TITE SOTIATTTOIn TRIBUNE-- TUESDAY MOTlNn-TG-, FEBRUARY 10, 1S07. in Irlij mill Weekly. No Stindiy Edition. Published nt bcratiton, ln., by Ths Tribune Publishing Company. Icw York Iteprewntntlv tr riiANK ston.vY co. Itooin H.TrlhiiniUltillillnir, New York Cit). ll;TIRtD AT TUB rOOTOPPIOf AT BCnANTOV PA. AS ErcONI) CIAB3 MAIL It ATTRH HCHANTON, KnUlUTARV 1C, 1807. It limy not bo lomlss to lciimtk thnt The Ttlbtine tomoriovv will sustain !t luputation for sutpnHsint' nil of lis tonteinporailcq In tho nectirncy ami completeness of Its election news. All Intolerable Anoninly. Discussion of thu nrbltintlon ttenty lies ni?aln called up the singular nnomaly In our Hchomo of. Kovernmonl In leference to the poiverloFsness of the feileial rovci iimeiit to Rimintitee to rltleiiH of a foielKii countiy safety In nny state The most familial lllustin tlon of this point Is shown In the ease of the Italians lynched In New Or leans timing the llairlbon administra tion, lleie a mob suddenly over whelmed stute police authority and executed UleRal vengeance on the sub jects of a friendly power Tho piem ler of Itnly sought of tho United States government an indemnity In bohnlf of the families of tlico murdeied men. Ills claim was cleaily just, but hav Ine; no diplomatic dealing with the state depaitment of T,oullnna lie could only advance it before the federal gov ernment which In turn was found to possess no method of compelling Louis iana to pay foi its indulgence In mob violence. In this paiticular case the then soc ietal. v of stnte, JIr. Illalno, finally In duced congiess to make a special ap piopiiatlon batisfactoiy to Italy. But If we could suppose a similar contin gency ailing dining the teim of Mi. Olney, the ehanci s would be that con giesa, In sheer obstinacy, would deny the solicited lellef and theio would re main no nltei native foi the executive than to make an appeal to the uncer tain sense of justice of the legislatuie of the oltending state a confession of federal weakness as humiliating to ur ns It would be inexplicable to a foieign KovoiniiiPiit. Cariying the supposition one step fuither, if the legislating of the state affected should lefuse tho piesident's leanest and the foieign go - eminent, giown impatient should send a wai ship to a state poit or otlierw lse tin eaten the state government with foiclblo collection of damages a pto ceduie not uncommon between Euro pean poweis the piesldent," while fully lecognlzlng the justice ot the foi eign claim, would under the constitu tion have to employ the mllltniy and naval toice of the fedeial government to defend the eirlng state In an In equitable peivetsity. To bo sine, the foiegoing contingency appeals fai -fetched, but under pies ent conditions it is by no means an impossibility Its citation nt least suf fices to fhow the need either of the creation of a special fund for use by the federal government In satisfaction .of Intel national damages denied b a separate Ameilcan state, or of the pnssago of a law, under clause 10 of section VIII of the constitution, empowering congiess to levy a punitive special tax on the leve nues of that state which, after having been convicted of an "offense ngainst the law of nations," i of uses to pay in demnity therefor. The constitutional ity of such a law would be open to se ilous if not fatal question, but an agi tation ol the subject might bring forth a better lemcdy. This: is tho day w hen Dunmoro bor ough Is cheduled by all the piophets to turn o or a new leaf Pollticallv speaking, it ceitainly needs one. Concerning Money in Politics A bill has been intioduced at Albnn) extending the law 1 elating to the pub lication of sworn leturns of compaign expenses so that It would, in the event of the bill's enactment, be dllilcult foi a candidate to do his buying of polit ical meicliandise by pioxy. Dllilcult, of couise, provided the law weie en forced, but not Impossible, so long as political conditions seem to make It necessary that money should bo em ployed In politics In largo sums. As the law now stands In New York state, a candidate must file within sixty days after election an Itemized statement of his campaign expenses, but these aie not limited nor nie his items, questioned. In tho Syiacuse district last fall, Mr. ISelden, who lan as a stump candidate against Majoi Poole, the tegular Republican nominee, confessed after the light was over and he had won, that his expenses weie something like $13,000, or $3,000 moie than his salary as rongiessman, foi the two yeais. Ho had sent most of the money in a lump sum to his commit tee, and it had dlsbuised it as it saw