Tl-- Z5 fmitr -w ." fT" i THE SCRANTON TRIBUNE-THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1898. J t'ubllslird Dally, Kxaepi Sunday, br the Tribune l'ubllsulne Company, at b'lfty Ceuti ft Montll. New YorkOmce: lRONnMnu.su H.H. VlllSKhANO, Bole Agent for Foreign Advertising. IKTrilCD AT THK rOSTOfrlCIC AT &CHAXT0X, PA., AH SKCOKM-CLAeS MAIL M AlTKlt. BCItAKTOX. SEl'TKMIJKR lSlSSS REPUBLICAN NOMINATION BTATE. Governor WILLIAM A. STONR. Lieutenant Governor-J. I'. B. UOMN. Secretary of Internal Affalra-JAMKS W. LATTA. Judges of Superior Court-W. W. SOR TER, W. D. 1'OHTEK. Congressmen - fit - Large SAMUEL A. DAVJiNTOHT, QALUSHA A. GROW. COUNTY. Congress-WILLIAM CONNELL. Jtidgc-r. W. GUNSTEH. Coroner JOHN J. ROIJEUTS, M. D. euivcyor-GEORGE E. STEVENSON. LEGISLATIVE. Senate. Twentieth DIst.-JAMEti C. VAUGIIAN. Houso. Tirst nistrlct-JOHN H FAUR. Second Dlstrlct-JOHN 8C11IXEK. JR. Third Dl.strlot-N. C. MACKUV. Fourth Dlstrlct-JOUN 1 REYNOLDS. COLONEL STONE'S PLATFORM. It will be my purpose when elected to fn ..'ondiii't in.sclf hs to win the respect tuid pood will of tliopc who have opposed me .is well as thoso who have given me t'lUr supiioit. I chnll bp the governor of the vlnile peopl? of the state. Abuses bue undoubtedly grown up in the legis lature ninth nr neither the fault of one party nor tlii other, but rather the growth of custom. Uniiiccatary Investi gations nave heon authmlzcd by commit tees, riMiHirg In Uiinect'ssavy expense tu the stfitf. It will be my cue and pJi Pom to correct thew am) other evils in so fnr ns 1 huve the power. It will be my purpose while coventor of rcnnsylvunl.i, ns It has been my purpose In the public position th-it 1 hnvi liltl, with God's help, to illtcharce my whole duty. The pettpln nto cifalcr tlinn the parties o which Ihfv belting. 1 am only Jcilous of their f.ivur. I bhall only attempt to win their approval and my experience lias taught me that that can best be done by an honst, modest, dally discharge of public duty. The president has directed that ns an alleviating condition for the volunteers who tiro obliged to remain In the scrvico In time of virtual peace, furloughs bo granted to soldiers in ens-es in which health or peculiar personal circumstances malo absence from the army for a tinio desirable or necessary. Washington Dis patch In the Sun. Will the Scranton Times please make a note of this? Stand by the President. It Is not supposable that with mo mentous territorial and other ivar problems awaiting solution at the hands of the next congress any Rcpub Ilcan will become Indifferent to the necesslty of re-inforcing the president by a congressional majority in sympa thy with his views: yet the light vote cast In the Vermont and Maine elec tions suggests that Republicans else where should not overlook the national nspects of the approaching November election. In this state the gubernatorial and legislative battle has become through no fault of the Republican party one ' very largely factional In its character. A noisy element though professing to be Republican on national issues is effecting in many legislative districts fusion with the Democrats. Prohibi tionists and Independents with the pur pose of undermining the Republican party organization. Beaten In open state convention after a fair canvass, these representatives of a disaffected faction are now seeking' revenge at the polls by engineering alliances with the common political enemy. In at least one congressional district they have set up a stump candidate against the regular Republican candidate, and while the latter will prolmbly pull through, saving a vote to the national administration, no thanks will bo due to the factlonists now striving to en compass his defeat. Doubtless as the campaign progresses similar tactics will be employed elsewhere, and it therefore becomes essential that Re publicans whose party atllllatlon rests on belief In Republican nrlnclnle should everywhere solidify with a view to defending their own. The Democratic party cannot make nny gains In Pennsylvania this fall unless helped to them by Republican aid. Whatever galnH it shall make by such aid will be held by it In future to the detriment of Republican inter ests. Guerrilla warfare where national Issues are Involved does not promote genuine political reform but simply embarrasses it. Mr. Wanamaker and his confrere disturbers cannot weak en the party at one point and expect it to remain strong nt another. If they are sincere In