i- -Nf. t THE SORANTON TRIBUNE-WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 9, 1901. r 5 GLASS MAKING AT BUFFALO TO BE REPRESENTED AT PAN AMERICAN BBlOW. ffhB Exhibit Will Be Historical la Showing the Different Stages of the Industry and the Various Changes In Method Which Have Taken Place Since the Earlier Bays. pedal Ccrrespor.Jfnce. Buffalo, Jan. 8. In the United States and Canada there are 401 elans factor ies having a combined capacity of 11,091 pots. This Importance has de veloped by slow stages and many cost ly experiments. Every department of manufacture Is represented In this long list from tho plate store front to the tiniest and most dellcato trinket In American countries, practical con sideration!! come first, the utilitarian qualities in tiny lino of manufacture properly receiving tho sreatcst atten tion. Artistic and decorative features follow as tlmo and education craato the demand. This Is especially notice able In the first production of glass In America. Such useful articles as black bottles, tumblers and other common table ware woro made in Virginia more than a hundred years ago. These were fol lowed closely by tho manufacture of 7x9 window glass and lines of novel ' ties, many of which have since become necessary staples. Glass and glassware nt the Pan American exposition will bo represent ed historically, carefully Illustrated with a view of showing Its develop ment along industrial lines from the first crude and clumsy productions to the finest cut glass table ware, dell cato fabrics and highly tempered musical glasses. Many Interesting pro cesses will be shown and many ar ticles made on the grounds. AN ANCIENT ART. Olusswaro Is so common, the gen eral public hurdly stops to consider how it Is made or where It comes from, and the Importance to the coun try of a business which employs so muny men and circulates such volumes of money, Is little considered. The art of glass making Is very old, so old that It was known In Egypt In Joseph's time, three thousand live hun dred years ago. It has grown In im portance, volume and variety with fach succeeding century until it has become one of tho staple articles of manufacture in every civilized coun try. Like all extensive lines of manu facture, tho business is divided Into specialties. Factories are constructed for the manufacture of one specillc article In which nothing else Is made. A plate glass factory Is a largo affair, covering perhaps twenty acres. Every thing about the plant Is designed and arranged with a view of facilitating tho manufacture of plato glass with out regard to any other branch of the business. The process is extremely simple and tho machinery ponderous and expensive: so much so that at least half a million dollars appears to bo absolutely necessary to operate a plate glass factory successfully. COMPONENT PARTS. M'hlte sand, soda ash, charcoal nnd nrsenlo compose the ingredients, though the exact proportions Is a guarded secret, varying somewhat in each factory. When weighed and mixed, a certain amountabout five bushels Is placed In a pot, the pot lowered Into a furnnco where it re mains for ten or twelve hours before it ia melted and sufficiently homogen eous. It Is then carried to an iron table upon which It Is poured and rolled out flat, the thickness being de termined by btrlps of iron at the sides of the table. It Is then wheeled into mi annealing oven where It is allowed to remain for a day or two, tho hpat being gradually lowered. When cool, it is trimmed, ground nnd polished af ter which it is cut to size and carried to the stock room. The manufactuie of gluss mosaics has been maintained by the Italian government for several centuries. The individual artistic character of tho workmen enter Into this Industry to a greater degree than In any other dec orative art. In fact, the term line aits would easily Include this production. In the. first place tho study of color is exceedingly important. The mater ials of glass are mixed with various coloring materials, which are chiefly metallic oxides, in a manner to form opaque colored enamels. The glass made In this manner Is piessed Into slabs which are cut Into very email cubes or rectangular pieces. Shades and colors to the number of so 000 are made in this manner which are graded, carefully classified and regis tered. ART GLASS. With these colored tints tho picture is built up, being composed or copied as the artist decides, the decision in most cases being do'errolned by tho ability and character of the artisan For copying, a work of one of tho fine old Italian masters Is usually chosen. Tho art Is handed down in families