TILE SCRASTTON TBIBUNE SATURDAY MORNTNG-, FEBRUARY 20, 1S9 7. G. W.----WITH ILLUSTRATIONS PRESENTED THROUGH THE COURTESY OF "LIFE." h.'-.n'I-U'WIi "-1 Hi iijWa..Wlni fJW J--lJMf J H.ll ' f '. H'JlVj'AJ.'l'lUw".j'lqJlg"'' ' " Jl 3L9. HKMLlWlMMttJW uju.uwi. il mm m. n il From Itarc Contcmporar Prints from the Collection of Even now, iioaily a century nftor Washington's ileatli, lie continues to be liked und respected, and the pre- LIKED GOOD vailing sentiment aDout him Is thai, conskleilng his disadvantages, lie did well Ills disadvantages weie ery considuable. His two oldei biotheis COURTING TIJE ANOTHER ANALYSIS OF RESTLESS KANSAS William A. While Tells What is the Matter With His State. THE AUNY POPULAR DELUSIONS lie Insists That There is Absolutely .Not lull',' the flutter With Ktuisns. lie Delivers a Speech W Inch is lie initrkublo lor Its Stj!e--His Refer ences to the Knnsns Populist Jliule the Hit of Ohio League Convention. Zanesville, Ohio, Feb. 19 William A. White is one of the litoiaiy pioducts of the j ear. Ho came into fame duting the last campaign in Kansas, not so much" In a political senso as In a lltoi ary seiibe. His stoiles of Kansas life are as clear cut and incisive as nie Kipling's .stories of Anslo-Indl.ui life. The speech which he lecently deliveied it the Ohio Republican league In this ity poitrajs his stle peifectly. It iv as as follows: Theie is a song which some of you iiaj have lieaid, which begins: 0 potatoes they glow small, out In Kan sas, And they oat them tops and all, out in Kansas. Theie aie forty-throe stanzas to tills ballad, and the buiden of the song is that Kansas is about the thlity-thlid degieo In the lodge of the Royal Aich Demon, and that a man, nftei going through tho whole sibling infetno, is tent to Kansas to got homesick foi hades. That songcontainssovei.il im poitunt onois. In the Hist place we do not eat them tops and all, out In Kansas. We eat them mashed with chicken gin vy and fried -with ham giavy, just ns you do here in Ohio. In the second place wo do not hae to fill our wells with lock to keep them fiom blowing away; nor do we tiim the claws of the Kansas catfish to prevent them tiom sciatchlng the bark off the trees In diy wathor. Neither do wo .send our ab stract to Missouri so that the giass hoppois -will not destroy the title to the land. These aie popular delusions which hurt Kansas. And of late a now delusion has sptead thtough the coun tty to tho effect that the Populists ate on. the icservatlon killing plutociats out of season and contiary to law. Those things being pievalent belief make the street car hotsos laugh till their skies hurt when they see u man fiom Kansas. IS UNTAIR. This is unfair. Kansas is n little nueet at time, but so are Indiana and Illinois for that matter. Rut Just be cause four or five Kansas congiessmen have the lumpy Jaw jou should not in fer that wo mow tails and tun wild with the buffalo. When Mi. Alger of Illinois began to see tilings and talk to himself you gentlemen didn't believe that the citizens of Chicago all walked backwatds to keep thelt tt onsets fiom bagging ut the knees Because Igna tius Donnelly scrambled ills bialns with the wheels in his head no one ever thought of putting Minnesota in the violent watd. Because Jones of Ai kan sas hold on! It hasn't got so fai yet that a Kansas man has to defend Ai kansas in order to stand up foi Kansas, Wo will have to dtaw the line some vvhoie, and Arkansas Is a. good place to begin. 