irrrjswp-FStprj7p;-TseJllsJm ijWJk"' y THE SCRANTON TRIBUNE- WEDNESDAY. JULY IT. 1901. ipsT r 'X. 0e j&eranfon ri8tme Published Dally, Except 6nday. by The Trlb. une Publishing Company, it Kilty Cents Month. MVY s. niniAfiK, Editor. o. k. nv.xm.K, nn.iii Manager. New York Office! 1JQ Nasaiu St. s. m vreeland. Sole Agent for Foreign Advertising. Entered it the Poslofflie t Scranton, Pi., as Second Cla.s Mill Matter. When space will permit, The Tribune I al"')' glad lo print short letter trom It Irlends bear ing on current topics, but It rule Is thJt these mint be signed, lor publication, by the writer real name; ami the condition precedent to''' trpt.nce I. tint nil contribution thill be subject to editorial revision. THE PLAT lUlB for ADVERTISING. The following table shows the price per Inch eich lnettlon. spate tn be used within one jesrt l It.. f ICI.llnff.Sn I Villi . DISPLAY. I J'PI Reidinsj I Position I. thtn ,Vi inrhc ' Inchei snno rWYi '' .!Q .11 Tor cards of llnnk, resolutions ol condolence nd similar rntitributen In tbe rvtiite ol ad vertising The lilbune makes a charge ol 5 cent! a lire. Hifes f-r Classified Advertising furnished on ppmitlen FC'RANTOX, .It'IV 17, 1011. . Mr. Bryan li.is arrived at the fault flnfllnp utage rather catly In the campaign. Profiting by nistakes. A-'REPnUSENTATIVK of one of the l.irsert Interests In the 1'nlterl States Steel cor poration" In the coutse of a statement lrsucil in New York on Mon day, relative to the strike of the Amal samated association said: "Rer.iti.ep last ear tlie anthracite roal Mitkn was tettled here, some have thought this strike Mould he set tled In the hame way. In that case It was found that theie were some real Krlevanees as to waces and limits and they weie lemcdled. In this cas-e, however, none of these elements enter. The striken are not similar. The ques tion between the strikers and the com panies has" nothing to do with wages or houip, hoth of which aie equal to If not better than the union si ale. The sole item of Important c In the demand of the stilkeis 1 the Insistence that non-union men employed In non-union mills on union waqes shall he lls chaiged by the company If they do not. join a union. The steel corpoi.-t-tlon's office! s have taken their posi tion in flat opposition to that demand and do not piopose to ehnnge It. For the steel coiporatlon to have made any other decision would have meant that It had no future." One sovetelgn proof of wisdom con sists in the ability to pi out by past mistakes. The "real grievances'" dis covered by the New Yoik financiers In the anthracite situation last year had existed for years and should have heen remedied by voluntary action on the part of the controlling Inteiests, ns some of the better Infoimcd individ uals operators contended, befoie con cessions were forced. Had that heen done, theie would have beeri no coal strike and no fictitious encouragement to the multiplication of demands which has since made the anthracite region a hot bed of labor troubles. It was the New York end of the coal business which made a mess of its handling of the anthracite strike anil opened a Pandora's box of lo'cal Ills. Let us hope the New Yoik financiers have learned something In the interval. i i-i i , And the man who has nothing to do generally suffeis most liom the heat. The South and the Chinese. AT THIS TIME, when the Ameiican-('hlnse aie mak ing a concerted movement to petition congiess next winter not to extend the prolslons of the Ceary Chinese exclusion act, and the Far West Is beginning to uige that very extension, thete comes a Southern voice that will gladden the Chinese and anger the Pacific coast rtates and those lying on the Sierra slopes. It Ie the Mobile. Alabama, Register which makes editorial declaiation: "What we need In the South Is a mil lion actie Chlnere to work the negro population into activity. There Is work enough for them and the negroes, too. We ought to hae them; yet hero is this Infernal un-Ameilcan Chinese exclusion law In the way, bat ring us from the very laboi we most need, and condemning us to put up with Incom