r..j. r t WTOfl-tms s mr r7' m im ,( , Urt,- ,"V" -'j---.jr -w '- "-,- Y "t V .k J '' V - & V . , 4 . ' f r ' 4 THE SCR ANTON TRIBUNE-FRIDAY, APRIL 10, 1001. -J-i ."C. ' 3 i'.' (! J lr' t J ftiMI'lied pally, K.tept SitneUy. hy Th i Tijb. line Publlililrtcr Company. Htly Cent a lonth. UVV 8. HICHAM), lldllor. 0. I'. UV.DCC, tliiilntii Mimfcr. New York Uim,oi K0 Namit hi. S. fi. VHKI.tiAKt. bote Aernl lor lorelien Achetllslng. tillered Hi Hip PreloflVe at Seranton, P. Eccuiicl-CU Mall Matter. Uhcli apaio will permit, The Trlbuno U Bind to print iliort loiters from IU Mends beat Ins on oitrcr.l topics, bul lln tula Utliate;o must bo elsnccl, lor publication, by the wri tcra Hal name anil the condition precedent to ac Mplance la that all contributions ahall bo autim In tditonal -evlslon. mi; ruvr nvn: for ADvniiTisiNO. Olio following table shons the price per Inch jaiii insertion, kpice to lie men wnnin one jc.r. ntiinclTsiainiion Full HlSlfiRon DISPLAY. . l'.iper Reading, I-'M than Sot) Inches 000 iiKhea JifKj " .looo " ...... MM " M .16 .155 .13 for tarda ol thanks, resolutions ot condolence and similar contribution In th nature of ad vertising 'llio Tribijie makes a charge ol 6 cent line. Rates for Classified Advertising furnished on application. SCHANTON, AI'KIL 10, 1001. The icniarks of tho., young woman fiom Pdtcrs'ljurg who did not know that It was against the law to atone roplG who worked during n strike WEECSt that it would not dp a bad Jrlea to Include a study of ordinances In tlie public school curriculum. Turn On More Current. THE ARGUMENT of Mr. T. J. Foster that a trolley line on Wjoming u venue would by Us noise disturb occupants of the lecture and study rooms to be located in the lino new building soon to foe constructed by the Colliery En gineer company Is entitled to respect ful conaideration by councils, for it Is not, to the interest of this city to put obstacles unnecessarily in the pathway of an institution so befietlclal to Scran ton as is the immense and growing es tablishment of which Mr. Foster is tlio directing head. It is i0,slblc that a well-conducted trolley system equipped with modern cars and trades would be less objec tionable from Mr. Foster's standpoint than the detonating flat wheel cars and a-ickety other apparatus of the Scran ton Railway company. While all trol ley cars are more or less noisy, the volume of sound with which Scrantonl ans are familiar should by no means be regarded as a necessary dimension. It is in the power of the city author ities at any time to put a soft pedal on this diurnal din by declaring the flat wheel bone-shakers a nuisance and ordering the company to remove them from service forthwith. In fact, without the hazard of grant ing a competitive franchise more likely In the long tun to aggravate than to amelloiate the objectionable features of the existing trolley service, it is within the power of the city to put such pres ume to bear on the officldls of the Seranton Railway company that they will either meet teasonable public ex pectation, which they are not doing, or make way for those who will. It Is u mistaken notion that this public service corporation has unrestricted license to maltreat .HCO.OOO citizens. Let the re coider turn on more cuncnt. .1. Plertiont Morgan appears to be able to spend money as rapidly as he can make it. Ut. lias already given tip one comfortable fortune for a paint ing and another for a. dog. Exchanjiin?: School Ideas. THK PUBLIC school system would become very much more effective if provision were made by which each teacher should be both permitted and leriulred occasionally to i&it other school looms and observe the methods of other tcaelior.s.Siieh visits at reuhon nblo Intel vnls would be fruitful in goud suggestions, whether frum seeing good let-ullh or being warned by poor one.'