SATUttrJAY, JAtfUAIlY IB, 1B9 THE SGRANTON TRIBUNE. SATt'nDAY, JANUAHY IB, 1833. U.4.4-.4-i--.4-4"-4"M-4-f-f4--H- i xn nniiTiimr t I We me bound to dNpeno of neiv tinlr l.nilln' mill Men' 1'oltltCU lOJ i I -f Hhom. Our price bos bscn belowntiy. thlni?eer otlered. Itent crnde or I-u- die' shoes, formerly Hold at 91.00 jhl nnet o.uu, Our price while they Init $2.09. Men's llqst Calf (looil Welt Oth double oi llghLMilil.S formerly oia at $1 00 mid fvou, Our nrlce while they last, $2.09. f Auy size and width fr om 5 to ir. Look iu our show window. T 1 410 SPRUCE STREET, t t t CITY NOTES. Public school tendierw weie bclne y.ild jesterilio for tho month ul Deeembei Aldernun John T. Howe is recoeilii from his Mint. ami will piobubly bu at his olllce toila At Hols Cios-, full tonlKht Mlv Kale Reunion will kIo a pluiio nolo uml llls. Knte Don.iho will nine. The Deluwuip uml Hudson Lompuiu paid tjip tiulume'ii on tho NIimwIi branch und the emplocs at the Clinton mines at Vanillins Annlo Hiroskl Is the plaintiff In an ac tion in trespass tialusl the Wile Kiilgp Coal compans eteid.o She Is icpie sented by Tnjlor & wis The "Hon Ton Hurlejueis elelighteU (inothei uood f.Ued nudltim at Mu-dc hall lust (nliiK. The will eloaa their eiiKaeement with tvo pufoi minces tu du Tho ehildreii ur thf Home loi tho l"rlendles.s and St Patiick s Oilman as lum will see "I'nele Turn s Cnbln" tonight b Imitation of tlin m.iiu Lenient of tln theater Tickets for tho ball of the Wllltes-Baiie 1'renH elub at tho Ninth Keslmint m mory npxt Wednesdu tan be obtained ut the iloor, by Scrantonluns, uii the night of the bull. James Kell Mild Muiv OHojle, of Sciunton: lMvuitd J. liniiiiitslnn uud Su l.Ui Dutkin, of Sciunton were gi anted marrlaue lleensts h Cleik ol the Court Daniels yesturdaj Court tsteula appointed T. II Holmes Inspector of election of the Second dlstikt of Tell township In pi ice of P.ittirk Mc Caithy, who Is a candidate loi the oltlce of leslHter of liters Tho Rpvcun mlKslon Is In Bleat need of rlothlnB of any kind that ean be used us their stock Is exhausted und calls for clothing ur mum Superintendent San botn sajs they would be Klud tu semi foi It If those liming unj would notltv them. Clothing foi both men and women Is needed. Rev. J. W. Randolph, the Herman pro fessor In the Conseivntoiy of music, coi ner of Ad imn inentie and IJnden stieet. will dellei a hctuie next Wednesday evenlnif In tha Consenaton His subect Is "Reminiscences of the Clt of Venice." Tho Itev. Randolph spent seveiul weeks In Venlco during his Hutopcan tilp. lloiace Illlpeit. nn cx-soldlet. wus ai restcd at police headuuarteis last night liy Sergeant Rldgliwaj and locked in a cell Ho came to the station house baUI Intoxicated and at-ked for lodging Hit. pert did tho same thing Wednesday night with the samn result, but Mayor Malloy discharged hlm'Jor his badge'!, sake Wny Ho HcHrlgtiride in This. A plain gold biytd ring: was found on Lackawanna arnnue last night and awaits a claimant aH. 'pdllt'e' headquar ters. On the sine, Js, the .Inscription1' "February 3, 1S93 J 'X M to O. A H." Head tHv" -Location or Modern French Flat F U Hltohcoek & Son. OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOQO MkM Ptfnt,'2lcf 1 I" O Butter, 'Best Till), 20c Sr;,;Best Cck,;i.8o Butter, Good Tub, 16c ooooooxoooc?8s THE I SCRANTON CASH STORE F. R PRICE, Agent ooooooooooooooooo HU II It iw i DEMOCRATS HAD ' A LIVELY NIGHT Leaders Have Separate Headquarters and Delegates Disagree. THEY BOLTED THE BURKE CAUCUS Altor the Klckori licit, tho I'nhcy Clhbous Slnlo U'ns indorsed find the 1'roposltlon to Nnmo Cnndl dale Tor tho l'oor Hoard Approved. A Cuois nt tho l'orsonncl of tho Ticket to Do Nmncd Would Ho Hinli. Thin afteinoon at 2 o'clock tho city I fiiinfim!i tu wilt rnnvt'llii In tilt. I niirt house to nomlnata candidates for the school board of tl. The outcome cf the convention 'will be news: no onu would honestly say last night, Just who would be the nominees. At mid night the situation was this: The city committee people hadn't the semblance of a slate; the Fahey-Glbbons