TIIE SCR AKTON TRIBUNE SATURDAY HORNING, NOVEMBER 17, 1894. Health flints" and :;., Rales 'of Hygiene Suggestions; That May Save You Many a Doctor's BUI.. ... WISDOM POK THE HOUSEHOLD Those Hints Pon't Cost Much, Arc Not Copyrighted, and if They Don't Do You Any Good, They'll Not Do You Any Harm. One of. the pleasing and valuable fPHtnrPH of the recent convention in this City of the Young Women's Chrlsi tlan association of Pennsylvania was a paper read by Dr. C. E. Ehringer, direc tor of physical education in the State Normal school at West Chester, upon "The Physical Well-being of Woman." We select from this excellent paper somepotntHof more than transient inter est. After noting that in primitive times the law of exercise was enforced by the very conditions of uncivilized soci ety. Dr. Ehringer continues: : "The whole tendency of modern clvlli aotlon Is toward specialization,- and, while" It is t(f this great force of con centrated and specialized effort that we owe the material advancement of our day, there is yet a blighting and wither ing effect which we are just beginning to appreciate. The first effects of an era of specialism must ever prove dis astrous In some directions. The whole subject has been tersely put In these 'words: 'There are three great marks or necessities for all true developement aggregation, or the massing of things; differentiation, or the varying of things, and integretatlon, or the re-unltlng of things." ' The result of aggregating in dlvlduals, families and communities, may. te Been in our great cities aua their development in architecture, art . and industries. TIip effect of differenti ation Is evident In the great discoveries "and Inventions. But the consequences of integration, or the re-unltlng of things Into higher wholes. Is scarcely yet apparent, and this, broadly speak ing, is the problem of .the future. "A word now concerning the physical Effects of city life. Man In his natural state lives In the country, whether as a hunter, a tender of -herds, or an agri culturalist. The tendency to aggregate in cities is most natural and easily ex plained. A higher Intellectual culture "obtains '.tliere; amusement are more liumerous and diversified, and com merce more active. The city has been styled the nerve-center of our civiliza tion. It is also the storm center. True Indeed, it is that 'the roots of civiliza tion, are the nerves; and other things being equal, the finest nervous organi zation will produce the highest civili zation Hut We must not forge't that there Is a limit to this cultivation and refinement of the nervous system, that unli'ss there is a coincident care and development of the nutritive and mus cular systems, disaster must inevitably result. Unfortunately, the specializa tion of labor required by city life, the sedentary occupations it Imposes; the . Jack of pure nlr, invigorating sunshine, pure water, proper rest and adequate means of natural forms of recreation, ' nre weW nigh fatal to this need. Unless special efforts are instituted to counter act these baneful tendencies; unless the city dweller can be .brought to realize these facts and induced to correot them by concerted and Intelligent endeavors his physical decadence Is a foregone conclusion; disease Will not become less, but Vastly more frequent than It now is. VThe progress of civilization unques tionably Involves an Increasing strain on the nervous system. Among sav ages and uncivilized races Insanity and some dther forms of nervous disease ' now so comomn are almost unknown. A writer in the November number of the Annals of Hygiene says: 'I will venture to assert, so true Is the fact that insanity is the product of civiliza tion, that if it were not for the combat ing influences of social laws, assisted not a little by scientific medicnl aid, all North A-meiica could, not contain the vast and enormous- army that would constitute the civilized world's array of lunatics.' Dr. Beard, the well known y. . authority on nervous- diseases, says: 'There is a large family of functional nervous disorders, that are Increasingly frequent among the indoor classes of civilized countries, that are especially frequent n the northern and eastern parts of the United States.' The suffer ers from these maladies are counted In this country by hundreds of thousands; In all the northern and eastern states they are found In nearly ever? foraln : working household. They are , all diseases of civilization, and of mod ern civilization, and malrrly of the nine teenth, century and of the United States. Neurasthenia, or nervous ex haustion, is comparatively a modern disease, its symptoms , surprisingly ?iore frequent now than In the last cen ury, and it Is an American disease in this, that. It is very much' more common . here than In any-other part of the civ ilized world.' Drl 8. Wler Mitchell, one vt the greatest authorities In this coun try on nervous diseases, says: ' 'The flower of American womanhood is wilted by over-culture before It comes fully Into bloom. The long hours, the multiplicity of studies, the number of teachers each striving, to get the ut most out of their pupils the craving rivalry to be well graded, the all-de-, vourlng jttnbltlon to command a means of living, the . hurried or neglected ' meals, the want of exercise and the fatal irregularity that it entails, the gnawing worry, that murders sleep-it is these, and these alone, that condemn ten of thousands of American women toalifeof misery and uselessness before they have ceased to behlldren.' These references will ' serve to explain In a measure why man-does not enjoy the same uniform good health and content ment that other Vertebrate animals do. It Is because man has sadly perverted his natural instincts, and has failed for ' such a long period to conform to the laws of his organization. Dr. Alls. ' Skene aptly says: 'AU this incompro hensible variety which Is displayed in tha human family comes from per- surfoundlngs. In the present state of society in this country too much time Is devoted by one class to mental culture, and by another to a necessary struggle for. existence. Nearly' all -our institu tions of learning are- deypied to Intel lectual, and moral culture, 'While there Is no organized means) of physical cul ture.. In. our cities almost nothing is dope to supply the great demands of the system for physical exercise. Just here, where the efforts in this direction should be the greatest, this all-important sub ject is practically ignored. Medical au thorities throughout the land have ever and anon been giving their warning cry, but thus far It has been but little heed ed. Dr. Skene sums the matter up In these words: 'According to my obser vation of the subject as It stands at the present time, the chief cause of Imper fect development in women is imper fect general physical culture. Mental and moral education have their influ ence upon sex, but they cannot take the place of bodily health.' "The period of childhood Is cut too short. Children are not allowed enough time to grow, to perfect fhelr mental and physical evolution. Children In this country are to apt to be precocious, to be little men and women while they are still children In years. Among girls the emotional natures are too much cultivated, nnd they are encouraged too early to enter society. Up to ten or twelve years of age boys nnd girls should lead much the same life, the girls engaging In almost the same games and pastimes as the boys. The tendency to mature thought and occu pations should be restrained and dis couraged. The spirit of play and out door exercise should be fostered In every way possible. The disastrous consequences which come upon a peo pie as a result of the enervating in fluences of civilization affect the health of women in a far greater degree than that of man. In her the consequences are more quickly seen and greatly in tensified. The remark Is often made, and not without reason, that Ameri can women are the weakest In the world; -and if this be not strictly true, It Certainly Is freely conceded that ner vous diseases do prevail among Ameri can women to a greater extent than In the women of any other civilized coun try. The decline from strength to weak ness has been gradual and hence not alwuys so noticeable. But in compar. lug one generation of girls and women with another this fact is plainly seen. Indeed, there is a prevailing notion that weakness Is a legitimate condition; that 111 health Is quite a natural state of the sex, that seml-invalldlsm is an indication of refinement, and that strength Is rather a condition of coarse ness. But within the, past few years there lias been a somewhat healthier reaction from these false notions. The feeling is growing, as It should, that health Is not merely a matter of per sonal comfort, but Is indispensable to the prosperity of a people, and Is a fact of tremendous significance as bearing on the moral questions of the day. would not otherwise obtain it. Where In J.L- CinM ftS - lli tut i iuiu ui lack of means precludes the establish ment of an equipped gymnasium, some provision should be made; a physical department should be organized and the work 4n some , form entered .upon. In smaller pjaces, where an abundance of room Is at hand, out-door work could be encouraged and undertaken without any special Instructor. Health talks could be inaugurated by securing the aid of the local physicians, and at a small cost health journals and suitable books could be furnished for the read ing room. Every town of 4,000 or 6,000 inhabitants should have a Young Wo men's Christian association and an equipped gymnasium connected there with. But, you say, how can this he done? Where will the means come from? It can be done If the necessity for their existence Is shown. It needs but an adequate appreciation of the alms and uses of this association to pro cure the needed funds. . Applied Science 'hat the Savants Are Doing to Make Life Worth Living. IX LABORATORY AND WORKSHOP How Mechanical Ingenuity Yokes Itself with the Theories of the Pedants in too Effort to Achieve New Wonders of Invention, "The saying that all disease is a sin Is not a mere empty phrase, but rests upon demonstrable facts. In the words of Dr. Felix Oswald, 'every disease Is a protest of nature against the active or passive violation of her laws. But that protest rarely follows upon a first trans gression, never upon trifles; and. life long sufferings the effects of an In curable Injury excepted generally lm ply 'that the sufferer's mode nt life Is habitually unnatural In more than one respect.' But what are the causes, and where his remialy? H are we to improve- the physical well-being, of wo man? This is the momentous question. The deteriorating -effects of city life have been touched upon, and the ex cessive nervous development and men tal strain incident to it pointed out. Improper food is doubtless a great fac tor, but lack of exet'clse and Impro prieties of dress are two of the greatest evils. The latter I have neither the time nor the disposition to consider at present at any length. Women, her self, has grappled with this question In earnest, and the needed reform Is slowly but surely progressing. In the short time remaining for me I would like to briefly point out what can be done to remedy the physical deterioration of woman by physical training. The artl flclal conditions and diseases of modern life can only be remedied by resorting to artificial means of obtaining exer cise, and this must be done by organized and systematlo effort. Leaders of thought and great movements of the day must lend their aid. Suitable means and proper places for securing physical exercise ore demanded. But even these ore of small value unless suitably qualified persons are provided to instruct in their use, explain their action, necessity and limitation. The Young Men's Christian associations throughout our land have already done noble work In providing suitable equipped gymnasia for the young men, and a good beginning has been made In the Young Women's Christian associa tions. I have no hesitation in saying that the need of them here and the good which they may accomplish Is far greater than In the Young Men's Christian associations. The boys and young men, .both from preference and necessity, secure more or less physical development, whether special provision is made of not. Not so with the girls and young women. Mistaken ideas of propriety, conventionalities in dress, ignorance, want of opportunity and In centive, alike operate to prevent their securing the one thing most heedful to their physical well-being. Every Young Women's Christian association in this broad land should make oil the provi sion In Its power to secure to Its mem bers some form of physical training. The urgent necessities of this cannot be too strongly set forth. Even though gymnasia were a thousands times more numerous than they are at present, If every school in the land made some special provision for physical develop ment, there would still exist urgent reasons why the Young Women's Chris tlan association should specially en gage In this work, as it has a field pecu liarly Its own, reaching a large class who sadly need such training and who Gilmore's Aromatic Wine A tonic for ladies. If you "Let us consider for a moment what a well organized physical department might mean to a Young Woman's Chris tian association. Were an ample room, suitable for a gymnasium, provided with the needful apparatus and pre sided over by a skilled instructor at tached to each association, think of the good that might be accomplished In the way of physical regeneration, vv nat a host of girls and young women it would attract. How pleasant and profit able might be the evenings of those who through the day had been occupied in household duties, at Bchool, in the factory, the office and the store room. Each applicant for admission to this department should have a thorough physical examination by the physical director to determine the exact needs of the case; suitable work should be prescribed to bring up physical defi ciencies, and correct the numberless faulty habits of posture of standing, walking and sitting. The applicant should be shown why a drooping head, hollow chest, uneven shoulders, crooked spine and protrud ing hips are harmful. What Injuries may result from suspending the weight of the clothing from the waist with tight bands; how and why constriction of the waist is one of the most promi nent factors n the causation nf the dis eases of women; that these things not only effect her health and happiness now, but may profoundly Influence her future well being. Should the appli cant be suffering from any condition demanding medical attention, she should be turned over to the medical director, who, In Yfung Woman's Christian association's, Should always be a woman. What a world of good could be accomplished here. The ad vice and occasional attention of a skilled woman physician might be the means of arresting many diseased con ditions In their lnclplency. I would have under this department a course of lectures upon hygiene In Its various aspects, laying particular stress upon temperance, social purity, dregs reform, heredity, diet, cookery and allied sub jects. I would have a course of health talks for children and a series of prac tical lectures for mothers on the care of children. What we need, above all things, is a broader view of physical education. This is no visionary ideal. All disease that can be prevented Is a crime both against ourselves and the state. In many instances physical re generation must precede moral regener ation. 'Life is not to live but to be well.' We cannot buy health, we must de serve It.' The woman of the future, if these suggestions be properly borne in mind, will be vigorous, healthy beauti ful and all sufficient to the demands of her lofty position." ' Rushing through the air at the rate of 200 miles an hour on an airship pro pelled by rapid explosions of nltro gelatlne Is the proposition made by Dr. Edwin Pynchon, M. D., of Chicago. He Is the author of a paper published In Transportation on "High explosives as a means of propulsion in aerial naviga tlon." In the course of his discussion he says: "In aerial travel, the great desideratum Is ceaseless and rapid on ward motion, and at an altitude of from BOO to 2,000 feet the best results should be attained. It Is quite prob able that a speed of 150 or 200 miles an hour can be easily had, and will, In fact, be necessary in order to Insure a commercial success. I have estimated, with a ship of the size mentioned, that after a full speed of 200 miles an hour has been attained, it can be maintained by the explosion every five seconds of a pair of 60 per cent, nltro-gelatlne cartridges, each weighing two ounces. Then will thus be required about 100 pounds of the explosive for each 100 miles of the journey, and the cost, in cluding a very liberal alluwance for construction and Insulation of the cart ridges, should not exceed 40 cents per pound. The expense would then be $1.20 per minute, or $72 per hour, being less than 40 cents per mile traveled, Three thousand pounds of fuel would thus more than provide for a transat lantic voyage, and the cost thereof should not exceed $1,000, which would would be Inexpensive for a vessel of its probable carrying capacity, which, In addition to fuel and supplies, should easily transport 25 adults, consisting of a crew of 10 and 15 passengers. Let man but partially succeed in the field oi aerial navigation, ana mere is no doubt but that the maximum of success will follow in much less time than has been required in the evolution of the ocean steamer." In the neighborhood of 200 delegates, representing 17 states and territories, Canada and Mexico, were present at the third national Irrigation congress, recently in session at Denver. Colo rado and California have more than half the area under successful Irrlga tlon; California, 1,004,233 acres; Colo rado, 890,733; Montana, 350,582; Utah 203,743; in all 3,500,000 acres under lrrl gallon, which cost over $30,000,000. Value of products on these lands range from $S.25 per acre in Wyoming to $19 In California. First cost Is about $S.15 per acre; average annual expenditure, $1.07; value of water rights thereafter, $26 per acre; increase In value of irri gated lands from $80,000,000 to $300,000, 000. Irrigation has come to stay. furs, $1,100 having been paid for a single skin. Fruit Is supplanting wheat on California farms. The oldest manufactured weapon Is the sword. Artificial whalebone Is mads from leather. The most abundant free metal In the earth's crust Is copper. The engines of the world can do the work of 1,000,000,000 men. Troy, N. Y., mokes over $4,000,000 worth of stoves every year. American corset factories represent an Investment of $7,000,000. The grandfather of the Rothschilds did not own a penny in 1S0O. It requires twenty hours for a ship to pass through the Sue canal. Over 90 per cent, of the business of the United States is done by checks. Scientists predict that In a century there will no disease not curable. A costal card recently received by a Cincinnati paper contained 3,203 words. The gross value of British maritime In terests amounts to slightly over $10,000,- 000,000. I A camera especially adapted for the photography of meteors has been Invent ed by a Boston artist. There are only about 87,000 persona In countty out of the whole number whose Income annually exceeds $4,000. The total amount of beer drank In the world during 1S93 Is estimated by a Ger man statistician at 4,500.01X1,000 gallons. In the fiscal year 1803 our exports of raw cotton were 4,401, ret bales, or z.aH, 131,711 pounds, of the value of $187,012,089, or 8.48 cents a pound. Experiments are being made with com pressed hay for paving blocks. The hay, after being pressed, Is soaked In a drying oil, which, it Is claimed, renders it Indestructible, Paper Indestructlblo by fire has been in vented by M. Meyer, of Purls. A speci men of It was subjected to u severe test 148 hours in a potter's furnucc and came out with Its glaze almost perfect. A Manchester (Eng.) man carries on his person a complete pickpocket alarm sys tem. Removal of Ills watcn, pin or oiner Jewelry causes the ringing of tho bell. The electric plant weighs tweniy-iwo ounces. The Prussian government spends over $50,000 a year In BUpport of the laborator ies connected with the medical depart ment of the University of Berlin. This Is exclusive of the salaries puld to profes sors. A llchthouse lens of the first order Is six feet In diameter, and costs $4,250 to $8,4(10; second order, 4 feet 7 inches, and costs $2,7110 to $5,550, and the third order, 3 feet 3 Indies, and costs from $1,475 to $3,050. It Is said that a week's work In Birm ingham, Eng., comprises, among Its va rious results, the fabrication of 14,00(1, 000 pens, 6.U00 bedsteads, 7,000 guns, 300, 000,000 cut nails, 100,000,000 buttons, 1,000 saddles, 6,000,000 copper or bronze coins, 20,000 pairs of spectacles.-Phlludelpiila Record. THIRD NATIONAL BMK OF SCRANTON. t i ORGANIZED 1872. . The duly Spiclalist In Nervoui Diseases 6 Iween Bnffilo and Philadelphia. CAPITAL, - SURPLUS, - $200,000 $260,000 This bank offers to depositors every fa cility warranted by their balances, busi ness and responsibility. Special attention given to business ao counts. WILLIAM CONNELL, President GEO. H. CATL1N. Vice-President. WILLIAM H. PECK, Cashier. DIRECTORS: William Connell, George II, rred Hand, J a Jr., William T. Catlln, Al- Smith, Luther Keller. men Archbald, Henry Bella, Malonev Oil and Manufacturing Go OILS, -VINEGAR AND CIDER 1 to 151 MERIDIAN ST. ;?V;c!' )K?Vo DR. w. h. hacker; Physician In Chief for Tbe Lackawanna Medical Go, 32? SPRUCE STREET, Opposite the Now Hotol Jermyn, has opened offlce. for tho treatment and our ot Kidney Bladder, Stomach, Bowel, Blood, Skin and Nervous Diseases. The oompauy has adopted the plan of NO CURE, NO PAY, to all responsible partita. Therefore taking upon themselves the risk: of failure to cure. superior by them. . 1895. In all its oud proving to a doubtful public the superior ht oi tue mimcsi talent employed Dy This offer hold, good until January 1, 18 bHuuehe. will Suraaona Call or eena 6 cents m .tamps tor Urinary Suraarv 1 be purtormed by Competent Mews," s treatise on Nervous yon amen. Office Hours-8 a. m. to 8 p. m. Good, Diseases of ROOF TINNING AND SOLDERING All done away with by tha use of HART MAN'8 PATENT PAINT, which consists of Ingredients well-known to all. It can be applied to tin, galvanized tin, sheet Iron roots, also to brick dwelings, which will prevent absolutely any crumbling", crack Ins or breaking- of the brick. It will out last tinning of any kind by many years, and It's cost does not exceed one-Hfth that of the cost of tinning. Is sold by tho Job or pound. Contracts taken by ANTONIO UAKTUA&X, 627 Birch St Have Ton BoroThroat. Plmoles. Cormer-Colored Boot.. Aches, Old gores. Cloers In Mouth. Hair-1 ramnp wniet oo jxemeuy w,ai ma-s aonleTeiaple.Chlcaa'oJII.Jor proof, of cures. I Capital VSOOMMt. PallenUcured nine yean I ay o today sound and wel 1 . 1 OO-pn g book fe SHAW EMERSON Sulphur stone chains. Davldow Bros. WHAT HE WANTED. In Any Anatomical Distribution of Parts lie Wished the Gull. A Napoleon of finance picked out a promising town-In Iowa and decided to "build It tip." He organized a number of stock companies, started a bank, de posed all the money of the companies In his own bank, and then went Into bankruptcy. Some of the sufferers went to learn whether anything could be saved. They found him in a mag nificent apartment. "I regret very much, gentlemen," said he, "but I have nothing left. My wife owns this Jioukp, but I have nothing. Believe me, it I could do such a thing, I would give you my body and let It be divided up among you." "What's that proposition?" asked a rather deaf old gentleman. . "He says," explained one of the suf ferers, "that we can take his body and divide it up among us." "Well, In that case," said the deaf old gentleman, "I speak for his gall." SWEETHEARTS IN YOUTH. Romance of Mr. Justice White and Mrs. Linden Kent. Associate Justice White, of the United States supreme court, and Mrs. Linden Kent, of St. Louis, were married in New York a few days ago. The marriage Is the culmination of an attachment formed years ago, when both the justice and his bride were quite young. At that time he was a newly-admitted barrister, and she waB a society girl of high standing. For some reason the match was broken off and she wedded. After years of separa tion they again drifted together, and the affection, which had been smolder ing, ripened for tho second, time Into a llame of love, and their wedding is the natural consequence. Justice White recently purchased a home In Washington and fitted it up in magnificent style, and will take up his residence there on his return. Sulphur stone necklaces. Davldow Bros. WHEN JIMMY COMES SCHOOL. FROM .verted bran action. There is nothing are suffering from weakness, apparent in the body below the head . which neoessariiy should give rise to so ana leei exhausted and ner- much more unnatural action in men than 1 ,,; .i j ii in animals . vqus; are getting thin and all ' -Anri , , u t , i ' ii i m ruu down; Gilmore's Aro- . And now to the 'physical well-being . ., ' ot woman!' In . Lowell's beautiful matlC Wine Will bring TOSeS wm r'r i: to. your, cheeks and' restore which places woman above all other y0;i to flesh and pluUipneSS things endowed with ltfe brlmrs With K, .-, - r iviuuiers, use u ior your daughters. It is the best regulator and corrector for ailments peculiar to woman hood. It promotes digestion, enriches the blood and gives and to" a mistaken idea ot what culture lastinc strength ' . Sold bv manna. , Tha nhlwr nf ,i,U,iA' la . I , It capabilities for sorrow and suffering' which are unknown to the lower orders. No exercise of Intelligence can ennble Woman to violate the laws of life with out Buffering. the consequences.' Mucli of thff- physical fratlty and disease found In the women of this country Is due to improper habltH and methods of living during the period of development, menus. - a no uujevi oi culture 18 to I r ... T O bring a being Into harmony with It 1 Matthews iirOS., bCfantOH." When Jimmy cornea from Bchool at four, j-o-r-u-s-a-i-e-ml how things begin To whirl and buzx and bang and spin And brighten up from Die roof to floor! The dog that ull day long has lain Upon the back porch wagg his tail And leaps and barks and begs again The last scrap In the dinner-pail, When Jimmy colnes from school. The cupboard latches clink a tune. And mother from her knitting gtlrg To tell that hungry boy of hers ' That supper will be ready goon. And then a slab of plo he tukes, A cooky and a quince or two, And for the breezy barnyard breaks. Where everything cries, "How-d'y do?" When Jimmy comes from school. The rooster on the garden fence Stirs up and down and crows and crows Ag if he knows, or thinks he knows, He, too, Is of sojne consequence. The guineas. Join the chorus, too. And Just beside the window nlll The red bird, swinging out of view, On his high perch begins to trill, s - -When Jimmy comes from school. When Jimmy comes from school, take care! Our hearts begn to throb and quake With life and Joy, and every ache la gone before we are aware. The earth tpkan on a richer hue, A. softer light falls on the flowers, And overhead a brighter blue Seems bent above this world of tours, . When Jimmy comes from school. . James Newton Matthew, The French admiralty recently con structed an aluminium torpedo boat, which, upon trlul, gave great satisfac tion. The material of which the hull of this boat Is constructed is not pure aluminum, but is -an alloy consisting of 94 per cent, of aluminum and 6 per cent, of copper. The adoption of this lighter material enabled important changes to be made in the general designs as com pared with the usual methods of con stuctlon; but the total weight of the hull Is only about one-halt of what a steel hull would be. The boat is CO feet long, 9 feet 3 Inches breadth of beam, and yet the total weight, with water in the boiler, Is a little less than nine and a half tons. One of the chief results In ubiiib una ngnier material Is that a speed of twenty and one-half knots was maae, against a maximum speed of British torpedo bonts of the same class of seventeen knots. Among otlmr ml. ages claimed are ease of taking out of tho water Into dry dock, additional buoyancy and freedom from vibration. me saving in weight nlone is of In creased Importance with boats designed to be carried on the decks of battle ships, such as designed for the Ameri can battle-ships Maine and Texas. Only one thing is against aluminum for boat making.. It costs twice as much as steel. Electricity Is now applied to the Inan imate typewriter. By its means one operator at a single machine can make l.uuu impressions or whatever he Is writing. Tho electric typewriter is operated just like an ordinary machine. Chicago is the first place to use them. These electric typewriters, or rather the machines which nre fed by a cen tral machine, have been placed In the leading hotels, business-houses, sanrple rooms and In private residences as well, and a general news report Is being Bent out to thel patroim 'from th,o main offices. The news which is sent out on thje machines ,is furnished by local newspapers, placed on the machine na Boon as received, r,o that a man may stroll Into his favorite resort, whether club, hotel or cafe, and by glnnclng over the neat manuscript unfolded be fore him by the machine find out what has happened, what is happening and what Is likely to happen during the day. At headquarters, where the news is sent out, a young woman Bits at a keyboard exactly like that to be found in the ordinary typewriter. This Is electrically connected with the "tick ers," each of which has a metal wheel bearing the letters of the alphabet, numerals, etc. When the young woman at the transmitter thumps the letter A, or any other letter, the wheel, which Is Inked, promptly prints that letter on the white roll. And so It continues, the lines being printed as they are to be read, from left to right as in a news paper. The shifting of the paper Is done automatically, and one person, the one who plays on the keyboard at headquarters, operates all the "tickers" simuuuneousiy.. tney may number l.uuu and some or them may be 20 miles or more away, but all record the events of the day at one and the same mo ment. The machine Is about four feet high and occupies floor space about a foot square. The Information sent out is In the shape of bulletins containing the pith of the news. THE WORLD OF LAIiOn: America has 2,000 breweries, Chicago has 207 millionaires, ..Illinois leads in railroad mileage, Astor will build an JS.W.000 hotel. Paper In 1841 was 25 cents a quire. Dresses are sold by weight In Japan. Austrian police must be telcgraphurs. . In the' tenth century razors cost SO cents, providence, Jl. I., demands S-cont bread. The "earth weighs 6,019,830,000,000.000 tons." . An Australian gold mine Is 2.400 foot deep. The lea otter Is the most valuable of all WELSH NEWS NOTES. Swansea was noted In the last cen tury for Its straw hats and its pottery. Out of thirty-four members of parlia ment for Wales and Monmouthshire, only fourteen are able to speak Welsh. Abel Thomas, M. P., holds several medals for bravery In saving lives from drowning. The present dean of Bangor was at . . i one time vicar oi uoigeiiey, aim im some years the present bishop acted as his curate. PIANOS J. Lawrence Stelle, FORMERLY STELLE & SEELEY, MUSIC DEALER, SHAW PIANOS to the Front. EMERSON PIANOS, Old and Reliable. 134 WYOMING AVE SCRANTON, PA, Nearly 4,000 members of the Cymru Fydd league have already been enrolled In South Wales, while even a greater number have been enrolled In North Wales.' : Sir John Jones Jenkins Is a native of Clyduch, near Swansea, and Is married to the Bister ot E. It. Daniel, the well known owner of the Pentre Tin-plate works. There are from 6,000 to 7,000 chapels In Wales which have been erected during this century, and It Is estimated that $4,000,000 have already been paid for the buildings. Six Welsh members will not seek re election at the end of the present parliament They are T. P. Price, Ful-ler-Maitland. W. Williams, William Rathbone, T. P. Lewis, nnd George T. Kenyon, while one, If not two others, may at the last moment decide not to contest their seats. ORGANS CLOUGH & WARREN WATERLOO CARPENTER,CROWN PRICES SATISFACTORY. DID YOU KNOW? That we WILL GIVE you beautiful new pat- terns of Sterling SILVER SPOONS and FORKS for an equal weight, ounce for ounce, of your silver dollars. All elegantly en graved free. A large variety of new pat terns to select from at MERCEREAU & CONNELL 307 LACKAWANNA AVENUE. Sir John Puleston la constable of Car narvon castle. His ancestor, Roger Puleston, was collector of taxes In the reign of Edward II, nnd was hanged by the Infuriated Welsh on the battle ments of the castle ot which his de scendant Is now the custodian. Sir John commenced life as a chemist's as sistant and was at one time editor of the Plttston Gazette and Is well known to many Scrantonlans.' Welsh literature Is the work of ama teurs. Celrlog was ' a statlonmaster; Hlraethog was an Independent minis ter; Dewl Wyn was a miller; Myny ddog was a farmer; Watcyn Wyn com menced life as a collier; and his cousin, Gwydderig, Is a collier still; and one of the chaired bards is an agricultural la borer. Sir John Llewelyn derives his Welsh name from lils mother, who was the daughter of Mr. Llewelyn, of Penller gare. Sir John's father was Mr. Dlll- wyn, brother to L. LI. Dlllwyn, late M. P. for Swansea, who changed his name on marrying the heiress of Penller- gare. The DIUwyns were an old Quak er family. Arthur J. Williams, M. P., Is the son of the late Dr. Williams, ot Bridgend, and Is also descended from the celebrat ed Dr. Price, the Unitarian divine of the last century, who anticipated many of the discoveries which Adam Smith made In political eceonomy. He Is married to one of the Crawshayg, ot Cyfarthfa. Tho blr.hops of St. David's Beem to take kindly to eccentric genius. Iolo Morganwg, though he never went to bed, but slept in an armchair in the kitchen, was always a welcome guest at Abergwlll. Carlyle's dyspepsia was no proof against the genuine kindliness and Courtesy of Dr. Thlrlwall; and the present bishop reckoned among his closest friends. Dr. Freeman, the his torian of the Normnn Conquest. Lord Mostyn is the descendant of the Mostyns who were privileged by Queen Elizabeth to hold an eisteddfod at the end of the sixteenth century. The older branch remained Catholic, but the younger branch, of which the present peer Is the representative, turned Pro testant under the later Tudurs.' One of I the Catholic Mostyns, who Is a priest, sang at the Carnarvon eisteddfod, In the Birkenhead choir. Henry M. Stanley, the explorer andl rescuer ot Livingstone, Is a Welshman, can read Welsh and converse In the motnnr tongue. Me was born In one 1 of the aim houses In the quaint and small city of St. Asaph, and commenced his adventurous career from one of the qu'etest spots in Wales.- Owen. SUPERIOR TO ALL OTHERS. ' Also a Full Line of JM Ik BLACKSMITHS' H H W,TH SUPPLIES, L j Hold Fast j I Detachable2' ?f. I " 1) Ul) ill) U UU CALKS Scranton, Pa. We have the following supplies of lumber secured, at prices that warrant us in expecting a large share of the trade : Paclflo Coast Bed Cedar Shingles. "Victor" and other Michigan Brands of White Pine and White Cedar Shingles, Michigan White and Norway Pine Lum ber and Bill Timber. North Carolina Short and Long Leaf Tellow Pine. Juniata County, Pennsylvania, Whits Oak. Sullivan County Hemlock Lumber and Lath. Tioga County Dry Hemlock Stock Boards. Elk County Dry Hemlock Joists and Studding. Miscellaneous stocks of Mine Rails, Mine Ties, Mine Props and Mine Supplies in general. THE RICHARDS LUMBER COMPANY COMMONWEALTH BUILDING, SCRANTON, PA. T3i Tha only aafa, rara an! IWDVID u.iav ever offered to Ladies, especially recommend ed to married Ladles. .v m nn wwimi nvwnvr. VTT.T.H and take no other. .W-Bnd tnr olrsul&r. lrloo tl.OO per box, boxea fot $5.00. Jjrt. MOTTB8 CHEMICAL CO., - Cleveland, Ohio. PENNYROYAL PILLS. For Sal by C, M. HARRIS, Druggist, 127 Penn Avenuo. I' or the coming Thanksgiving carve your turkey, with Wvltlow Bras, carving Be 19, EVERY WOMAN 8omttaMntJsinllsblt,nonthly,tcsUUnf msdtala. Only humlMSU? Unpumt drugs should be wed. U 70a wut (he Usl, el Dr. Peal's Pennyroyal Pills Tkey sm prompt, safe and esrUla Id result The tenelne (Dr. Feel's) never Aop 'mint, Betjrwlure, U.W. AddroM I'fcU. MmlU G tloTtlaod, O, For Saleby JOHN H. PHELPS, Pharmacist Cor. Wyoming Avtnus and Spruce) StrssL Sera Qtpn, Pa. m .1)