their professions of loyalty to the party on national issues they will limit their efforts at state readjustment within party lines and avoid alliances with the enemy. Their refusal to conserve the national Inter ests of the party should be taken by good Republicans as a signal to with draw from further Identification with them and to align for party defense. In solving the problems growing out of the war the administration needs be hind It tha support of a united party. Some Democrats ar.e broad enough to ayoia partisan obstruction of the pres ident's plans, but the majority of them, If history furnishes any warrant for prophecy, will be, as In the past, "agin the government." This certainly makes necessary an unbroken Republican front. Possibly some of the Democratic ed itors wou'.u like to serve on that war probing commission. The president should give them a chance. Wise. Sad Is tho plaint which comew from fair Columbia. The Hon. Christy Kauffm&n, prophet and reformer, has turned ills back on the people of Lan caster and will leave them to their political Idolatry. He tells the com mittee of one Ruddlph Blankenburg which boueM to persuade him to head ( fusion ticket: "I have gone over the matter very carefully, and I cannot see why It is my duty to stand as a candl- ditto for the senate. I think I have lone my full share In trying; to reform stato affairs, and th.it my friends should not Insist on my again enter ing the contoHt for senator. Tlio reo ord of the Inut legislature should bo enough to rouse the people of the coun ty and state to the selection of a better clnss of legislators, but as they have failed to assert their manhood and In dependence at the primaries. 1 have no nssuritnce that they will do better at the Eener.il election." The refusitl of a professionally cood candidate to run for ofl'.cft when his constituent don't want him to serve them Is, to be sure, a matter of pathos: but upon the whole It is not unwise. It obviates a lot. of embarrassment on the day following election day. When you see In the Philadelphia Press an accusation ngalnst the Re publican state organization don't be lieve It until It Is confirmee'. The Press Is doing a whole lot of misrepre senting these ditys, n notnble case In point bolng Its ridiculous recent asser tion tlmt the otnte organization had conspired to defeat C. W. Stone for re-election to congress. State Chair man IClkln's unqualified dental vnt not needed to brand this story as a mall clous Invention, nor should denials hereafter be vouchsafed where the purpose so evidently In to foment dis cord by unscrupulous deception. , Tlio General Commanding. It would undoubtedly i-nnduce to the president's ease of mind as well as to welfare of the military service and to the satisfaction of the country gen erally If he would take early occasion to extinguish finally the annoying jealousies nnd little conspiracies among the nrmy olllcers In and about the war department by indicating clearly who is In command, und giving smelt sup port to that person, whether General Miles, General Corbln or nnothcr, as shall leave the commanding general free to give hereafter his whole at tention to the duties of his position. In point of rcault3 achieved no 601 dler In the American uniform presents a large;1 claim to confidence than the present general in ostensible command, Nelson A. Miles. Wherever he has been permitted to put training and professional experience to tho teat as against political influence or the vague ideas emanating from tho civilian cor ner in the war department confusion has given way to system nnd chaos has assumed quickly tj)D semblance or order. We need not go over recent hls Iniy to enumerate instances In proof. They nre fresh in tho public memory and btcaus? of them tho opinion is now widespread that Miles Is decided ly tho man for his present place and that so long as ho is retained In that place he should hi Invested with au thority suuicicnt to Impress his ideas upon the army and not no kept in a eontinvnl petty cross-lire. Hut if there are reasons unknown to the public why Corbln or some other person rather than Miles should do the thinking for the army, we do not re gard it ns wise that there should be further hesitancy in putting him for mally In command, with all that that Implies. The matter Is not one of per sons but of principle. We have had too many heads In our army and It Is desirable at an early day in get back to the good old system which served