Ttltt SUKASTUaV T1UBUiNE-31UjNDAV. 'iiUJSE 13, 1898. V Published Dally, Except Rtinday. by tb Tribune Publishing Company, at Fifty Cents n 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 Office: lfto Nim HL( 8. H. VREELAND, Hole Agent for Foreign Advertising l.NTKREt) AT Tt!T. POHTOrFlCK AT WRANTOX, JA., A SECOND-CLASS MAIL MATTER. Frit ANTON. JCNI' 13. 1S9S. REPUBLICAN NOMINATIONS. stntu. Governor --WILLIAM A. STONK. Lieutenant Governor-J. I'. S. GOBIN. Secretary of Internal Affalrs-JAMES W. l.ATTA. Judge of Superior Court W. W. POR- TKR. Congressmen - nt - Large SAMl'l!. A. DAVENPORT, MALI'S! 'A A. GRUW. Lcplslntivr. First DIstrlct-JOHN R. FARR. Fourth DIstrlct-JOHN I. REYNOLDS. coLovr.ti sTovrc's 1'1,,1'itoiiji It will be my purprje when elected to 10 conduct mKef ut to win th" respect and Rood will of thc-e who lmvu opposed me as well us thnpe who h.ive when Tie their support. I thall he the coventor of the wholn i f ople of the tale. Abuses have undoubtedly gr-vvn up in the legis lature which mo neither the. f.iult of one party nor the other, but rather thJ growth of cuctrm. fi rtcessary Investi gations have been authorized by commit' teas, resulting In unnecessary expeiuc to the state. It will lie my care nnd pur pose to correct thEse. and o'her evils In so far as I have the power. !t will he my purpose while governor of IVnnsj Iv.iuia. as It has been m purpose In the public positions that I have held, with God's help, to discharge my whole duty. The people are greater than the parties to which they belong. I nm only Jealous of their favor. I shall only attempt to win their approval and my experience has taught me that that can best be done hy nn honest, modest, dully discharge of public duty. The stuff of which the Thirteenth Is composed was shown in the peti tion to Secretary Alger signed by every man In it praying for assignment to active duty. It Is this spirit which distinguishes real soldiers from drMS paraders. Colonel Coursen mav well feel proud to be at the head of such a regiment. Gambling Machines. Constable Timothy .Tones has with drawn from the prosecutions which he Instituted against a dozen or more saloon keepers In the city, who per mitted gambling machines to bo erected in their licensed premises. This action of Mr. Jones Is more serious than farcical, If administration of the laws of the commonwealth In Scrnnton has not been altogether abrogated. We trust that Is has not. Mr. .Jones says that the elzures were made by order of the coiut. We should now like to learn by whose orders he has under taken to "settle" these cases. The operation of gambling machines In saloons Is legal or It Is not, If slot machine? are- legal Constable Jones had no more right to take possession of them contrary to the wish of their owners than he would have had to see the whiskey or beer. It they are not lawful, the prosecutions should go on to the end. The evil senlt'd who first Invented the slot machines has much to answer for. The fact appears to be that penny or nickel-in-the-slot machines which might have served a useful purpose have fallen into disrepute. Kxcept for the weighing machines of this char acter the public has not taken kindly to the Innumerable devices to which this Ingenious Idea was put. Children have found out that better bargains can be secured in candles and chew ing gum ucross the counter; while grown up people regard them as childish. Their adaptation to gambling purposes was really so obvou that to see In it only a recent Innovation Is more than strange. The explanation perhars may be found In the fact that In other cities tho ward constables or their equivalents, whether policemen or deputy sheriffs, have a duty to perform and that the force of public opinion enable them and obliges them to act up to it, When the state do clares gambling prohibited. It is pro hlbited. It should he so here. It Is a fact which needs no very profound thought that while infrlng ments of laws which are allowed to go unpunished In Individual cases may take a long time to undermine social order, yet sooner or later greater evil follows the less. We have too much shirking of duty In this city by those who are appointed or elected to per form it. Citizens cannot afford to laugh at the antics of constables who look upon civic government as n Joke. If a fakir appeared at the corner of Washington Rvenue with three peas and a thimble, we know how short would be his shrift. Yet all the harm he could do In a month would fall very for short of that compassed by a single machine In a saloon an hour or two on pay night The first American flag permanently planted on Cuban soil wuh put there on Friday, June 10, by Color Sergeant nirhard Sllvey, of Company C. First nattallon of Marlnei. The first land ing of troops of occupation was made from the food ship Oregon, which had .. ...