THE SCRANTON TRIBUNE-TUESDAY, JULY 16, 1001. (Sc Scranton CriBune Pnli1lhM Dillv, Vaccp n-ly. by The Tnl line Publishing Cnnipiny. t Fifty Cent a Montli. livv s. niciiAnn, r.nor. O. V IlVXUEI., niiilnrd ManlR'f. New Yetk Office i l.W N'j'hii M. . S VREKI-AND. Bole Auent for Fnrtlgn A'hirtlsinc Entered t thf Postnfflte at Ncrsnton, Pi is Second Class Mill Matter. htn spare will permit. The Tribune is ala) Sld to ptli.t Klinrt lrtlrm ftftm Its friends !" Init on rmient topic, hit lis tiilc 1 thit ln trnwt re signer!, for puhliratlmi. y lh writer s real nsme, uml the ronilltlon prererlent to eeptanre is that all eenttlliutlons shall bo sul.jsct to editorial illon TUB FMT RATE KrtU AnVT.tiTlMSn The lrllc,n table shows the rrlce per Inch fli lnerton, rpace, to he used within one jean f ttnn of l&lrllncnnl v-nir DKrUY I J'ipcr J nci'llncl ' - Position .no 11 1 Ini thm .VO Inches WW tnrhcji 12M rm rnoo 275 .11 173 .17 1M .1 .IV! Vor r.iril of think", resolutions ef eon.I"lrneft fifl similar rootiilnitlon In the niture of in srrtuinir The Itllmno mil.es a cliuce of J cents I line li.itr lor Claiflrl AdcertHna: furnished on rpllcitlon. prRANTO.V, jri.Y Ifi, 1101. While the matter Is ponding In eouit It l manifestly linlivnrniis to try "gov rnmnt bv Injunction" In the news papers. Tho nnlv pinrtlr.ll effect of nrufpdpot intPtpfti'ltlon otiM b to Mi,on tho rpcpoot for law which 1R At the h,if.o of orderly finvoinmrnt In the present ctpo f.ilr warning has been given no to .irt.i uhlrh contravene the law; unil It I a poor compliment to the sulking c-ir bulldets to hpsuiik! that thoy Intend to Ignore this warn ing Hi do mMhliiK which would bring them within tho pale of contempt pio-iM-Tillns'i Labor Vs. Labor. -Hi: POSITION taken by Pi evident Shaffer, of the AmalpTtii.itf'l association, In hlsnf(!rttlation! and brMk with the representatives of the man ngoment of the I'nlted States Stocl rorpotatlon tho .ittlttuU upon whlih thf- confrenro f-plit was that the non union woikers In the orpointlon's mllld had no ilfihta which were en titled to teapot. As the Philadelphia North American, yellow though It be. fnyp. In thit Inst.im-e with unexpected candoi . "Piej-idfnt Shaffer delivered nn ulti mituni that the tiust must leao Its men no freedom of action No tiust magnate could have been more dicta torial. He had nothing to offer In Justification of his extiaordlnaiy de mandnot a grievance because of pay or hours or disci Imlnatlon against union labor Appaiently his sol pur pose, was to create nn absolute monop oly of the right to labor in the trust's mills a monopoly far more effective find far moie dangerous to individual rights than that exercised by Mr. Morgan and his associates In the steel Industry. It was as if the latter had asked the United States government to prohibit the manufactute and use of any hut th Steel tiust's products. What President Shaffer demanded was that the trust pass a prohibitory law against all workmen who saw 1U to remain outside of his association. The light of labor to oiganize was never called Into question by either side. The crux of the controversy was the right of President Phaffer to impose his own labor oiganizatlon, not upon the Pteel trust, but upon the laborers themselves." More and more the spirit shown by TreHdent Shaffer is coming to be the spirit at the bark of the labor move ment In Ameilca a civil war among the men who toil, with the non-unlon-Ist hounded as a pailah and lestraints of ,law and oidei Ignored in the ef fort to club him Into the union or Into his giae. Theie Is today ten times more bitterness among union strikers for the non-unlonlst. whose right to lie and work In peace is grounded In the foundations of American liberty, than there is for the employer at whom the strike Is nominally leveled. Very rarely Is the employei s personal lib erty menaced He Is fieo to come and go when he will. No on tells the storekeepers they musn't till his orders for goods. No one put sties him to his home or pickets the approaches to his office. In many cases the employer personally Is well liked by the strik ers. They honor him as a man and In cooler moments recognize In him a friend, and their sttlke against him is laigMy Pickwickian and piofessional. Not so with the "scab" He arouses In them the fierce passion of hatted and a thirst for revenge. Though they hae laid down the tools that he Is using and voluntarily abandoned the employimnt he is glad to secure' In order to support himself and family, their ftroelty tow aid him Is often un governlble. the negro slave was not more suhjuot to cruelty and abuse. Thtrcjjcan be sooner or later only one re&jilt to' this course of policy 'nauguiSited prjmarily by the men who found tjades unionism an easy vehicle m whlti to ride to prominence and power, fit .-will drive Into the union fold thousands of men whose Becret iMTipath,ies are opposed to such Intol irance.JJt will forfeit the sympathy of thinking neutrals, and when the fuiore fbbs, thre will be a corresponding re ctlon. ijabor cannot fight capital and labor bitfh The contract Is too much. The United States transport Warren, nhlch has beep for some time In Alas unn wattrs and Is now on Its way to SanFrafclbco, will have on board home thirty .peut Indian children bound fromi Unalaska Island to the Indian Bchool tt Carlisle. They and their parents jhave for 'years had mission training;; The Incident marks "a far cry" frOtn the times when the poet Campbell' wrote of "the wolf's long howl from Unalaska's shore" as the" only characteristic of that portion of the world then known to civilization. The Pan-American officials aro again having tiouble with their Mid way. ThP' concesslonalteH Insist upon ihowingon Sunday. The. exposition tuthorlttcs station euards around tho placci where ticket are offered for Mle and refuse to let the, people buy. The concessionaires lialm they nre being discriminated against because the exposition officials permit the tower elevators, tlt electric launches, the wheel chain- and the gondolas to tun on Sundays, while their shows are closed. They declare that next Sun day will ee an' open Midway from one end to tho other. Hetter that than a good Lord, good devil compromise. The vacation schools nre teported to be again making good times for the children of the poor In dlvets cosmo politan cities, blending Instruction with recreation, ndvniulng physical, mental and moral health In the ilsing genera tions. When will Scranton arouse to Its own welfare sufficiently to start and suppoit them? Tlio American Consular Service. B' ISHOP I'OTTnil'H scathing remarks on the American 'Onsitl.il' service followed close upon the exhaustive article In the Wot Id's Work for May, which gave the fullest proof that tho set vice which the bishop and some other Americans think so poorly of Is by Kuropean government considered more efficient tlfan their own the ptac tlctl pi oof thereof ljlng In their In structions to their consuls In dlers plates to pattern after It. Of course theie n room for Improvement. Whete that Improvement has need to begin Is told once more In this slgnlllcnnt para giaph fiom the Philadelphia Press: "Mr. Stowe, who has leslgned his office ns consul general In Cape Town, South Africa, Is another victim of the Insufficient pay allowed by congtess to our consuls. Mi. Stowe Is conceded to be one of the most efficient ofllteis In the service, but he cannot live In South Africa, particularly in war times, on a salary of $3,00(1 a ear and suppoit a. family, and thus he has been obliged to gle up tho office. Good men cannot be kept In the consular set vice for any length of time, and their efficiency de rends a great deal on their expeilence, unles congress provides sufficient re muneration for the services required." The moan patslmonlousness of this government's dealings with all of its iepi(s,entatlves abioad under the mis erable makeshift plea of "tepuhlican simplicity 'while congress squanders millions and billions of dollais on "liver and harbor Improvements" where there are no harbors, and no livers but muddy creeks, and In other wah at home has long been a dis grace to the nation. It Is high time that our consuls and diplomatic agents In foielsn countties were decently paid. In April, May and June 25.373 orients were made In New York city 20.047 males and 5,326 females. Of the 25,373 arrested, 11.923 were born In the United States. 3.S.-1S weie Iilsh, 1.707 Germans, 429 Kngllh, l,fifl! Italians, 2 Mexicans, 20 Chinese, and Finns. Of tho total number ni rested S.S39 weie maided and 16,534 single. Kvldently In mar riage theie Is yet some saving grace. Danger of a Timber Famine. THE DANGKR of a timber famine unless more careful methods of reforestratlon aie soon introduced was the theme of nn instiucthe lec ture deliveied In I-ondon tecently by a German expert, Dr. Schllch. In Europe thirteen countries are are impoiters of timber and only live are exporters. The Impoits exceed the exports by over 2,fi00,oro tons a year. In the British Isles Impoits have grown during the la3t thirty-four yea is at an average rate of 133.000 tons, and the pilce has mounted et more tapldly. Gtermany, though It has extensive forests of its own, supporting by woik done In them about a million people and three times as many by woik In connection with them, Is also a large Importer. Dr. Schlich calculates that the consumption of timber in the four chief consuming countties of Europe at the present rate of lnciease, will ptobahly have risen In a few years from fourteen to twenty cubic feet per head. Among the exporting countries the forest area Is extensive In Kussta, and especially in Finland, but from a vari ety of causes Is not capable of veiy great expansion, so the supply of tim ber may not improbably begin before long to fall off In Scandinavia the limit of productivity seems to have been already 1 cached. But Europe, It may be said, Is not the world Dr. Schlich accordingly passes other regions In levlew. Some of them aie importers, but their de mand is far exceeded by the export of the rest, the balance on that side amounting to 2.255,000 tons, or less by 3VS.O0O tons than the European deficit. This, however, Is made up by Imports from surh countries as Madagascar. Plam and Java, which do not figure in the tabulated return. It Is clear, then, that the supply,, even at the ptesent time, can baiely keep pace with the demand, and the limit of the former has been very nearly reached. China, If It becomes prosperous, Is more likely to import 'timber than to export It, for she has little of her own, and there are no other large visible reserves. The United States hltheito has been a large exporter, the average value of timber sold exceeding that bought during the last fifteen years hy over $12,000,000. But Dr. Schlich maintains that, notwithstanding tho vast area covered by forest and the piotectlve measures nowi adopted, tho United States could not long support a greatly incieaslng demand. Tho position in Canada is still worse. Tho wasto has been pioportlonately greater In tho past, and measures to check It nie only In the germ. Dr. Schlich theieforo concludes that, so far ns conlfcious wood Is concerned, tho dangCNof de ficient supply is already almost at hand, There Is only one way to guard against It; and that Is by scientific care of trees already grown and hy systematlo reforestratlon. So far ns the United States Is concerned, pro gress in this direction, if not rapid, Is steady. The advance ment, effective July 1, of tho division of forestry Into a buieui, with more than double last year's ap propriatlon, Jdiows that congress at last recognizes the nructlcal value of the work which this branch of the United Btates department of agricul ture has been doing. The change from a division to ft bureau, and the latger appropriation, will make possible both an Improved office organization and moie extended field woik. Field work, tho bureau announces, hns been going on during the last year from Maine to California, and from Georgia to Washington. It "Includes tho study of foiest conditions and foiest problems nil over the country, tho giving of advice to owners of forests lands, nnd the supervising of conservative lumbetlng operations which Illustrate forest management on business ptlnclples. This woik can now he gieatly extended. Private owners of some three million acres have ap plied for this advice, which In every case requires personal examination, and about 177,000 acres have been put under management. This land is In many tracts, large and small, and Is owned by Individuals, clubs, and cor porations. Several state governments have also asked thp aid of the bureau. Hut the greatest demand Is that of the department of the Interior of the Na tional government which has asked for working plans for all the Forest Re serves, with the enoimous total area of about 47 million acres." The result of thewotk of the forestry division has been to turn practical forestry In the United States from ft doubtful experiment Into an assured success. Special studies of some of the most Important trees, commercially, have been made, from which can be calculated their probable future yield. Cheap methods of harvesting the pres ent lumber ciop without Injuring the productivity of the foiest have been put in operation. Such concerns ns the Great Northern Paper company and the Deilng Harvester company have been led to undertake conserva tive management of their forest prop erties, Meanwhile, the work of tree planting, paitlcularly in the almost treeless western states of the plains, has been