THE SCllANTON TlilHUttE-FIttDAr, JUNE 3, 0.808. C?e cranfon fcrCBune rubllnheil Dally, Kxcsnt Sunday, by tho Tribune rubllaulng (Jompnny, nt fitly Cents Month. The Tribune's telegraphic news is from three to five hours fresher than that of any Philadelphia or New York paper circulated" in its field. Those papers go to press at midnight; The Tribune receives news up to 3 a. m. and sometimes later. All the news in The Trib une while it is new. New York Ofllce: lfiO KnMtui St., H. H. VUKKl.ANn, Hole Agent for Foreign Advertising. JMrilKD AT THE I'OTTOFPICR AT WnANTON, I'A.i AS SECONn-CLASS MAIL MATTRIt. SCHANTON, Jt'NE 3, 1S9S. REPUBLICAN NOMINATIONS. statu. Goveinor-WIl.UAM A. STONII. a.kMitpimnt iinvcnior-j. i. h. oomx. Secretary of Internal Affulrs-JAMES W. I.A'l'TA. j.ii1rp r Pupoiior Coin t-w. w. rcit- TKH. CollRrpsstncn nt - I.arRf SAMl'EI. A. DAVENl'CHT, UAM'SUA A. UllUW. fpc;ll!iliVi. First DIstrlct-JOItN It. FAItH. Fourth Dlstrlct-JOIIN K. 15UYNOI.D3. Tlio raiiUl llro oanipalKii orntots will toon be In position for fcrvli-o. - - The Nominee Tor Governor. ' In smother plnco will lo found nn intcrcsthiK biographical sketch of the gentleman yesterday nominated at HanlslnirK for the ofllce of governor of the commonwealth. From this It will he seen that Colonel William Alexis Stone Is a man of humble origin, patriotic aspiration in time of war, and varied but honorable experi ence as a civilian. On battle Held and in halls of legislation he hns ben en terprising and progressive, und the success which has como to him lias been aggressively fought for and won in the stand-up-and-tnke-your-medi-cino fashion which rarely falls to com mand the applause of our plain Ameri can citizenship. The Tribune, ere the lists were closed, opposed tho nomination of Colonel Stone, not on personal ground but honestly and boldly ns a matter of partv expediency. After an open debate wo were fairly overruled by u majority of the men whose commis sions from the Republican mnssis in Pennsylvania gave them the right to pass judgment concerning this mat tor; and we therefore bow without bitterness to the majority's will. Col onel Stone will bt desperately opposed, less on account of any personal shoit comlngs than because of the factional company he keeps: and what might have been a walk-over will In all prob ability become a hand-to-hand contest covering ever:' square inch of terri tory In the state; but Republicans who recognize the nerosslty for party regu larity and who especially at this time appreciate the peculiar need of un diminished Republican loyalty In view of obllcntlons due to the national ad ministration In Its ordeal of war will gird themselves for the light, sacrific ing minor and perhaps temporary ob jections for the benellt of the larger principles at stake. To those who have supported the can didate of Lackawanna county during tho recent canvass we offer our con gratulations. They did not win, but they showed irreproachable judgment. - - - . .. When we remember Lafayette, we forget all about the silly French news papers tliat lovo Spain. France and Spain. That the general situation in Europe Is ginve, graver than it has been nt any time ince the Germans crossed tho Rhine and laid France under the Iron heel of Prince Ulsnuirck. Is ad mitted by diplomats and publicists. That some secret understanding has been arrived at between France and Spain, there is every reason to believe. The rumors of such an alliance are persistent, and their singular per!s toncy -connects plausibility with the political situation In both countries. France has found out the unreality and unsubstantlallty of her alliance with Russia. She has not prollted by the Muscovite absorption of Monchuria, one of the richest and most fertile provinces of China, by the annexation of some other portion of the Celestial empire, if not of equivalent value, at least such as she might be supposed to participate In, in a nominal division in an adventure in which both coun tries were believed to go partners mutually. If national alliances are worth anything. France has supplied Russia with the money which makes the terminus of the Siberian railway possible at Port Arthur. The money ot Frenchmen will be employed also in the developement of the Immeasurable resources of Manchuria. The limitless wealth of this continental province Is practicably unrealizable. It contains n population of over twenty-two mil lions of an Industrious, frugal enlight ened