'4 THE SCRANTON TRIBUNli-MONDAY, MAY 1, 1809. Fubllfthod n.illy, Rxrept Hundnv. bv thn Trlhiinol'ulillsliltu Company, at Fifty UOnU (Month. hew YcrkOlllcr: iMNmvuBU H. H. VHKKl.ANH rolo Acont for foreign Advertlilnf. v.MF.iinn at the rotTorrtcu at rnATOJ, !., AS SKCOWD-CJ.AHS MAI). MATTER, MONDAY, MAY 1, 1S99. Quit fooling, quit lmKRlltiff, but repair thu streets. This Is the public's ulti matum. Dewey Day. Thi'ie are numerous positions from which the significance of this occasion may be viewed but perhaps the best Is to look at Dewey simply ns a typo of the nverngv American specialist ever rcnily to do lilf? tasks well when the opportunity calls. AW do not wish to detract from any of the personal liom uko to Dewey when up express the belief that among the ofllcers of the American navy one year ago were per haps a hundred men fully as capable ns was the modost Vcrmonter of doing what Dewey did and doing it equally ns well. His special advantage lay In having been afforded the chance to win Immortal distinction but while we honor him as ho deserves let us not forget the other Deweys, all along the naval line, who were ready for fame but did not get the opening. Wi are Inclined, in spite of our boasted democracy, to over-eulogize the individual hero. We are accus tomed to read and to hear that but for Washington there would have been no American Independence and but for Lincoln no salvation of the threatened Union. "We begrudge these great men no syllable of praise, for though per sonal In direction It is representative In Intent; but let us not lean so heav ily upon our discovered great men ns to forgot thu possibilities of great ness lying dormant on every side. Washington had the opportunity and he proved equal to It. Hut tho oppor tunity would have found its man had George Washington never lived. It Beems to us as If a special Trovldence picked out Lincoln for a special work nnd nobly did this most human of he roes Justify the confidence reposed In him. Hut the cause was so superior to tho Individual that wo cannot admit to belief the conjecture that had tho particular man been absent tha cause would have expired. And so with Dewey, ho Is more the type of American readiness than n per son of flesh and bones. It Is not meant in any unklndncss to recall that Dewey, tho man, is a diminutive person with half a liver gone and other defects. But the Dewey whom tho American people eulogize todoy is bigger than the giants of fairyland and more per fect than perfection Itself, for he 13- the personified embodln.ent and repre sentation of the Indomitable Anglo Saxon spirit, the spirit which has saved the ages and the spirit to which des tiny has plainly committed tho future guardian&hlii of the human race. Frequent changes In school manage ment aic Inadvisable. A good super intendent is a good olllclal to continue in ofllcc. Go Ahead. The people of Scranton demand the repair of the crumbling asphalt streets. They have endured for two years a condition of those thoroughfares which makes an old-fashioned corduroy road seem respectable in comparison. They have watched the manocuvering in and out of councils over this matter and they have reached the conclusion that for the common welfare It Is necessary to take street repairs out of politics and adjust tho matter on the basis of a Ions-term contract made with cap able, private enterprise. Then the streets will bo repaired coutlnuqusly and efficiently, year after year, no matter what administration is In office or what kind of men comprise the dominant majority in councils. This is the only safe, efficient and econom ical method. The suggestion that the thousands of big nnd little holes now dotting the honeycombed asphalt be temporarily filled in with ashes, sand or cement is not approved because, its utter futility is universally recognized. Tests have shown that these make-shifts do not last. The average life of such a re pair is from two to four days. Tho men of Scranton who use vehicles do not want to have their vital Interests trifled with in tills munncr. They are losing thousands of dollars every sea bon by reason of the dilapidation of the streets. Their vehicles break down, extra draught horses are necessitated, smaller and more frequent hauls are required and every day of postponement of durable repairs takes money directly out of their pockets besides impeding tho general transaction of business nnd marring most objectionably tho other wise attractive appearance of our city. Tho people demand asphalt repairs made with asphalt put down In a work manlike manner, under a water-tight contract holding the repairers respon sible. They demand that such repairs ue not further postponed whllo our city authorities fence and sjar among themselves. They demand an Imme diate commencement of tho uoik. A contract to this effect, nt a price com paring favorably with similar contracts entered Into by other cities, has been executed after nn open competition among qualified bidders and