THE SCRANTON TRIBUNE SATURDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 17, 1896. s FORTUNES TAKEN FROM PINE TREES Money Made in the Working ol Turpen tine Orchards. VALL'E OF THESE NAVAL SUPPLIES It Is Hard Work, TIicurIi, nnd the li.-tnms Are Not Alwuvs Fabulous. VhrreOiir ltcsiii, Pitch and Tur pentine Come I'rom. One of the principal Industries at muuy southern ports Is the shipping of "nn-vul Bloivs," that is, resin, ronin, l.iii of turpentine, common pitch, l.uv.ir's pitch, tar and oil of tar. These -Southern products are valued at J-KJ! 'H.itOii a year. Kesin. or crude tui -1-L'Miiitf, is the material obtained ly tupping or bleeding; the trees. Spirits ol turpentine is the liquid obtained by disullliiK the crude resin, llusln, or telephony, is the residue after the dis tlll.iuun of resin, t'ommon pitch Is the ivsiJue from the dry distillation of ros in. Brewers' pitch, which Is used fur itinti.ig the Interior of beer kegs and b.irivls, Is obtained by stepping the llr-tillalloti of resin before ull the oil b is been tl.'stilletl. Tar Is produced by di. tilling the wood Itseir, and oil of tai ls obtained by distilling the tar. Each of these articles is srparated, commer cially into several different grades, and every grade has Its own name. The Sun's Georgia correspondent thus describes the "tnrpent'ne orchards" of that section: A pedestrian might blurt from Brunswick on the Atlantic, const, nnd without going much out of his w.iy walk westward to the Missis sippi river without once leaving the sluiflo of the pine forest, except In crossing the innumerable rivers. The forest Is about 100 miles wide, bcg'.n tilv.g on the North Carolina coast and swerving westward along the gulf, till It reaches Louisiana. Some of the workmen who help produce the naval s forts live r.9 much In the shade as the fi.icst-dwclilrsr tribes in Africa, and do rot emerge from the pine shadows ten limes in ns many years. Of this tremenJotis extent of forest, 2,2"0.(it) acres are constantly kept at v ork producing naval Ftores, and" N50,- v v ucres or n-w or virfrm trees ir utppiu annually to Keep up the supply, for trees' can bo worked profitably for four years only, and then must either have a long rest or be cut into lum 1 er. It looks ns If this Industry ought to Give constant Independent work to very unemployed man in the south, ns it' a man need only buy o few acres of pine land at $2 to $3 an acre, or bet ter yet, rent a tract fop the purpose of "turpentining" It, as it is called, fird bo sure of making a good living for the neNt four years by tapping the treci all on his own account; in other words, to be ns Independent as the tm-all farmer who raises his own crops. Thi.-i was so once, but it Is not the case now. Capital has been as busy with ti"-peiitining ns it has been with the other Industries, nnd It is practically Impossible for n, small owner to get even the price of Ills labor by turpen tlnlrnr his own little tract. The big producers set the pace, and there is no longer any chance for small opera tors. THE TURPEXTIXER. The turpentiner is ns well known an Institution in the pine belt as Is the commission merchant In fruit and veg ctuWe sections. He Is In a sense n com- ii.!.i jn merchant, but besides that he Is a manufacturer. Generally he does i to the wood In the shnpe of a broad let not own an acre of land, but he must ! ter V. ten or a dozen of them, one above have a capital of not less than $5,000 ' another, each of the points bearing to bi-Kin a profitable business, and he j downward so as to form so mnny shal luiovs that In the four years of his . low gutters to conduct the sap into the operations with a plant he must spend ' box. This chipping is repeated every Not only must he know all : week from March till October or No abi ih producing; and manufacturing vember. The soft resin which accumu- rnv.il stores, but lie must have a good ii!' -i of the country. In the whole pine !nlt there are about forty of these lav;.;o operators at work, and they pro duce the greater part of the naval t'toi-i s of the world. The turpentiner with his capital ivudy must first select his location with v.s much care as a farmer selects his land. He requires a solid tract of about 4,0H ai res of forest that has not been tapped, nnd on this space there must be not fewer than 100,000 well-grown p:u trees. To find such a tract, and to be able to rent it, Is not always easy; but this is only a beginning. The tract nai l be near enough to a railroad or i to a navigable stream to give him good shipping facilities, and there must be an unfailing supply of water for op-eraiii-g the still. Such tracts are found generally far away from civilization. ui:d usually they are in the hands of Moveral owners and each owner of course must be negotli4d with. Some owners of pine land object to having their trees turpentined, believing that It injures the lumber. There Is no hag glln.'f about the price, for the price for turpentining is as well understood as the market price for resin. The sub sections Into which a big turpentine orchard ls divided nre called crops, and an orchard must contain not fewer th:m twenty crops to be profitable. A crop is a sufficient number of trees to give 10,000 b(xes; and as from two to four boxes ure cut In large trees, about 4..r.00 or B,000 trees are necessary to comprise a crop, which should cover about 200 acres. As the trees will yield profitably for four years, and no longer, the renting of turpentine land ls always fur periods of four years; and the standard price ls $"i0 for ach crop of 10,000 boxes for the four years. This gives the lessee the privilege of tap ping the trees, cutting away under brush, and operating his works on the premises, but nothing more. He must Hot cut down or otherwise destroy trees; and it is to his own Interest to protect the forest against fire. At this rale he pays 1VA cents a year an acre for land that Is worth about $2 an acre In the market, and he asserts that when he leaves it the trees are as valu able as they were before. The general opinion Is that turpentining Injures the trees and lessens the value of the lum ber; but there are two sides to that. DOWN TO BUSINESS. With his 4,000-acre turpentine orch ard secured, averaging about twenty five good well-grown trees to the acre, the turpentiner next selects the spot for his works. If he can have his own way about It he puts them close to both rail and water. Where the rail road crosses a small stream Is just the spot. He need not bother about a sta tion, for the railroad company will gladly enough build a little siding to to hU still, knowing that a great many thousand barrels of freight will be snipped within the next four years, (inly rough Bheds are necessary and thee quickly go up. nnd then along cones the still. The copper still gener ally used has a capacity of about 8C0 Ballots, or enough to carry a charge of twenty to twenty-five barrels of crude turpentine. The 4,000 acres of good trees furnish Just enough resin to charge such a still twice In twenty four hours during the working season. And when the still ts erected tender foot passengers In the cars generally think that they have discovered a moonshiner's lair, for the outside of the stills are very much the same. The labor question ls the least of the turpentiner's troubles; indeed. It is hardly a question at all. The first steps are hardly taken toward estab lishing a plant before men begin to appear as if they dropped from the trees. No matter how isolated the site, there are negro cabins on or near the tract, and their occupants want work. Then the turpentiner has a fo'lowlng of his own, men who have worked for him In other orchards and they stick to the "boss." Wherever he goes, they are r--ady to put up their cabins and remain In the same employ, sure of work in that spot tor the next four years. The colored man as a rule pre fers turpentining; to plantation work. On the plantation his "keep" is part ct his pay, and he handles only about $10 a month. But In the backwooas all his provisions must be bought, as far as the employer is concerned, so there is no Inducement to board him, and he receives from $1 t S1.25 a day, and supplies his owrp provisions. It amounts to about the same thing t the end, bat the man has the felicity of spending ISO a month Instead of $10. His cabin is soon built In the new orchard, generally close by a clear spot whore he can make a little garden. With the vegetables that he can raise, the fish his wife and children can catch, and the game and birds his gun can bring down, the cost of living is reduced to a trifling expenditure for corn meal and bacon, coree and sugar. The worklngman Is as familiar as his fchief with the pecularities of the long- leafed pine. It has a number of dis tinctive features, and he knows them all. No 'man of science can tell him much about the three sections that compose the trunk of the tree the bark, the papwood. and the heart. He knows that It Is the sapwood which supplies the How of reun. and that the bark and the heart are as useless to him, as if they were not present, the sapwood being the comparatively soft folds ly ing between the bark ami the heart. Ju a big tree the heart may be a foot thick., and It is full of resin, but the resin will not flow. It is this heart which supplies what In the north is called fat nine, and here in the south is c alled llghtwood. Cut down the tree, and In a lew years the bark and the sapwood decay and disappear, but the heart remains, almost as hard and as Indestructible as iron. The planter hunts out these hearts for fence posts, because they ure so full of resin that they will stand In the ground for a generation without Injury. The tar maker must have them, too; but the heart is worthless to the turpentiner. IMPORTANCE OF THE WEATHER. The weather Is of as much Import ance to a turpentiner as It Is to a farmer. Give him steady, long-continued heat, or a series of cold rains, and he Is sure of a poor crop. A cold spring Is equally bad for him. But work In a new orchard begins before spring opens; the boxing may be done any time through the winter, to be ready when . the sap begins to How. The boxes are not ordinary boxes, but triangular holes cut in the trees. Two hundred thousand of these boxes must be cut In the orchard, at an expense of about $2,5'J0. No trees of less than I twelve Inches diameter oupht to be boxed, but trees of not more than eight i inches are often made to do duty. The lower pnrt of the box Is cut about twelve inches above the ground, and the hole is mndo seven inches deep, planting from the outside to the Inter ior nt an angle of 33 degrees. This makes a pyramid shaped cut Into the tree, and forms a cur that will hold about three pints. While the boxers are nt work, other men. or sometimes i women or boys, are raking around the ' trees, removing all the pine needles 1 nnd chips for a space of three or four ; feet, and burning the fltuff in little ; heaps. This is done so that in case of fire In the woods the flames will not reach the box; and for the same reason as much as the underbrush ns possible is cleared away and burned. With the earlier days of spring the sap begins to How, and then the turpentine orchard becomes a busy place. The boxes are all ready, but without further treatment no appreciable quantity of rap would flow Into them. To start the flow of sap and guide It Into the right channels, the men go to work with their odd-looking tools and chip or hack the trees Immediately above the boxes, cutting away the bark at the proper points and making Incisions In- lutes in the boxes is dipped out about seven times in the first season and poured Into barrels to be taken to the still. Each crop of 10,000 trees should yield about forty barrels of dip or soft rels In the first season, glvlns a total of 6.600 barrels for the whole orchard In the first year. The flow becomes greatest in the hottest months. July and August, and decreases as the weather grows cooler. As soon as the exuda tion is arrested and the crude resin be gins to harden. It Is scraped from the chip and the boxes with a long-handled scraper. This material is called scrape. or hard turpentine, and It contains only half as much volatile oil as the dip. The scrape amounts to about seventy barrels to the crop the first year and increases to 120 barrels In the second year. In the whole four years the en tire orchard of twenty crops should yield about 120.000 gallons of spirits of turpentine, the average from each tree for four years being about a gallon and a half of spirits and thirty pounds of high-grade resin. DISTILLATION. The distillation Is a matter that re quires great care and experience to prevent loss In spirits of turpentine, to obtain the largest quantities of rosin , 1 1 4 1 ll 1 1 1 mc inieca, uaiiiiuva - .v..... i of the higher grades, and to guard against overheating. After heating the still somewhat beyond the melting ; point of crude turpentine, a small ! stream of tepid water from the top j of the condensing tub ls conducted into the still and allowed to run until the end of the process; and it Is by , a peculiar noise made by the boiling contents of the still that the distiller knows when to stop a sign that would have no meaning to a beginner. After all the spirit has been evaporated, the fire Is put out and the residuum is drawn off by a tap in the bottom of the still. This molten rosin Is first run through a wire cloth, and then through cotton cloth into a large trough; then It Is ladled into barrels. There is not much danger that tur pentine will be overdone, for the prof Its are not large enough to attract any except men who have been brought up In the business and know no other. The best that can be said of the profits Is that they are reasonably sure, for they are ridiculously small. The $5.i"0 capital required is for the still and oth er works, barrels, advance on labor and rent, houses, sheds, tools, wagons, and mules. The cost of four years' operating a single crop, or one-twentieth of the wholo orchards, is esti mated ttt $2.H(i8.50. of which $125 Is for chopping K'.OOO boxes, tl'i for inspect ing and tallying the same. 112 for cov ering the boxes, $40 for rnklng around the trees, $355 for chipping the boxes. 2Z3 for dipping the resin and scraping stands, $333 for hauling the dltminirtt and scrapings, $222 for distilling at 20 cents a barrel, $305 for 122 spirit bar rels ai jj.in, L'ts.w tor making and fill ing 795 resin barrels at 30 cents, $K0 for superintendence of the crop, and $50 for rent. This gives the following to tal expense for operating an orchard of twenty crops for four years: Labor, rent an1 materials $10 170 Interest on capital Invested (Jij.OOii) .. l'joo Depreciation of plant, 10 per cent. a year for four years OftO Taxes and Incidentals 'fc;o Total expenies .$jn,ooo The 120,000 gallons of spirits of tur pentine produced in the four years, together with 12,000 barrels of rosin, should bring In the market about $60, 000 at average prices. It may be a little less, according to the supply and demand. But without such a great rise in prices, the turpentiner. with his $5, 000 capital, his own labor for four years, and his risk from fire and otherwise, mnkes $10,000 in the four years, or $2, 600 a year. Delicate Tc-lc. Mr. Blnks Whnt's that you are putting up on the top shelf? Mrs. Blnk That's Fido's csndy. He can't eat this cheap kind we get for tbe children. Chicago Record. CLAIMS THE EARTH IS NOW WABBLING Our Planet Bacomiot Erratic and Un certain. It Is Said. IT IS BEGINNING TO LOSE ITS SPEED Doleful Prospect for the Hamas, Race A Million Years Hence Is Outlined by a Washington Astronomer. Facts I'pou Which lie Hi M Conclusions. Washington Letter, Pittsburg Dispatch. Is this spinning-top called earth slackening its speed, and showing signs of "Running down," by clearly evident wabbling? Is a question that Is now iH-ing investigated at the Naval obser vatory. Every clear night In somg one or the big and little buildings which give the heights beyond Rock creek the appearance of a Moorish city. Professor Ueorge A. Hill, of the observatory force, is literally Immersed to his neck I in a desperate endeavor - to tind out why the earth does not turn evenly and steadily on Its axis as any well regu lated planet should. This a til other absorbing Investigations have been progressing for a considerable period at this most Interesting of all the na tional properties, but they have been barely mentioned In the public prints, probably for the reason that they aru supposed to deal with abstruse scien tific problems, but more probably for the reason that no public report has yet been made of the work In hand. But the fact that the earth Is dis covered to be wabbling to such an ex tent that degrees of latitude are not stationary but constantly changing brings at least this feature of investi gation close to the most stupid mind, and makes It interestingly If not alarm ingly "popular." There Is no necessity for present alarm. NO DANGER AT PRESENT. Even if the tremendous speed with which the earth revolves upon Its axis. more than a thousand miles an hour, is slacking. It will be some thousands or hundreds of thousands of years before n,,v appreciable difference In the length vi lne Uav and ni(;nt ls notlceable, and lho prcsent generation need not fear. thercfore, that the sphere will in their day cease Its, revolutions and swing around in the orbit with probably the same side always towards the sun. What the reason Is for this erratic performance Prof. Hill does not pre tend to explain. He will only say that the source is believed to be Intrinsic, and not duo to perturbations caused by planetary or solar lnlluence. It is his duty to observe the perturbances from day to day and report their char acter at the proper time. For many years errors of computa tion of latitude have been observable, but It was not until 1SS9 that Prof. Rustuen, of Berlin, discovered that there was a constant and In some sense periodic change from established lines of latitude. Dr. Chandler, of Boston, declared the cause to be the Irregular motion of the earth on its axis. The Germun Astronomical society took up the matter, and careful observation showed this to be the fact. The work of investigation was at once parcelled out among observatories in various ports of the world, the Washington in stitution being assigned a portion. CURIOUS RESULTS OBTAINED. The results have been curious In the extreme. It has been incontrovertibly established that the poles of the earth, Instead of pointing always towards the same spot, In space, do not, in fact, ever do so, but are constantly wab bling exactly like the stem of a top which has so far lost the force with which it was started as to show signs of weakening and stopping. Imagine the North Pole to be a real projection Into space (as some people possibly believe) in the form of a glgan- ' sheet of papsr spread stationary in space where the point of the pencil can touch and mark upon the paper as the earth revolves. Instead of the point spinning around and simply making a dot like a mighty period mark, It will begin to truce ail sorts of eceenttic curves, extending a distance ufthlrty- I one n-ei on eucn siue in every direc tion irom wnr.t may be called the nor mal pose or beginning. This wabbling, therefore, eonstanly makes a change of latitudinal lines ranging from nn almost inappreciable divergence up to an extreme of about C. feet. It is pretty clearly established that there is a periodicity of these perturba tions, but Just what are its time and phenomena is not yet known, as the work of observation has been so brief. Prof. Hill Is led to believe that during a period of fourteen months the pole Increases its vagaries to a maximum and returns gradually to the minimum. AVmrpn tv thp tib AIN&Vt 1K t-N IHh, STARS. It must seem marvellous that an as- . tronomer, by observing the apparent movement of a star billions of miles distant, can detect this small but high ly Important perturbation of the earth, but that Is the method by which con clusions are reached. The artations of the star (any star may be selected for the work) In crossing and recrossing a given celestial line, tells the whole story. The necessary computations are intricate and exhaustive, but the won derful instruments now in us. very much simplify the work. It is probable that within a few month:) the reports made to the Ger man Astronomical society by the var ious observers will enable that body to give to the world one of the most cur ious disclosures that ever emanated from the field of scientific research in regard to terrestial phenomena, and possibly some conclusion may be reached touching the cause of the wab bling of the poles. There will be no theorising, however. The real scientist never theorizes in a scientific report, yet he must theorize and speculate In private or his road to truth and fact would be much longer and more mo notonous than It Is. One theory Is that the earth Is losing the force with which It was started upon Its revolutions, hut this Is met by the fc.ct that since the first computa tions of the time of the dlurnrl revolu tion there has been no modification of the day's measure. EARTH'S WEIGHT SHIFTING. Another theory is that there is an un usual distribution of weight, and this seems to be the more plausible. But If the weight were stationary a new axis would be formed and the wabble would disappear. The wabble being periodic, the weight must be shifting, but also shifting periodically and constantly, and it may be due to the tides and to tome law influencing them which Is ynt unknown. It Is possible the constant change of latitude occasioned by this wabbling may lead to a gradual change of zones and seasons on the globe. Whatever the phenomena mny mean the report of the German Astronomical society, based upon the aggregation of reports, of which that of Professor Hill will be an important part, will be awaited with great Interest. Another absorbing work In progress at the Naval Observatory is a collabor ation with other observatories in cata loguing all of the stars from the first to the ninth magnitude, inclusive, in the northern celestial hemisphere and for 23 degrees south of the celestial eq .la tor, which Is as far south as the most southerly observatories at Washington and Algiers can reach. . This worl; at Washington is In charge of Professor H. N. Skinner, who has made upwards of 20,000 observations, and catalogued about 9,000 atara in a belt. which in- eludes all stars between 14 and 1C de grees south. CATALOGUING THE STARS. The first star catalogue worthy of the name was constructed by Prof. Argel ander, of the observatory at Bonn, in Germany, who began his work in 1839. Fchonfeld took up the work when Ar gelander died, and the result is a cata logue in four large volumes of about 400.000 stars. In the same field in which astronomers of sixteen observa tories are now laborlhs with the advantage of Instruments that are vastly superior to those psed by the pioneers. The field of Profes sor Skinner's labors may be popularly indicated by stating that it Includes four degrees in width of the belt in which Sirius, the moBt brilliant of the so-called fixed stars, is situated. The exact cataloguing of these stars will enable astronomers to describe for each other the position of comets with greater exactness than heretofore. It has already resulted in the discovery of many variable stars not known as such to Argelader or Pchonfeld. Pro fessor Skinner is theluckydlscoverer of no less than four of gi eat interest in the field allotted to him. This vast work may also lead to discoveries of incal culable importance in regard to the course our own solar system Is pur suing through the eternal depths of spat.e whether It is a systenn as is sup- posed by some, revolving in harmony with other greater or lesser systems around a vaster center than the center of any single one of such systems; In short, the disclosure of the universal scheme to a vastly greater extent than can now be conceived In a scientific sense. TRAVELING THROUGH SPACE. It Is now an accepted theory among astronomers that the system of which our litttle globe is a part Is traveling with Inconceivable velocity somewhere through space, but astronomical sci ence ls yet too young for wen a gues3 as to the direction. It must require hundreds or thousands or tens of thou sands of years for even this swift mo tion to change our relative position in regard to the nearest of the llxed stars to an extent sufficient upon which to base a tenable theory. That there has been such a change since astron omy became one of the st iences Is well established. Moreover, many of the fixed stars, so-called, are known to have a motion of their own. and the discovery and record of this motion, which is called the "proper motion," in distinction from the apparent motion due to the swinging of the earth In its orbit. Is an important feature of pres ent and future work In connection with the cataloguing of these stars, and giv ing them a local habitation and a name: by which the least departure from their "fixed" position may be known at once. Still another task of collaboration is under the direction of Pror. Dustman, which is a re-observation nnd cata loguing of several hundred of the more Important stars for purposes similar to those which led to the cataloguing of all stars of the ninth magnitude or brighter. THE MAGNETIC NEEDLE. Another work possibly more utilitar ian in Its character than those de scribed is In progress in a mysterious cavern in the hillside near the main building of the observatory. This is called the magnetic establishment, and it Is devoted to observations of the strange, and to a great extent. Inex plicable antics of the magnetic needle. In a vault beneath a little structure composed entirely of wood, are the magnet ographs. Every precaution has been taken in the construction of the vault to Insure isolation of the magnets from disturbing local Inliuences, even to the exclusion of all direct communi cation with the outside nir. A continu ous temperature of about 70 degrees is maintained by ingenious automatic machinery for Increasing or decreas ing the heat. The only uivertlng force In the vicinity is an electric railroad a fourth of a mile distant, and numerous tests have discovered the exact lnllu ence of the current, which is consid ered in the observations and deduc tions. In this mystic vault is seen the most remarkable evidences of those magnetic disturbances which travel w'th the sPee1 of thought, not only from one part of the earth and its gas eous envelope to another, but also from sun to earth, from planet to planet, and probably (who knows?) from suns and systems which hold intimate mag netic communication with each other throughout the universe. THRESHOLD OP KNOWLEDGE. These studies are yet In their young est infancy, and improved Instruments, magnets, lenses, photography and mathematical machinery may, at no distant day, reveal wonders in the scheme of world creation, growth, d. cay and death, of which the most vivid imagination of a Poe or a Flammarion could not have the faintest conception. It is not generally known even to Washlngtonlans that there are nights set apart for visitors at the observa tory when any( of the public who wish to probe the mysteries of the celestial universe which the nnkutl eye cannot see may look through the m. g ! niflcrnt 12-1: ch ' qua'.onal. Jup ter, wlih hls remarkable btlts ana live saiel.l;es ,,h iittiB f.fty. ntlB reeint1tf H senvrpt only one hundred miles in dla.neter, and having its orbit a bare 100.UOO mtleu from the huge bulk of the planet, has not been seen from the Naval Obser vatory), has Just passed from view on his way to become morning star. But Saturn ls a wonderful and awful spec tacle, with Its vast rings and many brilliant satellites. But If the pi inets are not numerously on exhibition at thU time the visitors yet do nn lack enter tainment. Prof. Bouger, who presides usually at these dark senaocs. turn3 the huge tube upon the star cluster in the constellation of Hercules, the most biilllant of thus? astound ng aggrega tions of suns which ure supposed to be long to one system, and which iw- either invisible or appear merely us a faint nebulous spot to the naked tye; or he will direct it to some of the won derful colored stars; or to the btau Mful quadruple star, Epsllon Lyra?, or to the Ring Nebulae, near Alpha Ly rae, which may appear almost exact ly like our own milky way to dwellers upon some plunet sltuatsd wllhin Its magic clrcl?. These are illustrations of the won drous spectacles that may be ses-n through the 12-inch equatorial. The great 2-lnch equatorial is not available for visitors, as its every moment must be utilized for scientific purposes every evening favorable for observation. Thus it will be seen that the great Na tional observatory, with its vast mn- chlnery for celestial observation, Its testing of binoculars, shronometers and compasses, its production of naval al manucs, is not wholly devoted to work Hint mny be celled merely for utilitar ian and nautical purposes, but that Its large crop of able scientists are also engaged In labors which are the main purposes of the great observatories of the world, and which have for their purpose the discovery of the most mys terious problems of the form and phe nomena of the universe. Sho'll Gigirlc ConMantiv. "I'm no worrlod about my dnUBbtpr." sal'l the wottinn In the new fur clonk. "Sh noes ahotit no solemn, ro dppreFsetl. I'd slve. the world, doctor, to sie her emile a c.iln.' ' "Thiit's ensy enough," nnnwerd th doc tor, briskly; "gat her into a church choir.'' New York Recorder. Xot Altogether Bad. The Chicago And do you find the wai?r so very bad? The Elsewhere Oh, no. With nlal rtre'sln It Is not at all bad. Detroit Tribune. Thru. C'orrrcl. She wrltp herself down hcncetoi-th Mrs. But there's more In her life still than krs., - And nohoijy oncht To ko away with the thought That she knows even yet Just what blrs, Petrojit Tribune. CONVENTIONAL CIVILITY. We Are Gradually Losing- Our Polite ness, It Seens. From the Post-Express. A New York paper which ls not noted for over delicacy of feeling has been ar guing, with no little awekenlng of gen eral Interest, that the conventional po liteness of correspondence Is not worth while. Apparently without many scru ples itself, it yet sneers at the public for the "falsehood and Mummery" of Its use of "Dear Sir," and "Yours truly." and it asks why "Esq.," or "Mr." or "Mrs." or "Miss" should be written on a fully addressed envelope, since the postoffice officials do not care a rap whether "June" be married or single, and will take It for granted that "Thomas" is Mister. It even has cal culated thaf the American public wastes 8,333 years every year In this meaningless courtesy, and the value of this time IUt'Stlma's at fully ten mil lions of dollars, w.ilch to a practical people Is surely disgraceful. What other reform can be more Im portant than this? If it be true that such merely conventional civility Is foolish, or worse, let ub consistently have done with it all. Away with the cheery, but quite unconsidered, "Good morning;" and silence the cordial, "How do you do" that rarely waits for the answer. Banish the gentle raisins of the hat; the needless nod und smile; the kind word that comes more from the head than heart; the wave of the hnnd and the cry of "Farewell." Let us meet and pass as locomotives, that are only on business bent. Let brevity and directness mark our speech nnd selfishness our every action, and think of the years and yeurs that will be "saved!" CARRIED FURTHER. Nor here alone can we stop. Soci ety's closer and more elabcrate rela tions will be quite idle courtesies; at dinner It will be every one for himself and may the hlndmust lose his dessert; and there will be no formal calls, no "pleasant time" fibs to well meaning hosts and hostesses, no need of ac knowledging invitations, no mainten ance of reticence, nor regard for the preservation of dignity, no curbing of anger, nor hampering of liu'tviduality. Let us. In short. If the World's view is ! correct, be savages once again without the barbarian's reverence, let us be im plicitly true, no matter how the truth burns or hurts: and perhnps in the centuries that we "save" by the abo lition of conventional courtesy, there will be time to do nil we accomplish now through the kindly help of others, to bear more burdens all alone, to get over disappointments, and slights, and unkind deeds and words, and wipe the tenrs that at first would flow while we still were sensitive- to the world's true opinion. What is the use. Indeed, of nil of life's amenities; why should men lauffn, or birds sing, or flowers bloom, or women comfort with smile of love If there be no gain to them? Why are the fields so lovely, and why the lavish radiance of the autumn woods, and were It not better if the sun slumped into the ocean without touching with glory the sky and wave? Why Is not life all cold and hard and hurried? Shall we not do what we can to make it so, by omitting conventional cour tesies! HAVE GONE TOO FAR. The fact ls, we have pared down un necessary politeness a good deal of late. It will not stand much more. In Paris and Germany now men raise their hats to one another, but we have not the time for that; in France, at least, every funeral procession stops traffic and Is greeted by reverently lifted hats and is do not trouble ourselves; in the old days our fathers signed themselves In their letters, "Believe, Sir, Your Very Affec tionate and Humble Servant to Com mand." nnd lnds nriilrpttneil thpir fath ers as "Respected Sir." The one lis beenf shortened to "Yours truly, or "Yours; and the other to "Dear Father," and "Dear Pop." Shall eight thousand years be saved by shortening them any more? We are reminded of the sneering com ment of a Westerner when told Caesar's famous apaphthegm, "Venl, Vldi, Viol." "It is too verbose," said he. "Casear could not have seen without comlng.nor well hve conquered without seeing, so one word would have been sufficient for the despatch." We shall be willing to save our share of 8,000 years by shaving off the little conventional civility which remains to the beginning and end of our letters, when it is shown what good use has been made of the time gained when bi cycles were shortened to "bikes" and gentlemen to "gents." For, whatever they do with it, that time costs its sav ers dearly. IS HOXOIt OF VASf'U DA ti.V.M V. Preparation in Portugal to Coin nicinornlc His Voyage to Indin. From the Sun. Portugal Is mnlilnR preparations for the eel-.-hration of the four hundredth enniersay of the palling of the Por tuguese navigator, Vasco da Gama, on his vijyage around the Cape of Good Hope to India. He was born in the town of Sines, in Portugal, in I'M, and died on Christmas Day, 1524. On July 8, H97, Da Gama set sail for India, and In May following, having passed the Cape of Good Hope, lie landed at Call cut. Prior to that time, European ram mcrce with th east had been through the Mediterranean only, and the open ing of the water route sailed by Da Gama resulted In a complete recon struction of the line.-i of Kurouean and Asiastie commerce. There is to be in celebration of the four hundredth an niversary of the sailing of Da Gama ' an exhibition ut Lisbon Illustrating tin- contributions of Portugal to the art of ! navigation, nnd setting forth her tro j phies of discovery, which nre almost us glorious as those of .p;tlit. and in that period eclipse those of any other tiutrllinic power. Portugal Is u small country, with u land area one-third leva tiian that if the state of New York, and with a population half a million th:in thai of the state of Pennsylvania, but It has turned out In its time some celebrated navigators. Cabral and Da fcSouzi among them. It Is a somewhat peculi ar circumstance in the history of ocean navigation, which the Portuguese e:-le-brntioti of the voyage of Da Gama re calls, that the chief navigators of Eu rope have usually been natives of minor kingdoms and without the ad vantages which would naturally ac crue to a representative of one of the larger governments. Christopher Co lumbus, as every school boy knows, was a native of Genoa nt times when the Italian peninsula was sub-divided ninotis; numerous petty governments. John Cabot was n Venetian who nailed In the service of England as CVIuin bus had sailed In the perviee of Spain. Amerigo Vespucci was a Florentine who sailed originnlly In th? service of Ppaln. and afterward transferred him self to the Portuguese service, and then went back to the Spanish service for a second time. Vitus Behrlng. after whom Mi'hrl'-g Straits were culled, was a Dane by birlh who served under the naval flag of Russia. Magellan, after whom Ma gellan Straits were named, wa a na tive of Alemtejo. In Portugal, and was the first to complete th circumnaviga tion of the globe. In 13J2. Vtr.izznnl was a Florentine, whose voyages of dis covery were undertaken under the pro tection of the nag of Franc-. Hendrlck Hui'son was an Englishman, and it seems sin prising to many pom .ins In this day familiar with the preemin ence of Fnglnnd as a maritime n-'t'on that he should have been In the service of the Government of HoMand when he discovered Manhattan Island. b Tkew liar Cnpauleif ni "" treat In 4S boar ivlthvatlZl m IneoaTonleacn, aftretlousf wTW 1 1 EVA M. HETSEL'S , Superior Face Bleach Posltiielj Renmes All Facial Blealsia ! tiwre Ire'klcH. Tan. Minlmru. Bliu-s-acads. Liver f-j.ots i im les n::a fclllow Cora I'irxmu if lm'.irs will use rov HipTior 1'uoo lilnucu. Not it eoeintnif, but ii tnecicmo n-tiiirL acts U. l out I y i. ll tbe s!:i:i, ram.-vine nil discol uraimns, nnd can it tbo grratHt purify lag K't lor tlio con p';i-iion in i-xi-ti'ine. A terfi'etly rlcir nnd fputles rouiploxion rn i olitaiu- d in rery in.tanco 1 y ii i'S'. Pric 41 pt-r bottle, rursalout K. i. Helwl'-i Hair Diessiin: und K m.ic irr Parlor. 3 .0 Lacka wanna avu. Mail order Eilud promptly. J OitXo's STABLE and FARM 9 -swfc.. MICA AXLE GliEASt. BCS' Ih 1H WOPi.0 ton Hi A M fikCCIIS HEW TOM CARRIAGE GREASE. fOll U0H7 WAQ0KS .M MAM.CMIIIMS BOSTON COACH AXLE OIL, CHAPR AHB BTTR.IHA:iJSASI0DMk XTiunsan i certiro tin Kiimnnvunoikll VII... k BST LHHR mSMII HI 1HAQ9lt EUREKA HARNESS OIL I TH BIST HAPMSS OIL tiA(J Iruw harvester oil I .A tM HAtt B0OI FOR I ARU ACHlHRr W0RITErJ,mmC011 ELECTRIC IVBPlCATiSlO LAHJtRH OIL f i Coach and Carriage Cand landici H V-FOB 8AH KVBV.WJB! FOR SALE BY THE ATLANTIC REFINING CO SCRANTON. PA. THE HOOSIC POWDER CO., ROOMS I AND 2, C0.TLTK B'L'O'G, SCRANTON, PA. SfliNING AND BUSTING POWDER MADE AT MOOSTC AMD RUSH DALE WORKS. LAFUN 4 RAND POWDER CO'S ORANGE GUN POWDER Electric Dattorioi, Electric HxtjloJerj, for ax ploUlut,' blasts, tiufuty Fund, nud Repanna Ctcmical Co. 's HICiH EXPLOSIVES, UP TO i Tt7rrfTfffrtTffi'ttnt?nnnTfnnffT!TiffTfi;i Ilii'llllltifHlllliiitiUltitet mummt Eskblishrd 186S. ma Genuine tr- M - E h i PIANOS At a time when many manu facturers and dealers are making the most astounding statements reardingthe merits aud durability of inferior Pianos, intending pur chasers should not fail to make critical examination of the above instruments. EL. C. RICKER General Dealer in Northeast ern Pennsylvania. New Telephone Exchange Building, 11! Adams Ave., Scranton, Pa. '.iHpiTiiTr.fifiiiiiMfrtnnflnmiffnnnwHnfiiii ilU-'ilUiilliU THE DICKSON MANUFACTURiNGCO SCRANTON AND WILKES-BAP1RE, PA Manufacture of LggoihgIevos, Stationary Engines, Boilers, IXISTISG AND PUUI'ING MACHINERY. Oeneral Ottteti SCRANTON, PA. I . .' C X. f V LT 1 1 r w re. w , was For aate by JOHN H. PHELPS, Pharmacist, cor. Wyoming Avanv and Spruoo Street, Scranton, Pa, Pill dies GAS AND ELECTRIC flltB, Steam and Hot Water Heating FURNACE WORK. THE ill I GONNELL CO., ttUlCKIWAMU 1VEML E. Manufacturer at tfc CelabrtatoC CAPAClTVl loo.ooo Barrels per Annum JAMES MOIR, THE MERCHANT TAILOR Has Moved U HU Ntw Qwtm 402 Lackawanna Avenue. Entrance on aid next to Flnt Natloilal Bank. Ha baa now In 8 Comprising rarything iwqilalte for fln atarahant Tailoring. And the Mine oaa - be ahown to adrantato in eie ail oiaiy ntiea np ro A SPECIAL INVITATION b Bztended to All Readers of The Trlba o to Coll an "OLD RELIABLE" In HI New Business Home DATE. 0v?f 26,009 In Use. 04 t4 r a r Mihtn In doubt what to use (of Nervous Debility. Loss of Power, Impotencr.Atrophy, Varicocele and other weaknesses, from any cause, use Seilne Pills. Drains checked and full vigor quickly restored. troiviMitM. n.fi tnxblM mult foully. Mailed for$l.uv;6boxest500. With 3.00 orders we tin a guarantee to cure er refund the money. Address PEAL ME0ICINE CO tlereiaod, U ROBINSON'S SOUS' Lager Beer Brewery in in en Hole J