Lincoln so well In the latter part of the civil war the system of it com manding general who actually com mands. The history of military ex perience everywhere teaches that this is the only reliable basis of military organization: nnd a few more such in stances of cross-purposes like those Involved In the episode of tho aban doned parade of the troops from Porto Rico nnd Montauk Point will be apt to convince friends of the president that the line no less than tho staff needs his early attention. A satirical contemporary suggests that If champagne Is so objectionable at the christening of battleships the experiment bo tried of immersing the ships in ink, which would leave less of that dangerous fluid on hand for the use of literary reformers. Many a weary copy-editor will cheerfully sup port the amendment. Judged By Its Fruits. "Do our adversaries complain that the Republican party has not support ed tho school system of the state? My answer is tbnt more than sixty per cpnt. of our total state revenues are given fnr this purpose, and that no other state between the Atlantic and Pad'lo oceans provides such liberal support for the education of tho masse3 In the university of the common peo ple. Do our adversaries complain that our penal, eleemosynary, and chari table institutions nre not properly sup ported? My answer is that no other state or territory In this country, from Passamatjuoddy Ray to Cape Mendo cino, no, nor Horn Porto Rico around the globe to Manila, supports these worthy Institutions so generously ns our own. Do our adversaries complain that the moneys of the state have not been properly cared for? My answer Is that In the period or time from 1R10 down to and including ISflfc, there have been paid Into the state treasury al most four hundred and twenty-five millions of dollars, not one dollar of which was ever paid out except, by warrant of law, and not a single penny of which was ever lost by reason of tho default or dishonesty of p. state treas urer. I doubt If there Is any state, private business house or financial In stitution that can point to u record with such a degree of pride. Do our enemies complain because the Repub lican party has not paid the state debt? My answer Is that in 1S10 the debt of Pennsylvania was J3C.1CS.52S.10: In 1SC1, after twenty years of Democratic rule, this debt was Increased to $10. 4tS.213.82. In other vordj. In twenty years, under a Democratic administra tion of our state affairs, thero was an actual Increase In the public debt of JI.27P.C5S.T2. When the Republican party came Into power In lffil, the state debt, as I havo said, was Jlo, S,I13.82l In 1R71 we had reduced the public debt to J23,27,S20.r,l; that Is to say, during the first ten years of Re publican administration of our state affairs, although almost Jive of thM years were years of war, and conse quently extraordinary tux burdens, the stnto debt was reduced J11,1CS,S93.3S. In ISO? the public debt was G,S15,30..47. The amount In the sinking fund on the ilrst day of December, 1SS7, was $3,310, C38.69, leaving the uctual publlo debt nrter applying the sinking fund set apart for that purpose, $1,274,GG6.8. In tha thirty-seven years of Republican rule In the state our debt has been reduced $39,165,547.01. Tho average nn mini reduction in these thirty-seven years was Sl.058,474.21. "Fellow Republicans, Is there any thing in this record for which the Re publican party need upologlze?" State Chairman lilltln at Pittsburg. Out of a population of 1.S51.5SS Chi cago has 490,542 Germans and only 488, C93 citizens reported as Americans by nationality, the additional distribution being as follows: Rom In Ireland, IMS, 142; Sweden, Ul.U-0, Poland, yC,M3; Uohrmla, S9.2S0: Norway, 43,690; Eng land, 44,223- Russia, J3.0S7: Canada, 34,907, Africa (colored), 25,814; Italy, 23,i)6t; Scotland, 22,942; France. 2I.S0O; Denmark, 21,761; Hollund, 19,14s; Hun gary, 4.452; Switzerland, 4.401. Wales. 3, 774; China, 2.413; IJclglum. 2,011: Greece, 1,641, Lithuania, 1,411; Spain, 56; Mexico, 152. Rut It Is the glory of American Institutions that all these either already arc or will eventually become good Americans In spirit and In deed. Pure metal Is often weaker than an alloy. The transport Manitoba left Ponce, Porto Rico, Soph 7 with 1300 United .'states troops, mostly volunteers, nnd reached New York six days later. Tills vas not a voyage made In tho haste and confusion or war but one for which then- was ample lime to prepare. Yet during this six-day Imprisonment at Ka all the soldiers on the Manitoba had to eat was a little canned beef nnd some musty hard tack. We should like to know what explanation the Watihington bureaucrats will have for that Our government, It Is announced, will send it representative to the czar's peace congrers if thnt Is ever held. A trip from Washington to St. Peters burg nt tho right season of tho year, with all expenses paid, will constitute a pleasant assignment for some, lortu nnte ft lend of the president, and prob ably lead to no serious International embarrassments, Sjtlll, it doesn't im pies.H us ns being n matter in which the United States has any practical concern. A deplorable condition exists in tho dominion of Canada. There is a scar city of husbands. Census figures show a preponderance of the female over the male population running into tho hun dred thousands. Meanwhile every American stale along the border suf fers from (i surplus of bachelors. The remedy is plain. Canada must and shall be annexed. The Philadelphia Press predicts that the next United States senator from Pennsylvania will be a Republican. Ttiere ought to be no room fnr doubt on that point. Such doubt ns exists arises wholly from the efforts of tho Press and Its faction to elect Demo crats to the legislature In the hope of beating Quay. Reports of fatalities In the Alps con tinue to arrhe. Scarcely a week passes without the account of the head long plunge into eternity of sonic ven turesome tourist. It will probably nl ways be a matter of wonder that so many people seek tho Alps, when sui cide could be accomplished so much more inexpensively at home. So much gold has neriimiilntorl in the banks of New York from persons who prefer paper equivalents that the treasury department has authorized the sub-treasury to receive deposits of gold coin against the shipment of cur rency from Washington. It will not again be claimed that there Is an in sufliciency of gold. Hoston's school board has Illustrated Its Intellectuality by cutting the sal aries of nil of Roston's public school teachers 10 per cent. The excuse Is, hard times, but more probably the true reason Is, thick heads. Ry a unanimous vote the city coun cil of Greater New York has com mended Helen Gould for her patriotic services during the war, and the coun try nt large cordially seconds the mo tion. Now that ex-banker F. V. Rockafel low has been released from the pen itentiary perhaps he will gratify his torical curiosity by explaining what was done with It. It may bo that It Is the newspaper correspondents Instead of Dewey and Merrltt who are worrying about the attitude of Aguinaldo and his fol lowers. All orders to General Miles will pro bably hereafter contain the para graph "subject to change." Someone will probably have to be deputized to deal with tho Aguinaldo of the Ladroncs, TOLD BY THE STARS. Dally Horoscopo Drawn by AJacchus, Tho Tribune Astrologer. Astrolabe Cast: 4.33 a. m for Thursday September 15, 1S2S. ' sh & & A child born on this day will notice that eloquence is often the ucce8srul prop of a weak argument. These are the days when the straw hat and overcoat Lattle for supremacy. Examples of risk Incurred In the en deavor to apply yellow Journalism locally ate before us, The fall of the sparrow Is marked try the rise of the reed bird. The surplus stock of Cuban machettes could be brousht north and used to nd vantage on tho edltois who continually refer to "gentle reader." Weil now enjoy the other half of Sep tember. Scranton Is again In danger or being lilt by a baso ball franchise cold brick. AJacchus' Advice. The pence commission will please re. member that the Philippines come high but wo must have 'em. Anarchy Here and Across the Wafer. From tho New York Hun. n S MIGHT bo expected, the apsassln Ml atlun of the emprtfs of Austria has 111 culled forth from the European r press a universal expression of .re ttontment nt tlio dastardly crime, nnd a clunior for thi adoption of severe nieusutcn to prevent a it petition of it. The stamping out of anarchists and of aimtclilstln sentiments by tho most rig oroin legislation Is demanded, and an ut tempt at complying with the demand is quite possible. Here, In tbls country, tie sentiment afouecd by the assassination Is equally profound, but It docs not differ from that Inspired by any other shock ing homicide. To ub a woman la n wo man, whether she bo an empress or tho humblest nf her sex, and her unprovoked murder excites