WTmfffl r ' . -" " " " ' ' S " n "1 -J i rTTWWl T.l " 'WlW..fV J.T? w -i r7T' 1 MXi'TTT'' r Mas; wvvS7'3H. v'-s t'j ' ?' V , hl '. v v THE SCRANTON TRIBUNE-TUESDAY, MARCH 6, 1900. , jMK. Po Wd e r wr Absolutely Pure Makes light, flaky, delicious hot biscuits, rolls, muffins and crusts. Makes hot bread whole some. These are qualities peculiar to it alone. I have found (he Royal Baking Powder superior to all others. - C. Gorju, late Chef, Dclmonico'v ROYAL BAKING POWDrR CO., 100 WILLIAM ST., NEW YORK. LIVE NEWS OF THE INDUSTRIAL WORLD ARGUMENT IN FAVOR OF THE PROPOSED ROAD. Made in the Letter of the Anthracite Coal Operators' Association Hake Up of the D., L. & W. Board for Today Moving the Machinery Into the New Xlotz Silk Mill at Poplar Street Remarkable Record of the Cannon Ball Freight on the Jersey Central. Spcaklntr of tho proposed Delaware Valley ana 'Kingston railroad the let ter of the Anthracite Coal Operators' BPeoclatlon advances tho following ar gument: Tho intention to convert this c.inal Into a railroad Is clearly and beyond question simply following the march or modern Improvements. For seventy-two year? tl.o canal hus been an Important means of transportation from which freight traffic has been gradually withdrawn by rr.ll rtad competition. Conperiuently tho con struction of a rallrcad over thN route N but a charue In mothe power to mt.ct this comretlton. In view of certain changes in tho loute of the proposed railroad by Us dcpaituro from the bed of the canal at humo rurves, tho company laid Hh plans be fore tho eommmUs-lon, asking it to eon sldtr that tho legislature of tho state, which is tho creator of the commission, has very clearly shown In the ait of as nembly ntove quoted, that it regarded the public ndvantogo and utility result ing from tho substitution of a. rntlioad for a canal as u settled fact in the policy , of tho state. A direct and Inotlmable benefit, the i. hulls of which Bill be far-rc aching, will b that of reducing tho .selllrn price of the most essential of all products coil. This will rqvally affect both tho supply for domet-tlc purposes and fcr manufac turing. To accomplish this risult the proposed railroad lias already entered Into contracts for tho tlilununt of an thracite, mined b' indlUdual operators, estimated at two nnd one-half million tons, at fi eight rales which, assuming a tide price of $1.00 per ton. as has been, would be. twelve and one. half. per cent, under tho rates hitherto charged. Further, theso contracts pioWdo for an even greater (eduction In the freight charge on the smaller sizes of anthracite used for steam-maklni' purposes. Tho total difference is estimated at as much as thirty cents per ton on the uverAgo product, and besides there will bo tho e. ductlon In the llnal belling pi Ice, which, ur cording to the well-known laws of commerce, must always risult fiom open compe.tlton. This proposed road can afford to grant thin- material reduction in ft tight charges, not only because the tales charged by exUtlng tallroads are exor bltantly high, but, owing to the iclatlve Injr cost of lis construction and the com paratively small price already paid for the .right of way on-a lino which is pr.tc tlialU' waded, and ready for the rails, and, with the further advantago that, bo causti over almost the cntlro route the trradeji aro level or in favor of tho load. It will bo able, to transport freight' at a low operating cost. " , Tnat the present freight charges on onthraclte coal are unreasonably high can be clearly shown by comparison with the. rate on soft coal. Both ot. these varletlfit of fuel ure loaded and unload) d by.gravjty; a full train load lh us easily Mid cheaply assembled in ono caeo as in anothor, end there is undoubtedly no greater ccst In tho actual transportation of a car of either kind. A Remarkable Record. T.hjrfyflye years asro a fast freight trp, callecf 'The Cannon Hall" was pu, In Hervlce between Philadelphia und.gcranVpn, starting from the Noble trfet.sfaflon of the Philadelphia tuid Riding rallrcad. arriving at Hcranton nrv.Jhe Central Railroad of New Jer sey. t B o'pjock a. ni giving ten hotiw' seryjpejbctw?en the two cities. In tho thirty-five years the manage ment on each road has seen many changes, old men have son-', new men have conic nnd Rone, but tho old Can non Hall running time has never been changed and she has never missed a tiip in all these yeats. i The New Silk Mill. The Klotz Silk Throwing company has moved Its machinery from their quarters In the rear of the Mears build ing and the hands formerly employed there are working in the new building on Poplar sttect. This machinery occuple? only a small portion or the building, but it Is ex pected the new machinery will soon bo In place nnd the entire plant In work ing order. The D,, L. & W. Board. Following Is the make-up of the Del aware, Lackawanna and Western board for today: Tuesday, March Gth. WILD CATS SOUTK. I a. in. A. (3. Hatamlt, with James Ga in. pan's men. S a. in. II. Wishing, with F. E. Secor's men. 4 a. m. n. lJennclt. l a. m. J. Miwlcr, with C. Bartholomew's men. 5 a. m. O. Cds-e, with H. T. Fellow's men. 9 r. m. J. I'. Matter.-!. 10 ii. m. C. Towncnd. II u. m F. D. Secor. r.'.'J'j p. m. J. Burkhort. 1 p. m. P. Cavanaugli, with S. Fin- nerty's men. I P. m. J. llennigan, with Mann's men. i 30 p. m. M. Caimody, with John Gaha- gan's men. 4.1", p. m. A. Widener. 4.43 p. m. J. Bwartz. 8LTMMITS. 7 a. in., north O. Frounfelktr. 6.30 a. m.. south-Mchane, with War rick's mon. 1 p. m., south II. Bush. PL7M.i:il. 10 a. m. Pechlns. J' PUSHERS. "' ? S a. m., south Ilouser, " 11.30 a. m., south-Mornn. 7 p. m , south Murphy. uv 10 p. m., south C. C'awiey, PASSllNaKIl ENGINE. 0 30 p. m. Magovein. WILD CATS NORTH. ! n. m 2 engines J. O'Haru. 4 p. in , " crglnes-'H. Cusliier. t This and T"oat. Albtit G. Zlnk, lor tho last twenty five years un employe of the Delaware, Lackawanna nnd Western railroad's f hops, Saturday severed his connection with the company. The contract for the new church of St. John the Evangelist ot the corner of Plttston uvenuo and Flj; street was yesterday inomlng awarded Contrac tor M. J. Ruddy, of South Scranton. The chutch will cost nbout tGo.nOO nnd will be erected according to Architect Perclval Mori Is' plans. Ground will be broken In a few days, and it Is hoped that the corner stons may be laid in May. OLD FORQE. VERY STRINGENT MILK ORDINANCE TO BE SOON INTRODUCED IN COUNCILS. Was Considered Last Evening by a Special Committee- from the Board of Health Provides That Every Milk Dealer Be Licensed and That Before Such License Be Granted His Herds Shall Have Been De clared Free from Disease Penal ties That Are Provided. Miss Irene ' Myers ' and Mr. Henry Herbert were matrled at the Methodist Episcopal parsonage on Friday even ing at 8 o'clock by Rev. O. P. Ace. Tho bride wore a dress of navy ,blue poplin. and carried a bouquet of white carnations. She was attended by her cousin. Miss Oraee Emrlck. Mr. Jo seph Emiick acted ub best man. A large number of friends and neigh bors gatheied at the home of Mr. and Mrs. William Naylor on Friday even ing to celebrate the birthday of Mr. Nuylor. She received many beautiful presents as n token of the esteem In which .she Is held. The evening was spent very pleasantly. Refreshments were served and at a late hour the guests returned to their homes, wish ing her many happy birthdays. Mr. John Thornton, who fell and hurt his shoulder so as to confine him to his home, Is improving slowly. Superintendent J. C. Taylor visited the' borough schools last week. A very lengthy ordinance, by which It Is proposed to regulate the sale of milk In this city was last evenlnir considered at a meeting ot i special committee from the board e healtt held In City Solicitor Vosbms'a office. It has long been proposuM to revise the milk laws of the city, but the mat ter has never'been brought to a head until now. Parts of tho ordinance considered last evening wera drawn up by ex-Pood Inspector Culien and the other portions of the measure have been prepared by Food Iiifrpr-ctor WI1 mayer, acting In conjunction with City Solicitor Vosburg and a committee from the Green Ridge Womans' club, which latter body has lately Interest ed Itself In the matter. The meeting last evening was at tended by W. G. O'Malley and Dr. Rodham ,of the board of health; Food Inspector WIdmayer, City Solicitor Vosburg and Attorney S. B. Price, the latter appearing for the Womans' club. Only a few minor changes were made in the ordinance last night, and It is proposed to bring It before the board of health on Wednesday evening for that body's consideration. It will then be Introduced In council, but probably not before re-organlzatlon. Mr. Vos burg 'stated positively last evening that It would stand a strong legal test. PROVISIONS OF MEASURE. The measure first provides that no person shall sell milk In the city with out first procuring a license. Any per son desiring a license must make a written application to the board of health, stating his name and residence, tho exact location of his dalrv or .the place he obtains his milk: If a pro ducer the number of cows in his herd and if not the number of cows in the herd of the person he purchases milk from, and finally how he disposes of his milk. The filing of this application will al low him to continue selling until the board acts on it. The measure then provides that an inspection be made of the dairy from which the milk comes and of the cows which produce It, a refusal to allow such inspection being ground for the refusal of.al license. If the dairy Is located within Lacka wanna county it' Is to be the duty of the health' officer' to make the Inspec tion, or to supervise the Inspection, the purpose of which Is to ascertain whether any of the cattle are Infected with tuberculosis or other contagious dlseuse or not. If the dairy Is outside the city the ordinance provides that the Inspection be made by a local vet erinarian acceptable to the health of fleer and without expense to'the city. In this inspection what Is known as tho "tuberculin test" is to be used, tho tuberculin to be furnished at the expense of the board of health. Every animal inspected Is to be tagged or branded, such tag or brand to afford a permanent record of ita physical condition. GRANTING OF LICENSES. The health officer must then pre sent a report to tho board of health, stating what disposition is to be made by the dairy owners of diseased cattle found and after consideration of this report the board Is to determine what applicants are entitled to a license, and must pass a resolution granting them such license, which Is to be valid ono year from the date of the passage of such resolution. The licensee, upon being granted a license, must from that time post on the outside of his milk wagons, his name place, of business and the num ber of such license, or, it he sells milk in a shop ho must post these same in a conspicuous place. After disposing of the llccn&e prop osition tho ordinance provides that no dealer shall Sell any "unclean, Impure, unhealthy, unwholesome or adulterated milk: that all stables must be well ventilated and not overcrowded; that the animals be clean and free from contagious disease, and that they be not fed any putrlfled food." Taking up the standard to be main tained the measure provides that no milk sold shall contain more than 8"Vi per cent, of water fluids or less than 12',i per cent, of milk solids, 3l per cent, of which latter must be butter fat. No cream shall be sold which con tains less than 18 per cent, of butter fat, or which has been adulterated with any deleterious substance. No dealer Is to be allowed to sell skim milk with out marking all cans containing this kind of milk with the words "Skim Milk" in lcttets at lease V,i inches high. INSPECTION OP DAIRIES. The ordinance then provides that the health officer or any other employe of tho board of health Is to be permitted at any and all times to Inspect tho dairy and heads of licensed dealers, and a refusal on the part of said dealer to allow such an Inspection Is to be followed by a revocation of his license. It is provided that it shall be the duty of tho food Insptetor to make such Inspections and the board of health i empowered to appoint, with thi approval of the councils, such ad ditional Inspectors as may be necessary to carry out tho provisions of the mea sure, compensation to be-fixed by the board. In conclusion it Is provided that all violators of tho ordinance shall be tried before the mayor or any alderman of the city and shall be fined not less than $10 or more than $100. in default of tho payment of which he shall be Imprisoned In tho county jail for a term of not more than thirty days. In addition to considering the above ordinance the committee adopted a penalty clause to be added to the rules prohibiting the exposure of fresh meat outBlde butcher shops. This clause fixes tho penalty at not less than $. nor more than $10 for each violation of the rules. Your Liver Will be roused to Its natural duties and your biliousness, headache and constipation be cured If you Uke Hood's Pitts ' ' Sold by all druggists. 25 cents. ffi ContiollvalIace SCRANTON'S SHOPPING CENTER. A Group of Linen Bargains Dependable Linens hold inordinate charm for careful housekeepers. But when dependable linens are associated with unmistakable bargain prices their charms cannot be resisted. Here's a modest list of helpful items and i points the way to other and greater values in peerless flax Hemmed Huck Towels, size f A 18x35. Red Borders, each 3 Hemmed Huck Towels, of extra weight, pure flax, size 18x36; special price, each Half Bleached German Linen Napkins, 20 inches square, of good weight. ..dozen Full Bleached Scotch Linen Napkins, 22 inches square, a splendid value at dozen 125c $1.40 $1-75 50c 50c 62-inch Extra Heavy Brown Table Damask, in fine designs yd 66-inch Extra Heavy Brown Table Damask in black patterns, especially good for hard service yd 7i-inch full bleached Scotch able Linen, a regular e;oc value at yard 72-inch full bleached Scotch Damask of extra weight and worth C ftr easily 75c; at yard Ov Table Linen, a regular 50c 'Z'jlfr "' iy Connolly & Wallace, 127 and 129 Washington Avenue. I Success is Always Imitated S BUT fl WISE MAN IS NEUER SATISFIED 1 WITH A COUNTERFEIT. I H HTl PATENT IHI Uni U may b second by our aid. Addret, TMf PATENT RICM. 9 m 9 VOU CANNOT successfully educate yourself through the mails by enrolling with one of our Imitators. You are certain to lose the money you pay for tuition, because their methods of Instruction are Illogical, and the results without value to any one desiring educa tion for its practical use. Our system of Correspondence Instruction In the Industrial Sciences was originated in The International Correspondence Schools, of Scranton, Pa., in October, 1891. Since that time, we have taught the Theory of the Engineering-Trades arTd Professions, as well as Mechanical and Architectural Drawing, to thousands of industrial workers, and have qualified them for respon sible positions. Our rolls contain the names of students in every part of the civil ized world. That a method or an invention should thus extend around the globe, and rapidly grow in favor with the lapse of time, Is proof positive of intrinsic value. These great results have teen achieved by original methods of teaching methods especially adapted to the end in view. Our Instruction and Question Papers and our Drawing Plites differ widely from school and college textbooks, and cost us over 8300,000 to prepare and our Imitators are compelled to employ a cheaper but an utterly impracticable mcthod-r-that of using textbooks of colleges and the universities. " If the industrial classes could learn drawing and the mathematical and physi cal sciences from ordinary textbooks, there would have bsen no held for The International Correspondence Schools, and our grand army of 160,000 students could never have been assembled. , Our Instruction and Question" Papers, and Drawing Plates, differ from the textbooks used by students in the regular schools in the following important respects: FIRST? ey are mastered more easily and in leSS time. The theories and demonstrations of science its abstractions are always difficult. Our textbooks contain only the facts, principles, and processes a solutely required by the student in his trade or pro fession. These are usually easy to learn and to apply. The workingman has not the time to study all the matter contained in the school and college textbooks, neither does his work require him to be strong in abstract theory. In the prepar ation of our Instruction Papers, neither time nor expense is spared to secure the greatest possible simplicity and ease of application. We do not occupy the time of our students in the study of the derivation of rules and formulas; we teach them how to apply rules and formulas. SECOND: TheU are m0re Poetical. ordinary school "- v v" " and college textbooks, such as are used by our Imitators, contain no examples relating to Mining, Aechanlcs, Steam hngineering. Electricity, Architecture, Plumbing, Heating, Ventilation, Sheet-Metal Pattern Drafting, or Civil Engineering. In each of our Courses, the examples and processes refer directly to the trades or professions of the class of students for whom the Course was prepared: so that from the beginning our students are getting valuable knowledge and are learning to apply it. THIRD: 0ur textbooks are written by men strong both in theory and practice. The authors of textbooks intended for use in colleges and universities have thorough scientific training, indeed, but they have little or none ot the knowledge that can be gained only by doing by experience. They do not know, and. therefore, omit to men. ion in their bjoks the way In which innumerable scientitic facts may be applied in simple operations of the trades or professions. These applications of science are familiar only to the expert both in theory and practice, and only such men are em ployed as Editors and Instructors by the Management of these Schools. FOURTH' Tne men that make our textbooks su- pervise the instruction of our students. No one can teach the contents of a book so well as the man that wrote the book; he knows better than any one else what Is in tiie book, why it is there, and its Importance with reference to the other parts of the entire subject. FIFTH' They are frequently revised. Being private property, protected by copyright, school and college textbooks cannot be changed at the pleasure of those that use them. In order to correct w.iat is wrong, improve what is faulty, smootn away difficulty, and Insert what is of later duov eiy, changes must be made verv frequently. Our Instruction Papers belong to lis; and in our Editorial Department, they are in constant comparison with what is latest and best; faults, omissions, and crudities of every km J are therefore remedied without delay. In thu case of textbooks on Applied Physical Sciencs. the need of revision occurs with special frequency. Take Electrical books, for evuuple; manv works on this subject printed five years ago are now nearly worthless, for the reason that they are out ot date. SIXTH' We teach industrial drawing by an origi- ' nal and very successful method, m Mechan ical and Architectural Drawing, special Plates were prepared at an enormous expense both In time anil money, iney nave ueen copyrighted because they em- S body a method of Instruction entirely new one that has been extraordinarily pro- 1 ductive of practical results. 0 Our students in drawing make as rapid progress in learning and become as proficient as the students of the regular schools and colleges. The principles un- fl deriving our svstem of teaching drawing are entirely different from those in the 1 s stems employed in the regular school , colleges, and universities, and there Is M no other system by which drawing Is taught as successfully through the mails. Z Any system of education for people with limited time to devote to study by 0 the correspondence method that relies on the use of bdiool and college textbooks fl will end in failure; the student that pays his money for su:h tuition will get nore- Jz turns. 4 If you want to educate ourself In the theory of your trade or profession, If M vou want to become a draftsman or to add to your earning capacity the strength S that COMES FROM THE UNION OF SCIENCC WITH PRACTICE-, we can help ' ou. 0 Hour foh Visitoh? a.oo TO 11.00 A, M. 0.00 TO 4,80 P. M. Write for Circulars Describing Our Courses of Instruction, to j The International Correspondence Schools, Scranton, Pa, I 0& . '? ..... ft? . .. - yf ii . 1 , ri'l .. '. ... l-ra -1 . . ,-. aa 1 I . - 1 liv ivjv, . .'.