from father to son, the artis tic value of the work depending, of course, upon individual ability. The picture is compiled by inserting Pieces of cubes of colored glass ono by ono In a setting of cement which dries 1o extreme hardness. Each piece Is fitted by being ground at a lathe to the exact shape required by the par ticular tint or color which It Is de fined to represent In the picture. The process Is extremely slow and when pompleted In the rough, the surface Is ground to a true surface and caie fully polished. Another process which has been but little used for a century or more con slsed of building a comploto plcturo on ach surface of the finished glass. Tho process consisted of building up on eirch side of a centre web, by means of colored glass fibres which were fitted together with tho utmost exact ness and cemented by fusion into a solid mass. This was afterwards sur faced by hand. Tho process probably comprised the most intricate and painstaking mode of building a plc turo that tho ingenuity of man has ever devised. GLASS PAPEIt. The term glass paper applies to a polishing or smoothing paper for use on wooden surfaces, and Is generally referred to and known as sand paper, though In this particular form the sur faco 1h covered with glass Instead of and. Tho fragments of broken bottles nnd coarse waste, after being care fully washed to remove all greaso and dirt, Is crushed under a revolving stono and sifted into six sizes. Th sifting Is dono by means of revolving cylinders of wire cloth having from 18 to SO wires to the Inch. A surface of thin glue Is spread on the paper and the sifted glass dusted over It with a sieve. Ono patent process consists of coating cloth in this manner Instead of pnpor, two applications of, glue and sifted glass being applied. Tho process of soldering glass Is not very common, and the fact of ever re sorting to a soldering process for tho purpose of uniting two pieces of glass would hardly bo thought of outstdo of the business. In Vienna, a process Is worked which makes curled or frizzled yarn from glass. Tho composition of the glass Is peculiar and it is kept a caro ful secret. The material costs but little and the yarn Is made rapidly. It Is woven Into fabrics, which are used for many different purposes, such as carpets, tablo linen, shawls, etc. A dress made for the Hawaiian princess, Lllllokuoanl, was written and talked about somo years ago, though tho ma terial has not become fashionable. A cloth is made having a warp of silk with a glass woof, which is very lus trous and pretty. It would be Impossible to enumerate tho extent or give an ndequato Idea of the scope of the glass xhlblt at tho Pan-American. Such o. thoroughly classified history of glass, Its useful ness and its ornate value was never .before attempted. Besides tho exhibit proper, a glass actory will be In oper ation showing tho process of manufac ture In a great variety of articles from the crudo materials to tho finished product. Herbert Shearer. m MODERN MAP MAKING. Some Idea of the Immense and Cost ly Labor Involved. O. C. Adams,in The World's Work. Tho textbooks which our school children used one hundred years ago told them nothing of the Rocky Moun tains or tho ranges of the Pacific slope. The exploration of three fourths of our vast domain has been tho work of our government nnd pri vate citizens. In a broad sense. It has been well done; and In the past twenty-one years It has been succeeded by detailed studies and surveys which should be specially mentioned, for they are n phase of exploration which has been carried out on a large scale only In tho nineteenth century, and which Is essential to the .production of tho most accurate maps. No topographic feature or town or the distribution of economic resources can bo mapped with the greatest attainable accuracy till these surveys are made. They In volve, first, tho preparation of a topo graphic map showing the relief or In equalities of the surface, the diuln agc, and the works of man, such ns roads, railroads, boundaries, mid towns; second, the geologic limp, print ed In colors upon the topographic base map, showing the distribution of the rock formations, soils, useful mlneials, artesian waters, etc. These surveys and the resulting maps are ono of the most scientific de velopments of geographic reseat ch in this century. They have been com pleted In all count! ies of Europe ex cept In Norway, Spain, Turkey, and somo of the Balkan States. The great survey of India Is one of the monu ments of cartography, and similar surveys are far advanced in Algeria nnd Tunis. The topographic work has been carried by our