petents, who Tinow we cannot get nlTijr. without them, and take ad vantage of their knowledge." The Geary exclusion law expires by limitation next May. The treaty with China negotiated In 1SS0 says: The government of China agrees that the Kftvernment of the I'nlted States may regulate, limit or suspend such com ing or residence (of the Chinese Into this Riuntry) but may not absolutely prohlgt it." The Oeaiy law did "legu-late"-amf -"limit" It, In accordance wlthj5he demand of California and other iJtVir western states. "The law was passedj only' after prolonged legislative battles; Tho .sre&peels at present aie for rfflch a battle, more stubbornly fought nex 'Winter. There was gen eral unbelef, when the Chinese lead ers eifgaged In organizing the piellm Inaryiflght '.declared, a few weeks ngo, that friey would be able to secuie a great jnumber of American signatures lo thetf petitions. The Mobile Register's declar&tlon will bring utter amaze ment So the far west, and probably great tpdlgnatlon. It It at Just this timet that China puts Kb her claim for Indemnity for what jiavc been aptly termed by some of our contemporaries "tho White Bojcer'.outrngos" against the Chinese at Butte,Montana, ln 18S6. For the In formafjon ofMnany readers we take a connsed account of the basis of thla Irttiemnlty demand from a brief resume made by the Chicago-Herald. It says: "It Is alleged that several of Minlbter Wu's countrymen were killed, that others lost their property, that many were completely ruined and driv en away, and there Is no doubt that the allegation can be proved. It was a tlm(When white mobs were allowed to do as thy pleased ' wlfh Chinese. .25 .274 .JO .2i .11 .ITS .1-. .IT .15 W Not long before fifty of these people were murdered at Hock Hprlngs, Vyo by a gang of white mlnetn elmply be cause they were competltots In the labor market." Tho Herald adds: "It la said that In the Hutte chso tho city council and the local courts showed a shameless sym pathy for the tloters, and In such a state of public .sentiment as we have described that was natural, The Chlneso, Is as distinctly outlawed as n white man would bo In tho remote In terior Chinese province of Sz chucn. These facts, like tho negro burnings, should make us sing a little low on the subject of barbarians, though they In dicate that It would be Impolitic to repeal the exclusion act." There hnvo been some very recent manifestations of Chlnese-phobla In California nnd other far western states that serve to give emphasis to that last clause we have quoted from our Chicago contemporary. In the matter of making faces nt each other without results, Russia and Japan eeem to have biokcn all records. Ovenloinu It. HMAN NATURE Is so con stituted that, with the pos sible exception of n very few ' who are without ambition or alms above their present station, everybody is dissatisfied with his lot In life or Impressed with the belief that some body else's lot Is preferable. This unlvcisal trait Is not a bad one, either, In Its social tesults, since it Is the mainspring of progress, The man who Is satisfied does not piogress; he Is more likely to tetrograde Impel fectly. Yet at the same time, It would work incalculable mischief If every man who Is not satisfied should throw up his Job and go on a sttikc. That theie aie times when stilkes aie neccss'aiy to bilng about lrforms which would otheiwlso never mateiiallze is undeni able. In that i esprit they are to In dividuals or gioups of Individuals like wais aie to nations. Rut tho most progiesslve nations aio those which do as little lighting as possible and do It only after every other recourse has failed. They aie not quarrelsome. They do not carry chips on their shoulders. On the contiaiy they go very far to one side in order to avoid lighting and light only when It Is n neccssaiy nltornathe to unbeatable dishonor. No doubt very man who reads these lines thinks ho Is underpaid. And may he hi is. It all depends upon circumstances. Yet If eery Ameilcan struck there would be no gain to nny body except possibly our European rivals. On the contrary, every striker