loathing and disgust, lather than ungcr. o Anarchism Is nothing more than the tago of unintelligent men und women against other men and women whom tho course of events 1ms placed in conditions seemingly n ore favorable to comfort and happiness thar those In which they find themselves. At bottom It is the same spirit of envy which Inspired the first mutder recorded in history. Cnlu killed Abel because "the Lord had respect unto Abel nnd his offering, but unto Cain and his offering he had no respect." Conse quently, we are told. Cain was very wroth with his brother, roc up against him and slew him. So, In like manner, tho anarchist. Is wroth with all the hu man beings who apparently enjoy moro of thu dlvlno favor than he does, and, on opportunity, bluys them, -o Though anarchists, as has been said, nro unintelligent, they aro not necessarily uneducated. In fact, they comprise among them men of considerable Intel lectual cultivation, who nre tho moro in furiated against their fortunate fellow men for tho very reason that their desires have by their cultivation become keener and stronger than they otherwise would have been. What they get or this woria s goods Is so much less than what th;y would like to get. that, with Cain, they tiro ready to kill thoso who have succeed ed where they have failed. Hence, among the most ardent revolutionists, and dc clalmers against the existing order of thing nro persons of literary attain ments, who can put Into words what I'iss Instructed pcoplo feci but cannot cxprosi. Is obvious, therefore, that no legisla tion can suppress uncrrhlsm. It is a vice of human nature wnlch police measures cannot eradicate. The crimes It Inspires must be dealt with like other crimes, and, like thrm, will be frequent or Infre quent, accoidng to circumstances. In Europe It takes tho form of assassinating emperors nnd other rulers; In this coun try It provokes assaults upen reputations and incites spoliation!! under the form of law. Tho vituperation which some of our newspapers arc continually pouring out upon tho rich men of the country nnd upon official functionaries who havo failed to conciliate them, Is essentially nnnrchlsllr, nnd. If unchecked by publlo condemnation, It may lead to nssasslnn tlon here, as It has abroad. President Lincoln, President Garfield and Mayor Hanrlson, of Chicago, fell victims to It, as did the Emperor Alexander of Russia, President Carnot of France. Senor Ca novns of Spain, and now tho empress of Austria. INTERESTING FACTS. Tho Bermudas export over 17,000,WO pounds of onions every year. The expenses of Ureal Uritaln are no.v about JL-:WO,000,IWU yearly, or Hourly Jl.O'JO per minute. Tho port of Illogo. Japan, was opened to tho world in 1S3S. Resinning with noth ing, Its commereo baa Increased to W. OOti.noo annually. Tho governor general of the Congo Free state has clapped nn annual tax of J25.H5 on every commercial agent, traveling salesman, peddler and shopkeeper In that tcnltury. Interpreters aro taxed $1.9:!. Canadian bicycles next year, by agree ment among the manufacturers, will have CO-lnch wheels Instead of 2S-lnch. which aro now tho Uandard, will he from one to two pounds heavier than those of ISjS, and will cost mere. Tho total trndo of this country with Calcutta, India, during tho last lUeal year was J1S.719.1SS, against $13,023,570 four years ago, an Increase of more than j, OOO.OOrt. The Calcutta trado with Gieat Hrttnin declined S per cent, during the year. Of every 1.000 inhabitants of the globe PES llvo In Asia, 212 In Europe, HI In Afrlcn, S2 In America, flvo In Occanlca and the Polar regions, nnd only two In Australia. Asia contains more than one. half of tho total population of tno earth, nnd Europe nearly one-fourth. In 1S97 coal mining machines had bees Introduced Into twenty states. The num ber of machines Increased from 513 In 1SJ1 to 1.9SS In 1S97, and tho quantity of coal mined by machines Increased from 6,211, 732 short tons In 1S91 to 22,619,220 short tom In 1S97. The machines Increased from E.."G per cent. In 18D1 to 16.17 per cent. In lb97. In Montana nearly tV) per cent, of the coal produced In 1897 was obtained by ma chines, nnd In Alaska 100 per cent. According to the latest statement by Robert Tlage Keir, the secretary of the United Stntes Golf association, there are now enrolled nineteen associate and 100 allied golf clubs. Thero are three times as many moro unattached clubs, ho that by a careful estlmato there must this season bo over 500 