population who only requite good government to develop into ot.e of the finest peasantry on the earth. It Is rich in coal, Iron ore, and the precious minerals, while Its vast foiests are sources of immense potential wealth. France had the money which Hussiu needed to develop Manchuria, and as poon as the Incongruous alliance was formed, or believed to be formed. French wealth (lowed in streams into tho depicted coffers of tho czar's treas. ury. Whllo the security is good, Frnnr tin ' rprl''l nn tnnvlbla return, Hut neither Nicholas II or his advisers are ungrateful to Frantc or unmindful of obligations which their country lies tinder to tho French re public. Russia Is not prepared to aid France to recover her lost pro Inoui from (lermnny. Short of thla she is willing to give her all the moral if not material aid she can; and the moral support of Russia Is a dominating fac tor In European politics. Since the era of Napoleon Honaparte It has been the consistent policy of Franco to make the Mediterranean a European lake. Italy has for genera tions been too poor nnd distracted to frustrate the plans of France. Tuikey, so long ns she held the Ucophorcu.t. did not pay any pnrtlcular attention to what was going on In the .Levant and Russia was cooped up' In the Hlnck sea. England was the only country that balked her Inordinate nm bit Ion. She held (Jlbrnltar, which com mands the entrance to the Medltetra nenn at tho one end nnd dictated the policy of the sublime poite which con trolled the key of the Levant at the other end. Todny England's predomin ance In the Mediterranean la greater than It was ever before. She now holds Egypt as well an Gibraltar, white her only port on the great Inland sea !s Marseilles. Algiers faces Gibraltar and nil the formications 01 this French colonial possession are be!le,ved to be Impregnable. However, a battle ship can pass both the forts on the Algerian coant and the batteries on the rock of Gibraltar out of range vt the guns on each fortification. They are, of course, of Immense strategetleal value otherwise. There is Morocco over which Spain exercises 11 nominal sovereignty nnd on the coast of which she has a few forts. The sultan of Morocco holds his tenure of the throne im his brother of Constantlnoii" dos through the Jealousy of the European Christian powers. The Canary Islands and Ceuta In the Atlantic belong to Spain. They are of singularly little use to her. Having lost Cuba nnd the Philippines, Spain would probably sell them to France. She must do something of the kind. A bankrupt nation can no more carry on Its busi ness than a bankrupt shopkeeper. Money Spain must have and the sale of these Islands to a wealthy and friendly country like France aftel the ehaiiBtlon of a great war she could accomplish without degradation of her Castlllnn pride nnd dignity. There Is on? thliit; icrtaln, Englind would never ol'uw Ir.ince to acquire the islam.s by concession or purchaT without drawing the nword. These beautiful islands nre a favorite resort of Englishmen during the winter months. Iirltlsh capital Is almost the sole source of Investment in these Islands. This is of course a matter of no cause for Intervention, as capital Is ns secure under the regime of one country ns another. The islands are, however, of great strategetleal Import ance to Great llritnin. They are on the direct road to HritUsh West African possessions and to India and Australia by the Cape of Good Hope route. Tn fact they hold the commanding position In the Atlantic that the Hawaiian isl ands do in the Pacific. Perhaps Spain bellees that we will take possession of them permanently ortempornrlly. If we should deem it necessary to do so, and the necessity may exist, we should incur tho nbldlng if not active inter vention, of France. It Is certain that we should not n'low France to occut y the Canaries until at any rate after tho close of the war no more than Eng land. It may be that England and the Tailed States will have to co-operate to prevent her from doing so as th London Chronicle suggests. Rus sia would gladly see the trl-color wav ing over the Canaties. It would re lieve her of the pretensions of France In the far east. Slnco the government silenced Syl vester Scovel, the rest of the business ought to be easy. . 