lit. This was piobably not an exceptional case save, pel haps, in the sum of money Involved, although it was, so fai as we know, the only one in which the truth was .fiankly admitted. In Mr. IH'ldon's case the necessaiy expenses were made unusually heavy by the ne cessity pf instiuctlng many otors filendly to him how to maik their bal lots, his namo appearing In nn un usual column. Then, too, the chai ac tor of thu light, being that of a wai on a strongly fortified organization, In volved laigeand unavoidable legitimate expenses, and Mr, Uelden, being a man who could affoid them, paid them him self without passing the hat mound among his fi lends. The bill now up at Albany alms to lequlio committees and ugents such as handled Mi. Ilel deii'n money to tell In detail, under oath, what they did with It. A much more stringent and complete ly.ilrafted act to pi event coirupt piac tlces In politics Is the one drawn In this state by the Pennsylvania Civil Set vice Reform association, a sum mary of which was printed on tills page .sevetal weeks ugo. It goes aftei evoiy thing indicative of a trade, deal, solicitation, or piomlse, und scatteis penalties right and left. If It 'could be enacted and enforced, tho poorest man could run for olllce alongside the rich, anil If equally popular, would stand nn equal ( hance to win. Cut as a matter of fact It is too Ideal to be of more than nominal usefulness. It utterly omits to take Into .account tho broad human fact that pelllshness Is one of tho stiongesl tnotlves and that men who nto Hellish by natuio cannot be made unselfish by act of legislatuie. Wo should like to boo It passed, because 11 couldn't matte mattorn woise than they aie and might, In spots, make them bettor; but we Indulge In no broad liope.8 of a millennial cm In pub lic affalis as the ictult of any law making which moves faster towtud high Ideals than the human lace can follow. Thdie W one fact 111 'tills genet al con nection which Is often ovet looked, and that Is that the oxpenslveness of poll tics keeps out of office many men who nie unfit for it men Who would othei vvlso offer themselves as standing can didates for political chailty. To be wealthy or well to do in these days genet ally necessitates tho possession of a clear head and shaipenod facul ties, and when such men take hold of politics, even though they do spend money fteely, unless they employ coi uipt means to get it back again they aie spending It for tho public's benefit quite as much as for their own. It Is dosltnble that the costs of political ac tivity should be l educed, but this end Is not to be leached by Indiscriminate abuse of tho men w ho hnve the public sphlt to face the situation and spend their money In a way that ieluins a dollar to the community for every penny that It letuins to them. We must once more call tho atten tion of our friends to the fact that el! letters sent to us for publication vvhlc'i Involve or invite contiovcisy must be signed, for publication, by the leal names of the wiltets theteof. To tills lulo wo can make no exception. Pingreo Again Rampant. The Marquette club of Chicago role biated Lincoln's blithday by a "feast of goveinois" at which tho executives of neai ly a dozen states jiai tlclpated, but as usual vvheie Hnzen S. I'lngieo is involved, it was the lighting nilei of Michigan who supplied the spice and occasioned the sneezing. lleie aie some of the things he said: 1 assume that we all hope to draw a prlzo In life In our ptlvato capacity we flg uie, 1 will assume, for a couttact with the cltj, and ret it by pnlng the pi let. This assumes that the cit) fathois pocket tile pilco Of course, If Hil contract is for a sheet tallwu) the lutes of faie must st md vcr) high, because If the) do not oil! watoied stork does not go off our hands eally The Rome is to show In our contract that we cm pull millions out of the public Then wo cm get almost any amount of vwituic.il stork Into the impels of n gullible public It is a Ullul of lotte") system Almost ovot.vbod) knows It tnd admits it Wo condemn it In public and ieoit to It in pi hate I have he.nd that it monopol) has built a chinch Tne Louisiana lotteij paid big bonuses to Mew Oilcans and walked hand in hand with chailtj, doing good with other people's money It is cm Ions to observe that the law, the pulpit and the rostrum aie against the sale of a lotteiy ticket, but not against the sale of a block ot w.iteied stock. Passing thence to a broad considera tion of tho chaiacterlstlc Ameilcan evil of speculation, Goveinoi Plngiee said- Speculation seems to have put on tho nmk of business In the Un'ted States Tho