THE SCRANTON TJRIBUjME-SATUJKDAW MAY 13, 1890. I I'libllKlisil nullr. Itxeep Sun-lav, by (h TlljuuoIublliililni;(.'mianj'. at fifty t!aiu nMoDtb. Isew Vorkonicn: i'iNiiph.-iii St., H. R VKKli.VI toie A(!Dt for Kitriilsn AilvortMusr. imi:hki ATTiir. pnKiamcK at kciamto, IM., AMKCONIv't.A8 MAIli MATTER. TWELVE PAGES. SCKANTO.V. HAY 13. 1S!)9. If tho West Side board of trade lia? truntwurthy Uruiom to provo that a city repair plant would under existing coitdltloiiH Involve un economy In tho nm-es-sary m-atniurit cf the illslnto- grated uHpliutt streets of our city ..It.-. ...I.Vlll.f ! I should nmKo tnem pm.m """",, ; lay. U it ims inese n. "- .-- - fin- which tin: entile country has for ... im..ii kiniii'clilnir In vain, Fish or Cut Bait. Citizens who favor prompt and ef fective street repairs; citizens who nro tired of pnylnp blK repair bills on vehicles and tired of hlrlns: two horses and-two drivers to do the work that one horse, with one driver, could do It tho 'rttreeis were In proper condition: citizens who are unwilling . hvo their Interests trilled with by means oi ftillle cement patches litstliu; i day anil u nlcht: business men who want this puliiK iU"S'lim settled on ccono mle business principles, by means of a liinfj-lerm. Ironclad contr.it t with a rriiponslhlp .oiiir.icior. pledvlnc con tinuous and cifcctlw cure ol the as phult. antl who do not favor iImkrIiib tills one-linn Into wasteful local poli ties by means of a city repair plant opl-ntnl Int'-rniltleiitly in th" Interest of ward tiitf-ni'it and their relatives and dependent's every taxpayer of , Seranton wli-i can rNe above "mall prejudices and take n broad vl"W of this presdng testte fhoulii be all means attend the mat's uieetliiK nill'd to as semble on Monday night In the rooms of "tho Hoard of Trade. Tin- iiutstlon uf street repairs has gov to n point where the city nllUlals. and mole e.peilally the nriyor. must ilsh or cut bait. Two ears have been f-P"nl in useless fouclir-j and iiilb1illiiK Meanwhile the stieets have steadily Blown woive until today they are In many pla; 'nferlor to t(" old-fash-Iclied corduroy roads that our pioneer fcrefiitbers used to construct by felling logs at right angles to th? drivwas. This abominable condition of Hi streets Is a sample of what councils would be likely to do if put in control of a city plant. Judging by the past, repairs would b made by Ills and jerks and between times the public iuiiIiI go )iau.'. 'The demagogical assertion of oracles of the brick paving trust that the con tract cxeMited by the city with th liarber Asphalt company, tin low bid ders in the recent open competition, is extravagant hns b en overwhelm ingly related by plain f.iets and figures taken from olllelal reports. We make the assertion now in full knowledge of the conditions prevalent In other citii s. and challenge cnutradlition. that at the price agreed upon In that contract namely J17,.V;i a year for ten yeair th city ot t-'cr.nmn gets n bargain in pav ing renewal and continuous repair better than that uf any municipality In the fulled .States in the tamo lat'tude, present condition of Its paveuii'iit taken into due ac count. It remains dimply for the city to enforce that contract and hold the contractors rigidly to Its -xtu-tl'is term.'i. I'nlCHs this is done, and done piontpt ly, iiiibntlv can tell when the m-phall will bo repain d, for If It Is not done litigation win. follow and delay vltl follow upon delay. When It comes to (iolf.prais.c the Iluslness Men's league Is evidently de termined to occupy the front row. The Case of Dr. Bdggs. The contiover.-y which has been pro voked by the attempt of Dr. Drlggs to secure ordination into the ministry of tho Protectant Kpiscopal thiirch has assumed some personal aspects which are deplorable, as. for example, the ac cusutlon of ii western bishop that Dr. Drlggs Is a "loud mouthed fellow," etc. When bishops descend to this plane of controversy it is unfortunate: never theless the piinelple Involved In the discussion over Dr. Drisgs seems to us to h.' most Utal and upon it hinges in large measure tho whole future of n great religious denomination. Without pretending lo thoogit'a1 knotvii'dge or -ubtlfy the Issue ap peal's I rum a standpoint of common nense to pic&eni directly fur Christian answer the ijuestlon, is the liible a divinely Inspiied bock, to be accepted by mankind as the Word of Cod, abso 1'itcly ami without appeal: or is it .1 hook ot human origin, containing for each pel Sun only auch a message of Inspired truth us Hint person's intellect Is capable of grasping?" Dr. Jltiggs, If we understand the drift of his teach ings and belief, holds the Dlble to be only in part divine and rubcrves for the individual sinner the right to choose which part he wUhes to accept us di vine. It is as If tho criminal were to ask for an option as to which statute lie shuuld obey. "Putting the foundations of the Chtis tlan religion upon an Intellectual uhm "Whfdly puis that religion upon a paral lol with other subjects of mental exer ctee criiirornlnr,' which the greatest minds will differ radically, it is wor thy ot note that throughout the world's hlitnvv Intellict aloiia has done noth irur to make for human progicss. in tellect is cold, dlupasslonate, analyti cal. Its whole tendenr.y Is negative. Tiaclt of It must bo a motive power if results aru to be achieved. Intellect, hacked by tho sentiment of attachment to'country, oecomes patriotism. Intel lect, backed by luve. reverence and faith, becomes religion and leads men to untold lengths In their endeavors to benefit their fellow -men. Intellect with gut these warming lulluenccs Is as the moon compared with the sun un orb that Is di?nd. In attacking fuilh, however con scientiously; In moving for the substi tution of purely Intellectual instead of Intellectual and emotional stand- nrds of Pcrlpturo Interpretation, Dr. HrlSKH hns rontrltnitcd to tho 'eiil: nntiiK of the Christian church's IkmicII cent power over tho manses; he hns nt tenU'ted to take from It pome of tli vltaJlty which mukcu It more tlnui a Imuran Institution, and ho has liy so much done harm to the whole circle of civilization. The church of Dr. Hi-Ibbs cannot with Its weukenod authority hope to tipped I successfully to the great liody f the tinronvctted. What has It to offer them" It mii"i tend to he .ciime lcs. and less a reforming: In llneiire and more and more n purely Intelleoum! and i:oelal lnllucnee, like a leading rouin, a lecture jjnlleiy or n club. The PiolesiniH Kplscopat church, liy neccptlnir Into Its ministry a toucher of htfresy like Dr. TlrlRgs, able and ex cellent tlHiiiL'h ho be as an Individual. would do more to weaken Iti hold u,H,M vital problems and duties than could 1 accomplished In generations of active npnost Ictem. it would Itself olt'er ixaiupt" and sanction to sskepti ctem and InC'dellty. Deforc Seranton undertakes to en tfirtaln Admiral Dewey It had better rcpnlr Its streets. Otherwise the R.ll lairt admlrnl might Imagine hlmsBlf in a Spanish city. An Instructive Biography. The present tour of the Buffalo 15111 Wild West show, announced to. be the lust so far as the people or America are concerned, the linal exhibitions lo be Klven In 1'arls during the Paris ex position after which Colonel Cody will permanently retire from the entcitaln nieiit Held, calls to mind the fact that an accurate biography of this cole bratcd plainsman and scout has at last been wiltlen. It Is the work of his sis ter, Mrs. Wetmore, of Dulutlr. and It separates the facts In Colonel Cody's eventful career from the Innumerable fletlons which have accumulated around his well-known name. Wm. V. Cody, apart from his per sonal merltf, Is of Interest to Ameri cans and especially to the younger generation, on account of the fact that he is the most conspicuous embodiment of an an In American development which, though fast receding into tho distance, Is nevertheless deserving ot attentive study. U will soon become merely a memory those pioneer days or the stage coach, the Indian trail, the eanvnss-topped caravans of home seekers crossing the unpeopled ex panse of the Oieat American Desert, the buffalo herds anil the Indian war parties a memory needing an accurate biography of such n man as Cody lo keep It vivid and preserve It for the future. Our western plains have succumbed to civilization. Uur new frontiers have been established far out to sea. The Cody.s of the future will do their hazardous pioneer work In Porto ltlco, Cuba and and the Philippines, under new conditions and wholly different surroundings. Hut while Cody is with us we can still honor the men and the spli It of the men who conquered our own great waste space and, linked its natural wealth to the plough, the steam engine and tho electric motor. These men were the llrst American expansionists. Those who think that holes in the asphalt can be durably repaired by the use of concrete are recommended to study can-fully the object lessons supplied on i.lnden street. Facts are always more convincing than theories. American Tea. ("an the 1'nlted States raise Its own ten? This Is a question which Jiibt now Is receiving the earnest attention of the agricultural department at Washing ton. Our importations of tea average 70,000,001) pounds each year, and rep resent an expenditure of from $10,000, 000 to J15.00J.U00, not counting railroad freights and the prollts of the middle men and retnlleib. If this iiuuiey or a good part of it could be kept at home, It would obviously be a considerable aihantaae. Secretary Wilson, we learn fiom a. Waahington letter printed in the Times-Herald, recently returned from a. visit to thi tea furni of Dr. Charles V. Shcpard at Suinmervllle, S. C, and ho has been convinced by the success of that experiment that tho United States can grow its own tea. Tliete plants were introduced by tho Agri cultural department under Commis sioner J.e Due, but no effort has been made b the government to spread the Industry. Dr. Shepard has about fifty m res In tea plants, from which he -cured B,5u pounds of superior black tea last year. He does not attempt to roinpite with the cheap pioducts of the Orient, but produces a Wi thut sells readily for Jl a pound. He util ize negio labor and Incidentally main tains u school for the black children. Secretary Wilson's InviMigattons con vince him there Is a zuno of territory thiough the South well adapted to tho culture of tea. It will be his work to Impoit cliolc-? varieties cf plants from China, and to get men ot learning to study the industry, with a view to Riving Ameiiuin planters a thorough knowledge of lea culture. lie will try to persuade southern laud owners to embark In tea growing, and In; yflt also strive to enlist capital by practi cal demonstration of tho profitable ness of the now field of endeavor. It Is noc tho sectvtary's expectation tfca't American grown tea will be ablo to compete with the cheaper grades of the Imported product, but ho be lieves thai the liner grades can be grown as successfully In the southern stutes as in China. It Is to be hoped that his confidence will bo Justllled by results. It has been proposed to set npart one Jay In Washington's peace jubilee to be known as Sampson day, in honor of the succet'iiful commaniW of tho North Atlantic squftdion. The oug gestlon marlts Indorsement. Admlr.il Sampson unitustIonably has not yet received due popular recognition ot his filicleiit work In tho war with Spain. The dentil of a woman in Allegheny county from tho effects of a "headache powder" has suggested that more stringent la-.vs be patrscd to guard tha Rule of such nostrums!.. It is possible that there is need of such legislation; but common sense Is a safer remedy. The sufferer from it hoadttcho who wants to lake drugs had better go directly to n competent physician and have the drugs administered Intelli gently. ' ' It will In observed thut Admiral Dewey lias not accepted any of the din ner Invitations unconditionally. He re serves the rhjht to take to tho wood hnforn tho condition of his dlcestlve organs makes him a mark for the pttcnt medicine photographers. Tho Ethics of Silk Weaving. Pom" of our xtale exchanges are In the throes of editorial controversy upon 'He moral Inlluence ot the silk mill, and tho iiuestlon as to whether thi1 weaving of silk has a tendency to make a young man or woman Immoral If being discussed with considerable gravity. -s an outlet for deep thought that might otherwise become tangled upon subjects of a more complicated natute, the morality or Immorality of the silk mill is probably as useful a theme for consideration as any other. The editorial thinker who can deline the hexagonal whereabouts of tho hex ameral whereness of the unseen ran doubtless llnd much in the way of men tal gymnastics In deliberating upon the morals ot the rising generation. It may be that the silk worm of today once sported In voluptuous luxury In ages past, as un attendunt of Cleopatra or a lady friend of King Solomon, and has started anew on tho road of tlieosophlcal pro gression preparing to some duy again appear on earth In regal splendor ar rayed in the fubrlo thut It now so in dustriously spins. It may be that the tiny inhabitant of the coocoon imparts to the almost invisible thread the sub tle inlluence of a past existence of vice which Is unconsciously absorbed by the weary attendant at tho spindle and cnuscf her to forget the hum and clatter of machinery and dream of lotus blossoms and red wine. "Who knows'' Jlut It would seem to the ordi nary visitor to a silk mill that the awful racket made by the revolving wheels and the odors of bleaching acids and grease would be sudlrlont prompt ly to subdue any such Inlluenccs.should they put In mi appearance. The pro found editors throughout the state may demonstrate that It Is otherwise. If they do not they may ut least suc ceed in exhibiting their own folly. it Is now gravely stated that the cruiser Chicago was not sent to Tan gier to demand payment of American claims against the government of Mor occo. The cruiser simply stopped there on a trip mound Africa, and the up pcarinee of her runs made the sultan teel liberal. The friends of Brigadier General runstoii who insist upon dragging that Intrepid soldier and lighter into poli tics are more to lie feared by him than Agiilnaldo's entire army. Let us not forget that few good soldiers have made a shining success In politics. Both New York and San Francisco have put forth so many reasons why Dewey should first land at their ports that It may be necessary for the ad miral to land at New Orleans and sail up the Mississippi for a distance In order to avoid trouble. It Is but fair to Governor Thomas, of Colorado, to say that he repudiates the intci views which credited him with threatening to sue the national administration for its tardiness In mus tering out the Colorado volunteers. Four men were killed during tho set tlement of a doctor's bill at Okolona, Miss. The bills of Mississippi doctors seem to be more dangerous than their medicine. Hou) Congress Will Seem Without Reed. MvFarkiiid, in Philadelphia llccord. n N' ACTOCHAT, nn aristocrat, in Ml the best sense, Mr. Heed de fill served tho title of "great com- LTU moner" more than any other man, for ho has exerted all Ills great powers to maintain and extend the au thority and inlluence of the body im mediately representing tho people, and hns withstood the encroachments of tho senate and the much greater encroach ments of the executive. Mr. Heed de precates tho growing power ot the ex ecutive, regardless of personal or par tisan considerations. Mr. Heed thinks It most slgnlllcant that the makers of the constitution provided In the very first article, before everything else, for "the congress," and, moreover, that tho article provided for the house of representatives before it provided for the senate. No old-fashioned Demo crat could be more concerned at the concentration of federal power in the executive than the man who was nick named the "American Czar." Yet, so strong is the force of temperament, that, it Mr. Heed were president. 1 suppose he would govern like Cleve land, rather than Ilko MeKlnley, but with the breadth of view and the com prehension of congressional conditions that only long service In the house can give. When Mr. Heed cum" to congress, 22 years ago, ho lidd a state reputation as a successful lawyer of great prom ise, who hnd done well as attorney gen eral and In the Inslslatur-, as well as in tho oflice of city attorney of Port land, where, as In other places, he ac complished things which had not been done before. Uut hero he was for tho time being unknown, and, having been pirn ed on obscure committees that ni". .r met, seemed likely to remain In the ecllpso of the famous Maine men then In the zenith. Mr. Heed, as ho Iiiie often said, did not want to come to "Oiigrnss. Indeed, ho had never wanted any ouice except those In tho lino of his profession, and he felt then, as now, that no mun can love the life of a congressman unless he likes to get up early In the morning and run er tnnds for his constituents around tho white house and the departments most of the time, and thin ho certainly never did. It is rather strange that he stayed here, but tho genius in tho big, awkwaul body behind the largf moon face which then had so much less ex pression than now had -onio Intima tions of the opportunities ahead, and, in npite of ills pampered Indolence (which did not prevent his being In dttsttious us most men) ho improved the first chance ho. got, which was on tho Potter committee, and unavailable tor the more piomlncnt Hopubllcuns, so well that he made his mark whero nil tho hoiisre could see It. From that time on he climbed, ylowly. but stead ily to the leadership of tho house. Th" great Intellectual force appeared flrat In committee work, and then as he be gan to take part In debate his master ful porsonalltv Impressed tho house, which saw In him perhaps tho most effective debater of our time. Ills wis dom, so solid and substantial, his par liamentary learning, so comprehensive and concise; Ills wit, so quick nnd keen, all employed with such dexterity and grace, gave him an er.rly mastery. In ten years he had reached the fore front of the battle. Ills election as speaker was simply the ratltlealion of the natural selection of the house, oven though he hud none or the popular ways of his rival, .Mr. MeKlnley. Al though It Is ten ycais rlnee the begin ning of Ids ilrs i speakership, it was so remaiknble that it Is still familiar. Speaker Heed reformed the business methods of the house so thoroughly that ids new rules were accepted in the next congress by the men who had denounced them, and although there has been a movement for deci easing the power of the speaker, It Is not so much directed against the Heed rules ns ngalnot that rule adopted years be fore, In tlie Forty-sixth congrers, giv ing the speaker absolute control of the question as to who shall have the lloor to speak or make motions, It was the manner of the man In doing the thing mi autocratic, haughty and contemptuous, the tierco courage which rose with opposition and fought irre sltlb!y, that made his rules seem moro arbitrary than they were and mad dened the opposition to blind fury. Mr. Heed did not plan it all In advance, as is generally supposed, and he would have gone at it in more conciliatory fashion and with less sweeping results If it had not been for the way he was fought from the floor. Tho Democrats showed from tho llrst a disposition to take undue advantage of the very emni; Hepubllcan majority, and this roused Heed's Indignation and widened his purpose. The crisis came suddenly one day when he saw that he must take the new course on tho question then pend ing lu the house or abandon all ills hopes for Improving the rules and nrac- tiee in tho house. He had not had time ' u"' "un a tew uepuuiicans wnom lie considered doubtful on the ques tion, und three of whom could change the majority and defeat him, but ho felt that ho was right and that they would s-oon see It. nnd anyway that party loyalty would probably bind them to support him. So he sprang the new ruling on the surprised house, met tho tremendous uproar on the Demo- cratlc side unflinchingly, and so com mitted the I '."publicans that not one of them could escape. From that tlm on Speaker Heed was absolute master of the situation, and l:e went farther than ho had Intended in developing hlrf reforms. It was a most character istically American thing that Mi. Heed had done, and it was not strange that It gradually inuae him a presidential candidate, although his popularity has always been of a very different sort from that of President MeKlnley. It has been greatest among the more in tellectnal classes, and greatest of all among newspaper men, who are at onco the best and severest critics of statesmen, o It is not too much to say that Mr. Heed was the most interrsting man In Washington, as well ns the greatest In tellectually, by the confession of his associates In public llfo and that no one will ever take his place. All the candidates for the speakt rship put to gether would not equal him, although they are all men ,,f more than average ability nnd attainments, and some of them of long and successf ill expt rience In congress. Hut they would be tho lirst to recognize that Mr. Heed stands unique. There is a great deal of hu man nature in Mr. Heed, and he has his weak points like everybody els but his strong qualities are those tint most men admire most greatly and Include some of tho finest traits of our race. Just because iie Is human, however, he doubtless acted from mixed motives In leaving Washington for Xew York, and it is amusing to see tho explana tions furnished for him, even by those who know him, on the theory that It was some one reason which determine1! his course. He Is a or man, as ho himself has said over and over again, even though ho has had a comfortable Income for the last year or two, and without doubt the opportunity to se cure a modest fortune for his wife and daughter, to whom he Is devoted In a way that cannot bo put li.to cold print, was an Important consideration. Doubtless, too, he felt that lie -had done all that he could hope to do as speaker of the house under present con ditions, and that he was weary of a situation In which he was forbidden both by party etiquette ami parliamen tary precedent to speak on the Moor or even through articles in the maga zines or interviews in tho newspaper- against party policies which he strong ly disapproved. Doubtless, too, he realized that Xew Vork city was n very much better place for a presi- dentlal candidate than Portland, Me., and that It was quite possible that lu 1001. If not sooner, tho lightning might strike him In his new law otllics. o It Is not difficult to Imagine a sud den nnd now unexpected turn of cir cumstances which would make him a formidable presidential candidate next year, and it is entirely easy to see him in imagination the Hepubllcan candi date four years later, fur at CI he win be as young as mest men at 54, with his splendid constitution, spirits and habits, Tho only thing to emphasize Is that ho hns left Washington trium phant and not defeated. AMUSEMENTS AND MORALS. From a Chumpnlgn. III., Dispatch to the St. huute Globe-Democrat. Tho Itt. Itev. George F. .Sejniour, bUIiuu of the dloi-est of Spi'liigilelil, bad Ju.-a put through tho pi ess hen-, for distribu tion among the parishes hi his diocese, a pamphlet on "AniiiMiiH-iits In Their notation to ltcllslon." The bishop says: "It is not necessarily wrong to slug, to luugh, to make merry with our friends, to play games. Ttute things may ho wrong because we make them wrong, but lu themselves tin y aro not wrong." Summing up the ci.se of dancing, he says: "Dancing Is not Inlu-ruiUy evil any moro than money Ih, or the drama is, or music Is. it may be. and often Ih, ubused. There are lascivious dances and there aro bad people who dunce, und there nre occasions when one ought not to dance. So. precisely, are thero lewd songs, und Improper plajs. and vile pur poses to which money It put. hut these are not arguments against the legitimate uso ot music, or the druinu. or muni'.". So, precisely, with danclrg, It conies un der tho same category, and one can no more conrtetcntly condemn dnnelng th in he can condemn muney, or music, or ihu drnmii. "'As regards the clergy la their rilat'.oii to tho theater nnd dancing und amine meats generally,' suys the blubop, "we are heaitlly In sympathy with Ht. Paul, who miys 'nil tilings nre lawful tnr me, but till things am not expedient.' Holy things for holy men,' Is tho safe, sound piinelple. The theater Is, ordinar ily, no place for tho ptlcst of Chrlit, not because it Is Indecent, or lewd, or Im moral, for If It be such It Is no place for nay one, but because It Is tinsultcd to bis vocation who ministers the sucrnments, nnd whoso olfloei me needed by the bed side of tho sick nt tho hour of death nnd by the open grave. For the sumo lea urns the priest ought to take no part In the social dance. It Is not befitting the dignity and sobriety which become htm who preaches the blessed Ooupcl n'ld celebrates the holy ciiibarlst. Our plea Is not for the theater, or limiting, or amusements, but for the young, that they mny not bo misled ns to the dlMttnctton between good and evil, and so plunge recklessly Into tin, nnd for our pei'pK that they may not havo their moral vis ion confused nnd so loso their way be tween right and wrong." REXFORD'S, May 13. Now that delicious strawberries are witli us again, have yon tea spoons plenty ? The reason we ask is that two ladies came in yes terday in great haste, saying : "Company with us and our spoons look horrid." Plenty here at Rex ford's. Satisfactory prices. Sterling silver, six for $ 3, 50. Rogers & Bro., six for 80c. Berry Forks. Derry Servers. Berry Bowls. THE REXFORD CO., 132 Wyoming Ave. We are Showtag This week a great variety of elcgaut goods in Spring Serges, You will find the prices like the goods right. W. J. DAVIS, 213 Wyoming Ave., Seranton, Pa. Tie Hew lectrlc Clock, NO WINDING. NO WEIGHTS. NosrniNCis. no kepaiur. NO TROL'HLK OK ANY KIND. And PERFECT time at small cost. Send postal card and our agent will call with samples. MEECEEEAU k 0MEIX SOLE AGENTS, 130 Wyoming Avenue. '1fy 9 . -...'rs?' : 1 An elderly seaman, living on Parkman Street, in Dorchester, Mass., has struck his due share of " shallows and miseries." " I am an old man-of-war's man," he says, "sixty-three years old, and with a very bad stomach. I have tried Rtpans Tabules and found great relief there from, but can not afford to buy those put up in bottles ; so please send me two dozen cartons in paper packages, for which I inclose ninety-six cents. They do me more good, than anything I have struck." A ww ityU packet oonUiftinff ra Mr mi ritrut - iuvnfiM-n-ioHviniuiviMniin)CU ve BUI DT mall W5 mWWs! rwai. v ViiOKcU SiVora LewBSJ RILLY & DAVKS Fine HAND-SWD SHCKS FOR LADieS ii4aN6 Wyoming Ave. jO. :ir to Ca. is-iw- .' r r r . a - .- i .jb4 ri. ;T-- 1 - w ll - !.'? ? liiI1r?r 1 - 5- 1 vrJ".,:C-iS The Deadly Sewer Gas from a lenky drnln may Klvc the doctor a case of typhoid lever to work with un less you peinilt the plumber to (jot In his work on the drain llnd. Do not hes-itate about bavins the plumb InR In your bouse examined by an expert If you think thero is the slightest defect. A thoroiiKh overhauling now will savo mai-j- a dollar later. The fmoko test will convince you whether there is sewer kus or not. GMSTER & FORSYTH, 3i3.3K I'ENN AVIiNL'i:. Come 11 and ask to see our Wedgewood Blue, Oriental Rose, MAMAS LINEN. The most beautiful shades ever display ed in stationery. All Sizes in Stock fr m (r- lto ft Wc have the usual complete line of Office Supplies. Reynolds Bros STATIONERS aul ENGRAVERS. Motel Jermyn Building. In t prr etrtfln (wtthMil ftUiU Ii now for Ml at emi moiiouiIo!, On dotcn DT MadL&ff f tf Irlirht cnt ta th tUPim in-ruis-it J -3 - -?---. - "ijezi -ij--; , : -: s FINLEY Wc Invite inspection of our eJegant new line of C3, MM aiol Fancy SyIss, Swiss Grenadines, Motiseline de Sole, Organdies, WasM Chiffons, Etc., All of which we are show ing in an unlimited as sortment of the newest patterns and designs; New line of Mack Satin, CMna Si!fc Was! Ssl aid Lawn lilrt Wai Choice line of new Belt Buckles and Collarette Clasps In sterling silver and Jeweled, in the most ar tistic designs. Jetted and Steel Belts, Black Satin Sash Belts Shirt Waist Sets, in sterling silver, Roman and gold enamel, pearl, etc., an unusally large and at tractive assortment. 530and512 LACKAWANNA AVENUE TIIK MODKIIN HAltl'WAKUSTOKK. l,AW o?gr h ORANGE AND 'rAZOR Lawn Mowers are easy running, well built machines. We have a full line. Prices from $2.25 to $14. FOOTE k SHEAK CO., no Washington Avenue. The Hyot & Comeell C0 Heating, Plumbing, Gas Fitting, Electric Light Wiring, Gas an Electric Fixtures, Builders Hardware; id4 Lackawanna Avenn HENRY BEL1N, JR., UciiutiU A sent for Ilia Wyouiluj l'Utrlotfj. lliulnr, Blasiliiu, Spoittne. Umokslatt uutl llio Hepauno C'Ueoilcti I'om'utuy i HIGH EXPLOSIVES. tl'lety ruse, Cup anil IOiptoUr. Itooiu 401 Coniiell liuildtu;. ticruuma. ML Mjreiri pwroa AUK.NUit; 11100, rotm JOHN It. SMITH &i)X W.E. MULLlliAN, FlttlU riymouu U'Ukoj-lUrci V- V