Tt w ' rfih.iivn V l 4. o THE SCRANTON TRIBUNE- FRIDAY, MARCH 23, 1900. ge Scranfon $rt6tme PublUhed Dnlly, Kxcept Sunday, by Tho Tribune I'ubllshlns Company, at fifty Cents a Month. L1VY B. RICHATID, Editor. O. F. BYXDBK, Buslne3 Manager. Now York Office: E0 Nnsenu fit. 8. S. VKEKLAND, Sole Agent for Foreign Advertising. Entered at the PostolTlco at Scranton, Pa., as Second-Class Moll Matter. When space will permit, Tho Tribune Is always glad to print short letters from Its friends bearing on current topics, but its rule Is that theso must bo slRncd, for publication, by the writer's real name! and the condition precedent to acceptance Is thnt all contributions shall bo BUbJect to editorial revision. SCRANTON, MARCH 23, 1900. REPUBLICAN NOMINATIONS. Legislature. First Dlstrlct-T. JEFFERSON REY NOLDS. Second Distrlct-JOHN SCHEUER, JR. Tho net result of the legislative pri mal les thus far held thtoughout the state Is it decided stiffening of party lines. We do not know of an Instance In which a candidate for the legislature bus hud the hardihood to announce In advance his Intention, If elected, to bolt the caucus of his party; but on tin- contrary we know of several any Quay nominees who are under pledge to nblde tho will of the next senatorial caucus, and It Is not to be believed that ninny of these will break their word. All this represents a gain for legulnr methods and tends to minim ize the possibility of another deadlock. Untie the Foraker Knot. A PROPOSITION Is soon to be submitted to the president by Sir William Van Home, formerly president and gen eral manager of the Canadian Pacific railway, which on Its face looks rea sonable and satisfactory. Sir William has secured the active interest of a number of wealthy Americans, includ ing such men as Pierpont Morgan, Mr. Itockufeller, Mr. Flagler, John W. Mac kay, D. O. Mills and Granville M. Dodge, In a project to Invest $23,000,000 In tho construction of a complete rail way system In Cuba. "They propose," says our informant, Mr. W. E. Curtis, of the Chicago Rec ord, "to buy and consolidate all tho existing railways, which have a mile age of about 1,200 miles, divided up into short lines running from the prin cipal seaports over the sugar country, and extend them until every province shall be well supplied with transporta tion facilities. They first propose to construct a 'vertebraterial' from Cape Antonc, the extreme western tip, to Cape Mais!, the extreme eastern tip of the island, which is about "60 miles, running as near the center of the island as economical engineering will permit. From this main stem, or backbone, they will construct a seiles of ribs from convenient Junctions north and south to the accessible ports, thus giv ing an outlet to the products of the central portion of the Island, which now have no roads and arc beyond reach." Tho aica of Cuba is 43,000 square miles and only about one-fourth of It has ever been cultivated, although there is hardly a square mile of land on the Island Incapable of some profit able use. These men who are propos ing to build this railroad recognize that for a number of years they would not get back anything like a reason able return on their money, but they have faith In the Island's commercial future; they realize that the develop ment of a profitable transportation business Is only a question of time; and they are willing to accept the risk and ask no bounty, subsidy or special concession beyond a guarantee that if they build the road their property rights In It will be satisfactorily pro tected under whatever government shall finally control the Island. To Americans who oppreclate what their own country owes to the trans continental railioads In the develop ment of their great interior resources the Idea here presented, even though It bo a htrlctly business proposition looking to the ultimate reimbursement of its promoters, will appeal as In volving Incalculable benefit to Cuba. What Its legal status would be under the Foraker resolution forblddlntr the Amei leans to grant any churteis or concessions during the period of their control of Cuba we do not know: but It seems to us that It Is time that reso lution were amended so as to permit the entrance Into Cuba of outside capital on missions of commercial and Industrial development, under reason able safeguards and restrictions. Men like William McKlnley and Leonard Wood ought to be permitted to exor cise some measure of direction In flieso mattei s. If they are not to be trusted, who are? , i.i. .It is not literally true that Colonel Henry Watterson will not support Uryan If he is nominated. But