- n . Junt came 13,000 miles nround the Horn without losing n minute for repairs. These tiro facts which will pass Into history. General MoiTltt'n confidence thnt the Philippines will he held Is Increasingly Hhnrrrt hy public opinion. The Idea of embarking upon nn experiment In colo nisation undoubtedly exerts u steadily augmenting fascination. It touches the Imagination of t lit people. It may not tic wise: It may Involve consequen ces which the most far-sighted of our statesmen do not foresee, but It evi dently Is destiny. There Is apparently not one chance In ten million that the United States can escape It. Hence the wise thing Is to make the best of It. I'oultney BIrcIow's Latest. Poultney Rlgelow. undeterred by criticism, has returned to his attack upon the American nrmy, this time evincing somewhat better aim. He ar raigns the war department for Incom petence In executive work nnd for political Jobbery; h asserts that many of the best positions In the army have been filled as the result of political pull by men inferior In military experi ence and training, which not only pro duces Inefficiency at the top but also discouragement among the faithful nnd meritorious men In subordinate posi tion, who have to do the hard work without hope of sharing In the public recognition and rewards, nnd he pro ceeds' "What I the remedy? A very sim ple one. Treat our military machine as we treat any other great machine. Select the best men. pay them well, and. above all, Intrust the working of this vast enterprise to one manager. In the next place, the regular army should be made the nucleus for all ex pansion. The regular regiments should tlrst be rilled to their full strength, and new regiments can be created as fast ns they are needed. The men who have been good captains should bo raised to the next higher grade. The elllclent colonels should be given bri gades, If there are aspiring patriots who want to serve their country, let them enter the nimy at the foot of the ladder and work their way up." These suggestions embody practical wisdom, nnd the time is coming when they will force themselves upon the attentive consideration of the Ameri can people. For the present, the de feat of Spain; but for the near future, an overhauling of army matters so thorough that never afterward will the I'nlted States In this branch of the ser vice be unprepared to meet its duties as a nation. Some one ought to tell Rudolph Hlankenburg that veterans like Sen- ator Quay are not unhorsed by school boy rhetoric. Climate of Cuba and Manila. The government has made public In a bulletin of the weather bureau some In teresting nnd timely information con cerning climatic conditions In Cuba and Manila. With regard to Cuba the popular Im pression crediting It with exceptionally high temperature is shown to be in correct. The average temperature of Havana for the months of June, July and August Is only S2 degrees, about equal to that of New Orleans and only 7 degrees hotter than that of Wash ington. Havana's annual average rain fall is only M.;i inches, while New Or leans' Is 00.5'i Inches and Washington's 44 70 Inches. The average rainfall dur ing the rainy stnson (May to o tnber) Is only 32..17 Inches nt Havana, or ." inches more than at New Orleans nnd S Inches more than at Washington for the same period. The humidity of the Cu ban atmosphere is vv hat causes most of the mischief among unnecllmated persons. It averages about 75 per cent, .if saturation, or ".' grains of vapor to the cubic foot of nir. while In Wash ington the average percentage of satur ation Is 72, or 4 grains of vapor to the cubic foot of air. and in New Orleans, 7S per cent., or fi grains. Roughly speaking, the climate of Havant Is uilte as wholesome as Is the climate of Nw Orleans, th difference in health- fulness being one chiefly of sanitation. The average annual temperature at Manila Is SO degree. The months of April. May nnd June are tin hottest part of the year. .May, with an aver age temperature of SI degrees. Is the hottest of the thre?. December and January nre the coolest months, each with an average temperature of 77 de grees. The highest thermometer read Inq; recorded Is 100 d,egrees; this vvns observed In May. The lowest reading recorded Is 71 degrees, and was ob served In January. The average rela tive humldltv is 7S per cent. That of the most humid month, which is Sep tember, Is S5 per cerrt. and that of the Ictr' humid month, which Is April, is 7l' per cent. The average absolute hu mldltv Is S.75 grains In n cubic loot, it Is greatest In August nnd least in Feb ruary. The uvei age annual rainfall is 73.43 Inches, of which l.l.fil inches, more than ".7 per lent., fall during the monthb of July, August nnd September, and CO 74 Inches more than SO per cent, fall from June to October, Inclusive, Sep