-. The observations thus made and HUggestioiu: leceivcd would bo of great practical value to the- inexperienced ifHchi'f, and would save many of gi enter i-spi-rJeiii e from settling down into nils. In ail cases the pupils would receive ultimate, and often de cided, advantages. Such a plan rvgulurly carried out would have u mom vitalizing effect on M'lwol room work than has ever been exerted by institutes, although there would no no call to dispense with these us an adjunct In stimulus and aid to llie teacher. There aio places where this Intel change of ideas by vIMtlng and obf-ervntlon has been can led out. In successful private schouls and semi naries It has been long practised and known tn bo of immense vulue. There Is no fousoji but thq forces of indlffer "i,cu and inertia why the public schools fhouia trull along in rear of the edu c" U,15S.U? roces s I o ri . fiiico' niofo wo rcmatk tluit we are "4Uu1UUlug thu, teachers. This and BrTous "oilier 'improvements would ejFwi to pass if it wero the teachers vjho legislated ijllgvritlon of tor tuo scjioois. the snontro s.ivi.,1 tii ,5"cf?11J knockout In the senate. It vtfll loubtlegs tevlvu eio the gong fcfiiuids. 'lotion ami Fact About Cuba. N TUB affairs of government it w ns ttue us in other walks of 'life thut "tha shallows murmur Willie the deeps uro dumb." The luatlou In Cuba olfeis Itself us .a linely exemplllicntlon. On tim mir. rijci', the frothy, professional patriot ipment Is making Itself conspicuous l& effervescent faitlt-llndlnir and emu. aflonuent swugger, Nothing that la fytio by the Intervening government sjilts It. Jt has no use fop the Ameri jins, anyway. Th,ey uro interlopers: they do pot understand the Latin on rfly native houth; they-inay mean well Vjlit fhey l'Wktatty)e;jBCk-Tlnesse; hd they-gbne dlfterently at the things which they huvu done, all would have beei;vill, etc., etc. "Their man Wood H&.tfgp.d fcllQwr but ho dues not know tlurTtnjairfTeorilorhi pernills Ills eura JVibltlon .21 .21 .171 .1 .17 .1 165 I . to Iiq niled by false loportR', lie is only u military martinet and not nt till an ndnilnlslrntor. Nothing that Is In Hghtt Nothing will bo right until "we, the people" the slmon-puto, Cu ban pad lot, blue-itnlfornitnnil-gold-braid pcole, gel hold of the nlllccs and likewise tho einoltimontp. So lttno tho tenor of llic gnbblo unci gossip nf tho citfcf, which Is eager ly snatched up by newspaper corres pondents nt Havana and cabled to the United Slates for the delectation of yellow Journalism. 'Kvcry few iluys there Is a-blg-headllneii prediction ot Tiouble, bnBCd on mysterious hints ot deeply-laid plots unearthed by the en terprising reporter In tho toiu.io of his lynx-eyed researches! and when the grist of halt-ralslug prophecies runs low at Havana, the button Is pressed for reinforcements by the way of Washington. In this way those citi zens who nro accustomed to derive their hallucinations concerning publlo affairs from tho metropolitan jour nals arc kept In a. steady ferment of misinformation and unsettled belief, and tho broad fact escapes them that never since Columbus first brought civilization Into touch with the -gem or the Antilles has Cuba been so well governed or so fairly started on the roud to genuine and abiding prosperity us she Is todny. And as for General Wood, there can bo no better verdict than that pasted by Charles R. Miller, editor of the New York Times, who has Just completed a personal tour of Cuba, which Includ ed an intelligent Investigation of its conditions. Says he: "Ninety per cent, of all the men in Cuba who are worth more than $11)0 would view any such step as Wood's recall with grave apprehension, unless they wore assured that an equally cfliclcnt military gover nor was to be sent to lake his place." In view of the noise made by botli the prosperity and adversity parties of Porto Rico, it is rather dlllicult to de termine tho real conditions on tho island. The Wiser Way. IN NOTING Colonel Reilfs clear business suggestion not a novel one, by the way that the work ingmen should, as a class and as individuals, secure u share in the directorate of each of the corporations for which they work, the Philadelphia Ledger closes by saying "few of them as yet seem ready to view the propo sition approvingly." That Is apparently as true as is the other statement, with which it begins its comment, that "the world will take a long step furward in the march of civilization when the worktngmen of this country, or any other, generally accept the advice to become stockholders in the corpora tions for which they work." Why they have not come to consider and adopt this thoroughly practical, conservative plan, thereby promoting their own prosperity and that