1 0 Omaha Exposition. The Trans-MlssIsslppl exposition, which Is now open to the public, is evidently destined to a most cuccess ful season. There Is no question that the enterprise Is entitled to support upon the basis of genuine merit, nnd when It Is remembered that the pro ject has been carried through to a successful termination In spite of the war nnd many other things to claim the attention ot the citizens of Omaha as well as other portions of the coun try, endorsement of the project be comes almost a duty. Although no attempt has been made to rival the great World's fair at Chicago, or the Philadelphia centen nial, all agiee that within the limits which it has plainly outlined the Omaha exhibition J one of the most complete and comprehensive of its class and Is thoroughly representative of the enterprise of the great west. The people of Nebraska, who have perfected the plans that have boon car ried out so successfully nre deserving of grent credit for their pluck and per severance aitd It Is to be hoped that their efforts will be substantially rec ognized by liberal patronage. Tho change of European opinion to ward tho Vnlted States will doubt less do much In the way of bringing Spain to her t-i'twes. Many of the governments that were free to give Spain advice and sympathy at the be ginning of the present unpleasantness have evidently come to the conclusion that it Is not wlso to antagonize the American republic. It has already dawned on the minds of the leaders that the forces against Spain are too much to bo withstood. When the mob enn be made to understand that no help need be expected from the na tions of Europe, It is likely that they will be willing to give up tho unequal struggle that can only bring Ignomin ious defeat. Our esteemed contemporary, the Phil adelphia Press, in Its convention re port of yesterday, says Mr. Council threw his delegates to Stone.' This Is inaccurate. When he saw that his own candidacy stood no show, Mr. Connell released the Lackawanna delegates from all obligations and they followed their own preferences on second choice. "Hutch" Weyler will probably charter the "Gussle" vhn hft invades the United Stntwt. THE NOMINEE POR GOVERNOR Dusy Career of Colonel William A. Slonc, of Allegheny. HIS LIKE AS A SOLDIER, STATES MAN AND CIVIL! AN-A PRIVATE IN THE UNION ARMY AT THE AGE OF SEVENTEEN - AS TEACHER AND LAWVEUIHS CAREER IN CONCIRESS. Pittsburg, Juno 2. William A. Stone is 11 self-made man. Ills father, Israel Stone, waw a small fanner in Delmnr township, Tioga county, nnd here the prospective governor was born, on April 18, 1846. Here he spent his childhood and early youth, attend ing to tho drudgery of farm life unci eagerly securing the rudiments of an education at the district school during the winter. With his four brothers ho worked upon tho farm until tho out break of the war, when the thtee elder brothers enlisted und went to the front. Ho was then too young to en list, but In August, 1SG.1, he, with half a dozen other lads, wno were members of a cadet corps, illled with a feverish enthusiasm to fight for the Union, ran away to Harrlsburg nnd enlisted. Ills father, finding It dllllcult to work the farm alone, decided tliat his son might be spared from the country's service for the time being at any rate, and secured his discharge through Senator Simon Cameron's efforts. Hut parental discipline could not re strain the boy's patriotic desire to light for his country, in the following Feb ruary, not having renched his 18th year, he again enlisted, this time gnlng as a private In Company A, One Hun dred nnd Eighty-seventh Pennsylvania volunteers, a company which had com pleted a service of six months and was then going In for the rest of the wnr. His father made no further attempts to Interfere, as he had come to realize that the lad was prompted by some thing deeper than mere boyish fancy for a soldier's life. And so the young man was ordered to the front with his regiment. While on his way south he becaino sick and was taken to the Carver hospital In Washington. REAL SERVICE. In response to the call for volunteers to man the defences of Washington against the expected nttack of Dreck enridge and Early, young Stone quit the hospital and then saw his first real service. Ho was in the engagement at Yellow House, or Six-Mile Run, Au gust 18, the siege of Petersburg from August l'. to September 22, later in the fall of that year going with his command to do duty at Camp Cadwal ader, Philadelphia. He was promoted through tho grades of petty olllcers up to that of second lieutenant, which he received on March 10, lbOJ. He was mustered out of service