furtheied; the relation of the forest to the volume of streams, ero sion, evaporation, nnd irrigation have been studied: matters connected with irrigation and water supply have heen Investigated; hopeful pi ogress has been made in the direction of regulating grazing in the western reserves In a manner fair both to the important own ers and to those w ho look to the re serves as a souiee of continuous supply of wood andwnter; and studies of forest fires were conducted with a view of leduclng the great yearly loss which has been estimated at $50,000, 000. Slowly but surely this patient but effective work will tell. On July 23 there will sail on the army transport Thomas, hound from San Francisco to Manila, 540 of the 1,000 Ameilcan teachers called for by Pro fessor Atkinson, superintendent of edu cation In the Philippine Islands. There nie 370 men and 170 women In the party. lepiesenting every state nnd territory In tho Union. Colonel Claience Ed vvaids, chief of the Insular Bureau of the War Office, has sent Invitations to the leading educational institutions of the country to recommend teachers competent for the work, to complete the entire number of one thousand at as early a date as Is possible. The appearance of a Japanese-English paper in New York, with its arti cles pilnted in both languages, edited by a young Japanese graduate of Col umbia college. Is another nnd fruitful ly suggestive sign of the way In which the two countries are drawing ever nearer to each other. The newspaper Is called "Japan and America." Its edltoi's name if Hajime Hoshl. An other incident w 01 thy of note is the lnciease by Japan of its consular force in New York city, owing to the rapid growth of commercial intetests with this country. m Paris has been again making a gen eral and festive celebration of her na tion il holiday, the 14th of July Al though she included an evenlnc dls- play of fiieworks, she dispensed again with the firecracker, large and small, the toy pistol, and other enginery of maiming, killing, and property destruc tion. The experience of the stranded Ep worth Leaguers, who were fleeced by pickpockets at Colorado Springs, shows that it Is well when In the wild west to keep one s hand on one's pocketbook even on a "personally conducted" tour. Tho announcement that a quarter of a million In dU3t has Just arrived from the Klondike gold fields shows that the Pacific steamship press agents are not all dead yet. Ohio has Just produced a new Bryan party. There Is probably not a state in the Union, however, where a Bryan party would be less dangerous than In Ohio. SONG Or THE SHOVEL. The friends I hae are dciming fritnds, And I rcne them well I ween, The hand) that hold me are honrat handa He they eer to gnarled and lean: Oh, Miih and post lion arf naught to me If proud, they muit earn my norn , For I set them free, under (iol'i decree, wven the world waa newly born. A-awUh, a swish 'tl the song I sins With a truer tone than than the trumpet's ring, Or the 10II of drum, or the shrill of fl(e A-snlsh, a-snish, '(Is the tale of Life. I hrlng to the peasant his homely food, 'lo the prime his viands ami wine, The glittering stones and the saffron gold I wreat liom the grudging mine; Hut little I care for these tawdry things, And my kindliest gift to toll Is the Joy that wings and the health'that springs lioin the gia-p of the grateful soil, A tuish, a swish, 'tis the song I slug With a trtsc r tone than the trumpet's ting, Or tU:joll of drum, or the shiill of fife 1 Aswiih, a swish 'tla a tale of Life. O, well for the world fhit hukv voice f.iowa louder fiom day to daj j O, ill frr the kingdom that melts me down To I1.10111 in the deadly fray, , Ard wor to the ruler who hearcie groan Keith burden el grieous wrong, For ntten, alone, have I wrecked a throne With the shrill of my angiy songi A-wth, a swish 'til the thjrre I sing With 1 truer tone than the trumpet's ring, Or tlie roll of drum, or the shrill of file A-swlshri-swiah 'tl a tale ct Life. John A. Foote, In Georgetown College Journal. Otiflin? Studies of Htiman Nature Threatened to Tell His rather. Among old record of rojal vlaltn to the Ernrr. aid Island there is a ruriou story of that pild In 1700 by tho then Puke of Clarence, who became ifterward William the Fourth, to th neighbor hood of Cork, lelatei the Iuidon fully Mail. He w i at tint time 1 tub lieutenant in the nvty, and the ship on which he served touched .11 (JueenAtown, then known as Coic. While, there III lcoval Hlthness utajed for some clavi with fimlly named Pfnroe, the head of which w-aa an evteeme.t gentleman and (Juiker. Ho did his best to entertain th duke In a man. ner befitting hit rank and etatlon. and among other awldultlei the old Quaker aln-a)s sat up to receive him on hl return home from the convivial pirtles which the neighboring 'squirca wrri unly too glad to' Oiler him. The Duke of Clarnce, at was the fashion at that time, had a liking (or old port, and wa nol squeamish at the quantity consumed. Ai a lesult he ieeral times returned tn his host's houo in n state which botdered on elation It la recorded that his host ued the gentlest re proof toward him in these words! "Friend William, thou art late again tonight, und I fear me thou art not too sober. If thou nlot not amend I shilt have to write to thy (a. thcr, friend fitorgc, at Windsor." What Puzzled a Cuban Boy. "I was stopping for a few weeks with an American friend on his sugir plantation In Cuba," said a eongiesi-maa who recently vis ited the (land, "and one diy as I was riding out alone I came aitos one of the wagons load ed with cane btoken down In the Held A hind wheel had come off, and the driver of the oien, who was .1 boy about Pi jears old. was taking things as cool as Ice, not een having unhitched his beista. " 'wlitn did it harpen?" I asked, as I got down. " 'Hours ago, tenor,' he replied, "'And Invent jou reported to the overseer?' " 'No, sonor.' " 'Dut why hive jou wasted all this time when theie iv need ef hurry?' "'Will the senor tell me,' h replied, as ho larlly scratched his head, 'what has happened to the wagonf " 'Whj, a wheel has come off, of course.' " 'Then I will go up to the mill and report. I should have done so long ago, but I wasn't suio ' " '.'ure of what, you doltt' "'Of wl ether the wheel had come off the wagon, or the ww had come oil the wheel.' " Washington I'ost. A Man of Many Parts. When Joeph Ramsey, Jr. the newly elected preMdent of the Wabash Railroad, was superin tendent of the rituburg Southern, a small road tn the coal district, a millionilre coal miner of Pittsburg heard of his ability, and decided that Iiimsey would be Just the nun to take charge of a road which lie was then projecting, relates tho Jew ork rimes. Walton went oer to the tniall town where Icamsey nude his headquarters in oidcr to offer him the position. At the office he was told that Mr Ramsey was out somewhere In the jards, so the "coal king" went out to look for him The first man he ran across was a grimy mechanic who was at work underneath an engine. "Where's Mr Ramses V inquired Walton. "I'm Ramey," replied the mm, and then, climbing out from under the locomotive, he ex plained laughingly tTut there was "something wrong with a bolt of the engine, and as the engineer didn't know how to fix it I took a hand at It mjsrlf" That nude Wilton desire Ram sey's service more than ever, and indirectly was tho cauae of llanuej's rapid adtanie mint. Clover Retort of Miss Russell. Lillian Ruell his neier made any greit fame for vivacity on the stage, but this has not been from any want of a feeling for the humorous side of thlncs, and she his often flashed out a caustic bit of reply when an opening was presented, saw the Chlcigo Jour nal "Sot long ago she was a guest at a ban quet ghen to a certain Ruvlan noble, a small gathering, and the noble and Lillian happened to be placed side by side. He was a rather bumptious fellow, with a supercilious sniff at etrrjtlung American. In his estimation, Amer icins are little better thin savages. He founfl fault with the various dishes served, went near to declaring the cooking outrageous, and made himself generally digreeahle. 'is it possible jou eat that stuff t" he asked, when some hothouo corn was served. "Why, in my countrj, we feed that to thu hogs " "Help vourself. count," e-ald Lillian quietly, sliding the dish toward him. He is believed to hae "tumbled." Preaching and Practicinp. Re.- Callus M 'cherts is one of the wittiest and Jolliest V divines In Kansas, a man who believe that 6millng Is a part of a Christian duty, and who pon-tts in looking it the bright side of things, relates the Chicago Chronicle, ecd!css to say, he relishes a Joke, even at h own expense. In jears agone he studied law and was admitted to the Ros county bar and practiced for many .veirs. It was on a recent vlit here he fell In with 1 number ef his former comrades and naturally they fell to talking ovor old times. "Caslu," cne cf them asked at last, "how did jou ever come to give up the law- and enter the nilnlstrv'' ' "Well, bojs'," he answeied, his ejes twinkling, "I'll tell jcii. .ou know I was a mighty poor lawjer and had hard work to get along. I stood it for a good many jears and flnilly came to the conclusion -hit it was a good deal easier to preach than to practice." She Changed Her Mind. Three jears ago Joshua C. Freeman, of Ko. komo, lnd , wanted to marry Nora B. Hast, and threatened to enlist in the army if the refused him. "L'nlist," she said, "the country needs jou worse than I do. l'erhips when jou return I will marrj jou." freeman enlisted and recently returned Irom the Philippines, fly chance ha met Miss Kast Initown. 'You said 'perhips,' " was his greeting to her. "I meant jes," was her rcplj', "if you re enlist " Squire Pe Haven mauled them and the bride groom departed at once for Fort Sheridan to offer his serWces to the government again. On the way he tecelved a telegram eijing: "You need not re enlist if jou do not want to" His return i3 expected. Kanas City Times. Knew the Bird. At a recent examination In Railey, a class of infants was being, questioned on natural his tory. "What bird Is it," aked the inspector, "that is found in Africa, and, although it has wings, 'cannot flj 1" The class was unable to answer this very puzillng question. Thinking to encourage them, the Inspector of fered a sixpence to the little boy or girl who could tell him. After a brief hesitation, a little girl of 4 jears put out her hand "Well, my little dear," said the Inspector, "what is Itf" "Please, sir, a dead 'nn I" London Answers. No Value Left. Clergjmen sometimes get answers they do not expect, even from children, One of them was questioning a Sunday school class about the man who fell among thieves on the way (10m .lerusalem to .lerltho. Dring lng tlie story tn a point, he asked! "Now, why did the priest and Lev lto pass hy on this other side!" A scholar held out his hand. "Well, my boy, why did tho priest and Le.vlte pass by on the other side?" "I know," said tlie ltd, "because the man was already robbed "London Answers. His Little Scheme. "I understand he attended the sale of wine from King Edwards' cellars. How much did he buy?" "One bottle," "Only onu bottlcl Why, it scon't last any time at sll " at "The wine won't, but the bottle will, and It has the royal crest upon It, Besides, there's no limit to the amount of wine that can ty poured from a single bottle If there ire insonabl intermissions." Chicago Post, "DOING" THE MOSaUITO. From the New York Tribune. For centuries the human race his regarded the mosquito u an Inevitable affliction. Only re cently has the Idea been conceived that this Insect Is a removable nuisance. It now remains for soma man ta write his name Imperishably upon the scroll of fame by discovering a practic able wiy to exterminate the pest. If John D. Rockefeller's recently founded Institute of Re search could, by bending Its energies In this direction for a jear or two, give to the world a thorough exterminator ef mosquitoes it Is almost certain that even the anarchists and socialists would forgive the Slandird Oil magnate for using his brains to make money. And when it is considered how many ol the beautiful spots upon the earth sre made slmost unfit for habita tion by the presence of mosquitoes, few will think that research along this line is beneath the dignity of the most scientific, this mosquito plague can be best and most-thoroug'Jy abated has been punllng the public ever since the committee appointed at the time of the Spanish sr to Inveitlgite the prevalence of malaria teported that the mos quito was the real cause of the extensive spresd of the dlseave among the soldiers The Ides has crept northward along the Atlantic cosst, filling the people with interest, and Is now resulting in numerous experiments being made at Hartford, Conn.; East Orange, N. .1., and st Trenton by the state authorities In the use of crude petro leum oil for the extermination of the pests. Petroleum his been found to he the cheapest and mot enectlve meins of ridding infevted dis tricts of the mosquito. F.xperlments under the supervision ef the board ef health have recently been made at Hartford In sprinkling liberally with oil the low marshy areas which border on the Connecticut river on the east side ot that city, with the result that there has been com parative freedom from mosquitoes this summer. The experiments have heen so euccessful that they will probably be repealed next j-esr on an extended scale. 0 The experiments now being tried In Tientftn will, It is hoped, decide as to what particular breeds of the mosquito are most active In dis seminating disease-hearing germs. In fact, so widespread has been the awakening of th public 'nterest In the idea that this snnoying affliction can be banished thit hoards of health In many parts of the country are enlisting in an active cru'ade against the Insect, in almost every case wheie petroleum has been used an imme diate scarcity of mosquitoes foltows. The method most generally emptojed and most commonly successful consists of throwing liberal quantities of crude petroleum on the- surface of stagnant pools and other sheets of water where the mos quitoes breed This forms an ollv film on the surface and destroj-s sll mosquito larvae in pro cess of growth The oil is found highly effica cious in lessening the prevalence of the Insects, and since the mot fertlle.breedlng places are generally at some distance Mm habitations, little objection to its use Is found. KNOWLEDGE IN BRIEF. In Bavaria only S per cent, ot the army re cruits have sound teeth A German phj'lclan, Dr. Bruhacher, declares that 72.3 per cent, of djspeptics have unsound teeth. Tasmania in proportion to Its srea, is the richest of Australasia's colonies in mineral wealth. .- At the German universities there were lat winter 31,363 6tudents; at the French, 20,001 students. Oxford undergraduates who do not dine in the college halls will be fined $ for each dinner hereafter. In Oxfordshire. England, the superstition pre vails that the arrival ol a German band in a village portends rain. Our ostiich farms are profitable. Birds are worth 10O apiece and a good specimen jields about $2.V worth of feathers at a plucking. Few women consider that they carry some 40 or 50 miles of hilr on their head; the fair haired may even have to dress 70 miles of threads of gold everj' morning. The oldest known weapon was the club. The cluhs of the lake dnellers of Switzerland, stud ded with stones In default of nall, and thus making formidable weapons, have been recov ered from their habitations. The. population of Belgium, according to of ficial figures, reached 6,7H,532 on December 31, lSCKl, of which total 3,362. 13'5 were miles, 2,13,351 spoke Flemish only. 2,153,072 spoke French only, and 7O0,P)7 bath languages. The greatest river is the Amazon. It Is navi gable tor ocean steamers for 2,000 from its mouth, At parts of its course one bank cannot be seen from the other; tne observer seems to be looking out upon a sea of fresh water The population of Idaho has incressed S2 per cent since 1MO, tint of Montana 70 per cent , North Dakota 67, Wjomlng 1, and Washington 15. Nevada is the only state which shows an actual decrease in its population since 1SD0. Last j ear the markets of ew York pild ss revenue into th city treas.iry $255,000 from rents, exclusive of $15,000 collected from stalls and privileges in Wallibout market, Brnokljn, and $3,000 from market cellar rents, a total of more than $300,000. Glagow University conferred 120 honorary de grees of doctor of liws on the occasion of its four hundred and fiftieth annlversarj-. Among the American recipients were Professor William O Farlow, ef Harvard. Professor Thomas D Sej-mour of Yale, and Professor Paul- Haupt ot Johns Hopkins. The Roman pen, or stvlus, was an iron Im plement, sharp at one end like an awl and flat at the other like a paper cutter. It was used for writing on tablets of wood or ivory covered with wax. The sharp end was employed for writing and the flat tor erasing or correcting what was written. Among the British newpapers there aie now 160 Advertisers, 150 Tlmees, 111 Newses, 123 Gaieties, 120 Chronicles, 110 Herald", 101 Jour nals, 94 Expresses, 70 Guardians, 63 Observers. 15 Standards and 12 Mercurjs. There are 10 Free Presses, 35 Telegraphs, 31 Malls, 30 Posts, 20 Independents, 23 Couriers and as many Ex aminers snd 22 Echoes. The first labor day Japan ever knew was observed In Tokio on April 3 last. The cele bration was proposed and managed bv the Niroku Shinpo, a newspaper, ". friend of the labor ing man " Scarcely tex dajs had passed after the first announcement of the Niroku' under taking when more than 50,000 laborers eagerly secured their tickets of admittance to the pic nic. The four states in which there were no Prohi bition votes cast at last year's general election were South Carolina, In which the dispensary sjvtem of llqunr selling by the state exists; Wjoming, the pioneer American constituency to adopt woman suffrage; Nevada, the onlv state which is losing Us population, and Mississippi, in which the proportion of voters is less to the populstlon thsn In sny other state The South Includes one fourth of the total area and one third of the population of the I'nited States Its cotton and cottonseed slone gave It an income last year of $315,000,000 the largest value of any single crop In the world. Its corn and lumber products brought in the snug sum of $300,000,000 Moreocer, the South raises SO per cent, ol all American tobacco, mines 20 per cent of all its coal, produces 13 per cent, of its Iron, has SO per cent of its totsl railroad mileage, and a steadily Increasing percentage of its manufacturing. ALWAYS BUSY. Our Oxfords Low in cut. Low in price. High In quality. Ladies' from 75c. up. Gentlemen'6 from $1,26 up. Lewis & Reilly Wholesale and Retail, ENTRIES CLOSE AUGUST 15. After August 1 5 no more new contestants will be received in (The Tribune's (educational contest) This action is taken for the purpose of protecting legitimate contestants and preventing the possibility of any speculator from entering the last day or two and purchasing a $1,000 scholarship by presenting the names of his fn'ends as new subscribers and paying for them himself. While nothing of this sort was attempted last year, the close of the contest demonstrated that it would have taken much less than $1,000 to have purchased the first special reward, as the winning contestant had onlv secured for The Tribune less than &400 in new subscriptions. The Tribune desires to protect tne contestants that are working so nobly for it and will use its best endeavor to have every feature of tlie contest perfectly fair, and it wishes it distinctly understood that the rewards of fered are in no sense for sale, but will positively go to the con testants who secure the largest number of points, which will be credited only for new and legitimate subscribers. The Special Rewards: Scholarship in Lafayette College $1,000 Scholarship in Swarthmore College 1,000 Scholarship in Stroudsburg Normal School 675 Three Scholarships in Scranton Business College, $60 Each 180 Two Scholarships in Scranton Conserva tory of riusic, $75 Each 150 $3,005 Each contestant failing to secure one of these special rewards will be given ten (10) percent, of all the money he or she turns in. K. D The first two scholarships do net indud meals, but the contestants securing these will be given ten (10) per rent. n all the money he or she turns in to The Tribune, to assist in pajing this expense. There are seven weeks yet ot the contest and it is not too late for any ,energetic young man or woman to enter. Some of last year's winners were only in three or four weeks. Send a postal to The Tribune for full particulars, including handsomely illustrated booklet. Address, Editor Educational Contest, Tribune, Scranton, Pa- OF SCRANTON. Capital $200,003. Surplus 5525,030. United States Depositary. Special attention given to BUSINESS, PERSONAL and SAV INGS Accounts, whether large or small, Open Saturday evenings from S to 9 o'clock. Wm. Connell, President Henry Beds', Jr., Vice Pres. Wm. H. Peck, Cashier. Refrigerators, Oil Stoves, Screen Doors, Gas Stoves, Window Screens, Hammocks. 325-327 Pena Ayenus A Second-Class -City with a First-Class Stock of Gut Glass, Sterling Silverware Clocks, Etc. Suitable for Wedding Gifts. Mercereaii & Connell, 132 Wyoming Avenue, Gflft I II FINLEY'S Negligee Shirts, Boys' Waists and Blouses. Hot Slimmer weather make tho Neeileee Shirt imperative to the vacation-taker and home-stayer alike, who desire to enjoy comfort, style and neatness; these are embodied in our Monarch Shirts Newest patterns, latest styles, per fect fitting, best workmanship. New lines of the celebrated "Monarch" Shirts Just opened, including all the newest In Madras Shirts Scotch Gineham Shirts, Fine Percale Shirts, all at the ery lowest market prices, ranging from $1.00 upward. 'Artcx" Shirts The Celular Linen Mesh Shirt has attained great popularity as a Sum mer Shirt, owing to its ventilating mesh, making the lightest and coolest shirt conceivable. "King" Waist and Blouses for Boys Acknowledged the best and most per fect Boys' Waist on the market. Mothers that have tried them will have no other waist. Made of fine Percale, Madras Cloth, Oxford Cheviot, etc. "Mother's Friend" Waist Also full lino of this popular Watet in good assortment of patterns. 510-512 Lackawanna Ave Allis-Chalmers Co Successors to Machine Business of Dickson Manufacturing Co., Scranton and Wllkes-Barre, Pa. Stationary Engines, Boilers, Mining Machinery, Pumps.