it is reasonably safe to 'reckon that the Courier-Journal editor will not ex Waust his health in Bryan's behalf. The Jftlgh't Kind of Censorship. TrjVWE. DISPOSITION made by 1' Justice Fur'sman, of the New I L York city Supreme court, of , the celebrated case of some of the people versus "Sapho" must wln'ttior approval f the Judicious. Have .Miii Nethersole and her asso ciates, in, the production of this play, maintained a public nuisance? If Oiey have they should be punished. If they haie not, tlxjy should go fiee. :The question, said Justice Fursman, Is almost entirely one of fact. Is the play of such a character and so pro duced'SB'to outrage the sense of public decency which is common among edu cated, modest, right-minded, fair yilnklng men and. women? The ques tion Is not wljqtjier this individual or that-Individual takes offense, but whoVhcrtJTa KatUre bf tho production is uch asjtpsnock or offend the aver age -8linL.and Conscience, Inasmuch its the'tMaUer is eo clearly one resting first cgt all uponj the determination of rtie facts, 'the learned Justice promptly took 4t-out of tta band of the petty magistrate: who was about to act as judge, Jury and lord high executioner rolled In one, and remanded It to the general sessions. This means that the rase wilt go to ttlal regularly before a Jury. "These Juries," re marked the Justice, "ure composed of men selected from the great mnss of citizens of the city and county of New York, to perform their very Important duties, because of their good citizen ship, their high moral character, their Intelligence and their approved integ ilty. If such a body of such men are able to draw the Inference from the production of this play, that It Is an offense against public decency, It should be condemned and tho defend nuts punished for having produced It! but if such men are able, on tho other hand, to draw the Inference that the play Is not Indecent, within the fair meaning of section SS5 of tho code, tfien the defendants should be dis charged and tho play allowed to pro ceed." This Is a form of censorship to which there cannot be righteous objection. Wo hear a good deal about tho liberty of the stnge. Tt Is entitled to no more liberty than tho press; and when tho press prints obscene literature It Is not permitted to use the malls and when, In the opinion of a jury, it libels a man its responsible agents have to pay a line or go to Jail. This Is the difference between liberty and license. The dif ference Is one which must occasionally be emphasized for the public welfare. The report Is current at Washington that Great Britain has been won over to an acceptance of the senate amend ment to tho Hay-Pauncefotc treaty which, In clumsy language, provides that in case the United States should become engaged In war with any other power we could lawfully close tlw Nicaragua canal to the warships of that power. If this should prove to be correct, It Is to be hoped that before tho treaty Is finally ratllled Its thetur lcal crudities will bo combed out. We owe that much to the English lan guage. Trusts. u: NDER A resolution now pend ing in congress, another amendment Is proposed to the constitution of the Unit ed States. This amendment, known as the Ray amendment, from the name of Its author, Representative Ray, of New York, chairman of the committee on the Judiciary, would, if adopted, cause an Article XVI to appear in the constitution, reading as follows: Tho congress shall hao tho power to regulate and repress n,onopolles and com binations; to create nnd dissolve corpora tions, and dispose of their property; to make all laws necessary and proper for tho execution of the foregoing powers. Such powers may bo exercised by the several states in any manner not In con flict with tho laws of the United States. It has been represented in some quarters that this Is a campaign trick of the Republican party to make a show of hostility to the trusts suffi cient to carry It sufely through tin coming presidential campaign, bv which time the proposed amendment will have died a natural death and be ready for quiet burial. Wo do not think that this Is a fair view of the subject. Tho Republican party Is not under the necessity of resorting to clap trap In order to win the next presidential election; and If It should have to compete with the Hry.i'i type of politician for the suffrages of those who ore Influenced -by clap ftp we would consider that Bryan co'i'd give it cards and spades and still beat It out. Tho fact Is that the" Republican party Is ready to go as far In the di rection of regulating the trusts as It can go with the approval of fair minded men and In the wholesome feir of the United States Supreme coutt. It Is willing to take federal control of corporations It the legislatures of three-fourths of the states are willing that It should do so; and If that con trol shall bo given to It under the con stitution It will guarantee to use it to the best of its ability in the interest of the public welfare and for tho correc tion of abuses. This Is the plain mean ing of tho Ray amendment, and the introduction of that resolution carries the matter up to the Democratic party. China's Imports today are less than 30 cents a head, or about the same as Jnpan's were ere Japan opened its doors to modern civilization. Now Ja pan Imports $6 worth per capita; and a similar gain for China would supply the biggest new market on the face of the earth, of which the United States ought to secure the lion's share. Great Lake Prospects. A' NUMBER of facts of wide spread Interest In connection with the development of In dustry and commerce on and around our Inland seas are embodied In an exhaustive forecast of the lake marine outlook for 190u which appears In the Chicago Times-Herald. Last year the gross tonnage of ves sels entering and clearing Chicago nnd Calumet harbors was io, 000,000 tons. This year it will exceed 17,000,000 tons, notwithstanding that many largo boats have been withdrawn from the grain and merchandise trado to carry ore and coal. tn the Calumet last year 2,650,000 tons of ore were handled. This year 3,600,000 tons have been contracted for, and In other ore-purchasing cen ters a similar Increase is anticipated. In general merchandise, canned goods, dry 'goods, hardware, groceries, green fruits and miscellaneous cargoes the quantltes handled bv lake and river this year will, it is predicted, increase from 10 to 20 per cent, ns compared with last year, the esttmato being based on a comparison of orders last March and this. The best evidence that a busy lake season Is in prospect, however, Is to bo found In tho arrangements which are being made to handle the rush. One year ago tho value of the ships under construction in lako shipyards was $3,200,000; this year moro than $0,000,000 worth of vessel property Is being rushed through. In 1S96 on Lakes Michigan and Superior there were twenty-one docks for handling Iron ore. These docks had 4.43S pock ets, with an aggregate capacity of 617, 250 tons. When navigation opens thl3 spring there will be twonty-thrco docks, with a total of 5.061 pockets and a storage capacity of 834,082 tons, a net gain of C23 pockets and l5,S32 tons storage 'capacity, or about 40 per cent, increase In storage capacity in four years. A through pas'senger service from Buffalo to Chicago by boat Is one of the promised novelties of the coming navigation season. It will constitute a liberal education to those who have not ridden over the great lakes a Jour ney which every American citizen should make at least once in his life time. It may not be generally known In Scranton that our former fellow-citizen, Tallle Morgan, Is president of the Ocean Grove board of trade. Indeed, there Is a prospect that Tallle will yet become a greater man than was ever Founder Bradley in the palmiest and most voluminous days of his linen duster monarchy. Tallle Is now devel oping a monumental idea. He fancies that perhaps Philadelphia will be un able to secure the Exposition building for the national Republican convention and therefore no building will be large enough for that great event. Hence his proposition to allure the conven tion to Ocean Grove by means of the big auditorium" which can hold 12,000 persons. Tallle Is to lay his plans be fore Mark A. Hanna and the result will be nwalted with interest. When It comes to real originality and enter prise it 'takes a Scranton man every time to be in the lead. Why Expansion Was Foreordained and IneuifabI? From an Address Delivered at St. Louis Last Week by Postmaster Oencral Charles Emery Smith. THE OVERMASTERING fact In tho material development of the world during the pat quarter of n century is tho marvelous Industrial expan sion of tho United States. The moment our manufactured exports exceeded our manufactured Imports, that moment we passed beyond the possession of our do mestic Held to the demand of foreign morUcts. Tho pregnant hour when our ex ports nr manufactures passeu our im ports came in 1S9S, and In the striking march of events that are not ruled by any mere churce, that very year witnessed tho wur with Spain, which, us Its unexpected and unavoidable result, brought us tna gteat opportunity of commercial outlet for which tho princes of business had u.1 readv begun to look, but which the keen est. vision had never foreseen. The first and paramount obligation connected with tho war Is the moral duty growing out of It. Above all other considerations are the moral responsibilities of our new position. Hut when we have met the highest rqulrement of the moral stand ord, there is no code of ethics and no rulo of statemanshlp which excludes con sideration of tho commercial interests Involved In our public policy. o--Let mo ask our attention to our re markable position of economic superior ity and to tho Imperative demands which grow out of It. Familiar as we are with the legend of our national growth, we do not realize Its stupendous proportions until wo analyze and measuro it by com parison. In 1ST0 the nnnu.il value of our manufactures was $3,"0U,wO.0on; now It is about $12,000,000,000u For hulf a century England had been the workshop of tho world, and. wo had only Just begun. Still wo had got such a start that In 1S70 the manufactures of the United States ,1uet about equaled those of Great Britain. But slnco then our growth has been so pro digious thnt now our manufactures amount to two nnd n half times tho total volumo ot Britain's manufactures and equal those of Great Britain. Germany and France put together. Tho Increase In the annual market product within thirty years has been double tho com bined Increase of those three great na tions of Europe. In other words. If you match the United States against Great Britain, Germany and Franco together, our manufactures nre now equal to all theirs and are growing twice as fast. We aie manufacturing nearly two-thirds as much as all Europe with Its n.SO.000,000 people, and moro than one-third of all that Is manufactured In the world, o If you take the whole range of Indus tries, including agriculture, mining, trans portation and even commerce, wherein nlouo we aro behind tho proportions stand about tho same. Tho aggregate vnluo of nil American Industries Is moro than dou ble that of Great Britain, three times that of Franco and two and a half times that of Germany. It is one-half that of all Europo combined. With this enor mous industrial expansion tho national wealth of tho United States grows pro portionately. In ISm. our aggregate wealth was but little moro than half that of Great Britain, less than half that of Franco and only about half that of tho nations that mado up tho German em pire. Now It Is a third greater than Great Britain's, double Germany's and nearly double that of France. Within forty years tho United States has gained over Jt 7,000,000,000 In wealth, while Oreat Britain, France and Germany together havo gained less than JtfO.OOO.OW.OOO. o Tho figures of our national earnings dszzlo tl o Imagination. Last year wo earned about $1 4.500,000, 000, of which mora than one-half was tho wages of labor. 'I ho enmities of labor In the United States today aro greater than tho com bined earnings of capital and labor to gether In Great Britain. Labor was never so well rewarded as In this pros perous year. As compared with tho ears 1S93, 1894 and 1&93, the average earn ings of lnbor now aro In the ratio of 127 to 81. Thnt Is, they are nearly 60 per cent, grerter lhan they were five years ago. '4 no wnoio country is striuing ror ward by leaps and bounds. The J.'O.OOO. (W0 granted to Spain In connection with tho Philippines was paid by what tho country earns In half a day. The na tion's earrings In a tingle year like the present aro equivalent to moro than one. half Its entire accumulated wealth in ISiTO: thnt is, to mote than one-half of all that it had saved and put Into nil forms of piopeity riming the first eighty years of its existence ns a nation. Our annual gain is about $2.noo,000,v0i. and every suc ceeding working day sees tho United States over $G,000,KV better off than It was tho day before. Wo havo multiplied our capital more than thieefold slnco 1S70. and to Its present vast proportions we sliall In the next ten years add as much as the en tlro capital of the nation was In 1870. With this rapid and tremendous expansion of capital and ot the product of lnbpr, is there to bo no expansion of Its oppor tunity and Its outlets? o When wn.pass from these broad out lines to tho particular fuctrro. tho aston ihhlng grow tli and tho superior position of the United States are emphasized. Iron and steel aro everywhere recognized us tho basic fabrics and the surest index of industrial pow. r. F'tteen ye.ui ago tho United States mado only half as much pig iron as Great Biltaln, and only a nttio moro man