1 have been invited here to tell you what Is the matter with Kansas, and I have come neatly J.000 miles in tho middle of winter to say thnt theie Is absolutely nothing tho matter with Kansas. There has been something tho matter with Kansas a good deal the matter with Kansas. The devil has been to pay out in Kansas, but ho lias been paid In lOU-cent dollars. And that account seems to bo closed. The host way to explain to you what lias been the matter with Kansas Is to recall a story of Uncle Chester Thomas, who Ewan were sent to England to school, but his father died when Geoige was eleven yeaia old, and George, after picking CLOTHES. up what book-lonilng ho could in Vir ginia, began at fifteen to woik foi his living ns a suivejot Luiklb lie did not slop acquit ing knowledge when he WIDOW CUSTIS. usihI to bo the boss In Topoka politics The old man was laicly dlstutbed, but one time, when the leformeis gave him the fight of his life In Topeku, he lost his head. That was the campaign In which the old man told the cohoits to "Chui fci 'em bos, chur fei 'cm, but vote agahi 'em." It was election day when the old man had been quietly circulating around the polls, distribut ing lewards of met it and Inci easing the per capita, when ho suddenly tutned and lushed hack to his ofllco wheie his ft lends weie gathei and painted de spailnplj: "Bojs, bos; for heaven's sake send someone down to the Foutth waid; them idiots theie have been for thiee hours voting just as they damn please." CAUSE Or THE TROUBLE. That's principally what's the mattei with Kansas. We haven't been able until last fall to vote as we pleased as we damn please, If ou ptefer the Latin. Foi six or seven jeais Kansas has been under the spell of the dema gogues. Tiom 1S90 to 1S91 all patties vied with one another In putting tom my lot Into their platfoims You gtn tlemon hero In Ohio have doubtless noticed with constei nation what tads, what foollsms, what tank nonsense have passed cm tent for Republicanism at one time oi another out In Kansas When Jeiry Simpson tan for congtess the ill st time the Republicans in ills dlstilct stole his platfotm bodllv ivil then absolved the Republican nominee fiom the duty of abiding by the house caucus Tho people couldn't ote as they pleased. They had to choose the loss violent of two lunatics. Foi yeais a ctowd of fellows dominated the Re publican paitj In Kansas, whose motto was "Molasses catches moie tiles than vinegai." As n lesult the state plat fotm wns moie aftoi a fl tiap than a declaiatlon of Republican piinclples. These gentlemen saw that Kansas was built on the instalment plan, to bo paid for in small monthly paj nients They pleached a bogus way out of debt, be cause they believed that It was a sine way into office. They used to tip toe around among the delegates at com en- tions telling them what was the ' smooth thins" to put in the plat form. These political economists of the soft soap school would stand pioudly on a platfotm lecommeudlng moon shine as a legal tender, Indoislng as tiology, declailng for blue glass and thebatefoot cute, pledging the pait to vegetal lanlsm and whooping It up foi the fiee nnd unlimited (olnage of flap doodle. Think of vv hat Kansas escaped with these ghost dancois leading the consetvatlvo party for half a doen jeais. The wonder Is not that the state went for Biyin, but that It did not go foi the Rev. Ill Hicks and Geoige Fiancls Ti.iin, When the national Republican paity last fall demanded honor and coin age fiom its men, the mebeis of this "smooth thing" gang in Knnsau ot ganUed themselves Into a phalanx that came tumbling head ovei heels into the Populist paity They left Kansas to vote as she pleased. And when the people weie sine that these lllin-llam game fellows weie gone, they cast the latgest Republican vote eei polled slcne the days when Kansas was the bannet Republican state in the Union That Kansas Increased hei Republican ote after the six j ears' couise in liys tetics Indicates a couiage, an Intelli gence and an Integtlty among the