The Scranton tribune. (Scranton, Pa.) 1891-1910, April 22, 1899, Morning, Page 4, Image 4

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    THE SCRANTON TRIBUNE-SATURDAY, APRIL 22, 1890.
(Jc cranfon ri6tme
Pntillnel Hully, l'.eV. Siiiicli". Ir tin
Irltniticl'HblltliliijCompmy, at Mfty Coin
n Month.
Jst rrkOlllcc: 1M Nnntist..
s.h. viu:niiVNi
olc Agent or Koraltfn Ailvortlitln?.
ijsTFiirn ArTitnosini'i icb at m-hantox,
I'Ai. AK fcl tONtl.CI.Aht MA Hi MAlTI'tt.
TWELVE PAGES.
HCttANTON. APIltTi :'2, KM.
The fnct tlmt .Senator Quay, with
out cIpIrhIm? to ftilcr a clcren'- vui
ncciiilUrd oil tlio liroxccullon'H nwii evi
dence pIiouk how little mii lilut Uiciu
wns lu tlio tnio nKiiliiHt lilni.
Senator Quay's Vindication.
The vncllet n ncdulttnl, returned by
llio Jury In the Qtmv men estcrdny
mornlnK, ni the- nil pifblhlo etdlrt
consistent with tlio evidence. 'flint
evidence showed fiom f-tnrt to llnlsh
the manipulation of political malice
HeeklnK to conduct n political light
thiouRh perversion of the machinery
of the couits. In Instigation and nur
ture, the piosecutlnn w.is political unci
lncllctlve In every phase, nnd yet no
well luul thp plot been lultl mid timed
that not until the leglslaturo had ad
journed could Quuy'H friends get the
facts fairly hefote a jury.
I'ndcr thehe clictiinstanci'P the -piih-tor'rt
appointment by the Roveinor Is
natural and necepsary. It avetts the
cost of a fruitless special pension and
transfers to an Importlal outwde
tribunal the decision upon Quay's
cllKlblllty to ndmis&lnu to the senate.
The senate, It Is ttue, has decided in
recent cases wherein the power of gub
ernatorial appointment war. used after
legislative, falluie to elect that such
appointment was constitutionally In
valid. Hut on prior occasions It had
(lecldfd Just the opposite, so that the
matter Is merely one of majority
opinion nnd bubjeet nt any time to re
versal or modification.
In no cat-e yet passed upon by the
senate weie the circumstances attend
ing the legislative faituie to elect
parallel to those In this case. Hcie
was a hcnatoiial candidate duly in
dorsed in regular caucus by un over
whelming majority of the legislators
of Ills party faith, yet deprived of an
election through the machinations of .1
vindictive minority not only practicing
perfidy In politics but also Humping
up a criminal accusation and holding
it over the eandiilates's head in the
hope of scaling him Into a pui tender.
Surely If ever the sovereign power of
the American senate should be put
forth to Ikid'e malicious persecution
and tlcht a gtos, corspiraey ngain-t
justice it --lutitld be put forth In tlu
cti'.e of Matthew Stanley Quay, the
Mill unbeaten and Incomparable leader
of Pennsylvania's btahvatt I'epubll
LiinUm It l once moie time for linn. John
Woniinitiker to say t-oinetliing.
amply entitled to do that: they simply
want to lalse enough money through
their forthcoming fair to give suitable
welcome and show nppropilate hospi
tality tu thtlr guests of next Octoner
mid the niiiltltloti Is one which should
have the public's fullest sympathy and
most genet oils co-opuratlon.
In enmmeinoiatlon of Us fifteenth
lilrtlulu" our esteemed nmU'inporary,
the Tiutti, .vesterday published a liiind-
nuiiif siMei'ii page edition giving a
mol liitetestlng review of the progrc t
of Sci'itntim during the peilod of the
Tiuth'H exIHi'tieo. In calling attention
tu this latest feat of a neighbor's long
ti ciiglilKi'd enterprise It gives us gieut
pleasuie to be able to pol'it to the
Titlth us lvptesentlng In Itself one of
the best of visible evidences of local
ptogte's atid ptijspeiitj. May Its
blrthdavs ever be thus happy.
The City's Debt to the Firemen.
In May, lasting fiom the Sth to the
27th ila.vs Inelut-lve. the firemen of
Sc rar.ton w 111 hold a fair In the At tnorv,
fur the pin pose of raising a 310,000 eli
te i talninent fund to be used duilng the
State riiemon's convention In tills city,
Oct. ."-7. The coining of this comon
tlon to Suuuton w ill be of enotmous
advantage to Seianton, advertising Its
hospitality, its enterptlso and Its mani
fold advantages thioughottt the length
and lncadth of the commonwealth. The
city owes it to Itself, us well as to Its
lltemen, to entertain the firemen of
Pennsylvania properly and to send
them home with happy recollections of
the Klcctrlc city.
The occurrences of Thursday In the
Board of Ttado building and on Lacka
wanna avenue illusttated vividly the
rommunlty's Indebtedness to the volun
teer Scranton Tire department. The
Board of Trade fire showed Its prompt
ness in responding to the signal of
danger. The Lackawanna, avenue lire
Hhovvcd Its fearlessness In the face of
danger and the splendid efficiency with
which It does Its work despite difficult
obstacles. There were volunteer as
well as paid firemen on Thutsday even
ing who took as Imminent risks to life
ns were ever taken on any battle field
and who fought as bt.wely against the
futlous Hamcs as soldlets ever fought
under an enemy's guns. For this mag
nificent heroism and piactlcal service
the volunteers iccelved not one cent
of pay and lost, we are Iniormed, mote
thnn $400 worth of petsonal clothing
Into the bargain. Had It not been for
their superb efforts the pioperty lo-s
would have been not $70,000 or theie
abouts, but five, peihaps ten times that
putn, with possibly loss of llfu lit addition.
Tito community should begin to
realize whut It owes to the volimten
lltemen. It Is a shame and a ilKgtnio
that the city does not pay for this sei
vice directly by icorganUIng the de
paitntcnt on a liheial tcgulur basis.
Theie Is, we believe, no other city of
Srranton's magnitude In the wot Id
which compels most of its firemen to do
such hazardous yet necessity duty as
this without paying them for time and
work. Tito question of a paid depait
ment must lie kept before the people
until it Is auswuied by them equitably
and In the spit It of practical enter
prise. In the meantime, the Fiii men's I'.xlr
opens a wr.y tu tlio Inimedlato mani
festation of the community's sense of
oWI-ratlon to the Miluuleoi service. We
aro infotmed by the general manager
of the talr, .Mr O. 11. Maeejulvey. that
It Is the Intention of the firemen to
ask tha men hunts and latgu piopnty
ovvnei uf the city to ine'-ent to tho
fair management m tides of valun
which can be disposed of dining tho
fair by auction or othciwlse. Uveiy
fireman In tho city Is to havo cieden
tlals authoiliilng htm to tall upon
business men and eontilbutlons will bo
conveyed to tho Annory without
chatgfi for callage, Individual tesl
Jdunts of the city, whether
owning busliiias places or not,
would perform u gtaeoful net If they
should also emit i Unite, by check or
otherwise, to thu fall's huocosh. Tho
volunteerflremaumqiuitnsktug pay for
"Uiolr sot vices, although they would bo
Unfair to Piospcctlve Guests.
The acceptance1 by the postmaster
gcneuil and the conditional acceptance
by the piesldent of the I'nltcd States
of an Invitation to visit Seianton dur
ing the convention heie of the Na
tional Litter Curlers' association,
taken In conjunction vvlth the fact
that duilng that convention thousands
of visitor of less distinguished not-'
will i e heie from all parts of the United
States, suggest the Inquiry whether
this notnble visitation Is to be made
to tide or parade over our abominable,
pot-holy asphalted stteets. Unless
the( streets shall be tepalred lu the
meantime, the imptession which they
will make upon tho visltots on that
occasion will be sutllclcnt to counter
act much of the favor excited by
Seianton hospitality, be that us gen
et otts as It may.
Net October the firemen of Pennsyl
Minla aie to convene In Scranton They
will not onlj come heie In person but
they will ptobablj btlng heio some of
the cqtilppage used at home. To the
good fiteman his companj's engine,
hose ttuck or hook nnd ladder wagon
is an object of neat nnd dear solici
tude. To compel the visiting fire com
panies to parade ovet the principal
streets of Scranton in their present
disintegrated and dangerous condition
would be Inhumane; but to compel
them to ilsl: the safety of any of their
lire-fighting nppuratus upon these
tteetn would be to Insult them in a.
place of peculiar susceptibility. The
vNltlng firemen would lie justified In
declining to patudt over Tranklln,
Penn, Wjomlng, AVashlngton and
Adams avenues or over Spruce and
Linden streets If by October next these
stieets should not have been put Into
unable condition.
The people of Scranton may be In
different to their own welfare. They
may be willing to wear out good hoise
llish needlessly on pavements which
would (lNgiacc a village in the back
woods The mav be willing to ilsk
limb and life upon potholes, gullies
and olisttuctions In their piiucipal
business thoiougltfuies. That concerns
themselves alone. Thev can stand It
If they choose to oi fall down b tea son
of It if they cannot, dtive or lide. Put
they ought to be ashamed to exhibit
such obnoxious evidemes of municipal
caielessness to pel suns whom they
have Induced to be their guests with
out fltst explaining the risks of a isit
to this Ill-managed eltj.
the forms of law nnd outvote you If you
kick,"
This Is the essence of the Hryan
pc heme nf a gtaded Income tux. It Is
Juek fade over arralif the ethics of
mediaeval 1'iigland hot rowed for Imi
tation In the most enlightened peilod
of Atneileait hlstotv. All Prynn's ver
bal cleverness cannot cover up the es
sential unilghtiousness of the plan.
From piesent Indications,!! milk war
Up 111 tlio Vicinity or .vuuuiose may
cause a icviviil of the butler-mnklng
Industry nt home. Tho fanners of that
section believe that the man who feeds
the tow should havo some show lu the
division of pioflts, hence they have or
ganized and refuse to Bign tho Iron
ilutl contracts furnished by the milk
buvets this enr. The shippers have
given the milk pioduceis until April
SSth to consider the matter. It they
do not sign by that time Intel csllng
developments nto ptomlsed.
It takes all kinds of occupations to
tun the woild, but the average man
who was once a boy himself would pte
ter to engage In almost any business
nither than drag tiuant oung Amei
Iciv to school these blight spring time
daj s.
m
This Is the season of the jear that
new designs In oil stoves begin to
tempt Ptovldcnce.
Th? Retirement
of Thomas B.'Reed.
The decl-ion of Judge Mitchell, of
Tioga county that bleyc lists have no
tight to lide on the sidewalks under
nnv clicumstunees, even when the
local oidlnanccs do not foibid; and that
any wheelman who should while tid
ing on the sidewalk tun over and kill
a peison accidentally would be guilty
of manslaughter, "no matter If he weie
tiding with tlio greatest cate," comes
upon a troubled situation like a lay of
sunshine on a cloudy day. The Judge
sas the bicycle Is a vehicle nnd as
such It place Is in the public roadway.
It is as much out of place on a side
walk us a dtay or caniagey would be.
The sidewalk Is feu pedestrians exclu
sively. All othei.s use It at thelt legal
haz.ud.
Biyan on an Income Tax.
Mr. Utv-in's aseition In arguing for
an income tax, that "this country can
place its citizens befoto an enemy's
guns but cannot put its linger on ac
cumulated wealth," does nut be tr ex
amination. The countty has only dmc
put Its citizens hetcuo nn enemy's guns
against their will, that K by const tlp
tlon or diaft, and then any man could
g"t off who could hlie a substitute.
'J he diaft piikcss was an ait of su
pieme necessity. In obedience- to the
lushest 1'ivv known tu mankind, th
law of sclf-pics'-ivatlon. Does Mi.
Hrun mean to say th.it lu u similar
ftlN the government of tlu- United
States could not put Its tinge t on accu
mulated wealth.' it bus done this.
Kvciy mllituiy teb.uic of ptlvale piop.
eitv duilng the civil war was a putting
of the government's linger on accumu
lated wealth That afteiwnids, wlnn
the stre.st, as over, meu thus torcibly
dispossessed weie, so fat as possible,
compensated does not change the fact
that seizuto ot pioioity In time of ex
ttnoidiuaty ctlsls, wus effected by the
government's mllituiy agents, time and
time again.
Tho government In suih eiltleal
tlims has powers without limit. It
has them and uses them, constitution
or no constitution, law or no law, lust
as a drowning man grabs at u flouting
board without waiting lor the written
consent of the owner of the boanl
Neccilly, nation il as well as pettoitul,
knows no hew. Hut Ibis does not ex
cute thu violation of propoity tlghta
by tho government in tlino of peace,
and plentj, when It should bo thu gov
einntentV hUitest aim to deal falily
with vety citizen, white or blue Ic, rich
or poor. The Incomo tux hits at u
special class. It soys to tho man of
means "You must not only pay taxes
on your teal estate, taxes on your busi
ness or occupation and tho rations oth
er taxes lev! d upon all men In due
ptopoitlon, but jou must also pay a
spicial tax, not paid by other men.
fur the ptlvilego of succeeding. Wo
aio going tu tux success. Wo ate go
lug to hold up tin 1ft and eitteipilse,
the same ns thu buiglur or highway
man does, onlv Instead of tendering
outvulves liable to ia sent to jail If
cuught, wo arc going to do this under
From the New York Sun.
15 THOMAS P. Ki:i:n, lately
of Maine, will not be sixty un
til October. The boyish look
U has not gone from his big
fuee, nnd, what Is more, his soul is
i cully us fresh as April violets, al
though ho sometimes takes plensure
In ttylng to give a contraty liupies
slon. The batteries In which nature
stored for him at tho start an un
c ouimoii stock of v Itallty show no
signs of depletion, much less of ex
haustion He is physically and in
tellectually capable either of tound
Inc off a career which has already
put him among the elect of success
ful Americans of this century, or of
beginning and achieving a new career,
in new relations nnd with new ns
pltatlons; as capable of the latter en
teiptlse, wo confidently believe, as hs
was when he left Howcloln college
about fotty short cnis ago with a
well-earned and personally chetlshed
leputntlon for hopeless lalness.
o
An Individual so interesting as the
statesman who has Just now exiled
himself voluntarily ft out polities will
continue to be an Inteiesting object
nnd subject, even when Immuted In
one of the vast office buildings nt tho
lower end ot .Manhattan island. Of
fice bo.vs and mahogany tailings will
net entltely seclude Counsellor Peed
fiom public obst-ivutlon. We shall
know what he Is doing and how he Is
piospering, and we shall hear trout
time tu time what he Is saying" yet
it is none the less ttue that by his
sudden tetiieinent fiom the conspicu
ous isolation ot high public otllo In
to the wlili 1 and contusion of the
inetiopolitnn system and the compata
tlve ohscuilt of ciowdid ptofessloual
lite, .in Peed, though happily et
living, invites retnatks somewhat in
the ubituaty spit It.
Mr. Peed was not the speaker of
the house of lepiesentutlves when
he decided to quit. He ceased to be
speaker seven weeks ago, when the
Fift.v -fifth eongiess expired. Tech
nically he was merely a member of
the Fifty-sixth congress from the
Flist dlsttlet of Maine, but was suie
to be chosen as speaker next Deeem
bui, provided he stood for re-election.
The ofilce which he Is about to lelin
qttisli, therefore. Is that descilbed by
himself verv iceently as the most Im
poitnui and desirable in the nation,
baiting tlio ptesidency alone ins
toileal precedents tor a tenuneiatlou
of this magnitude aie bv no means
so numetous as to tender the ttans
uetlun commonplace Oeatn and de
feat are oidinaiily the only agents
powettul enough to compel the sur
icnder which tae Hon. Thomas IS.
Peed has made of his own aceutd.
Three dlflercnt explanations of his
lelltement have been current, and It
may not be Impel tlnenl to consider
them all In a fi loudly way. The lirst
theory ieg.il ds Mr. Peed as a thot
oughly acidulated man, ells ippolnted
by his failure in lO to attain tho
goal of American statesmanship's legi
timate ambition, unable to perceive in
tlie Immediate future or within the
limit of his tiKtuial expectation of life
my prospect of brighter ikies, out of
soits with the i null oiling element in
Ills own patt, and disgusted with
public life because he sees nothing
fin titer lu It foi himself. What a
gluoni.v pletuie this would be If It
weie tine' What a dbmat ending to
a c.iiier chock full of ttiumphs un 1
tun! We lejeet it unhesitatingly, in
asmuch as we know that the Hon.
Thomas I! Peed is a philosopher, and
a philosopher of his own pattlcular
school never lays himself down in
tho dust of the highway and howls
while his tlvals go struggling cheeilly
on.
o
The sicutid explanation Is moie te-
specttul to Mi. Peed. It represents
him as painfull;, conscious that his
views concerning the linger questions
now Identified vvlth Pepubllcan pol
icy, such as expansion In geneinl, and
tho maintenance of the Ametlcun flag
over remote teirltoiy which the flag
now covers, aie so hopelessly ut var
iance vvlth tin ptevalling sentiment
of tlio paity that his presence at a
post uf high responsibility and power
Is anomalous. He cannot alter or
modify his attitude, for his opinions
weie loo conscientiously funned, and
have been too sluieiely entoi tallied
and positively avowed In his nuiga
ainu vvjitlngs and elsewheio to admit
of subut dilution now. He cannot
i emulu In tho speaker's chair In con
gress iis a meio obstructionist, either
with justice tei his party or with com
foit for himself. Ho has, therefore,
decided that If the empire cannot
wait, he, Peed, can and will stand
aside! for tho piesent at least. This
theoiy, we must aud, Is very compli
mentary to tho statesman from Mulne.
for It assumes on his pint a manly
iidheience to pilnclplo nnd conviction,
und un ability to ilse supetlor it
the ulluniments of ,ilgh public station
anil olticlal power.
The Mill el explanation Is that -ir.
Peed Is Influenced by no political iim
eldcratlous whatever, but simply has
made up his mind that the time has
come, lu Justice to his family nnd him
self, to devote his energies to the ac
cumulation of that fottunc which Is
easily within the reach of his un
common abilities. The circumstance
that the e-speaker Is not yet u itch
man Is to his honor. Peset for ears
with opportunities lot" sudden Incre
ments of fottune, unearned .or earned
only nt the cost of self-iespect, he
has chosen to lemnln a comparatively
poor man. ' Now. In his sixtieth yenr.
he Is going to work vvlth the cneigy
of a youngster to make his pile; and
good luck to him'
o
Any one ot these theories of Mr,
Peed's tetiieinent fiom public life Is
sufficient to account for the decision
on his pait which has been iccelved
by tho people vvlth some surprise nnd
inuny expiessions of regiet. Again,
more thnn one of the three exulaua
tlutis may be partially true Mr. Peed
was toported yesterday us declining
to discuss the subject on the gtoutul
that he had "no Interest In the pub
lie" The sentiment Is cettulnly not
i rclpiocntcd. The public has always
hud a gtcat Interest In Mr. Peed ever
since his plctutesque Individuality
emerged from the common ciowd and
became conspicuous In national af
fairs. Ills very Independence of chnt
ncter, manifested on so many notable
occasions, and often In a manner cal
culated to piovoke or to exasperate,
his won him admlrcis and hc. their
admitalion. Unteiillled, unconven
tional, genial, dictatorial, obstinate as
a mule und yet as kind ns an old nc
gto mummy, ulwas teady to sacrifice
a material advantage for the sake of
nn epigram, aiming shafts of sat
easm tight and left, sajlng "no" with
haish emphasis often when his heait
felt "es," the most eminent of speak
ers has gone stiaight on In his own
course, through sunshine and stoim,
milking friends of the very men whom
he ran Into and upset. Pet haps no
other aggressive Aiiietican statesman
ever provoked so much personal op
position and nt tho same tune netted
so few real enemies.
HU.MMAUY.
Peptibllcitns M
Democrats '-'
Silver Pepubllcunn I
Populists 4
Independent 1
Vacancies , n
Temporal y appointment 1
Total !0
ICONOCLASM.
Fiom the New York Sun.
The MuSHirhtiKctts triintc Is la.vlng a
rash hand upon the sac i eel language of
tho low, and would prune It of some ot
that utelereil luxuthiiuo of expression
which Is ono of its charms. Thus, for tho
time-honored "give, grant, but gain, sell
and convey," the Iconoclasts would sub
stitute the paltry and bloodless "grant";
for "convey, rcmln, lelease and forever
quit claim" u miserable naked "release"
or "quit claim " Is this a fair way ot
treating tlio nuijcstv of tho livv? Shall
tho good old curled periwig be plucked
off and tho bnro poll exposed to grinning
laymen? We suspect that a large part of
the force of law and ot the public respect
for It Is duo to the magical mid lulling
repetitions and surplusages In It, to the
linmemoml droning of olel clitstj convey
ances still boilug but lntpicslng tho
world. Why slmpllfv a business which
'generations of wot thy and Ingenious
gentlemen havo devoted themselves to
making complex? Why brush out the
cobwebs anil whitewash tlio old worm
eaten wainscoting? Peslelcs, law is a lux
ury, and the man who buvs it is entitled
to bis money's worth without the loss
of a single "hereinbefore" And tltcie Is
no doubt that ovcibody feels seciotlv
In his soul that a legal document Is more
binding If It Is well stuffed with sno
nyms and seems to leave no era nnv open
to chance. Hut since paper and printed
forms look the place of parchment and
good clerkly scrlvrnlnu, the temptation
to meddle with the vv filth of legal lang
uage has been too groat.
Wealth and Happiness.
Wealth does not bring happiness, per
haps; reveithcloss, when fashion decrees
a walit that buttons down the back. It l
the ilch woman who may hire a maid,
while tho poor woman his to call In
neighbors. Detroit Jiurnal.
We are
Showning
This week
a great variety of elegant
goods in
Spring Serges,
k
INLEY
You will find the prices like
the goods right.
SENATE OF THE 56TH CONGRESS
AliAPA.VIA.
VOl John T. Mm gnu P.
I'M Pdnuuiil Petlus D.
AUKANSAS.
m Jnmes II. Perry I).
lti J James K. Jones I).
I'AIiU'OUNIA.
1"0! Cicorge ('. Perkins It,
I'.HIj Yiumiic),
COI.OPAIKI.
1'iot iMvvnrd O Wolcntt P.
iw: Henry .M. TVIlei S, P.
e'ONNi:CTlCt"T.
1W. Orvllle II. I'latt P.
l'")j Joseph 15. Ilawlev It.
nm. WAiiP.
l'Ml Hiehard P. Kenni v D.
MT VdenilC.
I.OKIDA.
1W. Stephen It. Mullorv D.
1''0"j James P. Tulliferio V).
C.POIKJIA.
lrM Augustus O Ilaron 1".
l'inj Alex. S. Clay U.
ILIA 110.
I'ml Ccorge 1.. Slioiip P.
I'm'. Henry iMtfeid r.
ILLINOIS.
fi1 Shclbv .M Cullom It.
!'0J William i: Mason P.
INDIANA.
:C C W. Fahbanks It
IW A J Pcveridce '
IOWA.
1"01 John H Hear P.
Vj) William P Allison P.
KANSAS
I'M I.uclen llaker P.
3ti J William A. Hairls I'.
KPNTl'CKY.
J"01 William l.lneKiv 1
.) William J. Debuci P
LOUISIANA.
rll Donaldson e'afferv D.
1W3 Samuel D. McKnerj V.
maini:
r-01 William P. Ui.ve P
lfn". Uiigine Hale It.
MAP Y LAM)
I'M Oeoigi I. Welllngtm R
Vtfi Louis t: Me Comas P.
MASSAC'lirSPT'l'S.
1301 Ccorge V. Hon- P.
'.'. llcnix Cabot Lodge P
AIICUlli.VN.
lr)l .Tames McMillan P.
Wi Julius C llunows P.
MINNPSOTA.
JOOI Knute NeNou P.
Wi Cushman K. Davis It,
MISPISSIPIM.
Iffll W. V. Sullivan P.
3W5 II. D. Money D.
MIKSm'Pl.
I'ml ejeorge U. Vt st li
l'lj 1'ianel.s M. Cuckiill 1).
MONTANA.
I'ml Thomas II. Carter P.
I'm; William A Claik D.
NPPPAfcKA.
l'H John M. Thuislon II.
I'.m", Momoe L llavward P.
NPVADA.
lril John 1 Jones
I'.kiT. William M Suwait
Ni:V HAMl'SHIKP.
1MI William 11 Chandler
l': Jacob If (Jalllcgir
NC.VV jpitsin.
1'sTil William J. Sewell
l!i", John Kc.in
NPV YOPK.
irvv riioniis C. I'latt
I'i1 Chauueev M. Dotiew
NOKTH CAItOLINA.
Pill Mailon Puller
lH)i Jeter C. I'lltclmrd P.
NOPTH DAKOTA.
Viil H. C. Hansbioiigl P.
l'ij l J. J. .MeCumbe-r P.
OHIO
IW. Joseph P Uoinker P.
IW'i Manu A. Ilautui P.
IIPPCON.
J'l fjenrce W Miilllele P
l'.U Joseph Simon P.
I'HNNSVI.VANIA.
VH)1 Holes Penrose P i
lf'05 Tempoiar. nppoliuincut.
P.HODP ISLAND.
1'iOl Ocorgn P Whetmoie P.
IWj Nelson YV. Aldrlelt P.
SOl'TH CAItOLINA
1W1 Renjaniln F. Tllmait
liij John L. Mcl.aurln
SOUTH DAKOTA.
I'til Plehatel I'. IVtilgrew
IW James II. Kvlc
TPNNPtfSPi:.
1'ini Thomas II. Ttulcy
l-j William II. Pates
TUNAS.
lrOl Horace tllutun P.
IV)J C. A. Oulbeisou D.
UTAH.
IfO! Joseph L. llaullns D.
lWJ Yacauey.
VPPMONT.
1'l .Tonnthan Poss P.
1WJ Jteclflcld Proctor P.
YillOINlA.
IMl Thomas S. .Mm tin D.
1WC John W. Daniel D.
WASHlNtrrON.
inn (leorgo Tuini'i P.
Uei.'i Addison ( Poster P.
WKST YIPOINIA.
l'-ni Stephen P. Plhlus P.
1'hj'j Niithun P. Scott It.
WISCONSIN.
I'll". John C. Kponurr P.
1'ii Joseph Y. Quatles P.
WYOMING.
Ifill Plane Is 1.'. Waiien P,
IUOj Clarence D. Chirk , P.
An Adage Disproved.
"Tho oignnlratlon of ttusts nt the
present tlmn dlsiuovcs nn old urlagc."
said the snake editor to tlio hone editor.
"What iidute Is that0"
"Two of n tr.iele can't, ngtee." Pil'i
burg Clironicln Telegraph
Wo J. DAVI
233 Wyoming Ave.,
Scranton, P..
REXFORD'S,
April 21.
We may be mistaken, but we
believe we have the most complete
line of Belt and Collar Buckles in
Scranton; we know we have the
newest. Sterling silver in French
grey and rose gold finishes. At
our way of pricing they are not
expensive.
Sterling $ 1.50 to
Buckles S5.00.
RliXFORD CO.
132 Wyoming Avenue.
We refund money.
m
jL.i2u aa. a.-j.-TJ. JtJI
ViewW
IRCiLLY
& 1
DAVI6S
HAMD-S6WeD
5H0S
I FOR I
1 LADieS
4&II6
WYOMIIiG
Ave.
Foulard Silks,
Wash Silks,
SMmmer Silks
The pcrlcction of printing
and designing in Foulard
Silks for 1S99, shows a mark
ed improvement over the past
two seasons aud we take
special pride in calling your
attention to our "unsurpass
ed" assortment of the
Finest Gooals and
Ess! Styles MainaMc
The loading things are
black and blue grounds, with
ueat designs in white, helio
trope, blue, etc. Black and
blue gronuds with Persian
effects, also iu white grounds,
with delicate printing ot
heliotrope, new bluc,etc. Our
prices arc
75c, $1.00 and $1.25.
Wash silks, that wash and
retain their lustre, aud colors
arc shown in a large variety
of choice patterns. Prices
range trom
45c to 75c.
Elegant line of Japanese
Wash Silks aud Summer
Silks, in plaids, corded checks
and stripes. Fast colors and
a large selection. Best goods
made
Only 45c.
Fast Black Wash Silks,
Habutai, and Waterproof
Silks iu the new "unspottable
finish, at less than- present)
market prices.
Qardem Tools,
Pomltry
Netties:,
Screemi
Screens,
Refrigerators,
to
tao
F
tao
510 and 5H2
LACKAWANNA AVENU&
...p. p..
...S. P..
n.
n.
it.
, it.
H
U.
P
GUKST1R ii FORSYTE
325 and 327
PENN AVENUE.
and ask to see
our
Wedgc-wood Blue,
Oriental Rose,
MAMAS LINEN,
The most beautiful
shades ever display
ed iu stationery.
All 53zes Jn Stock
We have the usual
complete line of
Office Supplies,
'J UK MOlJEttV UAUU7Alt: STJItl
Reynolds Bros
STATIOXKRS ami ENGRAVERS,
Hold lernivn Building.
n
v.
..s. u.
...Ilicl.
n.
u.
.
gfevntgJK-MJ
i
V
C5
te.m :
i
Q Lj-LLLLUJ-i yV W&r
Weal
Gas Raeges
Will bake, boil and heat
water
Quicker,
Easier and
Better
than a coal range. It is
economy and pleasure to use
one.
FOOTE k SiiEAt CO.
J 10 WASHINGTON' AVE.
The Htfliit &
CoomsEl Co.
A well-known clergyman," of Bo.ston,"" says of
" I have used them with so much satisfaction
hat I now keep them always at hand, and
they arc the only remedy I do use except by
a physician's prescription. , They are all they
claim to be."
Heating, Plumbing,
Gas Fitting, Electric
Light Wiring, Gas
an Electric Fixtures,
Builders Hardware;
434 LaelOTaiM Avenue
HENRY BEL1N, JR.,
OeuBial Agent for tlio Wyoming
DUtrlctfJ
luroirs
P01IEB.
Mlnlnz, Jllastlns.portln: MinoUalu
unci ttie Itepnuna C'tiemlo;
Cuiiiuiny
HIGI EXPLOSIVES.
tulcty l'cif, C'iw nml Ksplad4;(.
Hooiii 1U1 Cnnnell llulldiu;.
ocrttulaj.
AUt!NUlU1i
Tiioo, rniti'.
J0llMl.HMU'll.t 1U.N
W.li MULU1UAN,
Wtt(
riyinonti
WllkevUirrj
I
I