nermany. witnm that bhort peilod our gain has been equal to tho combined gain of tho two great Iron nations of Europe: wo uuw make 50 nor cent, more than cither: and we have leaped to far .to tho front that wo mako moro than one-third of all the Iron that Is mado In tho world. Tho baino thing Is true of steel. Last year wo produced twico as much steel as Great Britain, though llftecn years ago our product was less than hers; and, whllo Germany has outstripped Great Britain, wo uro W) per cent, ahead of Germany. Wo mako half ns much steel as all ether nutlons put together. Not only do we hold the present mas. tery, but wo command the future, be cause wo possess thii elements of contin ued industrial supremacy. Our unused resources uro oven more lemarkablo and lgnlttcant thun our present achieve ments. Coal and Iron ore ,nre the raw material and tho foundation of Iron and steel production. 1'ho coul ilelds of Great Britain embrace 9.300 square miles, and t those of Germany 3,0W square mile. But how mighty seem tho potentialities of the United States when wo remember that our total coal area covers 200,000 square miles, nnd that, oven when wo limit It to the quantity of cont which enters Into tho manufacture of Iron, It still reaches tho stupendous llgutes of more than 70,000 square miles, or 20,000 square miles more than the entire nica of England! Our coal production has rapidly advanced, un til wo now mine as much ns Great Britain and nearly one-third of nil that Is mined In tho world. Great Britain exports 40,000,000 tons, or one-fifth of her entire product, while wo consume practically all of ours and export only 4.0OJ.000 tons. As our llllmltablo Holds are opened and for eign fields aro reduced, our capability of supplying tho world will become more und moro marked. Even now wo are reudlng In tho public press of tho coal famlno In Europe, and of the gteat de mand for American coal, o Tho facts as to Iron ore aro much the same. Great Britain used nbout 18,000,000 tons In 1898, but sho had to Import one third of It, or 6,000,000 tons. On the other hand, tho United States produced 19,000,000 ions, ana used an or it wunin ner uwm borders. In tho lake regions we have a wealth of ore beds which nro practically inexhaustible and which, with our bound less coal Melds, assure our Increasing and ondurlng supremacy as an Industrial power. Wo havo not vet gained the sumo lend In textiles. But, though wo began fifty years ngo with a valued pro duet onlv one.seventli of Great Britain's, only one-fifth of France's and only one half of Germany's, we have now caught up to Great Britain, and nearly equal Franco and Germany combined. Our predominance will become as signal In this Held as In metals. English author ities point out the fact that there Is a serious depreciation in cotton mills at Manchester; that no new capital enters the trade, and that employment Is de creasing. But In South Carolina alone twenty-six new cotton mills havo been established within tho past year, many more being doubled In capacity, while in the whole South COOo.OOO spindles havo been set up, standing for an investment of $123,000,000. c Nor does Amcrlcnn superiority end here. When Enplnnd was rising to her Industrial leadership she had tho ad vantage of new mechanical forces. The continent was paralyzed and prostrate for a quarter of a century under the blight of the Napoleonic wars. While thus freo li m all competitive rivalry England, through the skill of her Vatt3 anu Arjcwrigns ana Etevensons, appnra new mechanical power to the productive processes, and became the unchallenged workshop of the woild. It was estimat ed at that tlmo that ono pair of hands In England, with these efficient agencies, had tho productho energy nnd value of ten pairs of hands on tho continent. The United States has n similar, though less signal, advantage now. American genius and Invention and adaptability have given our Industries a completeness and perfec tion of mechanical equipment which greatly multiply their productive power. A single broad fact demonstrates the su periority. In Europe 43,000,000 operatlc3 and artisans were employed In li93 In producing tho annual aggrcgato of manu factured articles valued at $17,000,000,000, or $3S0 apiece. In tho United States at the sumo tlmo G.OflO.000 operatives produced goods woith $10,000,000,000, or about $U8S apiece, or more than four times as much as an operative In Europe. o This superior equipment and producing power, man for man, explains why wo can pay higher wages nd still competo with the nations of the Old World on their own ground, and in their own mar kets. It Is tho secret of the comfort of American labor, tho key of American ci. terprlse, and the talisman of American expansion. It explali s why, within a few months, American shops have placed a goodly number of locomotives on Eng lish railways. It explains why we nio sending American machinery to Sheffield and Birmingham, and wl.y our rails nro found In Manchuria and Siberia, In In dia and Africa, The antiquity which en shrines the Pyramids looks down through forty centuries on the American electric load that carries troops of visitors to their base, and tho mystery of the Bilent Sphynx must now wellnlgh yield Its se cret in wonder at the new riddle of the youngest civilization and people peace fully Invading and conquering the oldest. The British government needed a great steel bridge, nearly a quarter of a mile long across the Atbara for Kitchener, and needed It at or.ee: tho British manufac turers required seven months to build it; American constructors asked seven weeks, nnd Philadelphia sent the bridge. This superior alertness, adaptability and equipment distinguish general American enterprise. It has a plant which beats the'world, and It must find the market for Its product. o And even all these striking facts do not tell tho whole story of American advan tage. England Is dependent on the out side world for her food supply and her raw material. In less degree the same thing is true of France and Germany. Tho United States, on the other hand, is the one country that supplies Its own food and raw material, the one great nation that sells more than It buys, the one world power that is completely Independent and wholly self-sustaining. Wo havo seen that tho crow-th of tho United States In manufactures has been phenomenal: that Its Industrial product Is now equal to that of the three great Industrial na tions of Europe combined; that It Is one half tho product of all the rest of tho world put together, and Is growing twice us fast; that we are Immeasurably ahead of all rivols In raw materials and re sources for future development, and that, with our superior nppllances, wo far ex cel them in producing power man for man. Since 1870, while our population has doubled, our n anofuctures havo quad rupled. Our producing capacity Is up to and beyond tho measure of our consum ing ability nnd Is Increasing faster. What, then, aro we to do? Are we to restrict production? Aro wo to run mill and fac tory on reduced lime, with the neces sary sequences of lower wages, smaller profits and wide discontent? Or are we to provide for this enormous and expand ing output by supplementing our own vast but unequal measure of consumption with new outlets and new markets? Our pathway Is determined by our re quirements. Commercial development la the Inevitable necessity of our agricul tural and manufactuiir.g supremacy. The demands ot cur industrial position com pel us to enter upn i ommerclal expan sion. With our surpassing power of pro duction, with our farms nnd forges and factories turning out more than we can consume, with our matchless inventive and mechanical genius steadily Increas ing our pnoductlvo energy, with our wealth of yet untouched resources which must In tho fututc put us still farther In the lead of all nations, we havo only ono of two courses before us. Either we must halt our growth, limit our produc tion, bank our fires and stop our spin dles, reduce our labor and restrict our capital, with all tho hardship that this Involves, or else we must find broader markets and expanded consumption. Do you tell mo there is cott and possible difficulty In this extension abroad? But Is there not greater cost and loss In a paralyzing restriction at homo? Do you tell me there aro risks and perplexities In this policy of commercial expansion? jnit are tnere not greater ana graver per plexities ana dangers, which may only bo suggested, in a policy of industrial con traction? o Let us fully realize the mighty facts of our national situation. Had there been no war with Spain, had tho new and glorious May morn of American liberty never shea its lustro over tho bay of Manila, had no victory at Santiago brought a brilliant triumph of peaco charged with great re sponsibilities, we should still havo been compelled to look beyond our continental bounds, It was inevitable that we should advance out of our isolation and turn our faces outward to tho worlu. Our transcendent Industrial growth and Its Imperative need of outlets demanded It. If the Immortal history of tho past two years wern blotted out, wo Bhould mako that commercial effort with no such art antuges und no such re3plendent possl bllltlet, as now beckon us onward. There would be no prestige and Impress of an ever-floating lias In the Orient. Thero would be no kev to Asia In our hands. Theio vculd be no open door In China, But even ha there been no such glitter ing chapter, our continued material ad vunccu'cnt would havo required us to ex tend tho nrms of our commerce across the seas, and commerce means a uuvy and outposts nnd defense. Tho futuro historian, In portraying the magnificent progress of the republic, will dwell upon tho manifest guldnnce of a power higher than nny chance lp the great and preg nant fact that just us it reached the stage of Its development where Its Indus trial upbuilding needed to be crowned with commercial extension, tho unforseon nnd mighty events of the Spanish war suddenly lifted the curtain and unveiled the new prospect, tho wider horizon and tne unexpected and immeasurable oppor- J tunity. ooooooooooooooooo I In Woman's Realm ooooooooooooooooo A MAN OUT west has gone Insane bo cause his wife nppeurcd before him with her hair chemically bleached. It was a Bomewhnt ttrange procedure. If tho woman had gone mad from the ef fect of the bleach on hor brain wo should have not been so surprised. Indeed If It had beer discovered that sho was de mented all the tlmo and that the hair bleaching performance was but a more malignant symptom of her mental utata It would not have been amazing, but to have her hlifcbnnd suddenly become a rav ing lunatic because of tho change In her appearance Is really singular. The average man who hi's lived long enough with a wlfo to have her lench i ho nan where hair bleaching would seem deslrablo In her eyes, or where she would be capable of employing It would natur ally have grown so used to hor vngarles that nothing could surprise him. At any rate nobody would expect him to tako It so hard even when she arrived at the in termediate "groenery-yallery" stage, when the bleach begins to wear oft. Oi course tho public doesn't know what woful experiences ho may have had prior to seeing his wife resplendent In yellow hair. Probably she tried dyes and tactal massage and neck gymnastics, and skin foods and other abominations to the m.13 cullne mind. Maybe tho had tausht him the Intricacies necessary to become an expert masseuse. SOME MINDS seem unable to grasp the Idea that a woman can bleach her hair unless sho desires to please or attract somebody besides her husband. Now this doesn't necessarily follow. Thoro aro women who would do almost anything In tho world to still seem young and beautiful In their husband's eyes. Poor dears, often they can't seem to real ize that their lords aren't observing enough to know the difference. Thcro actually aro men who aro such bats as far as their own families aro concerned thnt thev wouldn't notice If then wives- hair had suddenly turned gray In a nl3ht from worry over tho lack of attention thev received. It would be a great pltv to tako the trouble to bleach one's hair to please such a husband. . IT IS PROBABLE that most women who worry lest their husbands may be attracted .by a younger face are borrowing trouble for nothing for, strange us It may seem to some peo ple, the average man just the gen eral, decently conducted sort Isn't going round with a single Idea, that of looking for pretty girls. Perhaps his wifo may be sort of elderly and faded, but he probably doesn't note It particu larly and has something elbo In hi blessed head than trying to discover beauty In tho streets or at his office. Be give him credit for that. As you see him on tho train or tho hotel dining room or meet him In business, he appears to at tend to his own affairs rather well and Isn't watching out for a chance to flirt. Bleached hair, at home or abroad, Isn't likely to ensnare his fancy. So far ns a rather close observer can Judge, the wo man who bleaches her tresses In order to he mnro nttractive to any man on the face of the earth falls short of her mark. Out of a list of twenty-five Scranton men who were Interviewed on the question yesterday not on expressed himself us admiring It but on the contrary all made moio or less strong rematks to the ef fect thnt "If my wife" or sweetheart, or sister, as the case might be. should bleach her hnlr "I'd have her drowned" or 'I'd chloroform her," or "I'd pull It all out" or jieavo her," or wreak some other dire retribution upon her. . ACTRESSES often find It necessary to bleach their locks to hide the ravages of tlmo or render their stago make up moro easily urrnaged, but why a respect able woman Is beguiled Into so doing Is mystifying in the extreme, although there havo been many to do so. It Is not really Immoral any more than powdering the hair by the stately ladles of other days, was Immoral. It Is probably not more harmful except after the streaked and startling hued eflcct has disappeared and tho natural color has been allowed to resume Its place, but bleached hair has never had tho cachet of elegance and tasto that attended tho coiffure making of the colonial dame. It Isn't to bo re gretted that what small voguo It had Is disappearing und that women reallzo tho great attractiveness of beautifully cared for gray hair whether tt comes early or late In life, bringing tho Inevit able touch of dismay to tho feminine heart. . IFFl FURNmiR Roll Top Desks, Flat Top Desks, Standing Desks, Typewriter Desks, And Office Chairs A Large Stock to Select from. Hill & Coiniiniell 121 N. Washiujjlon Ave, ALWAYS BUSY. 'K0RRECT SHAPE," More friends every day. Tho cause easy to buy, easy to weur, $3.5fJ, $4.00 .and $5.00. Lewis. Reilly & Davies, lU-lU Wyoming Avenue. re If Sri HsMUljsifSraS SfSMsngflU Railroad lea Get Ready for Inspection We have uow a full Hue of all makes of Watches that we guarantee to pass. Buy your Watches of an old reliable house. Not some agent who will open shop for two or three months and tlien skip out. We are here to stay. Our guarantee is "as good a3 gold." Prices as low as any. HERCEREAU &NELL 131) Wyoming Ave. Coal Exchange. The Hunt & ConnieM Co. Heating, Plumbing, Gas Fitting, Electric Light Wiring, Gas an Electric Fixtures, Builders Hardware. s Timothy Seel Gtuunister and Forsyth S25.3H PENN AVENUH HENRY BEL1N, JR., lieneial Agent far tna WyoinUf W'trlot.'J.' AJlulns, UlastlOftiSportlu;, diuoUe.Ui end the rtep.iuna UUauil-a. Co upaay'i HIGH EXPLOSIVE tulety l-'use. Cap and Hxplods:!- ttoom 401 Coaasll BaUdlu. ciorautaa. AUK.N'Oflil THOS. FORD, JOHN B. SMITH & SON, W. E. MULLIGAN. - Pltlaton Plymouth. Wllkes-Borre lureiri roiiEB. The woodworker's life is hard at its best. Standing day after day alongside a workbench causes many of the delicate organs of digestion to get out of working order. Worry in the workshop six days in the week is very apt to carry; over on Sunday also. Headache does not stop when the day's work is done, but spoils the pleasure of the leisure hours as well. A workman in the Burlington Venetian Blind Co.'s employ says: " Ripans Tabules first came to my notice when the engineer sent for me one day and asked me if I had ever used thetiL He recommended them so highly because they had cured him of dyspepsia and other troubles, that I began to use the Tabules. 1 found them so good that I recommended them to others. I have had headache but once since I began to take them. Every, thing 1 eat acts well now and even a crust of bread tastes good." A saw tle packet conUUilns ten vrmi Ticus in paper carton (without iUs) u now (or taleM loa, drug itorn ron rm cisu. Tnls low-priced ,ort ! Intruded (or tlio poor and the economical. On dot ( the nie-cenl cartoni (WO tobolea) can be had b mall by nudlnn (orty-elcht cent, to the Wrixa Ciranrial CoaruT, No. It Bpruce Street, New York - or a iliigle carton (ten mum) will be mbI lor Or cent FINLEY'S WA8H (MODS One-half hours personal inspection of our Wash Goods Stock will not only make you" better acquainted with the immense line of "New Ideas" we aro showing for Spring, but will do more to upost" you on values, that have real merit to back them than a whole column of "talk and figures." Our assortment has never been as large, nor the styles so attractive as now; two con ditions which are not likely to exist as the season ad vances. , We make special mention of Mousellne de Sole, Fll de Sole, Peau de Sole, Dotted Swiss and Swiss Grenadine, Anderson's Silk Cord Scotch Glngha.ns, Irish Dimities, Madras, Cheviots, Linen Ginghams, French Percales, Etc. Etc, Exclusive styles shown in mest of the above. 510-512 LACKAWANNA AVENUE T&s fmz PMliefc. Teachers and superintendents de siring for class use in picture study, something that is substantial and inexpensive will find these beautiful new reproductions of great value. We have 100 different subjects to select from. The prices are very reasonable and the assortment is complete. With this book the simple act of writing produces a copy. Any letter head can be used an4 a copy produced from pencil or any kind of pen and ink. When the book is filled, extra fillers can be purchased from us at very little cost. Two sizes and bindings in stock. ReyeoldlsBros Stationers and Engravers, Scranton, Pa. IklPeiCartaietoBool if ., tefc. I A .4a&att? ' )A i ii ftr4fe tuti V 'w'i'WftaMrta.