THE PrrTSBUitG DISPATCH. Sw TjECONDMRT PAGES 9 TO 20. S r ' It' 11 That Will Bo One of the Holiday Duties of the Electors of Pittsburg. PLENTY OF WILLING MEN Mentioned for the Consideration of the Two Conventions. K0MINATI0XS MOST BE EARLY, As the J'eir Ballot &t Iteguires Cer tificates Filed January 3. THE FITE LEADING POSSIBILITIES I A political contest of as much local interest almost as the Prcsidental will open after the November election. Pitts burg will, on the second Tuesday of Feb ruary, 1893, elect a Mayor to succeed H. L Gourley, and while the contest is only re ferred to in whispers now there is yet in a decidedly quiet way come hustling among the leaders of both parties. The men who are likely to be the candi dates of their respective parties have not so far scored up for the word "go." Their plans are being made within closed doors, at it were. The leaders will decide, prob- A. jS. Jle andlas. ably within two week', who their candi dates shall be. The nominations will be conferred by the people probably as a holiday gilt The Baker ballot law provides for the nomina tions for Mayor as follows: "When Nominations Must Be Made. Certificates or nomination and nomination papers lor candidates for all other offices (this includes the office ot Mayor), except township and borough offices, shall be died with tho County Commissioners of the re spective counties at least U and 35 days, re spectU ely, ueforo the day or tho election. Forty-two days prior to the date of the election, the second Tuesday of February, falls on January 3. It is probable, there fore, that the nominations will be made in December, perhaps toward the close. For the Republican nomination there are so far but two candidates much spoken of though dark horses may be in waiting. Ex-Sheriff A.JE. McCandless has positively placed himelf in the field. He has given personal attention to his campaign and ex presses considerable confidence in his pros pects. County Commissioner Robert E. Mercer is likely to be the other regular Republican candidate ior the nomination. He has yet a year to serve in the Commis sioners' officej but his iriends have been earnest in their eflorts to have him contest for the Mayoralty. He has not yet defin itely decided whether he will enter the field. On a Reform Platform. F. C. Bcinhauer will be an independent candidate no matter who is nominated bv the other parties. He has been at war with the regular political organizations of Pitts burg lor some time and be will stand on a relorm platlorm in whatever fight may de velop. The Democrats of the city are more or less J. M. Guffey. at sea regarding a candidate for Mayor. Several men have been mentioned as prob able candidates, but only one or two of all the list are likely to stand for the nomina tion. The several factions in the Demo cratic party have each indicated a determination to spring a surprise on the unsuspecting public, but the party as a whole seems to be demanding .that one of two men be nominated. The conservative leaders of the Democracy insist that their candidate shall be a substantial business man, and either Captain Thomas B- Kerr or James M. GufTey, the oil and gat pro ducer, would suit them. Neither GufTey nor Kerr has as yet decided definitely to stand for the nomination, but the iriends of both are confident that one or the other will accept the nomination if extended without a struggle. Dr. BlcCandless' Fnbllc Experience. Dr. McCandless has already filled the offices of Sheriff and County Treasurer. He wai born on May 5,1819, within five squares ot where ne now lives on uenter avenue. At the age of 16 years he graduated from the High School. He then read medicine with his father and was graduated from the Jefferson Meilical College He was a me ai mer of the fire commission during the Pitts burg riots, and was elected County Treas urer in 18St In 1887 he was elected Sheriff and was filling that office durinir the Du quesne mill trouble, the trouble at the Edgar Thomson Steel "Works at Braddoclc, and the Homestead disturbances three years f go, and handled those troubles with a good deal ot tact and success. Dr. McCandless is a member of the Central Board of Education. He is active in the interests of the public schools. He is an ardent lover of good horses, and be keeps a valuable string of well bred anV mals. He has always been a popular young I CHOOSING MAYOR Dr. man, and he has a delightful home and a pleasant family. Mr. Mercer's Official Record. Bobert E. Mercer, whose friends insist upon his being named as the Bepnblican candidate, was born in Fayette county just 50 years ago. "When 3 years old he