the work of repairs would ere this have been well advanced but for contemptible chicanery In tho city hall. This con tract stands In Hw and It is approved by the Judgment of experienced busi ness men who hae examined Its pro visions thoroughly nnd made careful estimates on the cost or slmllur work r-Isowhere. It takes tho whole subject out of politics for ten years, gives tho city foreknowledge of what the work will cost during every year of that period, Is guarded by heavy bond and Is binding on n company of known financial responsibility. This com puny stands ready to go on with Its labors and agrees to expend during the present summer upwards of $70,000 In complete resurfacing of tho main Hrettts now In worst ronditlun. Thero its no need of further dllly dallying. Xlicrc Is no occasion for the resort to puny expedients, Tho whole matter can be adjusted In thrco minutes by the production of the missing contract nnd tho mayor giving orders to go on with the work. I'ubllo opinion has decided that tho streets must be repaired. It Is not likely to recede from Its position. If there Is any receding It must bo dono by those who otnnd In public opinion's way. No Individual who takes up nrm3 against Undo Kain need never expect to dictate tho terms of surrender. That Is exclusively nn Ameilcan prerogi live. The City Superlntendency. Tho city of Scranton Is exceedingly fortunnte In having two men so well placed ns nre Principal Phillips nnd Huporlntondont Howell. The former hns made of the new high school some thing more than a mero Jumping off plnco In the public school route; he has made It n radiating center of the entire educational systprn of the com munity, sending uplifting currents of energy and Inspiration in every di rection. He has done po well In so brief n time that in all kindness we feel constrained to suggest that for tho city's soke he should not bo disturbed. The high school is by no means n fin ished work, rt has yet to bo broadened and Improved. Professor Phillips, nil must admit, Is pre-eminently tho man to continue the Immediate personal di rection of this evolutionary process and on the professional side it consti tutes by no means an Inadequate ambi tion. What Piofessor Phillips hns been as the superintending principal of the high school Professor Howell has been In the wider field of the city supeiln tendency. The two tasks are dissim ilar. They necessitate nt many points different qualifications. The work of the superintendent calls for more of the spirit of the wrestler. He has to serve as a kind of buffer between tho politicians who want to make of tho schools a commodity in political man ipulation and the people, whose needs and Interests too often have no other special champion. It Is to the everlast ing credit of the present superintend ent that he has on several conspicuous occasions met this none too enviable task without flinching, and tho antag onisms ho has incurred whllo standing up for the people are not the least of his recommendations for a re-election. During the superlntendency or Pro fessor Howell tho school work in our city schools hns been very noticeably advanced in clllclency and system. To day the syllabus of studies Introduced by In'm mako3 It possible for c'tll dion to And their proper place and (fade in nijiy locality within the city parents may happen to as been set for the ugh not unreason able, yetsultlces to keep their best en ergies active. Instruction In many ways has been practlcallzed. to the end that the pupil, upon leaving tho city schools, may know many things about home geography, home geology, home methods of government and homo Intel ests In general which will be especially useful to the mmi or woman living In Scranton and yet not without disciplinarian value no mat ter whore the pupil shall locate. One particularly happy feature of Professor Howell's superlntendency has been the local Institution of a pupil's savings fund, now amounting to $10,000, or enough to purchase $10,000 worth of In terest bearing bonds.whlch will give in creased instruction In thrift und In business forms and methods. These various new fentures have not been applied ns fads but have formed items in a carefully matured plan to make of our free schools moio oillclent nld, In the cultivation of. practical citizen ship, which, after all, is their supreme aim and Justification. Work done bo well In the face of many obstacles Is its own best irdorse ment. As we said at the beginning of this article, Professors Phillips and Howell are tho men for their places. The board or control will make no mis take If It shall refuse to displace or to readjust the duties of cither. A verdict ta the effect that the army beef was good once will not affect tho fact that when it reached the soldiers on the firing lino it was nil that Miles claimed. Does Education Educate? The right kind certainly does, On. this point there cannot be a difference of opinions. Hut there is another kind which conduces to weariness. Take, for example, men like Charles Eliot Nor ton, Kdwnrd Atkinson nnd tho numer ically smnll but Intellectually consider able class of students and seholurs of whom they are types men of unques tionable sincerity, high peisonal char acter so far as the social virtues are concerned, and "ripe" (possibly over ripe) "culture." Tlicpe nro men who If breadth of Intellectual study wete alone sufficient to develop practical greatness ought to bo foremost among the constructive utllltaiians of their time, serving usefully the grpat body of the people In direct proportion to their superiority In mental training nnd to their Intellectually widened view. They nre the boasted finished products of university training; the flower, so to speak, of our higher educatlonnl sys tem, nnd yet there has never been a crisis in our national history when this class of citizens has not pursued a sen timentally unpractical and practically vain, foolish and obstructive course a courso showing an utter lack or ordin ary "gumption" or common sense nnd singularly streaked with the Ideas and impulses of childishness. This wns true during tho period or public agitation preceding the war of 1812, when this element in tho popu lation occupied Itself In sneering nt tho aspirations of the young jepublle to be free from the naval Impertinences and diplomatic tyranny of Kngland during Its pxerclse of the rlsht of seurch and Impiessinent. and In secret and occasionally In open negotiation with Hrltlsh emissaries for tho purpose of thwarting the general will. At this period many of the intellectual lights of New Kngland hovered so near to the brink of treason that history has not failed to use this harsh word In nd Judging their conduat. The abolition movement, however strong In Its moral ) which tbjBk remove. -jHte teacAe-rs Ht impulses, brought Into play tho same unpractlcnl contrariness and heaved up a lot of men who, in splto of their In tellectual nnd oratorical ability, soon became known to the average Judg ment ns fanntlcs or cranks. During tho civil war this element wns less offen sive, although hero It contributed largely to the embarrassment of thn Northern cause by captious criticism of administrative details nnd volubility of Impracticable suggestions. The era of political and Industrial reconstruction revealed this "cultured" class once more on the off side, clamoring like dazed theorists for free trade when every business sign nrgued eloquently for the now vindicated system of tariff pro tection under which our Industrial supremacy has been achieved so swift ly and so unmistakably ns to astonish the world. IJcfore war with Spain wan declured this class spoke contemptuously of the humane sentiment of our people which urced war ns the only means of end ing n system of oppression that In Cuba had become Intolerable. When the wnr started they gave It no encouragement nnd when, In the natural we may In deed say the Inevitable course of Its prosecution it became necessary for the United States to end n system of simi lar oppression in n more distant terri tory, they took tip at once by instinct ive concert an insulting hue nnd cry against the administration's purposes, accusing their countrymen of a lust for conquest, charging unfaithfulness to the piinclples of the fathers nnd gravitating swiftly Into actual conspir acy against their government nnd In favor of its armed Toes. They gave not slmplycncouragement butnetual hclpto the Agulnnldo rebellion, nnd not content with that, they were starting out to foment discontent and disaffection among the American volunteers In Luzon when their machinations were discovered and steps were taken to make them unavailing. Pear In mind that this long sequence of foolishness was not the work of ignorant men but that of the polished and perfected outputs of our great unl voisltles, the leaders or would-be lead ers of our Intellectual life, the kind of men who by reason of their superior learning should be entitled to very pro found respect were It not that when they begin to apply this learning to every-day matters they Instantly show signs of distress and act as men who nrc In an unfamiliar world. In the economy of Providence It may bo that men of this bookly-wise and worldly foolish stamp are necessary as checks upon the purely selfish trend of tho commercial nnd nggresslve spirit. Hut let us be careful not to accept them as ailthoiitles in spheres to which they are alien. The kind of education which raises such a crop Is evidently in need of a radical overhauling. Thus far most of the dollar dinner Jpffersonians have been content to rest at the expenditure maue at the dining loom, deaf to the appeal of tho en thusiasts who hinted at a further con tribution of nine dollars In the Interest of Hryanism. There appears to be no reasonable doubt that Funston's Kansas regiment Is earning Its salary. In the case of many of those Lancas ter clears the stamps must have been as bad as the tobacco. It seems a pity to have tho Filipino war close while colonel Funston Is having so much fun. Colonel Swift's Indians seem to be rapidly accumulating an old fashioned welcome home. Tho men who were getting readv to jump on Otis just had time to draw back. When Agulnaldo finds what he imagines to be a soft spot he will drop. The worrying over Quay's admission does not take place In the Quay camp. Judging from Manila reports there's nothing the matter with Kansas. Captain Coghlan will undoubtedly survive his reprimand. A WARNING. From tho Times-Herald. Tho action of Great Britain In deciding to contribute an annual subsidy for th, construction of a Pacific cablo from loii-l uda to Australia should udindnlsh this government that it cannot afford to iW. for favorable action upon u Pacific c,Utlo project beyond the next congress. At the lust ugulur session of the Fifty-iiftii congress Prchldc-nt McKlnley presented a special message emphasizing tlio mili tary urgency of cable communication with Honolulu and Manila and rocitlng thu dillirultleu and embarrassments ul leudy fticuunterod by thu government through the absence of telegraphic fa cilities. Mr. Hepburn, of Iowu, present ed a bill providing for a government subsidy of JluO.WO a year for twenty jears for tho construction of a cablo from San Francisco to Manila and Japan, whllo lu tho senate an amendment was added to the sundry clil bill providing for tho construction by tho United States of a cablo from "a Pacific port In tho htnto of California" to the city of Hono lulu. Tho failure of these projects to receive the nppioval of congress was attributed to tho unsettled condition of affairs in our Pacific dependencies and to tho unwillingness of congress to com mit tho government to any itxed cable policy at that time. o When tho Fifty-sixth congress con venes, however, it Is probable that tho question of a Pacific cublo will huvo early nnd favorablo consideration, and If tho .congress is disposed to accedo to public bcntlment tho cable will be built and controlled by the United Slates gov ernment. Even with quick action on tho part of tho next congress our govern ment cannot hope now to overtuko Great Britain In. transpacific cablo communica tion, for Great Britain has a habit of pushing such projects vigorously and quickly whtn onco sho grnnts the desiied subsidy. With the exception of the Brit ish cables from Australia to New 55ea land. fiom Australia to New Caledonia and from Hong Ktng to thn Philippines, the vast cxpnnso of the Pacific Is uncut with cable lines. In the direct pathway of tho projected British cable from Can ada to Australia lie the Hawaiian Isl ands, Samoa and groups of British Isl ands. It Is highly probablo. that this cablo will touch at Samoa, and that per mission will be granted tho British com pany to land nt Honolulu, In view of this great project, which Is backed by tho full British subsidy recommended In the report of tho Pacific cable committee of U'lil. It behooves tho United States to loso no time In establishing cablo connection with Its Important possessions In the Pacific General Grant as Prophet and Seer. From nn Oratlcn at Gnlena, 111., on Grant Day, My Postmaster Gvncrul Charles Umory Smith. fi (5 f? KANT not only wrought out u the great work of his time, II n but he has left Impressive val and significant lessons for our time. His sagacity nnd prescience seemed to antici pate tho tendencies of our national development. He advocated the ac quisition of San Domingo, nnd whether that particular measure was best or not, it was a premonition or the com ing natlonnl movement for bulwarks or American power In the Caribbean sea nnd Tor gateways or American ap proach to the Inter-contlnontnl con nection and the Inter-ocennlo water way. The opening may have come In a better way under a plainer neces sity nnd n clearer providence, but the project or San Domingo was the har binger or Cuba and Porto Klco, and tho vision which looked to the exten sion or our arm to the Isle or tho sea has been vindicated In tho resistless logic of events which, under an over mastering destiny carried our flag to the heights of San Juan and to the ramparts of Santiago. "In nnother realm of thought nnd nctlon GenernI Grnnt foreshadowed tho developments of our day. There Is nothing more heroic In the capture of Donelson, nothing grander In the march on Richmond that grim courage and the noble Impulse with wh'ch Grnnt, In the very shadow of death, wrote tho simple and fascinating sto.y of his lire that was to be the suoo;rt or those he loved. It was In the l:.st pages, just ns the darkening pall wis railing on him, that he penned the preg nant words: 'ICnglnnd and the United States ore natural allies and should be the best of friends. They sneak one language and nre related by blood rnd other ties. We together, or evm r p nrately, are better qualified than any other people to establish commerce le- tween all tho nationalities of the world. England governs her own colonies, and particularly those embracing the peo ple of different races from her own, better than any other nation. She Is just to the conquered, but rigid. She makes them self-supporting, but gives the benefit of labor to the laborer. She does not seem to look upon the colonies as outside possessions which she Is at liberty to work for the support and ag grandizement of the home govern ment.' o "Prophetic and suggestive words! Ut tered at a time when the old resent ment had not been obliterated and when the old traditional feeling still prevailed, they presaged the remark able change which was coming and breathed in advance the fraternal spir it which now animates the two nations. With tho vision of tho seer, General Grant forecast and sounded tho new note of the English-speaking race. We do not enter Into nny hard-nnd-f.ist alliance; we do not shut ourselves out from other friendships, but It Is true, as the sympathetic cords of the last year have taught us, that we are nat ural allies and have come to be the best of friends. It was singular that, In referring to the kindred attitude or tho two nations, General Grant Ehoui.l have made England's colonial policy and greatness the one theme or ht3 ad miring recognition, and that, too, at a time when we had no colonial co3is slons. It was as If, standing ther-d or all others In the shadow op roir.l g events, his clear Insight foresaw the majestic destiny of his country and pointed to the pathway of Its suci-ss-ful development. o "That splendid visltofthcdying chlef taln Is In course or realization. It ,'s nearly fourtepn years since his vis were closed in death, but tho dicr.'.u which flashed upon his fading tight on tho hushed heights of Mount .Mc Gregor Is today a vivid nnd lumlnoi s picture, filling tho whole front of the national view. We see now as we nev er saw before the higher unity and the broader mission of the English-speaking race. That race Is the pioneer of civilization and the founder of com monwealths. It Is the great master force or trade expansion nnd world en lightenment. The grandeur or Its alms and tho triumph or Its energies are written on every page in the glorious history or civil, religious and commer cial progress. It has subdued contin ents nnd made them blossom as the rose. It stands ror the genius or lib erty, ror liberty clad In the sacred pan oply of law, which recognizes the equality, protects the rights and exe cutes the organized will or all. Rep resentative government, trial by jury, rreedom or speech and or tho press, tho right to worship according to tho dictates or conscience, the establish ment or the common school these aie the cardinal elements of Its polity, nnd these are the beneficent fruits of its ever-ndvanclng march. o "Our country has not gone forth with ambitious or conquering hand. In tho little more than tho hundred years of its national existence It has found Its youthful vigor absorbed In developing tho mighty continent where God, in the westward course of civilization, has placed (bo seat of Its unrivalled em pire. Hut It now arches and fills the broad space between the Atlantic nnd the Pacific. Has its growth ended? Is its work finished? Or, when in the course of events not or Its own seeking the door of duty and of enlarged oppor tunity is opened before it, docs it re main for the great republic to take up tho whlto man's burden nnd play some part in carrying forward the flag of civilization? For a hundred years, which are but a fragment in the life time or a nation, we have lived within ourselves, nnd, shutting our eyes to the growth and needs of tho coming cen turies, shall wo hold that the metes and bounds of the past are to be tnc inexorable limits of tho future? o "Looking down the vista of time from the serene elevation of his con scious place on the border lino of earth and eternity, lifted above all passions or the hour, with his work dono and his fame secure, General Grant saw and said that our country was entering on a new era. Yes, on a new i ra or unity and progress and power. For, under the Impulse and inlluenco of the national uprising and patriotic re awakening or the past year, we wit ness more than ever on this anniver sary or his birth such a reunion or the North and South In heart and In hand as his great and magnanimous spirit yearned ror. And with this uplifting or the nntlonal sentiment at homo we see on the broader Held what his tran quil view prellgured In tho advance or the English-speaking race and or our portion or It to a larger part In the commerce and civilization or ".lie world." WILL VOTE TOR QUAY. From tho Chlcnco Record. "When tho question or Beating Mr. Quay, or Pennsylvania, Is brought up In tho next session or tho United States senate," said Senator Wolcott, of Col orado, nt tho Auditorium Annex, 'I will volo to confirm tho appointment of Gov ernor Stone." Senator Wolcott, accom panied by his brother, Henry It. Wol cott, tho Denver banker, arrived In Chi cago last nlRht from Washington, en route home. Ho expressed the belief that every Republican senator would voto ttw sent Mr. Quay In the fnco of what bo considered tho "rank attempt of the anti Quay faction In Pennsylvania to con vict tho senntor of fcnnk wrecking nnd Its dismal failure to niako a case ugatnst Mr. Quay." Tho Difference. Tommy Pnpa, why don't men wear their watches outside like women? His Father There's nobody to look lo for belter ones, my son, In case of theft. Jeweler Weekly. REXFORD'S, April 29. These arc the mornings you ought to get up and take a walk around the block before breakfast hear the robins, see the bursting buds. Our alarm clocks watch all night and call you on time. We keep the five good kinds of slumber dis turbers. One kind rings five minutes; another starts and stops alternately for fifteen minutes. Proper prices. 75c to $1.75. THE RKXFORD CO., 132 Wyoming Ave. The Deadly Sewer Gas rrom a leaky drain may give the doctor r case of typhoid fever to work with tin less you peimlt the plumber to get In his work on thn drain first. Do not hcstt.ito about having the plumb lng In your liouso examined b an expert If you think there is tho sllshtest defect. A thorough overhauling now will savo mary a dollar later. Tho (Fmoko test will convince vou whether theic Is sewer gas or not. GUWSTJER k FORSYTH, 323-327 PENN AVENUE. WE WDULD BE PLEASED to show you the most complete and up-to-date stock of Ftae Gut Glass which cau not be sur passed for quality of glass, style of cutting, and finish aud at prices no higher than others ask for interior goods. MERCEIEAU k C0MEIL 130 Wyoming Avenue. 1 !. Pill Jk&u My Age is forty-two, and I am a housekeeper for a family. Ripans Tabulcs were first taken by me for dyspepsia, headache and bad heart burn. They were given by a friend, and they helped me so that I bought a box, and I would not now do without them. They are the best thing I ever tried. I tried different things, but none which did me as much good as Ripans Tabules have. I still take them in the morning. I would eat my breakfast, then would throw it up, and would be so sick and have the headache so that I would have to go to bed; my heartburn would come on and I would be in misery all the rest of the day until I took a Ripans Tabule. Now I feel like another woman, and don't throw my meals up. I am in earnest and thankful that there is such a good medicine to help any one. AnewitylrpatkitrnntAluln;,' .Its' mris'i null n In wrr rurton (without claiu) It now for .Aleut torn. drutmtorfi-roKnvKivM ful. low n1"nl uri I. iiitemle.1 rur 1I10 HHr und the rcuui.niicul. Oneclucen of Ilia flve-ocntrartunadM t')UlM)iu I haJ hy mall by tending fortr-rlirtit ci'jit.tn ine lank. Chhiomiok. riMT. So. lOKprnoefctrwt.UswKoilt oritnlacrtoinTiiTBitEillll)Miit (orflvr rrnta KirmaTuiXU ids; &1m b Ixi el grocttp, gvaenl storeta'pert, mi agent uu at lliuor itutu nua tarter fioyn. We are Showing; This week a great variety of clcgaut goods 111 Spring Serges, You will find the prices like the goods right. W. J. DAVIS, 213 Wyoming Ave., Scranton, Pa. w& mi z& CM' . Lewis! ReiLLY & DAVI FINS HAND-S6W6D SHOS FOR LADieS .114 & 116 Wyomimg Ave. ty and ask to see our Wedgewoocl Blue, Oriental Rose, ? to r- The most beautiful shades ever display ed in stationery. All Sizes in Stock We have the usual complete line of Office Siipfe, Reynolds Bros STATIONERS and KXGKAVER3, Hotel Jermyn Building. FINLEY FoMlardl Silks, Wash Silks, Simmmer Silks The perfection of printing and designing in Foulard Silks for 1899, 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 GtM$ and Best Styles Obtainable The leading things aro black and blue grounds, with neat designs in white, helio trope, blue, etc. Black and blue grouuds with Persian effects, also in white grounds, with delicate printiucr ot heliotrope, new blue,ctc. Our prices are 7iic, $1.00 and $3.25.. Wash silks, that wash and retain their lustre, and colors are shown in a large variety of choice patterns. Prices range ironi 45c to 75c. Elegant line of Japanese Wash Silks and Summer Silks, in plaids, corded checks aud stripes. Fast colors and a large selection. Best goods made Only 45c. Fast Black Wash Silks, Habutai, and Waterproof Silks in the new "unspottable finish, at less than present market prices. 510 and 512 LACKAWANNA AVENUE he Modern IIardvtaub Store. Your Work o o o Will be lightened dur. iug housecleaning time if you. use Modern Equipments. That is the kind the Hodern hardware store supplies, FOOTE k SHEAR CO 119 Washington Ave. The HMot & Coeeell Co0 Heating, Plumbing, Gas Fitting, Electric Light Wiring, Gas an Electric Fixtures, Builders Hardware; 04 Lackawanna Avenue HENRY BELIN, JR., Ocucrm Agent for tUa Wyommj Dlittlctfif liiulug, Illuming, Hportlng, ttmolcal&ii uuU U10 Hepuuno CU01nla.1l Coiuputiy'a MGI EXPLOSIVES. tiifety J--iiv dip 11ml Kxploijrt iloom 1U1 l.'oniioll UulUlu;. ticraalaa. AOENCIlii. THO, roni), PUUtu JOHN 11. SMITH .tiO.N I'lymoutlt IIPI1T1 POWDER. 1 W.E, MULLIUA.N, WUUevlUrci ' ' N ' v. v s X