with his company on August 3, 1SGJ. After the war was over Governor Hnrtranft commissioned him assistant ndjutant general of the Thirteenth division, Na tional Guards, with the rank of lieu tenant colonel. Uefore entering the nrmy, like the sons of most poor farmers, young Stone hnd attended school but Irregu larly. After he was mustered out he went back to the farm and continued to help his father, attending the Wells boio academy dining the fall term of 1SCS and teaching at a district school In winter. TEACHER AND LAWYER. In 1SC6 he went to the Mansfield State Normal school, graduating from that Institution in 186S. He had a hard struggle to make both ends meet in those days, and while attending the Normal school he "did chores" for his keep. On obtaining the much-prized diploma he secured a position as teacher In the Wellsboro academy, and began the study of law In the ofllce of Stephen F. Wilson and .1. H. Nlles, of that town. Itvo years later he was admitted to the bar.and at once opened an ofllce In Wellsboro, which then had about 1,200 Inhabitants. It Is needless to say that clients did not flock to the young lawyer, and it required close management nnd phil osophy to keep the future congress man in food, clothes nnd good spirits. But he stuck it out. Clients came graduTflly; he took an Interest In poli tics, and in 1S74 made a successful fight for the Republican nomination for district attorney for Tioga county. Ho was elected, the term being for three years. At the end of two years, however, he resigned and moved to Pittsburg, and In 1S77 opened nn ofllce at No. 70 Grant street. After tlnee nnd a half years of successful practice he was appointed United States attor ney for the Western district of Penn sylvania by President Hayes on July C, 1SS0. He was ro-nppolnted tothls ofllce by President Arthur, but was removed by President Cleveland be cause of some speeches he made in the Heaver gubernatorial campaign. Col onl Stone then resumed his private practice, IN CONGRESS. In June, 1S90, he was nominated for congress In place of the late Thomas M. Payne, who declined after rocelv ing tho nomination from the conven tion. The action of the convention In selecting Colonel Stone instead of George Shlra, third, who had been Colonel Hayne's opponent for tho Re publican nomination, was severely criticised, nni considerable feeling was stirred up. As a result Colonel Stone wrote a letter to the chairman of tho county committee declining the nomin ation given him by the convention and asked for primaries to get at the desires of the Republican voters In regard to the congressional nomination, These primaries resulted in a victory for Col onel Stone after a hard fight of three months. Since then ho has had prac tically no opposition for tho congres Hionnl nomination, nnd Is now serving hl fourth term In the house. Colonel Stone has made a good record In congreas. s a member of the River and Harbor committee he at once be gan the work which Is now resulting In the improvement of the Allegheny river. Vie obtained a survey of tho liver with a view of making It navi gable to Franklin, and has followed out this project with unflagging zeal, until now threo dams nre authorize'! and the money appropriated for their construction. His purpose is to slack wnter tho Allegheny river, and then by the Improvement of French Creek to Mendvlllo ond from there by canal to Lake Erie, connect the cities of Erie and Pittsburg by wnter transportation. The success of this plan Is already as sured, ns tho government Is commit ted to it by largo appropriations al ready made. THE SUNDAY DILL. Colonel Strino's services have, by no means been conllned to his own con stituency. They have been nntlonnl In their scope. One ot his notable achieve- mntifa tn nntin-nma nfnd .lllflncf ll In see- oM term. Tho bill jirovldlnp for a rov- rrnment appropriation lor ui uouub Tfnt nt iii,i-,n mnu ittt fnv .mtli in. i 11 1 v nil life U vaiin i - - Colonel Stone Immediately offered an nmondtnont providing tnar ine appro priation should be available only on condition that the directors agree to close tho fair on Sundnys. The proposition Vat bitterly fought 1v tnntiu nf t,rt eoatnril members. lUt It was carried nevertheless. For this Cellncl Stone secured me inanicn 01 thousands of rlrruvmcn nnil cnurcn- goers, not only In Pennsylvania, but throughout tho country, no rcceieu nintu, fnu..1iillnu nt thnllltS from t'O- llglous bodies of every denomlnntlon. in which he was generally nnweii u "the champion of the American Sab bath" IMMIGRATION. An n tiirmiimi- nt the Judiciary com mittee of the Fifty-third congress ho gave tho friends ot restricted imniigi"- tlnn I111W.I, nnmlirnpitmptlt llV SCCUrlllg the passage of his bill through the house. Falling to get the immigiuuon committee to report It, ho had It re- rl mil tn lilu iwn nnilimlttCC 1)V ConSCUt of the house, obtnlned a favorable to- r,rf ii it nrwi tmil It on the caieiniar linfnrn tlin enemies of the measure WCt'O aware of his purpose. Then they bent .... ... 