$ THE SUKAIVJLUiN TlUUUJNJir- TirlUltSJUAlf, JLiYliJ 16. 1895. 0e cwmfon CriBune Published Dally. I'.xcept Suitiltiy. by the Tribune Publishing Company, nt Flrty 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 Office! lfi() Nasau t., K s VRKKIAND, Sole Agent for 1'Oretgn Advertising. (Mrnri) atthf rovrorrrcK t kchaxtom, pa.. AsetcoNrcr.sMAii. matter. FCHANTOX Jl'Ni: 16, IS98. Cnftirl I lie stnr-flct'kcil Winner biisht, .Vol t in h emotions onrllliiR TIip rlrai old flan that knows no nlsht In freedom's btoij telling. REPUBLICAN N0A1INATI0NS. stuto. Uoieinoi- WILLIAM A STONi:. Lieutenant o crnor-J. T. S OOniN Secietnrv of Internal Affairs -JAMEb W. LA'l T A Judge of Superior Court W. W. I'On- TKK. ConRicmen - nt - I.aiSP SA.MIM2I. A DAVKM'CIST. GALCSilA A GROW, Lcgi-lnlhc. rirft Dlstrict-JOIIN R. I'AIin, Fourth Dtstilct-JOHN l HU1 NOLD3. coLoxni. sror.s itatiorii 11 will bo my puiKe when elected to so conduct m-olf u to win the leaped and pood vill of thc-e who h.iv c opposed me ns well as thote who line Riven mo theli suppoit. I MihII be the governor of the wlieilo people ol the s-tato Ahupct lime undoubted! snwn up m the 1ckI lattuo which Hie neither the fault of one party nor the olliei, but lather tin fitnutli of iii-trm I'l i cerssm Investl patlons h.ue been authorized bj commit tee, rcstiltlni; In unneeessiir.x cpciis- to the Mute It will be m rare nnd pur pnso to correct llic-o and other evils In i-o far h 1 have the powei It will be my purpose while governor of IVnn-jlvani.i, ns It has been m purpose In the public positions that I hae hold, with God s help, to discharge inv whole dut Tho people .iree greater than the parties to which thev belong 1 nm onlv Jealous of their favor. I shall only attempt to win their appioal and my experience has taught me that that can best be done bv nn honest, modest, daib discharge of public duty. Spain has taken no steps In the dliec tlon of peace. So speaks the valiant Duke do Illn. We have taken some enormous strides In that dltectlon. Uncle Pain has put on a pair of seven league boots for the puipose. The Necessity for Hawaii. Hvents which the American people cannot undo h.ue made the Pacific ocean the present and the piopcctlo theatci of the woild's most Inteiestliifr activities. Kurope, oci populated and ovci taxed. Is ic.n bins' the hand of conquest Into the feitlle nnd unde el oped Oilent, hoping with the pain thus won to lenleulsh the waning Italltles at home. Thus tar u parity in per quisites, anions tho piiute powers has RUflked to keep the pence, but It Is a peace founded on mutual fear and sus picion the most ft agile thins In the woild. When It Is bioken. as broken it will be, the liilted States must be In tit condition and strategic position flis-t, to defend Its own and ultimately to -ee that theic shall be no peima nent loss to civilization The man who looks at passing events with n philosophic ce is likely to pei iehe in them tho hand of Piovldencc directing the Ameiliau nation out of the Insulnilty whltli bus been its piopcr llmitatlun dining the lepublic's itniuntuilly, and Into the bioadcr des tlh of a majestic woi Id-power. Such an eolution is a logical exemplifica tion of the doctrine of tho surlval of the. fittest. The Amciicau who aigues that tills tepublic should llo for itself alone misses the moial and abases the matcilal significance of government by nnd for the people. It is no accident that fotced the I'nltcd Suites to strike n blow for c-i ligation at the ery mo. mont when the lobber nations of j;u lope were arming for a new era of loot and plunder. Nor whs it blind chance which, while we were thinking of Cuba chiefly, made Dewey at far off Manila the Instrument of a stioke for liberty which set American power and conscience down In the very center of the sphere of the fotthcomlng eon fllct between the armed forces of Euro pean greed. Clearly, Uod has led us up to this new duty and It will be the basest recreancy If we ignore His sum mons. If there had been no widening of the Amcilcan limlzon by virtue of a war for humanltj llawull, by position the leerug- to our PncUlo defence and by character madu and molded by Ameri can Ideas, would still hae been an In dispensable addition to our .lift of sttategle outposts. In our possession and