came with his parents to the Soutbside, where he afterward was a glass worker and then a nailer, and was ior many years employed at the American Iron "Work In 1872 he was elected Alderman of the Twenty-fifth ward, after which he left the milk He served as Alderman part ot two terms, and in 1873 he was elected County Commis sioner, and is now serving his fifth term in that office. He was a member of the Board of Commissioners that personally super vised the erection ot the Court House, which is frequently referred to as the only public building ever constructed without a scandal or a job, or the faintest shadow of complaint or suspicion. Mr. Mercer is a genial, pleasant gentle man ana he enjoys the support and confi dence of many faithful friends among all classes ot the people. He has not yet de- Hubert E. Mercer. termined whether he will be a candidate. His iriends seem determined to decide lor him, however. Captain Thomas It. Kerr's Active Lire. Captain Thomas B. Kerr, one of the Dem ocrats prominently mentioned for the nomi nation, was born" in Ireland on April 24, 1813. He came to Pittsburg with his parents in 1850, and has been identified with exten sive interests here ever since.- He was edu cated in the Third ward school and the Iron City College. Immediately after leaving college he went into the wholesale liquor and grocery business with the late William Carr, and he continued in that firm nntil Mr. Carr's death. He now personally man ages the great Carr estate. "Tom" Kerr, as he is familiarly known, enlisted in the Union Army April 171861, just five days after Fort Sumter bad been tired upon. He was a private in Captain John Kennedy's Company B, Twelfth Begiment, Pennsylvania Volunteers. After a short service 'Captain Kerr came home and recruited a company of infantry and a battery of artillery and also a com pany of cavalry. He went ont as second lieutenant of the cavalry organization and for valiant services was made a captain. He was mustered out of service on June 2, 18G5. J. M. Schoonmaker was colonel of Kerr's command and General Averil, the commanding officer, in a letter to the War Department, says of Captain Kerr: "He was one of the best soldiers in the Union Armv." Identified "With Oil Developments. James M. Gufley, the other Democrat mentioned for the Mayoralty nomination, has been and is now an interesting and forceful figure in local, State and national politics. In his business affairs Mr. Gut fey has had unbounded success. He was born in Westmoreland county in January, 1839. He was educated in the common schools, and at the age ot 16 years he went S" Thomai R Eerr. South, where he was employed by the Nash ville and Louisville Railroad. In 1872 he went to the oil country, and ever since then he has been- conspicuous in the develop ment of oil and gas territory. His energy and money were early invested in the Washington county field, and he is now ope of the largest individual producers in the country. His appearance is striking, jd.li hair and mustache are white as chilly-and 7 & wl THE 2TVEAGE SAVING A SERIOUS TIME OF David B. Hill He should be repudiated by the party for its he never knew the taste of intoxicating liquors. In 1878 Mr. Guffey wa the Democratic candidate for Congress in the Clarion-Jef-lerson-Indiana district The greenback blue no tucu Bfjicuiug uror tuo uuuuiij,, and, while Mr. Guffey ran 1,000 votes ahead ot the ticket in Clarion county, where he lived and reduced the Bepublican majority in Indiana county to 1,700, Judge Harry White was elected to Con gress, defeating Mr. GufTev, the Democrat and Mr.Cosgrove, the Greenback candidate, At the time Mr. Guffey accepted the nomi nation only to keep the organization of his party in tack; He is now being urged as a candidate for Mayor for the same purpose. Two Other Democratic Possibilities. Alderman McKenna and J. C O'Donnell have been spoken of as probable Demo cratic candidates for the nomination. Both have positively stated that they will not go into the fieht George Fleming, the drug gist, has. within a few weeks, been talked of as a candidate, but he, too, says he will not enter the field if either Guffey or Kerr can be induced to run. The campaign for this place will open actively immediately after the Presidental election and under this law the conventions will be held probably during the holidays. Independent Running Made Easy. Besides the regular party nominations and those aspiring to them, as mentioned above, there is much talk of possible Inde pendent candidates. Among the combina tions of that sort most spoken of at one time was Eustace S. Morrow for Mavor and H. T. Gourley for Controller. Whether or not anything is to come out of that sug gestion will perhaps only be developed after the tickets of the Republicans and Democrats have taken shape. In certain contingencies it is said that a combination like the one spoken ot will be effected. The idea is that if the Bepubliesns and the Democrats fail by their regular organiza tions to give satisfactory candidates, then tried men like Gourley and Morrow would be successful. But whatever independent candidates may come out for the Mayoralty office, they will probably wait until it is seen what the "regulars" propose doing be fore formally taking the field. The Baker ballot law makes the way of independent candidates lor city offices much easier than before. The names of "inde pendents" must be printed on all the tickets; and the voter is given a chance to pick for himself. Before, the great diffi culty in the way ot "independents" was the expense and trouble of getting men to F. C. Eeinhaver. handle their tickets at the polling places on election day. That is all avoided now, and the running is on even terms tor all duly certified candidates, whether inde pendent or regular. Grand Oprfhing of the Imperial Hotel. Nothing adds more materially to charms and attractions of a city than flrst-ciass hos telrles, and the city or Flttsburs is fortunate in having in her limits a hutel which is fast gaining an enviable reputation and a larse ana lucrative patronage; me bdovo is none other than tho Imperial Hotel which was erected last May and contains 21 rooms and parlors on each floor and all modern con veniences and elegantly furnished by its new proprietors. Messrs. Eornman & Coll, who took possession October 18. The city of Pittsburg has long needed a strlotly first-class European hotel. Messrs. Eornman & Coll are to be congratulated by their many friends and the traveling public in general. On the ground floor of their hotel are the inviting and airy office and dlnins rooms, on the second floor will be found a beautifully furnished parlor and a large number of spacious and well ventilated sleeping apart ments, while the third and fourth floors are utilized for sleeping apartments. A leature of the Imperial Hotel Is its uni formly large and airy rooms! the halls are wide and handsomely carpeted. ' The entire building is heated by natural gas and lighted by both gas and electricity. The cuisine or the cafe is elegant and the tables are anpplled with all the delicacies the market affords, prepared in a delicious manner by an accomplished culinary artist. The bar, which Is Just off the offloe, is the most handsome and elaborate In the State, being fitted np with the latest World's Fair fixtures, is supplied with the very finest wines, liquors and cigars to be found in the city of Pittsburg. The popular Charles F. Eornman, who has baen'wlth W. J. Wright for years, and un derstands the trade, has the bar under his own personal supervision, and cordially ex tends to his many friends an invitation to call. , . Mr. Thomas J.' Coll. the genial clerk who has Just returned from the Sast, where he had charge of one of the largest hotels, at tends to the wants of the traveling public, and is aeservlngly popular. With all, the Imperial Hotel bids fair to become the most popular and welMcnown hotel in Pittsburg. Bates moderate. Grand opening November 1 Tuesday, Si' WM PITTSBURG DISPATCH. IT. own self-respect TIN FOR THE WORLD. America Has Enough Ore to More Than Supply All Her Needs. THE BLACK HILLS FULL OP IT. I ncouraglng Report Brought ly an Ix pert tent to the Alines. A GREAT FIELD FOR AMERICAN LABOR IWBITTEK TOR THE DISPATCH.! The existence of tin ore in this country, and in the Black Hills particularly, in quantities sufficient to pay to work, being called in question by interested parties in certain quarters. The Dispatch and New York Prat sent into that country a repre sentative, an expert on mines and mining, with instructions to visit every mine, in vestigate thoroughly, and get all the facts, and if he fouud that tin did exist in paying quantities to find out why no marketable tin has yet been produced by the Black Hills mines. He spent six weeks in the Black Hills in his investigations. He went down into all the mines that are open and being worked, traversed every drift that has been run and every crossing that has been made, and brings back the assuring report that there is tin ore in abundance, both at Harney Peak and in the Nigger Hill districts; that in the former the work of development is being pushed with commendable energy; that the new- mill just completed at Hill City will commence the reduction of tin ore and the manufacture of American pig tin for the market as soon as the Burlington and Missouri Bailroad has completed the "spurs" now building to the mines. This work has been unexpectedly delayed, but is being pushed as rapidly as possible. Mr. J. S. Childs, the experienced superintend ent of the Harney Peak Company, expects to be able to start the tin mill and com mence to crush ore before the middle of November. We Have the Richest In the World. After gold and silver, tin Is intrinsically the most precious of metals. The produc tion of it in the United States marks the beginning of a new industrial era for the nation as great aa that which followed the first manufacture of the steel rail Until the present time the value ot every pound of tin used in America has gone to pay for eign labor and enrich foreign capitalists. This alone of the necessities of civilized life was thought to be hopelessly absent from the American domain. Not one pound was produced in the United States uutil a few months ago. Every ounce of the $36,355, 679 worth of tin plate, sheets, etc., used in this country last year was imported. But it has been proved beyond all possibility of doubt that the richest fields of stanniferous ore in the world are within the borders of onr own country, and the necessity for pay ing tribute to foreign lands is at an end. We will in a short time be able to supply every pound of tin plate used by Ameri cans in canning vegetables, fruit, preserves, fish, oils and other commodities, and the United States to-day prepares the bulk of the canned goods of the- world. We will manufacture tin foil, of which the United States uses the larger moiety ot the world's supply. We will produce and manufact ure tin in everyone of the necessary forms and for everyone of the necessary pur poses, and have a large surplus left for export The Tin Supply of the World. A few figures will show the exaot future value of the tin industry to this country. The annual supply of pig or bar tin for Europe and America is 4,357 tons of 2,224 pounds each. This tin is produced as fol lows: Country. Tons Cornwall 9,300 t Banka-. 4,177 ) Sonth Sea Islands I Billltorf. 4 700 V lStralt8...2&3554 ..37,138 Australia 6,125 Batavla (Saxony) 1,500 Total M.S57 Of this total amount of pig tin the United Btates uses 14,616 tons, and. in addition, im ports 336,692 tons of tin plate, which, at present prices, is valued at $25,000,000. This means a total annual consumption of 28,111 tons of tin in the country. In the English tin industry there are em ployed 6,120 miners underground and 6,507 above ground, or 11,627 in all; and these people turn out 9,300 tons of pig tin an nually, or an average of about eight-tenths of a ton to each individual. Using these facts as a basis of computation the produc tion in the Blaek Hills, or elsewhere in the United States, of the amount of pig or bar tin actually consumed in this country in its native state and in the tin plate imported that Is, 28,114 tons would require the employment of 83,143 men; all of whom, at present scale ot wages in the Black Hills, would receive from t3 to $4 per day that is. f 1,093 to 1,660 per year for in these mills they know neither day nor night, Sundays nor holidays; the fires in the fur naces are never qneuohed.and the machinery never stops except for repairs. This would give in wages expended annually from $&, 481,673 to (54,823,080, as against compara tively nothing at the present time. Wa Will Hake Oar Own Plate. But the benefit to the laboring- classes and the country does sot end here. The SUNDAY, OCTOBER 30. manufacture of tin plate will follow the production ot the raw article. Already there are mills in sotive operation. Then Instead of importing the 836,692 tons of tin plate we will make that amount within our own nation. Griffith' Guide, a standard statistical work, shows that 600,000-persons are directly and indirectly employed in the 480 mills in England, prodaolng annually 600,000 tons of tin plate. Fnpm these sta tistics it appears that the labor of one per son is required each year in the produc tion of a ton of tin plate. Thus the manu facture of tin plate in this country ior home consumption alone would furnish em ployment for 336,692 people, and at the moderate salary of 1 per day this would increase the pay roll of wage earners by the handsome sum of $122,892,680. But there is no doubt that the average wages received would be at least $2 a day. It has been estimated by a competent authority that the home manufacture of tin plate will "furnish in round numbers an American market for the annual consump tion ot 850,000 tons of iron ore, 300,000 tons of limestone, 1,600,000 tons of coal, 23,000, 000 bushels of charcoal, 6,000,000 pounds of lead, 10,000,000 pounds ot tallow, 8,000,000 pounds of sulphuric acid and about 10,000, 000 feet of lumber. In addition to the iron and tin contained in the articles manufac tured. Tho Harney Peak Company's Enterprise. The Etta Company soon interested En glish capital, including Lord Thurlow and the Baring-Gould brothers in the enter prise. The Harney Peak Tin Mining and Milling Company was organized, and ab sorbed the Etta Mining Company and all its properties. The new company owns over 1,100 claims, covering over 11,000 acres. The energies of the company are concen trated upon the development of five of the most promising claims, the Addle, the Coats, the Gertie, the Cowboy and the Tenderfoot or Japanzy. These are produc ing mines. It is from these mines that the newly erected concentrating mill at Hill City is to be first supplied with ore. Miners are at work in all of these mines and a great deal of money has been invested in machinery at each. On a rough estimate it may safely be said that there are over 100,000 tons of ore in the Coats and Cowboy mines ready for stoplng at the present time. Allowing for the lull capacity of the new tin mill there is here sufficient ore to keep it running for 400 days; and in the opinion of Superintendent J. & Ohilds. mining has just begun in these mines ana he is an experienced miner and knows what he is talkingabout In the upper levels of the Addie mine, the most promising of the lot, are 40,000 tons of ore. , Other Companies in the Field. - Since the discovery of tin in the Black Hills in 1877 qnite a quantity of "stream tin" has been taken from Bear Gulch, Po tato Gulch and Beaver Creek Gulch. Many tin claims have been taken up in this dis trict Besides there are several large com fianies with properties in there also. There s the Cleveland Tin Mining and Milling company, oi wnicn ex-uovernor (Jornell Is President, with a paid-up non-assessable capital of 1,000,000. The company has done considerable development work, has a large shatthouse, a 20-horse-power boiler, and a large ore vein. Then there is the Nigger Hill Tin Mining and Milling Com pany, of which a J. Finch is President, with a capital of 11,250,000 and 20 or more claims that prospect well. A third com pany is the American Tin Mining and Mill ing Company, of which Lewis F. Pavne is President, with a capital stock of $2,600,000. While the stream t'n or cassiterite is of an excellent quality and produces white tin equal to that found in any other locality, yet it Is thought not to be equal to the "albite" (the true mattrix of tin) found in the lode veins in this region. In some of these veins the rock is sprinkled with fine specklike points of tin, and scattered through here and there are large cubes of the pure ore. These mines are mostly held by placer miners and other men without means to enable them to do more than per MANY By the JUST B - O - . A SIX-PIECE SOLID JUST LIKE THIS 28 - $28 $28 We have about 200 more Parlor Suits this week that must part company with us. Prices and terms are not taken into consideration. HOUSEHOLD CREDIT CO. 414 WOOD STREET 14 PITTSBURG'S LEADING CASH AND CREDIT HOUSE 189a. form the necessary assessment work on them annually. What Occasions the Delay. The Harney Peak Company has for some time been "preparing for permanent devel opment and the mining and milling of tin ore. Not a little unfavorable comment has arisen among ignorant and vicious people out of the apparent delay in producing commeroial tin by the Harney Peak people. The management has not "only been con demned and the company denounced at home and abroad, but many have gone sd far as to declare that tin ore does not exist in the Black Hills, or elsewhere in this country, in paying- quantities. This does both the management and the company in justice, and slanders the resources ot our country. It is a big undertaking to get ready to mine any kind of ore on an extensive scale. The first superintendent was a successful clerk in a commercial house, but entirely ignorant of mining. Ho was supplanted by a man who was and is an excellent railroad engineer, bat is not a practical miner or a good prospector even. Both of these gentle men went at the matter in a bunzline man ner, and their many mistakes have now toM De rectined as lar as it is possible to do so. Similar enterprises have been as long de layed in getting started, and nothing was said about it .Why then should there be adverse criticism because tin concentrates have not yet been produced in great quanti ties? It is a private business carried on exclusively by private capital. Simply be came the question has been given a quasi political aspect by the passage of the Mo Kinley law and the effort to "take care of number one" by protecting ourselves against other nations. .It Looks Like Business. The Harney Peak Company have built a dozen or more substantial buildings and equipped them in the most substantial man ner. The offices of the company, at Hill City, are neat, comfortable and Ample. The buildings consist of the superintendent's office, that of his assistant, the mining en gineer and his corps of assistants, the sur veying corps and the assay ofSc:s. They have a shafthouse, or hoist works, at the Addie mine that cost over 6.000, and fur nishes the basis' for the required power to go down 2,000 feet The Etta mill was commenced in the fall af 1885 and completed in February 1886, and operated for about two months. Fifteen tons of cassiterite or b1ack(oxide of tin have been produced, which yielded about nine tons of metallic tin. In April of the latter year the mill was closed down because the machinery in it was not adapted to the work required; it wasted as much of the ore as was saved. The company got uew machinery at once, and the result is the erection of a fine new Hill City tin mill at a cost ot little over 80,000. This is a mam moth mill of marvelous operation and great beauty. It has a present daily capacity of 250 tons of ore, and facilities for increasing that capacity to 600 tons a day as soon as the mines are developed and the ore output will warrant it Plenty of Material Progress. I secured a few photographs showing what is being done in Black Hills tin mining. Five-of these I leave at the office of Tub Dispatch a day or two for the benefit of those who may be interested. One shows the Hill City Tin MilL The building, which is located on s hillside, is 161 feet by 12S feet, with an average neight of 40 feet; but the vertical height from the point where thq ore goes in at the top oi the mill to where the concentrates are taken out at the foot of the hill is 120 feet This mill is furnished with two 80-horse-power boilers and is run by a tandem Corlissenglne supplied with an enormous wheel 36 inches wide and 14 feet in diameter, "Weighing 9 tons. H. M. HAjTSOif. TrtS Allots stopped free by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer, h o nta after first day's ate. Mar Ttlou cures. TreUe and tz 00 trial Dottle free to Fit cues. l)r,KUne. KQ. Archst I'M la., I'a. su Latest importations in Frcncii millinery. Mux. E. Sbxteb, 6M Penn avenue HOMES greatest sale of Parlor Furniture of the furniture world. PAUSE, CONSIDER WELL, THEN ACT ON O - M ON EAST TERMS AS YOU LIKE THEM. Free. With every Credit Sale on which a $12 PAYMENT IS MADE, one of.' these BEAUTIFUL EBONY CLOCKS. Half-Hour Strike, Cathedral Gong, run Eight Days and Perfect Timekeepers. SHAKING IN PROFITS. The Results of an Experiment by a Great Boston Book Hou3e. SALARIES RAISED SIX PER CENT. What the Employes Say About It and the Prospects Next Tear. THE CASH OF A LOSING BUSINESS rwarrrsv ran th prmTca.1 For many yearj I hare been thinking over the profit-sharing principle with a view of trying It practically in the publish ing house of Ginn & Co. Last year we in formed our help that we would share with them to. a certain extent the profits for the coming year, and at the close of the year we divided with them a sum that raised their salaries something over 6 per cent We have received In return for this divi sion the most cordial recognition from our people, as will be seen from letters sub mitted below, samples ot the many that come to us, and the acsurance on their part that the firm will loss nothing by its action. The basis on which we made the division was wholly In favor of the clerks. They were to share in the profits but not in the losses of the business. Any schema that Edirtn Ginn. does; not Include both to some extent, It seems to me, has not a safe foundation. "We are trying to work out some scheme that shall include a slight risk in the loss as well as a sharing of the profits, giving even a larger chance of advantage than our present scheme, something like the following: A Scheme for Profit and loss. To limit the loss or gain of the clerks to 6 or 10 per cent of their present salaries, or to place them all on the basis of partners, allowing the total amount of their salaries as the amount of money they contribute to the business, and taking their full share of the profits, in accordance with the same, on this basis. As an illustration, suppose that the expense of the business, including the manufacture of the goods, amounted to a half-million dollars, and the salaries of the help amounted to $60,000, the help would receive one-eleventh of all the profits, as they contribute one-eleventh of the capital. I feel more strongly, I think, than Mr. FarwelL that in acme adjustment of the profit sharing with all classes of laborers will be found the solution of the much vexed qnestion between labor and capital. MADE that has ever taken place in the Read this carefully. E- R-A- OAK TAPESTRY SUIT CUT FOR $28 $28 $30 $35 Free. Now capital hires its labor as cheaply as iS can, and labor on its side contributes only. as much as it can afford to for the amount' received. The great majority of laborers i are dependent upon their daily earnings fori the necessities of life and therefore cannot' remain Idle, but must accept such wages as they can obtain. Cspftal has a decided ad-j vantage in this respect In other respeeti' it suffers great disadrantages.for the laborer' that feels that he is contributing more than1 he Is paid for is not a profitable workman.- Capital cannot afford to have this antagon ism with its labor. Proflt-Sharlnj as a Stimulus. The only way out of it will be some ad jnstment whereby a portion of the risk in the profit and loss of the business will de pend upon the laborer, which will act as a stimulus for him to put in his best work every hour. One of the most competent and honest men we ever had in our employ once told me that since he had commenced! business for himself he made longer hours and worked harder than he used to onj salary; "and yet," said he, "if yon had even hinted that it was possible forme to, do more conscientious work than when I was with you on salary I should have felt Insulted." "I thank yon most sincerely for this sub-' stantial check which I have just received," writes another employe, "and wish to as-' sure you that your generosity In thus shar ing with us the profits of the business is deeply appreciated. Ton surely have the right to feel that you can count upon our earnest, loyal devotion to the interest of Ginn & Co., and to expect that the results of the coming year will be even more satis factory than those of the year jnst closed. I hope to contribute my share toward this success." A Success Both TVays. Here Is another: "I have received my share ot the profits and wish to thank you for your generous gift Aside from all per sonal interest, I believe the experiment has been undoubtedly productive of great good, making as It does each employe feel that he or she has a direct personal inter est in the welfare and success of Ginn & Co." "I am In receipt of your letter of the 17th inst with enclosed check. It came in the nature of a surprise," writes a third, "for though I looked for something I was not prepared for so generous a gift Please accept my most sincere thanks." "You ask for an expression of opinion ta to the continuance of the plan for another year. Undoubtedly the thought that the success of the company means the success of the employes acts as an incentive. Identity of interests cannot tail to bind every mem-( ber of the force to yon. It did not need the extra amount received to-day to make ma loyal to Ginn & Co. and command my best ability, but I do feel now like redoubling my efforts to advance their interests." I should be glad to contribute more to the solution of this problem, bnt my ex-, periment is yet too recent to give me any degree of certainty as to the right basis o profit-sharing. Perhaps I ought to say, in justice to the situation, that this last year the success oi our business perhaps was not so much influenced by the profit-sharing as by the conditions of the book trade. There has been a consolidation of nearly all the large publishing houses in the United States which has given us probably a larger share of patronage than would other wise have come to us. JEdwiX Gear. Boston, September 2i Watches, jewelry, fine diamonds, emer aids, rubies,sappblres, turquoise, opals, eta. in all the latest combinations. We set all our own goods and save youjobbers' profits. Call and examine the stock and prices at 1I G. Cohen's, S3 fifth avenue. SOLOMON & BUBEN'S Bulletin of Bargains In Horse Goods. An all-wool street blanket, 99a. x A good heavy stable blanket, 93c -, Extra heavy large size team blanket, $1 T3v Piner quality, hlsh standard, S3 to $3 23. l Genuine Baker blanket, six pounds, $3 73 eight pounds, H 73. HAPPY history THIS ISKG Parlor Suits Parlor Suits, o Parlor Suits, ' o Parlor Suits, $75 Parlor- Suits, Each suit worth from $10 to $30 more than price asked. Free. - oeSO-13 I 1 "1