THE SCRASETOtf TRIBUNE SATURDAY MORNING OCTOBER 13, 1894. In air -aii --iV . :--t:.: 1 Tba Morgcnthalcr Linotype. Type Setting Nou) Don? By Machines Explanation of Improvements Wrought in This Copy of the Tribune. LINOTYPE MECHANISMS USED Short History of An Invention Upon Which More Than Four Million Dollurs Were Expended Before a Cent Was Received lu Return. The management takes pleasure this morning in presenting to readers The Tribune In its brand new dress of typo that has been prepared for print on type-setting machines. For several months past the leading dally newspa pers of the country have successfully operated the wonderful machines which lire destined to revolutionize type-setting and advance the standard of news paper work throughout the land. Prac tical Investigation has demonstrated that the mechanical device which, to a great extent, doeB awny with hand composition and distribution In a print ing ofllce, has at last been perfected und that the system Is no longer an experiment and that it Is only a mat ter of time when every flrst-cluss print ing office In the country will be equip ped with type-setting machines. The Tribune, ever in the front rank In the march of Improvement, has been the first to introduce this mechanical device in northeastern Pennsylvania, and the offlce Is now provided with four Mergenthaler Linotype machines of the latest and most improved pattern. The Linotype machines used In The Trib ute offlce have been purchased out- paratus, and other improvements that have made the modern newspaper pos sible. The Linotype machine Is tiot a type setting machine In the ordinary sense of the word.On the contrary it is a cast ing machine which prepares the lines which la kept full of especially prepared type metal, and another movement of the fnfLnhtriM ahnnta AnrtticyH hnt vntttal Into the moulds to cast a line of type, wnion arops out in its proper place on a fra.mil nor tho knvhuni th operator is setting up another line. i.m moon as a nne ib cast automauo prlpers move towards the moulds with marvelous precision. One pair grasps liio spaces between words in the line and swings them into the proper chan nel, for Immediate use again, while the other set catches the type molds and lifts them to the top of the machine, where each letter Is droped Into its re spective box right side up. Iiy the ar rangement of the apparatus only a few molds of each letter are required, and the little bits of brass are almost constantly in motion as they travel, tireless, round and round upon their endless Journey while the machine Is In operation. The Illustration of the"key-board and metal pot" give a faint Idea of the man ner In which molds travel in fulfilling their mission. The type molds whtoh are situated In the section marked A at the touch of the finger keys drop down In the channels designated E to the level Q. When the line Is fuU on O It Is carried along the lines above O in the direction of the arrow to the melting pot. The line and spaces near K are lifted along course of the dotted lines to the position In which they are caught by the gripers. R represents the line of molds in readiness for Its eleva tion to the distributing bar T at the top of the machine. The machinery of the Linotype Is run by an electrlo motor, and the typo metal Is kept hot by gas Jets which are continually burning under the metal pot. Operated By Union Printers, The distribution of the matrices Into their proper channels after leaving the grlperB would seem to be the most dif ficult problem in the whole machine, but In reality the device Is the most sim ple. As will be seen by the Illustration each matrlce Is provided with teeth like the notches of a Yale lock key. Eaoh letter Is notched differently. The ribs of the distribution bar upon which the molds are thruBt by the griper fit these various notches and are varied In length. When a mold on Its travel along the distributor reaches Its proper chanel the rib that holds It to the bar 1 PlPlilSl iiilip The Distributing liar. ready for use on the press or on the sterotyplng table. The operator sits before the keyboard of the machine as shown In the first Illustration, and by simply manipulating the keys and va rious levers is enabled to turn out lines of type already cast with astonishing rapidity. With each movement of the finger after the manner of the type- tjisTffrauTOR ends and