flourishing golf clubs In existence. The money Invested in the game will exceed $30,000,000. Tho players among them will expend fully $10,000,ono this year on their sport. Tho Individual players will exceed 123,000 In number. A WONDERFUL WAR. From the New York Sun, Tho main facts of tho war are too Im portant and too helpful and too credit able to tlio countty for them to bo burled beneath borrow nt the war's accidents or resentment ut tho defects of Its adminis tration. Leaving out tho Incalculable po litical benefits of victory, tho army's re cord would remain surprising after proof of every fault charged against any ofil clal connected with It, In or out of uni form. o- Evcn if General Shatter had been ns In competent a commander at Santiago as disapproving criticism declares ho was, the campaign theio closed with suc cess of scarcely paralleled brilliancy, and tho Amerlcnn who would rather condemn Shatter than rejolre In his nrmy's tri umph falls In due appreciation of It, Even If Secretary Alger had been tho most in competent and unworthy secretary that ever sat in tho war department, tho to tal of actual achievement on the part of that bureau, In comparison wltn the num ber of troops supplied, would still sur pass all precedents. If tho sick who havo coino back to us from tho awful climate of Cuba had suf fered from blunders and neglect in tho full measures charged against tho war department, it would remain true that the cure and comforts given to them have far exceeded any standnrds ever berore known In armies. Tho total death list Is peculiarity small. It has been n wonder ful war, of wlich, after It Is all finally over, the marks of grief nnd misfortune will be marvellously few. but tho marks of national glor will be bread, deep, and Indelible. IF. From the New York Sun. If tho original Hull bill for the reorgan. Izatlon of tho regular army had passed It would have given us nn army large enough for the requirements of the war, to far as operations in foreign parts were concerned, and tho mllltla would have performed their appropriate functions In supplying or supplementing garrisons for tho seaboard fortifications. GO LISMIT 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 SCIdOL SMS AND FALL IFOOTWEAE For Every Member of the Family. Lewis, EeiSly & Mvies, 111 AND 1IO WYOMING AVENUE. IAY1LAB CHINA, ma- Dtaeer Sets New, Beautiful Patterns, just opened. Special Prices on same, $29,50 TIE CLEM1S, FERIEE, WALLEY Ca 422 Lackawanna Avenu WOLF & WENZEL, '2 1U Adams Ave., Opp. Court House. Sole Aconts for Rlcbardson-BoyatoaVi furnaces and Ranges. K iff THE MODERN HARDWARE STORE. Foote & Shear ComrnpfHirnyc Special Prices for Enamel Preserving Kettles 4-Quart 23c 5-Quart 24c O-Quart 27c 10-Quart 38c 32-Quart 45c 34-Quart 54c We have a large assortment of Fruit Presses, Jelly Sieves and Jelly Strainers. The above goods are all first quality. No seconds. Foote ifoear CS.li)5 4sj)o these beautiful garments, 1 ,980 SEE WINDOW, 1898, Fall Exhibit 1898 MILL & CQMELL'S Fiininre TT 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 bo found. Latest designs In Bedroom, Parlor, Library, Dining room and Hall Furni ture. Furniture to pult every taste nnd prices to suit every purse, with the satisfaction of knowing that what ever may be selected will be the very best in tho market for the money. Inspection of our stuck and prices solicited. Hill & Coeeell At H2! North Washington Avenuo. Scranton, Pa. S, Tyyewrlfers' Supplies, Letter Presses, Lay Blanks office supplies mi sta tionery in E E Fenna. Reynolds Bros Stationers and Engravers, HOTEL JKUMYN UUILDINQ. 130 Wyoming Avenue. the Canning Season. las 4-Quart 23c S-Quart 25c 6-Quart 28c 8-Quart 30c 10-Quart 36c 12-Quart 40c 14-Quart 45c CO.,w!itaJtonAve BAZAAt INLEY New Fall Our First Delivery of "Choice Dress Fabrics" iu 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 Velours, Eeigalines, Tweeds, C&eviots, etc, in Bayedere and other efFect9 promise to be among tho leading materials for the sea sou and all of them are hero 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 BELIN, JR., General Agent far tne Wyomlaj District fj. Mining, lllastlng, Sporting, SaiokalsJl itnd toe Itepuuno CnemlotU Company's HIGH EXPLOSIVES. tardy Fuse. Caps And Kxplnders. Hoom 101 Co an el I lluilillng. ticrantoo. AGKNCIE& THOS, Form JOHN n. SMITH A ION, W. E. MUI.I.IC1AN, nttsta Hymoatti WUkevBarce B1ESS GfflOIS. DUPONTO mma.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers