THE SCIUNTONvTmBUlSn&- SATURDAY, DECEMBER 17,' 1898 14? i rnir 1MK5)50:5XKKJKX50:5 00000x0x0x0x0x0x0x0x0xx0x01x0x0x0x000 mMfrimirfaicfm-f . k v n w w t. -..-w --.-w...-w.wv. .. . .jfjjjriuJrtjnu'wjfjW,fujti ;x 2 The Pennsylvania Central Brewing Co. of Northeastern Pennsylvania, COMPRISING THE FOLLOWING PLANTS: 0X a m XV tin HI & x xv Q PX XP u XP O PX XP o XP Q PX o nf v . n X0 XP 1J X XP PX xa PX XP o PX XP PX Xfi x XI? PX XP PX XP XP 0X XCXtfB 6X0X0X0X pt,pi.UXPXPXPXX E. Robinson's Sons, Scranton. Casey & Kelly Brewing Co., Scranton. Lackawanna Brewing Co., Scranton. M. Robinson Brewery, Scranton. Scranton Brewing Co., Scranton. Reichard & Weaver, Wilkes-Barre. anufacfurers of -f i 4- Hughes & Qlennon, Pittston. Hughes Ale Brewery, Pittston. J. Arnold Brewery, Hazleton. Dickson Brewing Co., Priceburg. Pelu. Krantz Brewery, Carbondale. A. Hartung, Honesdale. the Finest PORTERS T .is is the largest Brewing Company in the State, having a capacity of 1,000,000 barrels a year. This Brewing Company employs at the present time about 600 people at their several plants. They also give employment, indirectly, through the different lines and branches of mechani cal labor, to many more. The amount of money paid out last year, in wages alone, was $375,000. THE OFFICERS OF THE COMPANY ARE CHARLES ROBINSON, Scranton, President. A. J. CASEY, Scranton, Treasurer. GEO. WEAVER, Wilkes-Barre, R. M. HUGHES, Pittston, Vice-Presidents. W. G. HARDING, Wilkes-Barre, Secretary and Assistant Treasurer. Hie Hears Building, Scranton The Offices of the Company Are Located at lie Coal Exchange Build ing, Wilkes-Barre. 0TxpVM0XiPXPX000X0X0X0X0X0X00X0X0X0pX0X0XPPX0XPX0X0XP0X00X00X KganpXPPXPXPXPXPXPXPXPXPXPXPXPXPXPXPXPXPXPXPXPXPXPXPXPXPXPXPXjiXPXPXP GlXX0xyx0x7&p&x SAD PLIGHT OF THE ISLAND OF CUBA HAS THREE GOVERNMENTS AND HONE IS SUPREME. S nvntion and Deflation Aie the '.Intel inl Conditions and Suspicion, 'enlousy, Moibld Dicnd and Gen ual Unieliability tho Intellectual nd Moial Conditions Which. Wo i-Inve to Confront Uncle Sam's Big Continct in the I'eail of the Antilles. i i Meliiili- In iV.lli I s tin lil iiiimcr len-ntl imbiWliicl In Mi ll imiiii il Pniilitmo fin iiFi as a lest l. k liv i-lilldifii In tlii" fioe schcKilH oT Illi lllSUIROUW kIvi-s this ilodiiUlnu i i iib.i 'Culm, " tsnys the uilini'i, ik ai M.1111I. ll Is a H'l'Ullllr. Its lilcKl t Is liartiiliimuf MiisHo. .Muslim. mi . ii" (iiniinaiiili-t In i lili'i Hi" t!i ai n. or lilit-i.iiiim ' ii Il.n.tnu, on one ulilo of Mio I'liizu (i Aini.ii. Is a Ills liiti tuo-stoiy 1 i Uu t Ii Is thu liousc of tin- i aiitaln U m i.il Tho .spallldli fliiK l ll)lilK o. i Ii In tin1 (on Idms and li-rt'iitluu i inn pin ti nits of Spalns Ulnns anil iu i-ns alternate- with Illinois, th pii linu of whusH fianii-4, liki- Snanlsh t M'i and pulley, ate sadlv tnmlnlieel .ii il hli.i Ki'lli d Iliie SpunlMi Kelieials .ml ioIoik'Ih In a Rloiv of sold bi.n-l aid Rpuis whisper ana lntrlcuo and h olie ilciifttes an they huve done f ' ihe last handled jmus. Jt Is th b vpinnient of Alfonso Nil I, Ulnir 'if Si uu. lotrupt and medleal and djlnir, bin Ile el tllclchS a Ko eftllilullt. Tin eo miles frmii the palme. aiiiou? ih IUas or the Veilado. Is the f-alon Ti rha. thu hnine of the Amoilcnn I v acunllini (oininlsslun, where a nuin 1m i of Keiitleuion In liiiinniiilate Amei 1 ll blue llllifinnis (111 tale leltet.s to m nnRiiiphfiH and ttaiihait dallv 1011 t ii buMliiPss with all the tnsteinatli In slttii-ss ot a 'New Voik (ountliiK t mi Any one ot them would consider ti ilmost a iieiFounl atftont to IiihIii uu o that any IUik tnptesents tho B'Kliest leal (neielKiity over Culiu oilier than the Stais and Sttlpes which Minp ft rm thu peak of the toof ovet hl In ad ANOMAI.Ol'R 1'JCTl'lti:. This, then, Is the anomalous picture Cuba piescnts today In a nation- Isl and seven liuudied miles lonij, with a population lens than hall that of Greater New loik. we have tinea dis tinct governments 01, to speak more exactly, would-be iroveininents. Tho Cubans, nilstiustful and sensltlo Tho Spaniards, protesting und ciulbbllntr The American, Insistent and nBgies Mc, An this too. In u tountiy which for four j ears has been binned nnd plundered and foiiKht ocr with all of that fierce Intensity of which only tiop Icnl natures aio capable. Uvory man's hand held against bis bi other and ev er) band has belli a machete. Hut the situation Is further compli cated by tho quai i els and dissensions of the Cuban and Spanish patties. A Cuban Is by nutim a politician. Tho lntilgues and excltinent of politics aio well suited to his character. With u muzzled press and only uoveriiinental parties, his fondness for political strife have never befoio found a vent, but now that tho bonds are being every day more and moio loosened the Cu ban has a childish delight in taking pa it In political dlscussinn. Tin more U'lletni'lit and peisonal 11 Is the bcttei lie hoc ins to like It. Sillie the pro tocol, politics has become tho 1 tiling passion In Cuba Theie lane been mnny leient cImheps and tounlet chang( s in them. CI1ANCI.N15 I'AIITIKS. The autonomist!-, lefoi mists and con servatives weie the tlnoe pat ties in existence when the revolution begun In 1V.C In the political convulsions of the list tluee yeais tho lefoimlst party lias entile h ilis.ippoaiod. The niiii" i.ulirjl of i nicinbeis iolned ill in-' sin gents, while thu gicat majority be- I came .uitonoinihts. I With the coming of r.lnnto the con- ' m natives went out of utile e and powoi so loniplitily that tin have only ox- ' lsted leall) mote n an org.inl.itlon that as a living element in the politics . of the time. Tho position of thu con- I seiatie paity loi the past ear In j Cuba litis been somewhat similar to I that of the lojallsts' in Prance a le- moinbiance of the past and a posslbll It of t'o f tu, i.ilher than a icalltv of the piesent. All of lil.iuco's ap poiutnients were autonomists An over whelming majoilty of the deputies m 1 the newly lornieil 'camaia iniul.it," or local patll.tmeiit, belonged to that ' paity. It is a mistake to suppose that autonomists weie any less loval sub- j jeets of the king of Spain than tho c onsei nt! os bail been. "n the cou tinij. tlteif battle-cry was alwajs that their loMilty was aelio and luaetlcil while that of the conseiatlos was passive una theotetlial. Willi the passing of the conaetatlcs the two lialanelng political paitles weie supplied b the dlslslou that at once lollowid among the autonomists Into ladical and t onset atle wlngi They were botli Spanish and both loyal, but tlie ladlials wanted a mote cleaily de tlneii and moio inimedlato autonomy titan did their opponents. The debates between them in tho camara wete often tlerco and vehement. In utimbei.s the eoisenatle wing was the stronger. Al'TONOMY'S FAILURE. Autonomy, like the old teglme, had pioed a failute; but the two autouo inlpt paitles continued to exist. Thev leallzed the new conditions and made a pat ty isi-nto of it. The radicals, under the leadership of Rllseo Glberga, Issued wliat In the United States would be called a platfoim. In it they declared that they accepted the t Humph of the United States as lliml. That Independ ence h.ftl been vl'ctoihus, and they pledged themselves to support It, al though they considered It their duty to take no actual pait in politics and ie inaln neutinl until called by the "voice of public sentiment." "The voice" seems to havo called, be caue the unheal autonomists aie now hard at woik lighting annexation. The other wing of tho autonomists have Joined with the old conservatives In a Kind of forlorn hope that tho peace negotiations In I'ails will ptove futile and that Spain may at least letalu some sort of i mitral of tho inland. Fall ing in that, they will work for annex ation An thing to save Cuba from the Cubans, whom they hate with tho ac cumulated hato of centuries. An Illus tration of their sentiments Is found In the recent declaration ot one of their leaders. Marquis Rafael Montoro, that he expects to f-ell bis pioperty In Cuba and leturn to Spain; that ho will never live In a country with whono govern ment tho Cubans havo anything to do. It is not alono what are known m th "rccngnltd" Cuban patties who tiro snuggling and clashing. Tho insiti gents, too, ,h.ic tluir ttouhlos The two months of enfoticd idleness and pt.uo have tut in d tho instil gout camps till over Cuba into debating clubx on the futuie destlnv of the Island. There aie all silts ot gioiips and lollowers of individual tlumles, but they aie all factions of tho two loadln? insurgent paitles. Roth favor absolute Independ ence, but the laiger and stronger of the two known as "The Nationalist"," want it to come graduallv. In their manifestoes they say they have peifect lonlldence thnt the United States will keep Its wotd in making Cuba abso lutely free and Independent. They look upon the presence of Ametlcnn soldier s In the island as a means to thnt end, und aio willing to co-operate with them in the vvorl. (' in ilntalnlntr law and ot del A violent mtiio'ltv of the insiu gents, how et r, maintain that the piesenoe' of an Ametlcnn aimv In Cuba is a pos itive menace if not nn insult to Cu ban liberty. They scorn the idea of a military protectorate, and nsseit that If the nrmy of the Insurgents w is stiong enough to gain independence they aio stiong enough to maintain it. Among insurgents of both paitles theie .seems to bo a lack ot giatltude to the United States foi tho pait which they have played in helping to nchleve Cuban liberty. They harp constantly in theli newspapeis and piopagando, on the suffetings, hardship and brav ely of the Cuban soldiers, with only a passing icfereneo to tho Anici leans whoso money and guns and lives made Cuba fiee. CuNDRSCUXSION. 'Yes" .said a Cuban geneial In his camp to me the other day, "the Unite l Stales is a gteat nation, If they had not been wo would never havo accept ed their oft or ot assistance in our sttug-gle- vlth Spain." Thot is tho spli it of all Cuban com ment on the United Stntcs. They weie Kind enough to accept our set vices In their behalf. "Tho condescension la foieigneis" 1 caches its illmax in Cuba. Meanwhile leconcentiados die, and the Spaniaids retire. Tho llrst lapid ly and the last eiy slowly. Rveiy one in Cuba lui3 become so used to re concentrados' sufferings that their dally deaths ftom starvation attract fai less of public interest than the seething political questions of the hour. Numeiioallv, theie aie not so many deaths among the leioncentiados today as last spilng. The leason Is that so many have died altcady that.there are really comparatively only a few vic tims lelt for the death harvest. Tho blockade added to the hunger hoiror all over the Island, but Its fence was piinclpally felt outside of Havana, where the concentrated lesources of a nteliopolls weie enabled In HOtitti de- giees to alleviate tho suffeilngs. An illustration of Cuban conditions I witnessed tho other day In Matan zas. Heie tho suffeilng and mortality among the reconcontrndos Is something frightful; men and women diop like dogs In the street eveiy clay and die without a groan. Autonomists, Cu bans nnd Spaniaids blame each other for the sad stale of affalis, but all In sist that theie Is positively no money In the town with which to buy pro visions, INCONSISTUNCY. General Reteneouit, who Is tho Insur gent commander of Mntanzas province, has u camp only lour miles away with seven hundred strong, healthy-looking follow ets, who go through a machete drill every day and discuss politics. Genual llolencourt was formeily a physician in Matanzas, he is .1 most Intelligent, well-educated man, and perhaps lopresents tho best tvpo of Cuban commander. In order to show mo how much better the insiugenta weie faring than their enemies tho Spanish soldleis, he led 1110 into a large Sliaek which he used as a commlssaiy wauhoiibo. From Hour to loot it was piled high w Ith barrels of beans nnd coin-meal T askpd General Reteneouit where he got tlie supplies In time of peace. "Why, the explanation is Mmplo," ho said. ' Thev nie conti United to us reg it!. ulv by oiu fi lends in Mataiuas; to be sure It is a saciillco for them, hut they aio willing to malco it for tho cause of Cubin libeity." What n cluiiacterlslle Cuban incon sistency' Food enough to suppoit f-ev-en bunilf. d able-bcdlfd men. till nb'o to t ilce e.ire of thcmslvo" bo oiigl t to bo t homo tilHiiq the fl 1 ' , but not a centnvo tor the hollow-eyed women who fall dead with their babies In their arms eveiy day onlv four miles nvvay In the eafcM of Mutanzns men will sit for hours dWcutshig a possibility for the presidency of Cuba; any unusual animation in the discussion will chaw a Inige ciowd, gesticulating and ex cited. Rut I saw a seventeen-year-old gill fall dead fiom starvation as sh passed by the matket-place. Her death nttracted no more nttentlon than Unit of ,i tab hotso on Rtoadway. A RAT) ATMOSPEIRRi:. Tito bickgiound of the sad picture of Cuba today is tho ttopical imaginative, untenable chai actor of tho inhabitants of the Island. "Theie Is bomcthlng lu tho ptmos phete heie," said a piominent Span iard In llavnna to me, "which stems to btlti'T dishonor nnd disgiace to every one on the Island Just as completely as jellow fever luiks in every stunni r breeze that blows from Havana har bor. No matter how honest n man may havo been In Spain, the minute ho lands in Cuba his one object in life beems to be how much ho can steal from the men who trust him" Conuptlon and dishonesty have nl vvays been the curse of poor Cuba They have reached their climax sine tho tlgnlng of the protocol. Rvery oftl clal, fiom the highest to the lowest, Is engaged In a mad rush to lino his pockets before tho curtain falls on tho last act of Spanish rule. A great deal ot stealing Is done openly. I have fre quently heaid Spanish oJllcers and custom hous? men justify their thluv. pry on tho giound that corruption In Madild had defrauded them out of their salailes, now irretrievably over due, nnd that they stolo only to retali ate on tho men who had cheated them. Theio are many Interesting person alities in this wild sea of politics Go mez said recently: "Cuba has i cached tlm stneo whoie It needs a Gambetta what Cubans bad better do Is to Und one." Gambetta has not yet uppeared. TIIK FUTURU. AVhat will bo the outcome no ono can predict. In Cuba tho fact that tho United States have pledged Independ ence to the Island is usually regauled as an insuperable obstacle to annexa tion. Independence has ninny dangers and Is connected with may pioblcms The pi ev ailing idea in Cuba seems to be that an American piotectotato that recognizes the Cuban lepubltc in some such way as Rnglaud doen the Khedivo of Ugypt will bu the ultimate result. Only a few weeks before Joso Marti mado tho wild dash Into Cuba which cost him his life, he was unfoldlnc to ii lifelong f i lend his dreams for tlie future of his countiv. "Rut," said his friend. ' my dear Jose, Hiipposing that jou do succeed, what kind of a muss cm you think tho Cubans will make when they try to govern themselves '" Marti was silent for n moment, and then said: "Whatever they do cannot be worse than the Spaniards." Tlie sentiment of the Mazzlnl of Cuba expresses what moie than half of his vlctoiious countiytnen believe today. Few of thorn take an optimistic lcvv of the hltuitlon. If they can only bo allowed to live and retain possession ot their property for tho next ten jiats they will lie grateful. They realize bet te r, poihaps, than any ono else that the Immediate futuio of Cuba is daik and strewn with dangers; but however dark and dangerous It be. "it cannot buworso than the Spaniards " HAPPINESS VS. MISERY. I)r Charcots lonlo Tutileti, the graxl I'nr lMun leini'di, is a guaruiittot uuo tor ttio Iirinlc llublt; also ntrvoiineM and melan choly caused by over-lndulsonee. It UMroy tlu AppetltJ for Alcoholic nnd ii 1 Intoxicating licvunnoi, und leaves mini hi he) HUoidil lie It can bu lulmtnlsti'iuil without llio linov leiUe ot the patient where necCBifiry Sund for pamphlet. m. (I. Clark,, 32(1 Perm Ave, Scranton, Pa, NEW YORK HOTELS. The St. Denis Uroadway and Eleventh St., New York. Opp. 0 race Church. -European Plan. Itoouis $1.00 a Day and Upwards. fn a modest nnd unobtrusive wy there art f' w battor conducted Sotels la tho motropolU tlnn tho tit. Denia Tho croat popularity It baa acquired cm readily bo true-oil to its unique location, ltt Uomolikn atmospaero, the peculiar uxcelleno or lta cuisine and aarvice, aud lta Tr rnodw itto pricea WILLIAM TAYLOR AND SON. WESTMINSTER EL, Cor. Sixteenth SL and Irvlog Place, NEW YORK. AMERICAN PLAN, $3.50 Per Day and Upwards. EUROPEAN PLAN, $1.50 Per Day and Upwards. Lackawanna Steam I. D. CRAWFORD, Proprietor. hx.::-x-:-:-:-x:"W:xx-:" i: ror business Men u uc ncui i ui mc w uuicsuic umuci For Shoppers 3 minutes walk to VVunatnaler 8 minute tu blcgel Cooper a llltf Store. Kaiy of acccs to the great Dry Uood Mores. For Sightseers. One lilock from B'wny Cars divine easy transportation to nil points ofiiiterci.1. Mel Albert,! NEW YORK. COR 11th ST. St DNIVKRSITY Pr,ACH, Oulv One Ulock from llroadu av. ROOmS. ffi 1 UP. RESTAURANT c-m-mk-x-xk-M'x-m-m-w-: Bakery MANUFACTURERS OP Crackers akes and CoDf?(tionery Fine Cream Soda Cracte A SPECIALTY H. J. KELLY PROPRIETOR 10311032 Capouse Ave. Scranton v