appuicnt lights of speculation havo inci eased taxation, but such rights are moie nppaicnt than leal The excessive rates ot fare and of freight ti.uispoi tation, mused b speculation, are slowly draining tho earnings of the countr), and aie also slowly crippling ti asportation itself, be cause excess reacts. Speculation inter feius w'th business by taking a lnrge number of rake-offs thnt nro not cnrneU Speculation is the gieat antagonist of economic laws All) lnone) taken b means of bonds that do not lcpre-iont money Invested in work Is a fiaud on busi ness. The violated economic itile makes tho produce! food idle men who have placed toll-gates In tile way of economic progress Speculation is not business, tar from It Speculation Is the fos of busi ness. Capital deilved from speculation Is not economic cnpitnl The ical bjslncss capital of the counti) is that actuimilito.l In the savings binks Savings bank depo sits aie tho deposits of the multitude of pioducors When tho faotoiy bonoi," fiom tho savings bank It bororvvs as It vvoio, of its own uiiplojes Thus the cm ploes diaw both wages and inteiest from the factory If tho factoiy bonows the capital of sncculatlon It p.ijs no In'ciest to Its emplojes All tiuo cconoirlc capi tal lepre bents earnings If it does not, it is an Injurj to business because in a meas uie It v.e-akens the maiket l!v the mai- ket I mean the people who consume tho vast products of the United States the gieat bod of people who consume what wo produce If consumption falls, buui ncs falls If earnings fill, consumption falls When consumption falls credit .falls. Thus It Is seen thnt the capital taken b speculation contracts tho use fulness of a laige pait of the cunency of tho country. In conclusion, he of potato fame ,e- matked: Thetgieat body of our people believo t'nt bj tho opciatlon of unjust laws, man Ignorant!) passed b) the legislature, and some Intentlonallv, theie hns been, and la now. an unequal distilbution of the wealth of thl- countiy Tiom SC0 to 1S, a shoit peilod of thlrt)-flve )eai- we have made thiee times us man) dollirs as weie mude in the 3CS )enis Immedlatel) pi lor theieto, but the comparntivelv few hnve obtained possession of most of them Dr Lvman Abbott has mndo tho following most forci ble Ulustiatlon. He snvs, that If Adam, tho son of God. wns In tiuth bom u 0J.) )cars ago, and were now living, and if every dav of his llfo had been spent in honest toll, only lestlng on the Lord's daj, and had In addition to suppoitlng his laige famll), been able to lay aside as tho lesult of his toll $100 ovei) day tho Idea of Inteiest not having been conceived In all of this C.00O )enis of accumulation, Adam today would not bo worth ns much as Mi. Itoekefcllfi. Ml Yanderbllt, or Ml. Gould, who had nothing, or whoe fnthets had nothing, comparatively, a few )ears ago. Is it an.v wonder, then, that the com mon people should say, "How Is It possi ble that such enoimous foi tunes can be honestl) acquired'" And when I ea honestly, I do not mo-in that foim of hon est) which is made so b) legislation, but that whkh Is really honest Tho old nrln- elplo was universally locognized that if a man received ho should give something. It was tho law of equivalence, that no man should receive moro than that which he fairly earned, und I do not believe thnt uti) one man can honestly acnulre In ten years moio than It would have taken Adnm 0,0(X) )ents to acquire. I aftlrm that If tho tiuth weio known in each and ovoi) ease whoro vast foi tunes have been ac cumulated. It was, and is, the lesult of lObbory of tho people In tho uamo of law, many times not Intended by tho legisla tures, but lesultlng In robbeiy just the same. Theio was a time when If a public sponker had undei taken to talk like that nt a gathering of educated and repiesentatlve men, he would have been suppinssed ns a demagogue. Hut It Is significant of a recent chanure n our lelntlonBhlp to this problem of in equitably acqulied wealth that tho govornor of a prominent state now -lot only talks that way but acts In the line of his talk and bus mote bellevoia by far than many people suspect. The wholo fact Ib that wo nru iieuilng a,i economic levolt of thu bouijreolsc, and American society, If it be prudent, will not goad the "me.it In blouses" to uo shatper weapons than ballots. -,. It Is n lulo as old as politics that vlieii two men contest for a noinlnatl m and one Is fall ly beaten, ho should good natutcdly acquiesce. The fuot that thu unsuccessful competitor u.-r.lnst James 10. 'Watklnti for the Ie publican nomination for bin (toss Of Ti-yloi borough has seen lit to nut so a tuio too affords no reason why uny Re publican otlmr than himself shou'el suppeit tho Demociatlc nominee. The labored effot ts of tho apologists for social llunkeylsm to make It ap peal that oxttavauance in a vice onl among tho puot and that It is nobody's business but their own what the llch do with their wealth would be pathetic If the) weie not so utteily mean In In spbatlon. Why not fiankly face the tiuth? Uopiosentatlvo 'Woodman, of Illi nois, wants congiess to put a tax of $r.O on every 1,000 clgaiettes. That 1 tho one way to cuio the cigarette evil by law. We advised Governor Bushncll not to go up against the Maik Hanna buzz saw. Hut some men never will learn nnythlng save by experience. Tammany, it Is said, will run Dick Ctokcr foi mayor of CJicatei New Yoik. Ciokei is Tammany's kind. BEirnK CHANGE HER POLICV. riom the Altoona Tilbune. t"oi a number of )eais out southern brethicn have been pin suing an lntciest Ing rxpeilnient Whenevei a negio h.u committed a cilme ot violence against a white woman, oi been accused of such cilme, the) have put him to a ciucl dea'h without wulting fot thoordeily piocesses of the courts. In almost cveiy qunilor ot the "otith the black man accused of such a crime is doomed. Unless as by a mliacle, theio Is no escape foi him. The mob's methods have almost ulvvavs been swift There ins neve, been any anxiety lest an innocent man should be inlstnken I) put to death, black people aie plenty in the fai south, and their lives aie re gal ded as of HUle value Sometimes tho nccuscd linvo been hanged; sometimes tliev hnve been -hot, sometimes thry have been botli hangcHl and shot, on more than one occasion the) have been burn d at the stake, amid clicumstunces that Il lustrated the Inherent savagely ot their muidereis. o Dining all these passing jenis the comts hnve been holding ugulai sessions In cveiy sn.ithein slate. Tho black men who have been arraigned bcfoie the bar of .ludge Lvncli, chaiged with ofie of tho most heinous cilmcs on the calendu, have been poor, obscuie, friendless. Theio was not the slightest likelihood tint a single ono would have escaped condign punish ment had tin evidence hc-n sullicient to convict The manner of theli taking off Is not on!) a lellectlon upon the civiliza tion of the state that permits it, but also an insult to the courts. The excuse has been made lepeatedl) that a crime against the honor of a defenseless vomnn de mands Instint vengeance nt tho hands ol the upilght men of the (Ommunlt), to the end 'thnt the black Mends may be Intimi dated, and thnt women inn) be protected fiom constnut dangers of outrage. o Hut our southern friends should stop a Utile .and fnee the exact situation Accoid lng to thtli own confession, nnd judging fiom the annual Increase In tin numbei of negioes put to death b) the wild ven geance of the mob, the cilme for the pun ishment of which all the wietched scenes that lodden southern hlstor) havo been enacted, Is moie common now than ever befoie. The fuel Is the outh has mndo a fejifui bliindet. Ilefoie the war, even whllo it continued, she could snfel) tiust her women to the black man Why Is It she cannot do -o now"' Xot bcause the iieodoni that the war biought has de moralised him, but because she lias done her level be't to brutnlize him. She had better change her policy. a i)i:n:xci: or tkusts. fiom the Washington Post. Wo have nevei heaid but one Intelli gent objection urged agiinst "ti lists" nnl thnt was uiged by Mr. Clevelnnd in his Inst message He there snld that the oiiei ntion of the tiust was to nbsoib tin smaller Industries in thtii line, and to moi go the Indlvidunllt) of the persons conducting those lndustiies He thought Hint tho process desuoyed personal inde pendence and nnrrowed the lie! J foi the dlspl.i) of peisonnl innnhood As vvesa), that Is the onl) intelligent objection we have ktiovvledg' of, and It must be con fessed thut it is a 'eilotis one. It is not an objection to be llghtl) dismissed Yet, is not this olfneemeut of ludlv ldun!lt)i this limitation of poison il fiicdoni, an Inevi table concomitant of oiKunized society and piogiexslve civilisation ' Is nn) one to dri), even tho piotulnst million the, as fiee as the untutoied sivage who mams the wilds of Afiici' We fane) it will bo veiy dllilcult to show that tiusts aie out of haimony with our social and economic evolution And then while admitting wo must consider what the) do foi the gieat miises of the population In the dn)s ot the pilvnte slaughtei houe and the Inde pendent liutchci. ilid the people evei get such good meat oi such cheap meat? HJd the), before the otganlyation o'f the sugar tiust, ever get such good sugiu and such cheap sugni'' And Is not the same Hue of ever) article of food supplied bv vast establishments carcfull) managed: i)iM!i.i:vs i'ai'ijk on citovnu. Fiom the Lcwlston Journal. President Cleveland lias vetoed moie bills b) fai than any of his piedecessoiu And congiess has pissed moie bills ovei the eto than wns over befoie lecordeJ Tho piesldent has the courage of Ids opinions, if not theli wisdom Peihaps what Piesldent Cleveland needs more than additional backbone, is additional tact and a keen Interpictatlon of tho tiuth thnt tho caith Is Inherited by the meek. Yet It is piobnbl) Hue that Presi dent, Cleveland will bo followed In his le tliment by more non-partisan lespeet than Is usual, and yet without a v. hit of that sort of esteem and comradeship which wns tho essential liches of Piesldent Lin coln's public life. It cannot lie wholly tho fnult of the sonato that but one senator lemalns who Is on familiar teinis with the icitiilng piesldent The man who Is stiangei to tact is stinnget in tact. TOLD BY THE STARS. Daily IIoioscopo Drawn lit Ajncclius, The Tribune Astrologer. Astiolabo cast: 118 a m, fot Tuesday, Feb 10. 1697. A child, boin on this da) will notice that when there Is a "cut in rates" about tho establishment of n big s)ndleate, the wcrkmnn Is usually tho first to got It in tho neck. It Leglnn to look as though Dr. Abbott's sarcasm iogurdlng the story of Jonah and tho whulo would furnish edltoiial themes for the count!) newspapers for tho next ) ear. " ' Theio Is no question that a dollar will buy moro today than nt nny period In the present century. Tho dllllculty scorns to be In teeming the dollar. Whether or not Greece will be sllppoiy onouph to ovudo tho Povvors is now the question. Uecent developments Indicate that tho "ti lists" do not trust oach other, Songs ol Spiiug. The party man's abioad toda) About the pollB he's to.iming. Hut when night climes ho'U quit the fray; To seoiot haunts will movo away And study in the gloaming. BOARD'S NEW ROOMS WERE CHRISTENED IConcluded from Pago 3. S10.CS3 12; mnll Bchute, VU2, i-lcvators, $(l jyij extin plumbing, flxtuicS, lintdwaie, etc , $n.a,l.riO; architect fees, G,GU0, adding cost or lots, with Intel ent, 'iii,u0ii, making a gland lotnl ot $.M,MI0,81 On June lsth, IS'fj, nt n meeting of the stoi kholde i , the directors weie autholled to Issue. $100,000, llrst mortgage fi per cent gnl 1 bonds Those bonds were regulnil) Is sued, readily sold and the pioceeds appll"d on the ItidobtednesH of the eoiupnu), A furthei Issue of second moitgnge bonds Is pioUdod for of a sullicient amount to pa) any balance that muy bo due. BUILDING bPHAlCS Poll lTdHLF. As to the ccncial st.vlo and construction of the building It spenkes for Itself. Noth ing that I could snv would add to Its beauty oi perniauene). It Is certainly a noble stiuctuie and will stand for )ears as a monument to tho zeal nnd eiieigy ot Its pioniotois. In my last icpoit 1 took occasion to sn) (lefeirlng to the election of this building) that befoie jnolhur )oar lolls mound we will no ilotibt have a per manent home, n boil id ot trade building that will be a tiedlt to the citizens ot Hcinntoii Xo doubt aoine ot )oil eouslil cicd thnt statement 'oiiiewhat of u romance-, inn )ou are this evening foiclbly reminded that It Is a ic.illty. Ininoad ot be Ing a handsome i lulit stoiy, steeli stone and tnniblc stiuctuie on pipei, or In the minds of some of the enthusiasts of tho bond. It has taken foim and Is something that )ou can see, feel and onjo). To much ci edit cannot be given the pilo motors oT this piojtct. A few bio.ul mlncled and piogiesslve citizens have by their liberal views and undaunted cotill dence in the futuie of our cit), given to Seianton thin beautiful building, that liai been the admit ntion of thousands ot vls itois fiom all parts or the country, nnd tho cnv of otbei neirby cities within whoso limits it would have Jieen Impos sible to cany out a project ot such mug nltude owing to a lack ot uiteipilse As an Investment, looking at It fiom a cold business point of view, It Is "gllt edge" Tile jeveiuie fiom the building fiom the vei) stait will be sullicient to pav C pel cent on tho entile tost. The ultle of the piopeit) Is Inci easing t co da). The building will be tho most popu lar one In the elt), from tho fact that more business men will lie atti acted to It than to any othei, and ir sou will permit me, In my humble cipacltv us seciet.uy of the board of tincle to orfei a suKgc -Hon, it would be thnt this organization should tako advantage of the terms ot the loutinct and puichnse tills piopeilv. In in) Judgment, the boaid could do noth ing better With the revenue man) tilings could be accomplished thnt would be ot lusting benefit to our cit) As a stock holder I should piefer thnt the title le maln the piopeit) of the company, us I conldei the -dock todnv worth moie thnn $110 pel share, but like the othei shaie liolders, 1 urn willing to sacrifice what pi ti nt might uccrue In yeais lo come, in oulei thnt the bonrd of trade muv secure the property. A movement should be Inaug urated at once to provide foi tho purchase of stock of the Iioaul of Tiude Heal Hs tnte compaii) by the Seianton Uoaid of Trade Tim DECORATION'S The beautiful decoi itlons In this loom were done b) Janus T Hall fc Co , ot 131 West Hlghteenth stioet. New Yoik, at a cost of $1 709, and the pa)inent of same Is piovUbd foi bv llhciul subset Iptlons fiom membeis of the bond Ml Hall sub scribed $200 tow aids this fund. The flxtuies weie fmiiUhtd bv J II Mo Cos iV- Co, of j 'ihonipson stieet, New Yoik. and cost complete MJO. The fin niture In this und the othei rooms was pun bused of Hill i: ("onr.ell The cat net 111 tho spp,ctni's otllee wns fur nished by S G. Ken t. Son, thnt in the committee loom bv Goldsmiths Iianui, nnd the ein tains fiom Williams & Mc Anult), nil of this cit), and cost complete about S2.0C0. On the evening of January 23th, a bnn- quet was given nt Hotel jerm.vn in com memoiation of the twent)-fltth annlvei. sniv of the Incorpoiatlon of this boaid und to lilting!) celebinte the taking pos session of these handsome looms. One hundred and iilnet) poisons, members nnd their fi lends, were in attendance, nnd a mot enjo.vuble time was had Toasts were abl) utponded to by Hon Chnrl s Haioiv bmlih, ot l'niianeipma, ut i; n Wai field president of Litavette college C M Glllln. DHstoi of Him Park church H 11 Still ges and President May. James II Toirty filled the toust masters chair with bis usual ublbtv It Is honed that oui pleasant surroundings and into festi vities will aw alien a l enow en interest in tho boaid and laigely ineiease its mem bei hin. On June 2sth, 1S9" n deploi iblo cntas tiophe occurred at tho Twin shaft, Iitts- lon, ra nie accitieiu was eauaeu u u cavn-ln of tho mines which entombed llftj-cJBht men and boys, all of whom per ished Haily Jlondny mornmg following tno accident, )oui Eeciutni), acting under the nutlioilt) ot the otllee-s of the boaid, teloginphod to the I'lltston Lloanl ot Tinde, extending svmpnthv nnd financial iisHlstanoo On Tue-dn), June JOth, two thijB nftei the accident, n meeting of the ninnufiietuieis' committee of the hoaid wns callel. for the liurpose of Inauguiat ing a fund in aid of the widows and oi plians Tlie appeal met wltn vety genet -oils tespousis fiom oui cltiens, nnd closed September 21st. IS'"',, with the mng nllleont sum of $lii,Jll r,0 collected, and paid over to the piesldent of the ITist Na tional bank, ot littston, Pa. ABOUT NHW INDUSTltlKSt Tho woik of tlie boaid timing the yeai ISJuj In tlie vva) ot secuiing new lndustiies, wns fin short ol vvhnt hud been hoped. Yet, when consideration Is tukoh of the extreme depiesslon In business Incident to one of the most hotl) contented pietii ilentlai campilmis that tho countiy has passed thiough since 1B01, it will become evident thnt It was almost out of the question to induce desirable iiiunufnctiii eis to change theli locutions, oi to prev ill upon capitalists to invest in new tiiter-prl'-es Mnny applications fiom munu factureis weie leceived ar.d conideiod b) the committee, but In onl one case was favoiablo ectlon taken f lefei to the lillss Silk Woiks, who, thiough our et foits, wne irduced to move theli plant fiom Pateison, N J , nnd take possession of the Giegoiy Silk Hi aid Woiks of tho North Hud. which had previously been vncated owing to the failure of tho con cern operating It. In Apt II, 16, Mi. Hlbs took possession, nnd the mill hns been In continual opcation,, eniplo)lng some 200 hand Theio Is nt the present time nnothei veiy tlcslruble pioposltlon In Hit hands ot the Manufacture! s' committee, which, If can led to a successful Issue, (und the re seems no doubt of in will give to Seian ton nn Industt) thnt is destined to become as vnlutble us nil) now located heie. It Is the most piomlslnir enteinilso of nnv In ought to the nttention of the boaid for some )enis It v 111 employ 2u0 men fiom me start, nnd this number will be lueioas. ed from )ear to )tar. 1 am not ut llhei ty to mako known tho details at tho pieseqt time, but at no distant day n full leport of it will be mude by tho manufuctuieis' committee UurlniT tlie v car a number of out lndus tiies were oblUed to suspend opeiatlons foi weeks ami months. Othris woiked on short time. The gi enter numliei, how- evu. weie Kept in continual ope union. The mining Industt) was exceptionally dull, not nvei aging ovei half time, l'oi-t)-thiee million tons of unthrueite was mined during the venr, 23 OQfi.Ouo tons of which was 'hipped fiom this legion Tills laige tonnage ns compaied with the fiiort time woiked nt the mines, Is due to tho Impioved facilities In tho mining nnd handling of coal, The year lust close 1 will bo lemembeied ns the dullest one expeiienccd in this section for many )ears, yet wo should be thankful that it was not neui so hid as In sonio other sections of oui counti). PHOSPIX'TS AHH DIUGHT. The prospects nie bright foi tho future ami 'It Is believed thnt the next few months will show n decided Improvement In all lines of tiude and eommoice. During tho past twelve months tho bonid has held ten legulai meetings As usnal the Jul) nnd Aumihi meetings weio omitt ed At oui Apill meeting a voty Intciest Ing nddioss. was dollvoied by Hon O r. Williams of this city on .'Tieneh Itoads " At tho Mav meeting Hon. Alfied Hand addrcHsed the bonid on "International Ai bltratlon " At the Juno meeting Street Commlsslonei r n Kinsley talked on "Street Impiovemcnt " Mi. C. A Green, of Philadelphia, dellvoiod a vet) able loc tuio on the woik of the "Philadelphia Commeiclal Mii'eums" nt tho Septombei meeting In October, Ml. J. Gardner Sanderson read a pupci on tlio "Pioduc tlon of Gas fiom Anthrnclte Culm," nnd at tho I)e"ombt i meeting Geneinl Uoy Stone', of tho ngiicultuto dopaitmont nt Wnshlngtou, D C, nnd his usslstant. Mr. Hnirtson, of New Jeisey. nddiossed the boatd nn "Good Jtoada." These tnlks havo moved veiy liigtrue.tIvo nnd Intetest Ing additions to the tegular older of busi ness of our meetings, anil were secured without cost to tho board or Ub membeis, Dining the )e,ir wo havo continued to keep liefoio the public ut largo tho gient advantage of our cheap fuel. .Mr Sander- fcT 1 P 7PB yyfLUwVl 3 O s o s o & o S All of the Novelties now in and ready for inspection. "Dame Fashion" says that these, three articles will enter nfore into Ladies' Dress this coming Spring and Summer than ever before. Our buyers have taken great pains in selecting the newest productions of England France, Germany and Switzerland. : se slm Hanufacturers of the CAPACITY 100,000 con, In his paper which he lend befoie the boaid In Octobei claims tint he has been able, hv the use of his Improved produce!, I to make and stoic, bv actual measure-1 inent, ovei Hu.owi cubic feet of gas fiom, one ton ot culm An nnlvsls ol this gns , bus shown It to be supprloi to thnt made fiom bituminous coal, and theie Is no ien-1 bon to doubt but what nctuul use of tho I gus will show even bettei results. Should I tills piove true our culm banks will sme- 1), ut no distant tin), be the source ol a power so cheip thnt the wvtei wheel will lie an expensive luui) compaied with it, and Seianton will become the greatest erus moduclmr centte in tho countt). A compan) h is been foinied for the putposo of munufiicturiiih the-,vi pioduceis, oi the) will oiect plants and suppl) gas In an) qualities for power oi domestic pui poses. work on run stup.p.ts .Dining the )vai considerable sheet paving has been done In the city The block betv ecu Linden ami Mulbe'i) streets on Wyoming avenue, which wns foi so long a time nn e)o noio und a dls giuce to oui cit). Is now one of oui llnest pived streets Not a foot of tho so-called wooden-block pijv ement now u mains, and it is to be hoped that tho cit) will never agnln tolciatcauch an abomination. Swot land street fiom the new Linden '-tiet btldge to Main avenue, was guided and paved with stone block, making a ei) debliuble uppioath to tho bridge fiom the West Side West l.atkiwanna avenue from Ninth to Main Robinson and Jack sjon stients were ulo paved with the same mnteilal Monroe avenue fiom Vine to M)itle, Main couit from Linden to Mul ben, Ppruce stieet from Wyoming to Franklin weie pavnl with nsphult An or tilnance Is nov hi fore councils piovlding for tho pavoment of Mulborry street Its up time length with ntphnlt, nnd n movement isntpro'ent on loot witheveiv piospectof succe?s to nave Piovidenco ioail from the Dickson vvorlva to Noith Main, und Noith Main to the cit) lint This stieet Is without doubt tlie ve-v worst that tan lie found 111 the wholo commonv oaltli, und Is u dlsgrnco to our cit) nnd tho ovvneis of pioptrt) abutting on It The boaid of he iltli no about to petition the comts to condemn it ns a nuisance, which Is cer tainly no ciedll to mil boasted entcipilse It Is to be hoped that oui councils will do all in theli powei to cuise that stret t to be pived at the eaillest possible moment. Oui membership has about held Its own, notwithstanding tho depressed condition of business. Number of membeis on roll Jnnuni) 20th, 1S 171 New members elected timing )enr. . . H ISS Resignations accepted 3 Suspended for non-payment of dues fl ,Membei?hlp Januniy 30th, 1S37 170 sncKirrAttvs pinancial state ment. Received fiom membeis to Januniy IS, 1S97 $kl-! W 13y amount paid on account ban quet 20 23 B) amount paid tieasurer I.40S U ?l,129 00 TRKASURIHt'S STATHMHNT. Ilnlance on hand ns pel last lenotUl.Isi II To cash rceelvetl fiom seoretaty.. 4.10S 03 To Interest allowed bv Tlist Na tional Hank 3) (.3 ?j.93l 71 CR. Hy ordeis paid to January 20th. 1S07 . l.0-'7 b'J Balanco on hand $1,907 03 Tho ependttutes may be sunimarUed nn fnllnvv s. tn w It: Dun & Co $ CIO 00 "rialarits, tecretar) and Janitor.... 2.373 on J'UIHllll, ..... ui u Postnge 2S 7 Tclcuhono fu 7' Weathtr signals 'il 00 Cn9sler's Mugazlno artlelu 230 U0 Rent 27tfh3 Advertising 27 no Dickinson Law school lout paid.. . 37 3o Pi luting nmuiul icpoit 31 UJ Expense delegates National Hoaid of Trndo 70 lu Cut of new building 21 in Nutlonal Hoard of Tinde elues Ju 0j Suudiy expenses , Gu bl Total .51,027 b3 There Ih a lmlanee yot duo fiom mem beis of $070, which lopiesonts tho aiicii nges of 23 tlellntiuents. In this connection 1 deslie to uigo upon tliese members the necessity of pioinpt pnvinelit. Wo have contrncttd bills for new fiirnltuio, cu pels, euttnlns, utc , which will txhuust our ptesent lesources and itavo 11 eonslJ ciablo bilunce unpuid Tho amount )ct due tho board if In tho hands of tlie retu rn or would be ample to meet nil obliga tions. Let me matin leapectfully uige upon every membei tlio pionipt pu)nimt of tineas us 'soon us the statement foi tnino s leceived. It Is so much easier to piv MO or U when duo than it Is to wnlt until tho nmount Is so inrge tluit often times It becomes a hardship to pay and disjullsi fnt'tlon Is felt nnd epiessed In closing I desire to cypress mv t-lncero Ihunks to the otlleeis nnd membeis of tho boaid foi tho muny couiteslcs shown mo dining tho )cnr Judt closed, und It will Ih my ambition to so conduct tho affairs of my olllco that a continuation of tho mmo may bo win muted. Tho thanks of tho board Is also duo tho pi ess of tho city und Us representatives for tho very ablo man ner In which they huvo reported our do ings, and the many kindnesses extended lu assisting us in euujlng on our woik. Respectfully Submitted, D, 13, Atherton, Secretary. ager Beer Brewery. of our Great sig Celebrated PILSNER LAGER BEER. Barrels Per Annum. FilSHED OUR INVENTORY anil liavc some good bargains to offer you English Porcelain. Dinner Sets, decorated, filled in patterns, 100 PIECES, $ 9.-18 112 PIECES, 11.48 English White Granite Dinner Sets, decorated, fiuit patterns, 100 PIECES, $5.98 112 PIECES, 6.98 J--Wc are also closing out some llavlland China Fruit Plates, decorated, ot from $3.73 to $5.07 per dozen. Real Bargains. See thcic goods In our Show Windows. THE Clemoni, Ferber O'Malley Co. 42 Lackawanna Ave. " .& HOrgUAIirERS. You must luvo Yo 1 joint koop thoio clill dronuiuin. Don't list their joung lives on cold Uoors, in cold looms. Vory tew ipiartori buy hoator j nov. Wo uro clojin tliom out. Ynu lu jko ) our ovv 11 prco so long as yuu dun't got bolo.v ecst. u must have tho loom thoy tnbo. Foote & Shear Co. 1 19 Wasliiiifjton Ave. CAUL UP 3802! OFFICII AND WAREHOUSE, 141 TO 151 MERIDIAN 01REBT. BI. W. COLLINS, Manager. and BEIDLEK M BOOH 37 Spruce Street. OrpositeThe Commonwealth, r Gttr If V 7. ( Ju- '1?0!LBII1I CO. 10,1 Ibyll Uiuui February Sale of no matter liovv hard I try, of a better place to buy my oHlce and business sta tionery, blank books, type-writer's supplies, etc , than at Reynolds Bros. They have a large stock In every lino to choose from, anil you never can beat them on price on the down scale; nnd we also cairy in stock a complete line of diaughtsmen's supplies. eynolds oros., Stationers and Engrava.3, hoti:l jtrmyn huildinq. If Expense Is No Object Why Not Hnc the Best? IIEItE THEY ABE: HUMBERS $115 UNIONS $100 For a Limited Purjc Select 3Innufnc(urcii by Price to All, $75, Fully Guaranteed. For Mb:r Stamps Patronlz3 U13 nn m 7d IHASE 4 FAHRAR, Prop's, 515 I.iiulen St., Scraittou, l'n. NOWtscS&i THIS IS NO JOKE. Book Binding; Neut. Durable llouk lilndlng '3 , iat)ou receive if you lenve your order with tlw SCRANTON IRIHUSK DINOERV. Trlb. une Uulldlnii, North Washlnston Ave. I Can't Think,