""Jis,' c " "ifv.nVji -i via",ftvj 4 - lfH r -" vd i 10 THE SCRANTON TRIBUNE-THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1902. t ''"'''' I I I I n II READS LIKE A FAIRY STORY FIFTY-SOLD GROWTH OF ELEC TRIOITT IN iJO YEARS. Unexampled Progress of tho Elec trical Industry in the United Stales Indicated in a Census Bui-' letin, nnd the Industry Is as Yet Hardly Out of tho Nursing Bottle Stage. (Wislilnclon Cuitfttpondcnce Urooklyn Kngle. 7R9, of which 114 were time there Were 8,891 The story of the nhctioiTiuimi prowth jf tho eleetilcnl Industry In tho United tjtntrs, of ItH jump lit vnlue from'$l, 000,000 to close on lo ?1OO,OOO.00O wltlihv twenty yofiM, and of tho world'a abso lute dependences upon ItH nitenclcs for electric Intelligence, light, licnt, power, transportation, ptc, Is told In a bul letin issued by the census bureau. It forms one of the most Interesting nar ratives that can be related of the na tion's giant strides toward wealth and power. Just as the period between 1S30 and 3860 was notable for the discovery of the telegraph, that between 1SG0 and 3S70 for the beginning of dynamo con struction; that between 1870 and 1SS0 for the application of the science to the fctock "ticker, burglar alarm and other electrical conveniences; that between J8S0 and 1800 for the development of telephony and electric lighting, the period between 1890 and 1000 was mark ed by the unprecedented adoption of the electric motor for power transmis sion, factories, etc. Tho report states that the average annual expenditure on electricity In the United States for each Individual of a population not far from 75,000,000 was $7. Of this amount about $1.25 per head would represent the demand for electric apparatus and supplies, the income of the electric traction companies would reach not less .than $3 per-head; while that from electric lighting would reach about SI. 50. The returns available would also Indlrate that not less than 75 cents per bead would represent the expenditure on telephone service, and 50 cents per bead the outlay for telegrams, fire nUrms and kindred work. These val ues, which are conservatively put, are rapidly Increasing. At least one ex planation of the wonderful rise of the Vnltod States to their present position In International affairs and among the manufacturing nations may be found In this manifest willingness of its peo ple to pay as much for electricity as fur bread. The Dynamo Did It. The development of the dynamo to supplant tho primary battery was re sponsible for tho sensational advance In the value of the Industry. Of the JMOO.OOO.OOO annual product of the elec trical manufacturing industry, at least 75 per cent, would have been unavail able to the public In the days, of the primary battery. In 1SS0 then; were but 70 establishments for the manufac ture of electrical apparatus and sup plies, while In the census year 1000, 580 were reported. The output, of these es tablishments In JsSO was valued at J2. tjdO.UOO; by IMiO it had jumped to $19, 000,000. and in 1900 It reached the enor mous figures of $01,300,000. The figures here quoted do not rep resent corporations in the fields of tele graph, telephony, electric railways, nlectrlo lighting,, etc., in which the ap paratus produced is put into operation, but merely the output of the establish ments devoted to tho manufacturing of i-Iectrieal apparatus and supplies. Xow York leads all the other states In the item of establishments of this L-h.iractcr, having 184, Illinois coming eoond with S2 and Ohio and Pennsyl vania, close up with 04 and US' respec tively. On the other hand, in rmi.ss value or output Pennsylvania heads, the list with $20,900,000 a cmnuuieil with S17.60O.00O for New 1'orK. $11,600.1)00 for Illinois and $S,000,000 for llasacluisetts. In lflOO the average size of the dyna mo produced was about 75 hortn power, the total output for the yeai of dneet nr continuous cuirtirit-appaiaw.s iL-pre-sentlng 9,182 machines o! 42i,iMl hoi so power, valued sit $G.L-0.,0(0. The aei ige size of the nlteriutmiv cuni'ta ma chine was 254 horse pouoi. mil thai of the direct current was but 47 hoi.se power. Electric Propulsion. The statistics as to tho produethm of motors for electric railways are utrlK ing and interesting, esmciul'y wht-u viewed from the standpoint at tin- tu turus of electric railway work gathered Jiy the Eleventh census, when, for the 111 st time, the industiy made its ap pearance In the nutloimi records, none nf tho roads then enumerates having been in operation prior to JSSti, in isno the street railway companies of the t'nlted States In operation numbered o electric. At that 895 electric cars In use out of 32,505 of all kinds, nnd 1,- 2S2 miles of track out of S.123. Ily 1SS0 the number of cable cars had declined rrom 22,408 to 1,198! but In the Mean time) electric cars had Increased to the number of 50,658, and the number of miles of track to 17,969. The stimulus given the Industry Is further brought out by tho fact that whereas In 1S90 the total capital and funded debt for all roads appears to have reactird $363, 150,000, In 1000 tho total for 87t street railway systems, chlelly rlectrlc, was $1,023,819,087 capital stock and $777,802, 571 funded debt, milking a total of slightly over $1,800,000,000, or just live times the figures of ton yeuis before. On this vast capitalization the returns from tho operation would Indicate a not earning capacity of from 4 to 5 per cent, Economy of Electric Fowor. Tho "saving Introduced by the adop tion of rloctrlelty is Indicated sufllelcnt ly by the annual report of the Metro politan Street Hallway company of New York, for the census year ending June 30, 1900. This system employed the most expensive method of electrical operation known, the trolley tunning In ii slot under the cur. It appears ftom the Metropolitan figures that the cost of operating with tho cable per ear mile was 17.7K cents; with the horse, 18.9S cents; and with the electric motor 13.10 cents. The popularity of the small electiic fans for ofllccs and hnme has In creased to such an extent that the de mand In the census year was greater than tho supply. Tho report states that the experiments with storage battery cars have not been entirely successful, but better results have attended the construction of portable equipments for use In such places as mines, etc., where It is difficult or dangerous to Introduce wires carrying live currents. Statistics of arc lamps compiled during the second quarter of 1899 showed 2,360 stations owned and operated by private corpor ations, reporting 280,400 arc lamps, 2, 670,000 direct Incandescent and 5,300,000 alternating Incandescent on their cir cuits, with 1,100,000 horse power of mot ive machinery In their generating plants. This does not Include the muni cipal plants. Telephone Developments. Ton million dollars' worth of electri cal apparatus Is invested In the tele phones of the country. Referring to the Ifls'tory of the telephone In the United States, the report says: "Few Industries have undergone a more violent transition from a ccnti al lied control of production to unlimited manufacture of apparatus than tel ephony, and the period of greatest ac tivity in this Held since ISM) began with the census year 1900. Having after tie lnendously expensive litigation estab lished the supremacy of Its patents, the Bell telephone system enjoyed for some years undisturbed possession of the field, but the moment these patents could be assumed to lapse, competition broke in from every quarter, wltn the result that the industry lias of late undergone an extraordinary, develop ment, doubling its figures from year to year, and witnessing a very thorough revolution in methods, apparatus and rates. Since the census yeur 1S70-S0. no statistics of telephony have been compiled other than those embodlPd In the annual repoits of the American Hell Telephone company. Twenty years ago 148 companies and private concerns re ported 54,319 receiving telephones, 3.23S employes, and 34,305 miles of wire, with total liabilities of $15,502,135. ' In lilOO the Cell systems leported about 1,500 exchanges, with 1.0SO.OOO subscribers connected, using 1,254,203 miles Of wire, employing ra.uuu persons, ana Handling 2,000.000,000 eonversa tions per year. The capital for the parent and sub-companies then stood at not less than $300,000 000. "These figures would In themselves indicate the stupendous growth of a distinctively modern industry, but they are far from revealing the actual con ditions. Beginning about 1S94-9;;, 'in dependent' telephone exchanges sprang up like musluoonis all over the coun try, but more particularly in the Mid dle and Northwestern states, and by 1900-1901. they had attained a total of about 2,750 exchanges with 700,000 sun soribers and an Investment of $150,000, 000, apparatus being furnished by at least three score manufacturers. It will be observed that the output of apparatus for telephone purposes in 1900 reached $10,512,412, seatteied through nearly a score of states. These figures, however, are strictly those of the manufactuiing side of tho Indus try, and do not take any account of the fur more striking data to be de rived from a study of the subject ntter this apparatus had gone into service and Is In tho hands of the public. It will suflien to point out that in 19U0 the United States showed a per capita of 1 telephone in 40, while In some places, such as San Francisco, it had reached 1 In 12, a. rato that leads tho world, nnd which has since been grow ing will, unprecedented rapidity." As to tho conditions of manufacture, ns indicated bwy tho census figures, thoy nro disclosed only In broad rela tionships, The most Important change has been that which dealB with switch board construction, nnd with the ron sequent luodlUcatlon of apparatus In tho hantlH of tho Individual subscriber. Tho central switchboard Is the nppll unco which enables the operator to put any one subscriber Into direct com munication with the other; and In the "multiple" type this Idea has been worked out to such an extent that at tho period covered by this report an operator at a telephone board could have no fewer than 0,000 "Jacks" with in her reach, leprescntlng a similar number of subscribers, to any one of whom she could "plug In" the subscrib ers In her own care, provided tho spe cific lino was not nlready In use by u iflll from sonic, "other section of the board. The Jncks, with a ''distance of but three-eighths of an Inch between centers, give tho race of the board tho appearance of huge slices of honey comb. A further use of the multiple board principle may oven, It Is assert ed, bring 100,000 subscribers within reach of one girl nt "central." CORN rjcremUer .,,,,.,. OATS December aiay , ' ' I I I I I 3U N -h .fc. w m s . it t in ninit. 42(4 Mi 32! 4 3J'.f. 600 43 THE MARKETS. Wall Street Review. New Tork, Nov. 6. With few exe'p tlons today's stock market was virtually a, repetition of the first days of the week, There was the same Irregular tone which many issues under increased pressure. Tho only Important development was tho ofllclal announcement of Jlnnhat-tnn-Intcrborough lease. Manhattan was again very extensively traded in, and madu an early ilse of 14 per cent., later advancing to 157', nnd closing at 156J&, a net gain of L",i points oirHrans.icllons con sldeiably In excess of one-fourth of the entire day's business. There was much liquidation of Manhattan lit tho old the ory that a stock Is a sain when the good news Is out. The only stocks that opened with a show of strength were Colorado Fuel, which continues to bo the center of a Ilerce controversy, and Hock Island prefened, which titter a biiuf period of heaviness advanced 1 per cent., anil which closed with a net advances of 1 point. Tho initial list was generally low er, and the material decline In Reading was subscribed to disappointment over tho outcome of the more recent coal set tlement negotiations. Kiirly dealings also reflected much piessmu against Union Purine, Southern Piielllc, St. Paul and IJaltlmore and Ohio, while the industrials wero very Inactive, with pionounced heaviness in tho United States Steel stocks. As on the previous day, the move in Manhattan brought slight improve ment elsewhere In tho list but the rallv barely covered Initial losses, save In St. Paul and Reading. The market became duller nnd more irregular, with operations altogether professional. Colorado Fuel, after a further gain of a point reacted k per cent, and closed unchanged. Amal- gamateu Lopper seemed to Have some support and Sugar was about steady. There was practically no news to ex plain the course of other leading stocks, except In the railroad group where somo unsatlsfactoty traffic retains wore re ported. On the other hand certain other standard raihoad Issues showed good in creases. Several purchases of Manhat tan in 5,000 share blocks came out before noon, and scores of 1,000 share lots were traded in. Manhattan's price crossed Pennsylvania's for the first time, in some days. St. Paul, Southern Pacific, Union Pacific and Atchison wero bid un lrac tionally at times, but it was observed that these stocks sold off at the first ex hibition of weakness elsewhere. As the day wore on the pi ofessional element showed less inclination to make committ ments over the holiday. Commission buying wai nominal throughout, and much of thiit was western liquidation of the Steel stock. Little change in these conditions resulted from tho .Manhattan- Interboiongh announcement. Tho weak ness of Texas and Pacific was suDoosed to result from the Idea that that road might be most affected by any aggressive operations or tno antl-uould interests. The tdne of the market ns the close was weak. Total sales. 6SS.600 shares. Some of the active, bonds deelinetl today but there wore also issues which advanced slightly. Total sales, par value, .,03.'i,0flu. United States bonds wero all unchanged on the last call. The following quotations are tarnished The Tiibune bv Halght & Ficese Co., 311 813 Meats Ruilding. W. D, Runyon. man- Open.lflgh.Low.Close. Scrnnton Board of Trado Exchange Quotations All Quotations Based on Bar of 100. STOCKS. BlU.Askod. Lackawanna Dairy Co., Pr.,.. 60 ... County sav. nana t Trust t;o soo First Nat. Bank (Carbontialo). ... Third Uatlonal Hank rM Ulmo Ucp. & DIs. Panic ....... km Economy 1.., II. & P. Co First National Bank kioo Lack. Trust & Safe Den. Co , 193 Clark & Snovor Co.. Pr lea Scrnnton Savings Bank ....... Eon Trailers runuonni nanu ...... -jxn ... Hcranton Holt & Nut Co in ... People's Hank 135 Scranton Packing Co Co UOND3. Scranton Passenger Riillwny, first mortgage,. duo lO.'0 115 Pcoplo's Street Railway, llrat mortgage, duo 1918 115 ... Pcoplo's Street Railway, Gen eral mortgage, duo 1921 115 Scranton Trac. Co., 0 per cent. 115 Kconomy L., II. & P. Co 97 N, Jersey & Pocono Tco Co 97 Consolidated Water Supply Co ... 105 Scrnnton Wholesalo Market. (Corrected by II. G. Dale, 27 Lacka. Ave.) Flatlr-$4.40. nutter Kresh creamery, 25c; fresh dairy, 'JjJie. Cheese 13anV5c. Eggs-Nearby, S0e.; storage, 22c. Mai row Beans Per bushel, $:.S5. Onions Per bushel, 75nD0c. Potatoes 65c. per bushel. Philadelphia Produce Market. Philadelphia, Nov. 2G.-Whcat-',o. high er; contract grade, November, 7t;,4a7ti1c. Corn Quiet but steady: old No, 2 yellow, lisaeao. oats steauy nut quiet; rno. -j whlto clipped, 37Wc. Butter Steady but quiet; extra western creamery, 2Sc; cxtia nearby print, 20c. Eggs -Unchanged; fresh nearby, 29c. loss oft; western, 2Sc, loss off; fresh southwestern, 2i!a27o. loss off; fresh southern. 25c, loss off. Cheese Firm, fair demand; New York full creams, prime small, l.tUalSc; Now York full creams, fair to good small, ?12al.1c; Now York full creams prime large. 1.1.1 13Uc.; Now York full ereamsl, fulr to good small, 12!&al2?4c. Refined Sugars Unchanged. Cotton Flvo points higher; middling uplands, 8.5"e. Tallow Dull; city prime In tierces, G!4a65c; country, In barrels, tiaCic; country, dark In barrels, WjaTric; cakes, 6'Ha7c. Live Poultry Quiet but steady; fowls. 10all!e.; old roosters, Sc; spilng chickens, lOallc; turkevs, Jla12c: ducks, 11nl2c; geese, 10a He. Dressed Poulthy Less active; tur keys easier; fowls, choice western, 13c; fowls, southern and southwestern, 12a 12',.c; fowls, fair to good, llallVJc; ola roosters. 9,il0c; roasting chickens, nearby large, 15c; roasting chickens, small and medium, 13al4o.; western do., large. 14c; do. small and emdlum, 12al3c; tuikeys. nearby choice to tnncy, lf.U7c; do. fair to good 13al5c; do. poor and thin, lla12c; western do., choice, lSolfic ; do. fair to good, 12al4c; do. poor and thin. Dalle; ducks. 12al."if. Receipts Flour.1,300 bar rels and 2,0SS,000 pounds In sacks; wheat, 10,000 bushels; corn, B,00O bushels; oats, 1.1.H00 bushels. Shipments Wheat, H.ftOO bushels; corn, 3,000 bushels; oats, JS.OX) bushels. KASH Stoves at Wholesale. i ager. Amal. Copper ... Amcilcan Ice .... Am. Ice. Pr Am. Locomotive Am. S. & K. Co.. Amcilcan Sugar Atchison Atchison. Pr .... Halt. & Ohio .... Brook. R. T Canadian Pacific ....127'i ,"-S 54 10" :;x IN in IO-'m ;;v.:. 2n w; .118 't HS'4 . Sl.'i S2'i 97!i ilSli 'Hi Oriental Rugs $10.00. 12.00, 113.00 Are Worth One-Third More. 100 to Select From. MICHAEUAN BROS. & GO. 124 WASHINGTON AVE. Ches. & Oh ir r, Chicago & Alton .... :::"4 Chic. & O. W 25'. C. M. A- St. P 17.YU Col. Fuel & Iron M)'& Col. & Southern 2",'. Co. & South., -M Pr. 4'r. Del. & Hud 1.-0 Den, & It. G.. Pr .... S'ltj Detroit Southern .... 17 llrio Rlj Uile, 1st Pr 'n Kile. L'ud Pr li"'A Hocking Valley .... nj Illinois Central Hi Louis. & Nat-h !23',i ainnhnttnn 1,itj 3,"l& Met. St. Ry LIT :!!!' Us f'SJi JJ I2SH 16 M i7hi; Mif. US " 4-"i 46-.8 P". iDi .l3i I0'a :;s :'S :isi n.vu Sb'K 97',.'. 97-Ji hi VS!Vj 1Mb '.) '' 2,V5 17.-.U $L. 27"i I.-.9 Ni 17 ::!','. 4.V'( 91'i H l'l '., u 5m iin;; .ir.1; ip; . IKiyi (.91 .. 29"j ..I.V.V. ..Km'. .. 0 " .. M'i .. 75I, is; Mexican Centml Mo K. & Tex l!.-.;i 5ln.. K. . 'P.. Pr r.lK Mu. Pacific IOC'?; a. v. central ... Norfolk- St West Ont. ,fc West ... Penna. R. K .... People's Gas .., .Meaning Iteadhnr, 1st Vv .... Reading, Li Pr Republic Steel JtepiiDiic ttcel, J'r.. iii Rock inland Il'i St, U San F 72 St. I,, So. V,' i!7'i Southern Paclllo .... fii'4 Southern R. R :ii7. Southern R. R.. Pr.. 92 Tenn. Coal Sr iron.,. 5'i Texas .V Pacific IP's Tnion T'aclllo 91 I'ninn Pacific, Pr..,. Mi', T K. Leather ....... 12'i r, . i.eiiiuer, it,. T. S. Steel T. S. Steel, Pr Wabash Wabash, Pr Western Fulfill Wis. Central ,. Kx.dlvldend. CHICAGO GRAIN & PROVISION. WH11AT Open- Hldl. Low. Clos?, Decembor 7F 75 714 7Pi , SSi' . '! S.U', 2S7S 4! . S7i 219 121 HHUYi l.tt? l.li'l 2Jg :, 5 Ha vr,-u vty. f.9U 29U 1V INI .VMS fW'i 7.VJ 1Mi 76 !.',' 27'4 l.li SI'j 9J :r, ti 9'l 90U 12'i ss :;"S K.,ss 2S 4i'i N7k 21 J9'!. 1."'i JlW,!, ffl'i s.vC 7.-,'; ii 7il 4V'i '.' mi.'. 92 1."V m& 91'i 121,, JJiPk snn ai'i u wU 2 Pi 10' :k',S 2Si, SS-i 116'4 Mv8 9S 9S HI 4 12.'ii I.V) 32?4 a-. 1751s S.S 29 42'j ir.9'4 ,V9'1 17'A :S 6Pi 4Vi ntH 14P4 12H 136H 139 P.-'K th inr,--; 3.W.. f,9', 29' i 156 llVHi .V)'-, SIH 7,-.n w 76 4FJ aiw. lU'C 2 ,ili 114 99 mi 121!. SS N2i 294 424 SS'J 24 May 7u',3 7G?i 76?i 764 Chicago Grain Market. Chicago, Nov. 26. Trading on the boaid of trado today was Unlit, but prices weie higher; December wheat closing ?aa4c higher; Decembor corn, 4e. higher and louts. 4c. lower January provisions closed firm, l!4aoc. to 10c. higher. Cash quotations were as follows: Flour Steady; No. L spring wheat, 74Jc; No. 3, 714a72c: No. 2 red, 74'4a75e.; No. 2 corn, 514c; No. 2 yellow, r,je.: No. 2oats, 312a 31ic; No. 2 white. 34aWc; No. 2 white, 324a:i6c.: No. 2 rye, 4914c; good feeding barley, 3oa37c; fair to cohlco malting, 44a G8c.: No. 1 flax seeed, $1.15: No 1 north western, $1.20; prime timothy senl, S,!.6."; mess pork, per barrel, ai0.7iialC.R7V',; lard, per 100 pounds, $lfl.r,0:iinn25; short ribs, sides (loose), $S.S74a9.124; dry salted shoulders (boxed). $9.374n9.ri0: short clear sides (boxed), S.7;a9; closer, contract grauc, nv.-j. New York Grain and Produce Market Now Tork, Nov. 26. Flour Moderately active and Arm. Wheat Spot steady; No. 2 red, 794c elevator; No. 2 red, 77a4c f. o. b. afloat: No. 1 northern Duluth, S34c. f. o. b. afloat; No. 1 hard Manitoba, SHic. f. o. b. afloat: options ruled gener ally firm all day. The market closed 3sa 4e. net higher; May closed S0V4c; Decem ber closed SOSic. Corn Spot weak; No. 2, Hie. elevator and lil'jc. f. o. b. afloat: No, 2 yellow, 07c,; No. 2 white. 67c. options market wns exceedingly dull all day but a shade higher with the west, where De cember shorts were squeeezed. Tho close wns at Ua4c. net advance: January closed K!c.; May closed 477ic: July closed 4(J;ic.; December closed, !9"ie, Oats Spot dull: No. 2. 3(ic: standard white. SSc.: No. 3, 334c: No. 2 white. 3Sc; No. a white, 374c; track mixed western, nomi nal; track white, 37a42c; options steadier; December closed 374c mM-vmPMWimfis wmix :a ?jmmmmmasmKmmimBiLimmMmimaMmm- ,vfsi!raE&fre-!r mmmmmmmmmmmm K.MMmmmmmmsmsBSKBtmmmmi'4mii 4 a br?':iJ$ai mm: W3 ', WHY Buy a stove made hundreds of miles away, when you can buy SCRANTON STOVES at' Foundrv Prices ? You can get repairs at any time on home-made 'stoves ?ir whntPQaJo prices. Owing to the coal strike the Stove Works have a big stock which must be sold within the next thirty days. Come early and secure big bargains. ' SOLD AT SAME PRICE AS AT FOUNDRY BY FOOTE & FULLER CO., 140-142 WASHINGTON AVENUE. UNION CASH STORE, DUNMORE, PA. WILLI AM CHAPPELL, PROVIDENCE SQUARE. A. J. HOWLEY, 911 NORTH WASHINGTON AVENUE. Buffalo Live Stock Market. East Huffalo, Nov. 26. Cattle Receipts, DO; butchers' grades, good demand; stiong; others easy: primo steers, JiVu.30; shipping steers, Tri.23aj.7r; butchers' steers, $4a.".; heifers, J.23a4..5; culls. $l..-)0.i4.2."i; bulls. f2.3(ia4: feeders.. $3.17.".x4..Vj; stock ers. $.1.25.14; stock heifers. S2.23a3. Hogs Receipts, 4.200; SalOc. higher on light; others steady; heavy, tii.30a6.3.": mixed medium, $0.1Ja6.23: Yorkers and pigs. (i.03ai;.10; roughs, ?3.70.i3.S"; stags, J4.7."a.".23. Sheep nnd Lambs Receipts, 9,100; sheep, steady; lambs, 23a33c. lower: top Iambs. K!.20a.1.23; culls to good, Jlaj.10; yearlings, JJi.73a4; ewes, $3.23a3.60: sheep, top mixed, JJ.23ao.3."i; culls to good, $1.7503.13. -. -V .f T . " mo tti Headquarters for Incandesc?nl Gas Mantles, Portable Lamps. THE NEW DISCOVERY Kern Incandescent Gas Lamp. The Top Notch of Comfort i GunsteriiForsyii) 325-327 Tenn Avenue. HWMM'frm FINANCIAL Spencer Trask & Co. BANKERS 27 & 29 Pine Street, New York Members New York Stock Exchange. At the lowest notch of price. Ease and comfort at an insignificant ex? pense. A chair well suit ed to the laziness of the young or rheumatism of the old. Matchless value. Just like cut. Only $4.75 Ask for your coupons. Free Holiday Gifts. PR'ZE NO- 1, $60 IN MDSE PRIZE NO. 2 $40 IN MDSE Scranton Carpet & Furniture Co 40G LACKAWANNA AVENUE. Registered. BOODY.McLELL AN & CO. BANKERS. No 57 Ureadnay. New York City. siKMunns snw yonic stock exchanoe. STOCKS.BONDS and INVESTMENTS OBDERS EXECUTED FOR INVESTMENT OR ON MARGIN HKIMffi 1 1 1 HI J MM1 Hlil I S i - itaow e525 -" bsni pi-is: uiU'-em mmmmmi EVERY GOOD FEATURE IS EMBODIED IN l?. ff .j. .; : .j. . .!.-;. .j. .J. . .j. h..j. . 4. . . . 4. 4. 4. . , j. - . - 1 V j WARREN-EHRET COMPANY, L7t b6 cnrei s mm Mooring GUAKANTHED IO YEARS. 321 WASHINGTON AVE. ! 't$'' Jo!) Printing of Every Description, Neatly, Promptly, and Ac curately Done at The Tribune Office. . , , , Hand Made, Havana Filled This cigar rosts from f 5.00 to ?B.OO Ier 1,000 more thaa any 5c cigar sold Ju Scranton. moke..... ? mmm AKAS T 431 Spruce Strccl