peo ple that should command your tespect ful admit atlou. fiom liotse play to a few thousand otes short of liotse sense Is a long Jump, but Kansas made It. The people weie so glad to get a chance to vote ns they pleased, to face an honest Issue squarely, to see the slimy old bainacles scraped off the Re publican ship, they weie so glad to find a patty above Its politicians, that they piled up a Republican vote which was defeated by a nniiow mm gin only by the ttlplo alliance of gteed, anaicliy and colic. They can't beat us again, for money, marbles or chalk. KANSAS IS ALL RIGHT. That is why I came so far to toll you that Kansas is all right. Don't vvoity about the Kansas man. If he happens- to be a Poiiullst he is no worse than the Lenox Llbrurj. left Fchool, but ho was nlvvnjs an in dlffeient spelloi and an uncertain giiunmnilan, though ho wioto a good hand and was reliable In his use of llguies. The dlsadantago of being put to work early George oveicame In largo moastiio by wot king liaid and to good put pose, so that, when while still joung ho Inhotlted ftoin his hnlf biother a good estnto, he did not suc cumb to the tuulltioiml evil of halng pioperty In early life, but made good use of his chances, betteted his faun, nnd helped suppuit and dltcct a lot of tathet thtlftless relatives. Not being carefully brought up, as great men ate In our day, Geoigo learned while still young to dtlnk linn, play catds for money, go to cock-lights, buy lotteu tickets, dance, hunt foxes, and like good clothes. He was not as exact In his observance of the Sabbath as people weie In Connecticut at that time, and sometimes ho wont hunting on Sunday, though usually he went to church when It was not too Inconve nient. As soon as he got big enough he begairfalllng In love with gills, but this habit, though for a while It con sumed much of his time, and led to much fiullless ependltute of time and moiiej, piesentlj seied him In good stead, foi when he fell In love with the rich Widow Custls she mauled him and made him an excellent w Ife He had a high tempei and sometimes used bad language ho was also ety modest and sumewh.it diffident. Nevei tholess, because of omc oxpotionce he had hid In Indian fighting, und because he was suspected of possessing the moial qual ity familiarly know n .u "nnd," and be cause no one bettot offeted, and foi IN RETIREMENT AT the Ohio Populist. When ou wake up In the silent watches of the night and begin to fiet over the moinl decay of the 170,000 Kansas men who lined up with Ml. Btvan, tutu ovoi and go to sleep, testing in the sweet assuniiee that theie weie 474,000 men In Ohio who did the -ame awful thin:: When our child! en tremble at the tales of the teuiblo atiocltlos of Jenj Simpson of Kansas, soothe their childish feais with tho honeyed wotds of wisdom that dtlp fiom the insplted lips of J. S. Coxev, of Ohio Remember that a Pop In any state is just as sweet Populism is not a Kansas complaint. It is in the blood of men Some times It becomes epidemic Then, too, often, it biings out all the env In a man, all the covetousness, all the malice Then It is not a conviction it is a tempeia ment It affects Its victims neatly all alike. Tho Kanas Populist Is not one whit vvoiso than tho men of all ages who have lot their envy get the better of their honoi, and who have deslted to make men equal b dlv Idlng some other man's pioperty Cain was the first Populist When ho saw tint his bioth ei's gift was accontable to God and that hl own gift wns not acceptable, Cain did what eveiy Kansas Populist would do, what evety Ohio Populist would do, and what the Nebiaska Populist would justify in glowing lhotoiic Instead of getting out and hustling fot a better offeting, Cain got a club and wont nftet his mote diligent and successful brothei just what the Populist today is doing Gentlemen, fiom the ttee that trrew the club rf Cain lias come ever plank In the Chi cago platfotm In this gitat fight bofoie Ui Ameil can people for the preseivatlon of Ameilcan Institutions, gentlemen, ou may depend on Kansas She Is llesh of our flesh' bone of j our bone The Republican paity In oui state has been chastened and strengthened fot the gieat woik The last 5 ear has taught the Kansas Renubllcans tho greatest lesson of 1'fe tho lfcon of courage We have the lion In out blood lion that makes men strong, who shall make Kancas gieat, fot State-, nie not preat Except ns men make them; Men .u e not great excipt thoj do nnd date And In that great battle whoso line Is foi mlng, between pntilotlsm and an archy Knnsas may dedicate to her countiv's sen lee men wot thy to fight beside the patilots of Ohio Amci leans as fcniles as John .Sheiman. ns daunt less ns Forakei, as povveiful as Matk Hantni And one daj Konns ma glvo the world a knight, without fear and without tenioach-woithy to stand In the nation's hlstoiy, beside William McKlnliy, of Ohio. ' Character. My character today Is, foi the mot pait, fclmplj the lesultant of all the thoughts I have ovet had, of nil tho Tt cl ings I havi ever cheiished, and all the deeds I have evti peitormud It Is the entlret) of my ptovlous yeuis puLktd and cijstalllzed Into the present moment So that chniuctei N the qulntesconce of bio(jraph , so that anvboeij who Knows mj chat actei and there Is no heaping cliai octet under cover knows what foi foity or more ears I have ben dolnj und been thinking C'hamutti Is, for the mott patt, b'mplj hcblt become fixed Rev Chuiles H l'mkhuist, CHARACTER. Ho shapes the spheres to suit his ends Who hath a muse foi every mood Who In himself hath mari fi lends, And finds In ctowds Ills solitude. Ho asks 110 change of scene oi clime, Not heeds tho luio of alien lands; His hours foi him are all of Time His unlveise Is wheie he stunds, IPs force doth like tho forest grow, His tenderness as sunshine thrills, His culm desties like rivers flow. His hopes ure ns the mighty hills, Sereno through tempest and through tide, His heait Is nB the ocean deists; And vvhero eternal laws nbldo His soul a starry vigil keeps. John ilall Ingham, in tho Jewish Exponent, &W!!lllliB other reasons, "w lion the Revolution bloke out he wns appointed command-et-ln-ehlef of the American army. He was far from being an accom plished boldler, and o much dlsttusted his mllltat capacity that ho was prone to take advice, which usually tinned out to bo bad Novel tholess, when ho did whip the British he got groat ad antage fioin it, and when they whipped him ho also contihod, usual ly, to get advantage from It, and as lie novel would consent to stay tin ashed, and as ho had extiaoidinary patience and detei initiation, and as most of the lit ittsli genet als woto piovldentlully Incompetent, and as the Flench eventually came to his help, In the end he won his light, and a gteat MOUNT VERNON. CAKES OF IRON FROM THE ROCK Edison's Project of Extracting Ore by Magnetism a Great Success. IT NOW PAYS HIM 15 PER CENT Great UouldcrsChcvvcd Up Like Pcn nuts liv His Plant, Which Costs About 8!i, 000,000 to Huild--A15asc of Supplies :i:t Miles- Long, Rich in JUctnl, at His Command. Oiange, N. J., Lcttei, Pittsburg Dispatch. At Edison, N. J., in the heart of a wild mountain legion, aie situated a number of buildings, gteat and small. A fiightful toat comes fiom some of them Fiom a wooden chute which juts out fiom a big wooden stiuctute that lesembles a giain elevator more lthan anj thing else there dipped to- uay tliousands of little black objects. Thej woie of the size and hape of but toi cakes They weie little cakes of Bessemer, baked haul as flint, and ton ing Into eats leady foi tiansportatlon to blast furnaces in Pennslvnnla. Those little black cakes matk tho gioatest achievement In the career of Thomas A, Edison Aftei jeais of incessant labot In studjing out the pvoblem, he has now a plant which covers eleven actes, and Is the biggest mill in the world It has cost him In lound flguies $2,000,000 He has a stieteli of mountains tnirtj tlueo miles long as a base of supplies, and in that has moie ore than all the i est of the United States put together CHEWED UP LIKE PEANUTS Edison has in operation at this plant the biggest ttavellng cranes eei heaid of His mills nio so laige and povvei ful that they take a solid bouldei, weighing live tom, and chow it up taster than a healthy small bo could eat a peanut He emploj s ov et 700 immense magnets to sepaiate the oie fiom the lock The whole process of getting out tho oie Is done automatlc all, at tho tate of .1000 ions a daj. and the finished nroduct Is put Into the ears, icady to be shipped, at a cost of 7S cents a ton It costs almost $J a ton to get the tlchoi ore In Penn shanln Mr Edison's sjstem pajs a net pioflt of 15 pet cent, on the capital invested. No bonds have boon Issued, theie is no moitgnne on the ptopeity, and ev ot thing has been paid foi Mi. Edison ill st conceived the idea of a magnetic oie sepaiatoi nbout 10 eai.s ago At odd moments, he con stiunted a small model, which satis fled him that the plan was feasible, and was laughed at by cverjbody whoso opinion was considered of val ue in such mattei s. So confident was Mr. Edison that the idea could ultl matel be woiked out that he began to look about foi the oie He statted out, aimed with magnetic needles, to find n lock that contained the It on ctjstals NECESSARY MATERIAL. He visited nil tho mines In the New Jeisey mountains, and aftet being out sl weeks noticed took which looked like the gneiss, common in the state of New Yotk, They followed up that tock, and got quite a toflectlon of the magnetic needle Continuing, they found lots of lock of the same chuiactei, and that landed them In the nelghbothood which Is now known as Edison. He found there stretches of the gneiss 4 1-2 miles long nnd J.COO feet wide. It stood up verti cally and extended down into the eatth two miles or ihore. Right at the mill there Is now one piece a mile long and 400 feet wide, and anothet that Is two miles long and 200 feet wide. Each of these bodies of gnelBS contains 23 pet cent of oxldo of lion. Mr. Edison haa .leased and bought al those stretches of rock, so that his base WHEN HE DID WHIP THE niUTlSH. deal was made of him, and he became piesldont Ho had a at tat deal of ttoubio as pitsldent. Ills fale toetli foi a long time were a bad fit and did him lnlus tlcc He had enemies who did the same at ovety opportunity The newspapois, which In out tlmo relieve the president of so much of the cato and responsibil ity of administering the government, wore of scatcely any use to him, and some of them reviled him and lied about him to his cxtiome concern and disgust, so that ho complained w 1th ex ceeding waimth of their conduct, though it does not appear that at any time he neglected to lead them Nevoi tho less, ho finally got out of the office w Ith a good deal of his leputatlon left, and COLUMBIA CONDUCTS WASHINGTON TO THE TEMPLE Or TAME of supplies Is 33 miles long. Right on the mountain on which tho mill Is lo cated thete Is available 200,000,000 tons of oxide of iron. As the market lor lion Is ptactically unlimited, It doesn't take long to get an Idea of the alue of the oie-pioduclng mills. The gneiss Is got out of an open quany 5,000 tons at a clip. LOADING THE RAW ROCK. When the lock has been blasted, a tiavellng