THE SC11 ANTON TlUBUNl-IiTUDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1800. Published nnllj'. Kxrtpt Sunday, by Tho Tribune Publishing Company, at Fifty Cents a Month. New York Ofllcc: ISO Nassau St.. 8. 8. VHKHLAND. Solo Agent for Foreign Advertising. Entrrcd nt tho rostodleo nt 8cranton, I'n.. as Seccnd-Clasa Mall Matter. When fpaen will permit, Tho Trlhuno l always Rind tn print short letters from Its frler.ds bearlni; on current toplea but IIh rule Is that the&o must ho Dinned, far publication, by tho writer's real name. SCltANTON, SKI'TKMURU 22. 1893. REPUBLICAN NOMINATIONS. State. Justice of tho Supremo Court-J. HAY TJHOWN. of Lancaster. Judce of tho Superior Court-JOSIAII It. ADAMS, of I'hlladclphla. Btnto Treasurer- LIRUTnNANT COI. ONRl JAMES K. UAHNETT, of WnHhlngtnn. Election day, Nov. 7. Tlio rccont grand Jury took a com mendable position In tho location of rnsts on Ignored bills, putting thorn, In nearly every instance, upon tho prosecutor. Firm adherence to this policy would soon check tho rising tldo of trivial cilmlnul business In our courts. What the People Want. IF SCKANTON Is to have nny more public Improvements or 13 to pay for those already con tracted for, tho people must con tribute tho money by consenting to ad ditional taxation. This la the con densed substance of tho recent corres pondence between tho city controller usd the city solicitor. The city Is now up to Its limit In debt; the methods by which it transacts business are sueli that Its prevailing income Just about meets llxeil and current charges, not Including new improvements; and In asmuch as no change for tho better is to bo expected, the only thing for the dear people to do is to put their hands a little deeper in their pockets and put up more cash to be squan dered. It Is true that In the opinion of many competent business men the city's pre sent Income would be ample to meet all necessary expenses and leave a gen erous margin besides If It were ad ministered with approximate fidelity and Intelligence. It is true that thousands of dollars of city money are expended each year in ways that busi ness principles condemn ns wasteful if not dishonest, and that these wasteful expenditures are continued deliberate ly no matter how clearly their waste fulness Is pointed out. It is true that charges of Jobbery, some of them very serious, have been made In the press and on the floor of councils from time to time until tho belief of the people is that there must bo some truth Is them; but no action Is taken to ascertain the facts. Vicious con ditions are allowed by the people to run nlong, year after year, and the natural consequence Is that waste mounts Into debt, debt Into insolvency and then the taxpayers are at last forced to come to the rescue with a new bond Issue. There is nothing to prevent this sort of thing from continuing indefinitely. The people will murmur when their taxes are raised, bin inasmuch as tho raising Is a direct consequence of their own Indifference their murmuring U illogical and ineffective. They evident ly want this kind of devil-may-care municipal government, else they would change It; and if they want It they aro entitled to have It. France is Indeed a singular nation. She refused to get excited at a period in tho Dreyfus affair when everybody expected to see the brickbats fly. Slow Work in Cuba. I.N'E MONTHS of American control of Cuba will soon have elapsed and yet tho Island remains, In Its legal conditions that Is to say in the meth ods by which Justice is administered between man and man and In the prin ciples of Its Jurisprudence almost, if not exactly, where it was when the American nation intervened. Improve ments have been effected to perhaps a very creditable degree in the Island's sanitary condition. In its public works and conveniences and in tho morals of its customs administration; In details of public enterprise the natives have been treated to admirable object les sons; but down at the bottom of their discontent. In the fundamental matter of ho administration of Justice, which is tho surest Index of any people's civil ization, not only has no particular change been effected but none to our knowledge has yet bet'ii seriously at tempted save in special localities and cases, if any Is in serious contempla tion the fact has not been made public. Take one illustration, tho matter of libel, ' Some time ago General Ludlow had, by virtue of his authority as mili tary governor of Havana, to suppress n venomous and obsceno publication In that city known as El neconcentrodo. In this action ho was subsequently sus tained by tho secretary of war, who, in reference to the case, wrote; "It Is to bo regretted that tho persons re tpnnslble for tho publication cannot bo nominally punished." That they can not be so punished Is because the In tervening power In Cuba has etfeeted no amendment of the ridiculous Span ish law on libel, which does not hold the publisher of a libel responsible but only tho writer a provision easily evaded by tho hiring of professional scapegoats to assume tho responsibil ity of authorship, generally convicts already serving time in prison. This Is only ono illustration of the grotesque ness of the Spanish system of Juris prudence which remains in force on tho island, to tho infinite disgust of all intelligent Inhabitants, both Spanish and Cuban. A thousand others could bo cited. AVe havo the worij of General Wood for It that until held up by General Ilrookc he found not only llttlo dlfll culty but actual encouragement among the natives in doing away, as speedily and ns effectually as possible, In the territory within hU Jurisdiction, with the dofectlvo and obsolete Spanish court system and In substituting, N frankly nnd fully, Anglo-Saxon prin ciples and methods of fair and open adjudicature. lie did not take the slow and tortuous pathway to this vitally necessary reform which seems to have been preferred by tho rnutlne-lovlng governor general at Havana, who, It U to bo feared, lets "I dare not" wait upon "I would"; he took the short-cut. straight to tho heart of tho situation and carried out Immediately tho logic of American Intervention by removing without delay the paramount cause of It. His course found favor wllh tho Intelligent Cubans, because It wns both manly and wise; nnd It possessed the additional advantage of saving a great deal of valuable time. When will the authorities at Wash ington discover that the way to recon struct Cuba Is to reconstruct it? If the navy department Is to be run by the politicians of Maryland, wo frankly advise the Hon. John D. Long, of Massachusetts, to get out of it. Indiana's Roads Exhibit. Ei' nop Paris that l'nOPKAN visitors at the Paris exposition which, now Dreyus has been par doned, is sure to spring for ward into renewed and accelerated public Interest arc to be treated to ono exhibit which, If they study it intelli gently ought to do something to correct erroneous foreign opinions of the Unit ed States. WV refer to the roads ex hibit planned by Governor Mount of Indiana, which Is thus described by a writer for the Chicago ncconP "It is not Governor Mount's Intention to givo tho European countries 'new wrinkles In road construction, but rather show them what a community can do with swampy, boggy, wild ter ritory in a short space of less than a centuiy. On" of the most Interesting features of his collection oT pictures will bo iin old toll gate, a stretch of old plank road and a sight of the bottom less bogs over which turnpikes now spread, lie will show tho old wooden bridges, tho old miller going to market on his horse, which sank belly-deep many times. He will show how leS3 than a half-century ag.i doctors had to carry saddlebags and tho mall was transported on horseback for the rea son that that was the only way of reaching points located In bogs. With these pictures ai -tin Introduction ho can show some stretches of Indiana's 50,000 miles of graded and gravel high way and S,GS. miles of pike, which will compare favorably with tho roads of southern France and Italy and excel those of some European countries.." The writer for the Record adds: "Tho whole central section of Indiana is now covered by a net work of free pikes and graded gravel roads. The farmers can reach their markets any season of the year. Northern Indiana has made wonderful strides in the last few years in building graded and gravel roads. The eastern section Is practically fre of poor roads. In Wayne county alone there are over S50 miles of as good roads as can be found In the Missis sippi section. The most notable plka in tho nation the great National road running from Washington to St, I.ouls -pastes the entire width of the state and divides the Hoosler community in to two equal parts. The state recently passed laws vhich enabled the counties to purchase toll systems and today there are less than 200 of a totnl of no -009, of Indiana's graded and gravel roads that are under levy of toll gtep. A fraction over 10 of these 200 mllm is In ono county Fountain. The toll gate in Indiana, except in this ono county and a few communities, Is a faint outline of the past.' To appreciate progress of this kind Is one of tho fundamentals of good gov ernment we must bear In mind that a largu part o Indiana !s composed of swampy soil, where good roads aro hard to build and hard to keep In re pair: and also give duo consideration to the fact that Indiana Is not a stato rich In mineral wealth, like Pennsyl vania, hut ono inhabited, until very recent years, largely by farmers of lim ited means, upon whom taxes bear heavily. Imagine the rich and elderly Keystone state sending a roads exhibit to Paris! Dreyfus should come to America if only to get acquainted with a repub lican form of government In which civil authority resting on willing popu lar consent is supreme and unques tioned. American Tea. ONE OF T agrlcultui Washlngt THE hobbies of the grlcultural department at lngton is the cultiva tion of tea in tho United States. Experiments made under its auspices in South Carolina have demon strated the reusability of raising good tea In this countrj. In places where con ditions of soil, temperature and rain fall are suitable, and now the depart ment Is trying to discover how many of such places there are. Very lately Its attention wns turned to "Wyoming and Professor Mad of Chejvnne wns authorized to make ex periments In soil watered by irrigation. It Is tho belief of Mr. Charles IT. Shep ard, the agent of the department who conducted the experiments In South Carolina, that If the proper amount of moisture can be secured by artificial means, tho problem will bo solved. At Plnehurst, S. 0., where ho experiment ed, the annual rainfall was less than 57 inches, although in the famous tea centers of tho Orient it Is frequently as hlgnxns &0 inches and in some places It goes us high as 130 Inches. The bulk of this rainfall In the oriental centers is between May and September; where as In this country It. Is more evenly distributed. To reproduce oriental con ditions It will, in his opinion, he neces sary to provide supplemontary'molsturs during tho summer months by resort ing to artificial means. henc,e the dpol slon to experiment In tho Irrigated fields of Wyoming. Mr. Shepherd's experiments In South Carolina date back to IS')?, when ho planted about 100 tea plants in an aero of ground. The output of grern tea. from tills garden has been us follows: In 1W2, 50 pounds: 1S93, SI pounds; Ufll, 1M pounds- IRPJi. 321 pounds; 1WG, 000 pourdH' 189?, CIS pounds: 1S98, S.200 pounds. Twolvo hundred pounds of greon ten will afford 30.1 pounds of stan dard tea for commercial use. Con ducted on the bq'Iw of Mr. Shcourd's experiments tho tea. gardens net a profit of 10 touts per pound, or about $40 per ncre. It Is believed that with tho aid of supplemental Irrigation nnd by conducting the gardens on n larger scnle, a profit of 25 cents a pound or $100 nn ncre may be realized. Inas much as the United States Is now pay ing to foreigners for tea In the neigh borhood of $15,000,000 a year It will be seen that if we can grow our own ten or u considerable part of It, the saving in money will bo considerable, not to mention the satisfaction lnwbe ing Independent of foreigners for sup plies. n "The pardoning of Dreyfus can only bo the natural, legitimate) and spontan eous action by which tho representa tives of the civil power refuse to as sociate themselves with the obstlnato Iniquity committed by tho military Judges. It Is the government of 'c publlcan Franco repudiating with hor ror any part In this denial of Justice. As for us, wo shall pursue with In creased ardor tho task of public salva tion to which we havo devoted our selves." In these ringing words Fran cis do Pressense, tho ablest nnd brav est Journalist in France, defines the programme of tho "Drcyfusards." May their backbones keep stiff. A lady animal trainer nt Philadel phia was severely wounded the other day by n leopard under her care. Tho blood-letting features of entertain ments of this kind aro not always pleasant for tho trainer, but the con shit ration shown by tho leopard in (.hewing tho woman's arm at the be ginning of the season so that she might have full benefit of the freo advertis ng thus obtained is worthy of a iu bier animal. , Danish butter makers, it is said, Im prove the quality of. their product by feeding their cows Minitower cake. This hint seems well worth a trial by farmers In this country who endeavor to enrich tho milk by keeping cows on a diet of sour ensilage asd brewery awtll. The gloomy predictions of a Middle town palmist caused a young girl of that city to attempt suicide. This Is a strong argument that palmistry which Is not of the glad hand variety should be discountenanced. Now that Dreyfus has obtained his pardon and a cablegram of congratu lation from the Philadelphia Times, there Is no reason why he should not, like tho hero of the fairy tale, "live In peace forever after." Gruesome war pictures are seldom seen in our Philadelphia exchanges at present, but half-tone snap shots and buzz-saw etchings of the National exposition to a certain extent supply tho demand. The cut of Oom Paul's maxllllary lambrequins ought to be convincing refutation of the assertion that the president of the Transvaal republic ,was not a native of Mauch Chunk. A" roon as the stock of fireworks has been exhausted In New York we may expect Information that tho Dewey celebration was a "vindica tion" for the yellow Journals. The public will doubtless be inter ested to ascertain If the Esterhazy challenges aro declared off with the pardon of Dreyfus. Now that reed birds are in season the English sparrow will do well to roost high. HUMAN NATURE STUDIES Paris in 1000. An exposition guide Is showing tho nervous American over tho grounds. Tho OuldH Zees cos e building of ez nihnlnlstratione. Ket des two-hoontr an' The American Wh-what's that? Tho Guide What Ulstur-r-rbs monsieur? Tho American That sound of hammer ing? Tho Guide Kat ees nosslng. Ect ces only zo mob building a bar-r-rlcade in zo Jioulovard llaussmnn. Tho American Dut listen to that deep booming hound! Tho Guide Kot ees nosslng. monsieur, I assure you. V.o Iteds aro blowing up zo pavement wlz dvnamltc. Tho American Hut see that dull red glaro over there! Tho Guide Monsieur ces unduly agitat ed, '.u red glaro ees nosslrtg but zo pe trolouses tr-r-rjing to bur-r-n up zo Quartlcr Latin. The American I am sure I hear the crash of tlass. The Guide Ket ces qulto possible. Zo zhentlemcn of zo commune amuse zem sclves br-r-raklng zo vlndoys of zo 'Otcl Ue yille. The American Hark! I hear tho crash of musketry! Tho Guide Zo Natlonnle Guard Is firing on zo r-r-rioters Monsieur must not feel nlnr-r-med. V.o fighting is fully two t-nuarvs away. The American Th-thero they go again! Listen to tho yelling! See, the fires aro increasing! Wh-what was thut went zip by my oar? Th Guide Par-r-dong, monsieur, but znt wns a str-r-rny bul-lct. If monsieur will lie lint on ze gr-r-round wlz mo zece vlll bo no danger. I tell you cet ees nosslr.g. Veo haf zls sort of thing every day. Vcn you get used to eot you vlll not mind. Tho American My friend. Tho Guide Monsieur? Tho American Tell mo when tho first train leavs Pails to connect with the tlrst boat for Now York. The Guldo Eemposslble. monsieur. Eot ees under-r-ftood zat zo Sons of Llbcrteo vlll blow up all zo bridges nn' anucdooks. n r-rauwny statlones ycca morning. Tho American GoocV heavens! C -Clevo. land Pluln Dealer. A Thoroughbred. Ho was delighted to meet the bunco man. Ho set Ids grip-sack down In tho mlddlo uf tho street to talk over old friends In tho town where both had spent their happy boyhood days. Ho took oft his silver-rimmed spectacles und wiped them with lis red cotton handkerchief, so as to get a better look nt tho nephew of his dear old friend. "Did I ui.derstami ou to bo hiquiiln' whether I had nny sportln' blood In my veins?" ho usked, after tho oilier said something In a low tone. "Well, I should surmise thnt l'vo got a few droits. Hut I don't play only one game. Faro? No, 'taln't furo. You git un even chance fur yer money nt somu 'stages of tho gumo In fnro. no l'vo henrd tell, 'Taln't risky enough fur me. No; taln't rouleite, nor ylt poker, where ye Jes' put a few dol lars down on tho tablo nn' whero It's all over In, a minute, or two. 'Taln't boss race, neither. You kin holler fur quick action, but glmmo fcu'thln' llngcriu', su'thln' whero tho suspense hangs right over yer an' youiiold ytr breath tell y've totter swing yer urms to icsuscltate yer- self. Kvcry year I tnko all my cash cnpl tal nn' go over to tho lay-out. I put somo of It on oats nil' somo of It on corn nn' somo of It on wheat with n few sltlo bets on awect corn nn' various fancy vege tables. Then I git out every mornln' nn' bet r day's work an' watch out fur tho weather, week uftcr week, nn' spend my nights wondcrln about grass-hoppers nn' locusscs un' sccli. It takes u lung time to find out whether I win or not, but it's mighty Intcrcstln', an' I llko nn cxcltln" life. You might wait fur somo o' the hired hands to romo to town an' git 'cm to tnko a hand In tho small amuse ments you've mentioned. Hut you might as well bear iu mind that when you tncklo a fust-class farmer, you'ro goln' up agin' ono o' tho uportiest people on earth." Philander Johnson, in Washing ton Star. Was Well Rewarded. Madame Antoinette Sterling, the con tralto singer and cvnngcllst, had nn ex perience In tho IJombay presidency, In dia, which is ns quaint ns any of Kip ling's tales of the hills. Bho was cam paigning with Pundltn, Itnniabnl, ami through her magnificent volco was draw ing thousands of natives to her meetings. They had never seen that kind of a mis sionary before, and had never heard n volco llko hers. They were so pleased with her work that they said to them selves: "This Is a foreign woman guru, nnd for fear of giving' offenso to us sho has omitted to put her begging bowl outside of her door for us to put in tho custom ary contributions." In India every guru or holy person car ries a brass, wood or clay begging howl, Into which tho devout put some small sum of money. Mmlamn Sterling walked out upon the veranda of her bungalow eno morning nnd there, to her amaze ment, found two beggings bowls. One. a llttlo one, with two annns In it IntcmloJ for the Pundltn, and one, an enormous affair, containing n handsome sum of nmins and rupees for herself. The only explanation should could ever extract from the servant was this: "Llt tlo bowl little money for the little Pun dltn with little voice. Iilg bowl-big money for big Mlssahlb with big voice." NUBS OF KNOWLEDGE. Persia first giew tho cherry the pent h and tho plum. Tho tonnago of tho merchant mnrlne of tho four leading powors Is us follow. Great Britain, 8,923,000; United States 4,750,000; Germany, 1,550,000; France, Ml, (.00. Tho value of horses owned by farmers In this country Is $l."2,G19,39i, or consldcr nbly more than one-fifth of the totnl United States currency, including gold, silver and paper money, in circulation to day. With the general Introduction of auto mobiles cruelty to animals will almost cease. A driver will no longer bo aide to cxcrclso his whip and if ho forces his motor unduly he is reasonably certain of a good repair bill. One of the curiosities of New Zealand Is a vegetable caterpillar. What happens is that a wicked plant darts Its seed Into an unfortunate, caterpillar and tho seeds grow to plants sometimes a foot long. In the meantlmo tho caterpillar dies a lingering death. On the authority of the greatest manu facturer of dental supplies in the coun try there are over 40,000 ounces of puie gold worked up annually for dentists' use for material in filling teeth, In plates and solders, tho value of this gold ap proximating $1,000,000. Organ-grinders In Vcrvlers, Helgtum, aro compelled by law to appear every morning before tho pollco superintendent nnd play their Instruments. The organ which Is found out of tune must be set In order before a license to play on the street Is granted. Electricity derives its namo from tho Greek word for amber, electron, becauso Thales about COO B. O, discovered that amber, when rubbed, attracts light and dry bodies; and In the twelfth century tho scientific priests of Etruna drew light ning from tho clouds with Iron iods. The grave of Captain Paul Jones hus not been located by the government, through Its Inquiries of the embassy In the French capital. He died on July H, 1792. In Parts, and was burled with high est honors by tho French government, but tho placo of his burial cannot now bo determined. A typewrite. Invented by nn English man has a device Iiv which vertical col umns of figures can bo written as readily as they can bo set in type. By means of a special space key the operator Is en abled to write nil over tho paper, the whole width of the paper or in narrow columns nt will. From 1SS4 to 18S5 women have taken out f905 patents. AVotnen have Invented many important things. Tho woman who began by Inventing a corset Is now Inventing reservoirs and dams. Another woman has invented a lock with 3,0u0 combinations and a letter-box, now in dally use for houses. France In war has 1,000 soldiers to 15, 407 inhabitants; Germany In war has 1,000 soldiers to 17,427 Inhabitants; Great Brit ain In war has 1,000 soldiers to 72,419 In habitants, while under tho house bill en acted during the lato war tho United States provides for only 1,000 soldiers to about 701,000 Inhabitants, Only one-half of those who enter the military academy at West Point contlnuo In It long enough to obtain a commission, and In part becauso of the severity of tho discipline. Six thousand six hundred nnd fifty-eight cadets were admitted to tho academy up to and Including l&S-J, and only 3.3SI of theso were graduated. In futuro all Russian students who ere. ato or lnstlgato disorder, whether In tho university or out, will bo sent Into the army to bervo from ono to threo years. The regulation applies also to those who persistently refus.o to contlnuo their studies. Another regulation orders the removal from the lists of all married students, as Improvident marriages urc a causo of pauperism Tho world's production of gold for 1S99, If Australia and South Africa maintain tho rato with which they began the year, will probably reach $310,000,000, or about M.nno.OuO more than Iu 1S9S. At tho end of tho current year tho threo principal countries will rank In tho following or der In tho list of gold-producing dis tricts: South Africa, $100,ooO,(kXl; Aus tralia, $7B,0OO,O0O: United States, $7l,000,O. Tho power of tho Mannlichcr rltlo was recently demonstrated in an accident near Prague Two gendarmes entered a. room in an Inn and closed tho door, putting their rifles In the comer. One Jlllo fell and discharged Itself, tho bullet golpg through tho door Into tho next room, whero a party was dancing. It passed through tho body of a musician, Killing him, and then through tho bodies of live other men, all of whom were dangerous ly wounded. British census reports of family names gives for England and Wales 2.V).G0t5 Smiths, 112,100 Jorescs, with Williams, Taylor, Davies nnd Brown following In order: For Scotland Smith leads, followed by McDonald, Brown, Thomson, Itobcrt son, Stewart nnd Campbell Murphy Is ahead In Ireland, there being 62,ooo of them, then come Kelly, 63,900; Sullivan, 43,600; Walsh, 41.700; Smith. 37,000; O'Brien, 33,400; Byme. 33.000: liven. 32,000; Conner, 31,200; O'Ncll, 29,100. and llellly, 29.000. Following Is a list of tho deppest wells In tho world: In Kurope, ono ut Pussy, France, depth, 2.C00 feet; at La Chupelle. Paris, depth, 2,950 feet; at Frenelle, Paris, depth, 1.79S feet; at Neusalwerk, near Mlnden. depth, 2.2S3 feet; at Kissengen, Bavaria, depth, l,7k7 feet; at Sperenbeig, nenr Berlin, depth, 4.190 feet, which is said to bo tho deepest In tho world; nt l'esth, Hungary, depth. 3.S12 feet, lit the United States thero nro wells located nt St. Louis, depth, 3.S43 feet: at Louisville, depth, 2.0&G feet; at Columbus, O., depth, 2,77514 feet; ut Charleston, S. C, depth, 1,250 feet THE STAHS. Ted says the stars aro flre.flles, lost, As far, fur up they flew; noy calls them llttlo silver nails To hold the floor of blue; May calls them gimlet-holes in heaven. To let the glory through. -Mlru C. Pursons. yvNo J '. ft r Q. V- ttipir Vr3 Ym Cannot Think No matter how hard you try of a better place to buy your office sup plies and stationery than at our es tablishment. We carry our lines as near complete as possible. We cater for the up-to-date trade and if its a good thing in office wants we havh it. We still put the planitarv pencil sharpener on trial in any offiice for ten days free of charge, Our line of Stationery and bngraved work is as dainty as ever and wish you to in spect our lines. Reynolds Bros STATIONERS anJ ENGRAVERS. Scranton Pa. is Yoim HOUSK VACANT? IF SO, TRY A "FOP. nKNT" AD. IN THE TrUUUNE. ONE CENT A WOHD. : s The Modern i s t 7 : I V I I i m I i i ii Nil i I - inpirrw Eycfy Should attend the Cooking Exhibit today and see the GREAT MAJESTIC STEEL RANGE at work, During this week every lady visitor to the Modern Hardware Store will be presented with a "Ring" Paring Knife free of charge. Pillsbury Flour will be used at this Exhibit. FOOTE & SHEAR CO. 1 19 Washington Avenue. ONE GIVES RELIEF. Don't Speed a Dollar until you OJg&9C!3e(9MS.: You can buy them in Ten Tabules If you don't find that sort of Ripans Tabules At the Druggist's Send Five Cents to The RirANS Chemical Company, No. io Spruce St., New York, ami they will bo sent to you by mail j or, 13 cartons will be mailed for 48 cents. The chances are ten to one that Ripans Tabules arc the very medicine you need. r JK O U 7 IS k& s & & 1L s. V The H-taunt & Connell Co0 Heating, Plumbing, Gas Fitting, Electric Light Wiring,' Gas an Electric Fixtures, Builders Hardware; 434 Lackawanna Avenue Letter Keller LIME, CEMENT, SEWER PIPE, Etc. yard and Offloo West Lackawanna Ave., SCRANTON, PA. Hardware Store. for e have tried the paper 5-cent cartons for Five Cents, ) "i iisewifc ).jy FINLEY New Fall Dress Goods Fresh arrivals daily of tho newest things iu Fine Black Crepons, Black and Colored Armure Crystallines, New Camel's Hair Plaids, Plaid Black "Rever-. slble Suitings,'' Iu the newest color effects, for Separate Skirts. Complete Line of f.' for Tailor-Made Suits, iu black only. Buiiiiestic ancl Scotch Iu the new Oxford and Brown Mixture. A Very Desirable Line. 530 and 512 LACKAWANNA AVENUE A Gold-Filled Gase Witt a 15-Jcwclcd WaMlam Movement, Both QMaraeteed The Best Watch in the Whole World for the Money. ME1RCEEEAU k OMEIX 130 Wyoming Avenue. Temperature Tamers. Plenty of things rlsht hero to make tho hot wenther not only endurablo but onjoyable. And tho price at which wo offer them Is not frolng to innke anyone hot, ex cept tho man who charges a higher pilco for dual quality, and he la nu morouB, Just think of these and get cool. Refrigerators at reduced prices. G1WSTER El FORSYTH, 325-327 TENN AVENUE. HENRY BEL1N, JR., O'cucrcU Agent for tua Wyoinlnj DUtrieifJ.' Ululns. masting, Sporting, Hmoko'.ou uud U10 ltopuuno Utiemlcol t'o.npaiiy'i HIGH EXPLOSIVES. tutety Kino, cnni niul Kxploian Uuom 101 Conuell llulldluj. bcrtiuOa. AUKNUltii thos. ford. - - - wttston. JOHN U, BMITH & BON, Plymouth. V. 13. MULLIGAN, - Wllkes-Haiie. FOR $10 HPinrs POIUEBo