would lose and eveiy strikers family suffer. We ate having an epidemic of strikes. No sooner 1b one ended than another bobs up and lately they are coming In bunches. The effect Is bad. It Is Intel feting with business piogiess. It is hurting trade. It Is postponing new enterpilse. And It Is not a pay Ing Investment for the strlkeis. Tho cool, i effective, lo el-headed vorklng men know this and admit it pilvately. Hut the hot-heads out-talk nnd out vote them In tho meetings whcio stilkes aie ordered. The simple fact Is that organized labor Is over doing the stilke business. It Is biting oft moie than It can masti cate. Tho time has come- when Its f i lends must call a halt upon the strike spirit or tho losses will soon become intolerable. Marshall Field has Just given a flee public llbtnry to his .native town, Con way, Mass., as a memorial of his father and mother. He has not chosen Mr. Carnegie's plan of library giving, for the gift Includes not only the $100,000 building, but 6,000 volumes now on the shelves, and an endowment fund of $52,000 invested in "gilt-edged" se curities. Conway Is excedlngly happy over Its good fortune, i Two Pictures of Hanna. TWO PICTURES of Mark Hanna, each drawn by ver bal experts, aio going tho kjuihIs ot the press. They differ ladlcally and illustrate what wide margins theie can be among tho cuiient estimates of men contempor-nneoiii-ly gieat. The first Is by Wil liam Allen White, the Journalistic ptophct of modem Kansas, who writes In hla Empotla (layette: Hjiini i .i ilrnncr, eeti-lblv, c.ipalile.lioncst nun mil the Inundation ol hln iluraucr Is common sin-e. In nil) cirat nnirgfiity ami In all the little "MM lliniu applied the rule of inmmon nne to tho holuilon ol the problem bffnrc him. Then be appllca a 40i)lioree-powcr ilirumo of will and make .vniihle thine happen. 'Ihc other ill) thne was a Mate contention in Ohio, llanni was ihilnnan. He boshed the job, lie fhut on" uiatoi.. nnd all the world wondi'ied. Yet why Why rhould tlc hundred men lt cooped up In a hot hill lo be Inn led ,it by a lot of other men when theie U tmstm.' on hand? Hanna did the I'immoii ene thins. It took eonic courage to do It, but Hanna ha courise. He i om of tho Kieate.t mm in AmorUa, not tneiily today, but in Amerlian hUtorj. In ctlcitbenoM in Bet tin: hUtuij made urn! baled up and In the book with hl brand on it II inn i lead lllifno bv length and come in a cuod tccond to toward and Hamilton. He l not liiMy nur lo nutnt, but be doe thing thit thniilil be ilune. Hanna is all right. He would make a good piesb ihi.t. The other portrait Is by William Marlon Reedy, whoso weekly Journal, the Mirror, of St. Louis, la ono of tho brightest publications of Its class. Mr. Reedy writes: Mr. llamu may be idiouz, capable, lionet, a mm go, but the qucrtlnti Uiellirr Mr. Hanna is cniploiis. lie I douhtlcM, teihnkally honest, but the giritcr part of Amerlian piople helleio tint he is hot niuHilou a tn means and that hi end ate not ol tho exalted 'it wo expect in our tUttiiiirii, "llualnen nun" I a iiukIo phrase, but there aio boiler thlnu'S Hun buiine.s in this world. Common ene i booiI, but com mon wne H bad morals when it Is ionienlrated in the motto "get there anjhow." Theie uro questions of coieinnient that cannot he settled on the hiislncfS man Idea alone. Tho bmlncs idei Is, wh.M'll it cot ami t it woith It V Tho business idea In goiernment, as Mr. Hanna seems to , exemplify It, Is that oiuanlation, barked by coin, will do anjthlnjr or ciery thlm?. Mr. llanna's lommon cne seems to be of that ort tint itiogulzcs only the croorr needs u( nun. He figures that the people will go with the side that has the money. He banks on the lull dinner pall. Ills only answir to an lime ol principle Ik, "louk at our propcrltj I" Say to him that we should think of other unions and people and he would ayi "llosh, let 'em look after thrmteltti," Hi motto is take what jeu on get, itiuli out opposition by organisa tion and money and solldltied selfldi Interest. What dors llann tare (or abroad! What does Hanna care for the men who think that poiem ment should bo it Just