.WOT - . t. j T j. & 4T$ r "" T1' S ' Vr " ."-VV;V" tf A -Oh -""W jf i . r v. THE SCRANTON TRIBUNE-TUESDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1900. 1 1 1 f MVYB. IHCltAitt), Kdltor. y, I". JIYMlCi:, Iliwlricii JUnnacr. KiwYorkOfllc 0N.rBt Pole Affcnt lot J'orc!gn Ailwllilng (.. ij Entered nt tlir IVwtnfllee nt Jkranton, I'n,, ai ; Second t1iii Mall Mutter. When cpace will permit, The Tribune Is Mu8 glad to print liott letter from Its frlctiiU lirtf. inc mi uurcnt topics, but Its rule In that they; must be slAiu.tl, for publication, by the writer t real name; oml the lonillllon precedent to at rcptaiicc l that nil lontrlhullotis ehall bo sub ject to editorial revision. . TEN PAGES. ' SCRANTON, OCTOBER 2, 1800. REPUBLICAN NOMINATIONS. National. Prcsldent-WILI.IAM McKISI.F.Y. Vlco-rrcsldent-'lllL-OIIOIIi: JtUOSBVLl.T. ? State. 'ongTesstncn-aM.irse nAt.USHA A. GttOw", nUUKItT If. I'UKIinKHKR. -Auditor (leneral-U. II. HAKDUMir.tlOII. v County. Congics.s-WII.MAM CONNTMi. Judgo-QKOItai: M. WATSON. Shcrlfr-.IOIIN II. I'KLLOVVS. Ticosurcr-J. A. .srilANTOK. .District Aloiney-WII.MAM ft. M'.WIS. I'rotbonotai JOHN ( OI'IXAND. Clerk of Courts-TIIOMAS I'. DANIELS. Recorder of Deeds KMHj BONN. He;jltrr of Will W. K. IHX'K. Jury Conuiilssloncr-VDWAUU 11. STUIIUIS. Legislature. Klret Dlstrlct-TIIOMAS J. HKYNOI.DS. Heeond lJlitrlct-JOHN SCItl'.UI'.R. .in. Third District EDW.vItl) JAMES JH. Fourth District-!. A. I'llII.HIN. ' "If there is any one who believes the gold standard is a good thing, or that it must be maintained, I warn him not to cast his vote for me, because I promise him it will not be maintained in this country longer than I amiable to get rid of it." Wiliani Jentohgs Bryan in a Speech at Xnoxville, Tenn., Deliv ered Sept. 16, 1806. dive President McKinley a Re publican Majority in Congress. TAKING THE Republican lo cal ticket In the order that it will appear on the ofliclal ballot, ve purpose today to say a few words about the nominee for congress. "Congressman William Council," re marks the Philadelphia. Press, "has been renominated in Lackawanna by the Republicans. The nomination was made several months ago, and there has never been any charge that it was procured by fraud or the use of any method repugnant to the self-respect eft ' the Republican people and calculated to bring reproach and dis honor upon the party. Haying been fairly nominated by the majority of the Republican voters of the district, and being an undoubted Republican, Mr. Connoll can justly claim the party support. And the party ought to give him ItH united support in order that there may be no uncertainty about the election of a Republican represe tatlve from that district. AVhat every sincere Republican wants, no matter what his factional feeling may be, is a majority in the next house of rep resentatives at "Washington in har mony with the policy nnd purposes of the McKinley administration and the Republican party. The surest way to secure that result is to support the regularly and fairly nominated Repub lican candidates, and Congressman. Connell on this broad ground, If for no other reason, is entitled to united Republican support." Coming from the foremost news paper opponent of the faction in state politics with which Mr "'onnell has been in some measure id ,-d, this has the greater significance. aJut the situation today is far above factional ism. The re-election of President Mc Kinley is believed by few to be in doubt. Not so certain, however, Is the outlook for a Republican majority In congress. To re-elrct McKinley and then by means of a Democratic con gress tie his hands so that none of his policies could be worked out would be as cruel a fate as that of Prometheus' in the old mythology, who was chained to a rod; while his heart was pecked at by vultures. The personal element in the election of a congressman, in n time of special crisis, is not of the foremost import ance. It Is the vote, rather than the man, which is important at Washing ton. Yet Mr, Connell, as a result of two terms of diligent and faithful ser vice, performed in tho same business like and conscientious; manner which hns characterized his labor3 In the piivato relations of life, has grown familiar with tho wuys of doing things, acquainted with the men of influence nnd power, and proficient in thereruiromeiJts of effective represen tation" 'By returning him for u third nnd.hiAt .term the voters of this district wlll-nof only record their