the mold therefor drops off Into its place at once. The Linotypes in The Tribune offlce were set up several days ago under the supervision of J. H. Bedell, an expert machinist in the employ of the Mergen thaler Linotype company, and they bid fair to accomplish even more than haB been promised. They are operated by SinCiirsf Gotham find Its Ocioptis New York's Police Force Shelters the Biggest Thieves in History. SCARLET SKIRTS BLL'ECOATS t'nholy Alliance Between Law an 1 Order end Crime and Disorder-Thirty Ycare of Depravity Lost Year More Than Five Millions of Money Extorted. right, and trie expense of the machines together with that of other contem plated improvements, will cause an out lay of about 125,000. The Machine's Advantages. The m.ost important advantages of the type-setting machine are the amount of extra reading matter that can be furnished patrons or a paper at slight expense, and the new and clean faced type that is presented the reader each morning. As will be seen by the description of the Linotype that fol lows, the type for every paper Is entire ly new each day. For more than a century past ef forts have been made to do away with the slow work of composition and dis tribution In the dally newspaper offlce. Mechanics of an inventive turn almost without number have endeavored to solve the problem. But in every In stance the Inventions have failed to stand the test of practical application. Among others who have struggled con tinuously with the problem was a Bal timore mechanio named Ottman Mer genthaler. For many years Mergen thaler and his associates labored cease lessly In the work of perfecting a ma chine, at the expense of thousands of dollars. After a series of failures and disap pointments Mergenthaler finally suc ceeded 'In producing a machine that was Intended to do away with the use of a single letter type and substitute solid lines each In one piece. This machine, operated by a keyboard like a type writer Is known as the "Linotype." Only Eight Yearn Old. The machine was placed before the public In 18Sl Owing to opposition which methe Invention it was only after years of persistent effort that it was established as a reliable and desir able Invention worthy of a place beside the perfected press; the sterotyplng ap- Key Board and Metal Pot. ' writer a little piece of brass resemb ling the key to a Yale lock drops into Its proper place on a line. Upon the end of each piece of brass, or matrlce, as it is called., Is the mould of a letter of the alphabet corresponding with the key manipulated by the operator. Works With Human Precision. The ringing of a little bell warns the operator that the line Is full of moulds. The touch of a lever sends the line to the left in the vicinity of the metal pot union printers, and the young men In The Tribune composing room In charge of the machines have made surprising progress in learning the keyboard and have already gained an unexpected de gree of proficiency In their work. Hero of Honor. The college student kicks his way To glory and clean through it; If he s not king of football now, lie's hair-apparent to it. Detroit Free Press. A Lino of Moulds and Spaoes, New York. Oct. 12. In one sense the so-called Lexow scandal by which is meant the whole festering mass of municipal corruption laid bare in New York city by the Investigation of the Lexow senatorial commltteee is, as the Syracuse Post has well said, in an article of which this Is a condensa tion, the most colossal scandal of the kind that Gotham has developed. It differs from ordinary financial steals in that the men who have been mixed up in It huve not only been proved to be dishonest, but to have linked them selves to oil manner of revolting vice. And the fact that they are all men who have sworn not only to keep financial faith with the public, their employes, but to protect it from the very people whom 'they 'have been proved by undoub table testimony to have fostered and encouraged in their crimes adds to the amazing features of it. Not In the history of America, either, have disclosures affected so se riously the personnel of the whole mu nicipal department, not in the history of America have disclosures shown so great a fester to have existed so long without Interruption in any city. Thirty Years of Foulness. When the testimony of Tom Gould, a notorious dive-keeper and ail around criminal a man who for years boasted the proprietorship of a den so vile that It was celebrated from the Atlantic to the Pacific, a man who has often been locked up for his wrongdoings and would be now if he had his deserts showed that the organized corruption In the police department of New York city had existed since the days of the Civil "War, the whole city stood aghast. That means thirty yearsl It Is generally conceded now that it began before the war did. And up to the time that Dr. Parkhurst step ped In with his disclosures it had never been Interrupted for so much as a day The town had gone through spasms of virtue when the police had been forced by public sentiment to close up some of the dens which they were paid to protect, but the police them selves, Infinitely worse than the dens, naa gone unscathed lioth the po lice and the dens knew that It would be only a spasm, and neither dreamed for a moment of altering the pleasant relations that had so long existed ba tween them. The dens knew that the police In closing them up were simply Dowing tor a time, and that as soon as circumstances altered they would be permitted to go on again. There was no "hard feeling" on either side. Each knew that the other was "right.1 The police were certain that na soon as they could allow the dives to open again their revenue would begin to pour in, and the dives knew that the police were animated by no personal enmity, or even opposition, when they ordered them to Btop business for a time. For years It was the custom for the captains of police precincts '.to send men around to warn the dive keepers when complaints made raids necessary, so that everything could be right and tight by the time the po lice got there to enact their miserable farce of enforcing the law. This lit tle accommodation was only omitted in those cases where the divekeepers had failed to "put up." In such cases outraged law swept the wrongdoers away with a high hand. Ramified Rascality. Such a condition seems Incredible. but It only approximates the condition that really exists In New York. Not only were hands outstretched from be tween the silken curtains of the dls orderly houses to drop coins Into the waiting palms of the police, but com mon criminals panel thieves, sawdust men, green goods operators and a score of workers in allied fields plied their trades under the direct care and com fort of the police of the biggest city in America. During the testimony given before the Lexow senatorial committee a green goods operator told how the whole detective force had been working In the interests of the green goods men who thereby had been enabled to form what was practically a trust in the city. The detective offlce acted as a kind of board of directors for this trust. They divided the city into districts, each one of which was In charge of a certain green goods man. That particular green goods man was permitted to do as much business as he liked in that district, and whenever he needed help he had but to call upon certain mem' bers of the detective force In order to get It If any victim of the green goods men complained he was forced by the detectives to leave town or be locKeu up; and If any green goods man so far forgot himself as to operate in another's district he was promptly prevented from so doing by the police. But no objection was offered to his working In his own territory. In return for these little courtesies. the green goods men of New York paid to the accommodating detective force a very large share of their enormous pro fits. Rellablo testimony will be brought out before the investigation ends to the effect that the police protected pick- Dockets as carefully as they did the green goods swindlers. Their relations to panel thieves and workers ot tne "badger game" have been more or less clearly understood for many years, and will doubtless be proved beyond a doubt within a few weeks. It Is al ready evident that no wrongdoing has been too vile for the police to act as Its abettors and protectors when they were well paid for it; and no persecution too petty and contemptible for them to re sort to for money, ' Trading on Female Virtue. Perhaps the most Impressive part of this disgraceful spectacle Is the unholy alliance between law and female de gradation. For thirty years the scarlet skirted woman of the town and the blue coated men of the police department have walked arm In arm through the dark byways of New York's nether life. Prostitutes and police have played Into each others' hands unceasingly and skillfully. The police have carefully seen to it that the prostitutes were not molested, and that their traffic in souls was brisk so long as the money was given promptly at the end of each month In payment for the service. The prostitutes have carefuly seen to it that the police were-able to live In fine houses, give diamonds to their wives and college educations to their children so long as the protection was given ln variablv In Dayment for the money. As woman after woman swore to the business-like methods of the police in extracting this money stained with tha blood of woman's virtue and man's in tegrity, the town gasped and horrored sit th news That was the first chapter of the Handbook of Infamy which the sen atorial Investigating committee has been reading to the Incredulous citizens of the New world's imperial city. Police Persecution. Following that came exposures of less Important, but more unbelievably petty extortion. There Is a law in New York against obstruction of the streets ly peddlers' carts and wagons. The law was supposed by Innocent New Yorkers to have simply fallen into deud letterlsin. It was not enforced appar ently and no one cared particularly to have It. Testimony before the Lexow committee thowed plainly, however, that It was rot a dead letter. The po lice h.d cot forgotten it, . Tjiey remem bered It anduFfd It as ahandle forsmall extortions. Peddlers violating it were forced to lay Into the Police Depart ment's creed y maw a weekly sum. This nows. though not so great a shock, was mill a most vr pleasant phase. Thes rwldlera i r!sun.ab!y were honest men, but men-riury of them incredibly Pi or yet tl ey were forced to pay a on sideial It- ah re of their puny profits to the police. It showed that no purao wan l o smhil to be fumbled at and robbed by the fattening fingers of the city's uniformed protectors. Thon came ether wlUifKf.es showing that a sc ire more of uiii.nportant laws, forgotten by all who did not feel their influ mce di rectly, were cnJ'oiced in the same para doxic! way Anyone could violaci thm-'f ho paid, and all who violated thtm had to r&y Merchants whoie business f oi red them to leave boxes, barrels i:tid bales standing on the side walk, or w!im, in loading trucks, threw skids across, thus blocking the progress of pedestrians; others having signs pro jecting a few feet further from their buildings than some long forgotten law allowed; owners of trucks left standing in the street at night, contrary to ordin ance all these and more were levied on by the rapacious blackmailers of the Police Department for a regular pay ment. If they failed to pay, then came police persecution. Reputable merch ants, who had submitted to these petty extortions for many years, swore to the truth of this amazing condition of af fairs, and werefollowed by bulldtngcon- tractors, who declared that for every load of sand and lime their business had compelled them to deposit In the street, for every temporary bridge they had been forced to throw across the Bide- walk to cover an open cellar or support a scaffolding, they had for years been forced to pay to the captain of the po lice precinct. Scheduled Prices. After these minor revelations major secrets began to leak out again. Great dlmculty was encountered when an ef fort was made to show the dictations between the liquor dealers and the po lice, and up to this time a missing set of books has made it impossible to posi tively prove the charges that the prose cuting lawyers have freely made. No one doubts now, however, for an in stant, that each one of the saloonkeep. ers who violated any of the manifold ex else regulations of the city paid, and paid liberally, for the privilege. It Is agreed that the police have had well regulated tariffs for the different of fenses. Saloons keeping open after 1 a. m. paid a certain sum; saloons doing business on Sunday paid another; Ba loons selling without a license paid an other. More than half of the 7,000 sa loons In town committed all three of these wrongdoings; so the revenue, as shown below, was enormous. Besides, It Is pretty clearly understood that many of the low groggeries in town In which drugged drinks are sold and cus. tomers robbed nald hlehly for the nrlvl lege of going unmolested, In one or two precincts actually dividing the proceeds of the robberies with the police captains ana tneir ward detectives. to the low hundreds, doubtless. It is unquestionably fair to put the num ber at 3,500 and the price at $500 a year each, thus getting a total of $1,750,000 per annum. In Tabulated Evidence. From all these figures the following table Is made up; Per Annum. Houses of prostitution J,i51,0M) Green goods 3N amblers '2,0 k) . Merchants (iii.OH) I'eddlerB 7S OK) SlKns. fruit stands, bootblacks.. Baloons 1,750.000 Grand total t.',,600 This, of Itself, is larcer evf ry year than the full indebtedness of the states of Vermont, Delaware, Wrest Virginia, .Florida, North Dakota, Montana, Wy oming, New Mexico, Arizona, Nevada, I tah, Idaho, Washington or Oregon. It almost equals each year the debt of New Hampshire, South Dakota, Mis sissippi or Colorado. That gives an idea of what the blood money levied yearly by the New York police amounts to. Now let us get a glimpse of the total for the thirty years during which this system is known to have been in vogue. Millions of Blood Money. Suppose that thirty years ago the blackmail amounted to only 10 per cent, of what it did last year, and that Its growth since then has been uniform. The figures then would run approxi mately thus, like this: 18G3, $550,000; 1864, $715,000; 1865, $'.120,000; I860, $1,085, 000; 1867, $1,250,000; 1868, $1,415,000; I860, $1,580,000; 1870, $1,745,000; 1871, $1,910,000; 1872, $2,075,000; 1873, $2,210,000; 1874, $2, 405,000; 1875, $2,570,000; 1876, $2,735,000; 1877, $2,910,000; 1878, $3,075,000; 1879, $3, 140,000; 18S0, $3,205,000; 1881, $3,370,000; 1882, $3,545,000; 1883, $3,710,000; 18S4, $3. 875,000; 1S85, $4,040,000; 1886, $4,205,000; 1887, $4,370,000: 1888, $4,545,000; 1809, $4, 710,000; 1890, $4,875,000; 1801, $5,030,000; 1892, $5,195,000; 1S93, $5,200,000; 1894, $5, 325,000. The enormous total of this amazing array of figures Is little less than the Inconceivable Bum of $100,000, 000, or, exactly, $97,580,000. The bonded debt of New York state alone equals this great figure; It Is larger than the combined debt of all the western states. It Is doubtful If In the history of America any one fam ily has really owned property aggregat ing in value this stupendous sum. And yet It represents only what the po lice of New York city have demanded and received as bribes to induce them to break their oaths of office and prosti tute instead of protect the city. Truly, New York has reason to hide her head from shame. PROFESSIONAL CARDS) Physicians and Surgeons. DR. G. EDGAR DEAN HAS REMOVED to GIG Spruce sreet, Bcranton, Pa. (JUBtopposUo Court House square.) DR. A. J. CONNELL, OFFICE 201 Washington avenue, cor. Spruce street, over Francke's drug store. Residence, 722 Vino at. utnee hours: 10.30 to 12 a. in. and 2 to 4 and 6.3U to 7.30 p. m. Sun day, a to 3 p. m. DR. W. K. A LLEN, OFFICE COR. LACK- a wanna and Washington avt.; over Leonard's shoe store; olllce hours, 10 to 12 a. m. and 3 to 4 p. m.; evei.liiKH at resldence, 012 N.WaihlnHon arenuo. DR. C. L. FREY, PRACTICE LIMITED diseases of the Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat; olllce, 122 Wyoming avu. Rcsl dence, 629 Vine street. DR. L. M. GATES, 125 WASHINGTON avenue. Otllce hours, 8 to 6 a. m., 1.30 to 3 and 7 to 8 p. m. Residence 309 Mad ison avenue. JOHN L. W'ENTZ, M. D., OFFICES 52 and 53 Commonwealth building; resi lience 711 Madison ave. ; otllce hours, 10 to 12, 2 to 4, 7 to 8: Sundays 2.3U to 4, evenings ut reslduiice. A specialty made ot diseases of the eye, ear, nose and throat and gynecology. DR. KAY, 206 PF.NX AVE. : 1 to 8 p. m.: cull 2Wa. lJls. of women, obslutrtce and and dls. of chtl. Lawyers. J. M. C. RANCH'S LAW AND COL lectlon ofllce, No. 317 Spruce St., oppo site Forest House, Scranton, Pa.; col lections a specialty throughout Penn sylvania; reliable correspondents In ev ery county. DR. DOYLE'S PLANS. Hush Money from Gamblers. Then came the gamblers. This class may be divided into three classes. First were the big gambling houses where faro, roulette, rouge et noir, keno, poker and other like games of "chance" were carried on; then the nool roomB. In which bets on horse races were illegally plnced, and then the policy shops. Up to the present time this group has been only casually touched upon by the committee, but enough is known to make a certainty of the belief that all paid the police large sums for the privi lege of fleecing the confiding public. That there have been scores of other lnes along which blood money has flow ed into the capacious coffers of the po lice, nobody for an Instant doubts. Hints of many have been heard and proof of many will doubtless develop before the Lexow Committee ends its sittings. But without these minor matters the stealings which have already been ac counted for are so enormous in their total that the people of New York are dazed by amazement. Figuring It All l p. It is not easy to approach accuracy In figuring up the aggregate of all these stealings. The estimates below are not too high, however. The price charged houses of prosti tution for protection was as well estab lished as Is the price of pig iron or wheat and, unlike them, it did not fluctuate. When a disreputable house opened Its proprietor was ex pected to pay $300 to the captain After that, as long as the house was running, a regular contribution of $50 a month was called for. Default of any payment was the signal for an immediate raid. A little figuring will show how much this amounted to. Complaints were received by the So ciety for the Prevention of Vice of 1.435 houses of ill fame during the past year. Prank Moss, counsel for the society, estimates that less than one third of the existing houses were com plained of. This Indicates that New York's number la 4,000. It Is an expert who says that the average life of a house of bad character under one pro prietor is three years. That makes the "initiation fee" of one-third of the houses fall due every year. So the total figures up in this way: "initiation fees" of 1.500 houses ($500 each), $750,000 per annum. Regular monthly payments of 4.500 houses at $50 per month ($600 per an num), $2,700,000 per annum. This gives a total of $3,450,000 per year for the houses of prostitution, and, immense as this sum may seem, it Ib based on hard and undeniable fact. uemembertng that no account is made of the extras paid to the police for overlooking other violations of the law, such as assaults, robberies, etc., oc curring In the houses, and the prices paid for bogus ball bonds when the Inmates were arrested (and proof that this latter is a considerable Item has been offered to the committee), it will be seen that these figures are small. From Green Good9 Men. The blood money paid by the green goods men makes a total of great size, but smaller than that paid by the houses of prostitution. It was Bhown that the main operators there were four of them who controlled the whole city paid the police captains $150 a month each and the detective bureau from $76 to $250 a month each. Average this at $300 a month each, and vou iret $1,200 a month, or a total of $14,000 per annum. The exact number of "writers' Is un known, but at the loweBt calculation it was not less than eight for each "boss "Writers" paid $50 a month each. Thus thirty-two paid not less than $1,600 a month or $19,200 per annum. The amount turned Into the pockets of the city's blue uniforms by the gam blers Is, at present, hard to guess at. As has been explained, there were three classes of contributors: The gamblers proper, the poolroom keepers, and the policy shop men. A conservative est! mate (and it probably falls short of the fact by one-half) guesses that their payments amount to $6,000 a month in all, or $72,000 per annum. The average price paid by merchants for the privilege of obstructing thealde walks was $25 a year. At least 2,000 merchants gave this tribute, amount ing in an to ?oo,ooo per annum. men come tu peddlers, who were permitted to violate city ordinances for is a week. This made $78,000 per an' num. At least 1,000 owners of signs, fruit stand keepers bootblacks encroached upon the public domain to an extent which the police thought Justified an assessment of $25 a year, making $25,000 per annum. To wind up the list It is necessnry to put some estimate on the amount paid by saloonkeepers. There ore about 7,000 saloonkeepers in New York, and at least one-half of them violated the law and paid for it. Among them must be included not only violators of the 1 a. m. and Sunday laws, but those who Bold liquor wholly without license and those who kept concert halls at which various Wrongdoings were tolerated. Prices ranged from the thousands down JESSUrS & HAND, ATTORNEYS AND Counsellors at law. Commonwealth building, Washington avenue. W. H. JKSSl'P, IlOltACH H. HAND, , W. H. JKSSL'P, JR. WILLARD, WARREN & KNAPP, AT torneys and Counsellors ut Law, Re publican building, Washington ave iiue, Smanton, Pa. PATTERSON & WILCOX, ATTOR nej'B and Counsellors at Law; olllcea 8 and 8 Library building, Scranton, Pa. HOSWELL H. PATTERSON, WILLIAM A. WlLCOX. ALFRED HAND, WILLIAM J. HAND, Attorneys and Counsellors, Cormnon- wealth building. Rooms 19, 20 and 21. W. F. BOYLE, ATTORNEY-AT-LAwT Nos. 1!) and 20, Rurr building, Washlns ton avenue. He Will Lecture in America Hut Not Write a Hook. Tribune readers doubtless remember how they were pleased at Conan Doyle's "Study In Scarlet," in which Sherlock Holmes figured. Well, Doyle he must be called Dr. Doyle by the way Is In this country now. He came to deliver a series of lectures, und this Is how a group of Gotham quizzes were entertained by him the other day: "What I want to know. Dr. Doyle," put In a little gentleman with whis kers, who had been bursting with Ina bility to restrain his curiosity, "What I want you to tell me Is wholht r you're going to resuscitate Sherlock Holmes. You threw him down a precipice in your last story about him, but couldn't you manage to have him crawl out and go In for some more adventures?" Dr. Doyle smiled. "Well," he re plied, "I had an impression that it wouldn't do for Sherlock Holmes to outstayi his welcome. Yes. Sherlock Holmes Is quite dead." "Perhaps," pleaded the little gentle man, "you might some day change your mind and let him climb out of that chasm?" "Oh, I might," answered the novelist, "after a few years, but I wont prom ise anything." Dr. Doyle seemed a good deal pleased at the almost boyish excitement of the company at the thought that Mr. Holmes might be resurrected some day. Then some one else ventured: "I sup pose you're going to lecture on Amer ica?" "Lecture on America? Not I," said the doctor. "Before I left a magazine wanted me to write my impressions of this country, but I declined. I felt that while I might have a great many impressions, and vivid ones, too, they might not be so. Wrhnt do you intend to lecture about?" "I 'have three .lectures. The first Is entitled 'Facts About Fiction:' the second, 'Novels of George Meredith,' and the third, 'Readings and Reminis cences.' The lecture on Meredith, I am told, will be a little heavy and uninter esting for this country, where there is not alarge amount of curiosity on that subject. The lecture on myself Is the one Major Pond seems to think will be the most popular." 'In it I give my early recollections, and speak about short story writing, and the detective In fiction, denling es pecially with Sherlock Holmes. In 'Facts About Fiction' I speak of Ste venson, Olive Schrelner, Rudyard Kip ling and others who have left their Im press on literature." "You know Kipling, well personal ly?" "Only very slightly. I shall speak more of his works than of himself." "In a speech you made before the Author's club In London recently, you complained that the novelist wus not sufficiently recognized in Knglnnd." "I did. I think that writers of fiction are more recognized in America than In my own country. Poets are made poets-laureate and receive peerages, as do historians and biographers, but the writer of fiction, whose talents are per haps of as high on order, though of a different type, is not rewarded In that way. Now in this country, if I remem ber rightly, you often bestow consul ships and that sort of thing upon novelists." HKNRY M. SEELEY-LAW OFFICES In Priee buljillns, 120 Washington ave. FRANK T. OK I'LL, ATTORN ET-AT-nt-Law. Room G, Coal Exchange.Scran lon. l'a. MIT.TON W. LOWRY, C. iT VON Stored, Attorneys, 227 Washington ave nue, Court House square. JAJ1F.S W. OAKFORD, ATTORNEY" at-Lnw, rooms Itt, 4 and 65, Common wealth building. BAM PEL W. EDGAR. ATTORN EY-AT Law. Utlice, 317 Sprure St., Seranton.I'a. L. A. WATRES, ATTORN EY-AT-LAW", 423 Lackawanna ave., Scranton, Pa. P. P. SMITH. COUNSELLOR ATLAW. Olllce rooms, 54, 55 and 56 Common wealth building, C. R. PITCHER, ATTORNEY. AT law, Commonwealth building, Scran ton, Pa. CCOMEGYS, 321 SPRUCE STREET. D. R. REPLOG LE, ATTORNEY LOANS negotiated on reul cstuts security. 408 Surucestreet. R. F. KII.LAM, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, 12U Wyoming ave., Scranton, Pa. Schools. SCHOOL OF THE LACKAWANNA, Scranton, Pa., prepares boys and girls for college or business; thoroughly trains young children. Catalogue at re quest. Opens September 10. REV. THOMAS M. CANN, WALTER HBl'ELL. MISS WORCESTER'S KINDERGAIt ten and Sehol, 412 Adams avenue. Pu pils received at all times. Next term will open September 10. Dentists. DR. WILLIAM A. TAFT SPECIALTY in porcelain, crown and bridge work, odontothreapla. Offlce 104 North Washington avenue. C. C .LAUBACH. SURGEON DENT 1st. No. 115 Wyoming avenue; R. M. STRATON, OFFICE COAL Ex change. Ho Came Hack. From the Indianapolis Journal. At Richmond, a peculiar circumstance has como to light with regard to Warren D. Jewell, a member of the Eighty-fourth regiment of Indiana Volunteers. For sev eral years the local Grand Army of the Republic post has decorated the memorial monument in the post room for him as one of the unknown dead, Jewell not having been heard of since the war closed. At a rcent reunion of the regiment, how ever, he showed up and said that he had been living in Kansas. Foiled Again. From the Detroit Tribune. "Bethink you ero you strike." The assassin paused with his glittering poniard raised In air. "Contemplate," the victim argued fur ther, "the risk you run of being proved insane if you kill mo." The dagger fell upon tho pavement. With a snarl of mingled rnge and fear the desperado troubled the crouching llg u ro at his feet for a clgiyotto and strode away. Ills Hearts' Desire. From the Indianapolis Journal. Weary Watklns How would you like to be disposed of when you ure dead? Hungry Hlgglns Glnenilly.l would pre fer beln pickled In alcohol, but I am so hungry today that I would Just as soon be stuffed. in" the dark. The fields are silent and the woodland drear. The moon had set, and the clouds hid all tho stars; And blindly, when a footfall mot my ear, I reached across the burs. And swift as thought this hand was dapped In thine, Tho' darkness hung around us ana above; Not guided by uncertain fate of mine. Hut by the law of love. I know not which of us may first go hence And leave the other to be brave alone, Unable to dispel the shadows dense That veil the life unknown. But if I linger lubt, and stretch onco more A longing hand, when fades the earth to .i.,.. Again it will be grasped by thine, before My steps can lose me way. The Independent, Loans. THE REPUBLIC SAVINGS AND Loan Association wll loan you money on easier terms and pay you better on In vestment than any other association. Call on S. N. Cullender, Dime Bank building Seeds. O. R. CLARK & CO.. SEEDSMEN AND Nurserymen; store 146 Washington ave nue; green house, 1350 North Main ave nue, Btore telephone 782, Teas. GRAND UNION TEA CO., JONES BROS. Wire Screens. JOS. KUETTEL. 615 LACKAWANNA avenue, Scranton, l'a., manufacturer of Wire Screens. Hotels und Kestuurunts. THE ELK CAFE, 125 und 127 FRANK- lln avenue. Rates reasonable. P. Z1EGLER, Proprietor. WESTMINSTER HOTEL. W. G. SCUENCK, Manager. Sixteenth St., one block east of Broad way, at Union Square, New York. American plun, $3.50 per day and upward. SCRANTON HOUSE, near D.. L. & W. passenger depot. Conducted on the European plan. VICTOR KOCH, Prop. Architects. DAVIS & VON STORCH, ARCHITECTS, Rooms 21, 25 and 26, Commonwealth building, Scranton. E. L. WALTER, ARCHITECT. OFFICII rear of 606 Washington avenue. F. L. BROWN, ARCH. B. ARCHITECT, Price building, 126 Washington avenue, Scranton. Miscellaneous. BAUER'S ORCHESTRA MUSIC FOR halls, picnics, parties, receptions, wed dings and concert work furnished. For terms address R. J. Bauer, conductor, 117 Wyoming avenue, over Hulbert.s mu slc store. HORTON D. BWARTS WHOLESALE lumber, Price building, Scranton, Pa. MEGARGEE BROTHERS, PRINTERS' supplies, envelopes, paper bags, twine. Warehouse, 130 Washington ave., Scran- tonJ'a: HORSES AND CARRIAGES FOR 8ALB at 1533 Cupouse avenue. D. L. FOOTE, Agent, FRANK P. BROWN & CO., WHOLE sale dealers In Woodware, Cordage and Oil cloth, 720 West Lackawanna ave. JIT. PLEASANT COAL AT RETAIL Coal of tho best quality for domestlo use, and of all sizes, delivered in any part of the city at lowest price. Orders left at my Otllce NO. 118 WYOMING AVENUE, Rear room, llrst floor. Third National Panic, or sent by mail or telephone to the mine, will receive prompt attention. Special contracts will be made for the sale aud delivery ot Buckwheat Coal. WM. T. SMITH. ,