tember has the largest average fall, 15.ni Inches, and February the smallest average fall, t.47 Inches. From these figures It would nppear that military service In Cuba Is prefer able on climatic grounds to service In the Philippines. A new cure for consumption Is an nounced. It has been discovered by Dr. J, R. Murphy, of Chicago, and was made public In a paper by him on Thursday at the convention of the National Medical association In Den ver, Col. The explanation of his the ory caused a decided sensation nmong the eminent 'practitioners present and seems to huve been generally accepted ns a remarkable discovery, giving promise of wonderful results In the treatment of tulon'culifds. It Is a well known fact that the sore spots In the Ijngs have a tendency to heal and that tho process Is constantly retarded by the expansion of tho tissues In breathing. Dr. Murphy's treatment Is the introduction of pure nitrogen Into the lung cavity by means of a, hypo, dermic) needle. Tire action of the nltru. gen compresses the lungs nnd gives them complete rest. This tieatinent Is employed for a few week, after which the nitrogen In withdrawn nnd the lunas expand to their usual dimen sions. If. as It Is nlllimed, this method can bo employed even In despcrato cases with almost Instant relief nnd rapid replacement of the.tlsues, the future U tuberculosis patients brightens, nnd the (rouble and expense of shipping them away to the moun tain; where they may die off the home physician's hands materially abate. It Is a pity that the Irish Parlia mentary party in the House "f Com mons cannot realize that the Ameri can people ate quite capable, of taking can- of their own Interests, nnd that they Intend to do so irrespective of the party politics of other countries. Sylvester Scnvel, correspondent "f the New York World, landed In Cuba, but could see neither Spaniards nor In surgents. It Is tolerably certain that both were In the Island at the time of Scovel's visit. Colonel McClure advises the Altoona convention to adopt word for word Senator Quay's reform platform of JEM. We fear this would be useless without a bond for faithful enforce ment. Reform in Pennsylvania these days must be puzzled to Identify Its real friends amongst the many dlscordnnt factions that claim each a monopoly of its championship. If the next presidential campaign Is to bo fought upon the Issue of terri torial enlargement, what party will take the negative side? Evidently not the Republican. Paper money Is only worth from 14 to 16 per cent, of Its nominal value at Havana. When paper is redeemed by paper this Is usually what happens. One advantage of this war Is that It has ended for a generation the era of small Issues In politics. It has taught the nation that it has grown up. This is a uood tim of the year to keep the Spit:? dog in a place of safety. His presence on the streets Is liable to make pedestrians run mad. It Is still our belief that when the is sue becomes tightly drawn between Hlanco's pride and his appetite, Ha vana will yield. This war Is making a big crop of he roes, hut hero-worship is a much better pastime than sordid worship of the al mighty dollar. A test of good citizenship will soon be afforded In the opportunity to bear necessary extra taxation without grumbling. It Is becoming plain to the dullest mind that Hawaii will be an American territory long before snow tiles. The one sure way to bring Spain to terms Is to carry the war Into Spain's own territory. A stamp tax on the Congressional Record wouldn't be n bad Idea. The strategy board will kindly ac cept apologies and a vacation. Heroism in the American Navy From the Cilohe-Pemoirut. THK HISTORY ot the American navy Is an unbroken record or daring alor and devoted patriot ism.. Thrilling Incidents aoou.ul In its pages, and In .ill Is the In domitable spirit that leads through every llery test to victory. Naval Constructor Hobson and his seven associates hae added n new and brilliant exploit to those that nre familiar in the, annals ot our navy. Above everything,' and It will stir the country to proud admiration ot its sailors. Is the fact that no less than LOW) men on our ships stepepd forward to take the place of the eight volunteers in vited to perform a service of extreme risk. There is nothing to match this In tho long n.irrativn uf warfare on Mie ocean. Volunteers for work of peculiar danger have always been found among our blue Jackets, but In this case almost the entire lleet was ready to be Included In a forlorn hope of extraordinary peril. Such a body of men Is necessarily in vincible. They can be destroyed, but not conquered. They will fight to the utter most, and go down with their colors rath er than strike them. o I'sually In extra hi.zardous service a certain chance of escape is open. But Hobson nnd his companions