopeless character naturally strikes terror to the heatts ot Its victim when the faintest suspicion of Its development Is discovered, but the sufferers arc few who will not hesitate at the cure of who will not hesitate at the cure proclaimed by an Austrian priest named Gcntlllnl who advises a diet of lizards. He affirms that he has cured thlity persons with this rcini!dy and claims that the discovery fs efficacious In all cancerous affections. Probably ninny of the drugs already In use by civilized laces contain Ingredients no less obnoxious to the Imagination than lizards but the adage "Where Ignor ance Is bliss tls folly to be wise" holds good In many cases. People have shuddered at the horrid brew concocted by Macbcth's witches ftom "Eje ot newt and toe ot frog, Wool of bat and tongue of dog, Adder's fork nnd blind worm's sting, Lizard's legs and owlet's wing," nnd various other unpleasant things, but they will now begin to wonder whether the other elements of the pre scription nro to come Into favor .since lizards promise to be provided as an article of diet to produce almost a miracle In medical science. The acreage of coin In Kansas this season is 8,283,000, and yet they say the corn crop is poor. Statistics show that only seven larger corn crops have ever been recorded. The acreage is the largest in the hlstoiy of the state. Taming the Terriers. Even the anarchist Is made harmless by McKInloy times. The nnnuul outing and picnic of the anarchists of New Yoik and vicinity, on Monday, was a eiy mild affair Indeed. Five yeais ago moie than 10,000 sympathize! s of the red faith assembled at a similar affair. Monday not more than 1G0 men, women nnd chtldien, nil told, were pres ent, and thee weie so orderly and quiet in their behavior that the occa sion was like a nood humoted family picnic. They diank an enoimous amount of beer, but no one was In toxicated, and theie wai no voclfeious demonstiatlon, although the outing was a sort of faiewell to Herr Most, who bewails his hard fate In having to woik for a living by editing a new paper in Buffalo. The most effective reform of an an aichlst takes place when he becomes a capitalist or a teal estate owner. Then if he Is a lesldent of this countiy he Ls leasonably certain to abandon the theories of file and bomb and to be come a peace-loving member of soci ety. The New York anarchists were all too well fed, too well clad and evi dently too contented with the Improve ment of the times to display much thirst for gore und conllagiutlons. THE KLONDIKE GOLD BUG. IMiloihil nnd News. Mr. Slatter, of tho palllion, called at tin- "Bug" office today and tendered us four tickets to the grand cjelot.inlc, panoran le, eilocopic ait recital on Wed msda night. As the price of admUMou Is only fio dollais a ticket we beliet we can discern a method In .Mr Slattei'.) nitdness. ihls "giand recital" uudcu va rious hlghtalutln titles Is probably old Jack JIooio's magic lantern under an other name. Mr. Slatter cannot gain t!.o good will of tho "Bug" by orftrlns lieo tickets to nn entertainment ot that sort. Wo hao "Hock of Ages" framed at homo in better stsle than It appears on old Jack's lanteri. slide; and our pictures of McKlnley nnd Hobari, and "Washington Crossing the claw ate" do not resemble comic alcntints. If Manager Slatter wUhC'fus to ahield his fakes he must ot fer better Inducements than tlektts to nn exhibition of rheumatic art on eiicus tent cloth. Until Mr. Slatter sees lit to properly iccognizo the "Bug" we shall continue to advise people to shun his theatrical holo in the wall. BUI Cook's horse ran away yesterday. No one war Injured but the hoise looks disappointed. The accident was caused by a flaming sign elected in tho Interest of Quaker oats. Bill was driving down Nugget aeni'e. at a gentle amblo when the hofp s;i!ed the oats sign and niado n c'ash for the painting. Bill was thrown out, but sustained no feilous Injuiy. Tho pccaUnr action of tho horse has been a matter of comment and surprise, as it is said that tho animal has never been used to oat since it has been owned by BUI. We hao received an Invitation on a printed circular to meet at 'i'endertoot squaio on Thursday night and a.ist in the organization of a golf club. We mift decline in an open litter gliug our ica sons. Wo bclleo that the committee had sinister motives In bending us the circu. lar and that it was because they oxpv'od to work tho columns of the "Hug' for Jreo advertising, and not becniisc the thought we would look well In shoit rants and rat tlesnako stockings, that we wcte asked. The fact , too, that tho circular was print ed in tho $3 Job press of the "Klondonlan," puts tho Invitation In the light of Intuit lather than a compliment. Wo wash our hands of this social enterprise which we do not hesltnto to prcJIct will fall as flat as a Br an 20-ct-nt dollar In this cn Ughtoncd community. tiibi:b naval ni;bds. Vrom the Philadelphia Tress, The United States still needs more bat tleships than It has, but Just at present It needs theso trlngs more than battleships: 1 A fleet of torpedo boats and "destroj oi s" simply largo torpedo boats, able to keep at tea In all w caller Is Indlbpensa. ble for the defense of our shallow ccwjt. Useless without battleships, with tho bat. tleshlpa wo have a swarm of these small, active vessels would bo able to meet it largo fleet of buttleshlps, and a dozen torpedo boats can bo built for ouo buttlc shlp. 2. Thiee dry docks aro needed eo.ua! to tho docking of any battleship, ons on the North Atlantic coast, ono en the boulh Atlantic coast und ono on the dulf. vv ab out this our battleships aro as useless as a horse would bo to a man who had bought a $59,000 trotter and had no stable In which to put him. 3, An udequato plant for armor, buch a plant would cosit moie at first, but In tho end It would bo cheaper, Just as gov ernment plants for emiall arms and can non have proved cheaper. Until these three needs are filled our navy Is a bob-tailed alfalr. WHAT hi: SIIOIIJJ) demand, From tho Philadelphia Press, Among tho things that tho worklngman should demand nro gieatcr convenience nnd security tor mall savings; very much greater racllltlea for mall and toicgrnpnic communication; the. exemplary punish ment of ull who aro guilty of fraud in savings banks, Insuranco companies and uuiming loan nsaoolat ons: the oppor tunity of effecting small loans on per gonal security tit a moderate rate of In terest; the Inspection of all food, fuel nnd other articles sold to the worklngman, with proper cnattles for fraud una naui terntlon; the ranltnry examination or nil tenements nnd rented houses nnd of all factories and vvorkuhons: tho lcmovlng of nil sources of dlscaro (which Is one ot the nenvicst taxes laid upon tho worKing man); tho provision of public squares and recreation grounds In the crowded dis tricts; tho supply of puro water nnd good light at moderate rates. If tho working man should demand these ho would get them, and, -with them, a great better ment In his condition. Alarming Growth of Public E?pens?s Prom tho Philadelphia Record. In a very interesting article on tho subject of "Billion Dollar Congi esses," In tho lllustrnted American, Congress man Mahlon Pitney, of New Jersey, shows thnt twenty cais ago tho tun ning expenses of the government were annually one-thlid of a billion dollars; nut tlH'V have been Increased to half a billion dollars notwithstanding i eductions In tho payment of Interest on the pub lic clcbt, nmountlng to sixty or seventy million dollars per annum. He shows that for tho ten fiscal yeats from lfc"7 to ISSli, Inclusive, the total regular ap propriations of congress amounted In round figures to .O19,7I3.0OO; and for tho following ten years they were $3,427, S7S,00J an excess of l,40S,wX,UOD, or an averago annual excess of about $140, 000,000. The growth of appropriations for tho years mentioned was 09,71 per cent., or nearly thieo times ns great ns the growth of population. As population In ct eases In density tho per capita cost of government ought to decicaso; but Mr. Pitney shows that while It cost 510 27 for each man, woman und child In the country from U77 to ISSiS, It cost !.."! from 1SS7 to 1S9G nn Increase of $14.47 per capita. Tho enlarged pension pamcnts were the cause of part of this excessive increase In expenditure; but excluding pensions theie was an lncie.iso of Jj.ll per capita, o Mr. Pitney attributes this extravagance largely to the change made In 1S87, which parcelled out the ork ot the uppiopna- tions committee of the house so that the control of eight of the fourteen great annual appropriation bills was lodged in the hands of separate and Independent committees, thus dividing responsibility. In suppoit of this contention he furn ishes tho following Interesting table, Hhowlng the percentage of Incicase In ten CUIB. Increase per Title of Bill. Agricultural $ Diplomatic and Con sular District of Columbia. I'ortltlcatlon Indian Legislative Mllltiity Academy ... Naval Pensions Inciense. :0,211,b07.0ii cent. 024 lib 3 990 5b7.0ti 16.2i0.102.57 17,754,224 W 35,5S5,7G3,15 31,132,250 Ut l,3DS,l'2.71 95.757,800. IU 3310 5S.4 374 95 70.32 19.0S 4V02 bit 40 134 01 77.97 77.49 2"S1 CU.12 43 03 l',CIS.l7S Postolllco B19.30t.9J2.SS River und Harbor .... 57.451,502.90 Sundry Civil ,W.iS9.3';C.77 Deficiencies C3, 400.05 1.22 Miscellaneous 15,37S,70 33 Total $l,427.01S,725.Sci o Having pointed out what he considers the cause of the extraordlnniy Increase In federal expenditure, Mr. Pitney sug gests theso altetnutivo remedies: (1 ) To restore nil the nppioprlatlon bills to tho control of the appropriations committee, so as to put un end to divided tesponslblllty. (2.) To clotho the ways and means committee with the sole power to iccom tnend the nmounts to bo nppioprlated for the dlffeient branches of the service, as they now lecommend the measures for raising tho necessaty revenues to defiay the expendltuies, or, If It bo found that the present svstcm of dividing up tho appropriation bills among the dif ferent committees Is too firmly rooted to bo dislodged, then (!.) To eientc a new committee to be called tho committee on fluenco, to bo made up of the speaker of the house and the chairmen of the several committees on ways and means, appioptlatlons, mll Itniv affairs naval affairs, Indian affairs, foreign affairs, postotllces, agriculture and ilveis and harbors, comprising all tho committees now having charge of either levenue or expenditure, and to give to this committee adequate control over tho whole subject. It Is evldi ut that something must be clnnn to Lhoek the neislstent and steadily growing chain upon tho pockets of the people, and Mr. Pltney's suggestion Is deserving ot serious thought. But we think he lies not touched the most se rious phase of the matter. The tendency toward extiavagancc Is not moio marked in federal than in state and municipal expendltuie. Tho true underlying cause of the mischief is the same In each In stance. Theie has been an Increase of facility at Washington, but a reckless Improvidence una a growing disposition to make use of the government In pro moting private ends ure tho foundation upon which the plundcicrs have buildcd. A KHAIN IJISTUKIIUK. from tho Stroudeburg Times. W. J. Oianlees. a guest of tho Kttti tlnny at the Delaware Water (Jap, is some, thing of a mathematician and ho pro pounds the following example for loal men to work their gray matter on: On I'llday night the Klttatinny House had a ceitaln number of guests. On Sat urday morning one-fourth of them lett. On Satuiday noon one-eighth ot them left. On Saturday evening there left one-third of the dcpartuics of tho morn lug and noon trains. The Hirivals were us follows: On tho morning train one-half of what departed In the morn'ng; on the noon train three times as many as departed on tho noon tialn, and In the evening train three times as many ns departed In the morning tialn and three times as many as riepait ed in tho evening tialn. There lemalned bilf ns many as in the beginning. How niiiiy guests had they on Sunday morning'.' . A High Bcconinicndntion. Capitalist "How lapldly can your new machine gun be discharged?" Inventoi "It can be fired, sir, with tho rapidity with which tho nverago stage letter Is written," Pearson's Weekly. A SIUSOK OT TUIAIiS. De tun como prowlln' earlier dan he did somo time ago, An' It's later when ho goes ter take 'Is rest; An' all do vvu'k you tackles seems ter measure mo' nn' mo' Dan It uscter, though you does yoh level best. Hit secm3 a ter'blc distance 'ciost dat gyahden patch o' mine, An' do spado Is long an' mighty hahd ter swing; An' dat bioken fence goes stretchln' miles an' miles along do lino When do days Is glttln' longer In do spring. Hit takes a drefful lot o' tlmo ter mako an hour or two, Exceptln' when l's done got fast asleep; Den, land o' goodness gracious! How dat night do gallop fioo De slumber dat wus comfortln' an' deep. Do road goes up-hill all de vvuy, no mat ter whnh I wulks. An' when ncroat his lazy back I fling, Er back o' grain, do mule an' me, wo bof stahts In an' balks When da days Is glttln' longer in do spring, Washington Star. GO LISMTI ALTHOUGH the Telephone Company has taken possession of a good share of the street and the carpenters and masons are in the store, we have not lost sight of the fact that our customers will come to us to supply their early season's wants, there fore, have prepared a little Bargain Feast for this week, At On Bre 300 pieces All-Wool French SzrgQS at 25 cents. 25 pieces 38 Inch Wool Plaids, the 50 cent kind, at 25 cents.' 75 pieces of Choice Novelties, Fall 18P7, at 39 cents. 37 pieces 35 Inch All-Wool Covert Cloths at 50 cents 24 pieces 45 Inch French Cheviots at 59 cents. 40 pieces 50 Inch Broadcloths at 35 cents. Our stock of FINE PARISIAN DRESS NOVELTIES, ranging from 75 cents to $2.50 per yard are now open and ready for Inspection. laving aiiciptd prices h 01 FINE 3n addition to our ad vance line advertised last week, the balance of our extensive FALL IMPORTATIONS are just to hand, and will be on exhibition during the next ten days. It is needless to enumerate the many different styles, as nearly eyery NEW and DESIRABLE weave is rep resented, All our "Fine Pattern Suits," as usual, are exclusive. An un usually attractive line of "Roman Stripes," "Checks" and Clan Tar tan silks for Dress Waists 510 and 512 LACKAWANNA AVENUE Jard Meres AND Pedestal, See our new lino of Celelnntcd DlcUens Ware; idfco Austrian, Wcdgevvoocl, Jnpauese audotber imported wnres. Fere Dishes In many decorations und prices to tult. Common Clay Flower Pots, from 3 In. to 36 in, for replanting use. We give exchange stamps. NLEI'S DRESS GOODS TIE CLEMONS, FERIBEfc 0'MALLEY CO,, 422 Lacks. Ave. KJSo I -1. vs ss Goiis Conntcr tie Hew Tariff, we shall as long as we casi, ATT10 A JP ATI TTVTI if!! Fit if the Blues I OOOOOOOO Wt Our Summer Clothing is all cle tiud, except a few Blue Serge Suits. It will pay you to call and see them and Try Lewis, Renlly c& DavSeSo ALWAYS 11USY. '4 THKY WBAll Ot'It HHOUS AS OFF TO .SCHOOL THKY GO, "AI.LTHF. HOYS, ALLTBB GIULS LOVB THBM bO," CHOOL .SCHOOL HOES MOES LEWIS, EEILLY&MVIES 1 1 1 AND 1 10 WYOMING AVE. Well! Well! Just TMek of It! (lOO-PACE LOXO HAY BOOKS, I.K1K,. EHS Oil JoritNAl.S ITU, DUCK BINDING, hl'ltl.VU BACK, GOOD QUALITY PAPER, PQJ 05C Thee TMek Ag'aie A LETTER PRESS onn PAGE LET TEH BOOK, BOWL AND BBUhil COM- PLETEONLY$5.00. Ml OOOOOOOO IV i BiWlE i iUGDOJW I II 416 LACKAWANNA AVENUE. $; SLfS? Reynolds Bros btutlouers und Knsiaveu. Motel Jermyn Bldg, 130 Wjouilus Ave, bcruulon.ra. EAZAAt give oief customers Re One FOOTE & SHEAR CO, " Headquarters for S"""LEY PLANES, BAILEY PLANES, GAGE PLANES, CHAPLIN PLANES, SARGENT WOOD PANES, DISSTON SAWS, WITHEUBY CHISEL3 GOODDELLSPIRAL SCREW DRIVERS, CHAMPION SCREW DRIVERS, STARRETT'S MACHINIST TOOLS. DRADE'S BRICKLAYERS' TROWELS, ROSE BRICKLAYERS' TROWELS, I DISSTON PLASTERERS' TROWELS, PLASTERERS' DARBYS PLASTERERS' HOCKS, PLASTERERS' FLOATS, EVERYTHING IX MECHANICS' TOOL3 No extra charge for special orders. FOOTE k Wo Give Exchange Stamps. HENRY BEL1N, JR., General Agent for the Wyomlni District for Jllnlns, Hlatlng,Sportlns, Sniokoleu and tho Ropauno Chemical Company's HIGH EXPLOSIVES, Safety Fuse, Caps nnd Exploder). ' Rooms Ui'J, mil and 'J14 Commonwealth Building, bcruuton. AGENCIES Tims form JOHNB. HMini.fc&O.V, K. W. MULLIGAN, rittstnti Plymouth WHUei-liarra Ml PLEASANT COAL AT RETAIL. Coal of tho best quality for domestla uj and ot all sizes, including Buckwheat and Blrdteyc, delivered in any part of the city at ths lowest ,rlce Orders received at the Office, first (loir. Commonwealth building, room No 0j telephone Xo. 2621 or at the mine, tel? phono No. 27., will be promptly uttew (o. Dealers supplied at the mlno. T. S 'V' DUPONT'8 POilEI. l i
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers