WK&0ti.' cmg!f " mw-"Ctr n 'AT-, -" -" " 9 THE SCRANTON TRIBUNE-WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 14. 1898. Kqsa&mi ? . k Publlab4 rially, 'Kxoept Sunday, by the Tribune rublUblng Company, at Fifty Oonti a Month. Now YorlcOtricc: 1M) Nauau Ht, H.H. VUKKIj.NI, Sole Agent for Foreign Advarllslns. IMmED ATTHK I-OSTOrFlCB AT HCnAKTOMi rA., AS B ICON 1CI. ASS HAIL MATTBH, SCIIANTON, SEPTEMUI3K 14, 1898. RbPUDLICAN NOMINATIONS. STATE. Govrnor-W1LLIAM A. STONE. Lieutenant Qovernor-J. 1'. 8. UOHIN. Secretory of Internal Affulis-JAMES W. Judge of Superior Court-W. W. TOH- TER. V. V. roilTKIt. Congressmen -at - Lurgc 8AMU12L A. DAVENPOUT, GALUSHA A. QltOW. COUNTY. Cnpsrcrs-WILLIAM CONNELL. Judgp-F. W. dl'XSTUK. foroncr-JOIIN J. RORKKTS, M. V-Hurvcyor-QKORUE E. STEVENSON. LEGISLATIVE. Senate. Twentieth Dlst.-JAMKS C. VAUGHAN. House. Pirnt DIMrlct-JOHX R. KAMI. Hocond DUlrltt-JOlIX BCHEL'EU, JR, Third Dlntrlct-N. C. MACKEY. l'otirtli DMrict-JOlW V. REYNOLDS. COLONEL STONE'S PLATFOBM. It will lie my purpose when elected to bii conduct mj'Kflf ns to win the res-poet nnd Rood will of tho-e wlio liuvo oppoK.nl me as will us thou- who huvc given mo their fnippoit. 1 iihull bo tho Kovcnmr of the whole peopl of the state. Abiines have urdouhtC'lly rown up In the lecls lature whuli .iro neither the fault of one party nor the other, but rather Iho growth of cuMoni. I'micocHWiry lnostl Rations hae been nuthorlzeil by commit tees, rcMiltlri: In unnei'i'rs.ary expeiine to the stme. It will be mv iiirc and pur pose In correct these nnd other evils In so fur an 1 hove the power. It will be my purpose while uovcrnor of I'ennsyluinlu, ns It lias been my impose In the public poi-ltljns thut 1 Imvo hold, with Coil's help, to dhchniRC my whole duty. The peopln arc creator Minn the parties o which they Im-Ioiik. 1 urn only Jealous of their favor. I shull only ntteinpt to win their approval nnd my experience baa tuuglil me that that ran t.est lie done by an honest, moileit, daily dlsclmiso of public duty. m The Times Is for the people first, last nnd all the time; It does not favor the wealthy, the Influential, the moneyed power, aristocrats or those In authority Mmply because circumstances place them In their position, but the Times Is found on the side, of rlcht nnd justice and pan ders to no Caesar. Scranlon Times, Put more frankly, you try to feather your nest by stlrvir.fr up prejudices, manufacturing discontent nr.tl dolnc all In your power to bring about a con flict between the fcrtunate and the un fortunate, onie people call that smartness, some call It demapoglsm: but in any event It Is contemptible, and only a man lacking- In principle would work Ills way through life in that artful manner. Reorganize the Volunteers. The Army and Navy Journal of Sept. in says there Is considerable talk in the War department of dlfccharglnK from the service tho entire volunteer army enlisted durlne the war, except the troops In Manila. "Now that the actual fighting- Is at an end the volunteers." it notices, "are clamoring to he must ered out, and show no inclination to serve either In Cuba or Porto Rico, as armies of occupation. The president, Secretary Alger and Adjutant General Corbin are seriously considering the proposition of enlisting an entirely new army for such duty. The plan as sug gested Is to discharge all the volunteers In this country, Cuba nnd Porto Rico and give them another chance to enlist with the understanding that they will be either sent us part of tho armies of occupation, or used for garrison duty In this country." Thus those volun teers who are really needed at home and no doubt there arc many such could leave the service honorably while those without home ties or of advent urous disposition tending to Incline them toward further service could have opportunity to remain without embar rassment or disaffection In tho ranks. The plan, of course, presents some rtlfllculties In the way of reorganiza tion; but we believe thai on the whole It would by far bettor than to depend upon the service of discontented troop.H whose thoughts are centered rather on home than on army needs and dis cipline. The prospects of service an troops of occupation in Cuba or Porto Rico duiiug the winter months would undoubtedly appeal to a large propor tion of the unmarried men nmong the volunteers; and if. In the Interim, all volunteers were allowed a, month's furlough for the purpose of visiting their famiUea and friends and adjust ing personal mutters preparatory to a winter In tho tropics we have no doubt that tho required number could read ily be secured. It Is u plan worth trying. Maine's verdict show a light off-year vote, as was to have been expected considering that no formal oanvum of the state was attempted; but It also shows that Maine's Republicanism Is steadfast. Maine, as usual, Is emphat ically all right. A Belie of Feudalism. Shrill thero be a fraelng of the llv toll bridges at Pltt-stan, Wilkes-Uarro and Plymouth or n new court house? This Is tho question now before the people of Luzerne county. It is said the county can find means to do ono or the other presently but not both. Therefore it is a matter of prefer ence and the public is invited to ex press its wishes. This invitation probably does not ex tend to outsiders, yet as a matter of general Interest it would seem as if the new court house could wait. The pres ent court house in Luzerne Is not thing of beauty but it serves. Tho chance to Improve it can be exercised advantageously on the Interior by bet tering Its Juries and requiring among the officers nnd attorneys a high stand aid of conduct. As for the toll bridges, these are a nuisance and an abomination to thous ands of persons every day In tho year. The exaction of toll on ft public thor oughfare or on a thoroughfare which represents to the travellnsr public a nei cesslty rather than a choice is a sur vival of feudalism that should not bj endured In any modern community ono minute longer than necessary. Away with tho toll-taking. The now court house can watt. We can see no Just ground for com plaint against either the Cuban or the Filipino Insurgents who decline to dis arm until they are oillclally Informed where they nro at. It will be time enough to cnll upon their, to disarm when wo have disarmed their Spanish antagonists. It Is nil very well for the government nt Washington to say that It has declared an armistice with Spain, but that does not bind the Spaniards to desist from firing when they please on tho third parties to tho quarrel. If we were a Cuban or Fil ipino Insurgent living several weary miles out of range of a protecting Yankee wartlilp or a safeguarding American land force wo should post pone a general disarmament until wo knew for certain th.it tho Spanish gar rison around the corner had laid down Its shooting Irons first. Give the in surgents a fair shake. Dismissed. Wo shall not continue a controversy with a paper so destitute of principle as the Scranton Times, but once for nil we desire to suy that neither The Tribune nor any one In Its employ has ever said or Intimated that the reason for the non-aslBumcnt of the Thir teenth regiment to active service In Cuba, Porto Rico or the Philippines was because Its olllcers shirked such an assignment. We could not truth fully make uch a charge because we have never had the slightest basis for It. The officers of the Thirteenth had far less reason to fear lighting than the privates under their command. Tho lot of oillcers In a lighting campaign tluir food, shelter and liability to death or disability Is generally much better than that ot the privates in the ranks. In addition, they get the hon ors of battle tho recognition, the pro motions. Unless tho men who com mand the Thirteenth are a mean and contemptible set, they would have had fully as much reason to court active service ns the men under them. We will leave It to a gutter Journal like the Times to Insi it them and their friends In and out of the regiment by charging them, without a scintilla of basis, with being sneaks nnd cowards. The Regular Army. Reorganization of the nrmy staff to lit tho lessons of the war must, await the results of the thorough Inquiry which is to be made. U Is not a mat ter to be determined off-hand. In a general wuy tho conviction exists that ve must, abandon the old system ot divided authority which makes the commissary, quartermaster's and surgeon-general's departments virtually autonomous and distinct spheres of of ficial influence jieldlng obedience to no central military head and put tho whole matter of caring for soldiers away from the lighting lino under the control of a general staff tho head ot which Is subordinate to the general In command; but the working of this Idea out In Its various details Is something which will require expert study und time. Apart from that, the suggestion of General Miles that the regular army on a peace footing should be In propoition to the population, comprising, say, ono soldier to every 1000 of the population, meMs with favor. This would bo In line with the adjustment ot the police forcc In our municipalities and would insure the maintenance of an army tending gradually but not dangerously toward expansion. The system hereto fore in vogue of keeping the army strength nt n standstill whllo the pop ulation and the responsibilities of the country are continually Increasing stands condemned by common sense und by the bitter teachings of experi ence. We know now. If we did not know a year ago, that In any large emergency calling for tho assertion ot military strength the regular army is the basis upon which we must depend for niitlonui safety. It Is no less a na tional protection than Is the regular navy on the high seas; and we can no more improvise an army out ot volun teers in time to be of swift and uner ring usefulness In n sudden emergency than we can improvise a fighting navy out ot passenger steamships and mer chantmen. If we reorganize the standing army so that In peace It shall have a mini mum enrollment of 70,000 to 73.000 men we should so arrange its composition that at the llrst sign ot trouble It can quickly bo multiplied by two without necessitating tho appointment of more than a small per centage of new o'lle ers. Tho sinio line olllcers who com mand CO privates In peace can take charge of ICt1 privates In war and lose little time In lifting tho 50 raw recruits to the level of trained soldiers. Hut the late war has shown, as tho ,;lvil war also taught, that it Is out of the question to improvise fit olllcers In a hurry. With a regular army of 73,000 nun In peace and capable of swift ex pansion to double that number In nn emergency, and with a sul'lclently large navy to give us control of the seas In at least the immediate neigh borhood of our coasts, wo can engage any enemy and keep him occupied un til our volunteer reserves are got in shape to take and hold a place at the front, alongside the regulars. Chaplain Eateman of tho Sixteenth infantry declares his belief, which ho says Is shared by General Shafter, that the Malno was blown up by a rcnegado Cuban. No doubt it was a renegade Cuban who shot the crew of the Vir glnlus, murdered Dr. Ruiz nnd put In forco In Weyler's name tho famous rc concentratlon scheme. Cubans uro convenient ucapegoats Just now. The explanation elsewhere by Major Parke of tho circumstances of his nr re!t as tho surgeon in charge of tho Pecond division hospital nt Camp Meade puts the matter In a light not only exonerating him but also tending to Illumine much of tho complaint which has arisen concerning the medi cal department of the nrmy. Failure to transmit n change of orders Is ns great u dereliction as failure to rive the necessary orders In the first piaosj nnd if it Is developed by tho court martial that Major I'niko has been humiliated for doing that which his last orders commanded him to do an other and a serious oaso will bo es tablished against the department over which tho celebrated Sternbctg pre sides. It is Indeed high time for an In vestigation of this department. John Sherman says if congress had let him nnd the president alone they would have drafted a treaty with Spain whereby Spain would have relin quished Cuba peacably. Perhaps. And perhaps not. It Is prolltles3 to specu late on what might have been. Tho fact Is now that Spain Is going to get out not only of Cuba but also of every other possession where she Is In our way or where her misrule has been a stneh In the nostrils of civilization. If John regrets that he Is further gone In the dry rot of conservatism than wj had thought. Tiie Democratic politicians must bo blind, Indeed, it they think there's tho ghost of a polltlcnl show for them in charging mismanagement of the war ngulust McKlnley. The people have full confidence In the president's abili ty and Intention to have abuses In army control probed nnd corrected; and they know that whore he falls no Detnojiut could succeed. Canadian papers Intimate thnt Queen Wllhelmlnn, of Holland, is a vain little creature and feels bigger than her mother. This Is to be regretted. It Is astonishing that even a Queen after having been written up by lCdward Hok could cer bo anything but an gelic. . The most nmuslr.g feature of tho campaign to date is tho attempt of tho Dr. Swallow organs to make It appear that Colonel Stone was not slncer In his advocacy of immigration restric tion. They will have him a free trader next. As In the case of tho Empress of Austria, the stllleto or bomb of tho Anarchist generally socks a victim whose life has been Identified with everything save the evils which the Anarchists pretend to seek to correct. If tho Carl Schurz crowd don't like tills expanding nation they can move to Switzerland or China. The world is diversified enough In point of gov ernments for every mun to have his choice. It Is now In order for the average es teemed contemporary to pat Itself on the back and tell how much superior Us war news was to that furnlthed by oili er newspapers. The war came very near destroying the prospects of the foot ball heroes this season. Wo do not hear of many "Russell Algers" In tho fall crop of babies. General Agulnnldo Is busy these days pigeonholing ultimatums. Reasons fop the Retention of Uizon. ITho significance of the following edi torial from the Philadelphia Press con sists in tho fact that It undoubtedly re flects with accuracy tho purpose ot tho administration to Insist upon American retention of tho Island of Luzon, which me.inseventually all tho Philippines, since with Luzon taken from It, Spain's foot hold In tho Archipelago becomes nt oneo untenable. The island of Luzon in tho past has been tho keystone ot Spanish authority In tho East Indies. It Is about tho slzo of Cuba and Porto Rico added together, nnd In natural resources is credibly reported to be. If possible, their superior. Tho presence ot tho peace commission in Washington brings the Philippines to a decision. Tho United States can take nil tho group, a coaling station or Lu zon, with the city of Manila. In all prob ability the commission will be instructed to ask the last; but why take any terri tory save a coaling station? Not for tho profit and trado of tho colony nlone. Tills Is shallow. Luzon, a fcrtlio tropical island, has yielded Spain n net profit of $1,000,000. It win yield us more. Rut to a nation like tho United States this Is no temptation, though It sweeps away the Plea unit mo possession will bo costly. It will pay its way. The present tradu Is another Item, but the total profit on the current commerco of the Philippines ran not bo much over fMo.ooo, tho return of a slnglo big American llrm. Tills Is worth having, but It does not mcasuro very big against tho profits on our total trade of $1.S17,0(),000 In tho last fiscal year. Wider relations nnd reasons are needed to Jus tify their acquisition. o First, tho United States needs In the trado of the cast a commercial base. Our trado with China has grown ten-fold In twenty years. It has trebled In three. All Eastern Asia und Malaysia is open ing. Tho experience of England for two centuries ha.-v demonstrate that tills trade Is best acquired when curried on from eastern trading centers where goods nro protected and contracts enforced by tho familiar home law ot tho trader. This gives the English trader his price less advantage nt Hong Kong, Singapore and so on around to Rombuy. Ho trades on his own soil, under his own law and on nil Issues cf possession or of contract ho Is secure of a llnal appeal to a British court In London. Tho possibility of this appeal means security, nnd on security rests tho prolits of trade. o Every American merchant knows tho valuo ot federal law in protecting his con. tracts in our own states. No nation has ever won permanent eastern trudo with out a securo commercial base. Tho best of eastern states nro far worso than the worst and most reckleES of American states. Trade follows tho (lag because, the Hag means law law certain. Just and ti mlllnr. If our trado In tho east is to grow, as England's has at Hong Kong, wo must have nt Manila n rcnt commer cial bnse where warehouses, partner ships, bargalnn nnd contracts nro under a law both familiar to and trusted by our traders nnd where ull port regulations, local taxes and official action will be friendly to American trudc. As a nation wo need Manila exactly ns any firm whose trado In a distant spot grows soon finds it must have Us own warehouse nnd agent. o Tho new possession Is needed ns nn nut let for capital nnd enterprise Why him not Amerlcnn capital sought the manifold riches of Central America und the trop ical regons beyond? I'ecauso tho admin istration Is corrupt and tho law purchas able. Improvements, Investments, crops nnd profits In Spanish Amerlcnn states nro not safe, bernuso tho courts cannot bo trusted. Ceylon swarms with profit able ten plantations growing a tea in digenous to Fnrther India nnd not cul tivated there becauso tho native states had courts nnd governments no man could trust. English lnw makes English Invest ments possible, Our capital Is rolling up. "Money" for mouths together hns bean ns cheap in New Yoik as In tendon. The English investor finds Enslleh protcc- tlon and Kmtllsh law nit over the tropics, Hnd lis brings to enterprises there tho skill, energy und persistence of tho tem perate zono. America needs n Ilka chance. Our population Is banking up against tho rainless lino which Is depopu lating West Kansas. Our foreign trndo Is expanding. If our national develop, ment Is to continue tropical Islands ilko Luzon and Poito Rico must sivc an out let. c Such development will make us com mercially Independent. No nation occu pies this place, unless sugar, coffee nnd tho like, grown In Its own territory, un der Its own law, regulates the price it pays for these products elsewhere. Lack ing this, nations nro mnlmed. With them England, a mcro Island, is, in Its trade, both complete and Independent. If tho Pnltcd States Is to suspend Its develop ment It needs no external territories; but If Us trade Is to grow, Its products to Increase and Its relations multiply, it must have them, nnd without them It la bors under tho disadvantage which leaves us today the only great owcr which plays no shnro in extending law, trade and civilization In tropical legions whore commerco Is und always has been the foundation of enduring piospcrlty, 1'nless this duty Ih discharged our na tional life will remain parochial, Intro spective nnd narrow. Nations, like Indi viduals, grow not by dodging duties but by discharging them. Responsibilities creato character. Their lack enfeebles. Over alt nnterlal Interests nrc tho moral responsibilities our own nets have cre ated. For regions nnd islands not taken wo stand as wo do towards tho Canaries or a Spanish province; but Luzon we hold nt Its capital. Ablo to govern It better than Spain, we hnvo no moral right to return It to Spanish oppression or lot It sink Into Its native barbarism. We are rich, populous and powerful. Not for ourselves alone, but as Providence Imposes responsibilities towards other and weaker peoples, we enjoy all to nld In tho work of world civilization. In which for a century the English branch of our rare has led, to tho earth's lasting and limitless good. AN AMERICAN WEAKNESS. From tho Allonna. Tribune. The habit of reckless assertion is ono thnt Is widely spread and has done mucn harm In Its time. Tho disposition to complain with one's lot, whatever It m!y be, und to compare It with some mythical blessed time in the past Is equally preva lent und equally vicious. Thero uro men who have become so accustomed to say ing vicious tilings tibout others nnd crumbling about their lot that it Is a strt of second nature to them to but tonhole others nnd pour out tho stream of pessimistic thoughts that burden their brain. Jf tbeso pertains can find nc th ing in tluir Individual cxpcrlcnco ocr which to mourn they will weep over tho woes of others, Iho shortcomings ot th3 people's servants and tho decadence of public spirit. o Tho inveterate grumbling ot the aver ago American docs no particular harm so long as It refers exclusively to his per sonal affairs. H makes him an unpleas ant companion sometimes, nnd there uro moments when it may do gross injustice to the citizens against whom he rails, but until ho enters tho larger arena ot public llfo and begins to throw dirt at conspicuous public characters the world heeds him not. His excoriations of pub lic men affect two classes tho young and foreigners. A young man who ireads that a certain public character Is a thief nnd the companion of thieves Is very much surprised at the prominent posi tion held by tho alleged "thief" and at tho number of leading citizens who aro Ills partisans. He lias confidence in his newspaper, never dreams that It is blinded by prejudice or something worje, nnd tho result Is that ho Is soon on the way to become a cynic. Tho Inhabitant of Europe Is led to believe that the Amer ican people, through some strange freak, aro in tho habit of filling their ofhees with criminals. He could not bo ex pected to think otherwise. Not under standing tho peculiar ccccntilcitiea of American journalism, he accepts its stat wilts concerning American public men as correct. Then he goes Into the company of his fellows and shakes his head sadly as ho points to tho condition of tho American republic, ns dosctlbcd by Its newspapers, as n terrible illustration of tho failure of popular government. o As a matter of ff.et there Is no govern ment on earth which taxes Its people less heavily than tho American republic; no country whose public srrvuits, as a class, nro more courteous, cflkient und faith ful; no country In which there Is so little heart-breaking poverty; no country In which the laws are morn Impartially ad ministered and class distinctions less pronounced; no country in which tho worklngman Is so Independent and his home so comfortable. To be sure, this Is not tho conception of the demagogue, but It is the true one, as tho census nnd other returns Indicate. Isn't It time that senslblo and patriotic citizens recsg nize tho truth nnd turn tho cold shoulder to the chronic defamer of his country's good name? Thero has been a terrlblu exhibition of the national peculiarity during tho lust few weeks In connection with tho sufferings ot our army In Cuba nnd tho home camps. Tho facts sho.v that thero was room for criticism, but they also show that tho reckless on.l mallgrant n.rnufactursr of colossal false hoods was lllcewiso on tho ground, and that his untruths havo Inflamed tho pub lic temper. Wo nro likewise about to engage in an animated political cam paign In this state in which the weapons of detraction arc likely to bo used. Wlso citizens will do well if they resent such methods. THE REG'LAR ARMY MAN. Ho ain't no gold-lace "Relvlderc," Ter sparkle In tho sun. Ho don't parado with gay cockade, And posies In his gun; Ho ain't no "pretty soldier boy," So lovely, spick and span. Ho wears a crust of tun and dust, Tho Reg'lar Aimy man; Tho mnrchln', parchln', Pipe-clny sturchin', Reg'lar Army man. He ain't at homo In Sunday bchool, Nor yet at social tea, And on tho day ho gets his pay Ho's apt ter spend It free: llocin't no temp'rance advocate. Ho likes to till tho can, Ho's kinder lough an' maybe tough, The Reg'lar Army man; Tho rarln", tcarln'. Sometimes sweurln', Reg'lar Army man. . No statoil call him "noblo son," He ain't no ladies' pet, Hut let a row start nnyhow, They'll send for him, you betl He don't cut any ice at nil In Fashion's social plan, IIo gits a Job to face a mob, The Reg'lar Army man; Tho mlllln drlllln', Mudo fer klllln, Rcgiur Army rr.cn. They ain't no tears shed over him When ho goes off ter war, Ho gits m speech nor prayerful "preach" From mayor or governor; Ho packs his llttlo knapsack up And trots off In tho van, Ter start tha fight and stnrt it right, The Reg'lar Army man; Tho rnttlln'. battlln', Colt or aatlln', Reg'lar Army man. Ho makes no fuss about tho Job, Ho don't talk big or brave. He knows ho's in ter light und win, Or help fill up a grave; He nln't no "mamma's durlln'," but Ho does tho bout ho can, And ho's tho chnp that wins the fccrap, Tho Reg'lar Army man; Tho dandy, hundy, Cool and sandy, Reg'lar Army man. Joo Lincoln In L. A. W. Dullctln. ( GO MMTffS iW A SURPRISE IN SKIRT, Special sale of Two-toned Brocaded Dress Skirts, four yards wide, lined with Rustling Percaline, inter-lined through out with Crinoline, faced with the best, velveteen, cut in the latest shape, perfect hanging ; combinations black and red, black and brown, black and blue, grey and blue. No expert could figure out the materials and making less than $3.50. Sale price of Always Busy SCHOOL SUES A NO FALL FOOTWEAR I'or Every Member of the Family. Lewis, Rely k Mvies, 111 AND 110 WYOMING AVENUE. EE3Fiiece Dfleeer Sets New, Beautiful Patterns, just opened. Special Prices on same, OMONS, FERBER, 0'MALLEY CO, 4 '22 Lackawanna Aveaua WOLF & WENZEL, 210 Adnm Ave., Opp. Court House. Practical Tiaiers Sole Acents for Klcbardson-Bnyntoa'J Furnaces and lUnffas. tfWWX THE MODERN HARDWARE STORE. Foot & SHnear Company. Special Prices for 4-Quart 21c S-Quart 24c o-Quart 27c ilO-Quart 38c 32-Quart 45c 14-Quart 54c We have a large assortment of Fruit Presses, Jelly Sieves and Jelly Strainers. The above goods are all first quality. No seconds. Foot & Shear l 40 these beautiful garments, $L9 LjsO EE WINDOWe 1898, Fall Exhibit. 1898 MILL & COMELL' A anitire No such magnificent display of furniture has ever been shown in Scranton as that now presented in our Fall exhibit. Nowhere can equal choice or equal values in Furniture be found. Latest designs In Redroom. Parlor, Library, Dining room and Hall Furni ture. Furniture to suit every taste and prices to suit every purse, with the satisfaction of knowing that what ever may be selected will be tho very best In the market for the money. Inspection of our stock and prices solicited. Hill & Coeeelll w At 121 North WMblaglOQ Avenue. Scranton, Pa. Tyyewriters' Supplies, Letter Presses, Law Blanks aid tie largest line of office supplies and sta tionery ii H. E Peina, ReyeoldsBros Stationers and Engravers, HOTEL JEUMYN UUILDINO. 130 Wyomlns Avenua. the Canning Season. 4-Quart 23c S-Quart 25c 6-Quart 28c 8-Quart 30c 30-Quart 36c 32-Quart 40c !4-Quart 45c Coe 319 Washington Ave BAZAAt m 1MLEY New Fall Our First Delivery of "Choke Dress Fabrics" in Black and Colors for early Fall wear is just brought forward and we invite you to an inspect ion of the same, feeling sure that after looking them over, you will con sider it time well spent. We duplicate nothing that is shown in Exclu sive Patterns, so you will make no mistake in mak ing a selection now as our present line contains many choice things that could not be had later on. Black and Colored Grepes, Poplins, 1& in Bayedere and other effect promise to be among th i leadiug materials for the sea sou and all of them are here largely represented. Also some very desirable numbers in New Fall Silks all in exclusive Waist Pat terns just opened. 510 and 512 LACKAWANNA AVENUE HENRY BEL1N, JR., General Agent for the Wyomlox Ulitrlctfj; IMM1T illulng, I!lastls.Sportlns, Braokeloi dud tba Itepauno CneuilcX Company' IH EXPLOSIVES. fcafety Kuee, Cap and Kxplodffi. Itoora .tut (.'onnell Uutldtng. bcruntoa. AOUNG'lEd: thos roim JOHNH.BMlTH.taON. W. Ii MULLIGAN. rittlla Flyiuoutl WUWen-Ilarri ESS G001S. roita
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers