' THE SCRANTON TRIBUNE-THURSDAY. DECEMBER 22. 1808. l)e gcranfon ri6une filblliilid Dally. P.xcopt Hundnv. br th ItHinel'ublHuliig Company, lit 1 Ifty Cents 1 rihunn n Month. New YorkOIlIco: lftl) Naau St., H. H. VUKCIiANn, fcolo Agent for Foreign AcKerllilnt. Mehmj at Titn vonrorrxcn at fccnxNTO, PA., AS BLCONn-CI.AM MAIIi MATTER, TEN PAGES. scnANxox, rnci:MBcn 22, isos. Down South tliey want tho next Hp jmlillcnn presidential ticket to lie: .Mc Klnley anU Wheeler. A better plan would be for the inocrnts to nomi nate Wheeler and then the countiy would be assured of a Rood president whlcheer way the eat should Jump. A Curo for Truancy. An lnter"tInR point In connection with the enforcement of the coinpul lory education law has atlsen In Lan caster. Tho New lira, of that city notes tho frequency wlthhlch non iompIlaiiLe with the law Is excused by parents who my they are too poor to clothe their children so that tho latter will be ptosentablu In school, and thf superintendent of tho Lancaster schools hat Investigated a number of these claims and found them well founded. To overcome this clIMculty he has begun a sjstematlc collection from well-to-do persons of donations of clothing and money, and announces that lie will 11 y to clothe by private l)ne(lcence "eiy tuunt who'-e tru ancy Is due to genuine poverty. Tills Is undoubtedlv the way to solve this problem. It has ncen pioposed bv some edueatois that the state, which now provides fieo schooling and flee text books, nlo provide free lunches and fiee clothing foi pupils whose pat ents aie destitute. The hum.uie senti ment behind the proposition Is entitled to respect but It may be questioned if the state litis not cone as far In tho dltcetion of ducutlonul llbeiallty as in common fairness It should. The state must not go to far In this dltpctlon as to undermine the -piilt of self-help among either Individuals 01 communi ties. Hut tlieie is no tejson why the pu pils alicady in our rehools should not be com cited, outside of school lioins, into a oIunteer army of canvassers for the benellt of other child! en who do not by reason of poverty now at tend the public chooK We have had in this city n leeent lllustiatlon of tho effectiveness of such n c.invafs In the name of humanity. The vast collection for the poor made lr. the Scranton schools for Thanksgiving day showed that the little folks, when enlisted In woiks of benevolence, are lnepresible. It this zeal could be dliccted to tho work of tnerromlnK the ti nancy which comes from dlie poeity the tjaln to all concerned would be immediate and pal pable. It Ik not easy to see for what pur pose the war Investigating commission Is pioloiiKing lt sessions Only one witness has been heard by It whose testimony has pi ac Ileal alue; and it Is not pi nimble that Colonel Iooi-e elt'j sugsestloiiH win lip needed. History Will Repeat. To an KiiBllsh writer who in a for eign magazine chained this country with Incompetence in its dealing with the South after the close or the clil war and who from this alleged Incom petence made deductions unfOAOiable to the prospects of an meilean colon ial system, reply In ample fashion Is made by the New York Sun, which thus calls the l'liBllshman to uccount: "The nuthoiitj of the Federal gov ernment was extended foithwlth over a region which had put its thcoiies of tho constitution to the oidcal of war, and had been oveunme The levoltint; states were restored to the 1'nlon with the full rights and pilvllege which they had enjoyed pievlous to t'le con tlict Bv rrpld steps they and their people ieceled their full telatlve pow er In our political system. And the Civil war had fieed about four million negro slaves, yet that tremendous so cial and political ioolutlon occuried without pioduclng other than spoiadio outbieaks of dlsordei. Southern In dustiy, dependent on the emancipated iaee, was levlved without any wide and serious dlstuibance of the relations between the blacks and white". The cotton crop, the great agileultural In dustiy of the South, decreased largely during the four yeais succeeding the war, ns was lne itable after the waste and rtraln t'nd social transformation of that conflict, but It was still great enough to prove the continuing enter piise of the people and the ordeily condition of society. In the four years fiom 1858 to 1EC1, inclusive, It was In the aggregate 15,291,219 bales, as against 9.24G.T93 bales In the flint four j ears succeeding the war, but tho lat ter amount was great In Itself, and considering the destruction of capital In the south by tho war was astonish ing. Fie yeais after the war the cot ton crop began to reach Its old propor tions and speedily It doubled tho gieat est production of the past. Meanwhile southern wealth Increased lapldly In all directions. Hallways were rebuilt, reorganized and extended nnd im proved, until now tho southern railway systems have come up with tho best equipped and best managed in the Union. The white population of tho southern states Increased from about eight millions In I SCO to about fifteen and one-half millions In 1SC0, and the colored fiom about four millions to nearly seven millions. Can our for eign critic find In history an example where problems so tremendous ns those Imposed on the Amerlcun peoplo by tho Civil war were solved bo suc cessfully within a period fo short?" Ho cannot. lie has simply fallen Into tho common error of accepting passing complaints ns proofs of full ure. There weie ecaudals nnd mis takes In reconstruction days; thero will be bcandals and mistakes during American reconstruction of Porto Rico, Cuba and the X'hlllpplnes. These will bo vociferously exploited and exan gernted by the opponents of expansion, the burden of whose song will be, "We told you so," Professional pessimists, Mugwumps. American cavaliers tit America, will write doleful treatises on the decline nnd Impending fall of the great republic, Just ns they wrote them during tbo transition period fol lowing tho clll war; but herenfter, ns In the past, tho actual progress achieved by American Institutions nnd enterprise w 111 bo amazing-, silently but sutely giving tho He to nil theso prophecies of evil and working steadily for tho expanding honor nnd glory of the fins. A third of a century hence the historian of that day will draw as nattering a picture of tho results of colonial expansion as our esteemed New oik contemporary, In tho foic golnc quotation, draws of tho results of civil reconstttietlon growing out of the war of the rebellion. 'Corpoial James Tanner, ex-com-munder-ln-chlef of tho drand Army nnd commissioner of pensions tinder the administration of General Harrison, lends off with the suggestion that crippled ex-Confederates bo admitted to tho soldiers' homes. This Is Indeed nn era of leconclllntlon. Bourbonism. In many wnvs Senator Morgan, of Alabama, Is one of the nblcst of tho Amerlcnn statesmen of his time; but he would be a greater one If It weio not for certain 'unnecessary nnd in tempeiate ptejudlccs. On Monday during a debate In tho senate upon the subject of the Nicar agua canal, Senator Hoar, of Massa chusetts, announced, very moderately and very sensibly, that ho favoied tho cnnal project, but that he thought It ought to bo built by tho United States government after payment of a fair pi Ice to the Maritime Canal company for tho actual value of Us piopeity and concessionary rights and after filendly negotiations with Great Iirltnln hnd ic moved whateer of legal difficulty now Intervened by reason of tho Clayton Bulwcr tieaty. "Wo should," lie con tinued, "at onco proceed to let Great Britain know that wo desire to build the canal and that wo desire her con sent, and wo would get her consent, with a stipulation that the canal should be used on the same terms that tho Suez canal Is now used by all man kind in time of peace, and neutral In time of war, except against a nation making war on this country or upon Nicaragua or Costa lllca I hope that for this bill will be substituted a meas uie requiring tho president to pioccod to remove the obstacle In regard to Great Dtltaln, In which I anticipate no dllllculty whateer; to remove the ob stacle, if theie be one, In tho rights of tho company and get tho necessary poweis for this government to go to work nnd build tho canal " This proposition sounds reasonable) and judicious; It saors of an intent to be honorable and above board; but It provoked the senator from Alabama into a retort of which this Is the pub lished teport: Mr. Morgan scoffed ot the Idea of the I'nlted StutLS goernmcnt going "hat In hand" to ask tho permission of (ireat Urlltiln to build tho canal. "If," said he, "1 wcro appointed a commissioner to tho court of St. James for such a purpose I would go to mv grae beforo 1 would pre sent that paper. Tho people of the t'nlted States are not going to accept that as tho utlitude in which they shall bo placed. If Great Hrltaln had como forward ten earn ago and said, 'You shall not build a canal without my consent,' it would hao been built llo yeais nso. If sho came forw ud now and said, 'You shall not build this canal without my consent,' theie would not bo a man in the United States who would bo out of the sound of the kettlo drum "ummoning us to n-ms. Senators would hao us crouch at the feet ot Great Hrltaln, but I will new-r nti for a bill that has got siieh a pioUslon In it " The fact behind this ebullition of Bourbon prejudice Is that we arc com mitted by a treaty to share with Oieat Britain In the contiol of a trans-Isthmian wateiway unless Great Britain consents to release us from this obli gation. The tieaty was a piece of stu pid diplomacv for which tho present geneiutlon of Amerlcnn statesmen are In no wise lesponslble. Mr. Blaine, when secietary of state, made a good aiguinent to piove that Great Britain bv certain aMs had abiogatcd It; and If Mr. Cleveland had not rubsequontly repudiated Mr. Blalno's aigument and recognized tho treaty ns ttlll binding we might today legaul It as n deld letter. Under tho clicumstunces. however, we cannot now do this with out appealing beforo the woild as a dellbeiate breaker of contracts. AVt must nt leat exhaust friendly means of negotiation bsforo sounding tho ket tle drums and belching forth red fire. In the light of recent events the tall: credited to Senator Moigan leads like the braying of an ass. Admiral IXwey seems to have re tained his laurels at tho end of a three weeks' visit from General Mer ritt, but whether ho will be able to bear up under Hobson lemulns to bo seen. Our Merchant Marine. Tho most Important new bill Intro duced during the present session of congress is that ptesented the other day in the senate by Mr. Hnnna nnd In the lioune by Mr. Payne, "to promote commerce and Increase tho foreign trade of the United States and to pio lde auxiliary cruisers, transports nnd seamen for the government's use when necessary." This bill is n practical and carefully considered flist step toward the ci cation of an adequate Amerlcnn merchant marine. Tho bill provides a graduated plan of compensation to tho owners pf vessels currying tho American Hag and en gaged in foielgn commerce, tho amount depending on the tonnage of the vessel and the speed, graduated all tho way from the slowest saUingvese: to steam. ships of 10,000 tons buiden capable of making twenty-threo knots an hour nnd upward. To secure huch compen sation at least one-fourth of tho shlp'n navigating crew must bo citizens of the United States. Provision is nmdo for the admission to American registry of all American-owned ships under the stipulation that tho government cun usa these -vessels In tlmo of wnr as It recently used the New York, Paris, Bt. Iuls and St. Paul, by payment of a specified rental, A certain number of American boys are to bo cairled on each American essel ns apprentices nnd Instructed In the art of navigation. Ships reglHteied under this art are to carry mnlls, If required, without other compensation. It Is claimed by the sponsor of this bill and by others who havo made a study of tho problem of reviving our meichnnt nmilno that the enactment of legislation along these lines would speedily fill every Amerlcnn ship-yard with work and call Into existence a merchant lleet second only to Hng land's, If In time It should not surpass that. Tho United States Is tho great trading rntlon of the world. It Is con tinually increasing Its Bales In every open market. Tho Atlantic has long been burdened with Its growing com merce; the Pacific Is destined to bo with in tho not remote future. Tho liundieds of millions of dollaiH that wo arc pay ing yearly In freights to foreign ves sel ownctB ought to bo paid to Ameri cans; ought to remain In our own coun try as a part of its ch dilating wealth, instead of being sent abroad ns a con stant drain upon our resources. The remedy solely one of legislation; nnd tho tlmo has como for congress to net. Tho supply of Christmas trees will largely exceed tho demand this year ns usual, nnd hundreds of trees will bo thrown nway unsold. When one thinks of the green tructs that are made deso late each year to supply the dealers In Christmas trees and tho people who decorate their porches with greens dur ing tho holiday season, It Is a cause for wonder that the country Is not nlready the treeless, barren wasto that it Is sure to become if tho tree-hacking busi ness Is kept up. Christmas trees are all tight; In fact, we must havo them, but there Is such a thing ns overdoing a good tiling. It Is time, in this mat tor, to consider tho future as well as tho present. The Brooklyn Hagle claims to havo been the first newspaper m. the United States to nppreclato the significance of Dew ey's victory nt Manila and to start the ball rolling for expansion. But the Knglc Is mistaken. To the New York Sun belongs this honor, and also the honor of having led the argument for expansion from start to finish. Tho Sun's treatment of this pioblem Is tho Clowning glory of Its eventful and bril liant caieer. Since tho conclusion of the peace negotiations at Paris tho peoplo In search of foreign news are taking; moi e Interest In James Gordon Ben nett's dally cablegrams In reference to the fluctuations of the wind. It Is to be regretted that General Shaftei's opinion of the Cubans was not given while General Garcia lived. An accurate Cuban opinion of General Shatter will piobably never be ex pressed. Tho Cai lists of Spain seem to be very slow to take tho hints continually thrown out to them that tho vacation season has atrlvcd. Full settlement of the recent affair should not be made until it has been ascertained that Billy Mason deslies peace. It looks as though the long expected business boom for Sciantou had ar rl ed. Sectionalism In the United States has gone to join the silver Issue. NEWS AND COMMENT Wiltes H. I.,. West In the Washington Post: ' Mention h.ifc been nnido hi prev ious dispatches of the cordiality of tho presidents reception in tho touth. This was to h.io been expected and Is not nearlj so signllicant In Indicating an era of tood lcollnjr as tho treatment which has been accorded tho soldiers who aro encamped hi southern cities. 1 hae taken especial pains to question tho olllcers and men of northern regiments stationed in the south as to their reception nnd with out dissent hao been told that tho hospi tality Is sincere and unbounded. It would be almoit true to say that if tho soldiers uro not boon removed to Cuba they will be killed with kindness. Tho homes of tho southern peoplo have been thrown open to tho noithern men, who aro In vited with great cordiality to nil social functions. Manifestations of good will have taken practical form At Savannnn on Thnnksglvlng Day tho ladles of tlia city cavo a bountiful dinner to tho 1200 men In tho Seventh Armv corps, 1.700 tur kevs alono being contributed, while the best society of tho cltv wuited upon tho men nt the table. In Augusta great pre paiatlons hae been made to entertain tho olllcers and men on Christmas Day and In eveiy household two or three sol diers will find welcome places at tho family table. The scenes which wcro witnessed in Washington during tho early months of tho war, for Instance, havo been, I am told, utterly unknown In Sa vannah, Macon, or Augusta, nnd between the soldiers nnd tho people there Is tho most cordial fccllns. The departure of tho troops for Cuba, will be an occasion of genuino regiet." War department ofllclnls are said to ba much surpilaed and gratified over tho groat reduction In the death rate among the troops tu tho Philippines, Cuba and Porto Itlco. In tho past week only two deaths occuired among the forces hi and around Manila, and ono ot these was the rebult of nn accident. Tho other was from tjphold fever. Major General Henry, in command of the forces In Porto Itlco, re ported on Mondav that Sergeant Thomas n Varley, of Company C, Blovcnth In fantr, died of typhoid fever on Saturdiy. It wns tho first death of a soldier in Porto ltlco for a week. General Otis' dispatch said that no deaths had occurred on Sun day. Tho death rato lu tho province cf Santiago de Cuba has also been ireduced to ono or two a week, and there hove been no reports of deaths among the American soldiers In other parts of Cuba for several days. Tho military authori ties aro unable to tell tho reason for this remarkably low rato of deaths among soldiers in tho field. It Is said by old cam rnlgncrs and students of military history that nothing liko it has been known to exist nmong troops engaged In lleld scr Ice. Tho rato is lower than that of tioops In barracks In their own country, with every facility for keeping th?m healthy and contented. The.ro aro 7.000 United States soldiers in Porto Itlco, nioro than 20,000 In tho rhnipplnrs, and sev eral thousand moro In Cuba, including thoso in Santiago province Tho most 10 markablo decrcuse Is in the Philippines, whero tho death rate last week was ono ten thousandth of 1 per cent for tho to tal number of troops. Tho comment of the press Is almost unanimous In criticism of Hero Ilobson's kissing exploits. Says tho Washington Post: "Wo think wo may safely say that Hobson Is rapidly diminishing his own proportions and alienating tho respect of tho American peoplo by this barnstorm ing tour of his. His persistent posing bo foro nudlences in different parts of tho country, nnd worst of nil his nauseous osculation of tho seml-hysterlcnl women who throng to hear his so-caUwJ. lectures theso aspects of tho raso aro rtklng on ttm properties of Ipecac. Ho is making himself both cheap and tiresome. Ho Is diluting tho worth of military achieve ment nnd clothing renown In tlio cheap habiliments of theatrical display. Tho country Is sick of tho whole tawdry, melo dramatic performance, nnd scnslblo and thoughtful men aro wondering why the navy department permits such melancho ly nonsense. If Mr. Hobson huel mod eled himself upon Captain Clark, of the Oregon, who, after accomplishing ono of tho most brilliant exploits of thin or any other war. retired from Dublin low. he would havo today a much firmer hold upon the respect and approval ot the Amerlcnn people. Slnco ho has chosen another and less ndmlrnblo couise, how ever, tho navy department would do well to consult tho dignity of tho bervlec and to call him in." There aro some big congressional dis tricts In tho United States writes Ulon 11. Butler In tho Plttsburu Times: "Toxas has ono district with thirty-seven coun ties. To go from his home, In San An tonio, to Wendell, In tho west end of his district, means for Hepresentntlvo James Slajdon n Journey of D00 miles, whllo to reach tho confines of Kctor county, by tho roundabout way that must bo traveled, would ncccssltato a trio of almost twice that much. Mr. Sla den's district is as big ns from Pittsburg to Chicago. But oven Mr. Slnyden's district ha3 to toko a back seat when ono that adjoins it on tho north Is brought to notice, for tho Thir teenth Texas district Is composed of eighty counties, and J. H. Stephens, who Is its representative, cun wander away from his homo In Wilbarger county n dis tance of from TOO to 7ti0 miles in three or four directions and not run any risk of gottlng over Into a neighbor district to do his clectloneoilng. If n lino wcro drawn from Now York to ChlcaEO, and onothor from that down into tho north of Ten nessee, It would about cover the extreme dimensions of this big district, which, be ing Irregular In shape, could not Includes so much territory ns tho squ.tro so de scribed, still, the Thirteenth Texas dis trict Is not so big In ono way as somo others. It has but 100,000 Inhabitants. Mr. Dalzoll's district In Pennsylvania has a half moro peoplo than Mr. Stephens' big bailiwick in Texas, and Mr. Dalzcll can rldo from ono end to tho other of his ter ritory In half nn hour, whllo Mr. Steph ens would havo to nlve up two or threo days to tho same thing In his own." Says Secretary of Agriculture Wilson: "A vory Interesting hint comes to tin, peo. plo of the United States fiom Tuskcgeo at tbo present time. Wo will bo rcspoi.sl blo to the world and tho Maker for 10,000,CKiO of colored people In tho sev. cral Islands now under our Hag. lho ery best servlco that can bo done by tho United States to thoso Islands Is to teach their peoplo to work. Just ns Booker Washington Is teaching the colored peoplo of Tuskcgeo to work Wo havo not hail marked success with the Indian, because ho would not work. Wo nio working peo plo ourselves. A man has scarcely re spectable standing in tho United States who docs not contribute by his head or his hands to tho wclfaio of tho republic. But tho colored man will work, and just an rapidly as tho people of those Islands can bo helped In this direction success will come to tho efforts of tho United States In trying to do them gooil. Just lu whit way congress may deem wise to man age thoso Islands no ono can tell. Per haps congressmen cannot tell themselves jet. But education toward tho Industries Is what the peoplo of the islands tiro all needing." The legislative comniltleo empowered to draft a bill legulatlng railroad chuiges In Kansas has completed Its work. Tho bill drafted reduces freight rates 20 per cent Hxpress companies' charges nro reduced 23 per cent., and telegraph tolls aro e duced at least 40 por cent. The local census of the city of Berlin just completed show 3 that the population, which In 1695 wns about 1.C00.00O, now has passed the 1,800,000 mark. WHAT WE SHIP TO ArillCA. Trom Leslie's Weekly. Tho wonderful expansion of our export trade Is revealed by tho official statement of tho market wo aro finding in far-off Africa. In 1S9I our exports to Africa were less than ?5,000,000. During tho past fiscal jcar they h.vvo risen to $17,000,0u0. Includ ing corn, wheat, canned beef, lard, butter, tobacco, furniture, leather, boots nnd shoes, haidwaie, cotton clothes, , agricul tural Implements, clocks and watches, sewing machines, typewriters, blcjcles, and scientific Instruments. Surely, wo nre teaching out for tho trade of tho world. 8i'I,i:NDIl ASSOnTMKNT OF HOLIDAY . . BOOKS Booklets, Calendars, Cards, Diaries: EIEIiLEMArs""0.!:00" J103 WASHINGTON A VENUK. Uelowr Tribune Ofllco. Holiday Goods o o o That are gmi all tie year areiii Q. W. Fritz ihas the best and largest assortment in his line. All suitable for presents. Among them will be found the follow ing: Harness $6 to $250. Fur Robes $3 to $50. Plush Robes $2 to $65. Sleigh Bells 35c to $4.50. Trunks $1.25 to $40. Traveling Bags. . . .40c to S50. Shopping Bags. ...75c to $12. Chatelaine Bags., .ac to $13. Dress Suit Cases. $1.65 to $25. Telescopes 25c to $10. Ladies' and Cent's Traveling Cases, JYIani cure Sets, Writing Cases, JYIusic Rolls, Cuff and Col lar Boxes, Pocketbooks, Card Cases, Purses and a host of useful and orna mental goods too numer ous to mention. GOttSM Trnn tttli JIm. For a Alt" StC nan Wr Hatch Safes, Pin Cushions and Match Pockets, Hand -IL ,g) yijrrorSt Card Trays, Hairpin Boxes, Glove and Handkerchief Sets, Glass Pepper and Salts, Etc., Etc. Aft TTrTnir s31ver and China Pin Trays, Silver Mugs, Celluloid Novelties, fML W Silver-Top Vaseline Jars, Easel Mirrors, Etc., Etc. Alt" ITgif u ass a:n Silver Inkstands, Venetian Vases, Glove Boxes, -IL 11) ;HanrjkerchIef Boxes, Necktie Cases, Etc., Etc. Alt" "2gC C52ar Jars, Smoking Sets, Silver and Bronze Ink Wells, rietal fL ) Ylc pufj Boxes, Celluloid Novelties, Bon Bonneire Boxes, Chil dren's Silver Sets of Knife, Fork, Spoon and Mug in Boxes, and a great line of riedallions. These are bargains rare and ripe 5 handy to get; at Hain Floor; near front door; ftSiuifllay Sctaols Stupliecl Cleaper Tiaan. Elsewleire, ALWAYS BUSY CoiiSI52 v Is -- dulstm S Is Santa Clans His little friends, aud big ones too, will be happy in our shoes. Lewis, Rely k Mvles, 11 1 AND 110 WYOMING AVr.NUIi t looking around for your Christmas Gifts 0000 remember our stock of Fine China, Cut Glass, Brie a Brae, Dinner, Tea, and Toilet Sets. TIE CLEM0R& FLUME, O'MALLEY CO. 42'J LnoUuwauna Avenu THE MODERN HARDWARE STORE. nxruniss kou TUB HATH IIOO.M Nickel-Mated lacks, ge Cases We have a nice line of the above goods. FOOTE & SIEAfl Ca 110 Washington ave. -0 WOLF & WENZEL, J 10 Adams Ave., Opp. Court llom;. iWryC-1 did Eole AemU tor Iilcbardsoa-Uoyaton'4 Furnace and Haass. TP(0 sO jT A p a 0 Flyers iristmas Gift Buyer Prices Halved and Quartered For Christmas Hill & Connell, 121 Washington Avenue, Have an unusual large assortment or Chairs and Rockers Section Ladles' Desks maun,, Parlor Cabinets and Music Cabinets lu Mahogany and Vcrnli-MsrtlQ. A FEW CHOICIJ Pieces of Bric-a-Brac, Tabourettes, a large selection : Tables, in endless variety. Hill & Connell 323 Washington Ave. Caleodars, s, GflM Peis, Gold Ilk Stands, Leafier Card Cases, Ftaia Pens aad a Handsome Assortment Of 1899 Maries, In fancy bindings, suit able for Christmas Gifts. All holiday books at cost. Reynolds Bros STATIONERS nnd ENGRAVERS. THE I k CMiELL CO, Heating, Plumbing, Gas Fitting, Electric Light Wiring, Gas and Electric Fixtures, Builders i Hardware. 434 Lackawanna Avenue BAZAAR HIIEY: Holiday AemioiLiiece meet O O O 9 We are prepared t show a finer assorted stock of than on any previous occasion. We make special mention of tho following lines, viz. Real Lace Handker chiefs, Scarfs, Collars, Jackets and Collarettes, also Laces by the yard. Spanish Lace Fichus and Scarfs. Fine Silk Petticoats. ' Ladies' and gentlemen's Fine Silk Umbrellas. Kiel Gloves and Mittens for men, women and children, Gentlemen's Fine Silk Mufflers, Neckwear and Suspenders. Fine Table Linens.Table Setts and fancy Centre Pieces. Fine line of high grade Perfumeries, etc. 530 and 512 LACKAWANNA AVENUE HENRY BELIN, JR., Ucucrol Agent ror tns Wyomlnj DlatrlcUJ.- Mining, UltiMIng, Hportln?, Bmokelon und Uio Itepnuno uuemloul Company HIGH EXPLOSIVES. bnfety I'ute, Cnpi uud Kxplodori itooiu 101 Connoll llulldluj. bcruatou. Christmas Goods PIIBEI. AQUNUILS TH09, FOUP. PHHt JOHN 11. BM U'H&dON. Plymonti V. K. MUL.UUAN, WMies-llarr J