THE SCIUNTON TRIBUNE-WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 9, 1800. 0 t(Se Ikranfon ri6une I'ub1lhfl n-illv, Kxcpt flnndny, ly 'Tho Trllmnu I'libllshlng Company, at Tiny Cents a Month. New Tork Onico: 150 Nnswiu St.. s s. viuji:iand, Bolo Acent for Varclsn Advertising. nntrrcil nt tho PofdotTlcfi at Seranton. Pa., ns Scccntl-Class Mall Matter. When Fparo will permit, Thn Trlbuno Is nlwnvs r1i1 to print slioit letters from ltn frlerrts ticailim on curiont topics but It ru! l Hint thnso mint bo ulffri"l, for publication, b the writer's real mime. fiCIlANTON. AUGUST 9, 1809. If all of Hip foreign nations were ni unfriendly as the yellow press would have us believe, the United States would be obliged to declare war at least once u week during the dry sea son. Labor's Trlentls to Labor's Kescue. Tli announcement uf Mayor Jones, of Toledo, that he Mill tonlEht lec ture before the striking street tar employes of Clevelnnd, O, with the Intention of trjlnff to persuade them to abandon their uo of the bojeott, shows that labor's real friends nre at Inst (omliiR to labor's resrue. Labor's real fi lends seem ut times to be some wlint slow In tntrlilnu up with tho Pioipsslon nt the start off It Is usual Iv the hotheads and ctanks who catch labor's eats nnd 1111 lliPin full of vic ious suggestion and unwise prompt ings, but with labor, as with capital, tiuth and Justice generally win out befoie the race Is ended. The bocott Is unnecessary where labor's cause Is jut and where It Is necessary to bolster up a declining strike It usually Is Ineffective. Where n cause of labor appeals directly and on Its obvious meilt to public sym pathy ft foimal boycott Is superfluous becnusp public opinion will voluntar ily oiganlze Its own boycott. If pub lic opinion cannot be Induced to co ol erate with labor by the moral sua sion arising fiom a Just grievance In telligently pi sotted, It cannot be co pi cod by skull and cioss-bones, pla lards and nnonnious tin eats. Pub lic opinion In such matteis sits as u larger Jury nnd villi not submit to Intimidation from any source Mayor ,Tone should tell the stilke3 of Cleveland, and the lesson should apply elsewhere, that the best thing vliat laboi can do, in the street car business oi In any other business. Is to attend stiictly to business living within its income whether that bo pient oi small and oveiy month put ting something aside for a lalny day. The laooier who does this, who Is tempciate, frugal, studious and will ing to give back full value for the wage he receives, may, of course, meet vi lth mlsfoi tunes, slnco these are an inevitable llsk of life, but the chances are that In the long run he villi llnd small necessity for walking delegates', boycotts or other Incidents of economic "trifo tn enable him to secure. In ptoportlon to his ability and skill, steady woik at fair wages, sub ject only to the unpreventlble varia tions In maiUet conditions, which af fect emploer nnd employe alike and. which no laboi organization can pre v ent. There Is something radically wrong in the system of government which al lows the citizens of vaiious states to lvneh foreign usklents and forces Uncle Sam to settle the bill of damages without having the oppot Utility to punish the offenders A Hint from the Fatheiland. The temaik of l?aron Von Stengel, seeund In rank nmong Getmany's dele gates at the lecent peace conference, that " a good swotd Is the best pro teetoi of u countij's rights,' contains enough of tiuth In it to wan ant In telligent tccognltlon of It by advocates of peace As applied to our own count) . the baion's Teniarks warns us not simply to prepare for a particular wai, as our authoiltles aie now doing with refeipnce to the Philippines, hut to so aiinnge our military nnd naval nffalis with legaid to Hip future that us eventualities shall ailse we will be equally ifjd for them whether the theater of their occuirence is neat to our own shoies or in Islands or along mainlands thousands of miles le mo"ed. In the European sense nillltiulsiii Is n danger which does not exist for Americans Those who are depicting Its horrcus for tho purpose of Influene ine' public opinion in the United States are flatting up a scarecrow for fools. The American who Imagines that In this land of Instinctive democracy, wlrcre each man h by heredity jealous cf his sovereign lights, a condition co'ihl nrlse such as is now threatening the future of 1'iance a condition In which the nimy b titles with the re public for tho mastery of the country a condition which ns In the continen tal nations, cnuses the lndlrldual sol dier to leok with contempt on the In dlv Idual civilian and forces the civilian, under pains and penalties, to give to tho soldier nt eiery meeting the salute of homage and tho right of waj such un Ameilcan utterly mlsundeistands the chat actor of his countrymen. Many of the rhetoilclans now solemnly exhorting the American people to slum the pitfalls of Imperialism are un doubtedly slr.cete, but we must be charitable enough to believe that they are also a little ciacked In the upper story. The danger confronting the United States Is exactly opposite in character. It Is the danger of falling to profit by the teachings of the costly experiences of the paFt few months. The reserve forces of our democracy can be trusted to take effectual cure of any embryonic Napoleons who may develop among the ranks of our future soldiers or sailors, but these reserve forces can not so easily Improvise trained sol diers und sailors, together with the tools of their profession, when, as In February of last year, tho need for them becomes suddenly apparent to every observer. Swelled heads In uni forms are quickly reduced when reduc tion Is necessary for the public, wel fate; but seaworthy battleships, mod ernized coast defences, rifles and ord nance are not made In a day or a year, ' uid the nation which puts off tho start In their manufacture until need for their uso has forced recognition from overy obtuso mind In tho nation over which tin nlcrt nnd resourceful nptag onlst ought to have an emphatic ad vantage. Lot us look, for a moment, nt what oil persons concede to be undeniable facts In our International position. In this hemlsphcio our flat has the ptac tlcnl effect of law. We are legally commissioned guardians of Porto lllco nnd Cuba; nnd tho Monroe doctrine lias g'ven us u ineasuto of responsi bility lr the foreign diplomacy of tin Central and South American icpub llcs. Toward the North Polo we havo Alaska, only Just beginning to breed for us International disputes. In tho Pacific we have Hawaii and Guam for a certainty and whatever shall bo the form of tho ultimate adjustment of tho Philippine nVoblem tho fact of it, already clear, will he an Ameilc.in mtprcmacy nnd responsibility, opening new vistas of opportunity and liak. As our morchnnts go for trade to the fast multlpllng ports of tho Orient, and ns the communications of our foreign commerce carry us farther Into fields hitherto untitled, the rlvnhles and frictions will Inevitably arise which give employment to statesman ship nnd complicate the problem of preserving an unbroken peace. As these unavoidable risks of an expand ing national vitality augment so must augment our precautions against Injustice or loss. It Is not as a her mit power which seeks the solitudes and dwells In sonlle self-communion that the United States Is to flguio In thennnals of the Twentieth century, hut ns the maturing giant taking hold of duty and destiny as both unfold, fearlessly and unabashed. There aie living nations and dying nations, but the United States Is not headed towdrd a funeral. Let us, then, be for all that tnil'ei for wise nnd noble peace, whether through arbltintlon or through the "good swoid," but lot us sputu with contempt the doctilnulre tjpo of peace which degenerates Into unfitness for worldly responsibilities. The purchase of President McKln ley's old homo at Canton, O., should not bo taken as an Indication that he intends to occupy it peimanently dur ing the next five jenrs. . Men Who Can Do Things. These are the daja when a good many men holding positions of execu tive tesponslblllty In various commer cial or Industrial enterprises are liable to feel like agreeing with C. P. Hunt ington that the American youns man Is over-educated. Such a feeling is the natuinl lesull of icceivlng, in vacation time, fiom pupils In the schools or from recent graduates numeious applica tions for positions which do not involve tho necessity of manual labor and few for positions which do. Mr. Huntington of course was wrong so far us he has been undei stood as counseling against education. There cannot be too much education of the right kind, but the right kind will not turn out giaduates who feel that hand labor is less dignified than the ill-paid, inferior type of labor of the bialn, or tint the opportunity opening to the educated mechanic is unworthy of the holder of a high school or college diploma. An education in books is useful but there Is btlll greater need for an edu cation of the common sense, to tho end that the overcrowded lower ranks of the so-called learned professions (which, by the way, are professions that mostly live upon the misfortunes of other people) may bo thinned out and some of tho statvlng thousands who now beclog them be put In tho direction of earning nn honest living by the healthy sweat of their brow. An education Is vinnted which will teach not only the ethical absurdity of the social discrimination now existing to the disadvantage of the mechanical vocations, but also the economic fallacy of it We ure becoming of n sudden a great exporting nation; we are far on our wuy to become In a literal sense the workshop of the world. It Is not lawyers or doctors or dentists or cleiks who will reap the great business prizes of the next centuty: but the intellectual mechanic, who shall master tho In tilcacles ot industrial production nnd develop the executive skill to turn them to the best account. Alicad our great Industiles nre on the lookout for such men They can hire all the lawyers they need at their own pi ire. They don't have difflculty In emplojlng doctors or accountants or Journalists oi stenographers The so called "genteel" vocations yield an nbundance of good material leadv at hand for the signal of command. It Is the man with giease on his elbows, the ciear-bralned shaip-eyed fellow who can tako hold of machinery and men and do things who Is the scarce and precious article In this year of grace; and schools which fall to correct the delusion that the mechanic crafts are to be despised are missing their maik by a very decided margin. New York Democrats are congiatu latlng themselves Hint ex-Governor Jones also keeps quiet. Tho Republican State Tickot. (Prom the Philadelphia Inquirer.) The utter unfairness of the Insurgent and Democratic press in Philadelphia Is again apparent. A day or two ago Senator Quay went to Atlantic City for the sole puipose of angling for sheepshead. Senator Penrose goes to Atlantic City when he can get a day oft. Insurance Commissioner Durham has been tn the habit of going there for ears. Attorney General Dlkln has been going there at thp end of tho week throughout the summer. Tho mere fact that Quay went there tho other day was sufficient excuse for tho reporters of the insurgent and Dem ocratic papers to organize a clearing house and swap news and to lift tho event Into one of political Importance and to tell their readers that a confer ence was on for drawing up a slate for the coming state convention. A reporter on an Insurgent newspa per Is pluylng In extremely hard luck these days. He must magnify and he must lie outright to sutlsfy his em ployers. Therefore we have been given columns of falsehood about confer ences nnd agreements, and wo have had tho ticket all made up for us. The political clearing house Is exceedingly versatile. What It says one day It de nies the next. It will give out a state ment In nil soberness nnd falsify it In the courso of the next twenty-four hours. Consequently, while we hnve been Informed that at n regular con foicnco everything was arranged, wo nre now Infoimcd that the slate Is subject to revision. Now, as n matter of fact, theto has been no conference. The Hepubllcan stale ticket Is not settled. It Is true that the Philadelphia delegates or ot least the great majority of them, for tho Martin contingent will not count will usk that .Toslah It. Adams bo nominated for Stipeitor court Judge. Colonel Hawkins, hnd he lived, would have been nominated for state tteas uror. Hut he Is dead, and if Lieuten ant Colonel Harnett cares for the of fice only nn Insurgent would deny him the honor. So far as tho Supreme court la concerned, tho contest for the vacancy Is still open, ns It always has been. There Is no agreement. There has been no conference, and there will bo none today, nnd that Is tho whole truth about the matter. The Republican state convention will nominate a stiong ticket, and the com bined influences and falsehoods and hypocritical demonstrations of the In surgents and Democrats will be power less to harm It, General Toral was acquitted, ot the crime of surrendering Santiago by the Spanish court martial, not because it was nn exhibition of good sense but because he simply obeyed the orders of his superior officers. If the government follows up the superior olllcers the Im pression that Spain Is looking for a scapegoat will be verified. Tho wise housewife wastes no time In showering caresses nnd honeyed phrases upon her husband nt this sea son, but occupteth herself In the preparation of a goodly stock of black berry jam for future consumption. Tammany Democrats who are pre paring to spring Augustus Van Wyck upon the countiy ns a rival of Mr. I3ran, if profiting by past expeilcnce will select a date upon which ex-Governor Hogg Is out of town. A curious state of affairs has been developed at the present trial of Cap tain Dreyfus. The Paris mobs are unable to determine which side they should favor and have failed to make the usual demonstration. It Is certain that some one must have blown out the light In tho brain of the "Man with tho Hoe' or he would have been leaning on an up-to-date one horso cultivator when posing for his picture. The same amount of energy wasted by a Klondike prospector If applied to a ten acre lot lllled with garden truck will In nine cases out of ten bring bet ter results In a financial way. The King of Slam has purchased a bicycle In Elmlra, and BInghamton ot course may be expected to exhibit symptoms of the green optic com plaint. With the atllval of every additional English regiment in the Transvaal It is said Oom Paul becomes less boorish. According to latest reports ex-Governor Altgeld has decided to alight fiom the Biyan 16 to 1 gospel wagon. Tho long silence of David Hill indi cates that he considers It unsafe to rock tho boat at this time. Latest revolts are to the effect that Lady Randolph Chui chill Is disengaged. Even the Kansas cornstalks are a menace to Bryanlsm. ARMY OFFICERS CALLED "MR." Prom tho New York Tribune. People who arc not versed In matters of nim utaco often ask why certain army ol!lcern are addressed ns "Mister," nnd not by their titles. To the men who enter tho service fro-i West Point tho custom Is well undei stood, because they know that, no matter how much authori ty they mas have, or how gay their uni form may be, they are simply "misters" until they wer two bars on their shoul der straps. A recent occuirence In the Army liulldlng Illustrated tho matter A man who had been a field officer In the volunteer service In the war with Spain hnd been appointed to a lieutenancy In the new volunteer army, and called nt one of tho offices at tho headquarlors on a matter of business There tho of fleer In charge presented him to a United States army officer. ' Major Ulank, allow mo to present Mr. bmlib Mr Smith, Major Ulank " Tho volunteer olllrer hinted in a modest wav. when tho major had withdrawn, that it might have been well to let tho fict bo known that ho also was an army olflcer "Oh. that's all right." said tho officer who had acted as host, "every body Is mister until ho Is captain " Even In service the first and second lieutenants are addressed "mister" by officers of higher rank. Tho custom Is so general that it Is rot unusual for lieu tenants In tho reeular benlco to have their visiting cards engraved with the "Mr " prefixed Tito officer In the regular scrvlco also shows a preferenco for civilian's dress, which the volunteer officer docs not ul wa8 share When not on duty, nt homo on leave or on his way to post tho reg ular officer usually wears no part of his uniform, and prefers to appear as an ordinary citizen. MIDSUMMER. A power Is on the earth nnd In tho air, Prom which the vital spirit shrinks ufrald, And shelters him, in nooks of deepest shade. Prom the hot stream and from the flcry glaic. Look foith upon tho earth her thousand plants Aro smitten; even the dark, sun-loving maize Paints tn tho field beneath the torrid blaze, Tho herd beside tho rhaded fountain punts; For Ufo Is driven from all tho landscape brown. Tho bird has sought bis tree, the enako his den, Tho trout floats dead In the hot stream, nnd men Drop by the sunstroke In tho populous town; As if tho Day ot fire ha;l dawned, and sent Its deadly breath Into the firmament. William Cullen Bryant. VOICE OF THE riVES3. American Negroes for Cuba. Prom tho Chlcnco Record. A Cuban nowspapcr published nt Man zanlllo is much concerned about tho pos-t-tblo coloiilzitton thcro of negro lnborcrs from tho United States. In Cuba nnd Puerto lllco negro Immigration Is looked on much as Chlncco Immigration Is re garded In tho United States. Por years theio has been nn Influx of negroes, es pecially Into Puerto Itlco, and these, by their superior etrongth nnd Industry, nro crowding out tho white laborer and threaten to dominate tho Iflaud. Thcso negroes, however, do not como from the United States, but from Haiti, tho Danish West Indies, Jatnotcu nnd other neigh, boring islands, Dvcn the negroes of Key West generally nro from tho Antilles and not from tho United Stntes. Any pro position to tako American negroes to colonize them has snmo elements of ab surdity about It, which the Cubans nro not yet sufficiently Americanized to un derstand Tho negro of the south does not want to go to Cuba Ho Is almost too welt contented where he Is and with his own prospects for advancement. In America no law exists and nono can bo enacted or even thought of that could bo U(ec1 to transplant tho negro In Cuba against his will Tberefoio nothing Is llketv tn tnko him thero except tho In ducements held out by the Cubans them selves. ,As the prosperity of Cuba re turns the Cubans may find that tho American negro of tho south nnd his mule are exactly what nro needed to de velop the resources of tho fcrtilo Island. Considered Seriously. Prom the Rochester Post-Uxpress. Whatever may bo thought nnout Mr. Astor's renunciation of his Ameilcan citizenship nnd naturalization as a sub ject of tho British queen, nothing but condemnation can be bestowed upon the nttempt mado in Now York city last evening to Insult him Only a crowd of ruffians, led by a ruffian, would have felt called upon to burn him tn effigy In a public square. If Mr. Astor prefers to bo a nrltlsh subject to nn American citizen, it Is his business nlone Ho is guilty 6f nothing treasonable, or even discredita ble, or that requires public condemna tion Peoplo nro constantly clnnglng their nlleglance Englishmen become American citizens, und Americans citizens become British subjects. But no one thinks ot reprobating them, or burning them In effigy. Facts Are Lacking. Trom the Mobile Register. Thoso who, like Champ Clarke, see Inevitable success for the Democratic party In tho next campaign, nro getting their inspiration from the thought that tho free silver policy will sweep gold Democracy oft Its feet In the Eastern and Mlddlo states and tho Eastern Demo, cracy, thus brought into line with tho Democratic party of tho rest of tho countrj, will then carry tho electoral voto of those states for Brjnn. Tho facts to back the thought seem to be lacking. In truth, they point tho other way The Maryland Democracy, for example has leceded from Its rather advanced position In 1W, when It de clared for International bimetallism This vcar Its platform Is absolutely silent on the financial question. Worth a Trial. Trom tho Philadelphia Record. In the face of Dr. Doty's recent favor able report upon the Sanarclll serum and of the one cure seemingly effected through Its agency on Swlnburno Island, comes a declaration from Dr. J. II. de Lacerdo, of Rio Janeiro, that experi ments with the South American scien tist's therapeutic discovery at S in Paulo, Brazil, have determined It to bo nelthpr curatlvo ror preventive. In tho nbsenco of details, this unauthentic cated statement cannot as vet be ac cepted It would seem, however, ns though the Federal government should Institute a thorough trial of the Sanarelll "Icterolde" serum, or yellow fever anti toxin, upon Its own nccount, when a dell nlto solution might be expeditiously ucbleved. Gold Is Expensive. Trom the Detroit Tribune. Klondlko stories have been plentiful fiom tho beginning of tho stumpede, Illustrative of the doctrine that tho gold of the world has alwajs cost more than It Is worth Tho Klondike gold has been an expensivo luxurj, considering alone the suffering that has been endured In getting It Tho latest heartrending storj Is that of Mrs H W Bens, viho has Just leturncd to her homo In Bay City. She reports that of an expedition of thirteen persons Into tho Interior of tho Kotzebuo sound country. Including her own hus band, she is the only survivor. Scurvj, freezing and exposure were tho principal causes of suffering. Liquid Air for Microbes. From the Philadelphia Ledger. Innsmuch as frost ts the lecognized antidote for jellow fever, tho sugges tion Is made that in cases like the pres ent situation at Hampton, where frost is not to be expected for many weeks, frost conditions may be bad by tho uso of liquid air Tho experiment seems worth trying, for, ut the worst. It would bo harmless and Inexpensive, whilo In theory, at least, tho process would be Identical with the natural one merely tho freezing out of tho tender fever mi crobe. Cannot Boycott the Jail. From tho Troy Times. There Is one Institution In Cleveland that tho riot sympathizers lannot boj eott, and that Is the jail. And from pres ent appearances some of the boj cotters nre llkelj to learn tho fact by harsh ex perience When bocottlng tnkes the form of preventing phjslclnns from min istering to their patients nnd stopping druggists from preparing piescrlptlonc, with fatal resuli to tho sick persons, it comes perilously near murder, nnd thoso guilty of such barbarism should be mado to feel the strong hand of the law. Candler of Georgia. Prom tho Syracuse Post-Standard Governor Candler, of Georgia, is rapidly developing a reputation as a man of re source nnd determination. Tho way to stop a lynching, nceording to Governor Candler's Idea, Is to bo on tho spot whcio It is likely to occur, and ho did so nt New nan the other day, taking command of tho mllttln nnd causing tho safo re moval ot the prisoner to tho Atlanta jail. Candler would make a good army official, but he Is needed more in Georgia than he Is In Luzon. Recipe for Good Government. Prom the Elmlia Advertiser. Tho man who renlly wants to secure nnd to continue good government must go to tho caucuses always If posslblo and must go to tho conventions when chosen for that purpose. IIo must, final. ), voto with both courage and common sense nnd keep doing theso things all his udult life. That Wicked Tariff. Trom the Denver Times. Tho wicked Dlngley tariff ts working havoc. In the fiscal year Just closed nil the countilcs of tho world, with the ex ception of four, which reduced their Im ports of breadstults, largely Increnced their purchases In the United States. Tho sales of manufactured articles to all parts of the world has been beyond all prece dent. Democratic leaders have gotten beyond trying to "explain " Jonas Long's Sons. Wednesday's at the Bm Store SOUPS Bisque of Tomato Consomme Ventasse Lettuce Sliced Cucumbers MEATS Prime Ribs of Beef, au Jus Stewed Chicken, English Green Sauce Stuffed Tomatoes, a la Morton VEGETABLES Mashed Potatoes Green Peas Mashed Turnips, Carney Style DE5SERT ked "Watermelon Apple Pie Tea Coffee Ready to Serve at 11.30, Star Amitomatflc Paper Fasteeer Fastens papers in a jiffy, feeds itself and improved in every respect. Prices lower than ever. We are 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. Rey molds Bros STATIONERS and ENGRAVERS Hotel Jermyn Building. Temperature Tamers. Plenty ot thliiKs llKht here to make tho hot weather not only endurable but enjoyable. And the price at which we offer them Is not going to mako anyone hot, ex cept tho man who charges a higher pi ice for equal eiuallty, and he Is nu merous, Just think of these nnd get cool. Hefrigeratois at leduced prices. OTSXER k FOESYIi, S2S-327 PENN AVENUC. J(u)IM5 HlMJi 5 u y 11115 j I am a warper in a cotton mill, and am twenty-eight years old. I have been troubled with dyspepsia for a lonj; time, and have tried a great many remedies for it and doc tors, but nothing did mc any good until I tried Ripans Tab ules, which have entirely cured me. I believe they will cure any case if used according to directions. I always speak a good word for them and use them myself whenever I need them. Every one who has tried them here says they are the best medicine they have ever tried for indigestion. A,'5ZZiX!Cir2yi,t!!iaS.T.K,,aTl,!!1 """? In pprcrton (without ilu.) l. now for Mia At iw ?.T?X.2Sr,T'ro.a ".VLS1?1! lo prim! Kirtl.liiU.nd.Jl for Uinpuor ami lii,, eMnomlcal Ore iloi"nf KS'SJ"?.'.'.',??!!1.1 iliulMi"? """l hX ro"1' bT Madia fort j-olijlut cenu lo th mr.ii. CnitIp1L Con rT,No UKproc;btrtet..wYorL.-orii.iii1o.rtou(rEn,i,uui)wril lament for fl..-nu Hiru,. TiVuju m alio Ik huiut grocer., gvatni .tortki-viw., mi neuu and at 1 cjupr .loreiand tarUr .uiu. "" Jonas Long's Sons. Dninieer o o o o Lemon Pie Milk Iced Tea Restaurant ii Basement FOR A Twenty-Year GoM-HlM Gase Witli a 15-Jcwclcfl WaMbam Movement, Both Guaranteed The Best Watch in the Whole World for the Money. M1EEC1EMAU k COITOU 1 30 Wyoming Avenue. Lnnther Keller LIHE, CEMENT, SEWER PIPE, Etc. l'nrd and O nice West Lackawanna Ave., SCRANTON, PA. Doe Ceet a Word9 A price within the reach of all, is the cost of placing your wants befoie the people of Seranton through the publicity afforded by the columns of Scranton's family paper, The Tiibune. $10 FINLET Menu's FuinniisIhnirDgs The predictions are swel teriug weather from now ou and if you study your own comfort investigate our stock of Men's Soft Front Shirts as more solid comfort cau b had iu our Perfect Fitting 66 MONARCH" Negligee Shirts. than iu any other we know of. You will fiud here a very interesting line to pick from and at prices altogether to your advantage. For au cn tire week we will offer tha choice of our entile line at $1.00 each. Former Price, $1.50. And no better goods shown at any price. These coma with one pair of laundered separate cuffe and with or without collars to match shirb 2 OTHER SPECIALS Iu same line of goods Ona at 39c, marked from 50c. The Other at 50c, marked from 75c. Comfort also for the boys in our IAMEB-10WH HOUSES KM WAISTS One Line at 39c, for merly joe One Line at 88c, formerly $1.10. Sizo 6 to 14 years. 510 and 512 LACKAWANNA AVENUE The MonEnv IlAitnwAnr. Storb Cam Are made of heavy ma terial, smoothly and strongly put together. The most durable cans made. BOTE k SMEAR CO. 1 19 N. Washington Ave. The Hoot & Coneell Co0 Heating, Plumbing, Gas Fitting, Electric Light Wiring, Gas an Electric Fixtures, Builders Hardware. 04 iaeteaina Aveaue -HENRY BELIN, JR., oeueiai Agcutfortln Wyouunx DJstrla. J' Aiming, lllustlnz, Sportlnj Hmoua.ojl huU (lie ltopauuo UUoiutci. to ii puny i HIGH EXPLOSIVES. (ufety l'uuf. Cap) und i;cpIoJlaci iiooiil 101 Council llulldlu;. fScrAUtJO. AUUXUIUJ thos ronn, - - - vittston. JOHN II SMITH &. SON, Plymouth. I W. E. MULLIGAN, - WilKtm.Uarre. BtaM Milk Finns POIIEB.