tn the outsider as the In ildert Nothing. Hanna knows nothing, care for nothing but that business, nd more particularly his hutineM, li flourishing. He doesn't think tint the great mistcs ot the people hate tn in- Itrrrit in got eminent quite Independent of the litt that Mr. Hanna and hW sjndlrafe ire piling; up the ch, llmna i bltr mn-nn doubt about that. .No one more admire his larfte, Jolly rtnklfm than doe the editor ol the Mirror. Ills content jind his eonlrmpt for the discontent ed are almot sublime. Hi blulT, rough shod method ol coercing men Is tcfrrhlns. He ha that lirute-Mreimlh ol Intellect that we some how tike, ern while nc turn up our noses at It, llantit li a fine tjpe ol the man who Is bo lulely Hire that he tan buy what he want. He know that people will irwl to money and power. He knowa most of the people don't think, He itcrcn t ate time atgultig with tliem. lie Just tells them, thafi all. Maik Hitini I not a hjpoultr, He doesn't disguise hi attitude. He doen't think that contentions ought to deliberate. It I the duty ol conten tions to tale their order and execute them. Whit' the me of eloquence, or tfon, or Imag ination, or antthlngf All that the country needs Is about thirty mm with "the dough" to get tngclhei, decide wlut'a best for fhemseltes, rt the titichlnery working. Jam their chem' through prlmirirs, contentions, legislatures and ctcn loutts and tn hell with the rest ol the country or the rest of mankind. You can like a man who bellete that jou can like him In w.i.t. Hut jou don't think he'd make a good present. Mr. Hanna i a Jolly, rjnle tjrint. lie might make a good enr, but a good presi dent net er. Probably both of these portraits are overdrawn. Rut It doesn't matter. Hanna will have his way Just the same, until some man more powerful than he gets in his way nnd shoves him Into a corner. Meanwhile, this talk of Hanna for president is not to bo taken seriously nnd we are happy to say that It isn't being so taken. There must be something wrong with the rlAlng flylng-machlne element of yankee land when a Rrazlllan Inventor can claim tho honor of introducing tho fli st successful alr-shlp. General Kitchener's dispatches Indi cate that ho can at least keep on the trail. Press Comments on the Steel Strike Absolutely Unjustified. From the riiiladelphli Times. The aMoilation seems to hate made a xast mis take, anil the only pity is that the leader who hue Intolted thousands of Innocent persons in the strike will not themeltes lute to bear the nifTrrlns which II must etentually entail. They will stilt draw their stlarle nd may ride in their i.irriage, xthllo poor women and children are crjing for bread and meat. No one denies tho right of ttorkingnicn to unite and organise to gu.iid llulr own interests. In these da ol lirge corporations, when the point of dlrcit ion tail between emplotcr and employed are so fc', labor organUatlons seem to be lndipensihe, In order to secure imituil protnllon and hirmony. Hut It can bo Jintlllod only when it rcallv per fninis this scrtlce and urs It powers rightly and Justly. It xlnlales the trust reposed In it when It abuses lis prltlleges and undertake to exert It-elf In 1 depotp a. Tlio Amalgamated assodatlon ha oterslepped prrnisiblp bounds. The rcale of wages which it Intituled when the si ile was signed guaran teed peace within the industry (or a long term, a matter of Importance to the manufa hirer a well a to the men. On this occasion It is not a muter of wages, hut President hhalTer under take to control not only the members of the union tmt thoe who are not members. It is .i question of going Into all the mills and of union ising them, etcn against the will of the men who are cmplotcd there. Workmen arc tn Join the nssni-htlnn, nolens xolcn. This puts so arbi trary an apei t upon the strike that the leaders mut go into it at a sacrifice of public sjmpathv. In granting their demands the manufai Hirers would not only put their plant in absolute ion trot of HnlTrr and the offlicrs of the association, but the li Hon would lie ilestructite of the Indl tiiluil freedom of the workmen. No man who still renins a trace of the old American lote of librrtv wants to be forced to Join a lodge, paj the awsments and be bound by the rules, or to hate hi rmplotnirnt controlled from out side without my tolce of his own. How soon the strike niav end, nrithrr the in terested parties nor the public at large can offer a prediction. All esperiemc Justifies the belief tint the etrntui: result will be fatnrablc to the company if ome it cmlnrk.i upon the struggle. The adtantsgrs are alwaj on the side of capital in a labor war. The corporation his unlimited funds at its command, and it can prolong the contest until It wins, nut meanwhile all the In dustries o( the country mut suffer Incilntlable loss. The man who brings about nn h a cahmlly bt hi own arbitrary order should be held to the strii test accountability. A Striko for Powor. Trom the New York Tribune. There-Is no dlsputr as tn the immediate causo of tho stnke. It Is not a nutter of wagcv Nor Is it a question of lecognluing the union. Th question is merely whelhfr or not the steel com funics shall unionize certain mills which hate not hitherto been union, though union mm were not bined from thrm and union rates of wages were piid. t'ndcr tilth circumstances unionisation would simply mean tint the steel companies would compel their Iree workmen to join the Amalgamated association on pain ol being ele prited of a chance to cam a litmc in the ttvr mills where thej hate worked without antagon ism to the union or cutting the mukct priie ol labor. Ml other points In dispute might easily hate been arranged, but the Amalgamated asso ilitlon would oflkr no compromise whatcter on this though the companies offered to unionize some of the open mills but insisted that the men in all the mills should be foned, regard less of their desire, to join the association. This the manufacturers would not agree to, and in justiee rnu hi not agree to. It would hate been an ait ol tjranny on their part quite as Indefen sible as an absolute refusal to lrt thofe of their tmplojes who wished Join the union. They treat id their rmplojes as free men, recognized tha labor organization full.t, allowed it to dominate most of the mills, and only insisted that they would not themseltes hriome Instruments of co en ion In the hands of the association to force the minority who preferred to be free worker into tho organization or out ol the steel buslncw. The onlv exuise whlih the union glirs for this tecminglv unreasonable and un American demand is the charge that the manufuctuajr site theia free mills preference in the distribution of work and at slack times force the men In the union mills to idleness This is denied by the com panies. Ktcn if the charge is true, in the pre c,nt and Immediately protpcctlte state of the steel Industry it does not seem to he a matler ol such tirious concern to union men as to warrant a strike which otherwise could be atoided, The, real reason for the stand for absolute nnlonlza tlon Is more probably not an actual grlrtancn toncernlng the free mill, but a determination long ihirlfhrd to extend the organization at a fatorable time and put the whole steel Industry wllh lis grasp as a necrssiry ttep to possible (utuie contest! oter more terlous and as jet un formulated demands. Organized labor teems tn lute sought at the.iutet, while the trust hat jet to otereome prejudice and commend itself tn public (atnr, a contest as tn who shall really control tho properties, and naturally its first ttep is to forie all cmplotr of the trust into the union II possible. Tills strike Is not lor piesent betterment ol the londltlon ol labor, but lor fu ture power. Bad Judgment or Worse. from the Philadelphia Hecord, The offhlal annoumeinent by the Amalgamited Association of Iron, steel and Tin Workers, when lsunl, may possibly add tn the public Informa tion of the lauses whlih led up to the ttrlkc; but so much has been said that apparently there can be little tn add. The right of skilled non-union laborers to work term to bj the toU point at issue. Hie owner of tho trel plant Intoltcil were simply lommanded tn "unionize" their e tablishuient or take the co-i-t,cmrs, No tiust has eter rssa.trd tn do afslhlrjj more urbltrar than is tliis undertaking ol the Labor Trust. It has put Itrclf in the attitude of tn enerrt to all libor but union labor, and hat compelled the Steel Trust to aissumo an impregnable position ai the defender ol one of the Inallenahle rights. It teem hardly credible that thete it not tome ttock Jobbing basis behind thit motement of the Amalgamated association. Should the strike spread it would prove ruinous to thousands upon thousand ol mr.ceent person by reason ol thit comprehenslte indirection which makes all biu, nets Interdependent. The ttdppag would brim on (canity; scarcity xx-ould tend up prices; high er price xxTtuld tun rrtble to the !.'! lr:it to make good Its Iossm. Put the wig lost and tht putllo lost1 would be Irrecoterable. Schwfib or ShRffer-WhIehP From the New York Sun. Knr the moment let u consider only the de mand thst the Amalgamated association should control the whole Immense field ol Meet making. Miould this xst-industry, second In the country lo agriculture only, be dominated by tbe men now at the head ol Itwe may y without in- idiom comparison, the shiest known to American business or by the hindful of professional labor agitators who assume to control the army of tteel workers? In England tome jer ago the labor ing machinist undertook to wrest the control ot their Industry Irom the hands of those wha owned the properly; and the llrltlsh trade i crushed at the result ol their edottt. It is now tlowly and painfully getting baik Its tlrength under Its former mastri. The present unllerfak ing of the Amalgamated association It flowing oter with llbbodlng, but II under the clrcum tlancet Schwab, ol the tteel company, thouM be otereome and superseded by Miaflcr, ol the Amalgamated association, we helleto that the blow to the general prosperity would be even heavier than the prostration ol the tteel com pany alone by a protracted strike. No business would he secure and no law-abiding citizen would be safe. Bettor Settled at Onco. From the r.lmlra Adtertlser, The contest it not wisely precipitated. II la not to reilresa wrong or to athlete tytterment. It Is oter a question of pride, or sentiment. It is a contest of the weak againit the strong, in which weakness I the weaker because It lack a grletame. The weak will suffer. The Improvi dent will need tuccor. Stoppage in the furnish ing of material will cause idleness In occupa tion! remote from the Iron and tteel mill, -lust will suffer with the unjust. Meanwhile the treat tteel corporation can wait the inevitable end. It will not ttarte if a quarter passri without t dltidend. The contest on which these rarties are entering, perhaps, was sure to come. It it regret able, but as well determined now as st a future time. To Wage Earners and Others of Moderate Income Do not spend your money foolishly because you have so little of it. but yave what you can from month to month and Invest It in something that will multiply many fold. The mil lionaires of this section were laborln? me-n a generation ngo and they pur sued this course while most of their comrades blew It all In. The pru dent ones saw that fuel was a good thing, that the xvorld had to hav It, and they bought coal land, a little nt a time as they could spare It, and It has made them rich, and their fami lies live and will live In the greatest comfort, while the descendants of their Imprudent comrades are labor ing as their fathers did for day! wages. Keep this object lesson In mind. The opportunities of that earlier time wore In coal, today greater opportuni ties exist in oil, which Is fuel in a more concrete fotm nnd is rapidly supplanting coal, because it Is easier and cheaper to mine nnd handle, and is, besides being n mor- economic fuel for nil large consumers, profit able for n hundred other uses, Tho oil of California is furnishing that state xvlth cheap fuel, for tho lack of which her progress has been woefully retarded. The entire Pacific coast will consume oil ns a fuel, so that the demand upon the oil fields of Cali fornia Is unlimited. California oil refiners will hold the markets of the far East and of tho west coast of South America. It is plain to be seen that the oil fields of California will he the source of incalculable wealth, far beyond xvhat the coal mines of Pennsylvania have heen In the past. All thourjhtful men can see that the thing to do now to make money Is to buy the shares of conservative, re putably managed oil companies hav ing lnrgp holdings of undoubted oil lands secured at low prices, and only requiring development to become the source of enormous revenues for ehorpholders. The PACIFIC COAST. AND TEXAS Oil. COMPANY has in the most Im portant oil fields managers of ability and Integrity and of the highest prac tical qualifications for their business, nnd the shares of this company are today, without doubt, the best Invest ment obtainable. These shares would be cheap at 40c, but are; selling for the time being at 2dc per share, to procure monev to bore the first wells. The price Is sure to adx-ance rapidly to keep pace with the developments on the company's lands and on ad joining lands. The market value of the lands is constantly advancing. Do not delay making an Investment In this stock. As to the value of this oil property and the character and nblllty of Its managers this company refers, by permission, to the presi dent of the Broadway Bank and Trust company, of Los Angeles, Cal, For particulars concerning this In vestment apply to the INYESTMENTand FINANCE CO Room 1, Dime Bank Building, Scranton, Pa. - OPEN EVENINGS. ALWAYS BUSY. Our Oxfords Low in cut. Low in price. High in quality. Lsdles' from 75c. up. Gentlemen's fiom $1.25 up. Lewis & Reilly Wholesale and Retail. Allis-Chalmers Co Successors to Machine Business of Dickson Manufacturing Co., Scranton and Wllkes-Barre, Pa. Stationary Engines, Boilers, Mining Machinery, Pumps. sSrillt'w FINLEY'S Negligee Shirts, Boys' Waists and Blouses. Hot Summer weather makes the Negligee 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 Gintrhara Shirts, Fine Percale Shirts, all at the very lowest market prices, ranging from $1.00 upward. ''Artcx" Shirts The Celular Linen Mesh Shirt has attained great popularity as a Sum mer Shirt, owJnc 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 line of this popular Waist In good assortment of patterns. 510-512 Lackawanna Ave OF SCRANTON. Capital $200,000. Surplus $525,033. United States Depositary. Special attention given to BUSINESS, PERSONAL and SAV INGS ACCOUNTS, whether large or small, Open Saturday evenings from 8 to 9 o'clock. Wm. Connell, President Henry Belin, Jr., Vice Pres. Wm. H. Peck, Cashier. Refrigerators, Oil Stoves, Screen Doors, Gas Stoves, Window Screens, Hammocks. 325-327 Penn Avenue. hi l Forsy A Second-Class . City with a First-Class Stock of Gut Glass, Sterling Silverware Clocks, Etc. Suitable for Wedding Gifts. fltercereati & Connell, 132 Wyoming Avenue. ENTRIES CLOSE AUGUST 15. After August 1 5 no will be The Tribune's") educational contest) This action is taken for the puipose 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 friends 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 only secured for The Tribune less than $400 in new subscriptions. The Tribune desires to protect the contestants that are working so nobly for it and will use its best endeavor to have every feature of the 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 lor 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 $3,005 Each contestant failing to secure one of these special rewards will be given ten (10) per cent, of all the money he or she turns in. N. D. The first two scholarships do net Incl'id mfals, tut thf contestants securing those will be Klwn tin (10) per cent. n all the money he or she turn, in to The rrlbuae, to assUt In paying thU expense. There are seven weeks yet of the contest and it is not too late for any energetic young man or woman to enter. Some of last year's winners were only in three or four weeks. Send a postal to The Tribune for full particulars, including handsomely illustrated oooKlet. Address, Edtor Educational Contest, SCRANTON'S BUSINESS HOUSES. THESE ENTERPRISING DEALERS CAN SUPPLY YOUR NEEDS OF EVERY OHARACTER PROMPTLY AND SATISFACTORILY. L. SOMMAR, liulhllns Contractor. Employs union men. Kstlmstes clwrlullr glen. nemodcling and repairing a specialty. 320 WASHINGTON AVE. HAVE YOUR WATCH FIXED RIGHT We ARE SATISFIED WITH A SMALL PROFIT. BERNHARD, jeweler. 215 LACKAWANNA AVENUE. EDWIN S. WILLIAMS. CONTRACTOR. BUILDER ROOM ZB COAL CXCHANGE, SCRANTON. PA. Gold Medal 1$ Photographer Children's V Artist. P FOR SALE nrnr.iEs and wao- O.SS of all kinds; also Houses and rtuildlns Lots at bargain. HORSES. CLIPPED and GKOOJir.D at farrell's Transfer Moie (relght. Furni ture and Bansaije, Sites, Pianos and Ma chinery. 217 LacKananna Ave M. T. Keller's LacUwanniCarriaje Wciks. THE MOST PALATABLE and Healthful Beer thst is brewed, The Real Vrctar ol the Nation, I'nrisalril in Its Purity, is Pure Srhllt, the Deer that made Mllnaulice famous, bold by A. W. SCHRADER, 726-723 Adams Avenue. Scranton, Pa. Roth Telephones. M F. WYMBS. FUNERAL DIRECTOR, 1112 .lael-son Street "2 Wjominc Ae. Calls by Telephone Recede Piompt Attention J. B. WOOLSEY eg CO CONTRACTORS AND BUILDERS. Dealera In Plate Glass and Lumber OP ALL KINDS. LACKAWANNA UNDERWEA R STORE Will sell all their simples ol fine Imported Madras Shirts lor men at 6ic. ; worth U to $2 Iti WALTER E. DAVIS, 214, 216, 2Q PAULI BLDQ. ' Attorney-at'Law, Scranton, Pa. MRS. SARA ALLYN, MANICURE. CHIROPODIST AND SCALP TREATMENT tfa-m Mears Dulldlne, Tartars open Monday, Thursday and Saturday eicnlngs. E. JOSEPH KUETTEL, rear Sll Lackawanna avenue, manufacturer of Wire 6crens o all Wndsj fully prepared (or the spring season. We make all kinds ol porch screens, etc PETER STIPP. Cenersl fnntractor, Builder and Dealer In Building Stone. Cementing cl cellar) a ens. cialty. Telephone 25W. v Office. Ji.'7 Washlnitnn avenue. more new contestants received in Tribune. Scranton, Pa HOTEL TERRACE. Parlor Hotel. Accommodations, unsurpassed. Special SUMMER HATES to permanent suesU. Oet them. Table noard. W II. WHYTE. Hanlevs Bakery, A20 SPRUCE ST. Succeseor to HUNTINGTON We mako a specialty ol fine bread etiifls. Orders for Salads, Oysters, Croquettes, etc., promptly filled. A full line ol Lee Cream and Icm. BROTHERHOOD WINE CO.'S .Fine Old Ports, Burgundies, and Bauternej. Family Trado Only. P. H. FRENCH. 408 CONNELL BLDQ. TONY HAY, Successor to William Hiy. RES. 313 LINDEN STREET. House palntwf, decorating and paper hining W. A. HARVEY. Electric Wiring and Fixtures. F.lectrlo Bell and Telephone Work. 300 COMMONWEALTH BUILDING. CHRON10 DISEASES A SPECIALTY. DR. S. GERTRUDE EVANS OSTEOPATH. 12? and 123 Washinston avenue, Scranton Pa. OUke hours 3.20 to 12 m. , 1.80 to 5 SO p. m. Only prait icing lady o.ttopath In Northeast ern Pennsydania, FRED H. WINTER. E24 CAPOUSE AVENUE, Staple Groceries and Provisions, A full line cl cgetables. etc., receded dally. THE SCRANTON VITRIFIED BRICK and Tile Manufacturing Company sums oi paving Brick, etc. M. H Dale Gereral Sales Agent. Office 320 Washington ave' Works at Nay Aug. Ta,. 11, & W. V It It Kinqsbury & Scranton. Manufacturers' Agents MINE AND MILL SUPPLIES. District Agents for John A. Rotbllng'a Sons Co.'s Wire Rope and Electrical Wire, Gutta Pcrcha and Rubber Mfg. Co.'s Belting, Packing, Hose and Mechanical Rubber Goods, Know Hon Packing. Carter's Oil Clothing, Room 310 Tail!! Bldg. Scranton Laundry, 322 WASHINGTON AVENUE. Calls by telephone receive prompt attention WILSON WASBERS SEOURITr BUILDINQ A SAVINGS UNION, Home office, 208-203 Mears Building, transacts a general building and loan business throughout tho state ol Pennsylvania, JAMES J. MURRAY, Succewor to tbe Hunt k Cornell Co., In tin and sheet metal work and ventlUtlon. Carton lurnaies, irpalrs snl general tin stork a specialty. No. 412 I.uikswanna avenue. WILSON d COMPANY. Fashionable Tailors (Hotel .lermvn Building), S22 Spruce street, Scranton, Pi, Suits presed, 35 cents-, pants pressed, 10 cents. Clothing re paired, called for and delivered New Phone. 2C.IH ASK YOUR QROCER FOR KIRKPATRICK'S PURE SPICES AND FRESH ROASTED COFFEES.