were required to sink their own ship after taking It through a r arrow passage lined with heavy batteries at short range and ovr a net work of mines. Their first danger was to bo blown to pieces by artillery or Into tho air by U rpedoes. They were within easy rifle shot of the shore. If they escaped shot and shells mid hlhh explosives their mission was to locate their ship In the manner best calculated to obstruct the channel, sink It with a torpedo fixed In place, ami then row away, subject again to u tremendous crossfire. That the elpht men should have passed so far Into tho zone of Hie and mines and successfully performed their strange task Is a most remarkable event, und that none was killed or seriously wounded Is a marvel. They ate prisoners, but prisoners of n kind honored by the military men of every civilized nation. Intrepidity llkt theirs is acknowledged wherever courage und love of country have any hold upon the human heart. fl it Is In nn spirit of vaunting tho Amer icans point to the achievements of inelr volunteers on sea r.nd land. Not ons conscript today Is found beneath our Hag. Every man wearing tho national uni form represents his own consent nnd In dividual fealty to his country. The story of our navy is one of splendid deeds. !n past times we have created fleets from almost nothing and amazed the greatest sea power In the world by their effective audacity. Our sailors have run batter, les. doled torpedo mines, olown up ar mored ships from frail boats nnd clinched for the final struggle in every form ot ocean warfare. The commander has but to order, th men stand ready to execute In utter detlanco of death by bullets, shell, fire or drowning. Knglneeis and pilots guard tlndr ports with tho same heiolsm ns the lighting sailors on die, Old Ironsides Is not an exceptional Amer ican ship. (I 1 the type of all. The seir. sacrificing valor rclelirnted In song and story. In the sea lyrics of Campbell and the Charge of the Light Brlwade. In In soher truth a matter of courte on tha hhlps of the American navy. COLONIAL ADMINISTRATION. New York Commercial Advertiser. The tltcal administration of tho depen dent with which this war wilt charge us wilt he an Interesting problem. It will ba new In our experience, but we shall work It out, as we have worked out other problems. Wo shall make the dependencies self-supporting, of course. This country will revcr endure taxation to police Islands, near or remote, but wo shall not try to make them support us, ns Spain has done. There will be local governments, more or less Independent, with power of taxation for local pur poses. The degree of our Interference with these will depend upon the ca pacity of tho people for self-government and the responsibility we are obliged to assume for their protection. Of course If wo maintain nn army of occupation any where, the country It protects will have to susla'n it, and we rhnll have to see that the revenue, nre honestly collected nnd applied. Probably we shall not make the navy a local charge, but we hhall re quire tho colonies to pay any civil oin elals wo find It needful to keep In them. Moreover, even in the most autonomous, we shall look shatpl.v after the manner ot laying and collecting taxes and scj that tho people are. not oppressed or robbed. F.vcn the Cubans are not qulto ready for the complete aclf-governmint enJocd by Canada. It will b a puzzling problem to adjust our commercial relations with our de pencles. und the matter will not be c. compll-hrd without much trade Jealousy and Industrial discontent In this country. If they become absolute and IntlMln gulshable Ameticnn territory, like Alaska, no tariff can bo enforced against them. This would give a tremendous stimulus to Industry In nil the Islands and make the fortune of enlcii rising Americans, who would hasten to acquire plantations there. On the other hand, it would cut olt all our rcverue from sugar and to bacco, and create a deal of discontent among persons who want to build up those Industries here. rndoubtedly we should not sacrifice this revenue without some return from excise taxation In 'he slands. How tho Ameticnn sugar and to hncrn Interest nre to be contented does not yet nppear. Perhaps they will bo strong enough to exact filly a protector ate over the prrsmt Spanish Islands., with perhaps preferential dutl giving them an advantage over other foreigners. It Is our protective system and the Ideas that have grown up under It which will mnke the problem or colonial administra tion more complicated for ns than It was for Great Britain. o Pendlngcompletf conquest nnd final ces sion of the Spanish Islands, while we are merely In military occupation of them, it appears that present commercial rein tions will not be disturbed. The legal theory of such occupation is that the na tive