ciano 200 feet long and worked by electricltj on the trolley sjstem, i oils down ovet the loose rock There aie big claws attached to It, and by means of these the chunks of lock, no matter how large, ate hoisted on Hat lion buckets, called "skips," which hold four tons each. The lolleis of tho fit st mill aie of chilled Iron six feet In dlametei, and the surface tuns at the late of a mile a minute They weigh 3,034 pounds each Tho mills aie tun at such high elocltj and have s'ach power stored up behind them th it tho biggest chunks of lock check them only 5 pel cent They aie dilven by filctlon, and stiike a terrific blow. There aie five mills in all The fitst one gilnds the rock Into pat tides IS Inches In dlametei ; the second, to S iiithis; the thlid, to 3'A nches; the fouith to 2 inches, and tho fifth, to j inch smaller. It tuns fiom one mill Into the othei, and when a rock Is Hist dropped in, those who ate not familial with the pi ocess Imagine that tho w hole mill i going to buist to pieces at once PROCESS OF DRYING. Prom the last mill It passes to a big squdio towei, where it sttlkes one hot plate nttor anothet In descending, and Is tilled at the late of five tons a minute. Fiom the diiei It passes into a stock house, whoie It Is kept until used This stock house holds 15,000 tons. There Is a setles of openings In the bottom of the stock house, which open Into a conveyoi. The conveyot Is sim ply a set les of pans about tho size of an oidlnatj sink, diawn b an endless chain i mining on little tiacks The con veyor takes the giound material to mi othei mill, wheie It Is gioupd to pin head size. Leaving that mill it runs tht'ough chutes and throii'th si teens at the lop of the high building In which tho magnetic separator aio located Theie aie thieo set3 of the mag nets 74 In the flist set, 320 In the sec ond, and 320 moie in tho thlid set The magnets aie ahou foui feet long, and the oie, on Its jouinelngs, has to pass a "mile of facts of magnets Right hcio is pioseuted what to the lajman Is a mot lemaikable featuie of the pto cest. The magnets are ai ranged In tleis, five In a tiei The top one is weak, but tlioy Inctease In strength as thoj go down, until the bottom one is vety povveiful. HOW THE MAGNETS WORK. The giound lock pa3es thtough the screen and statts downwatd In fiont of the magnets. The mngnets Jeik tho pai tides of lion oxide fiom the mass ns thej descend, but tho Iron does not adheie to the magnets. And light Time TUG SAVED BY YfAsmm Powd What More 7 & iF&tlSkll Only this ask your grocer for It, and Insist on tr ing lr. Largest package-greatest economy, THE N. K. FAIRBANK COMPANY, Chicago, Bt. Louis, Hew York, Boston, 1'hllaileJphttt, retlied to his farm, where ho lived hap pily for thiee ycats, wilting many let tors and collecting the spelling of those he had vvtltten earlier In life. Ho died seiencly In his bed of loss of blood carefullj spilled by his attending phy sician. Geoige Washington was an upright and able pattlot, sound In wind, llinb, mind and mot als, and deserved all the success he won, and all the consideia tion ills memoiy has received. Tho more Intimately vve know him tho bet ter we shall like him, and the more encouragement In well-doing wo are llkelj to receive fiom his example, which crows mote Illustrious with ad ded yeai. Life. Cop tight, 1897, by Mitchell S. Miller. here Is a most surptislng sight. The oie, In passing the flist magnet, in clines tow aid it. As it rushes down, the oie swings in more .toward the magnets, until, ns It reaches the last one, It cuives Inwatd and under it In a half clicle, without an particle of oie adheilng to the magnet In its first pnssage past tho magnets small quantities of stone stick to the oie. Tho oie Is can led upward and started down befote the second lot of magnets after passing thtough a mill, which gilnds oft the particles of stone. The flist set of magnets extract G2 per cent of oxide of lion When the mass has passed the second set of magnets theie is in It 75 per cent, of olde of iron. Then It is giound again and passes th thlid and most povveiful set of magnets, which takes the phosphates out and makes Bessemer of It. Tho peicentage of iion oide is then fiom 85 to S7. riom thete it passes to a second stock house which holds 21000 tons. Tlie Bessemer Is drawn out as wanted It has passed thtough all the piocesses automatically. Men aie emploed,.but onl to watch the machinery The little black cakes aio called biikuettes, and aie made in a separate plant Thete are a number of machines which make them, and the process Is just as Intel estlng as any othet part of the woik. CO.N'CERNIN't; AM HAL INDUSTRY How 38,000,000 Cattle, Sheep, anil Hogs A c Inspected in a Year. Prom tho S -ii A pet son unacquainted with the facts might be puzzled at Hist to conjectuie with the functions were of a "Bureau ot Animal Induttj" in our system of government In reality this bureau is a subdivision of the depaitment of agilcultuic, with tho human animal pei foi mlng the Hboi, which is laigtly that of the inspection of quadiupeds slaughtered for food, and It can ells plaj some remarkuble figuies to show its industtj The prodigious rumbel of 35 917 479 meat-piodudng animals underwent of iiclal Inspection during the last fiscal jeai, tj Is shown 1 y a lepot t Just print ed. Ot these 23.275.7J9 weie Inspected at or tor slaughter houses, and 12,041, 740 In stock jatc', whence they went to be established abbattolrs of othei places, oi else In tho possession of buv ets Thenumbci was made up of 7,529 -523 cattle 314 MG calves, C!1S,2S4 sheep, and 21,754,828 hog3 The figuies thus given ate of living animals, readj foi slaughter, but last J eai theie weie also Inspections, olllcially knov.n as "post mcittm," numbering IS,SS3,275 It takes alirost a teglment of men counting In Inspeetois, taggers, clerks, mlcioscoplsts, and laboiets, to do all the woik There are eAaminatinns of Impoitcd as well as expoited animals and theie nie experiments on animals relating to theli diseases The expense of ante-rr.uitem Inspection Is put at $JU 450, or a little less than one cent iui, while the total d'sbursement of the Bureau of Animal Industij weie neailj SG00 001 "KSrS$SSSOs2v sKssy7 ,;s J."..... s"SSS "vm 1 K . sS .vi.'siN! &?fS Can be Asked? EISTEDDFOD To Ue Meld at THE FROTHINGHflM, SCRANTON, PA.. TUESDAY, MAY 11, 181)7, Under the Auspices of the 1st 2d Prize Prize 1. CHORUS -"Toyrnnsocdd 1 Ddnenr" In Welsh or Lnglish. (73 to 100 voices). J. A, Llovd $200 $75 To eaeli unsuccessful Leader $10 2. MALE CHORUS-"The Pilgrims' Chorus," (33 to 4a Voices). Dr. Joseph Pniry $10000 No. No. No 3. CHURCH CHOIR-"Tho Lord's Prayet " (23 to 3D voices). D. Protheioe.. $30.tW Note For church choirs only und each choir that enters In this contest must enter us the rep resentative of a church. 4. CHILDREN'S CHOIR No. "A 8 You Go." $1000 Words b Grant C. Tul ler music by I. II. Mere dith Lcadei und mem beis of choir not to bo ov er 10 eat s of ago. Ten adult tenois and bassos allowed. Each choir to sing three stnnzus, chorus to be sung by tho children only. Each lender to receive $3 00 Ptbe donated by Clarke) Bios No. C QUARTETTE, MIXED "s V01Ci:S-"TelUMe Thou Pretty Bee " D. Proth- eroo $1200 Donated by C. 12. Prj or. 1st 2d Prize Prize No. 0 SOPRANO SOLO "Out of tho Deep." Key of D-flnt. T. J. Davles $0 00 $3 00 Donated by Morris Thomas No. 7. CONTRALTO SOLO "Incense of the Morn ing" O L. Caitor $0 00 $3 00 Donated by Bojle & Mucklovv. No. 8 TENOR SOLO "Dream Thee of a Dn." W. T. Miller $fl.00 $3 00 Donated by the Sam teis. No 9 BARITONE SOLO-"The Raft." Key of E Minor. Pinsutl $GOO$3 00 Donated by Wade M. Tinn. No 10. PIANO SOLO-"Pastoral No 1 In E Minor." Con testants not to be over 17 jears of age. Tauslg Von Scarlottl $0 00 $3 00 Donated by Col. Ripple. No. 11. DUET "LOVE " (Amor.) Sopiano and Baritone. Pinsutl $S00 Dnoated by Collins &. Hackott. No 12 DUET "Harp of the Winds " Tenor and Con tralto Tranz Abt $3 00 Donated by Prank H. demons No 13 R E C I T A T I O N-rE- MALES "Tho Painter of Seville" (rrom Shoemak ers oest selections, No. 3) Susan Wilson $3 00 Donated by H. L. Tay lor. No II RECITATION-MALES "Llbeity and Union." (Prom Shoemaker's best selections. No. 2J. Web ster $500 Donated b James il. Powell. No. 15 ENCL1SH POEM "Rob ert Morris" . .i $1000 Donated by Joseph D, Lllojd. No 16 ENGLYN "COLEUNI GOGLEDDCJL" '.... $3 00 Donated b D. Phillip Williams. No. 17. MALE QUARTETTE Sight Reading $5 00 Donated by John J. Da lies No. IS. SOLO "Buglllo'r Gvvenlth Gvvjn" 00 Each Blnger to sing two stanzas Prom Uilnley Richards' Songs of Wales. For Males not upder fifty jeirb of age, no accom panist, and each singer to select his own pitch. Donated bj W. R. Lewis. No 19 IMPROMPTU SPEECH IN ENGLISH $3 00 Subject to be confined to "omo incident or evont in United States History, to be selected by Donor. Donated b E. E. Roba than j No 20 Words for a Welsh Na tional Ijjmn foi Wales. (Not to exceeil sK stan zas ) $10 00 Donated by John H. Williams. No. 21 ORATION "Thomas Jefferson." $3 00 Not to exceed ten minutes in length Confined to pupils of the High Schools of Lackawanna and Lu zerne Counties. J No 22 ESSAY "International Arbitration " (In Eng lish, not to exceed 2,000 words) $23 00 Donated by tho Scran ton Times No. 23 POEM "Gwjljm Gwent" In English. Not to ex ceed 4S lines $23 00 Donated b The Scian ton Truth. No. 24 SHORT STORY $25 00 In English between 2,000 and 5 000 words. Must be original nnd prefeiably local In color, must bo tpo written Rlifht to cop light to rest with tho Tilbune Right to print the three best stoiles re served. Donated by the Scran ton Tribune. CONDITIONS. No prlzo awarded without sufflcler.' merit Numbers 1, 2, 3 4, C, C, 7, 8, 9, 11 and 12 must be sung with plnno accompaniment. The Committee leserves the right to hold preliminary competitions for Num beis tj, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 18 and 21 The successful compositions for Num bers ID, 1C, 20 22, 23 and 21 to be the pro ptrtj of the Committee. The compositions Numbers 15 20 and 23 must be In the hands of the Adjudlcatois on or before the 1st day of May, 1897 The compositions Numbers 22 und 24 must bo in the hands of tho Adjudletaots on or before the 15th da of April, 1897 The compositions Numbers 15, 10, 20, 22, 23 nnd 21 to bo signed with u lion de plume and sent to the Adjudicator, tho real name of the Authot with nom de plume in sealed envelopo to be sent to the Sec tetur Names of all contestants to be in the hands of Societarj b Mjj 1st, 1MI7. Adjudlcatot on Numbers ID and 23, T. G Osborne, Mooslc, Pa, Adjudicator on Numbers 10 and 20, Rev. Do Pugh Oritllths, No 21, Broome street. isingnamion, . i Adjudicators on Number 22, Alfred Twining and John Courier Morris, care of The Times, Scranton, Pa. Adjudlcatot on No 21, Llvy S Richard, caie Tho Tilbune, Scrunton, Pa Adjudicators on other competitions an no unc oil latei Copies of above music enn ho obtained at Powell's Music Store, Scianton, Pa WILLIAM II LEWIS, Chairman. E E. ROBATHAN, E D JONES HOWELL HARRIS. JOHN II PHILLIPS, D PHILIP WILLIAMS, ROGER EVANS, JOHN J DAVIDS, Treasurer, DAVID J DAVIS. Secrutury. AddreBs all communications to tho Sec retary, DAVID J. DAVIS, Municipal Building, Scranton, Pa.