coutiol It locks up tho commercial and naval potentialities of the Increas ingly bfcsy Xoith Pacific and puts the key In oir pocket, to use as our pleas ure or need may dlctnte. But In tho light of those tdgnlllcaut oecunenccs which as by tho Intel position of Invis ible hands me at this moment leucilng us toward a new Influence in shaping the destinies of the human lace Its an nexation n one of the ptotectlng steps In our pathway toward higher rcspon Abilities becomes n necessity both Im mediate nnd Impel lous. Tho Philadelphia Press hnr been working up a lot of unneteMUy and flotlliou sympathy for representative Coiay, of West ritttton, by icpi'csiu- Inn that the bail men uf the Quay ma chin" lrnve frightened Jilm s( thnt re Is nfratd to scolc i ir-nonilnaton. The truth l! that Mi. Corny hat had enough of HnnlKburg. Hut If he were to de-Bit-! another tetin. he could linve.lt for the apkln?. He Is no mattyr. Since the hist blrthdny the stars on ni.l Oloiy Imvo ticcomo veritable plan ets. The l-'renclt Ministerial Crisis. The iceent election to the Trench chamber of deputies gave the mlnistiy o small a niajotlty that Its overthrow was niiinieiititrlly expected on the first contioeislal question thnt ynesentpd Itself. This Is as n matter of fact what has actunlly occulted. Tho Me line go eminent hna had a phenninennl lease of life. Its membcis are now ncarl thieo eaia In possession of their portfolios. The average duration of a Ficneb. cabinet docs not exceed nine months. Tho tetmr of the mo tion upon which M. Melino was oxer tin own would seem to n foielgner quixotic to a ludicrous degree. To uf film that a republican government should legislate on republican piin clples in a legislative assembly elec ted on universal sufftage appears the quin tessence of superfluity To oerthiow a mlnistiy because It decided to ac cept the support In Its admlnlsttntlou of monaichical deputies elected by the people may seem mote plausible, but Is In reality no more rational. Kicnch republicans have allowed their mon archical fellow countrymen votes, nnd the tight to exeicisc them Involves the light to pnrtlclpate In the dltectlon of the policy of the ndmlnlstiatlon when in sympathy with It. Tills seems a logical deduction from the picmlses of lepiesentntlvc govern ment. Hut In leallty it does not apply to Fiance. Parllamentaiy Institutions are alien tothe tiadltlonsof the Kiench government and the Instincts of the Trench people. The republic has stood the stiess and strain of nearly a quar ter of n ccntui It has often been threatened fiom one side or another. It hns not succumbed simply because there hns been nothing to put In Its place Pretenders to the Kiench thiono there are in the Due d'Orleans and Prince Louis Napoleon. Rut neither of tbce jouug men aie foimldablc en ough in the captivating and ostenta tious qualities, deat to the Tiench beau, which might make their pie tentlons dangcious to the lepublie. Boulangu possessed them In a small measure, but Iip never had faith In Ills undei taking and Dually he lost faith in himself. The danger stilt exists and when the man comes, the omens ate fnvoinble to a die tnloi ship The most sincere friends of the Tiench tepublic. even among Tienchmen themselves, lecognize this fact. It it was impossible to distinguish the Jlellne ministry from its piedeces sors In tonstiuctlve statesmanship, It will be jemenibeied at all events for the pait it plaved In the gient Zola scandal. Whether Diejfus was guilty or not, tills pait of its executive woik has alteady become histuiical. Thcte ate fpw people In tilt? woild beside Tienchmen who do not believe in the piojiable Innocence of Diejfus. But this is a matter which piinelpally con cerns Tienchmen themselves, and would ptobably have caused less dan ger to the stability of the lepublie than the Panama scandals, had not It been foi the fact that M. Mellne sub jugated tho civil legal processes of the countiy and the individual rlshts of pilvate citizens to what he proclaimed to be the "honor of the arm v." What the guilt oi innocence of nn alleged military tiaitor or the justice of the v el diet of five or six offlcets sitting as a mllitaiy tilbunal had to do with the collective honor of the laigest army in Km ope it has taken all M. Mellne's gallic casulstt y to evplaln. At any Kite the ni my rules tho country, and will i tile It, In Its own way, when the time comes. The anti-Semitic move ment is another symptom of the do geneiacy of lepubllcan Instltuions In Tiance. Jew baiting Is not consistent with the spirit or essence of democ lacy, much less lepublicanism. In .fact. Fiance Is the most buieauciatlc ally governed countiy in the woild ex cept China. The Code Napoleon is tho surviving pilnciplo of admlnlstiation, outlasting the monarchy, the empire, and the lepublie. M Tauie will find tho difficulty of forming cabinets among the clashing elements of the gioups in the chamber the curse and burden of his presiden tial life. Nothing Is easier than to get men In Fiance willing and eager to accept office: the dltlleully Is to cnuble them to retain It. In a countiy of unl veisal cuff i age, whcie one-half the voteis do not take tho tumble to vote and the half that does Is actuated by any other splilt than a natural one, the danger Is great, and, us the Kiench themselves saj the debacle Inevitable When it Is said, as it often Is, that the Tiench people aie sound nt tho core. It means that they aie qulto In dlffeient to the foun of government under which they lle so long as It secuies to them the iewaul3 of their Industiv and thilft. liovolutlmis aie ubhonent to the notions of citizens under a stable government But In n little muie than a bundled ears Krance has witnessed no less than six revolutions and Is not at all Indisposed to add annthei to the list before the cntuiy dies out. (Jet jour flieeratkers In oidcr. We are going to have a pvmlechnlc dis play on the Tourth and no mistake. A Matter ol Vital Concern, The Philadelphia Inquire), while iecog. nixing tho luulcenf the demand which Is being made In the anthracite coal le gion for tellef fiom oppressive discrim ination In coal fi eight rates, Is dlsj ised to doubt whether t concession by the coal loads of tho po.nts at lsue would In Ins the iclief deslird. It argues that Jiacl: of th" matter of uitcs and pile's lies tho existence of n suiplti'i ol labor nnd the neid o( Increased stilngoncy In the iestrlctlo;i of Immigration. Our contmporaiy In a bioad sense Is undoubtedly conect, vet It must ad mit that the salvation of tho anthra cite maiket depends ii.undhitely upon the ability of piodutus f that amino dlty" tu get their produc t hauled to tide water on terms uih na will enable It to compete stiteepsfully with bituminous coal. This is the messing and vital part of the problem at this time. Very little new Immlmntlon is being attract ed to the eonl fluids under present con dition?. Koi every new comer there Is an exodus of two. Hut while this Is go ing on tho maiket once held by nnthta cite Is being grndtnlly taken fiom It, not Ihtough any depreciation In the quality of nntrirnclte, but simply be carso a shorl-slght"d policy has ben enacted by the railway magnates whereby soft coal Pi given a most in equitable piefoience In tolls. Many plana of nigument and appeal having been tried in vain, the men whose btHncss this short-sighted pul ley Is mining piopose now to take the' icmedy Into their own bends. They In tend to build a intlrund of their own nnd hnttl their own coal to tidewater. They have control of enough tonnage to mnke such an Investment profitable; they have enough monev to build nnd opeinte tho road nnd thev have sur veyors now at woik upon the selecting of a route. We shall see how this p'un eventuates. Lieutenant Blue has performed an net of valor which falls little short in deed. If It falls short nt all, of that perfotmed by Lieutenant Hobson. Counting the enemy's ships within i aiige of the enem.v's guns may not loom as lnige In public estimation 'us bottling up tho Spanish fleet at Santi ago; but It was a noble deed nobly pei formed. Will these southern offi cers give us poor noitherners a chance? The objection which Candidate Btyan offeis to a policy of anntxatlon may not be altogether Impel sonal The putting foiward of such a policy by the pics"in administration would probably leave him very far in the political lurch. The crew of the Meirlmac hnve le celved their promotion. Hobson's will come In good time Our heioes ate yet prisoners. A stiong light and a sboit one before Santiago and they will be able to diaw their defened pay. A few slight earthquake shocks have disturbed the south. That Is nothing to the shock we aie going to give the Spaniards in Cuba. General Correa, the Spanish minister for war. is cheeiful Small Is the cheer that bilngs comfort to an aching heart- Spain Is objecting aid from Ger manv. Blessed aie those who expect little, for they will not be disappointed. The Sound Money Democrats are all light. Populism has no place on their programme. Voting Mr. Loiter Is 1p position to np-pn-ciate that it is the last laugh which is best. Don't get ec Itcd Pbout the Cuban insurgents. This war Is joung. TOLD BV THE STARS. Dally Horoscope I);nwn br AJncchus The Tribune Astrologer. Astroiabo Cast: 1 19 a ni for Thursday, June lb, 1515. M 5 3 A A A child bom on II. Is day i-, liable to setve t.s a juror when the board of tiane prosecutes the councils for not u pait lug the ciy p,ic muit The Scimton high school giaduatlrg class Is c'Wdciitlj of a superior order this car onlv one cay on the Cuban ques tion will be Riven Between the Spaniard the Cubans and the gunners of tho Maihlehead, Mm mai Ires bad a hot time at Gunntniinnro. Happy Is the local politician who car. get his feet on the right side of the Ha waiian fence In time. Tho local branch of the "Business Mali's League" will dose at six durlut tho heated term The bond issue will be popular with tho peoplo who can iiffoid to buy Ihem The United States of fltisfralasia Tiom the New York Sun T IS characteristic of a more demo cratic spirit Hint the Austiallan confideiallon Is to be known as a "commonwealth" whereas the name "Dominion" was applied to the Can adian confederation by the British North Ameiiea net Another Btriklng difference between the two sstems will be noted In tho conipoitlon of the senate. Jt will be iccallcd that the members of the Dominion uppci house were to be ap pointed fm life, In the Austiajlan con federals on the other band, tho seim tois, sl of whom are apportioned to e.rclr oilKlnnl state, arc to be elected by tho people of each state voting ns one electorate, each elector to have only one vote. Theie is a provision that, althouir tho senatoilal term Is, ultimately, to bo six eats, the first elected members will be divided by lot Into two classes of equal numbci those of the first class to icllie at the cxplintlou of the third etr and those of the second at the expiration of tho sixth after which ail senatois will vacato their scats nt the expliation of six j cars from election The Ameri can piecedent Is followed In the regula tion that while exttaordlnaiy vacancies In the senate are to be filled bv tho state leglslatuie, vet during a iccess of a legislature the state governoi may nom Inale to the vacancy. o Ttu plug to the popular bianch of the fderal parliament we lind that the membeis of the house of representatives aio to be chosen by the people of the commonwealth In proportion to tho state population, and tho whole number of rep resentatives Is to be. ns nearly ns pos sible, twice the number of tcnutoi.s K.iclr otlRlual state is to have at least five members It follows thnt Tasmania will be better off In tho Australian confed eration than Nevada is In o-ir own The term of n repiceentatlve is iteirmallv, three jcnr but It md be dioit. r, for, in the event of a deadlock between the chambers, the parliament may be dis solved We should here nv nilon that if, nfter the election of a m w bouse of lepiiseiitatUes. tiro elUagn enient be tween the bouses of parliament 'oiitln lies, the govt i nor general may cunmno n joint sitting of llie membeis of the two chambers, nnd If the disputed bill Is uf firmed therein bv n nuilorlty of tbice fifths of the members pusent It Is to be taken to have been duly passed by the senate and bouse of representatives This Is so far ns we know a new device In legislation, and i-huuld It wmk well In Allien iclid. Is lllcel to bo extensively copied. The powers of the two Austra lian edrambers are nut co-ordinate. Money bills must orlslnutc In the house of icpicsentatlves, the senate muv not amend them, but may suggest amend ments to tho other house We add that Hid salaiy of senators nnd representa tives! Is llxod for the present nt J.'.OXi a j ear. lboiiRli the tlgure may be nltcied heiieafter by parliament. , is The oxteullvc head of the nw cofd- erntlon will be the queen, represented by n governor general, who Is to havo r sal ory of JViOft) n jenr. Ho will be, bow ever, llko the governor general of tho Dominion of Canada, a mere figurehead, tho real power being exercised by an ex ecutive e niincil or cabinet The mem bers of this council, that Is to say, tho ministers, must be capable of slttltiK either in the senate or house of repre sentatives, and, after the first general election, no minister can hold ofllce be yond three months without becoming o member of the leglslntuip. Tor the pies ent, tho number of ministers Is not to exceed seven, nor shall their Joint sal aries exceed ltv thousand dollars n year. In the arransements for tho fed ci al Judiciary the Australians have cop led the fulled Slates lather than the Dominion of Canada The existing colon ial com Is are not supei seeled, but will continue to posspss the same kind of Jurisdiction which Is vested In our own state tribunals The ludlelal power of tho commonwealth will be vested In a supienie court, consisting of a chief lus tlce and not less tbut two other Judges, ami cnlled the high court of Australia, the federal paillament, like our congrcs has power to creato other courts with federal Juilsdlctlon. Tho said Jurisdic tion covers matters nrllng under the constitution or under the laws of the federal parliament, or unilci treaties, also causes in which the commonwealth, or n person suing or being sued on behalf of the commonwealth Is a parti ; also Is sues between states, or between resi dents of different states, or between a state and a resident of nnothei state, or whcie the subject matter is claimed nu clei the laws of cllffeicnt states The high court may also everclse appellato Juilsdlctlon over the supremo court of any state or any other couit In nny stnto from which an appeal now lies to tho queen In council t'nder certain circum stances tlieie may be nn appeal from the high couit Itself to tho pi Ivy council nt Westminster, but no such appeal muv be made In eases Involving the Interpre tation of the constitution of the com monwealth, nor of any stale. o Besides the dlffeience of opinion re galilliig tlie expediency of a piotcctlonlst pollcj. the unwillingness of certain col onics to renounce the llglit to levy cus toms ami exi isc duties lias btcn an ob stacle to confederation By the common wealth bill uniform customs duties are to be Imposed by the federal paillament within two vears. aftci which all Inter colonial trade will be absolutely free, ex cept In the case of West Australia, to which a further temporary Indulgence Is extended The seat of the new govern ment Is not vet Uxed upon, for the pres ent the federal parliament will sit at such place as shall be designated by a majority of the governors of the states; in the event of an eepial division of opin ion among theni, the governor gcneiat will decide We observe, lastl, that the machlnnv for constitutional amendment follows the Swiss rather than the Amei ican model Tho proposed alteration of the constitution mut be passed, first, by an absolute rnatoilty of the senate and house of representatives, and then, not less than two or more than -x months later must be submitted to a popular vote when it must be appioved h a majority of the electois In a ma jority of the states and alo bv n ma joiitv of all the electois of the commonwealth. liven n cursoiy view of this synopsis should convince the reader tint the fed eral constitution of Australia Is a marked Improvement upon that of the Dominion of Canada. MOBILIZING AN ARMY. Tiom the Philadelphia Ledger. In tho Civil War. and now again In tiro war with Spain our statesmen failed to grasp at the outset the Importance of thorough preparation foi the conflict, and In both of these wars failed to com piehcnd the magnitude of the contest or ro estimate with any approach to the truth the timo thnt would be icqulted to vanquish the enemy At the New IJng lanel dinner in New Yoik Dec U, SbJ, Mr. Scwald confidently predicted tli.it tho threatening Southern question would be settled within sltv das This i3 tho same cheerful but dangcious optim ism which Insplied Seeretaiv Alger's le plv to a questioner who aueel l.im in Km ope what the I'nltcd States would do If the country should be thiown Into col lision with a Buropean nation strong in mlllt.irj resources "In thlilv dus we could put millions of lighting men In the field and back them up with a wall of fire In the peisons of the veterans" The herculean task of placing a mil lion nun In the Held equipped for war in thlrtv elavs, under our present military oiganizatlon. 1h demonstrated by the In ability of the government to get I".Ceje) regulars stalled for Cuba in fifty das. Tho ilinicullles to be met Ir. preparing for the invasion of a foielgn country aio very much greater, of course, than aie encountered In military operations within the country The failure to real ize the boastful prophecies of Seward or Alger casts no reflection upon the pa triotism of our people, their readiness to bear stoically the wealing sacrifices of war. but it illustrates our unpte paredness for war and demonstrates a defect in oui military system or want of svstcm respi.etlng the moHllratloir eif volunteers, which could be remedied by the nationalization of our militia service ami by the enactment of a more; effec tive code of military law. o Captain James Parker. In a seasonable paper on "The Ofliccrlng and Aiming of the Voluntecis," published in the eui rcnt Issue of the North American Re view, makes some valuable suggestions touching the organization and mobiliza tion of ihe volunteer army, upon which wc must rely for the defence of the coun try A large regular or standing armv constants on a war footing nas never been In contemplation here, but the slow mobilization of the volunteer forces In a war with one of the weakest Buiopeau nations shows that somo better method for the oiganizatlon of the nation's pa triotlsm should be devised If we are to have a sufilelcnt foice prepared to cope at once with a foreign foe which might mnke a sudden descent upon the coun tiy with a laigc. well equipped and dis ciplined army We Imvo the matcil.il beio for a formidable volunteer nrnrv, and It should not be dlfllcult to utilize It without placing upon the nation the burdens of war In time of peace The New York Times forcibly remarks In tills connection: "If the army bad been In as good a state of preparation for often slve opeiatlons as the navy, if we had bad a tialned and disciplined foice of 100,000 men Including a regular armv, suy of DO OOP, complole in its staff de partments nnd Immediately nvallahln for foreign cerjlcc. the war would already have been over." 0-. Captain Parker Insists that the pri mary requirement of an effective volun teer service for tho country Is a full complement of skilled and trained ofTi ce rs The tluev schools of the soldier, fiom which such ofllcers could be sup plied, are the Mint ny academy, the regular armv and the National guard Captain Pnikri savs that the Mllltaiv academy was established to provide of ficers, noi only for the regular staudlmj nriny, but to furnish a reserve of ofll cers; bur fn this latter respect tin Insti tution lias not fulfilled lis mission The maximum number of cadets at West Point Is r,;i. and eighty Mars ago tho maximum was 2e,0. Captain Pnrkei thinks that an urmy of luoono would be neces saiy In n war with a flist e lass Uuro pean Power, requiring lGOeVl ofllceis, and that b elf of these offlceis rhould bo graduate of it, military academy To accomplish this bo would In'renio tho number of cadets from 371 to J 20j, divid ed among three acude-mles Ho would foim it reserve of others fiom tho grad uates of these schools, who would bo constantly rendy to seivc tho countrs. and required by law ro do so. Dining peaco the rcservo ofllceis would diaw no pav. Captain Parker says that probably 1,000 non-tommlinlonid ofllcers, many of thm excellent ilrlllmastetii, aro ells eharxed from tho regular army every car. He would make there men eligible? to commissions In tho volunteers aflor HJSMIT A Or eat ' ur 60 Silk We have just secured another small lot of Taffeta Foulard Silks of the very best qual ity and most beautiful designs, such as have sold this season at 75 cents. Last week we sold hundreds of yards at 45 cents, and you know they were very cheap at that. These Will Go at Lewi9 Reilly Oav3es ALWAYS BUS. THE SALE IS ON. SUMMER FOOTWEAR IT IS NO FEAT TO Fl'f OUIt FEET IN OUR STORED. WE ARE FITTERS OF FEET. Lewis, EeiSIy & Bavies, 114 AND 118 WYOMING AVENUE. lAMMOCI WATER (JOIERS AND .FILTERS. WHITE MOUNTAIN AND OHIO ICE CREA1 FREEZERS AT HARD PN I'RICF.3 TO SUIT THE TIMES. TIE CLEM0NS, FERMR, ALLEY CO. 4U2 LcUavTBDua Aveuns an c:vamlnatlon t-hontus; their compet ency, and tliit. I'aptatu Parker avers, could be done without federal legisla tion, by an older of the war department. T,he third f-ource fiom which trained offlcerh could bo supplied is the National guard. To remove the varvluj; standards of efllcjeno In the giidid in tin- Bevei.il btatc. Captain Patkcr would make the National suard a "national" bod.v, In fact as well as In name He suigKems that the federal government Bhnulel cepiip lurch portions of the National guard as parsed tho Inspection of federal officer. Tor tho prompt eepjlpment of volunreers Captain Parker would keep on hand at certain places ample t-uppllcs of aims Held battel ies and ammunition. Home Mich system of officer Inn and organiz ing the volunteer army would mako It available for field duty In a short time, and celerity of movement Is of the ut most Importance In tho initial stages of war. 11 11 Till: AUCU.UKNT CON. Trom the Pittsburg JJUpatch. The United StntrK will cease to be the exemplar of Ilbeilv tbe moment It as Mimes to guvei'ii without the onnicii! of the governed The Ideal that has inspired tho world will ba shatteied whenever mrcli government Ih maintained bv mili tary foice Tho war foi Cuban llbcrtv ami peace will become a farce tho Instant It Is niadei tiro excuse for Mdzlng distant tciiltoiy nnd subjugating the population thereof 10 distasteful rule In the name of all that is v rcreel In Ameilcan hls torj. then, let ue as n people, tet-M the temptation of roncjucHl nnd repel tho plcadlnirs of mercenaiy anucvallonlsts. siJM.iir.itTnu: t ounsi:i Prom the Philadelphia Hulletln. Don't huriy. don't worry, don't growl becuuse It is hot Don't drink alcoholic beverages, under the mistaken Impression that they make jou cooler . Tlioe are a few fundamental rule that tend greatly to comfort when Old taol is sizzling and Uencuil Humidity Is doing his worst. iS prise i) 0J TT 1LJ After a most successful season of Silk Selling we have accumulated quite an assortment of mm ahd Eims all short lengths. Varying from 2Jz yarks to 8 and 10 yards each, and have con cluded to repeat our great Slert Leigffi Sale of last January. We will therefore offer the entire line arrauged in two lots as follows: All 95c aud $1.00 silks now 69C All $1.10, $1.15, $1.25 and $1.40 silks now 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 Printed! Foiilaims mi Was& Silks Were are offering two lines of CHENEY BROTHERS Best Goods, to close at StOc aial tc Worth SijC and $r.oo 510 and 512 LACKAWANNA AVENUE HENRY BEL1N, JR., Ueueral Agent for tlio Wjommt Uimrlotfj.' MM!! Mining, lilastlut fiportius, Mmo.ic.3ii and the Heimuno Cooralc.C Company era explosives. fcafety Kuf, Caps and Explode;. itoom 401 Council Building, bcrantoo. AGKNCIlVi THO FOim rilUtoa JOHN B. SMITH iSON, riytnouti W. E. MULLIGAN, Wllkti-Iiarri Fffll 5(0 W N June SoflT ll Sale P01IEB. BAZAAft Cents. A MILL & CONNELi 121 N. Washington Ave. BRASS BEDSTEADS. In buylnc tirnsi Bedstead, ha iur that ;ou get the best. Our braia bedsteads aroi all made Mltli tcnmleji brnis tublni ni frame tyoi!c ! all of te8l. They cost no mora tlian many bedste&K made or tba open eioaralem tublnff. Every bednte.id U highly flDUhed and laequsri.l under a peculiar method, nothing ever hav ing been produeo! to equal It. Our oeir Sprlni Patterns aro now on exhibition. Hill & Connell At 121 North Washington Avenua. Scranton, Pa. Tfee MmII l tees Is Tfec Month of Wcflfiingo The late-t. suellcst. most con-ipM line of Woddlne hutlonery. The most novel lines of Patrlotra Stationary. A full lino of nil things which up-to date Matloneis i-hould carry. Reynolds Bros bTAlIUMJRS AND ENGRAVERS. HOrEIj JKRMYN IIUILUINO. 130 Wyoming Avenue. fOOTE & SHEAR CO. PPECIAl. SALE SPEC IAL PRICES. Tor b few days only on GALVANIZED MHCANS, GALVANIZED CARBAGE OAN irtlolei ihownlnMore window marktAtq pUlo fljurei, Itt&ZZm J 'S !-r fife 119 N. Wihlncton avm
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers