THE SCRANTON TRIBUNE MONDAY, JULY 3, 1S99. 0e kranfon $rtBune FriblMiml Dally r.xnopt Hutidfir. br th frlbunePublliblnz Uumpiiy, at in fly Cnti 0 Month. Ivfcvv YorkOnice: lr,f Nnnti RU H. H. VKKKIkYNIX lole Acent for lorolgu AdvorttMnj. IMtnrn at tut lwrorvirR at cnA!To:( IM., AA KECOND-CI.AM MAIL MATTER. SCUANTON, JULY 3, 1S35. C isrsi. : jssj The express companlca doing busi ness In Scrantim continue to violate the law which rerjuhea delivery of packages to all ronslRiicos alike. Per nons discriminated nR.ilnst have the remedy In their own hands. A Patient Community. If a number of men should band to gether for tho purpose of collecting the tilth from the sewers nnd after ward throwing handfuls of It against tho doors of only one resident of our city the offence would not be many times repeated before tho police, with out special prompting', would arrest these delllers and bilng them Into court for punishment It Is Improb able that in such a contingency there could be found a single man of sane mind and respectable habits among the 120,000 odd Inhabitants of Scranton who would so far forget himself or so far shame the civilization about him ns to applaud the delllers nnd offer thorn svrriputhy or help. Yet theie l pilnted In this city and scattered hroadeatt eveiv Sunday a publication which not only throws tilth and the infection of filth Into eery household that permits It to en ter but which Is allowed by the city nuthoiltlos to do tlrN with Impunity and Is encouraged while doing it by tho financial support of prominent business dims and others. This publi cation dries not stop at lclous slander of men In olllce or othciuls-o before the public but It Invades private life and there ti allies In tattle, tcandal and blackmail, not simply inlllctlng the pain of publicity upon those In no sense befnie the public fur ciltlclsm, but alo embittering domestic life and putting before tho young a kind of llteiatme winch the law distinctly and emphatically bans. It Is a patient community which tolerates such an unblushing piostitu tlon of the printing press. I.Ike the mad dog crare, the Drey fus nffa'r Is showing ltelf to be far less dangeious In the bite than In the scare. Kvert in a country like Fiance honesay is the best policy. Russia as It Is. A most Intel estlng book Intended for private circulation has recently been Issued bv cK-Govtiiinr Honkwalter, of Sprlnglleld. O , entitled "Siberia and Cential Ala." It Is the louuml of a. journey which Mr IlooUw alter took last vear ovor the route 01 the partly completed Trans-Plbeilan l.illroad, frrm Moscow to Vladivostok, a dis tance of more than C000 miles, one-halt of which, fiom Moscow to Tomsk, now has a tegular tiain sen Ice making the round trip every twenty days. Most Ameiican readers are alradv familiar with the political Importance of this gieat nitcilnl highway bisecting th. tuoimous biilK of lluinpenn Russia nu 1 Sllvtla K will mean ultimately th conversion to modern civilization no 1 fin dexeli) merit along piogicssiVij lim s of a count, y greater In area than th whole North Ameiican continent a lountry nlieady Inhabited by 130.000,- 000 vlgoious peopl eighty per cent, of whom follow pastoial pursuits along primitive methods, and one whom na ture has equipped to nurtuie In Hue stjle pel hap? thiice that number of In habitants Hut tin' average Yankee will pci haps lenrn with some surprise how thoroughly the government of tho czar Is pioceedlng In its work of rail wav coiiftruetlon and planning. When Mr. Uookwalter war In Itussia he was shown a tialn In course of prep aration which, when completed, was to Ik one of many designed to traeiso tho entlie route. It will, says he. bo composed wholly of sleeping, parlor and dining eai.i, an elegant salon oc cupjlng fully one-half of each car at the middle, '-living a piano, writing tables, maps l'bi.ry, etc Wesldes the tiunl tot room there Is an elegant bath room whe e nt nominal cost, the 1 isenger can have hot or cold baths In any fashion The- U also to be a roi m tlttS up especially for gymnas tl exorcise, with dumb-bells, f ration al apparatus for muscular development) nnd all tho newest appurtenances of sinh an establishment. The train will b.- of the vestibule type, with electric lights and signals, air brakes and all other Hist class accessories; there will be a. porter and special guard for each car In addition to the geneial director or conductor; owing to the broad gauge emploed live feet the coaches are much wider and higher than our n and tho compartments corre spondingly moie loomy; and for all tin sp conveniences tho charge for fare, in Hiding everything except meals, Is If-s than one cent and a half per mfle. ' ousual precautions are taken for Ifrafoty Every verst (less than a mile) there is a track guard, whose duty Is Ito go over the line before nnd after everj train, to make sure that nothing: lis wring. He. Is provided with a cot- hago alongside the track and must nev- fr be absent from his heat without leave The track has stone ballast; Its bridge constructions are of tho finest steel put together under tho su pervision of efficient engineers und tho stations are neat, commodious and well arranged. In America the aver age railway restaurant la a public crime but according to Mr. Uookwalter this thing Is different in Itussia. "It Is a pei feet delight," says he, "to take a meal In a Russian railway restau rant. They have a most agreeable cus tom of furnishing meals. On entering the dining room, you will find at one end an immense sideboard literally groaning under a load of newly pre pared Russian dishes, always piping hot nnd of such a bewildering variety as to range through tho wholo gamut of hu man fancy and tastes. You are given a plate, with a knife and fork. Making your own selection you rettro to any of the newly-spread tables to enjoy your meal at your leisure. Tho price, ton, Is u, burprlso to one, uccustomed to metropolitan charges. You can get soup, as fine a bcefstako as you ever ate, a splendid roast chicken whole, potatoes nnd other vegetables, and a bottle of Ameiican boor for one luble about fifty cents." W could quote at Indefinite length from this most readable volume pas sages whose purport would radically conflict with the prevalent American conception of Russia an a great person ification of tyranny and seml-barbar-lsm, but lack of space demands n hnlt. Mr. Uookwalter has performed n nota ble service In placing before his coun ty inen by pen and camera a panorama ot Russia as it Is. Cyclist Murphy's mlle-a-mlnuto feat, though Interesting, belongs within tho list of follies which mankind would never miss. Alger Disavows Plngreo. Secrctaiy Alger has Issued a dis claimer of I'ingree. It Is In the form of a statement to tho pi ess denying thnt a political alliance has been form ed between them. I'ingree, Alger says, voluntarily offered to support him for benator, and ho adds: "Of course I could not refuo his offer, and natural ly I thanked him for It. That was ex actly what I had done with hundreds of other Republicans of my state who have ottered me their biipport. As u matter of fact, I became a candidate for the senate solely at the suggestion of my friends. 1 have no more ot an alliance with Governor Plngreo than I havo with my hundreds of other friends In my native stnte. Of course, It's nonsense to hold me responsible for what Governor I'ingree may say. I am powerless to control his utterances, even If I had a right to try." Commenting upon this statement, tho Washington correspondent of the Phil adelphia Press, who usually speaks ad vlsedly, sajs. "Even those who have been most persistent In asserting that Secretary Algtr must get out of the cabinet, and In this class are Included many of the president's close friends and advisors, admit that the repudia tion of a Plngree alliance, made by General Alger, puts a now aspect upon the mtter. a the demand for tho secretary's resignation arose from the fact that It was feared his alleged Michigan political connections might embarrass tho president, that demand would seem to cease when those reput ed alliances were disavowed General Alger has by his repudiation of the 1 Ingiee nlllance elected to remain with the national administration. It is pos sible the secretary will make no mora formal announcement of his position than Is conveyed in his brief state ments to newspaper correspondents. In the face of G"iieral Alger's specific re pudiation It Is not to be expected that either the president, in person, or any of his Immediate advisors will be dis posed to convey to General Alger an In timation that his presence in the cab inet no longer Is desired. The compli cations were wholly of a political na ture and Important only in a political sense. Theie was no personal feeling Involved " Theie are complications quite apart from the I'ingree episode which requlro the selection of a new secretory of war. Chief of these Is tho practically unanimous belief of the American peo ple that General Alger is unlit for the place. The Dewy home fund is growing at a pace which Indicates that sometime Iti the next centinj it will be largo enough to purchase a few tougli boaids Suggestion of a Comparison. ReaiKis of MtClure's magazine for the curient month will find in Miss Tai bell's paper on Lincoln materials foi an Intel estlng compailson. The paper deals with the tiylng period Just Pi lor to the presidential election of 1S64, when the carefully matured war pol icies of the administration were threat ened with destruction b an epidemic, of restlessness among the people such as Is not without parallels today; and when for weeks and months, the gieat war president was oppressed with a fear that popular Impatience, provoked by the very eagerness of the people for substantial vletoiles. might by a spasm of political short-sightedness not mere ly overthrow him but undo the whole result of the painstaking work which had been done In behalf of the North ern cause during the first two and one half years of the civil struggle. So great was this spirit of restless ness that not only did most of the Re publican leaders come to regard Lin coln's renomlnatlon us out of the ques tion, but one member of his cabinet secretly Intrigued to become the party nominee Neverthelass when the time came, the sober second thought took possession of tho people and Lincoln's renomlnatlon was practically unop posed. Rut after the convention had ndjouined, the popular discontent again took form, notably when, on July 18, 1SCI. he issued his call for &00.000 volunteers, and toward the last of August lit that year, with election day only a little over two months removed, tho clamor of tho people grew so loud that not only Lincoln's friends but also Lincoln himself concluded that his de feat was Inevitable, and Lincoln on August 23 wrote a letter saying that In view of the seeming Improbability of - re-election he was determined to co opeiate fully with the president-elect for the salvation of tho Union. Yet when the actual Issue wus presented to the people of continuing the war to a victorious conclusion or agreeing to the McClellan platform that It was a fail ure and that the North should sue for peace, Lincoln's re-election was over whelmingly decisive, he receiving 212 out of 233 electoral votes. While the dissatisfaction of the antl Imperlallsts with the war policy of President McKJnley does not amount In numbers oi In respectability to that which thirty-five years ago menaced Abraham Lincoln, It does by Its meth ods and especially by its eager seizure ot military disappointments In some de gree recall tho chapter In war history so vividly presented In Miss Tarbell's narrative. Rut now, as then, tho ad ministration will be sustained and by a vote which will Illumine tho situa tion. The Missouri Supremo court has at firmed the constitutionality of the anti trust act recently put on the atatue books in tlat state, which made It Impossible for "combination! In re straint of trade" to enforce collection ot debts. Missouri trusts will there fore employ the cash system nnd tho only sufferers, ns usual, will be their patrons. Tho Troy, N. Y,, Times has entered upon the forty-ninth year of Its exist ence, old In usefulness nnd ripe In prosperity, but young In spirit as the day when It was founded. The man who made It has been gathered to hla fathers, but tho son follows In tho founder's footsteps and the grandson Is preparing to carry forward the Jour nal's destiny. American Journalism has icason to oe proud of this monu mest to the good Judgment of the lata John M. Francis. Woman has Just won the privilege of admission to tho bar of France but Judging fiom the French census fig ures her place of duty will continue to be In the home. General King sayB that tho Filipinos are capable of self-government, but It Is doubtful If the general would care to bo one of the subjects of such a government. It Is believed that Lillian Rlauvelt makes a mistake In declining to sing In opera. Lillian has a pretty face, a fine voice nnd a Dakota divorce. It Is safe to predict that President Kruger, not long hence, will be a man ot less conceit and moro knowledge. Even the New York Sun admits that the psychological moment has come for General Alger to retire. Secretary Alger and Mr. Plngreo evi dently have not given sufficient study to their code of signals. The Devil's Island Is about as diffi cult to locate on the maps as Aguln aldo's capital. Export Trade o! One Million a Day Prom the Times-Herald. o MILLION dollars a day repre M sontB the size of the demand l" which the European nations are UU making upon the Ameiican work shop at the present time. This is the contribution of American mechanical skill and Industrial enterprise to the comforts and necessities of life in the old world. Although the monthly re ports of tho tieasury bureau of statis tics have given some idea of the phenomenal Increase In the volume ot exports of manufactures, it Is only re cently that the bureau has attempted a detailed classification of this trade showing tho particular classes of goods that find most favor in particular coun tries. IJy these tables, which the treas ury bureau has lecently prepared, It Is possible for American manufacturers to learn not only who are their best customers, but It furnishes valuable suggestions as to what fields offer the greatest possibilities of profitable de velopment In the future. o That the subject is worthy of special study by the Treasury department and the manufacturers is shown by the fact that our exports of manufactures have more than doubled during the last six years, and have mote than quadrupled slnco 1870. In 3S9S and 1S99 the exports of manufactures, for the first time on record, exceeded the Imports, and dur ing the fiscal year which ends tho last day of this month they have aveiaged more than a million dollars for each business day of the year. While tho exports of American manufactures show an increase of no per cent in tho last decade, those of Great Riltain show no increase since 1S90. During this peilod France made a gain of 10 per cent. In the epoitatlon of manu factures, Germany made a gain of 13 per cent, while Russia and Austria Hungary show a loss. o Moie Interesting than these compari sons, however, are the figures which icveal the classes ot manufactures in which America has made the greatest gain and in which she now holds the undisputed ascendency. The history of our export development shows that wo easily surpass all other nations in the manufactures of metals. Although In 18S9 tho manufactures of metals foimed less than 20 per cent, of our total exports of manufactures, the In crease of this class of exports In the last decado was 339 per cent. Our man ufactures of copper Increased from J2 31S,934 in 1SS9 to J32.1S0.S72 In 1S0S, while the manufactures of Iron and steel Jumped from $21.1GG,077 in 1S89 to J7O.10C.8S5 in 1S9S. In the fiscal year of 1899 It Is believed that our exports of lion and steel manufactures will reach the enormous sum of $90,000,000. o Tho most remarkable fcatuie of this showing is tho fact that the greatest demand for our manufactures Is In counti Ics where tho manufacturing In dustry has been fully developed. It Is the American workshop and American buslnees enterprise against tho Eu ropean manufacturer, add In such a contest tho former is distancing, not to say durnfoundtng, competitors. BILL NYE'S CYCLONE. II. I. Cleveland, In tho Tlmos-Herald. riftcen ears ago a cyclone came out ot tho deptlu of St. Croix Lake, swept over New Richmond and Clear Lake, Wis., In tho blistering heat of an af ternoon, and after it had passed tha searchers found Bill Nve In the wlndJall of a plna forest suffering fiom u broken lg. lit was conveyed to his homo In Huelson, where his humor served to light on the weary dujs of waiting for the Us to heal. When the storm came Nye was driving through the forest with his brother, a resident of Clear Lake, and had a verv narrow escapo from death. In a path of some elehty miles In length, and ending with a cloudburst that Hooded tho towns of Eau Claire und Chippewa Falls, the cvclono sacrlfloed nearly 100 llvos nnd removed one village) temporarily from tho faoo of tho map. I found at Turtle Lake, eleven milts fiom Clear Lake, a portion of the church of the latter town. Between New Rich mond and Clear Lako at a farmhouoe In a plno clearing I aw the body of a lltllA girl through which had been dilven by elcetileal force a plno splinter as long as a blade of grass and ns attenuated, :o: The first work that I did upon the stcrm was to secure an Interview from Nye, and the extracts given herewith are what he had to say of his experi ence. ITe subsequently redressed the Interview and Incorporated It In his per manent work. At tho time of tho cy clone It was copied far and wide, and was regarded as ono of the cholco bits ot humor of tho genial wit. "I never did anything," ho ald, "to a cj clone. There Is no reason why a cyclone should at tack mo. I never eald anything mean of a ci clone, never criticised any ot Its relatives, never mado fun of Its mother-in-law; In fact, I always minded my own business In regard to cj clones, nnd was tho victim of n base assault. Why cihould u. cjclono single mo out? Why should a cyclone make ma a target for Its low wlt7 It 1 had -ver given a cy clone reason for Its attack there would be somo explanation for my present cent dltlon, but 1 am an Innocent man. This shows that tho cvclono poneases many of the characteristics of an Indian, It Is not to bo trusted. I wouldn't tako the word of a ciclono utter mi recent experience under any clrcumstunccs." :o: He said further: "I have lost faith In cyclones No man can continue to bc Ueve In a cjclono after he hns been bc tiaved Had tho cyclone given mo piopcr warning, had It said Unit nt such and such a time It Intended to mnkii a visit to whero I was Inspecting the lux urlant timber growth of beautiful Win cousin I would have known what to do. I wuuld huve gono somowhero else nnd engaged in other pursuits while tho cj clono wns attending to its business en gagement I nm no tival of the cyclono to bo treated In this manner 1 didn't oven benr It a grudge. Nothing that I hnve done In my past life could bo con strued as having warranted a cyclone in taking umbrage at my prcsenco when it camo along. Had 1 been consulted In tlu matter I might havo been willing to oven have gono Into business with the cyclono and given It pointers which would have bosu of advatitngo to both ot us. Hut," ho said, "no fairness was shown me. I wns struck from behind, maliciously ap proached, defensclesnly hurled to the ground, trod nnd spat upon, nnd left to consider tho futility of any effort on my part to bo upright and square In my dealings with cj clones." Ono of the last things Njo said of the storm was. "If I had wished to I might havo struck back at tho cyclone I might havo mado myself dlsagiceablo nnd caused a change In its plans, But I re frained. 1 am not of a levengeful spirit, and then 1 know when I have had enough of a good thing. I wouldn't ride a free horsa to death under any clicuiiistanccs. 1 Just accepted things as they were and mado up my mind that hereafter tho cjclono could not travel in tho tamo so cial net that I did. If It attempted to I intended to cut It dead." Bill Nj-o speedily recovered from his Injury, and In a few years all traces of tho great Clear Lake storm were effaced, but there are probably some old residents of tho region still living who will remember the humor of the man who refused to tako even his own narrow escape from death seriously. THE GREATEST ACHIEVEMENT OF THE YEAR 1808. The brief oration of Frank Springer at Lns Vegas, N. M , accompanj Ing the pre sentation to Colonel Roosovolt of a medal of honor, contained this striking passage: "Tho mighty fact which tha year lMti brought forth was not the glory of tho war, which added to tho annals ot our victorious arms the names of Manila and Santiago It was not that our armies were valiant or our navy invincible for theso facta are not new to our hNtory But It is that now, after a century of Internal dissension the fruit of antagon istic Interests and discordant elements the nation hns been born again, nnd thnt thero is realized in fuct that grand ideal set before us in tho admonitions of Wash ington, tho exhortations of Webster and the jearnlngs of the patient and farsee lng Lincoln a complete and perfect Union "Of this transcendent fact tho most splendid witness was that band of heroes whoso survivors havo assembled to meet ou hero todaj. As If to furnish tho world a living proof of this new birth among the nations, thej' camo together, under tho magic of your name the most remarkable bodj1 of men that ever fol lowed tho American (lag Not for their courage In battle, or their fortitude in camp for these are dualities that be long to everj American soldier but re maikablo for what they represented. "Men from every section, of every race, calling and condition, Protestant, Cath olic and Jew American and Indian, the millionaire nnd the breadwinner, the cow puncher nnd the dude from Rast to West, and from North to South, they gnthereil sons of rebel and j-unkeo alike to march in ranks of war against a for eign foe the very incarnation of the American people And when they plant ed our glorious emblem upon tiro bloodj heights of San Juan they wroto In crim son letters upon Fame's eternal tablet, und whero all the world might see, the symbol of a reunited people." THE MAN WITH THE HOE. Reprinted by Request. Bowed by tho weight of centuries, ho leans Upon his hoe and gazes on the ground, Tho emptiness of ages In his face, And on his back the burden of the world. Who mado htm dead to raptutc and de spair, A thing that grioves not and that never hopes, Stolid and stunned, a brother to tho ox? Who loosened and let down this brutal jaw? Whose was tho hand that slanted back this brow? Whoso breath blew out the light within this brain' Is this tho Thing the Lord God made and gavo To have dominion over sea nnd land, To tiaco the stars and search the heav ens for power; To feel the passion of Eternity? Is this the Dream Ho dreamed who shaped the suns And pillared the blue firmament with light? Down all tho stretch of holl to its last gulf There la no shone moro terrlblo than this Moro tongued with censure of the world's blind greed Moro filled with signs and portents for tho soul Moro fraught with menace to the uni verse. What gulfs between him and the sera phim Slave of the wheel of labor, what to him Are Plato and the swing of Pleiades? What the long reaches of tho peaks ot song, Tho rift of dawn, the reddening of the rose? Through this dread shapp the suffering ages look; Time's tragedy Is In that aching stoop; Through this dread shape humanity be trayed, Plundered, profound and disinherited, Cries protest to tho Judges of the World, A protest that Is also prophecy. O, masters, lords and rulers In all lands, Is this tho handiwork jou give to God, This monstrous thing distorted and soul quenched? How will you over straighten up this shape; Give back tho upward looking and tho light; Rebuild in It the musto and the dream; Touch It again with Immortality; Make right the Immemorial Infamies, Perfldous wrongs, Immedicable woes? O, masters, lords and rulers In all lands, now will tho Future reckon with this Man? How answer his brute question In that hour When whirlwinds of rebellion shake the world? How will It bo with kingdoms and with kings With those who shaped him to thu thing he Is When this dumb terror shnll reply to God After tho silence of tho centuries? -Kdward ,W. Markhum. THE CENTER OF POPULATION. From tho New York Sun. By tho first national census tnken in 1790, when the population of tho country was not much gi cuter than of New York city todnj'. the centro of population was twenty-threo miles enst of Baltimore. It was still In the neighborhood of Baltt- Linote, though to tho west of that city. In iwv. in ism It wns near Washington. In 1820 It was nl Woodstock, Va., and In IS JO, 1840 and ISjO In the present stnto of West Virginia. In IStM It wns n llttlo to tho south nt Chlllcothe, O, this being tho first otllclal appearance of Ohio ns the centro of population, though It hns remained tho political centre of popula tion stendlly over since. In 1X70 tho cen tra of population wus on n lino In Ohio between Chlllcotho nnd Cincinnati; In Uso It was In the nilghhoihood of Cincin nati; and In 1S90, the year of tho last na tional census, it was In Decatur county, Ind near tho Ohio boundary, and on n line between Cincinnati nnd Indianapolis. Thu government estlmnto of tho present population of tho United States, exclu ulvo of countries over which its sover eignty has been extended, was 73,000,000 on Juno 1, and all sections of tho coun try havo participated, though not cqitnl lj In tho growth of population since 1S0O, when It was ,e00,00O. :o: By tho coming census tho Ohio and Mississippi Valley states will probably be shown to have gained less from direct foreign Immigration than In any previous decade, while the citizens of tho Mlddlo nnd New England states have, relatively, gained more Thero has been a substan tial increase in population, larger, proba blj than In any period slnco tho clco of tho civil war. In the Southern and South border states, nnd a much larger Increase In thoso of tho Southwest, most notably in Texas, the total vote of which increased from 230,000 in 1SS0 to StO.000 In 1S90 nnd OSO.ono In 1SD6 The population of Texas (2,200,000 in 1S90) Is probably near 3,(00,000. A stato cnnsuB taken of Kansas In 1S93, on tho other hand, showed tho population of that stato to be less than In 1S90, whllo in the samo period tho population of Now Jersey had Increased 16 per cent. Between 1S90 nnd 1S93 tho population of Tlorlda Increased from 300,000 to 4G3,000, whllo tho population of South Dakota (3.3,000 in 1S90) was re turned as 330,000 live years later. :o: The growth of population In American states between 1SM and 1900 will be in ne cordanco with tho Increase of tho urban population in each rather than with tho gain In agricultural districts As a ma jority of the cities are in the Ncrth, it appears likely that tho "centre of popu latlon" In 1900 will bo on or near the banks of the Wnbnsh In the state of In diana, nt some point northwesterly from tho present centre and nearer tho Illinois than the Ohio stato lino. VALUE OF SOLOMON'S TEMPLE. W. E. Curtis In Chicago Record. A Biblical student In Washington de clares that If tho descriptions of Solo mon's templo aro nccurntcly given In the Bible and by secular authorities the total valuo of that ediflco nnd Its contents must havo exceeded $30,000,000,000. In tho first place, tho value ot the mateilals In tho rough Is estimated nt $12,500,000 OX), nnd the labor at $1000,000 000 According to Vlllalrandls lO.OvO men vvero engagenl in dressing cedar lumber, S0O0O were en gaged in cutting stono and bOOOO In bear ing burdens, for a period of seven jears, who, In addition to their wuges, re ceived CO cents a day for food. Accoid lng to tho samo authorltj, which Is corro borated by Josephus, the vessels of gold were valued nt 110,000 talents, which, re duced to American money, Is equal to $2126.481,013 The vessels of silver are calculated at JH.2J1 713 000, the vestments of the priests and tho robes of the sing ers $10 030,0ii0 and tho value of the trum pets of gold was SI 000,0iO. UNFOROIVEN. "Why do you hite him so?" "Wher wo wcie joung men wa loved the same girl " "Oh' Did ho win her from you by any unfair means''" "No. Ho went nwaj- nnd left hfr no choice but me "Chicago Times-Herald. REXFOKD'S. Scranton, July 3, 1899. We bought too many sterling silver link buttons. New shapes, beau ends and dumb bells. We'll sell them at about weight value, 25 cents a pair. THE .R13XFORD CO., 132 Wyoming Ave. 5mmmmaM. (V a 1 I MllLZtbiU vLwiW'ifrlFV w iTtUrfHSlf - n r- -r I ill mi My little girl, eleven years old, has had all her life a very serious and stubborn constipation. I had given everything I could think of, and still once in about two or three wceko she would wake at night crying pitifully with pain, and for two or three hours would suffer intensely until finally relieved by frequent enemas. All this was very wearing. My brother insisted I should try Ripans Tabules and finally he got them for me. I tried them, giving her two every night for awhile, then two every other night, then she took them herself when she felt like it. It is now about three months since she has had any trouble, and her bowels are in a very healthy condition. Her color is good and she is gaining flesh. As I have given her no other medicine I ascribe her improved condition wholly to Ilipans Tabules. 1 n ftiU pkt conUlntnr nifAN, tuum In a PMr corton (without elwfl l no I nr uJ t ion t U IMOUI rarl.M ( W f L"t-J ! a tM hid J "D T KXVllac UrtJ-flM ( Ul tk. JUTUU CUUUClk P41MrHiKnHIIHWUll(IHWlV47 0.nwm T .. Star Automatic Paper Fasteeer Fastens papers 111 a jiffy, feeds itself aud improved in every respect. Prices lower tliau ever. We arc still sell ing the Planitary Pencil Sharpeners. The only sharp ening device which never breaks the lead. On trial in your office for 10 days free of charge. We have numerous other novelties in office sup plies, together with a large line of Blank Books and Typewriter's Supplies, Reynolds Bros STATIONERS and ENGRAVERS, Hotel Jermyn Building. FOR A Twenty-Year -Filled fee a ISJeweM Waltlam Movement, Both Qimaraeteedl The Best Watch in the Whole World for the Money. MERCMEAU & CORNELL 130 Wyoming Avenue. rT t2$t. THE LONG GREEN lira around the house, or tho little pitch of srass In Ihe doorjaid. require constant attenrlon to look nnuttfii! Don't borrow jour nelphbor s lawn mower which you rind i?n t sharp, and then say sharp things about it which makes your wife Md. but eomo In hero and buy a lawn mower thnt will rut lfko a razor and runs as easy ns a bicycle Tho labor saved will amply n pay jou for the bmall outlay. And such thlnps ns Pruning Shears nnd Grars Clippers that will give satisfaction aro here too. CMSTEK k FORSYTH, S25-327 PKNN AVENUE. Lunther Keller LIHE, CEMENT, SEWER PIPE, Etc. Yard nnd Onica West Lackawanna Ave., SCRANTON, PA. :ggFS hgl -3S: sue til' ZSil .,:, &L mmiA 'vrliyrrim ii"'Uiviiu FINLEY'S One Week Devoted to At Reduced Prices.1 In order to get our stock of Colored Shirt Waists down to normal propor tions, we have made a general reduction of from H 5 to 25 percent, all along the line and our entire stock is now at your dis posal at tempting prices. The new prices apply on all Cambric, gfoams, Slams Iquc Waists, And we venture to say that no more attractive line is shown this season. The following numbers you will find exceptional value: Percalo Waists Reduced to 43c, 65c, 75c. and $11.00 Valuo for 65c, 85c, 90c. and $1.25 Glrcham Waists $1.25, $1.50 and 51.75 Valuo for $1.50, $1.85 and $2.00 510and oil LACKAWANNA AVENUE Hill MODEUN II vrtUWAUU -JTOltJ. No Worry About the result when you use a reezer Try one this Summer. 0012 & SIMM CO., 119 Washington Ave. 119 The Hiiflot & Coomiell Co, Heating, Plumbing, Gas Fitting, Electric Light Wiring, Gas an Electric Fixtures, Builders Hardware. 434 Lackawairaa Araus I HHNRY BEL1N, JR., oeueriu Atom lor tbi WyouUnj lintriot.j JUuInu, ItluUIn;, Hportlni, tiniokU4l nd trie Hepuuu9 Uhsuilctii Co np.iay a HIGH EXPLOSIVES. tuttty I'lici". lnp and Hvploliri. Kooiu 101 Cornell ilulldUii. boraulDO. AUKNCll) THO? roftD. . - Plttston, JOHN H. SMITH & BON, - Plymouth. V, 1. MULLIGAN, WIUi03-Uaxic Silt Wist Sellin? Llg htnin? F luroirs POWER. HMHMIiflHlMn