general govern ment, with the assistance of a few states, Into all the states and territor ies, and nearly a third of our entire area has now been completed, The labor is enormous and costly and many years will elapse before the wholo country can be mapped with the refinement und accuracy that characterize the map sheets of tho most of Europe. PRESIDENT HAYS. Man Who Receives Highest salary of Any Railroad Executive. Fruin the Saturday Ecning roil. Only twelve years ago Charles .. Fays, the new president of the Sou h orn Pacific railroad, held a elricai position. Now he receives the highest fc nry paid to any railroad president in America probably In the world This is said to be $35,000. or $3,000 mor than 13 paid to the president of the United States. The peculiarity of Mr. Hays' mental equipment which enables him to command this splendid Income I? uoli Illustrated by a certain buach of old letters reposing in the pigeon hole of the desk of an olliclul who was a ruhoidlnatc to Mr. Hnys when the latter was general manager of the Unbat'h road. Some of these epistles nro only two or three lines In leiiRth, but not ono of, them is too short to contain a sentence of olllclal commen dation of a kind calculated to stir the heart of tho most Indifferent subordin ate. Tho ability to bestow approval vltli tho same 'HTScernnipnt nnd promptness with which he niete out criticism Is held to be the secret of his phenomenal success. Ills complete demonstiatton of re markable abilities for harmonizing conl'.fctlng Interests nnd attracting a large, popular and loynl following was mndo ns vice-president nnd general manager of th.o Grand Trunk line. Heie he encountered a dee.p-seatod prejudice against his Yankee origin nnd American methods. From llag man to directors tho road was staunchly British. Ited tape and of ficialism were highly doveloped in the service. Thero was not, It Is said, a typewriting machine in any office of the system. One of the first orders Issued by Mr. Hays was for a force of stenographers nnd typewriters, nnd an equipment of mnchlnes for tho entire system. But tho most revolutionary practice which he carried Into effect on tho big Cana dian road was the "open door" policy. Not only did Mr. Hays keep his own door open to all who had legitimate and Important business, but he also saw to it that the doors of tho of ficials under him were broadly open to tho public. Mr. Hays Is only forty four years of nge and was born In Rock Island, Illinois. Deafness Cannot Be Cured by local application u they cannot reach tho diseased portion of tho tar. There It only one way to cure dculncw, and that in by constitu tional remedies. Deafncas ia caused by an In flamca condition ot tho mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube is Inflamed you hao a rumbling sound or Imperfect hetrlne, and uhen it is entirely closed, Deafness is the re sult, and unless the inflammation can be taken out and this tube restored to its norms! condi tion, hearlnK will be destroyed fornver: nine rase out of ten are caused by Catarrh, htch Is nothing but an inflamed condition of the mucous surfaces. We will Bhe Ono Hundred Dollars for any case ot Deafness (caused by catarrh) that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure, Bend for circular!, free. V, J. CHK.N'KY & CO., Toledo, O. Bold by DrUKirlaU. 75c. Hall's Family I'lll art the best I I . . --rmrTr The White Sale Jonas Long's Sons 2 The White Sale THE WHITE SALE BEGINS TODAY. The store is a veritable city of white. Windows, aisles, rotunda, counters and shelves peep forth in nature's purest tint. It is a pretty sight one you are sure to enjoy the merchandise and the prices will interest you beyond anything of the kind ever held in Scranton. One of the chief events of the year in the Jonas Long's Sons' Stores is the annual sale of white goods. Important because its success is firmly established due to similar sales of three years past. It is not a hurried sale : it commands extreme preparation and utmost care. The un dermuslins have been making for many months -perfectly finished garments await you. These are not ordinary sales, where quality is cheap ened in order to lessen the price. The broad scope of the store gives you the best there is or that can be made for the money a policy that is only possible in a store where quantities are sufficiant to regulate the price. A I Corset Covers Ladies' fine quality Muslin Corset Cov ers, made from an improved pattern and perfectly finished, with felled seams for the Great January White Sale at only Not More Than f 1 HU LU It bUS. 5 tomcr. Muslin Gowns ' Splendid quality of muslin, made ' with tucked yoke and embroid- ' ery. Good width. For the great ' January White Sale wo io m a it a Buyer. Muslin Gowns Fine musiin in three styles, some Em pire trimmed with embroidery, others with V and square yokes elaborately trimmed. For the Great January White Sale only g Not riore Than - Jc Two to a Cus- -F tomer. Muslin Chemise Very fine quality of Muslin Chemise, perfectly made and finished and quite elaborately trimmed with torchon lace. For the Great January White Sale at only Not flora Than Two to a Customer. 19 Cambric Gowns Best quality of cambric, made with line embroidered tucked voice; full width and For the great l.inuary White Sale....'. Two to a Buyer. length. Corset Covers Made up from very fine cam bric, French style, some of them with square yokes. For the great J anuary White Sale - Two to iyc a Buyer. . Cambric Drawers Very fine Cambric Drawers, made extra wide and finely trimmed with lace and inserting. For the great January f White-Sale UC Two to 17 a Buyer. Cambric Drawers Ladies' Superb Quality Ci.hjii'c Drawers, cut very lull and finished with hemstitched ruflles and yoke band; superior to any ever offered at 35c. For the great January White Sale at only Ig-. Not More Than fllc Two to a Cus. Jr tomer. White Fur Rugs Exquisite floor coverings, real fi.r rugs, full 27x60 inches in size, heavily lined with felt and fin ished in the best man ner. For the Great January White Sale at only Muslin Skirts Ladies' tine grade of Muslin Skirts, made with very deep umbrella flounciiijj and trimmed with several rows of line plaiting ; splendidly finished. For the great January White Sale at only Not More Than Two to a Customer. 49- Muslin Skirts Extra quality of Heavy Muslin Skirts, made with very deep umbrella frames and elaborately trimmed with fine lace, little narrow plaits, etc. For the great January White Sale at only Not more Than Two to a Customer. 98 Handkerchiefs Ladies' Fine Swiss and Cambric Hand kerchiefs with hemstitched borders and scalloped edges; others with lace and drawn work corners. Big variety of styles and worth up to 25c. Janu ary White Sale, each Curtain Swiss Full yard wide, uncom monly good qual ity; January white -fl -I c sale 1 1 Swiss Curtains Ruffled Swiss Curtains, full width and length. Jan uary White Sale, pair Tray Cloths And Stand Covers of fine lined, stamped ready to work; some drawn work. arm a ry White M fire Sale.: Kid Slippers Fincsi white kid, in new toe shapes, ribbon bows and straps, with pretty buckk: on top. M X CV JV ?, (7 'v.v.irv & &f Ax i?ic s- wLf .1? v .. I-T CA AtW7 37 A 2 4v T .As$-. ' F V ' Sale.: 40 V 3vvvO S V W&tSF&r A.eiTv VJ - Or V3&HP&T $2.49 XMW AT C, m QA x: ;&.:a. ex W wwkv v v iiT.O,c .j'O-xy 'kW I t? x w X XAk ,SV-. . Cv7.a X . r rf' - . s xw ? (.vV, X3 AC Ave 'Yj X mm Ot- yf & c Jm. V-L X,' .ex? .'v " m r .- . :7 v rrv r r O w oA Sn.'.c f k ' I j'-v. i.JO- . .. ivi x .jyy,ij isr r w 1 z. iJ ssr . ' i c r .Y-.W..""? .N ,r.. vrc . "- "v t r .v, n 2 V m. m f 4i .v ck . m.- ft 1 sfA 9- .- X. 5sa.' . - cv v 3 r '' 'wo v TJA. '),' OL X. M 'v. -y For ladies' handsome styles in Grey Tourist Hats, trimmed in vhite silk and pon pons the newest effects in the most predominant styles. Dinner Sets One hundred piece Din ner Sets of finest English porcelain, decorated in the newest flord designs. Pos itively worth 1 1. 00. Jan uarv White AQ Sale.' DivJO White Lawn Fine in quality, full 40 in. wide; worth 15c Qc January White Sale.. Table Linen Full bleached all linen Table Damask, worth 59 cents. January ffic White Sale 4"0 Fine Towels Rest all Linen Towels. full 40 inches long, worth inc. lanuarv White Oc Sale 1 8' White Groceries Sugar, fine granulated, 18 lbs 1.00 Flour, Jonas Long's Sons' Best, barrel 4.50 Soap. "White Cloud", large bar, 7 for 25c Codfi9J, Cream of Codfish, pkgs. for. 2Sc Lard, Swift's Best, per pound 9c Rice, fancy Carolina, 6 pounds for 25c Corn, fancy N. Y. cream, 3 cans for 25c Starch, large lump, laundry, 6 lbs. for. 25c Salt, diamond crystal, fine, package 8c Baking Powder, J. L. S., pure, per pound.... 18c Baking Powder, Royal, i lb. can lc Apples, evaporated, N. Y. State, lb 7c Crackers ; Hitchner's tid bits, package 7c Condensed Milk, Dr. Hand's, ball brand, 3 for 25c Scouring Compound, Army and Navy, pkg.. 5c Oocoanut, Schepp's improved, lb. pkg.... 10c A j& Wrt. ? ..' ? a: y SSS8.2ii Ii, Ae AhZb' K ?ocO 7. SosT v.? r . v ' vv. 'G -. Ja A 'i 't 'ff ? Boys' Waists White laundered, plaited front and back, cuffs attached, all sizes frm 7 to 12 yrs 44' fa,. Of 6,yst $&? 4?; 'wac J " ,t n & rts'a M c ' rr The White Sale Jonas Longs Sons. The White Sale . t i W . . N',, W,"