The Scranton tribune. (Scranton, Pa.) 1891-1910, February 03, 1899, Morning, Page 4, Image 4

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    THE SCRANTON TRIBUNE-FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1899.
rnbllnticil lilly, Kicept Slintlny. hr the
TrlbitnePublUblnj Company, ut Hfly Cent,
.Month.
Istw YotkOtUce: 1M) Nummi st
K H VllKKl,ANt
tole Agent for lorolgn Advertlilni.
IMMtU AT THE rOSrorFICB AT DTKANTO!,
r., AH euo.tMum JIA1I. HATTUn.
SCH ANTON, rCDUUAUY 3, 1859.
REPUBLICAN NOMINATIONS.
MayorJAMES MOIIt.
Trcacurcr-TIIOMAS It mtOOKS.
Controller 1 J. WIUMAYKH.
School Directors JOHN COURIEIt
atonms. at:otoi3 11. (murks.
Assestors-OW1LM JON11S 1'lllLU'
R1N8LAND, C. 8 FOWLUK
Election Da l'ebruary 21.
a muss of testimony not to bo Implied
usltlo. It Is possible Hint the war do
tmrtmont was Imposed upon by the
meat contractors but It Is not nitP"
posnble that all these olllcers ami men,
constituting tho lirnlnn of tho tie-
tnnt Secretary
Forum.
of Btato IIIU In the
The case of Mrs. ermule, the fair
rhllntlelphlnn who has recently Rained
notoriety In New York courts, reads
cIMve military campaign of tho war. I Wie n. modern paper-bound romance
are concertcdly lying. Neither lfl It , turned wrong end on. Mrs. Vermulo
' v hen a mnldun of 1C scorned the suit or.
Tho Democratic senators who think
opposition to tho peace treaty Is Rood
politics will tlltcover their mistake
When too late.
Bright Itopublicnn Prospects.
In notable contrast with tho turbu
Imico which chaiacteilzed the recent
Pemoeintlc city convention and which
has left soi es Impossible to be healed,
the "ltuntlnii on the Republican Bjcjo
mis and l si-it'iii'. Tli prlmi-iles ot
tered nn ipi n flumip ind their result
lias been lien fully nctiulesced in
Tho ticket ri'unlnnUtl under the Cravv
luid rountv FNSteni bv cood luck hap
pen'? to bo well distributed freogr.rphi
i ilh nnrt t;vciilj nnportloned in other
itpcits. It is well calculated to poll
the pnit;- sttonKth and unite Inroads
on the ciienis
Captain Sloli fm mnvnr bis been for
Iiuinv M'nis liefote the people III the
capacity of u cuuncllmnii and his ot
llrlul rt enrd Is open for eiminntlon.
Tlmnns 11 Urooks foi city treasuier Is
ii pupulai rep rsenlathe of tln vniinfter
ileinunt of tl'e inrl a thorough bust
nen man tirtl tnuneh njOil 'allow
whom tic Pc mounts i tinnot hope to
beat I'ik! J, Wldmnvi for controller
liHids no intuiduetlon to Kcrartonlain
after his tlrt intt iidmlnlstratlon of
that otllee from WS to 1S00. Morris
and Khliew for school directors nre ex
perienced and trustworthv students of
m Itnol inobleiTis and their Republican
ism Is beyond challenge. Jonc., Ttins
Kiml and Kottkr for assisors are a
ti to measuilnj up to eveiy lequlre
nunt and their election Is assured
The tlclx't as a whole Is gieatly aided
b the tfuicr.il consciousness that
t-eninton has been under Democratic
contiol lorii? enough. It matters not
who weie responsible for foisting the
piessnt tnaloi'orous administration
upon the citv, the thing to do now is
to coriect the misfortune as quickly
and as thoroughly as possible.
When the president dealt with Gen
cial Gomz dlictly through an uutlror
izd agent an understanding on disputed
points was : cache J easily and immedi
ately. It should be a lesson.
Election Contests.
The bill of Senator Vaughn bearing
on election contest j lfl received with
faor b the press of the state. It
represents an admitted necessity In
legislation.
It piovldes as our icadus will re
call, that witnesses in contests whose
otes are shown to be illegal shall re
ceive no fees or mileage, and it spec!-1
fles that in contested elections of presi
dent or additional law judges and of
tounty, boiough, township, municipal
oiliceis or school diiectois or school
lontiolleis. If the contestant or con
testants fnll to establish his or their
light to the office to which he or they
claimed to have been elected, the peti
tioners and each and eveiy one of them
shall be Jointly and severally liable
for all the costs and the same may
be collected as debts of like amount
are by law collectable, or payment
theieforc may be enforces by attach
ment. Thlo provision has been objected
to on the ground that a contest might
be begun In good faith nnd et end in
lalluic, but even so the petitionee
should pa the costs. Their mistaken
good faith should not be charged upon
the- public
No law enn be fi amid with reference
to contests which might not In some
iaro case v.oik conceivable haidship,
hut the aim of legislation should be
tho gteatest good for the greatest
number, and this principle Is the basis
of the public's cry for relief from
speculative election contests. It Is safe
and just to lay down the rule that a
deieated candidate who contests and Is
beaten should, either personally or
thiough his Indorners, bear the expense
of his failure to win. To ask the com
munity to bear It Is to put a premium
on contest speculation and to Invite
rontlnuous nnnojancc nnd expense.
No county In the state knows this bet
ter than Lackawanna.
Miles' fault that the meat vvaa poor
Ounntng for his scalp will not strike
at the root of the trouble.
Of course the president regrets keen
ly as do all his friends these outcrop
pings of scandal and 111-fccllng In the
military eeivlce. Tho public has Its
own Ideas ns to the responsible cause
of tho major part of this friction; but
regardless of any personal prejudices
here Is a matter calling for thorough
Investigation. Alger, Miles, McKlnley,
congress and everybody elso ought to
be of ono mind as to tho need of going
lo the bottom of thla beef scandal and
detei mining beyond any question who
the guilty persons are.
A conservative estimate places tho
cost of the senatorial deadlock at Ilar
llsburtf to the principals alone fo" ho
tel tent and ted fire at more than 11,000
a day, not to mention the thousand
rind one ' evtras" which contribute to
the excitement of politics The cost to
the state has not been estlrnatui but It
Is iiotoiiouly heivy. It Is a big price
to pay fot .John Wunamnlier'H vlndlc-tivemsb.
a rich man who had been selected by
her mother as a husband for her, nnd
lan away with a penniless llotneo who
had tho bearing of tho sad young man
who lescues tho heroine of ten-cent
dtama fiom tho 'villain who Is about
to foreclose the mortgage on her fath
er's furm. Tho young husband did not
prove to bo a prince In illsgulso. In
fact ho had no relatives connected with
any of the Important trusts in this or
nuy other country. After a brief wed
ded cxlstenco tho husband has disap
peared and tho wife, known ns Mrs.
Vermulo, Is In Jail for swindling. This
Is a romance In real Hffi that senti
mental girls will do well to study.
Tho Business Outlook in Cuba.
Uncle Ram has not been In control of
Tuba for more thin a month, and In
that time miry velng problems hnve
ailtin to creite disturbance on tho sur
lace of aftalrs, yet the Information at
hand tells of a very perceptible Im
provement In the business conditions
of the Island, and of course this Is only
the beginning. Charles M. Pepper, per
haps the best qualified of the Ameri
can correspondents now In Cuba, de
votes a recent letter to this subject
and gives a report which, while not
overdrawn, Is certainly cheering.
Mr. Pepper sees no portents of a
boom in the American sense; the pov
erty of the masses of tho people, the
consumers, forbids this until such time
as normal conditions re-appear. Neith
er are then? large fortunes to be
picked up by strolling Americans off
hand. Business customs In Cuba are
exceedingly conservative. Business is
orr a cash basis; proprietors of stores
pay cash when buying stocks nnd ex
pect to receive it when making sales
Moreover, there Is little or no cutting
of prices; when a merchant cannot see
a profit there Is no sale. It will, In
Mr. Pepper's Judgment, take time to
change these customs and until they
are changed Americans striving to do
business In Cuba must bo willing to
conform to some extent to native ways.
Yet despite these drawbacks he finds
that a great deal more attention is now
being paid by tho people of Cuba, the
better clnsses, to business problems
than was true three months ngo, and
correspondingly less to politics. Bright
Cubans are looking about for trade or
investment opportunities, and this sign
impresses Mr. Pepper favorably. Ho
discovers, also, that a good Held Is
open to Anteilcan bankers who are
willing to loan money on crop mort
gages and be content with an average
Interest rate of 7 or S per cent., as
against 13 to 20 per cent, charged by
Spanish barkers prior to the revolu
tion. "With tho dlslnndment of the Insur
gent troops capital is expected to be
released In unusual abundance, and
profligate nnturo, plus a little work,
will do the rest.
Cuban soldiers evidently do not be
lieve in cheap labor.
Tho Federated Women's club3 of
Tekln, 111., havo adopted resolutions
asking the legislatures to suppress tho
use of pictures of women as advertise
ments. The resolutions are directed
more particularly to the manufactur
ers of cigarettes, liquor dealers, and
advertisers of the class that Intro
duce high art In calling the attention
of tho public to their wares. No ob
jection seems to havo been made to
the faces of women who have been
cured by the various patent medicines
In most Instances the society probably
believes those portraits Incapable of
exciting other interest than that ot
speculation as to what the subject
must have been "before taking."
General Miles continues to Insist that
certain Chicago meat packers have
discovered the principal lost art of the
ancient Kgvptlniw,. Tho manner in
another proof of excellent generalship
In piovldlng an ample supply of am
munition before going Into a fight.
It Is to bo feared that Senator Pllnn
has entered the Incipient stage of polit
ical tremens.
It Must Be Probed.
It Is announced In a number or news
papers close to tho administration that
tho president Is being urged by Secre
tary Alger to discipline General Miles
for making public evidence bearing on
the unfitness of the prepared meatH
supplied last summer to tho army. The
discipline sought Is trial by court mar
tial. It Is also said that the enemies
of Miles want the president to remove
hlnr from the command ot tho army.
What truth thero is In theso reports
we do not know. If Mllce has broken
any military rules ho should not be
moro exempt from punishment than
any other soldier, for discipline Is fully
as essential among generals as among
subordinates.
But if his offense consists simply in
making public Important Information
which his opponents were trjlng to
conceal, the president will bo likely
to pay little heed to their requests.
On the face of the case tho man to
discipline Is not Nelson A. Miles but
the person, whoever he may be, re
sponsible for trying to feed the army
on unfit beef. Miles has published
reports from thirty different olllcers
and over eighty civilians which sus
tain his RBsnrtlons as to the unsavory
character of this meat. These reports
represent, wa believe, ovory regiment
and almost tivery oompany at Santiago
and in Porto Blco, and they conutltuto
A "War for tho Extension of Civiliza
tion. "The moro closely we subject tho
matter to analjsls, the more closely wo
perceive that we have been waging a
war not of conquest, but of civilization.
There are two ways of neutralizing Its
normal results and of repudiating its
animating principles. One of these is
to employ the methoda which we have
succeeded in destroying; the other is
to drop tho whole enterprise in its etate
of Incompletlon and to confess our er
ror In having undertaken It. Kqually
with the so-called 'imperialists' If any
really exist the 'anti-Imperialists' of
fend tho principles upon which the
United States has thus far acted. That
principle has been expressed ns the
right and duty ot our government 'in
the name of humanity, in the name of
civilization' to enforce the end of strife
and to secure a rule of Justice.
"To abandon In a critical moment tho
populations emancipated from thesover
elgnty of Spain may seem moro re
ppectablo than to exploit them, but
neither the one nor the other Is in har
mony with tho conception of national
duty which Inspired tho prosecution of
the war. Thero aie only tlnee possible
positions to be taken upon the ques
tion of our proper relation to the lato
colonies of Spain: (1) That Spain had
a right to exploit them, and, since
wo have defeated her, that we have
succeeded to that right; (2) that Spain
was wrong la the treatment of her col
onies, but that we had no right to Inter
fere; and, (3) that Spain was wrong to
an extent that justified our Interfer
ence and our substitution of u better
order. Those who accept tho last pos
ition must admit that our duty has not
been fully performed until we have
substituted a better order than wo
found In truth, the best order that wo
are able to Hccuro.
"Having invoked 'humanity' and
'civilization' as tho watch words of tho
war, they now clearly prescribe our
task In Imposing peace. Tho current
course of events has beerr described
by Its enemies as 'Imperialism,' and by
Its friends as 'expansion;' but neither
of thee terms quKo accurately meets
the case. Tho purpose of our govern
ment has not been the subjection of
foreign peoplo for tho sake of empire,
nor the enlargement ot our territorial
limits for tho saka of expansion. Both
of these words Imperfectly express the
ultuatlon, and, thus far at least, are not
true to history. A more fitting phraso
to designate the alms and achievements
of the nation is, perhaps, "the extension
of civilization; for it expresses tho mo
tive and controlling principle of tho
war nnd of tho treaty by which, when
ratified, it is to be concluded." Assls-
duced much mischief, have already In
jured the United States In tho eyes ot
tho world, and if successful In prevent
ing ratification next Monday would do
nn nmount of Inrm to our standing ns a
nation, to our relations with other pow
ers, to the people of tho 1'hlllpplno Isl
amic, and to our vast flourishing business
Interests, which It. would be hard to cs
tlniato or measure
o
Tho sennte of tho United Stales la tho
most powerful single chamber In uny
representative government In tho world.
Us adjustment Is tho only thing In the
constitution which cannot bo changed ex
cept with the assont of every state.
Amendments may come and go, but they
cunuot change the representation of tho
states In tho noimte. Nothing but a com
plote revolution can touch that greet pro
vision. Tho combination of legislative
and cxccutlvo pswers carries tho author
ity of tho sonato into every branch ot
the government, and by tho mistakes nnd
shortsightedness of the house of repre
sentatives the legislative powers of the
senate have Increased and multiplied.
Foremost among tho great powers con
ferred upon the senato Is that which
associates it with tho executive In the
making of treaties. With tho memory ot
days when the influence of Trench minis
ters was felt strongly, and, perhaps, cor
ruptly, In tho continental congress fresh
In their minds, tho framrrs of tho con
stitution mndo a two-thirds ote of tho
senato necessary to tho ratification of a
treaty. Uppermost la the thoughts of
men whose politics had been part of those
of Kuropo was the deslro to guard as
strenuously as possible against tho peril
of entangling alliances and dishonoring
agreements brought about by foreign In
fluence and foreign corruption To us
such reasoning seems Impossible. In 1787
It was real and valid But In this effort
to protect tho United States from foreign
Intrigue tho framcrs of tho constitution
Involved thempolvts In a strango con
tradiction. They gavo to a majority of
congress the power to declnro war, and
they enabled one-third of tho senate to
prevent ptaco and continue a war onco
entered upon. It probibly nover oc
curred to tho fi amors of tho constitution
that one-third of any senate could evci
be found to refuse to ratify a treaty of
peace In opposition to tho wishes of the
country, of tho president, nnd of the ma
jority of both houses. Such a proposition
would have been deemed by them too
monstrous and too fantastic, to bo con
sidered as a scilous objection to tho pur-
which the general has met all efforts I l'osea they were seeking to carry out.
at bluff on part of the mmMIES'Sl'IS?!
an abuse of the treaty-making power of
tho senate could ever bo attempted; et
tho wisest of men cannot foreseo every
possibility of human nature, and It is
that very abuse of 'he treaty-making
power of tho senato which menaces tho
country today.
o
Tho president, in fulfillment of tho pow
ers with which tho constitution clothes
him, has concluded a peaco with Spain,
hopelessly beaten by the United States in
war. We have wrung no Indemnity from
our defeated foe, but havo compelled her
to cedo nnd relinquish to us her colonial
possessions, over which she tyrannized,
nnd which wo havo conquered and tiken.
By tho treatj, and by tho treaty alone,
can wo tako finally from Spain tho peo
plo whom we havo freed. By the treaty,
and tho treaty alone, can wo end tho
stato of war and re-establish peace. The
treaty binds us to r.o policy in the future,
but leaves the destiny of the islands for
us alono to determine. But If tho treaty
binds us to nothing, our own honor and
our international obligations bind us In
tho strongest way to give peaco and or
der to the islands whero wo havo thrown
down tho government of Spain, which
we aro bound to replace, ana we mo
equally bound not to permit anarchy and
desolation to spring from victories wo
have won By tho treaty, and the treat
alone, can wo reach a position In which
wo can fulfill theso high duties and meet
these solemn obligations.
A refusal to ratify tho treaty on Mon
day next would mean putting it over to
the next senate. Delay was never more
dangerous. To refuse ratification now
means encouragemont to tho udventurcr
Agulnaldo nnd his bands, and blood
shed in tho Philippines. That bloodshed
will bo due to tho opposition In the sen
ato, and the Democratic p-rity, which
furnishes most of the negatlvo ote.
will sink deeper than over under thit
red burden. Iho refusal to ratify mea-is
disorders in the Philippines and compli
cations with foreign powers. Jealously
eager for an excuse for interference It
menns tho humiliation of the United
States, nnd would Justify civilized man
kind in saying that we aro a people un
fit to play a part in great affairs, and
unworthy of our own high destiny. It
means alarm, anxiety, suspense, uncer
tainty and the contlnuanco of tho state
of war, bringing a check to business, and
menacing our prosperity. Tho sonators
who 'vote "NO" next Monday will make
themselves directly responsible for all
theso results, and tho country will hold
them to their responsibility and not suf
fer them to escape.
CO
USMIT
'S
.J)J
' BAZAAI
A
GlMBSC
if Spriag
New Woo! Dress Goods0
New Silk amid Wool Dress Goods
New Black aed Colored Crepoos
Henri Wattcrson la not at all dis
couraged by tho little drawbacks en
countered In his effort to boom Ad
miral Dewey as the Democratic candi
date for president. He pioposes, If
Admiral Dewey will not Join tho Dem
ocracy, that the Democracy shall join
Dew ey.
m
TOLD BY THE STARS.
Dally Hoioscopo Drawn by Ajacchus,
Tho Tribune Astrologer.
Astrolabe Cast: 4 1G a. m , for Friday,
Pcbruary 3, 1SXI.
&?
A child born on this day will notlco
that many persons experience the great
est difficulty In preventing tho moss from
collecting upon a prcud ancestral name.
When the bojs of tho Thirteenth re
turn there is no question that all will
Join in the chorus indicating that there 11
bo "thermal temperature In tho ancient
municipality this evening."
It begins to look as though many
of the coming men" at Ilarrisburg had
engaged passago on the slow freight.
Blissful Ignorance is often better thin
tho knowledge that prompts one to nt
tumpt brush whiskers from tho moving
buzz-saw.
Tlmo can bo moro piofitably spent in a
giavejard vault than in tho society of a
man who has lost faith in woman.
Ajacchus' Advice
Do not waste tlmo setting woodchuck
traps during the coming six weeks.
To the S?naf? of
Ihe United States
New Wash Fabrics
Exclusive styles in both foreign and domestic produc
tions, including Piques, Madras Cloths, Ginghams, Ox
fords, Mousseline de Soie, Etc., Etc.
(Mr Great HMerwar Sale
Has received such amazing acknowledgements of praise and apprecia
tion on the part of the ladies o? Scranton and vicinity, and the opening
sales have been so enormous, that we feel deeply grateful to our friends
for their appreciation of our efforts in this dir-. 'Lion.
ALWAYS BUSY.
SlllUjllItt,
OCR (canJlffnlr!
N.". M I I I I 1 X.X
' uuiyjik
EOTS!
Stand more kicks than
any other shoes made.
INLEY'S
W IF
You cannot think, no matter how
iniru jou try, oi a more convenient
and better equipped stationery store
than ours, in addition to the largest
line of ofTlco supplies In Northeastern
Pennsylvania. We have Blank Books
of every description, Typewriters' Sup
plies, Draughting Materials, Ietter
Presses. Postal Scales, ptc. We are
agents for Bdlson's Mimeographs and
supplies, nnd the famous Wernlckl Sec
tional Book Cases.
A complete line of Kauffman's Cor
poration Books In stock.
Goods
Peaco or war. that Is the Issue and the
only lssuo Involved In the vote on ho
treaty now Ulng on your table. Tho
country demands Its ratification.
WE 1IAVB A NUMI1EH OF riNII
III
Aire
that we will close out
At Cost
This is a chance to get a
rrom tho New York Sun.
A treaty of peace with Spain lies upoi
jour table. On Monday, Bob. t, at 3
o'clock in the afternoon, jou will vote
upon It. The war which this treaty brings
to an end was one of unbroken victory,
and tho treaty accords with tho war. On
this statement alono It would seem that
the ratification of such a treaty could bo
nothing moro than a form, and that not
u blngle vote could posblbly bo given
agaliibt It by any senator. Such, how
ever, marvellous as It may appear, Is not
tho catec. There Is opposition to this
treaty, an opposition violent, passionate,
extremely cal, and, sad to say, with
votes behind tho voices. Treaties of
peace In the past have often called out op
position, discontent and criticism on tho
winning side, but ulwujs upon tho ground
that they havo not been commensurate
with tho deserts of the victor. This
treaty ha3 the unique distinction of meet
ing with opposition among tho represen
tatives of the victor nation because it is
too triumphant and has taken too much
from tho vanquished. No objection is
made, or can bo made, to the instrument
Itself Tho treaty is drawn with the ut
most skill; it grants every American de
mand and commits the United States to
nothing. It Is as creditable to American
diplomacy as tho battles by sea and land
wero to the Eallors and soldiers of tho
United States It is assailed cololy on
the ground that it Is too toiccessful and
matches too completely the work of tho
American army and navy.
o .
Tho position of the oppoi ents ot tho (rood lamp for little money.
frtntv nml thn diitrlhoq with whlrh Ihnv I o F J
sustain It aro difficult to comprehend. In
genuity has been strained to show that
tho constitution limits tho ordinary pow
ers which pertain to evory sovereign
and Independent nation, and to invent
overy kind of possible and Impossible sit
uation ns a barrier to constitutional ac
tion. Tho declaration of independence
has been pressed Into tho servtco and
made to do duty ns a statement of or
ganic law to bo construed like a statute,
In a manner which would niako tho au
thor and signers of that greatest of rev
olutionary manifestoes start with amaze
ment ami surprise And all this heated
Invocation of the declaration and tho
constitution Is betldo tho mark and with
out any relation to the question In band.
At the best it Is academic, and at tho
vvorbt It is Insulting to the American peo
plo for It implies that they are not to bo
truUcd to live up to tho principles thoy
havo themselv et- enunciated and to In
terpret arlfcht the constitution which
they revcrenco and for which In past
tlmo they have given their lives and spent
their treasure Onco off tho ground ot the
constitution nnd tho declaration of in
dependence, the opponents of tho treaty
depart entirely from tho practical ques
tion and plunge Into a future which they
cannot rcadand fill that futuie with chim
eras dire and with tho vain things of
overheated Imaginations, AH they fay
can be summed up'ln one short sentence,
that tho American peoplo ie not to be
trusted with the fate of th Philippine,
and aro too feeble, too dishonest, too
biutal to undertuko the tnsk.
Lewis, lellly & Mvies,
114 AND US WYOMING AVENUE.
ma
mm k cwMEix ca
Heating, Plumbing,
Gas Fitting, Electric
Light Wiring, Gas
and Electric Fixtures,
Builders Hardware.
STATIONERS and UXGKAVEKS.
1 50 Wyoming Avenue.
-
TIE GLEIOf s, raie,
WAIXEY CD.
422 Lackawanna Avouu
434 Lackawanna Avenue
eon
BIOIS
Can be made
comfortable
If you use oue of our
Gas or Oil Radiators.
Just what you need iu
cold weather.
FOOTE k SHEAR CO.
11B WAbUINQlON AVJS.
Ranges
and
The senato dobato has not brought out
a blngle argument or one valid objection
to the ratification of tho treaty. In fact.
It Is dKTlcult to tako berlously anything
said by Its opponents, nnd It Is Impossible
to answer them, for there Is nothing to
which a reasonable mind can make re
ply. Hut If the arguments nre futile
nnd without bearing on tho case, thn sit
uation created by the opposition and the
votes they profess to have ore eerlous
In tho extreme. They havo already pro-
Ft
no
laces
LARGEST ASSOItTXIENT Or" HANGK3
IN THE CITV.
PllllllllbSIlg,
and Tieeflinis:
A . o
ooo
We have now open
our elegant new line
of
Scotch
GtaghainniSo
s)
Scotch
Cheviots,
Fine
QaflateaSo
For Children's Waists
and Dresses.
Zephyr
cloths,
Wfelle aifll C3oreol
Pigmies, Etc,
With Laces and Em
broideries for trimmings.
510 and 512
LACKAWANNA AVENUE
OTSTra Ei FORSYTH,
325 and 327
PENN AVENUE:
The boss of the repair department in a Massachusetts
watch factory says : " I used to be a good deal of an ath
lete and was in the habit of taking lots of out of door
exercise, but since I've been shut up in this shop I began
to have terrible bilious headaches. I stiH did enjoy an
occasional bout at boxing, but after a few lively rounds a
tendency to get as bick as can be seemed to take posses
sion of me. The exercise appeared to stir up the bile an
the next day I would have a ciacking good headache, M
druggist recommended me to try Ripans Tabules as ..
possible cure. He said they seemed to be the latest cure
all for stomach troubles. Well, he just hit it. I have not
used more than 25 cents' worth, but I exercise now as
much as I please and don't know what a bilious headache
means any more."
HENRY BEL1N, JR.,
General Agent for the Wjamloj
District fJ."
wroiri
POliERo
id. rtrt MdK eaaUlatur iu wrik tisclu la a pa;r c.rtu (without irlkm) Ii now (or ula it tarns
4raffiim- 11A rim cnt 1 hi low prliul wrt Ultnidt fer il p"m l lh roonnmlmJ oixilotui
of tt. ft nr.t f.yiimnfi iak.iL-Mt mn hrt hmd b, ULAll br UDdtMT fftv-tht oeuu to the linimsuMiiL
w'runr)l.aractkra4,Jtw Yrt- daili CMUmtnui rucuuJwUlUeuJIorftra
lllulnc. bunting, Bporllnx, SuioltelMl
unit tbo KcpiuiiiQ CbeiuloA.
Company'
HIGH EXPLOSIVES.
bufety rutc Cnp nnd Ktplojtri.
tloom 401 Coauell Ualldluj.
Bcrantoa.
AaENGlttl
mos routs
JOUN II. SMITH &dO:t
W.K. MULLIGAN,
Ptttiti
Plymouth
VUtet-Barr
I
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