support of Kopulfnu national principles but also assure 'themselves of a thorough safe guarding of local interests at tho na tlonaV'c'upltal. The anlvnl In this country of Sexto Lopez, Agulnaldo's private becrotary, on .the 'invitation of Flsko Warren, 'seems tp have brought to light an other nntl-Imperlallst unknown, Mr. Flake Warren will pirate forward his phot6, t ' No doubt It was very wrong for ChaWea T.. Yorkss to tuko J20.000.000 ot AmcrlcuiV money, go over to Lon don, luy the Charing Cross under ground elcotrla railroad, prepare to ctiulp it throughout with American muchlpery, and ideas, and await the day of profitable dividends. Home In vestments .are preferable. But even the hypercritical Mr. Bryan must ad mit nlaf this bold stroke of the Chi cago ,treet railway magnate will con stitute a valuablo advertisement ot American goods and probably be a means flf greatly quickening our grow ing export trade. If that Is so, It will benefit more than VerUes. it wjj make extra worl; In our mills and fac tories, dhburso additional wages among- their employes tlnd In turn in crease) tho trade and piotlts of the initcher, tbe baker and the candlestick maker to the outermost circle of the community. Money for Investment will naturally eccIc the place of great est Inducement; but it tnkes Repub lican administration to keep money from going Into hiding and lints help ing nobody. m For tho Individual coal operators of Noithcastcrn Pennsylvania, pinioned between the United Mine Workers on tho one side and the conl-carrylng rail roads on the other, there Is now but one mentis of business salvation. That Is the prompt completion of an Inde pendent railroad to tidewater, Why Bryan Hopes Not. IN PENNSYLVANIA, Inst 'Year, according to tho bureau of In dustrial statistic?, exactly $73, 179,333 was paid cut In wages to 151,422 persons as against $02,070,615 In 1898, nnd $45,229,067 In 1S94, being an Increase In 1S99 over ISIS of 24.73 per tent, and an Increase ovoi 1892 of 72.83 per cent. The average earnings In these skilled nnd unskilled Industrie! wore $506,27, as against $454.52 for 137, 985 persons In 189S In the same estab lishments, an Increase of $51.75 per nnnum, or 11.3S per .cent. Seventeen thousand five hundred and forty more persons were employed, nnd thesei In creased the production of the previous year $U1,SS0,S81, or 42 per cent. In tho steel Industry those gains were especially noticeable. The Unit ed States for 1899 produced 10,039,857 gross tons and Great Britain 5,000,000 tons of all kinds, or 22.2 per cent, over IMS, and 60 per cent, of the total pro duction of the United States and about 29 per cent, more than Great Britain. While England in five years gained In steel production 53 per cent., the Keystone stnto gained 141 per cent. In pig Iron In 1899, as compared with 189S, the aggregate value Increased $44,872, 573, or 81.1 per cent., and the value per ton over 1S9S was $5.07, or 51 per cent. The average earnings of labor in this industry, skilled and unskilled, were nearly $100 over 1896, and tho average over 189S was $52.S6. The aveiage dally wage was $1.51, an in crease over 1S98 of 19 cents per day. With a gain soon to come to tho workers in our mines, this showing explains why Bryan need expect noth ing fiom Pennsylvania. An independent, mlddlc-of-the-cam-palgn poll of tho United States, made by the New York Herald on the basis of sample polls taken by special cor respondents In every locality, indicates that McKinley has 23S reasonably cer tain electoral votes, that Bryan has 163 and that 21 are doubtful. The Herald concedes Delaware, Illinois, Kansas and Washington to McKinley, allows Colorado, Kentucky, Maryland, Ne braska, and Utah to Bryan and classes Indiana, Idaho and Montana ns doubt ful. According to the Herald, it Is all over save tho shouting. Parallels and Contrasts. THERE ARE some interesting; parallels and some sharp contrasts between the polit ical campaign now in pro gress in Orcat Britain, which has for its objact the election of a now par liament, and the national campaign in our own country for tho election of an executive and a legislature. There is a noticeable parallel in the fact that in each country tho party in power, which has shouldered most Jlfficult responsibilities to the best of its ability, is being attacked with ferocity by the party out of power, and the nature of tho attack is one of fault-finding and savage criticism and not the proposition of a better policy. On the other hand, a contrast Is visible between the results accom plished by the two parties in power the Conservative in England and the Republican in the United States for the reason that McKlnley's adminis tration of the war with Spain Is being condemned for having been too suc cessful while tho complaint uttered against Lord Salisbury's administra tion of tho South African war is that it was Inexcusably faulty and tardy in its achievements. There is a parallel in the fact that both countries entered upon war handicapped by a defective war ma chinery handed down from earlier times, rusty, creaky and Inelastic. There is a contrast In the fact that while the Liberal, or minority party, In England has sense enough to see and patriotism enough to advocate that these defects In the military es tablishment must be remedied at all costs, as a matter affecting the very life of the empire, the Demociatic party In the United States howls until blue In the face over the imaginary dangers of "militarism" and resists nil efforts to reorganize our little regular nrmy so that It will correspond in efficiency of system to tho admitted individual efficiency of Itsulncompar able personnel. Thejo is a parallel In tho fact that In both countries the "outs" will have to stay out, nnd a contrast In the fact that while the English Liberals -have never advocated trailing their coun try's flag in surrender to Kru'ger, tho paramount Issuo brought forward by the agile commander-in-chief of tho American Popocrats Is one of capitu lation to tho cut-throat Tagalog dic tator, Agulnaldo, In defeat Lord Rosobery will remain a flguro of com manding influence and widespread publlo esteem, for he bus been phil osophic, broad-minded, statesmanllko; but when Vll"1"" Jennings Bryan hears on the night of Nov, 6 tho sec ond doom of his Popullstlo and social ists vagaries as registered in a thun derous second rejection of his candi dacy, ho can proceed to Inter his pros pects of acquiring the presidency for tljey will bo extinct buyond the hope of resurrection. Now that Ervlng "Wlnslow has ac quired (ho letter writing habit, Mr. C'arneglq will doubtless remain In Scotland's woods. Captain Dreyfus again shows a dis position to arouse dangerous social and political elements in France by de manding a revision of his case. In view of the ofliclal array agalnit hhn Pieyfus has been fortunate in secur ing his liberty even though no may have been Unjustly Imprisoned. The conditions of Franco at tho present time will not admit of milch agitation such as Dreyfus would provoke. His friends should advice him for a time to let welt enough alone. Free Silver a Crime. (From a Letter by Abram 8. Hewllt.) THE PARTY which call? Itself Democratic Is In reality Popullstlo and based upon doctrines which, If carried into effect, would produce political an archy. We ate compelled by every consideration of honor, of duty and ot interest to repudiate Bryanlstn and all that It represents. You ask whether I believe In tho coinage of silver In the ratio of 16 to t. You might ns well ask m whether I believed that an ounce should bo made to' pass for a pound in the ordinary transactions of com merce. The ratio is n false ratio. Tho valuo of stiver measured by gold Is, as every one knows, not 1G to 1, but 33 to 1. The proposition, therefore, of tho platform is to declare that 50 cents shall by law bo made equal to one dotlnr. This absurd proposition Is based upon tho professed belief that In 1873 when sliver wns demonetized a crime wns committed, by which creditors benefited at the expense of debtors. Tho fact is that sliver was then overvalued, and hence its demon etization was a relief to debtors and of no benefit to creditors. The extra ordinary thing is that the Kansas City platform proposes to commit the very crime which It falsely denounces as having been perpetrated In 1873. It proposes to substitute a fifty-cent dol lar in payment of debts which ought to be discharged with 100 cents to tip dollar. This is robbery and therefore a crime, in which no honest man can liavo any part. I do not see how a Democrat who is true to the interests of Democracy can in the present exigency take any other course than to vote for the Re publican ticket. I propose myself so to vote and I do this because I am a Democrat who fools that Bryanism and all that it stands for is diametri cally opposed to the principles of the Democratic party, as they were enun ciated by Jefferson, and as they have been construed by all the great men who have led tho Democratic party up to the time of the holding of the 'un happy convention of 1896, when the old organization was broken up. "Is It likely that the American peo ple will now bo so unwise, while many of our great problems are still In the course of solution, as to the change of administration; now while we are still occupied in enforcing our rlchts, and doing our duty by the suppression of the revolutionary and turbulent ele ments in tho Philippines; in politically organizing Cuba and Porto Rico; in maintaining our national dignity in China; in protecting the life of our na tional representative there and the lives of our women and children: In entering upon diplomatic discussions of the greatest delicacy and of the utmost nicety? Is it at all likely that tho American people will dispense with the trained services of Mr. McKinley, of Mr. Hay, of Mr. Root, ot Mr. Hitchcock, of Mr. Long, in ex change for a cabinet of Incompetents such as can only be found in the cir cle cf Mr. Bryan's political and ner sona'i advisers currency fanatics, men willing to throw our Supreme court Into the area of politics, Contraction Ists, Populists and Anarchists? Are the people likely to elect to the presi dency of theTTnlted States a man who favors the silver standard because It permits the repudiation of a debt: a man who'contends that the finances of the country are in danger because in addition to having money to lend at low rates at home, we have surplus money to lend In the world's markets?" William M. Ivlns, In the Sun. Mrs. Conger, wite of the American minister at Pekln, Joins her opinion to that of many others to the effect that China is an abused country and that the people would be better off if left alone. It begins to look as though tho missionaries could profit ably employ their present spare time In a little extra work among the for eigner in China. . . . If tho leaders of the Republican party In Lackawanna county, after years of mutual goro-shedding, can all get together and be good, the rank and tllo ought to have little difficulty in composing their differences and in working unitedly for party triumph. Tho only doubtfuln;ss In the politi cal situation in New York state is whether McKlnley's plurality will fall slightly below or go high above tho 100,000 line. Tho Democrats do well to carry In diana five weeks before election. They will stand little 'show of doing this on election day. m REPUBLICAN OBJECT LESSONS. -r f t f New Hampshire. I)aid.3. Depositors. 1601. 1809. National S.iings 0,101 07,003 15,001 tS,259 103,000 07,071 Total ,,, 70,'sa Incrcaso in No, of deposltoia Hanks. Amount of Deposits. 1S-H, 1S99, ,$ 6,173,107 $ 8,710,147 ,,,,,,,, 27,0U,3&f 36,701,016 National Saiingd Total ,,,,? 3I,1U,3."1 MI,W3,0C3 luiruse In deposits ,, .. 10,353,733 Connecticut. Depositors. lbOI. 3S09. UanltS. National Slate nnd I'rbato Loan and Trust ,, Sulngs ,,, 21,701 27,030 Oil 1,100 570 1,387 I37.0W 203,003 Total ,.,, 231,180 203,125 hit i ease in No. of depositors,, 41,239 Hanks. Amount of Deposits. lS'JI. J8T0. National ..,..,.. 21,231,111 27,053,100 State ond I'liuto 513,031 1,373,078 Loan and Trust . WJ.OSO 811,011 BaWmfS .,.,...., 02,5Q7,SS7 117,800,031 Total .., tUI.Wl.SU ttU.lOT.W 4 Incrcaso In dcpo.lU ,, ,.t 3i,3t2,0b3 -ffff -f TT Tt t PROOFS OF REAL PROSPERITY UNDER McKINLEY ADMINISTRATION Th one supreme test of prosperity in the money in the bank. This is a self-evident truth. If ft man's family is well clothed and fed and in a comfortable home, and besides this ha can put money in the bank, it must be admitted that he is prosperous. In the following unparalleled showing of the increase In the number of deposits from the dark days of the Semocratlo Wilson bill regime in 1804 to tho glorious days of McKinley prosperity, the most marvelous of all is the increase in the number of depositors and in the amount of deposits in the savings banks of the country. where the wage earners of the country put tholr savings. Mr. Bryan says the people are not prosperous. So say all his calamity followers. We commend to them the following official figures from the report of the comptroller of the currency of the United States for 1899. They are unanswerable; TOTAL UNITED STATES. Total-Number of Depositors. Bank. 1894. 1899. National 1,424,068 1,091,183 State and Private 808,766 086,394 Loan and Trust Companies 808,388 443,381 Savings 3,413,477 4,284,618 Total 8,645,867 7,866,414 Increase in number of depositors ... " 9,109,647 Total Amount of Deposit. Bank. 1894. 1899. National 81,165,191,688 81,830,1161140 State and Private 814,448,510 418,881,867 Loan and Trust Companies 839,604,892 578,724,117 Savings 1,865,450,416 1,788,974,481 Total 88,874,589,406 84,608,098,005 Increase in amount of deposit? $1,733,506,599 Average Deposit in all Banks. 1894 .' 8520 1899 v 608 Since the Democratic days of 18T94, there has been an increase of 2,109, 547 bank depositors in the whole United States. This number of more people have had money to deposit during McKinley prosperity. The to tal amount of money deposited to the credit of the people was 82,874, 589,406 in 1894. In 1899 it was 84,608,096,005, showing an increase of almost v one and three-quarter Billions of dollars to the credit of the peo ple who had bank accounts in the five years since the country was suffer ing the agonies of a Democratic administration. Not only has there been this vast increase in the aggregate amount of money placed in the banks, but the average amount of each bank account has increased from 8580, in 1894, to an average of 8602 per bank account in 1899. Who will say that the promises of the Republican party have not been fulfilled P Who will say that the Advance Agent of Prosperity has not visited the American people under the Republican administration of President Mc-KinleyP Wants Sfafe Board of Arbitration John L. Butler In Harrlsburg Patriot. The oluntary trndi; tribunal act passed In the session of 1SS3 should not be confounded with laus enacted in other commonwealths providing for a state board of arbitrators. The act of JISS3, for which Senator Wallace stood sponsor, did not create a permanent board of arbitrators, but pro vided simply for a temporary local board after petition made to the county court. Tho weakness of that act lies in tlds, that there could not be any arbitrators chosen unless both parties, em ployer and employe, petitioned jointly for their appointment. True, cither party by the express terms of the act may petition the court far the appointment of arbitrators, but, by express terms, also, the court is vested with discretionary pow ers. In other words a court of common picas has the power to say that the Interests of tho parties would not bo beneficially affected by the appointment of arbitrators. As a matter of his tory the cmplojcs never succeeded in obtaining the signatures of their cmplojcrs to a joint peti tion for the appointment of a board of arbitra torsand the liw is a dead letter. o As attorney for the labor Interests during the session of 1SS3, I was called in by Senator Wallace to assist him ni the preparation and pissage of the act. It was not intended for anything more that a tentative measure, a feeler, as it were, along the lines of more drastic laws in force on the continent of Europe. In 1886 Massachusetts, New York and Iowa passed laws providing for ar bitration, the two former enacting measures creat ing a permanent state board nnil the latter a measure somewhat like that framed by Senator Wallace. The federal government, for the Dis trict of Columbia, the states o Ohio, Illinois, Indiana, New Jersey, Connecticut, Colorado, Oil! fornia, Kansas, Texas, Missouri, Louisiana, Wis consin, North Dakota, Utah, Minnesota, Michi gan, Idaho, Montana and Wyoming have also enacted measures providing for arbitration of labor disputes sinco Senator Wallace took the initiative in 1833. o Sixteen states now have regularly constituted state boards of arbitration for the settlement of disputes between employers and employes and yet Pennsylvania, the hotbed of strikes and lockouts, the land of coal, Iron, oil, textiles and freight traffic, can boast ot nothing better than a tenta tive measure that was discredited within six months from the day it received tho approval of Governor Pattlson. Of course, the strike In the anthracite region will be a thing of the past before the legislators in 1001 can pass an arbi tration Jaw, but should we not provide for the future? HOW CONSTITUTION FOLLOWS THE FLAG. From a Speech by Senator Bevcrldgc. You might as well require your children to learn tho alphabet by reading Panto in the origi nal; to acquire the multiplication table by making a calculation in astronomy, as to give tho American Constitution the highest, the most complex and most difficult form of gov ernment devised by all human cxpcilcncc to Filipino or Porto Itican. Let a generation in each island learn by experience what government Is for; lot them behold property protected with out a bribe, justice administered speedily, pub. licly and without price, property kept from the hand of the vandal, lief shielded from the knife of the assassin, freo speech guarded even by those whom it sss4ils, and education developing tUy In the midnight which till now h.is reigned in the minds of lite masses. And then, when American institutions have thus done their pure and perfect work, then is the season to consider whether tho Constitution shall follow the Flag, LITERARY PRESCRIPTIONS, From thn Karsas City Star. For clearness lead Macaulay, For loglo read Uurkc and Uucon. For aitton read Homer and Scott, For conciseness read Raion and Pope, For sublimity of conception read Milton. For vivacity read Stevenson nnd Kipling. For imagination read Shakespeare and Job. For elegance read Virgil, Milton and Arnold. For common sense read Benjamin rranklln. For simplicity read Burns, Wluttlcr, Bun) an. For smoothness read Addison and Hawthorne. For Interest in common things lead Jane Aus ten, i For humor read Chaucer, Cervantes and Mark Twain. For choice of Individual words read Keats, Tennyson, Emerson, For tho study of human natuio read Shakes peart and George Eliot. For loving and patient observation of, nature read Thoreau and Walton. M'KINLEYIBMS. 'Could vve have brought Dewey away without universal condemnation at any time from the 1st of May, tlio dav,ot his brilliant victory which thrilled the world with Its boldness and heroism? Wai it fight to order Dewey to go to Manila and capture or destroy the Spjnlsh fleet, and des patch Merrltt and Ids army to reinforce hlmr If It wt duty to scud them there, aud duty re quired theiq to remain there, It was their clear duty to annihilate the fleet, take tbe city ot Manila, and destroy the Spanish sovereignty in the archipelago. Hiving dono all that in the Hue of duty, is there any less duty to remain These hanks are particularly the ones ' there and give to tho inhabitants protection and also our guidance to a better government, which will secure to them peace and order and security In their life and property and In the pursuit of happiness? Are wo unable to do this? Arc wo to sit down in our Isolation and recognize no obligation to a struggling people whose, present conditions we have contributed to make?" "Let us resolve, by our laws and our admin istration of them, to maintain tho rights ot the citizen; to cement the Union by t,till clos.r bonds; to exalt the standards ot American civ ilization, encourage the promotion of thrift, in dustry and economy, and the homely Tirtucs vhich have ennobled our people; uphold the stability of our currency and credit and the un stained honor of tho government; and illustrate tho purity of our national and municipal gov ernment; and then, though tho rain descends and the floods come and the winds blow, the nation will stand, for it is founded upon n rock." "From the day our Hag was unfurled to the present hour, no slain of a just obligation vio lated has yet tarnished the American name. This must and will be as true in the future as it has been in (he past. There will 'to. prophets of evil and false teachers. Spine part of the column may waver and wander away from the standard, but there will ever rally around it n mighty majority to preserve it stainless. '- "Nor will wc ever consent that the wages of labor or its frugal savings shall bo scaled down by permitting payment in dollars of Icis value that the dollars accepted as the best in every enlightened ration of the earth." "In this age of frequent interchange and mu tual dependence, we cannot shirk our interna tional responsibilities if we would; they must be met with courage and wisdom, and w mist follow duty even if desire opposes." "This government of ours is safe in the hands of its people, because they have no other aim but the public good, and no other purpose but to attain for the government the highest destiny and the greatest prosperity," "Indifferent citizenship is always unfortunate; it is always unfortunate to be Indifferent to party, but it is more unfortunate to be indif ferent to principle." "Nothing should "ever tempt us nothing will ever tempt us t'o scale down tho sacred debt of tho nation through a legal technicality." "The American pcoplo never shirk n rcsponsl. billly and never unload a burden that carries forward civilisation." "No achievements are worth having which do not advance civilization and benefit mankind." '"Whatever covenants duty has made for us in the year 1893 we must keep," a'A janitor's "wife Jrf New Vojk City, a lauv wna amen witli tier recently ty me recittM ot woes causal ujr certain spells ot ill health which had assailed her sinco she was a child, bnt which had been almost banished by the so of Rluans Tabules. While at her home in Sweden, when young, she had worked in the fields, as Is the custom there. She sometimes had to1 have her work in great distress with a misery at tne pit of her stomach, Ilcr mother oiten stirred up some Swedish drops for her that afforded a temporary relief. As sha grew older other symptoms developed, among (hem shortness of breath. This, sha .said, occasioned intense suffering, One night while sweeping one of the offices she) 'found a portion of ft small packet of RIpans Tabules in a waste basket, and knowing wliat they were, because sho had seen tliem advertised, she sampled them and found .that "they carried off all her difficulliesright away," It Is only once In a greati 'while now tlut she takes one, but if sho gets over-tired when her work is extra hard and feels tho slightest twlnge'of bad feeling, she says a Rlpans Tabule alwavs cuts it short. Sho buys them at the drug store now, but does not use ten cents' worth in a month, " ' A new rtjrlo jxK-ltH eoiUuilwt rml tnuxj jwua la dniE ttaru k n enra. p( IBs Ovc-ccat urtou an ti iCOJUiXT, Ho. 1 SprtM Btnx W' . Tp lvv-pric(J com U intojdol for ti poor iui1 uw tcoauniaal. 0 Ua J)UbuIticLiUlbTEi:xUfej:udLaalrtj-clalicaU Ui Uturuu (Sural Btmv, Mr Yorfc-uc rfb(l carton (x tuvlbTvUI b tent for ? ntk f34ji"g$"$"84"i Vft . V Meaos Many people ask, What's in a name ? Shakespeare says that a rose would smell as sweet by any other name. But in trade a name means very much We claim and there are thousands who will say the same thing, that our name stamped on a shoe means that the shoe is the best of its kind. The best at the price. Why ? Because ounname represents a life work in the shoe busi ness. Our constant study, Our constant labor. And to it we have given our best thought and our best efforts, and you have helped us. New Fall Styles for Men and Women. 4 Our Me!la Shoes For Ladies. In twentyfive different styles to suit every body and fit all feet. ' LEWIS & REILLY, ATiWAYS BUSY. $ eft 'eft $ e ef $ $ $ f nercereaan & Connell s Temporarily at 139 PENN AVE. CONTINUED fiiesa; T7 TT b 1LJ1LJ Jewelry, Silverwear, Etc Our full force of workmen at work again, as usual. Watch Repairing and all kinds Jewel ry Repairing and Engraving done promptly. IS YOUR " HOUSE VACANTT IP SO, , TRY A "FOR RENT" AD. IN THE TRIBUNE. ONE CENT A WORD. Swelisli'"woman7very much interested i a paper cutoa (wltliou Uu) U sow rar itU it itm ' uaMa PStbiiicA1 g4444'$'4'4"i"24' ?. I It's O. K k For Gentle- men. Twenty five different5 styles. 8 kinds' of Leather. j 3,50peiriprfrj 114-116 Wyomiig Aye-j ESTABLISHED 1888. gA '$ "$ $ $ $ $ e$i $"$' $. eft ' EEY k Your special attention is directed to our elegant and exclusive line of Petticoats which have just been opened. The cut and fit of this sea son's goods conform to the modern ideas of dress; and are different in many ways from other seasons styles. We make particular mention of tlhree numbers in an en tirely new French Pattern Skirt, m Black only, at $12, $14 and $20. the entire body of which is made of a Pure Jersey Silk, pliable as a Silk Glove, with one plain and one accordeon plaited, graduated flounce of fine Taffeta. "They are ex ceedingly handsome and ex clusive." Other styles and numbers, in both black and colors, from $3.?S UD. Two specials in black mer cerized, of an elegant quality, and handsomely made at $1.98 aid $2.5a on which we challenge com petition. We make a specialty of Moreen and Mercerized Short Length Petticoats to be worn with Rainy Day Skirts. 110-512 LACKAWANNA AVENUE fcoD BL15S' , --w. I OUR Swear" If you haven't tho proper office sup Piles. Como In and give us a trial. We have the largest nnd most com plete line of ollico supplies in North eaBtein Pennsylvania. If it's a Bood thing, wo have It, Wa make a specialty of visiting cards -ond monogram stationery. ReynoldsBros Stationers and Engravers, Hotel Jermyn Building OK A SHOE - 3M 1 JrlLJksBllL AstflsBBBasT Mad mi Colored UK Pctticiats 'Air. jvir7 r x' .; -' "Don't I n ) WV.&fe -- . faJa!t. 4