-w.nW s- "" t :" THE SCRANTON TRIBUNE-THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22. 1898. , ' (Je cranlon CrtBune Publlihad Dully, Kxcept Sunday, by lbs Trluunal'ubllihlns Uompuy, at Fifty Cents n Month. Nw York Office! 15() Numru su S.H. VKKMAM), bole Agent (or Foreign Advertising. i-MTRfD ATTIIK TOSTOPrlCn AT SCRANTON, fA., ASSECOND-CI.AS1 MAIL UATTKR. KCIIANTON, SUPTCMUUIl 22, 1S0S. REPUBLICAN NOMINATIONS. STATE. Covcrnor-WILUAM A. STONE. . Lieutenant Uocrnoi-J. 1. S. UO. Bl .v. Secretary of Interna! Affulis-JAMbS w. Judges of Superior Com I W. W. POR TER, V. D. PORTKIt. Congressmen - at Largo SAMLLL . A. DAVENPORT, OALUSHA A. GROW. COUNTY. Congress-WILLIAM CUNNEl.L. Judge-P. W. UUNSTKR. Coror.ei-JUltX J. ROBERTS. M V , SurVfjor-aEOUUE E. STEVENSON. LEGISLATIVE. V.vrGUAN. Senate. Twentieth Dlst. JAMES I House. Pust Distill t-JOUN H. PARR fceoond Dim lit-JOHN SCIIEfElt, JR 'third Dlsttlet N. ; MACK1JV. louilh Dlstllct-JUIIN P REYNOLDS COLONEL STONE'S PLATFORM. It will lit inj purpos-e when elected to so lumluit imsclf as tu win tho respect mid good will of thoe who havi oppoeil me as wll hi thou- who liao given me thetr KiipiK.tt 1 rl.nll Ik the governor of tin vlmle pcopl or the btate Abuser lmi' tipiloubti.lh kniiMi ul. In the legls lntun whim are neither the limit ot one part) ior the othei, hut ruthei Hie Mouth of i umoiii. I'micccs'sat) Investi gation have been authurlrtd 1 commit tees tdiiltli g In unneicsm im"iio to the stale. It -will be ttiv uire and mn po'ci to i ii if tt tt-esi ami other evil's lit so far hi I hyve the powet 1t will be ms T'lnpoT while governoi of l'enii'ylvatila, ns It Inn been n- purpof In th- liubllc poltjns th'it I bue bold with Clod's help to dlschaigo in) wliob- ilut Tho people arc uicatu than the parties -o which th' belong 1 nnt onlv Jealous of tbclr favor I shall onl) attempt to win theli npprovn' nnd in) evpeilenee has taught me that thai inn 1 e't be done by an honest, modest rtallv dlscbatge. of public dut). A good ti'plj to Dr. Swallow's cffti lve i halleng" to I'ulnncl Stone would lip to recall to the doitoi's attention the oi did tendered upon his ctratle i barge by the twelve good men anil tine, his fellow citizen t evident In Dauphin county, who sat ns a juiv In his tilal for ulmlnul libel These men, elt( ted among the nonest yeomnniy of the lower Susquehanna allev, lieeid the accusations and the evidence and promptly voted the doctor's nseitloni untrue. It Is not likely that n political meeting swayed by excitement could impiovo upon this calm deliberation of n tegular and lespeeted tribunal of justice. strletcd authority to carry Its Investl Bntlons to the fartlieit limit. Ilveiy soldier and every civilian coimrctcd In any way with the army mnnngc merit will bo Instructed to tespond to inquiries with tlio production of nil rer cuds and tmpera anil the wlthlioldhiB of nothlim. raptaln Howell, the flBMIns: Atlanta editor and a Democrat of the Mtalwurt type, would not consent I" fpivp upon the committee until ho. had Hint sntlufled hlmaelf by pergonal In vestigation that tin: committee would bp clothed with patamount Jurlndlc tlon. No Innucunt man shall suffer, hut no guilty man escape. This Is the president's unalterable purpose. The attempt which Is being made by the Democratic leaders to pull a free silver campaign vlotoiy out of a war that In Its main tesults was tho most successful short war In hlstoiy will not succeed, for an obvious tcason. The American people want tho war management Investigated, as It Is go ing to be under the plans of the war piesldent; but they do not piopose to have that Investigation turned Into a party Issue and made In tho htespon slblp and tecUless spltlt or campaign OtmagoRlsni. It Is too seilous and too s.u-ied n matte! Involving too Inti mately the honor nnd safety of the countty to be committed to the wind) buffeting of blatheiskltes. The high est (haiartci nnd thp ilpest executive epeilencc nie tailed foi in the tieat inent of so delicate n pioblem and this Is wh.v the lommoii senp of the lountiv, putting aside the spoutlngs unu the shoutings of the demagogue" will Htnnil by and sustain the leader tiled and tine. Hon William McKln- li'j. the president of the United Stules In the adjustment of the many piob leins glowing out of the war the ad ministration of William McKlnle) hns a i Ight to expect the support of ever) Republican. Stand 1 the piesldent. Superintendent Howell's Repot t. The annual report of Superintendent Howell upon the condition of the city schools, which appears elsewhere, mer its perusal in both substance and man ner. Without dilation, It puts the situ ation In due perspective and touches with special emphasis upon special needs. The teferences to what have been done In culture of the sensibilities by the use of music, pictures and llowers In the school room and in the enlisting of motheis' Inteiest aie not the least Impoitant feattues of the tepott. We dare suy that weie Supeiintendent Howell called upon to elaborate his Ideas In this diiectlon a valuable chap ter could be contributed to public In formation. It Is In the ethical and aes thetic Influences with which the schools sui round the pupils ciulte as much as In the evict knowledge Imparted or the set fonrts of Instruction observed; that they have political value as nur series of good citizenship; nnd we note with pleasute the start which has been made along these lines In the schools of Huntiton. Of kindled Inteiest Is the resume of progress achieved In the pupils' saving fund. With the hlstoiy of its Inception our readeis ate familiar, but it Is gratl f)ing to know that eight of our schools now hae the savings system In oper ation with a total deposit of $950. Here is the germ of a lai,j;t development In the Inculcation of habits of tin If t and ft ugallt) habits quite as valuable to the community as is a knowledge of the laws of giammat oi the Intilcacies of i-ube toot Altogether the icpuit pt educes an cu tout aging Impression and shows that the management of school affalis on their ciliicttiou.il side Is not going for ward without a well-defined put pose In view. Mr Wan.inialter has printed his speech" in book toim, but his most ' Ifectlve contilbutlon to political lltet atuif will continue to be Ills check book. Koosevelt's Valuable Object Lesson. A valuable lesson It derivable from the position which Hon. Theodor" Roosevelt has taken in the canvass for the Republican guhernatoilnl nomina tion In New Yolk state. No citizen o'f the United States stands higher than he foi personal Integrity and moral as well as ph)slcal coutage. He Is, In these tespects, an ideal t)pp and moie ovei he Is a livin of large and varied expel lence both as n law -maker and a l.tvv-enforcei. He nevei "woie a col lat" or "cringed to a boss',' or did tiny of the things th.it the piofesslonnl tefoimeis aie fond of holding up to leptobatlon. jot when a gio'ip of citi zens repiesentlng chlellv a, dissatisfied element In the Republican patty sim ilar In many wa)s to the element In this state Identltletl polllitull) with John Wanamnker met without his so licitation and nominated him at the head of an independent ticket he pioinptly cilled on the leadeis ot the regular Republican pait) otganlatlnn and lnfoimecl them that he would ac cept no nomination which did not come fiom Republicans as Republicans and cany with It cut dial ii.doisoment of his associates on the Republican ticket. This assutanee was oluntaty on the part of Colonel Roosevelt and, ns he has since explained, was dictated by two consldeintions of high Importance In th" tltst place, inasmuch as the leg islatuio to be elected In New Yotk stat j In Novembet is to choose a rep resentative in the United Stftes senate In place of Senator Muiphy he could not as a Republican on national Is sues encourage a multiplication of leg islative tickets that would put in jeopauly the opportunity to win the senatoishlp for the Republican party, unci, secondly, If elected governor he would want at his back .it Albany a Republican legislative majority which would lend Its suppoit and the suppoit of the Republican oiganlratlon to his executive policy. This position takes cognizance of the fact that one of tho two gieal political oiganizatlons will lnltnbly gain control of public nffalit; and that the diversion of Republican votes to an Independent or a Puelon ticket Is Jut so much aid extended to the Democracy. Colonel Roosevelt's example bears di rectly upon the political situation In Pennsylvania since It wains the Re publicans of this state that they, too, must fatand firmly by their patty. The Republican vote thrown to Dr. Swal low oi to a Wanamnker fusion candi date for the legislature is a oto thrown eontiaty to the best Interests of the Itepubllcan party and wasted so far ns ptactlcal tesults aie concerned. Tho time for those who wish to Insti tute changes In the Republican party management to make their put pose ef fective Is at the party primaries and in tho pail) conventions, righting outside of pmty lines Is helpful onl) to the Democracy, and it would be far mote manly for those who Indulge lr. It to go all the way over Into the Dem ociatlc camp and take their place boldly under the Democratic banner than to engage in guerrilla watfaie be tween the Hues while still professing to be Republicans who fought bravely At Manila bay as long as ho hud a ship loft, has made Augustlit a little uncertain as to what his wtlcomo will be when ho reaches the locality where scapegoats are In demand. It Is ptobablc that before many weeks Augustln will be convinced that the "Inst ditch" at Manila was n safer place, for him than Madrid, It Is Interesting to note Hint Dr. Swallow's paper so far hedges In Us defense of scandal In politics as to ad mit that rlvul candidates ought not per sonally to blackguard nnd defame each other. That paper, however, still holds that the peddling of scandal in a. candidate's behalf Is proper provided he doesn't do It hlmsplf. In other wot ds, while a doctor of divinity ought not, vv hen seeking public office, to use sewer sweepings against an adversary the use of them Is nil right on the part of his undci strappers. The rctteat Is not veiy ninstetly, nevtttheless It Is a tetreut. Our contempniar) has our sympathy. The nomination of Hon M. F. Sando for cotiBtcss by Hip Lackawanna Demo crntlc committee Insuics a contest In this district which will duubtloRs grow In Interest as the campaign advances. On the eve of it The Tribune desires to expiess Its Biatlflealloti that the nomi nee whom It will oppose Is to be a gentleman pel sunnily so amiable and accomplished AVe assume that Mr. Sando's nomination assuies a clean and mi honorable campaign testing not up on personalities but on political nigu inent. On this footing we are toady to give or take. With Its best pationnge )et to come, the Omaha exposition Is now $15,000 uhcad of all expenses and Is giving the Bi ?atcst show of its kind that the peo ple west of the .Mississippi river have ever sen. This speaks well for the piospcilty of n people Just enieiglng trom a fotelgn wai. The new nichblshop of Santiago, Rt. Rev. Louis Musteliei, Is a native Cu ban whom Spain for many )eais forced Into exile. His designation for this Important ecclesiastical post is an In teresting indication of the Vatican's quickness to meet changing condi tions'. Colonel Roosevelt sas he does not believe much In the lasting qualities of Independent political movements. He Is not alone in this opinion. The Due d' Oilcans does not seem to tealUe the danger liuuried In at tempting to handle the live wires in the Dieyfus case. It has turned out to be the German admlial Instead ofAgulnaldo who needs watching at Manila. It Is a time fot Republicans evpty whete to too the mails and stand firm. nnd the Philippines, all of them being transported over long distances by nea, Involving an Infinitude of arduous tie. tails, all ot them landlnir succcssrullv, and nil of them accomplishing tncu pur pose, so that only four months after tbu declaration of war hostilities vera brought to n conclusion nnd negotiations fur peaco begun, It was a teat or whleti even a nation orRitnlacd on a military barls, with n grout army ulwa)s at liiind, might well have hud tea son to be proud. o Tlio original purpose of tho administra tion, ns expressed In the Hull bill for the reorganization ot the army, was to pro vide for an Inctcase of the regular urmv to a strength which would have furnished a trained foiea sutllclent for tho necessi ties of uctlve campaigning without en forced i ell nice upon the tnllltla or volun teers. The history of the failure ot thut bill hns been lehitcd bv Mr. Hull, fader a mistaken apprehension of Its purpoh, tnllltla olllctis In ninny slates protested against It to their congressmen, on the Bround that It would deprive them ot a share of the clorv of tho war, ami uc coullnglv tlio house of representatives inn avvny from tills wise nnd necessary Mil nlmust In a panic: and consequently an Insuflltlent Increase of the regular army was voted. That was a great mistake; but In spile of It, American ulnr, In- genuit) and resource carried through the war In four mouths to complete victory, and with a telntivc lofs small almost be yond precedent. It was a ningnlliccnt achievement and the American people huve reason for boundless pride and un ceasing thnnrtliilnccs because of It. M iU 6SM nn JSo & BAZAAR THE IMPORTANCE OF CONGRESS. TOLD BY THE STARS. Dally Hoioscope Dtnwn by AJacchus, The Tribune Astrologer. Astrolabe Cast- '-'..M n. ni , loi 't liuisuav, Sept'-mbcr --. 1W. A child boi n on this day will notice that an honet man does not need o place a lag on hlmscll announcing th i fuit The cindl'latc who neslttts to lei p a meni'ii.iinlun. of the dates ot tounty talis is sadl.v in need of a manager. Some pel sons --pcnil so mm It time making tun of the werther prophets that they never enjoy a pleasant cl y. l'i isons who cieate seldom have time to criticise. Summer with the oi option of the In dian varletv, should have ended jester-da). l'min tho St. Lous tilobc-Demoerat ho congress which will bo elected m November will have to deal with mote nutations of great Impoitance than pie sentid themselves to ail) oongiess whleti hns mot since tho civil war and recon stitictton dj)s. It will have to devise n svstcm of government for oath ot our now possessions, with the possible ex ception of Hawaii, which ma) be, nttend"d to In the coining short session ot tho pies"iit eongre-ss. The wotk of forming a permanent army to meet the new needs which enlarged tcrrttoi) will lmpoe mav poslbl) be tiaHFUcted 111 the coming lour mouths' seslon of tho existing congress, but the chances are that It wilt go ove to the noxt bod). Then, too, n stun" oi gunlzallou for the arm) In line with mod cm tesiulicmciits will have to be devised. The old isue of the stalt anil line wrangle In the navv will have to bo settled, nnd u new system of naval promotions must be created. o -Woik enough to kiep a coiiRiess busy during nearly nil of its term, nslilo alta gothcr from thu routine) business ot the government, has hero been cited the task of framing governments which will recognize the local capabilities and meet tho peculiar nooels of tho people ot Cuba, Pcrtp Rico and the Philippine demands tlmo nnd Intelllpenee. In a eonsldeiablu de glee tho conditions here are now. Some ot the peoples to bo dealt with may ha.e to lemaln In a state of depetiilt nte lor ever. Tho full teiiltotlnl status which Is ciijovctl b) New Me.xlto, Arizona and Ok lahoma i.innot be extended to ail) ot our new possesions immediate!), though tlio Indications aro th.it It may bo safely given to Poi to Rico before man )ears have passed. An entirely illfteient and a less advanced sort of government will have to be lnovlilcd fui th" Philippines. Government for Cuba will involve some delicate iiuestlous of a different ordir from those which will tome up In the Porto Rledii and Philippine mat let, -o Tor the adjustment of all these compl x questions the Republlttn paitv will be liclil primarily n sponsible The neces. sit), therefore, for the Republicans to elect a maiorllv of the next house ot rep rtsentatives and to gain the two or thre seats which will give thiin contlol of the senate Is partlculnilv urgent A Repub lican congriss should lm iliosin to nsslst the Republican piesldent In dealing with these dollcnto issues Jsot since lSif, when Georgia, tho last of the seceded states, was restoied to her old lelatlons to the Union, has congress been called upon to deal with so many questions re qulrlng discrimination, balance and tact as will present themselves to the con gress which Is to be elected a little less than two months he use Oyr Big September BLANKET SALE Has outstripped all previous efforts in this direction. Why? Because Blankets bought during this sale means a saving that you cannot afford to let pass. We wanted to to make a Blanket selling record and we have done it, because we have the stock and prices to do it with. Fall weight Canton Blankets from 35c to $1.49 a pair. Half Wool Blankets from $1.98 to $2,98 a pair. All Wool Blankets from $2.98 to $5.98 a pair. The Finest California Blankets from $7.98 to $12.98 a pair. Syit9 Jackets aed Capes wm Be our Next stor Always Busy w Will Stand by the Piesldent. The piesldent has received from seven gentlemen acceptances of his In vitation to act as a committee to In vestigate the executive management bf the wai. Two othet invitations have not yet been answered The commit tee will ceitalnly consist of Gencial Granville M. Dodge, of Now York, Col onel James A. Sexton, of Chicago, commander-in-chief of the Gtand Army of the Republic; President D. C. Oilman, of Johns Hopkins university; Dr. W. W. Keen, the noted bactoilolo gist of Philadelphia; Charles Denby, of Indiana former minister to China; Captain Kvan P. Howell, of the Atlunta Constitution and ex-Governor Wood bury, of Vermont. Mr. Whiting, of Massachusetts, the paper manufac turer, and General W. II. Jackson, ot Tennessee may accept. If they do the bouid will consist of 5 Republicans and 4 Democrats; If they do not, It will comprise 4 Republicans and 3 Demo crats; but In no Instance Is' it believed that party politics will be Instrumental In deflecting honest Judgment. These men have been (.elected pilmarlly for their high peisonal character and wide experience. This committee will lecelvo from the president as commander-in-chief of the army and executive head of every branch of the military amice unte- Genoial Garcia, whom Shatter need less!) offended at Santiago, is coming to the United States to visit a daugh ter who Is 111 Having disbanded his foices and relinquished hlB command, Geneial Garcia Is now a pi hate citi zen As such he was honoied at San tiago yesterday b) a public leceptlon held In the palace under Genetul Luw- ton's diteetlou; and when he l cue lies this cuuntrv tt Is announced by nu thoilt) that Piesldent McKlnley will be glad to receive him at the Whit house and center with him telatlvo to Cuba's 'future. All of which tends to couth m our oilglnul suspicion that the public bus not yet heaid every side of the Gatcla-Shafter episode nor gained as vet u ttue estimate of this line old Cuban's chaiacter. A good purpose will be sotved by let ting the Iowa and Oregon, while going to Manila, stop nt ports In South American countiles. like Argentine nnd Chile, that have been unnecessarily Spanish In their s)mpathles duilng the war. Thu Inhabitants of those coun tiles need a visual reminder of Ameil can power. It will do them good. COSTLIEST MACHINE MADE. Geneial Augustln, who (led from the Ante) leans nl Manila, has I cached Aia bla on his Journey home, and has been dropping oiuislona! Intel views along the loute by vvn of explanation The J puulflhment accurded Admiral Montijo, Greatest Triumph in All History. Prom the New Ycrk Sun HEN It became appaient, eaily last spring, that war wltn Spain was at hand, this country was woefully delltlenl in pp pa latums for tho Inevitable era"!- gonej. Yet the tactics of tho president, obvious!) pursued In older to gain time to tush through nil possible prcpaiatlons tor supplvlng these delltlenels In troops and tho material of war, provoked violent outcries against him In the very news papers which aro now bitterest In thrir vituperation of him because of the suiter lug which has resulted trom this neces saiy haste. Our legular nrmy of about S."0U0 men only wus scattered In small bodies far and near, and only the sup plies esM'iitlnl for so small a foice had been provided, or could have been pro vlded, under the narrow appioprlutlnns for the purpose made by congress. 'J his was tho condition In which we were nt u time when wo weto on the eve of war with a fully equipped mllltnr) state with a largo and thoroughl) sensoned army all rady In the Held and supplied with ev. eij icqulslto foi modem mllltniy service That wo should have suimountitl the ipr. licult), so that in four months wo com pelled Spain to suo for pence nttcr a rapid und continuous series of victoiles by us on sea and land, was one of the most brilliant achievements of gclierul shlp and military administration which Is afforded by tho hlstoiy of war o- Our Initial vlctoi). tho sulcndld tri umph of Dewey at Manila, wns mado po?- slble by the rapldit) with which suppiu.s wrro sent across this continent to ha ionve)id to our slatlc squadron. It wns a task requiring tho ablest administration In the navy department, and was per formed qulctl). systematical!), without undue publicity; and It was done thor oughly and successfully. Sensationil newspapers wcio crying out madly tor nn immediato assault on Havana, Impieg nable against any such attack as we could then have attempted, and suie to Involve us In awful and probably tuttio losses. Instead, the (list assault was mado on the other side cf the wot Id, und Its complete and bloodless success shut tercd tho power of Spain at one blow and changed the whole course of American hlstoi). The Philippines wore our proper objective, but sensational newspaper strategists had overlooked It Dcwe) s ttlumph gavo renewed conlldence to our wholo navy and titled It with the Inspira tion of victor)'. The vaunted power of tho Spanish navy, previously runka above our own In strength, wus proved hi a slnglo engagement to ba a delusion, 1'orelgn opinion and even timorous home misgivings had looked for disaster for us at the beginning or the hostilities, but, Instead, victory attended our anus trom tho first stroke to tho Inst, with never a variation. Neither on sea nor on land did we suffer a single inverse u single delay In our vlcloilous progiess The strength of our regular mm) was 'X.i'1 on April 9) During May, June and July It was leerulted up to !il.s.i7, or I'bonl 10U0u less than the maximum strengtn allowed uuclci the bill for the Increase or the fuico passed by tongiess. 1'ioni this army chiefly were iliavvn the mice iv pedltlons sent by us to Cuba, t'urlo Klto, SCMIQl SIMS AND FALL FMWEA1R 1898, Fall Exhibit. 1898 MILL k CQMELL'S H Koi Every Member of the t'nmll). Lewis, Eellly k Mvks, Hi AND 118 WYOMING AVENUE. Ithaca Dispatch In the Sun 1'. T. Dodge, a well known patent at tome) of New York city and or Wash ington, has piesented to Cornell unlvei slt), thiough Dr. Thurston, ot Sibley col. lege, what Is said to bo tho costliest piece of machinery ever contracted. It Is the oilglnnl Paige typesetting machine, the only one of Its kind ever built, and was const! uctcd at an expense ot neail) (2 000,000. Beldes being tho costliest piece of machlnei) In the woild, It is at tlio same tlmo one of tho most icmnikihlo. and Ingenious It consists of over luo parts, and Is In every detail beuutltull) pel feet In Its wet king It Is not built on the plan of the ordinal y Dpcsottlng ma chine, which moulds Its own t)pe, but like a human being handles ordinary t)pe, sets It, leads It and distributes It as though It were a ptisan. The Invention wns a tulluie hi a com mercial sense, for even alter the tirst ma chine was perfected it was impot slble to build tho machine so that it could be sold Tho machine occupies door spat-v 113 by ,1'a feet, and lias a maximum height of UC3 fi et 1 ho new gift to Cor nell Is all the more Intt resting Inasmuch as It was In tho construction of this ma chine that Mark Twain sunk some of his fortune. It Is not known )ct when the machine will reach Ithaca, but Dr Thuis. ton expects It In a short time As soon ns It arrives It will bo placed In the Sib ley museum. SUGGESTIVE FIGURES. Torm tho Philadelphia Bulletin Tor the twelve months which came to an end with thu close of last month our exports amjunted to H.LMCCQO.IMU about four millions of dollais for every work ing day In tho year. Part of this unpar ulleled Increase was due to the enor mous volume of bicadstulfs sent abioad to teed tho millions ot Eutopc, but not all. Practically one-quarter of tho whole was in manufactured goods pioduced in American fuctorlcs by skilled American workmen Ten yeais ngo the man who pirdictcil that beforo tho closn of tho eeiitui) the I'nltcd States would be exporting Us manufactured pioducts at tho lute or about a million dollars u day would have been regarded as an optimistic lunatti Yet this Is precisely whut mis happened Better still, thero Is ovciy reason to be lieve that this cxtraoidlutuy trade de velopment will not only bo maintained but will grow steadily ns tho )enrs go by and forelgii'is leant by expeilenco that American fabrics ot tho highest class are the best In the world. All this means prosperity better limes for the wage-earner, higher pikes for the farmer, a comtant growth in the peo ple's savings, and more comfort In Amei lean homes. HAVfiLAB CHINA, nE3Fflece Difiieer Sets New, Beautiful Patterns, just opeued. Special Prices ou same, nrmtare No such magnificent dlspUy 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 Bedroom, Pat lot. Library, Dining room nnd 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 the veiy best In the market for the mono). Inspection of our stock and prices solicited. Hill & Coeeell At 121 North Wuhla;tou Avaaue. Scranton, Pa. Blank Books, Tyyewrtto' Supplies, Letter Presses, is, FINLEY' 0 1 n1W7P' and Corseti These two department: are now replete with the latest and best makes and newest designs for Fall wear, botli in imported and domes tic maiuitacture. We are solo agents lor the following celebrated makes ol Kid Gloveb : f; Ceilemeiri & Qu Ferna Frcre & Co. .it which we cairy the most com jlctc line and newest color assort ncnt. New line IMes9 Castor Gloves, 'n grev and tan, for street wear. Entirely new. New line La Mure in shades of green, army blue and red. to match our new Fall Colors .11 Dress Coods. Special Line English Pique Walking GJoves An elegant glove tor set vice and durability at $1.00. '29.50 THE OBIONS, FERBER, (MALLEY CO. 4'J'' LacUawanua Aveuu SCIENCE OF MODERN WAH. Prom the Portland Oregonlan. Events of tho past few months have demonstrated fully the claim that science Is tho servant ot wur. The engineering skill that builds roads and bridges, makes and records topograrhltal snrvc)s and strings electric wires, fouid largo menus for a display of Its talents In tho Cii ban campaign, Tho quick adaptation of means to end un adaptation learned amid tho arts of peace strung an dec tilo whe from tho commanding general s ten In tho Cub&n Jungle to government headquarters In Washlrgton, laid sub marine cables with nutonlshlng celerity developed wonderful speed In battleships, and sompelK'd quick results. It Is this adaptation that has made war a stlcntllln game, grandly effective In tho settlement of nat'onal controversies and Infinitely less watc." At;u Uua In fotmer years WOLF & WENZEL, J40 Adaini Ae, Opp Court Home tactical Timers mq! Plumbers, Bole Agents for Rlcbardum .BoyatouVi lurnncM aud Haages. tie largest Mae of office supplies mi sta tionery Si E E Peaaa, Reynolds Bros Stationers and Engravers, HOTEL JUKMYN UUH.DINO 130 Wyoming Avenus. THE MODERN HARDWARE STORE. Foote & Shear Count pany Special Prices for the Canning Season, Maslia Kettles, 4-Quart 23c 5-Quart 25c 6-Quart 28c 8-Quart 30c 30-Quart 36c 32-Quart 40c 14-Quart 45c Enamel Preserving Kettles 4-Quart 23c 5-Quart 24c G-Quart 27c 30-Quart 38c 32-Quart 45c Corsets The following aie some of tho leading makes, always in stock: Tier Majesty's, Fasso, C. P., P. D Royal Worcester, R. & Q. Thompson's Glove Fit ting, also Warner's 68 Model, a new num ber, and warranted not to rust. In addition to the foregoing wo cairvattill line of popular priced goods that for Ai value cannot ba beat. Special Fall Opening Sale during the next ten days. 5H0and512 LACKAWANNA AVENUB HENRY BEL3N, JR., titueial Agent for tua W'yomlnj District Dr .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. F00te & Shear GOo, Washington Ave POIIK Mining, Ulastlng, Sporting, SmokeUti and tua IUpauuo ouemlcal Company' HIGH EXPLOSIVES, tafety 1'ute. Cnp and Kxplodsri. Hoom lot Conned Uulldlng. scrautoo. ACJEMHE thos, rorm, JOHN 11. SMITH A40N. V. E. MULLIQAN, Plttito riynxralti W'llku-Buru i .,.,.....1. .., tM ' T 1 Tfll ' iljluHlJl 'ilw n m iMi.iii nil. 7sl aMaisaMsi