of tho entire communities in which they live, is indicated by contraries, as may be said, in Colonel Reiff's preliminary question addressed to the Ledger's New York correspondent: "Do you know what I would do if I was a labor leader with the real Interests of my fellow workmen at heart?" The public has come to know by repeated experiences of needless loss and business stagna tion that what the majority of the labor leaders "hae at lieait" is their personal ambition for "recognition" as the bosses and autocrats of labor or ganizations. That is why the business of this coutnry is forever In dread; why prosperity, when it dots put in an appearance, is at once broken in upon by the threat of strikes or their actual outbreak. The day has come to be wn abnormal one when the wires do not report some fresh event of the kind. When, as in -very recent time In this part of the country, public disapproval of a threatened Mi ike Is shown by the general statement of business men that they will not ruin themselves by an unlimited extension of the credit sys tem until they are themselves bank rupted by it and, so, the leaders who have needlessly threatened stiike and creajed panic, give up their plans tem porarilythere Is a class of papers that begin to sing most extravagant praises of their "conservatism." Con servatism! In Mopping back, perforce, after stepping forwaul without leason; and their followers go after them be- ' cause eacli is atruid of the other. "It" the labor leaders had, as Colonel Relff puts it, "tho real iuteiests of their fellow-wot kmen at heart," this terrible spectacle of the continual up heaval of business of eery kind would speedily come to end. Colonel Reiff's words as a practical. clear-headed business man, go to tho very root of tho mutter. Answering his own question he suld, in effect: "Why, instead of collecting luigis sums of money for use In, stilkcs, I would apply tho money to 'obtain an Intel est In tho corporations tor which wo were working. It seems strange that the wage-earner, tho trades union man, does not icallzo how much ho could accomplish by becoming a pait ner of the business of his employer. Suppose enough money could be raised by assessment to buy, say, 100 6hares ( of tho stock of tho railroad company I for which the men of a certain union wero working. Tho 100 could be divided among lOu different men, one share to a man. When tho annual stockholders' ' meeting wws held 100 employes, en- I glneors, conductors, flu-men and tho ! like, would 'bo entitled to attend by light of ownership of stock, Do tho i men tall touppieelate what power thulr more nresence at the meeting would have 7 Let them lucieasu their holdings of stock, year by year, and soon tljo continuing Interests would Invito them to naiuo one of their number to servo In the board of directors, and then tho men would uctually have a voice, and u powerful one, in the management of the company, of which they ate tho employes. Would not this ho better policy than going on a strike? Why waste tho money in making war, when you can apply it to buying such an in terest In the property as will make you u factor In its management?" Tills, isuys tho c-oriespoudeiit, is tho essence of the statement made and pie sentlng a practical solution for the dif ferences between 'capital and lubor. Alsu; "Thu Illinois Central, It may be added, tome time ago, invited Its em ployrs to become ultarcholdcrsj nml rc rnntly tho National Risctilt company did the snmo, offering as an Inducement a, nyalom by which the men could pay for the stock by easy lndultuent pay ments." Some of the plans und icsuIIr nf tho National Biscuit company's wlso action wore but lately publicly related to a Seranton audience. U Is noteworthy to lead ot tho pres ent publlu exhibition In Philadelphia "of Interesting inuniisoilptB by Amt'ii citiis antedating tho discovery by Columbus." Such "manuscripts." or coui-M-, ore understood to bo hiero glyphic, und picture writing by the various races now known to have in habited this hemisphere In dim and distant ages: races, some ot whom had left nought but hieroglyphs, monu ments or temples in ruin, at periods antedating the univul of the Indians whom wo call aborigines. Tho vast ileld ot research Into the history of the human