lawi. Institutions and status of the conquered country subsist, only they nre controlled, maintained and administered hv the Invader. This being so. as long as we hold Cuba or the Philippines by mlll tarv tenor nlnne. our revenue laws will be enforced against their trade, as against foreigners. Tltev can claim exemption only when pain has ceded them to us in tho trn.it v of tieaee. It Is said that our treasury department is already preparing repulation for resumption of trtde with these countries when they are conquerea. MANIFEST DESTINY. From tht Altoona Tribune. If the eternal povvcis open up the way and suggest that the I'nlted Stntes ought to enter upon the work of ending cruel and despotic government in thU hemi sphere and elsewhere, then the nation must inarch up anil seize opportunity or be ever considered faithless In the coun cils of the unlveise. Some of us have been ver much opposed to the policy of latlonal expansion. We have protested ucalnst the acquisition of any lands be vond this continent; we have opposed ,.ny Ineiease of the navy or the army; we have held that bigness does not mean the r.ame thing as greatnnss; that a nation which attends to Its own business, avoid ing entangling alliances, is most likely 10 prosper, and that military glory is an expensive and a savage thine. Yet the swift passage of events seems to have left us without a foot of mound upon which to stand. U'e ure driven by the force of circumstances to abandon our attitude of isolation arid to Join In the demand for a new and Immediate career, one that will bring Into active play the policy of expansion, the result of which will be a union of all I'nglish-speaking peoples for the domination of the globe. o There weie signs on every hand that the nation was becoming Impatient over the modest policy that had been In foi'-O since the foundation of the government. Whether or not interested parties were zealously engaged In assisting Provi dence to push us out Into the path of op portunity, certain it is that there was much talk concerning Hawaii and very zealous efforts to secure a government guarantee of the otherwise vorthkss bonds ot the Nicaragua Canal company. Hut these projects made but slow prog ress after all. even the Hawaiian scheme was side tracked and nearly as good as dead, when suddenly the destruction of the Maine and the slaughter uf her cicvv, with the publication ot some particulars of the terrible suffering of the non-combatants In Cuba Inflamed the temper of the American people to sticii an extent thnt war became inevitable. And all the other things have followed the war. o Already It is clear that Spain will have to give up her hold on this continent. She may likely be driven out of the Philippines and compelled to abandon the Caroline Islands also. There may be no formal alllanco with Great Britain, but there Is sure to be a warm frlen 1 shlp. nnd If tho sultan of Turkey should resume his massacre of Armenian Chris tians, Great Britain niaj undcrtako to drive him out of Kurtpe, luck into the Asiatic fastnesses whence his predeces sors emerged, and she may do so with the assurance that tho t'nlted States will step right out and take a place close by her side should any of the continental powers threaten to Interfere, as they did before. Our navy will be very much en larged, our nrmy will likewise be more than doubled, and wo will Join tho pro cession of tho nations that bilng things to pass. THE REGULAR ARMY. The following letter from A. L. Slack, of Tullulah. La., to the Mobile RegUter contains cheering information on a topic of present Interest. Mr. Slack writes: "I visited Mobile a short time since to Ece my son, who had enlisted In tho Second I'nlted States cuvalry. When my son wrote me of his enlistment In the regu lar army my heart sank within me. I preferred rather that he should have joined tho volunteers, but since I have pecen the present splendid regiments of the I'nlted States and their composition I am convinced his choice was a wise one. o '( shared somewhat the prevalent opinion 'bat the regulars were mostly 'bums,' and that a boy had better bo in the nethermost regions than among such h set. 1 urn glad to say that I was more than ugreeably surprised. In fact as tounded, at tho moralo and personnel ot tho standing urmy. I found seven regi ments of regulars encamped nt Spring Hill camp ground, some four miles from Mobile. Five of theso were Infantry the Third, Tenth, Kleventb, Nineteenth and Twentieth, nnd two cavalry tho Second and Fifth. I was all through the regu lar and volunteer camps, taking in every detail with the eye of an old soldier. I found the personnel of the regulars as good as that of the volunteers. The 'bums' who formorly Inlested our regu lars nre now not In It. The army U n splendid body of physically developed men and trained soldiery, made up prin cipally of young men. Their soidhrly bearintr, gentlemanly wai's, suleudld Phy- GO LftSMITI We M and Awiratmt: CMrtaaai Of Awning Curtains for Porches made of the best Awning Duck, will keep out the sun and rain, with cord and pulleys complete, to put up, 5 feet wide by 5 feet long, - $1.40. 