crowd paid they would win. and on top of all a well mounded rumor that the city committee would take no hand In the reinvention but let the antlsvet the nomination unoppored. and the elec tion unassisted Hot It sides had headtiuarttrs, the city committee holding forth In Inclus ttial hall and the opposing forces ut the St. Charles. At the former place Chairman George S. Horn, Sceiftatv David J. Heady, ex-County Choltmnn T J. Jennings, John J. Durkln, T. 1 DuiTy. Hon. John P. Qulnnan, M. J Donahoe, J. T. Hammea, and a score of otheis busied themselves receiving the delegates who came to enroll and holding whlspeietl conversations in small gioups at frequent periods on the aspect of the situation Messrs. Fnliey, c.llilions. Oiler and otheis matMmlled their foices In n business-like wav. THHY HELD A CAUCUS. About 9 o'clock the delegates lMd a caucus In Raub'a hall, on Wyoming avenue, and thither all the delegates who "came to town" betook them selves. W J. Huike, who hat stiong rahey-GIbbons leanings, was elected chaiiman. The object of the meeting was announced to be the selection of a ticket, and us the announcement waR made the Fahev-GIbbons slate ,i. pioposed. Just how tho meeting Mood as to the top of the two-headed ticket did not develop, but that it was not favotable to the slate as u whole was most evidenced. There was a commotion for a while, and it ended In many of the delegateH leaving the hall. owing that they would hae nothing to do with "any such caucus as that " Aftet the klck eis had gone Ml. Uurke leoiganlzed the caucus and the slate was foi malty endoised It was duly endorsed and with a hun all at that The cltv com mittee people said that there weie only eighteen or twenty delegates who temalned for the second caucus. The antls claim that theie was a majotlty of the delegates of the convention In attendance. This second caucus also approved of the proposition of nominating candi dates for the pooi boaid, which piop oriltlon was Ignoied nt the Hist session of the- delegates The matter will be brought up In the convention In the wav of nn announcement that a com mittee of the delegates would upon ex Clty Solicitor It a II. Hums in 1 elation to the mattei, and had been informed that there was a .strong piobability of the present poor board being declated illegal, and an otdet of court made dl tectlng that a boaul be elected dliect by the people. Tltr.y WANTED A SLATE The city committeemen ut 10 no o'clock got together In dead earnest to make an eftoit at tigieelngupon a slate. Half an hour later the meeting dis banded, but if a slate was made no one could be found who would tell what it Is. Ceitain contingencies make it almost safe to give it a.s a ceitalnty that no slate was ugieed upon. Thobe who attended the meeting, who could be Induced to say anything at all. posi tively maintained that no slate had been selected and that no teal attempt has been made to lonnulute a slate. The convention will do that today, was a geneial lemaik. They denied even that they had picked a man foi chaii man; that Mi, Heed) was an Independ ent candidate, lepiesentlng no faction School Controller Pattick Langan, of the Eighteenth wuid, was making the announcement that he had thlity eight delecates solid and he would go into the convention as an independent candidate, aching no favor ftom any faction and in turn fa voting nelthei J. T. Ilnnnes was anxious to be nomi nated at all costs und made big claims as to the stieneth he would wield in the convention Hon John P. Qulnnan was in much the .same flame of mind as Mr Jennings. It was not among the impiobalill Itles, viewing the situation at midnight, that some of the men who weie to be given giatultous nominations because of theh geogiaphlcal or iaclal fitness would be tin own over, not thiough any deslie of the leadets, but simply because the can't pievent It. The six men who huve the most delegates will be the nominees, unless theie is pome stalwait woilt to pievent it this mottl ing, and if that Is the case there will be a ticket so lopsided that the Re publicans will be spared the effoit of defeating It It will fall of Itself. W. J. Burke will be the candidate of the Fahey-Olbbons slate for peimanent chairman. AN OPINION' ASKED. Some of the delegates who believe that poor directots should be elected yesterday, addressed the following communication to Attorney I. II. Hums: Jamiaiy It, lbjs. I II. Ruins, Esip: Dear Sir- We have been Instruct ed on behulf of a number of the delegutes to the Democratic convention tomorrow to ask our opinion as to ihe legal right of this poor dlstilct to elect the members of the poor board, Instead of having them appointed bj court. Win. J Hurke, M. S. Lav nil, John Mawn Jn teply to this Mr. Duins tendeied the following opinion. W. J. Hurke and Others. Dear Sirs: Tho ciuentlou whether tho members of the board of directors of tho Hcruntou poor district aio elective or ap pointive, depends largely If not entirely on the construction to bo placed on tho act of March 10, 1SG2. which Is as follows; "That hereafter whenever any vacancy shall ocur In tho board of directors, cre ated In pursuance of the act to which this is a supplement, wholher siidh vu cancy occur by tho expiration of the teim of oftlce or otheiwlbe, the same shall bo filled by tho uppolntment of the presi dent judge of the court of common pleat) In and for the county of Luzerne., at a regular term of said coutt, upon the pcv. tltlon of at last twenty freeholders from that portion of the district comprised within said act, in which tho vacancy oc cuts; lliut all acts and parts of ucts In consistent herewith, bo and the same are hereby repealed." There nro several reasons why this act did not choiiBO tho poor board olllces from electlvo by tho people to appointive by tho picsldent Judge of Lezurne county. First If It had been designed to chnns"o tho method of nillng tho ofllces of the boat J, it would have been very ensv to have said so. All that would have been necessary was simply to say; Ho it en acted that hereafter the members of tho poor board of tho Scrnnton district shall not be elected by the peoplo but shall bo appointed by the president Judgo of Lti reine county. DOES NOT ALTER METHOD. Second The above act docs not purport to alter the method of filling the olllces, but only provides for filling vacancies thnt may occur. May occur In what7 Evidently In the sistem then existing. It does not s ty that the appointment shall be for three years, or tho regular term, but leaves the language to be Interpreted by the general rule, th it when vacancies are llllcd by appointment In an elective olllce, the appointment only holds until the regular time for holding the elec tions, when tho people can till tho olllce In the method prescribed by law. Third The language of the nbove act does not change the ofllccs from ap pointive to elective even when taken In Its literal sense, for tho leason that no vacancy occuro In an elective ofllce by reason of expiration of the term when n successor has been elected to take the place of the outgoing olllcer. When cc Sheriff demons left tho ofllce of sherltT, no vacancy occurred, because, as ho passed out his successor passed In, nnd there was not an Instant when the olllce was vacant. The water that Is In the channel of the Lackawanna river today will be In the Susquehanna tomorrow: but there will h no vacancy In the Lack awanna channel, because nys fast as the water moves down the water from above instantly takes Its place. The plain lnterpietatlon of the above law seems to bo that It was designed to provide for the possible occasion when no successor was elected; or, having been elected, died befoie the time to take tho ofllce. In such case, the term would ex plie without any elected sueccfesor to take the place and thpre would then be a va cancy which the court would be called upon to fill. There are othci reasons which seem to me to be equally conclusive against nti thotlty of the court to npoolnt our poor dliectors, but they can hardlv be i-.pt forth iu the brief compass of this letter. I think the peonle of the city and Dun more borough aie entitled to elect In the Mini1 marner as before the ubove act was pissed Respectfully joins, 1 II. Rurns. POLITICAL JOTTINGS. Peter Netil.s, one of the candidates nominated for the boatd of six school dliectois by the Republican city con vention, was nominated for school con ti oiler a,t yesterdaj's Eleventh waid piimatleM He tecelved 184 votes against 17C cast for John J. Schneider. Schneider was one of the defeated can didates at the city convention. He and Neuls aie tesldents or the same elec tion district, which Avas carried by the latter jesteidav Election ofllcers weie nominated as follows: Tliht dlstilct, Philip Haitman, judge of election; E. R. Conley, Inspector of election; John Kang, leglster of voters Second dls tilct, Chatles AVeber, Jr., judge of elec tion; Philip Hejer, Inspector of elec tion, P P. Neuls, register of voteis. Thlid district, John "W. Betghauser, judge of election; Fred Hempe. Jr., inspector of edectoln; Adam A. Tear ing, tegister of votei.s. Two ets of ceitllicates of nomina tions wn" tecelved by the county com missioners yesterday, each ot which putpoits t contain the names ot the tegular Democratic nominees ot Lack awanna township. Th'e two sets of papeis aie slf-'ned by 'two different men but each claims, to be the ehair mnn of the Democratic confetees of the township, The couit will have to decide which of the candidates aie the real nominees ot the Dtmouatle paity. Theie Is an Impiesslon that if poor dliectois aie to be elected they will b chosen for the dlstiicts they aie at present appointed for. On this sub ject a supplementary opinion will be obtained this moinlnC fioni I. II. lhli ns. Maik Cahlin and Michael O. Langan, of the Twentieth vvatd, jesteiday filed papers with the county commissioners as the candldnt s of the citizens' pnr ty for select and c onunon council re spectlvvlj. Hie Democrats cf the Sixteenth waid will caucus tonight in the Eagle hotel on Penn nvenue. at 7 o'clock. The Demouats of the Nineteenth wnul. FUst dlstilct, will hold their pri maries tonight. Delaware nnd Hudson Ilnilrond. On and after Mond.f, Januaiv 17, IS98, tialns will 'cave Hcinnton us fol lows For Caibnndule 0 10, 7."., S.r.3, 10 IS a. in ; U noon, 1 Jl, .i, 3 M. 5 L'3, C 2", 7 G7, 9.1', 11 00 . m ; 1 10 a m. Fo.' Albanj, ft.ii.uo8i, Mont'eal, Poston, New England points, etc., G.'iO a. iu ; 2.J0 ii. m. For Honcsdule. 0 'JO. f i", 10.11 a. m ; 52 P0 nuon, L2U, 3.'-j p m. For Wilkes-Uaiie. U 43, 7.30, S 43, !' SS, J0 45 a in, 12 03, J.J, '.".'I, J JJ, 4 11, COO, 7.50, 10 23, 11 .10 p in. For New VoiJs, Philadelphia, etc, via Lehigh Valley i.ill'-oad, 0 43, 7 30 u. in; 12 03. 2.21, 111 p. in. iwlth Illack Diamond Entebs), 1130 p. in. Foi Pf nnsylvjnlu Hallioad joints, G43 6 3S a in , 2 21, 141 p. rn. For Western points, via Lehlgn Val ley Hallioad. 7 3d a. in , 12.0.3, ?..Z", iwlth Hhuk Diamond Epiess), 10 23, 11 ?0 p. ifi. Tialns will atilve Scianton as fol lows. Fiom Cathondale and the north, 0.40, 7 43, 8 40, 9 34, 10.40 a. in ; 12 00 noon, 1 2C, 2 18, 3 2.3, 4 37, 5 43, 7.45, 10.25, 11.27 p m. From Vv'llkes-Eatie and tho south, c ir, 7.r,o. S.30, 10 10, ll C5 a. m ; 1 16, 2 14, 146, S.20, C21, 7 53, i),03, D.43 p, m.; 1.13 a. in. Verdict in the J.nrklu Case. The coionet's Jury In the case of Thomas Larkln, who was found dead on Luzerne etieet, last night heard the lesult of the autopsy and then re turned a vet diet to the eftect that death was caubed by alcoholism und expo sure. Doctored Nino Ycnrs for Totter. Mi. James Castou, merchant, of Wllkes-Harre, Pa,, writes. "For nine yeais t have been dlsflguied with Tet ter on my hands and face. At last I havo found n. euio In Di. Asnow's Ointment. Tt helped mo from tho first application and now I am permanently cured." Sold by Matthnws Bros. 15. Uudanum, ctc. ONLY PERFECT HOME CURE IN THE WORLD. ABSOLUTELY PAINLESS. TRIAL BOTTLE FREE. WHITE U IN CONUBINCI. ST. PAUL ASSOCIATION, tO BROADWAY, NCW YORK, ifJRPH NE DUFFY'S PURE HISKEY FOR MEDICINAL USE NO FUSEL OIL The best possible cure for dys pepsin. It gently stimulates the stomach and thus helps it to do its work, Sold by all druggists nnd grocers. Send for lllus. l'tnnphlct. DUFFY MALT WHISKEY CO,, Kochcstcr, N. Y. TREATED OF THREE GREAT SUBJECTS Judge Freeman 0. Willcy Lectures at Albright Library. HAD A VERY SMALL AUDIENCE Itc Discusses 'Tlio Ministry of ' Thought, "" l'hc Langungo ol Un rest" and "Tho Struggle of lain" from n High Economic Standpoint. First Tinio tho lccturo Was liver Dellvcrod--Somo of tho Idons Ho Advanced. Only about half a bundled peoplo weie at the Albright library last night t8 hear the lecture by Hon. Freeman O. Wllley, of Oiange, N. J., on "An Hour With Three Great Questions' It was an audience, however, that could appreciate the lectin e for all that it vv a.s vv orth. Judge Wllley has attained some fame as a student of economics and has writ ten a ciulte widely read book on the subject of capital and labor. He has, however, as et failed to make him self able to entertain as a lecturer on economics if his effort last night Is taken as a crlteilon. Much allowance has to be made for the fact that it was the flist time the lecture was ever de livered; that it is a ditllcult task to ticat enteitalnlngly of so much In such little time, and last, but not least, that the audience waa not one, numer ically, that would call out any man's best efforts. A little of everything and not much quantity undei stood of anything aptly descilbes the lectute The three sub jects which the lectin er essayed to treat of weie "The Ministry of Thought," "The Language of Unrest" and "The Stiuggle of Life." DON'T THINK FOR THHMSHLVES. Under the fiifat heading he contended that peoDle of the busy today are all too pi one to allow themselves to be can led along by the tide of public sentiment; that theie are not enough people doing their own thinking. Our yeais aie too few to permit us to do mote than merely skim over the great Iiumber of subjects that ciowd them selves on our attention. Theie are not enough who even skim over, let alone probe into the .subjects that present themselves for solution The rugged exercise of our own ment al powers, the lecturer thought is what Is needed rather than butdening our selves with the thoughts of others, no matter how sublime these thoughts may be geneially esteemed. Profes sors and prelates laughed at Columbus' Idea and the school philosophers said impossible when Franklin advanced his theoiy of harnessing electricity. Think ing should be stimulated. It Is not enough to go through life as we went thiough school for the most pait learn ing to think and act as others did. Under the second division of his lec tuie he defined umest us being of two kinds healthy unrest, which is only another way of describing active desire of Improvement, and the unnatural un rest which fills hearts with souovv and nation, with grief, the unrest that would thrust aside, hastily, piesent Institutions and substitute without proper thought, othei untiled institu tions. POPULAR OPINIONS DANGCROCS Popular opinion, the lecturer held. Is dangeiously wrong In this rebpett, and partlculaily In I elation to the subject of capital and lubor It docs not real ize the oneness of their Interests, their interdependence. Capital, he argues, cannot profit by the Impovetlshment of labor; labor benefits when capital thrives. Inequality in ownership of propel ty has made our piesent civili zation. It is aggiegated wealth that makes employment of labor possible. The main thought advanced In the discussion of "The Struggle of Life" was "Sweet are the uses of adversity," or, as the lectuier very cleveily put It, "A calni sea never made a skillful mailner " COMMON PLEAS COURT. Jury in Case ot Edwards & Barthold Pilchard l'nilcd to Agree. Theie weie stiong hopes that the very careful, exhaustive and thorough trying which tha case of Edwards & Uarthold against Martha Pltchard ie ceived this week would result In the common pleas dockets being finally rid of it. These hopes were, however dis pelled yesterday afternoon when the Jury after being out twenty-four hours returned and repotted that they could not agree. They weie discharged, and the case will, doubtlessly, come up at the next term for its fifth trial, Mis. Prltchard gave Edwards & Barthold a $200 Judgment note to se cure n, debt which tho Prltchards owed for gtocerlcs and other things. She Is now trying to dodge Its )iyment on tho ground that she can not make herself liable for a debt which, she con tends, was contracteu by her husband, and, becondly, because the note, she alleges, -was modified by the Insertion of "with Intel em" after she had signed it. In tho cas of Hovvley Ujothers against It. E, Hurley the Jury jester day morning rturned a verdict of $370 In favor of the plaintiff, which is $50 less than tho amount claimed. Tho caso of Farrar & Trefts will go to the. Jury today, Arguments for the plaintiff were made yesterday after noon hy Carpenter und Fleltz, while Major Wairen and Hon. C, P. O'Malley, YTT MIL Vt WEr'otfc of Wlllard, Warren & Knapp, closed for tho defense. Tho Jury in the caso of Hrldgct Mc Donald against Joseph McNamara nnd May McNamara had not returned a Verdict at adjournment. WEEK'S LIST EXHAUSTED Cases Argued Before Superior Court. Counties from Which Appeals Will Be Heard Next Week. Tho end of tho first vveek'H supeiloi' coutt list was reached yesterday at noon und tho Judges went Into consul tation after adjourning court until Monday morning at 11 o'clock. Three Lackawanna cases wcro he'jrd yesterday morning. The first two were argued Jointly, tho parties In ieach ac tion being tho same. One caBe was that of William Koch against Catharine Ulesecker and Hnvln Uleseckor, the other, that of Catharine BIttenbender against Catharine Blesecker, Ervvln Hlesecker nnd William Koch. Cathar ine Ulesecker Ib Erwin, Blesecker's mother. They work adjoining farms in Madison township. The mother bor lowed $173 from Koch and $325 from Catharine Hlttenbender. The son signed both notes as co-surety. When execution was had on the notes he camo Into court with the plea that his suretyship was not binding ns he had received no valuablo considera tion. Judge Edwaids refused to open tho judgment to allow him to enter a defense, saying In a meaningful way: "The contention of tho defendant, Ervvln Hlesecker, does not command itself to our favorable consideration. We do not think he Is entitled to any relief at our handB." He thereupon took an appeal. Incidentally it might be remarked that Koch Is also apply ing In the local courts for a lule to open Judgment as to him. Vosbutg & Dawson appeared for Hlesecker, and E. C. New comb opposed them. The final caso was that of W. E. Barnes against the Bonta. Plate Glass company, appellant. It is a test case brought by a number of employes who vvoiked about the Bonta Plate Glass vvoiks, while the building and machin ery was In course of construction and during the early days of the operation of the plant when tests were under way. The company made the defense that it did not take control of the works until after these men had fin ished their labors and weie discharged and fuither that Bonta waB to deliver the plant over to the company free of all Incumberances. The plaintiff se cured Judgment for his full claim in the lower court. '. Comegys argued T or the appellant, and Vosbutg & Daw son for Barnes. Next week will be devoted to the heating of appeals from Monroe, Car bon, Wyoming, Bradford, Susquehan na, Wayne and Pike counties. There are only seven on the list. For morbid conditions take BBECH AM'S PILLS. Klondike Gold. Mr James I. McCullough, an exper ienced miner who has lived In Alaska for several years and is thoroughly familiar with the Yukon River terri tory and the supplies needed, Is or ganizing and will personally accom pany a special party to leave Buffalo via the Nickel Plate road, on Tuesday, February Sth, 1S98. Mr. McCullough's long experience In Alaska enables him to glvo reliable Information on all matters pertaining to the trip and after reaching the gold fields. For rates and all Information, ad dress James L. McCullough, or F. J. Moore, general agent, Buffalo, N. Y. FELS-NAPTHA soap helps to home comfort. Makes washing easy, does clean ing quickly. Use luke warm water in cold weather. FELS & CO., Philadelphia. Dyspepsia, Heartburn, Gas- trltts and alt Stomach Disor ders positively cured. Qrover Urabam's Dys pepsia Hemedy is a sueclflc. One doso re- ' moves nil distress, and a permanent cure of i the most chronic, uml sovera cases Is guaran teed. Do not sutler I A OO-ceut bottle will convince tho most skeptlcul. Matthtns Ilios., Druggists, S20 Lacka- waoau avenue. TODAY'S BIG SHOE BARGAINS For Today Only We Have Placed on Sale 185 Pairs Ladies' Kangaroo Calf Patent Tip Button Shoes, all sizes, worth $1.75, at 98c 76 Pairs Ladies' $1,50 Shoes, sizes 3 and 3, at 49c and 75c 48 Pairs Misses' Grain Shoes at 49c 76 Pairs Child's Lace Shoes, sizes 9 to 13, at 46c 175 Pairs Men's Embroidered Slippers, all sizes, at , 49c 250 Pairs Ladies' Felt Fur-Lined Juliet, worth $1 a pair, all size's, at 69c 175 Pairs Misses' Dongola Button aud Lace Shoes, all sizes, worth $1.90, for ;. 59c Men's Shoes at 98c Boys' Shoes at 79c Youths' Shoes at 69c The above are only a few of the many bargains. Come early. MlER DAVIDliW, Lackawanna Avenue. Acknowledged Cheapest Wholesale and Retail Shoa House, 'VyvxyaTVlaW . LAMPS SdUVT LAHPS sdwvn uot purely orna mental, but with good burning ma terials. Our prices will in terest you. Miliar & Peck 131 Wyoming Ave. "Walk iu and look aionnd." QVkVIV OAlviiiiiiixiOAiivliJ iOf 1 1 Course 1 We expected a ready response to our sale of pianos. More came than we had any idea would come. Every day we aie adding new piano bar gains to take the place of the ones picked up by fortunate buyers. For today we offer two splendid values: Lester Pianos Fine $400 Les ter upright piano, slightly but otherwise new complete 5 . Miopwoin, sood as with stool and cover, $225. Another Bargain Very hand some bin! walnut up right piano old reliable Weser make full sue 3 pedals cost less than two years ago, $ 375. Selling now to the first comer for $145. 1 THE REXFORD CO. 303 Lackawanna Ave, & 1 There nro TOILET and Toilet Sets, some are sold cheaper, some are sold for more than the prices we are quoting below. 6 piece set, neat de- d -y signs Pl.Oy 6 piece set, gold decora- 1 gQ tions I.VO 10 piece set, 3 colors and gold stiple, 10 patterns to select from. This is the one that worries our com- 4 fxr, petitors 4Z.Vo 10 piece set, Harvard shape dec orations of roses, honey suckles and geraniums, 3 patterns, with gold dj and stipled edge... PO4.V HlopJnr to match $1.10. 12 piece set, solid blue body with gold and tint df fQ decorations. ...... pV."0 See the most com plete housefurnish ing department in the city. Down stulrs, THE GREAT 4c. STORE 310 Lackawanna Ave. J. H. LADWIQ. EH EXISKID WITHOUT PAIN Hv the ne of mv new local anncsthette. No sleep-producing agent. It Is simply pplled tot 10 coma and tho tooth extracted without a particle or pain. All other dental opeiuttous perfoimed posi tively without pulu. U Ukl WARRANTED 5 YEARS. These ara tho Mimo teeth other dentist ruaigefiom $l(i to ?'J5uset for TEETH WITHOUT PLATES. Gold and Poicelnin Crowns; Gold, 8iler and Cement MUlngs, at one-half tha usual coHt. i:umluutioii free. Open evenings 7 to 8. Uuudays 0 to 1 1 a, ra. I 316 Spruce Street, Next Door to Hotel Jermyn. K I M KIIVSBAL.L PIANO L L To those who are not acquainted with the standing of tho W. W. Kimball Co., the following will prove ot beneflU REPORT. Business established In 1S59 by W. W. Kimball. Incorporated June, 1ES2, with capital ot JOOO.OOO. Capital Increased in January, 18S?, to $1,000,000. Capital lucieased from 11,000,000 to 1, 200.000. Statement, January, 1800, showed sur plus of over 51,000,000 overpaid in capital. The company Is known as a first-class house In Its line and Is In high commer cial standing. If competitor say the Kimball guar antee Is not good, ask them for a mer cantile report of their company and Bee how It compares with the above. GEORGE II. IVES, General Agent, 0 West Market Htreet, Wllke-llarre. W. S. F00TB, Local Agent, 1'2'2 I'nfe I'luce, Hcrnnton, fa. SETS III 85 (" I -.A..,4-&L-Li.u , A i-i.