race "in this new world which is tlie old" seems to bo us yet scarcely more than touched. m A brilliant' Illinois legislator hus In troduced a bill providing that "voters who are too drunk to mark their bal lotH may be usslsted by two election officers." Wo agree witlt tho Chicago Record-Herald that tho state and the country can spare the ballots of such voters. Even the "women, minors, idiots and criminals" whom tho law of most states excludes from voting could do bettor than such voters as those whom tho Illinois lawmaker is so unx ious to have help decide elcctlonn. The Chicago Evening Post, which at tempted to follow the Harmsworth idea of publishing newspapers In magazine form, has given it up. It is useless to attempt to do anything in a small way in tho publishing business in Chicago. If assertions from some sources are to be believed, the gieat Chinese diplomat could be more approptlatrjly named Prince Ll-ar. Colonel Abaci, of Muinduque, has sur rendered. He has no further deslie to bo a bad man save in name. SOLD BY THE STABS. Daily Horoscope Drawn by Ajacchus, The Tribune Astrologer. Astiolabc (.VI: ..:t a, in., for Fildjy, April 10, 1W1. SrS1 A ihihl born on this ihy will nolo th.it pros penty is dcalruilhc to llio r.tolght of some people. The bicjule hump is about to giio way to the automobile tunc. The lctt-oicr Uastcr egg will now go into cold ttoragc. Indigestion sometimes has mote influence upon a uitcr than the efforts of actoia in shading a di.imatic criticism. Many people who (hiow luiiKs at random al w.ijs appur surprised when an one is lilt. Ajacchus' Advice. Do nut feel too imn.li elated whin a leading citueu aks jour opinion upon the political situ ation. IIn nuy intend to urn for office-. IiriiopERafiOD and Eni?rfainrnenf, Too X AN AXALVsJs of the mental quality which haj laUed J. l'ierpont Moigau to hit pres ent commanding place In the world of finance and industry, "Holland" .cites this I instance: Wlien in 101 secretary Chase came to New York to plead with the banKeia for their , aid ill cariiug the gomnmcnl thiough an emergency that was for the time more danger ous than the iinnlcs of the boutli, he met at a bmkei'o hoiue up town a gioup containing about a biore of the leidlng bmkers ot New York, 'lhe frcrctary told them that tho gocrn nifut niiit Ime aid, and he iddcd that hr was not a financier, only an administrator ot tlie law as. it related tu the tieaturj- depart ment, lhcy who financiers and to be a limn cltr meant to ciiatr- the wjjb and means, fur imctlrg an enibai raiment of that kin I. The banket hemmed and hawed; they weighed ocry detail and the iu.t morning when the sccic taty met them In the dnector' loom in tho old Amu Ran Uchingc Hank building, he found that tun then, although they Wi.rc disponed to (urnl'li lilm yO.OOO.MO in gold they had no dear ilia of tho beat way by which that lould be done, and it was pel Imps a week before an undu -landing was iraihcd by them. fcl j para ago when the sccietaiy of lhe tteasuij, who hid waUlieil lhe iluln of gold from the tteasiiiy dcp.utinent until ho saw that within a clay or two his supply would be all gone, i-e'nt in Urp.dr for l'ierpont Slorgon, Mr. Mor gan was closcled wil. the (.ccrctary not mora than an houi, but lu that hour he mealed to the tcciet.ii' a better itnilcistandlng of the con dillons of the Ireastity tnau the scciotary him elf jios-i-sed, and he laid before .Mr. f'arllslo a pi in luoliug the turning ocr to the gocm limit nf J good iiun.v millions nioic than Sccie laiy I base asked for in 1661. It was a plan than imolcd nu-teiy ot loicign exchange, a giip upon thu international markets lasting fur el months and a promise that if the secretary made instant agiccmcnt Mr. Morgan would guarantee not only that the drain upon the tttasuiy dipailmciii would at once be toppui, but that tho supply of goM would be rcplen Hud utlim a uuk by some i.xty-sl. millions, 'that intcnlew of an hour imohtd not only abjolulu compiclieii-ion of tho whole tkld of moduli finance and tho specific application of tin m. I,i 1 conditions in uih a manner as In Muutl t- ulitu' the rmbaiiassmciits of the lieasury dcptitment, but a promise to continue this piotectlon for av icaU six months and jet Mi Moigan had had less than twentj-four houia in consider this subject. Probably had Mr, f'ailUlc called upon hlni at 10 o'clock In lhe luoiiilng .mi laid his cinbiirassment before him, ho would Ime gon away fiom Mr. loi. gan's uffleo at U with tho dlltlcully ended. the agency of i school fating bank, in whic'i tliry could inil.o weekly deposits without re gard to the tin illness of the amount. A friendly MNiliga bank lulpcd Ills plan by agreeing to re echo tain-s account fiom lhe francs up, 'lhe sj stein was in operation for thirty jcars when it attiactcd the attention ot the Trench gomn incut and oilkl.il sanction was gitcn to It, Miice then it ha tpicid all otcr Kuupc and nioic than luo.Cu-) schools ere cnjojlng u m,c, tiU rifU-tn jciii ago the school savnt;a bank was inliodi'cd Into the Unilcd"stalca by i ie tlml Long l-'tnd capitalist, who lus ,im0 giuu up his whole time lo its Interest, l-.ut December J. II. Iliady, a l.o, Angeles bunk pre.), ilnit, i-atahlUlic.il the sjsteni In each of tha llftj-tmir si hools lu tli tt illy. These silmeils contain an aggicgale ci 3W ioom, caili of which Is a Min's bank In IUelf. The l.os An geles lluald s.is tin. the lii-t week's depudls amounted to $l,0.i0.:, in whlih lyuo depusltois paitie.lp.itcd. :utv the saWn.'s of lhe eihoo) children amount In i.eailj $j,o0u. The- iceouli of the tehcol taiiig In suantuu aie well known. I ll Har cur rnlloual Ihpioi- bill iiinuiintrd lo l,Uj'J,5iji,i67, an auiae per ruplu of ?U.J1, or U.o.'j gallons. The people ol the United Mutes aie luusumiu,; larger quintl lies vt akohohu ll-iuois than foiuicily. Last jear the average consumption of spliiu reached .i per i-jplta of I.-.7 gallon, more than tiiiie IV.U, when it waj 1.31 gallons; ,J0 gallon per capita of wine, more than since 1507, when the average was ,W gallon; and 10.01 gallons of beir niuie than tlute l$W, kIicii If was lu.su gallom. The Increase in the diliikln,- of beer lias been i.ioc pionounecd than In iliher spiills or wine. The accrjgc eil all alcohujiu ' rtflnks prr riplta 17.09 Rllon-h only been escceded dntc tine 1891, when, in l$0t, the average reached H.20 gallon.. More gallons ol coffee are consumed thin any other drink or stimulant, imountltif In 1900 tfl l,O57,rM,20tl gillon, coniparcil Willi 1,221,500,100 gallona r beer, the next most popular beverage. In 1000 wo alsn conMimcil $37,312,nail vvnrlli of lea and $0,OOU,tKrt ot cocoa, bringing the total tor alco holic and noiMlcohoi.c drinlti to l,22,7l,fli.-, au Increase over 1503 of $31,777,103. It U lelaltd ,( Parlililge, a celebrated al manic maker, that he once received a rude rebuff, administered litiwlttlniiljr by an nstler to whom be applied for Infornnllon. While on a journey the old-lime almanac maker put up nt an Inn for refreshments. On setting out again bo was advised by the mstlc to tarry awhile, Inacmuch as rain wan certain. Par Irldgo laughed to scorn the unlettered oatlcr. Yet tlie prediction proved faulllcai, and Par tridge, Intent on obtaining a vvcathcr wrinklf lor futuie editions of his almanac, hastened back lo Inlerrogate tlie apparently weather wise jolcl. Having received a crown the latter freely captained bis modus operandi, "Hr, we hivo a Partridge' almanac, and the fellow Is such a notorious liar that whenever lie promises in a fine day vxe know it will be Hie contrarj. Today is put down it settled, fine weather, and this is the reason J urged you not to set out!" This ttory would almost apply lo the Seranton weal her clerk at limes. Charles M. vcbvvab, the 30-jcai-old president ot the biggest corporation on earth, who twenty cars ago was earning U a day driving stakes In an engineering' corps, (rives as the secret of his and other people's success this ma.lm: "Make jourself indispennble to -our emplojcr Instead of continually looking at the clock." Sixty jean ago a Trench school teacher con ceived the Idea that the children under his caie might be taught habits of frugality through COMMERCIAL BOSS OF THE WORLD. Editor of The Tribune Mr. -A vciy Inteuting and able arlielc ap pears In lhe April i-sue ot the Fortnightly lie view, entitled "Will Gcrmmy 1'nlU" Tlie con tenilon of the writer, who. by the way, i nonjinous, ia this: That fieimany has reached, or Is about .hortly to reach, the cllmlx of lit r ndnitrlnl and commercial expansion as it Is; that It she la one djy to become a great, maun tactuilug and iijiUiilihl center like Ungland she mu:t lay Juldc bcr militarism and naval day dicams.aiid depend upon the agricultural resources nl the United States to sustain her In her in dustrial competitive struggle against this coun tiy, final Britain, Japan and Ilussin; that the Gcnnan Empire has overreached ltd ambition; that while she has undoubtedly the greatest army in tho world at the present moment, the cam paign in China has il;ninnlrntcd that the Ger man militaiy machine, perfculy automatic as it undoubtedly is, Is far fiom being invincible, and lias certainly lost some ol ils prestige. This witter points uiit that Germany, as a nation, has two ambitious projects! befotc hci to humiliate England and to upset the Monioc doclnne on the Amc-iiun continent. How is this to be done? In the first place England beaten and humili ated, Germany would, of course, be mistress of the sei. Nothing easier then than to usuip Kngkind'n dominion In Canada, to which not unnatuially the Germans do not thiiir. the Monroe doctrine applies, predicating as ninety-nine out of every hundred Ameiicans do at this moment that the Monroe Joel line ia one which is only effective in regard to the South American ie public. Willi a foothold on the American continent, the Gcnnan "invineiblp" army would pick its way through Austria, the Balkan provinces and work her destiny quietly and effcctnely toward Constantinople, where, noblesse oblige, the em peror of Germany and the emperor of Russia would be able to effect some arrangement to suit their own purposes. The German press is outrageously insulting to ward Great Britain; it is hardly less so toward this count rj-. Why? Because in the future domination of the earth, that is the immediale future this and the next century practically only two factors can or will count the Teutonic and the Anglo-Saxon. What about the Slav I have not forgotten that potential ethnological factoi; but we can leave him out of account tor the ne.xt decade or two, except lu China, in con sidering the commercial units of the world. The Teuton claims ninety millions of the most piolilic lace that ever trod the surface of Mio globe; the Anglo-Saxon eighty millions, relatively decreasing in birth rate, growing more inventive and resourceful, jet developing a luxuriousness and tplcurianism which their fatheis knew not. Against whom aie wc tiaining out licet, build ing ship against ship? Against England? Xo; such a war, thank Gcd, is unthinkable. If Kng land looses her trade, we shall get it, and Eng lishmen know it and accept the situation. But Great Britain's commercial and industrial deca dence would be a black day for iif No nation can aflord to loose n good customer; a national customer thrown out of work, so to speak, would not add to our revenue. But Germany is piajmg night and daj- that John Bull may be thrown out of woik in order to slcp into his shoes. But that stolid old gentleman is holding his own with u war on his hand, or rather two htindied and fitly thousand men in the field trjlug to make u.u, that is making his satuiinc tcmpciament moie gloomy and despondent than it actually need be. Who, then, aie we building our fleet against not, of course, with an aggressive or even an unfriendly intent? Why, against the jacKDoot agrarians and slave dritcia ot Prussia, who have lesv ri spect for us and infinitely more bailed than the poor fc-panlaid who knew us not better than to call us "pig.stiekerf." We have ten million of tinman lellou. citizens hi this Louutry, as Jojal and faithful as cm breathed. Hut when one of these counlij men vlstt3 the old country the German gen diimcs are as happy to nab lilm a.s .1 tiappcr in the Hudson Bay territory is to tiap a silver giay fox. This Is not became the Uernmi au thoriticK aie so zealous lo tiap a shaggier fruiu the United btatcs lo add to the Jinn, wlieie-, to say the least of him, he would be discontented if not dangcious-, out is one ot iU multitudinous ly indirect ways to hmv its contempt ami fear of the- United blates. Yit whatever nuy be the fate of England, Untie bun will remain boss of the- commercial woild. No country lias a bleaker commercial outlook than Germany at the present moment. I'. Jl. Gicer. NUBS OF KNOWLEDGE. Inoculation baa lowered tat al cases in cholera from 10 to 2 per cent. Of tho 106,300,000 .Volummedan in the woild only 18,000,000 live in Turkej-, Notwithstanding Paris and Berlin, London is tho best tree-shaded city in Europe. A race horse traveling full speed clears twenty feet at a stride, un ostrich, thirty feet, New Yorkers will invest In a million-dollar winter icsort on the island of Bermuda. France pays for her paupers by means nf a tax of 19 per cent, on all theater tickets sold. lhe value ol the French vintage of 10OO would i over half tlie annual budget of tho Gernnn em pire. Apricot pulp to the amount of twcnty-clght tons was recently ordeied from California by a s-lnglo London Jam-making fiim. Tho number of epileptics In Illinois Is estimated at not less than 5,000, The legislature is expected to arrange u state colony, wheic they nuy be l.ept at oiiq place. An ordinance is pendiu tn f'lucinnitl tor the establishment ot tlireo lloallu,- public tilth houiia along tho river, lhe hocucs are to bu built and iii.iint lined by the city, Denmark lias a lax for ioiniiicri.lal liaveleis. Us late is MJ.ss for the liisl fliiii and $21.11 lor cveiy addition one, wlieie a nun icprcscuts nioic than one, good for one jcai, 'there aie no inlllioiialies in Iceland, The peo ple theie aiu all poor, but there aie no de pendents, ami no pauptis 111 the laud. All ale, sclf.suppoitIii-. Theie is little or no ciluic in tint laud. A Minneapolis nun bought fiom a llib.-lau in Halifax live jcats ago a curious lough clone of a leddish litn. .tiling on a iccent hint ho taut the stone to. ivaies-u City and cutters de vi loped leu linu Siberian mblts worth ?".', a Kji.I. A laigc chestnut factoiy al Ljons, France, employs 2J'J v onicu and girls. The ehestuuts arc peeled and bollcfl, and placed lor three dajs in a vanilla sjiup; theu Ihey are drained, coated nicely with vanilla and prepared tor ship, ment, A bill which has the support of Governor Mo Lean in Connecticut appoints a ta.x commission, cr with a salary of ?2,000 a jear, who has power to go Into any town and examine siffpcctcd tax dodders uudei oath. 'I no same bill penalizes ly iflflu hue and 2.1 per cent, addition to a tax lhe ieual vf a taxpajer tu land in a list. 'HM1& Connell Seven Floors Fyll of Exdmslve Desngms Sim New Fimrinifltimre0 flO Plain FlgweSo WASHINGTON AVEWE Furs That We Store... Receive protection, insur ance and actual benefit from the process employed. Re pairs skillfully, economically made. Furs called for and delivered free. Free storage when repairing is done. Attend Our Special Sale of Ladies' Tailor Hade Suits. From 25 to 33 per cent, off regular prices. BRESCHEL, Reliable and Up.to-Data Furrier. 124 Wyoming Ave. "Lender's" Old Stand. Piano Tuning. I H. K. ZERBE, 607 Picscott avenue Best local rcl'cicncc-. Guernsey Hall IS THE BST PLACE IN SCRANTON TO BUY A PIANO OR ORGAN Don't tail to come an J .sec as great bargains .ire waiting for yon. J.W.GUERNSEY, PROP. 314-316 WASHINGTON AVE. SCRANTON. PA. In New Guernsey Building. Davis steam ore Co. 33 PENN AVE, llooda called tor unci cl'lltcrnl. I Icanlns, DiUlne; anrl rrciiiiig, 'llwopk ouiHA"r"Ea, phone 373s Golden Gate Dininq Rooms. Dc.t :'o rent meal in tho eil). rite Mc.l IliUtJ, M.00. Sjnday ilinni'i a tpeeislty. lUine-nudo rjsliy. 244 ADAMS 'V. W, J, BARRI3CALE, MANTELS. rircpUce tllnimiiiLjs, ELdCTHIC, COAL ANO QAS GffATES 1'llln; loi lloois TFLvoHON" 3t2W'HlJQTON live, W. A. HARVEY, i;ieelrlc Wiiln,- jnj ritiui, Ulectrlo lle-ll ami TclCilionc oik 3Q9 noMMOIWi 'LTH BlIILOING. J. B. WOOLSEY c CO CONTRACTORS AND BUILDERS. nealeis in Plate Glass and Lumber 0"ALLKINOS. Kingsbury - scranton, MJnuiacturcia' Agents' MINE ANU MILL U 'PLIES, Diatrlct, Afents for Jolm ,. Roetillns's Son-t Co.'a Hue Hope, .intl Electrical Wire. Uutta rcielu Jiiel llubter JUt; Co.'s Belting, I'jcKIni;, IJpae jwI Jlcelianleal Itubber Gooelj. Know lion I'jekinc; Carter's Oil flothlng. Hoom 310 1'juli Blelir Wi H. GORDON & SON. Horse Shoclne ami Cvncnl UUcLeinlthln; Watson and t'til.jc Uulldlus a 11 J llubbei 'Inc-ll'.'- 339 ADAMS AVNUE, " General Orace. Seranton. Pa. Scranton Business Houses. i , , There Is Only One LANSDOWNE Which You Will Find Perforated . t Every Five Yards On the Selvedge. flsk fop the Gentiine find Insist N On Seeing the Perforation . . . . v. v. .. n h k v. r. K TRV S "s Best- Union Hade A Good Smoke or Chow. A Tiinl Solicited. Satisfaction Guaranteed. MANUFACTURED BY The Clock Tobacco Co, 644-4G-48 Wyoming Ave Seranton, Pa. j. .J. ! 2 3 ! J..:, Ji . 2 Ji Said the bait to the fish. Or nexc thing you know you'll garnish a dish. I came from the store of Flotev & Brooks, And I'm daugerous. 211 Washington Ave. Clock in 1 1 W I HI THESE ENTERPRISING DEALERS CAN SUPPLY YOUR NEEDS OF EVERY CHARACTER PROMPTLY AND SATISFACTORILY. E Brotherhood Wine Cos I'nie OIJ I'eiit, nuiKumlio-, ami tjutcMnn. 1 .inilly Ti n!o Onlj. P. H. FRENCH. 40B C-3WT'.t. Gt,aG. $3reschel's Great r ire Dale 124 WYOMINO AVCNUC. nv (lolne: On line lilt- uii,I .ill Mini- of Neckwear. BRf-CHEL cS OO. Scranton Laundry, 322 WASHINGTON AVENUE, Calls ley tclepliono ri'ee'ei" ptonipl .attention. L ON & WASBERS. Spectacles, MADE AND REPAIRED. "Ilufa .ill." S. H. TWINING. 131 PENN AVE. DIAMOND SHOE SHINING PARLORS Tor l..iilitv .am! (,'cnts. i ALL -HAeS.SO I A33-SPRUCE-433 Han ley' BAKERY, 420 SPRUCE ST. bncccnioi lo HUNTINGTON W injlio 1 fpeeiall.c nf flno tucjtl at nils. Iulci3 Jul- SaUJi, Ov.tci , l ifquetu-a, cle , rej!Jll lllleel, A full line uf i.ec LitJi.i ,mel Iu-1. Euhek PlatinXs Works, tllui, Colli. MiKi'l, loppci ami lliaia. t liainlcllcrj lictiiiliheel. SSI CIXCaURT, PEtRBO. TR1DE REIrMAN BROTHERS, Uo 1.111) 1 iiiilin ioil ot in i.aHi, pillutliul ttia mini ui,.i Imui,, 105 SP iUCE STET. IMPORTED CIGARS Fiesh nnivulb daily, Finest Key Ve&t Goods. DEAN, 40Q CONNELl. BLDQ 1'no Phones. GOODMAN'S SHOE STORE. Iw .i' (li 1 ukjujniid 4e SOUVENIRS OIV N OUR CW,TOM"RS. thescranion vitripiso c3rick ano Tile Manufacturing Company MakfH ol Putin; llilek, lie' M II 1 at--. Cei'Cial ale A'.-'iil. Illlleu ::."J j.-hliie;toii i '. uik al Tnjj Au.', I'j , 1.. L . V, 1!. It. FINLEY ' S The Pan American Exposition Is the attraction of the, country at the preseut lime. But no less alluring are our Exposition Su. tings, shown in light, medium and heavy weights, just the right ma terial for traveling suits or rainy-day skirts, 39c 36 inch all wool Suitings, in Groyt. Browns, Bluer-, otn 150 inch all wool heavy Suitings, ia new Spring mixtures, Oxford Groy, Silver Groy, Browns, Blues and other liopulnr colors. 75c 54 inch all wool Scotch Homespun, Tnn, Grey and Brown mixtures. 54 inch extra heavy double faced Suitings, in Grey mixtures, nnriow stripes and Chocks. $1.50 Extra heavy double faced Melton Suitings, Oxford Greys, Tans and Blues. Also a fine line of Imported Suit ings for tailor-made dresess. ' 510512 Lackawanna Ave P. J. HONAN, Merchant Tailor. 319 Lackawanna Avenue. The Dickson Mumiructiirlii? Uo. t-cranton nil WltlcoBarro, i'ji, JlaiuifaoiuroM of LOCOMOTIVES, STATIONARV ENGINES Boilers, tloistlnzand Pemplnc .Machinery. i 4 !; $ THINK! Aio 3011 fijlly illiuicel? It not, call upon F. L. Hitchcock c? SOW, FIRE INSURANCE AGENTS, 60e! ami 507 Commonwealth Building. SCIUNTO.V, PA. Only first-etasa companies represented. Cliima promptly paid, O. S. BLOSS "ao'e THE SMITH PREMIER TYPEWRITER. rtTIOS TH".M ILL, L. isOMMAR. llullding Coiituelm. Ijuplo.ii union men lollmitcii lIicciIuIIj sUen. Iteiuude liner and rcpililn; a apceialty 32e WASHINGTON VE. LACKAWANNA UNDERWEAR STORE Will sell all theii samples of line Unpolled Median Hiiils foi men at liOe-.: eirlli 51 to $J,oi1 Cold Jledal rhotographer sr -jt. FOR SALE llbGOlKS snd WAG OSS of all Linds uIko llou.-'.'i ami llullding Lots t barcr.iin-. I10IISF C lil I' PC U and (.ROOMlUi at ' ( lnldion'3 Aiti.r. ALL DISEASES OF WOMEN. A apeciilty. Pr lKcrlo;i, lluoiu 1, oerr lilolic toie I loins; I 10 .'...HI p 111 f uiwilialioii fiec. 'I'lionc t520. M. T. Keller's, l.aekawannaCairlJa1 e.l.s. HAVE YOUR WATCH FIXED RIGHT WE ARE SATISFIED WITH A SMALL, PROFIT, BERNHARD, jeweler. ,lli I.UMW XN UI..MI.. HDWIN S. WILLIAMS, CONTRACTOR, BUILDER ROOM 2G COAL EXCHANQE, SO V ANTON. PA. THE SCRANTON UMBRELLA MANUFACTURING COMPANY,,,,, nt eairy the liic- toelc of Cmbrellas, 1'ai J0l and Handle,, m jiVo RECOVER mnbtella. and pirawb and inik tliem up eijuilly as pod i now and guaranlco urn pricej to be lower than any houic in tho fl1' Uo repair U our good for 0110 je-ar KREK Ol ( UARilB. 313 SPRUO-: STREET.