1... ..inlnhlm, every errort to ucieai 11, " "v' his opportunity, one day, when its one mlcs had gone over to the senate to hear Senator Hill speak, ne passed u. Vnr,l ivnu Mont to Ills opponents, but when they rushed back to the hou3e, they were too late. 'Phis gave- the Stone bill great prom inence, Colonel Stone has worked hard since he first went to congress to se cure the passage of a law to restrict I'liniitrriiHoti. nnd It was mainly through his efforts that a bill was passed through the house last congress. This bill hnd been vetoed by President Cleveland, and wivn it came back Into M,n Iwinse. fn imp Hlone loci mc uK"t The chairman of the Immigration com mittee did all he cou'ci to prcvnui m passage, but the bouse voted with Colonel Stone and inssed It over the president's veto. He la known and re cognized as n lender In the cause of re stricted Immigration, not only In con gress, but throughout the country. FRIEND OF REED. The standing and position of the members of congress nre shown by the o-mmltteps. The committee on appro priations Is the second, If not the first, committee la the house. In tho organ ization of the Fifty-fourth congress Speaker Reed did a very unusual thing. He placed Colonel Stone on the Appro priation committee, although Pennsyl vania already had one representative on it. This was done In acknowledge ment of his worth and fitness, and In recognition of his position as one of the leaders of the house. Although he may not be called nn orator, yet he is a plain, sensible talk er, and speak' with great oarr-ostness and to the point. Always good nntur ed, he is yet aggressive, and does not shrink from a light. PRIVATE LIFE. HI? private diameter Is unquestion ed. He delights In the quiet of his fam ily, and spends his evenings with his wife and children. Colonel Ston" is .1 Presbytetian.having joined that church before he left Tioga county, while quite a young man THE MEN KUIIINO THE CJUNS 1. A t'leor and salute tor tlic Admiral and here's to the Captain bold, And never torget the Commodore's debt when the deeds ot might are told! They stand to the ileeK thro' the battle s wreck when the great sheila roar and screueh And t.ever they fear when the foe la near to practice what they preach; Hut otf with your h.it and thtee times cheer for Columbia's true-blue sons, The men below who batter the loo the men behind the guns! 11. Oh, light and merry of heart aro they when trey swing into port onco more, When, with more than enough of tlio "green-backed stuff," they start tor their leave-o'-shore; And you'd think, perhips, that the blue- blouaed tiiaus wtio loi along tho street Aro a tender bit, with salt on It, for some flerco "mustache" to eat Some warrior bold, with straps of gold, who dazzles and fairly stuns The modest worth ot the pallor boys tho lads who serve tlio guns. 111. Hut say not a word till the shot is heard that tells the lljht 13 on. Till, the long deep roar grows more nnd more from the the ships of "Yank ' and "Don," Till over the deep the tempests sweep ot llro and bursting thell, And tho veiy air Is a mad Despair In the throes of a living hell; Then down, deep clown, in the mighty ship, unseen by the midday suns, You'll llnd the chaps who aro giving tho reps tho men behind tho guns! 1 IV. Oh, well they know how tho cyclones Mow that they looso from their clcud of death. And they know is heard tho thunder word their fierce ten-tneher salth! Tlio steel decks rock with the llshtnlns shock, und shako with the great re coil, And tho sea grows red with the blooo or tho deau end reaches for Its spoil Hut not till tho fco has gone below or turns his prow 1 nd nuis, Shall tho voice of peace hrlng sweet ic- leaso to tho men behind the guns! John J. Rooney, In tho New York Sun. CHINA and Ii CarloM tolls, Vv'o have Just received another built car load of White and Decorated China nnd Porcelains, and can now show you the latest designs and decorations in Dinner, Tea nnd Toilet Sets nt prices that can only bo made when goods aro bought in largo quantities and direct from tho manufacturer. CiEMMS, EERBER, ALLiEY CO. 42U I,oWnwanna Aveniia GOLDSMITirS IE?, rlday, argmn Children's Ready-Hade Percale Dresses, an handsome new styles 25 cents Friday only. Second Floor. Our entire stock of Wide Fancy Ribbons at about naif price 25c per yard. Main Floor. Scotch Plaid Tarn O'Shanter Caps, with Plume and Buckle, 35 cents. Main Floor. Ladles' Fine Tailor-Made The prettiest and Floor. Floor. Basememt Bargains 2 cents per yard will buy Toweling worth 5 cents. 3 cents per yard will buy beautiful Challies worth 6 cents. 34 cents per yard will buy the best Calicos worth 6 cents. 4 cents will buy Outing Flannels worth 8 cents. 6 cents will buy the finest Dress and Waist Ginghams worth J2 cents. 5 cents per yard will buy Dress Trimmings worth 25 to 30 cents. 6 cents will buy English Flannelettes worth 32 cents. 3 cents will buy Ladies' Ribbed Vests worth 8 cents. 39 cents will buy Ladles' Ruffled Skirts worth 75 cents. Lewis, Rellly & DavJeSo ALWAYS DU3Y. 75 THE SALE 35 ON. HUJIMElt FOOTWEAR. IT IS NO FEAT TO FIT YOUH FDKT IN OUK SXOHBi. WE ARU FlTTlirtS OF FEET. LeyIs, Rely & Itevles, 114 AND III! WYOMING AVENUE. MILL k COMEIX 121 N. Washington Ave. BRASS BEDSTEADS. In buying n brass UocUtead, bo sura that j-ou get tho best. Our brai3 Iiedstcadi are all made with iiearuless brats tubtnz and frame work Is all of steal. They coat no more than many bedsteads made of the open seamless tublrj;. Every bedstoad Is highly finished and lncquerad under a peculiar method, nothing ever hav ing been produced to equal It. Our now Spring Patterns are now on exhibition. & ConeeH At 121 North Washington Avoaua. Scranton, Pa. f OOTE & SHEAR CO. SPECIAL SALE. SPECIAL I'MUES. For a few days only on GALVANIZED ASH CANS, GALVAN1ZITD CMtllAGE OAN8 (articles shown In store window marUedvn pluln figure. CCafHCHizSfc-dirr-r-T s- -r" - Q FUME & SiEAH CO., ID N, Washlnclon avo, "lis. mi UsiaaL Day Suits, reduced from best Foulard Silks, (See Are Yom Prepared for tHne Chaoge ta the Weather ? We have a full line of LIGHT WEIGHT CLOTHING, the product of only the best makers in America. You will have but little difficulty in finding. what you need, if you will visit our store. in FIMLEY'S i) raraso and This season's parasols are so dainty and pretty that we feel sure you will have more than an or dinary Interest in Our First Opening -AnnoMncemenlt especially when we say that our stock never was so attractive as at pres ent, comprising every thing new and desirable in Fine 551k Coaching, Roman and Bayadere Stripes, Checks, Plaids and Changeables, Black and White Indias, with and without Chiffon Ruf fles, and the newest ef fects in Mourning, with plain hem-stitched or Moire edge. In Umbrellas We are showing a most complete line of Black. Also all the desirable col ors and changeables; In cluding Green, Brown, Red, Blue and Purple, all mounted In the most ar tistic natural and fancy handles. Umbrellas re-covered while you wait. Covers to fit any size frame at oc, 65c, 75c, $1.00, etc. We also do re pairing on short notice. 510 and 512 LACKAWANNA AVENUE J IXJ' Mire BAZAAR. o1 25 to 50 per cent. Second Window), 45 cents. Mair MUCKLO w, CLOTHIERS, 41 Lackawanna PATRIOTIC STATIONERY Beautiful Dies of American and Cuba Flags Novelties Up to the Hinuti Stationery and Desk Supplies Of Every Description. With nil purchae amoimtln's to flfty cent! or oxer wo will iireseut one of tho Latest Maps of "Cuba" Reynolds Bros bTATIONKHS AND ENQKAVEttS, HOTEL JEUMYN BUILDINa 130 Wyonlns Avcutto. Wo carry tho largest lln of office supplies In Northeustcastern l'cuusylvaula. HENRY BELIN, JR., tieneial Agent for the Wyoinlnx district far wpin Miuintr, masting, Sporting, ttmolialeil ana the Hepaui.o Chemlc.il Company's MM EXPLOSIVES. fcnfety Fuse, Cnpi nnd Hxploderi. Koom 101 Connell UulUins. ejcrautou. AGENCIEA thos rorm JOHN 11. SMITH .tdON, W. E. MULLIUAN, PlttJtoa riymoutij Wllkes-Barr IT, PLEASANT 1 AT RETAIL. Coal ot tho bc3t quality for domestic us anil of all sizes, Including Duckwheat and Ilirdseyo, delivered In any part of th city, at tho lowest price. Orders rocalvul at tho office, first floor. Commonwealth building, room No. 6; tele-phono No, SC21 or at tho mine, tele, phono No. 27S, will bo promptly attended to. Dealers supplied at tho mine. WE 1 SI reiiEBo OAL