5 feet wide by 6 feet long, - 1.50. 7 feet 6 inches wide by 6 feet long, 2.30. 10 feet wide by 7 feet long. - 3.00. Lewl9 Renlly ALWAYS BUSY. THE SALE IS ON. SUMMER FOOTWEAR. IT IS NO FEAT TO FIT YOUR FEET IN OUR ST0RE3. WE ARE FITTERS OF FEET. Lewis, Eeilly & Mvles 114 AND lift WYOMING AVENUE. MMMQC1KS, WATER CeOLlRS AND FILTERS. WHITE MOUNTAIN AND OHIO ICE CREA1 FREEZERS AT HARD PAN PRICES TO SUIT THE TIMES. TIE CLEM0K& EERIER, TOALLEY Ca 4'J'J Lackawanna Aveuna sique and Intelligence bespeak them the finest body of troops on tho planet. Their muscular development is remark able, and their magnlllcent physique like the trained gladiator. Tho discipline Is strict, but kind, not tyrannical. In met. the soldiers are too Intelligent and proud to bo held under the mailed hand. Know ing their duty, it is performed with alac rlty and cheerfulness. o "The solicitous caro Uncle Sam has for bis children Is us paternal and motherly as that exercised by tho best of patents. There Is nothing which can contribute to the cornfirt, happiness r.nd protection of tlnv men that Is overlooked. All that science can suggest or money can procure to make them what they nre the nation's defenders Is lavishly bestowed." A I'OH.MIDAIILi: ARRAY. New York Commercial-Advertiser. The fleet of war ships and troop trans ports ordered to Santiago Is lariymg nioro men than did the Spanish Armada as It left Lisbon. The Spanish expedi tion, us It went to help capture Kngland, carried lfl.203 soldiers nnd l't.oOO saliora and rowers. Tho Santiago expedition entries 25,000 soldiers and 8.0)0 sailors. Comprising this Suntlimo fleet are 31 steamships, with troops varying from t.100 tons down to HOfl tons. Then thro are some 13 or 13 other craft, Including vessels suitable for conveying fresh wa ter, stores, etc., und for lightering the troops and stores from tho slilps to tho beach, when the debarkation bi-glns. Tho entire transport fleet of about llfly steam ships, augmented by the fleet of naval convoys, 18 In number, will make n for midable marine procession, even exceed ing In magnitudo the notable spectacle of the naval review during the World's fulr year. This, with the 20 boats that aro already nt Santiago under Admiral Sampson, will make some S')-odd boats encaged agalrst Santiago, feS8KST E. lS- ake AwMiik 3 Every DescriptSoiri. FINLEY'S June After a most successful season of Silk Selling we have accumulated quite an assortment of QMS AND) EMB-S all short lengths. Varying from 2lA yarks to 8 and 10 yards each, and have con cluded to repeat our great SlMft Length Sale of last January. We will therefore offer the entire line arranged in two lots as follows: All 95c and $1.00 silks now 69C All $1.10. $1.15, $1.25 and $1.40 silks now 9o5 These quotations will be for the entire piece as no lengths will be cut at these prices. The warm weather has stirred up trade in Mitd FOTlairas and Wast! Ssls Were are offering two lines of CHENEY BROTHERS Best Goods, to close at 50c ani XSz Worth S-;c and $r.oo 510 and 512 LACKAWANNA AVENUE HENRY BEL1N, JR., General Agent for the Wyomtuj District fj.' Mining, masting, Sportlns. ttmolce.ti.il and the Hepuuno Ulierulcol Company' HIGH EXPLOSIVES. fcufety fuse, Capi and Exploders. itooui 401 Council Uulldlug. tjcraatou. Sum Sac roiia AGENCIES: Tlios, rortu, Piinton JOHN U. SMITH idON, Plymouth W. E. MULLIGAN. WUkej-Iiarr BAZAAR. MILL k CONNELL 121 N. Washington Ave BRASS BEDSTEAD5. In buying a brass liedntoad, bo sure thafJ J'ou get the best. Our brass Bedstead! ari all made with seamless brass tublnx and frame wort Is all of stcol. They coat no more than many bedsteads made of tho open seamlew tubing. Every bedstead is highly finished and lncquere.l under a peculiar method, nothing ever hav ing been produced to equal it. Our Dewi Bprluz Patterns aro now on exhibition. Hill & Coemell At 121 North Washington Avenue. Scranton, Pa. lie ftatl el loses Is Be Monti of Weddings" The latest, swellest, most complete line of Wedding Stationery. The most novel lines of Patriotia Stationery. A full line of all things which up-tcl date stationers should carry. Reynolds Bros bTATlONKnS AND KNGUAVEFtS. HOTEL JEP.MYN UUILUINQ. ino Wyoming Avenua. 3 fOOTE & SHEAR CO. SPECIAL SALE. BPECIAL TRICES. For a few days only on GALVANIZED AfiH CANS, GALVANIZED CARDAQE OAN KttTIrVHHjaFBlTiTiTW ft r-iuHuKnB drtlcles shown In "tore window niBrbcaUt plain figures, i ILL I i&rSicwj; J J ) J- &jfft HME k SiEAH 110 N. Washington avts
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