'4 t THE SCRANTON TRIBUNE- FRIDAV, AUGUST 9, 1901. iva ! t - U fr J ; v f '$r ' .y vy wmmtt tur ' Published Dallv, Except Sndiy. hy The Trib une Publishing Company, t I Illy Cents a Month. LIVV S RICHARD, K.lltor. 0. V UYMir.E, Ilusliess Manager. Jvtw Yctk Office I M Nassau St. s. a vnr.n.vM). Sols. Agent lor Foreign Advertising. Entered at th( Postorhce it Persnton, Pa., recond Class Mull Matter. When spsee will permit. Tho Tribune Is nlwsys fld to print short Inter from Its friends bear ing on cuirent topics, hut Its rule Is that these mint he sinned, lor public tlnn, bv the writer s resl name, nnd the ronilltlon precedent to ac ceptance Is that all contributions shall bo subject oedilorlslreUslon THE FXVT 1UTE VOIl ADVEMISISO. The following tsble shows the price pr Imh sen IriKtrtion, space to be ued within one jean " Full Position '.90 .:t ,ii is DISPLAY. less thsn .V) "inches" inches ... Jjnn ' rnno IW0 1 or esrds rf thanks, resolutions ot condolence nd similar contributions In the natuie o( ad erlislne The Tribune males a charge ot cents line Icstes for Classified Advertising lurnlshed on t'Piitatn SCRANTON. At'i-.rST 9. 1P01. Cf.nKrrwmjn WrlRht nppoan to hnve rut thf Sti.rueliBniiH county "antls" to fltep in thf flr.t round. Where Reform Is Needed. THK m.tny toilets of thf rlty whn.se nlalitly labors require that they should gain sleep In the hours of daylight, as well as nervouH people. rotnpMin of the hurkster nuisance which becomes more unbear.ihle dally as the season of home firnvvn fi tilts and eset,tl)les advances. The amount of Inns power possessed by some of the emlf rs of g.uden truck would he h matter of wttiprlse to an lnvetlKitlnff fi Iptitlst ?leep is impos sible within a block of one of these vnral wonders. ye.t app.irntly not sat isfied with the ffort of their yelling some of the ciaft hiue Intioditred tin horns for the purpose of lmpartlnK .id dltlonnl emphasis to the announcement of their pieseiite In a neighborhood In the portions of the r-lty whete board ing houepp ate plentltul the huckstot Kener.illv utilizes his reserve foup and puts on additional steam In inukinK Known the contents of hl! vvason In New York It Is said steps have ben taken to put tm- .oft pc'aj upon the huckster's .veil and the peaie .'.nil pood order of the resldnce portion of the city h'te thereby been enhanced. There is no ii-ason why the huckster's howl should not also b. inoclltled in Fcranton As a rile i p,.,ipn , ,0 luy of the ',tn-i t uiultr ate on ihe lookout and h would prohably sell ns many poods by conducting business in a peaceful manner as by attempting to outshine the 'linkers" of a midway show. By all mean.? let the huckster he regulated. An exchange intimates that the "aunties" are a trifle backward,, In ap plying the title of "Third George Washington" to General Malvar, the successor to Agulnaldo. Density of Population. WE HAVE little Idea 'of this country, says a writer in the New York Sun, what gteat density of popu larlon really means. According to the last census there Is in the United States, exclusive of Alaska and Ha waii, an average of ; fi inhabitants to the square mile in other words, our density of population Is far smaller than that of any country of Europe excepting Norway and Sweden. Rut crowded ns nUrope Is. In compatison with this coiiiitiv Its people seem to have abundant elbow room when they ate .ontrasted with the hundiods of millions living In India and t'hlna. l"r. A. Mipan. the illMlnguMied geo prapher and one of the editors of JVrolkerung der Erde, oMlmntts the population of China at over 3.V).nn,il,ono, not Including the sparsely peopled ie pion outside of China proper. China lsonly about us large as Russia, but it has neail a many Inhabitants as the whole of Einope. New Jersej, with an aveiage ot i 3 Inhabitants to the squaie miif., i;, tnr tMui lnost densely peopled state in the United States, be In? sui passed only by Rhode Island and Massachutetts. If one. half of our count! y was as densely peopled as New ,Ierse with Ith blp c.tles and tmpoitant towns that half of the United States would have Just about as large a population as Is crowded Into China. Rut China, like nil othei large countries, has Import ant areis In which the nonniminn is comparatively small, if we would know what density of population really means in China we must go to thejow. irh plains which, though only-a small part of the country, con taiaXnearly a third of the people, or aboiJt 110,0.00,000 souls. There are only two plains of great mpprtanre, the most of China being q mountainous or a very rugged coun try. Tone, .of these, plains stretches in a brjiad belt near the sea from a little foutrj of the Yangtte liver to the north or Tekln. It Is crossed by the Hoflnr river, whose terrible floods have sometimes killed millions of people. The "other plain, in the low regions of the Vangtse. does ont extend far from the river and its larger tilbutatlcs, nnd It 15. narrow In nil pans, for moun tain hem it In. On these plains about a tljrd4pf the people of China gain theieilvftTg for the most part by tilling the &, Iftthe 76.000,000 Inhabitants of the United States lived In the state of Texas and. -to.000,000 mote people were crow-Tied among them we should huve a polled tn this country of the den cltyjif population on the two plains of China. Thete is nothing like It even In India. No wonder that tillage In China Is of the nature of garden culture, that each householder has only two or three acre of ground, that mountains in mot parts of the country are terraced and tilled and that .EastCJilna has beeni denuded of its timber so that every foot of the soil may he culti vated. Th masses of the people In any I Hun of 5ldlngon Paper I Reading 2 "".275 M .ITS .1M .17 .! .IM country, herded together like the Chi nese, would perhaps be as poor as they ate. 0ei population Is a dire evil and the Chinese ate suffeilng from It. Whete the farmer tills only h gaiden spot that produces scatcely enough food for his family, he has little to sell and can buy little. Siuh minute sub-tllvlslon of the soil as pievalls In China would keep any people poor; no matter how highly the commercial aptitude of the Chinese may be de veloped, their part In trado will al ways be small In proportion to popula tion as long hs they me mostly farm ers, each tilling only two or tluec actcs of laud. It begins to look as though Historian McCIay would be obliged to go upon the lecture platform in order to vindi cate himself. For n Universal Language. -Tr-HERE WAS recently held In I Pnrli, sny the San Francis- j co Post, a great reunion of learned men, whose put pose was to form an International congress of academies. The Idea Is that thete should he a body composed o' repre sentatives of every gru nemlemy, in stitute, unlversltv mil p!-,nnnf soci ety of the whole clvlllr.ed world, all working together In the general Inter ests of every blanch of knowledge. The congress of acailcmlex will be a genenl registry olllce of learning and discov ery, or, one might put It, Rn Interna tional dealing houe of science. Its most Impoitant function will be to keep tab on the prepress made In every liitshwav and byway of research and thought ail over the world. It will sum up the actual position of knowledge In every subject, organize research on new lines and enable Iso lated workers to avoid wasting time and labor on lines afready fully o. plored The scientific worker In Lon don or Rerlln will be able to profit at once by the authoiltatlvely recog nized net results of a worker in the United State", or vice versa. It Is not too much to say that the whole move ment of science and learning during the coming century should be immeas urably accelei.itcd by this new Institu tion. The Idea realized In Paris t not a new one. Henjamln franklin advocat ed It In Pats to Voltaire. And long before him the great German philos opher and scientist I.elhnitz lud sug gested some such International alli ance of learned men. It has taken 200 years to realize what seems to be so simple and obviously useful a sugges tion. Leibnitz might well have been satisfied to .see how warmly his coun trymen of this cnr of grace have espoused his irlea and how brilliantly Geim.iny was lepiesented In the con gress. But what Franklin would have said to hi, countr.vmen Is more dubi ous. For, whatever the ica.son ma be, only one American was delegated to this assembly Prof. Gondalo and, by a singular piece of bad lin k, he fell 111 In Switzerland Just befoip the re union, and was unable to attend. Into the proceedings of the congics there Is no need to enter at length. As a matter of fact, nil that was not highly technical was purely picllmln nry. Rut there vvai one Interesting question opened. The congress of ac ademies detei mined to tackle the diffi cult matter of a unlveisrl language The need of such n language is being felt moio and more evciy da. As trade Incomes mor" and incur- extend ed, taking in eveiy country in the world, the language question becomes a formidable dlfllculty. A large Amer ican linn will. In the course of a year, have to write and receive letters In every dialect spoken wheiever Ameri can goods nre used. Instead of having i employ main- translators, waste a quantity of pilceless time, nnd In the end do business unsatisfactorily, it would be Infinitely better to have one recognized business language, adopted in every country and learned as a mat ter of coui.se- by every one who pro posed, either as u cleik or principal, to enter coinmeice. Seveial eperlmrnts have, of course, been made in this diit-ctlon. Perhaps the most ptnmlnent was Volapuk. Rut Volapuk Is now as dead as the tradi tional (loot nail. The reason s eaMly stated. It lacked authoiltatlve sane tlon: and It was lll-coiistiucted In this respect, that, being puiely lantanle. having no relation to any existing tongue, it laid a heavy burden on the memory. Relatively few people caied to learn a dlfllcult language when th j were not sine that the day after they had acquired it a new and better eys tern might not appear and be moie generally adopted. A philological committee of the con gress of academies will study the ques tlon in all Its bearings and expects in the course of n few rais to work out or adopt from outside some artificial language which will meet the condi tions of universal success. Such a lan guage will have to he absolutely simple In construction. with no elaborate rules, easy of pronunciation on phonetic lawa by every race likely to use it, easily learned by being composed ns far as possible of root woids common to the guatest possible number of lan guages. These conditions are not so hard to meet as It might seem. Pronunciation and grammatical rules aie f-lmply n matter of unlveial agreement. As for aiding tho memory by the use of toots common to many languages, they can be found In the Latin words which abound in nearly eveiy tongue. English is full of them; French, Spanish and Italian ate almost exclusively mnde up of them, German has a good ninny. lAready a languuge flas been foimed on this principle. It Is called Espeianto and Is the creation of n Russian scholar, arwl Count Tolstoi deflates that after only three houts' study ho learned to icnu ii hb iruenuy arc uis own tongue. Any one with a smattering of Latin would certainly mnster It In n week. It may be that Esperanto will bo adopt ed by the united academics If it he, the congress will use all Its Interna tional Influence to get It officially ac cepted by every country; perhaps even to have It made a compulsory subject In publlo schools all over the world. In that cae every educated man In the next generation would be nhle to com municate with all the educated people he hud to do with In any land. Of course, the universal tongue would not kill existing languages; that Is ns Impossible ns It would be regrettable: It would simply be a more or less per fect vehicle for the conveying of the ordinary affairs of life and of trade be tween repieenta lives of different tucrs Tho ever active Pntorson anarchists are planning nn unique entertainment for August IS which will represent the assassination of King Humbert nnd the suicide of tho murderer Rrescl. Large led placards have been Issued an nouncing the event. While this Is a land of extreme toleration, It seems nbout time that the leading spirits of anarchy In Pnteraon were loaded Into tho patrol wagon, President Cnstro ha.i displayed sa gacity scarcely excelled by General Kitchener In handling war bulletins. M. Santos-Dumont Is still, unable to get his flying machine out of the liquid nlr class. The corn crop will doubtless recover In time to be harvested. Inventions Lost Through Accent from the New York Pre F.Mr. and fortune await the min ho will rodlcoier anv of the manv selentlfie se. i rets which hae been lost in the last txentj voire In Hut time rmnv valu able imenilon- have been lost liv reon of the widen deith or the deliberate defsn ol the In ventor Ideas "hkh no nvnev on bnv brik hsve been shevin to tho world for a short time and then hive been withdrawn. o Yrars aso ,Inhn Vjj mouth, of WoUerhamp ton, fnghnd, incented a plan for untiring; the force of heat and exhibited cine of Hie simple, rheiprt and mol useful engines ImanlnihK run bv that power Then h 'lellheratelv de prived the world of Its benefit. He was in enslnecr ami Interitnr, and befoie he Invented lili heat ensltie had patented a dniin smcpssfu ,ip' pllancc which ti!l bear ln name. Wajmouth devoled himself to hirnewlne the heat rf an ofdiniirv fire and rnaVlnj a new power out of it The idea was laucilieil at bv all his friend', but ailir foui vcars' experimentlne ho produced a statinniry licit encni" that ce double the power of it uteam ensinc of the nine size at one. thlid of the cost, and aLo a small model heat loromnthn, liree enoujh to draw a truck wllh a mm In it lie lncl'-d a committee of end ners and scientists, inning whom were Professor Iluvlej and Toihes Pinwu, to witness the work of his new invention Tlio- did so and declared flat the two euslnes worked to perfection. The Invention mul" i sreit si'r at the time and Wav month hid inj number of offers of bus sums for It Hut, tor ni appirent leisnn, Wiv mouth refused either to bring out the Invention himself nr to sell the s-del. He said tint le was stti-flcd "Itiplv lo have mcireded in vvhit he hid midert ikrn. Hid shortl.v befoip his deith, two jeirs .ifler, he destcoved all the papers and plans for explaining the e.vslrm and re moved the CMcntial pirts of the enfflnes The eiiKines are slill In the possession of Wav mouth's lelrs. but no one ever has been able tn mike anvtuing out of them. ci Mlll tritiKCY was the famous los.s of the recipe for the manufacture of dhmnnds fifteen jears aire llcibrrt H irncr, who alone dlseovered and held the secret ot diamond makinc, did not live to wreck Hie diamond industry, as people thought he would, mid the circumstances of the loss were mvstrrimrs and tru;li Inferior rill minds can still be produced artlfloiillv, but onlv nt a rnt of about ten times their value. Wnrper, nltT voir of experimenting, wss ab'e to turn out a genuine diamond, of luce sire mid it the llrst water, at the- c.ot of the small friction of (he complete stone's worth. II-', like Vtaviiiniitli, minufai lurrd his diamonds be fore an audience of wienllsts, and produced thrco fine stones, which were tested and pin. noiinced faultless, Two of them are still in ex istence, and aie th cieitevt curiosities the jewel wirld his ever seen Hut within a fort iiiulit of tills triumph, blore anv of the new stones wen- put c u the mirket. W'ainer dis appeared from bis house in Ilarle.v Mreet, Lon don, lecvlng no tiace whatevet So complete was his diuppni nice that from that dtv to this not the smallest explanation lias been hit upon. o--light veirs ajo a wonderful new metil nihil "tiliuin" wis heralded vvldelj is a greit and useful disrnverv. It was an alio; of various metals electrlcillv treiled .and was ,W per cent lighter than -tccl, stronger, tougher an I costing .in per cent, less to produce. It was discoveted bv (irantlv Adims after four jears of studv and experiment It wis suluVi ted pnblirlv to all sons of test and stood the all Tillum w is going to rcvolutlonlre ronsimrtlon rtillwav trains constructed of it vvo-ild lie ahle to travel at double their former speed, and all snrls of ei'.'ei) tool would be keener and lighter when nude of the new men! Mi,-un.,i1jp'( cirrlages evervthlng wis to lie made of "tilium " Over rome liv the micnltwl of his success dim lost his reison, and as lie had kept the erret ef the tnanufactuie of Hie metal entirely to himself it was lost to the world when his resson fled He died a ravinx lunatic, and no papers explaining In method weie ever found ll the tools md models which dams romtructed of "tnlluni" eilll exist, hut so fir no man bis I een able to ijii,ier the method by which the amalg tin was blended o The ixtraoidinirv "perpetual limp" of Henry Mills, which he Invented, pcrfecrrd and proved the vvoith of twelve jeirs ago, xva lost In a different miniier. The Mills limp was an In eandesient light, produced without nnv using up of materials It hid nothing to do with com bustion, and the "flam.-" of it was perfectly ecbl It was ceitalnly one of the most won dcrful Invrntinns of the me, and not at all ex penfive Mills made two of these limps and demonstrated their ibsolute aufre.; lmt m ex traordmaiv thing hapoened before Hie inven tion was put at the ditponl of Hie public On the night of Mmh :u, )sl. Mills' laboratoiv In Hampstoad, rnglind, was broken Into, hoth limps broken to frjfments, and all the papers describing the invention, Involving veara ef work, stolen There was not Ihe smallest rlue In the burglars Kven the reison of it s not known whether It was malice, jealousy or thefr. No vse has been made of the stolen papers Mills, who depended en those pipers, set to work again, but two minths later he fell 111 of ty phoid and died, and the world was thus deprived of his secict. o Six vcars ago an Kncllshmin named Sluvv. bridge announced tint he bad Invented a new explo,ve, to whUli he gave the mine of "fill- mile" Kxpeiimentss with "fnlmlte" proved that In an oidlnary serfico rifle It could send a bullet six miles, and it was shown that a projectile fired b "fulmlte" possessed ten times the ienetratlve (one of jono propelled by "cordite" It was a tenlhly destructive explo sive, and rne of the good things about It wis that it did not strain in any wav the gun In wlich It was used The British government en teied into negotiations with Slnvvbrldgc for the purchase of his Invention, tint he was killed in an explosion In his laboratory before the nego tiations were completed The explosion wreck ed the entire bouse, and the Are which followed deslroved whatever papeis describing Ihe nun tier of nakln,' "fulmlte" the Inventor m.y have left. si lt was shrer vinll or perl ips "c us.eilnes.," tint kept (irant 1'lnlav fiotn givlnj to the world the benefit of his invention for the total aboli tion of smoke. He evolved a simple svsteiu by which any die or light roubl he made to con sume its own carbon, and though lie demon strated the usefulness of the Invention many times, he obstinate!) refused to put It on the market or to sell the secitt of it Ilia own house, Just outside C.lasgnw, was fitted with his s.vstem, which did not cost him 7.V for tho entire buildirg, and no Jot ef smoke ever was emitted there All his fires consumed their own tmoke, and h was fond ef showing the ef flcacj of his invention to his guests, hut never would he explain the working of It, and he died two jears ago, rarrsing hl secret with him to the grave, A week before his death he had all the "anti-smoke" apparatus stripped from hit house and destrov cd. HIOHTB OF LABOIl. From the Philadelphia rtecord The conflict between the afllllsted teel cor piMllons and the Amalgamated Association promises to have at least one good result, amid much evil, In Mnilly establishing the rights of Isboe on a basis that can be shaken neither by arbitrary eniplnvers on the one hand nor on the other by coercive combinations of workmen on strike. It was lone before the laws cl any Industrial countries tolerated or recognized as. sociatlons of workmen for their mutual pro tection. In England formerly combinations of labor and strikes were treated as conspiracies and the Issders were arrested and punlshel, The Trench Constituent Asenbly of I7. vvhkli managed the ttevolutlon, vvaa certainly not Inimical In srlrlt to the rlthts of werklngmen Yet the Assembly In rccowmlclrg In each cltlren lh rlsht to ofTer or refuse his labor and to bargain as to Its conditions at the same time prohibited Mm from co-nine to an understand, ing even with other workmen for a rommnn ex. exercise ot this Irdlvldual right t nder the First Jcenublic ef France the law punished strikes even though unallendel by violence or fraud and founded on ei'iuj This legislation was inspired not so much by favoritism to employers as by the feir that "coalitions" of labor, as they were called, would exercise tjrin nv oier the freedom of Individual werklngmen not belonging to them It was not until IV.1, under the Second Kmplre, that the French liws against labor unions were abolished on the oeeision of an application of them to a peaceful strike of Tails r Inters. In this count-v, as well as In Hnglind, the progress of legislation in behalf of labor unlrns has been much more ripld F.verywhere In the I'nlted States the right of worklngmen to com bine and to strike against anv grievance Is fully recognlied on the ole ccnelltlon that the strike shsll be attended by no infringement of personal rights and by no Injury to property So complete Is this recognition bv emplojers that in most of the mills of the Steel trust the worklngm belong to the Amalgamated association In this strike no dispute Is made as to the rliJtt of the Amalgamated association to control its own meinheis emploved by the sleel companies Nor, so far as observed, is there anv disposition in the steel companlea to tluow- out of en plovment worklngmen helorglng to the union This serves to Indicate the power which organized labor has attained In this countrj. Put there is a third party In Interest, and this Is the non-union worklngmen around whom the steel strike actuall.v center These men do not wish, for reasons -if their own, to enter the Vmahamsted association er to fill urde Its control, which is their property. In their own terms; and In thl they are entitled to the amplest protection of ihe law. Kterv attempt then to coerce or "itimlelate or molest then in niiintalnitu this light nf labor should be ste-tly nil picked b.v the mil islers of the law. PRAYING AND FISHING. Frrm the Patterson, N J , I.venlng News. Mr Ilarrv Nightingale of the Paterson Supply companj and Mr John Nightingale superintend ent of the Stern. Pohlv and Herman mill, and their fithrr. .limes Nightingale, are all old successful fishermen who love the sport vcrv much Some weeks ago Ilirry Nightingale got .a permit from Mr. Mackenzie in New Yoik to go fishing on FrinMIn lake and they invited rtev I II Callaway to poln the partv, an in vitation which the Pev gentlemin gladly ae cepted, and last Stturdav the four men started off In a beautiful suirev and vcrv e-vm were on Franklin lake In one of the many flahlng boits. Mr. r.illaway has been in the rity for more thin twentv one jears and never caught, or tried to catch a fish before last Saturday in these I'niled States. Mr Nightingale showed him how to put a worm on his honk and after the partv hid rowed about the lake for an hour Mr fiallaway earnestly and Mcredlv prajed In these word. 'O Thou Jesus ol Nuireth, Who brought fi'h to Thv disciples on the sea of Oililee bring to me i fish at this time " Inside of two minutes a pickerel 12 Inehea long welching 2'i pounds elzcd the worm on Mr ttilla-v ij's hook and after a good deal of eplishlng it was sifrly landed In the boat. During the remiinder nf the dav Mr. Oallaway, who never tiled to catch a fish before In these I nlted Mates, ought exactly as tnanv as the other three experienced and Miccessful fishermen The pislor savs his success was a direct answer to praver Tins mine pastor rn he has been pricing for more than rine months for a son and that son was born in his home last night md the mother and habv are both well He .as If we all did right and prajed earnestly we should have more t-uccesa than we now en- ky. THE PRESUMPTION OF SCHOOL BOARDS. One of the profound mjsteriet in this world is the marvelous psvcho'ogical change that comes over rcp"ot ihlo, intelligent, and otherwise wise livmrn when they are elected by their fellow citirens to sene on school committees Persons who never dream of superintendent an electric pi int. niinigiiig a ruthnad, building a bridge over Niagara, lennng an aunj, or commanding a lilp, enler the duties of a school committee with the astonishing rn sumption that they can with safetv minister directly to the welfare ef children, mold socletj into right living, and shape the destinies of, a nation by meaiu of com mon education; that they can make courses of jstudv select teidierr), examine pupils, and nianige the Inlinul md pedagogical affairs nf a school sjstcm This pievailing state would be rlrilMiloui, were it not so awfully sole.nn. 'Ihe presumption of itchool boards is the acute distress of the nation, it is the culmination of bad palitlK, the vcrv worst by product of democritlc evolution For this presumption mil lions In nionej are wasttd every year, countless children sufTrr. and free government Is imperil ed -Col. F. W. Parker, In Quincy (Mass.) Ad dress. PERSONAL DRIFT. flcronlmn, the noted Indian, has announced his conversion to ihrlstlaniti and is to all ap peanncotvinost devout Admiral end Mrs, Pewey have ergsged apirt menta at the Hotel Wentworth, Portsmouth, N II . for a part of Auginl The Admiral ia well known in that city, as his first wife was a Portsmouth woman However, this will be his first visit since the battle which won him fame. Itev Mlnot J Savage is th latest celebrity to raise warning voice ajalnst the felly of overwork He declares that about half the world's effoit is wasted, and tint we should be better off If we should epcad in dignified idlenesa somo of the tune we devote to useless labor. vV A Clark, of Montana, bas said to have entered into partnership wllh ,r4nd Duke Michael to work copper mines in the I ul mauntains. It is alleged that the Orand Duke, who own the mines, offered Mr Claik a sluie in them if be vrould take control This offer resulted in .Mr Clark investing tj.fSsi.fifFfl in the propertj-. The Duke of Sparta, lieu apparent to the throne of Oreece, was :u ycare old on July 21st He is luckier thin moat people, however, for lie maj be said to have two birthdijs, the otl.ei occurring on August 2d, for In Crcece the old calendar, as in ona or two othei countiies, has not been entirely nineded bj the new. Chief astronomer F. W. Djson nf the flreen wlch Oherrvatory arrived last month in fan Iranclno en Ins homeward Journey fromhumarta, where he observed the total eclipse ol the sun. He has vislrted the l.Ult obcuvatery, ami in tends inspecting other American observatories be foie he returns to i:,igland Kmperor William has appointed Profesair ljich Prygaltki to command the ticrmau South Polar expedition, The objective point -if the expedition Is Kerguelrn. and thence snuthwaid. In case South I'olar land Is discovered a scientific station is to be erected and maintained f.ir at least ono jcar. The expedition most return in the spilng of l'sll at tha latest I.ady llemilone Dlackwood, who was one ol Ihe nurses decorated by the cuecn at Marl borough house, is the second daughter of the MaiiuU of Duffrrin and va. Her eldest sisler, whose nanie curioiislv enough is also Hermione, in the wife of llnland Munro Ferguson, while the jnungest, Lady Victcrla, Is mauled to Lord I'lunket. Her eldest brother, Lord Ava, was killed outside ladvsmltli at the beginning of last jear, and another brother, Lord I rederlck Temple, was wounded a few month, ago in South Alrica, Binghamtoi Privat. Training School for nervous, Pack yard and Deaf Mute Chil dren. Manual Training, Physical Culture, Needlework, Music, Kindergarten, Articula. tlon. Open jear round. Circulir. Prlcea moderate. 8. A. DOOL1TTI.E, ii Falrriew Avenue, Our Outing Sale of Shoes With prices we are as thankful to give as you are to receive. 500 pair Youths' Leathef Bicycle Shoes, tan and black 75C 500 pairs Men's Tan, high and low cut, usually $3.50. This sale.... X.5U 200 pairs Ladies Black Vlci Kid Button Shoes warranted to be worth 1.50. This sale 75C Lewis & Reilly 114-110 WYOMINQ AVENUS. Cedar Chests It is now time to put your wintercloth ing and bedding and you need something that will keep away moths. There is nothing better for this pur pose than the Cedar Chests that are car ried in all sizes by Hill & Connell 1S31 Washington Avenue. THiRD NATIONAL BANK OF SCRANTON. Capital $200,000. Surplus $525,03). 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 Belin, Jr.. Vice pres. Wm. H. Peck, Cashier. Refrigerators, Oil Stoves, Screen Doors, Gas Stoves, Window Screens, Hammocks. 325-327 Penn Avenne, if I m A Second-Class City with a First-Class Stock of Out Glass, Sterling Silverware Clocks, Etc, Suitable for Wedding Gifts. Mercereati & Connell, 132 Wyoming Avenue. ENTRIES CLOSE AUGUST IS. After August 15 no will be The Tribune's Vis.....M , M, r EDUCATIONAL CONTEST v The Tribune's Education.il Contest has been open twelve weeks and still has four weeks to run. There is plenty of time even yet for new contestants as is demonstrated by the fact that last year two of the winners were only in three and four weeks respectively. The eight special rewards are offered to the young men or women who secure the largest number of points in the contest. They are required to canvass for subscribers to The Tribune and nre credited with one point for every month's subscription se cured, a year's subscription counting twelve points. Two of the winners will secure lour year scholarships, valued at 81,000 each, for the work of a few weeks. Why shouldn't one of them be you ? 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 Husic, $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 n The first two scholarships do net Incl'id meals, but the contestants sscutlnj thrs will be elven tin (10) pr cent, oj all tho money lie oc she turns in to Tin Tribune, to assist in paving thU expense?. There are four weeks yet ot the contest and it is not too late for any energetic young man or woman to enter. Some of l.iit vp.ir's: wiranprs: voire nnlv in thrpn nr fmir weckc. Send a postal to The fnbune for full particulars, including I hnnH;nmiIv illiietrntpd liranli'lpt. AHclifss HWW ...v. ..HV,. ,.... ww. ' .....vw, Editor Educational Contest, Tribune, Scranton, Pa. P. J. HONAN, Merchant Tailor. 319 Lackawanna Avenue. SCRANTON'S BUSINESS HOUSES THESE ENTERPRISING DEALERS CAN SUPPLY YOUR NEEDS OF EVERY CHARACTER PROMPTLY AND SATISFACTORILY. L. SOMMAR. Ilulldins Contractor Emplojs union msn Estimates chfertullj' eiven. rtemoclclln? and repairing a specialty. 3SO WASHINGTON AVE. HAVE YOUR WATCH FIXED RIGHT WE ARE SATISFIED WITH A SMALL PROFIT. BERNHARD, jeweler. :i5 i..ck.u wvv AvnTi: EDWIN S. WILLIAMS. CONTRACTOR. BUILDER ROOM SB COAL EXCHANQE, SCRANTON. PA. OH Jledal Cc Photographer Ctiildr.'n s V. Artist. FOR SALE ni'ttl.lKS and VV 0 ONS o( all Kinds, nlso Houses and llmirliPK I, its .it bjr.Mins llOHhb Cl.ll'PI-n and CROOMI.n at M. T. Kcllcr's I..a kauannaCurrujc orks. farrell's Transfer Moves freizM 1 urm tin? and BJBX'iuc Mffl, Pianos nd Ma chtneiv 217 I,acc,aanni vie J. B. WOOLSEY c& CO CONTRACTORS AND ' BUILDERS. Dealers in Plate Glass and Lumber op all hinds. LACKAWANNA UNDERWEAR STORE Will ce' all theli samplrs o' line imported Madras Kimts lor men at i )c . -rth tl ,n f- WALTER E. DAVIS, 214, Sie. 2IO PAULI BLDG. Attorney-nt-Law, Scranton, Pa. MRS. SARA ALLYN, MANICURE. CHIROPODIST AND SCALP TREATMENT M sot Meais nuildine Parlors open Monjjy. Thuicday and Saturday ecenms' E. JOSEPH KUt.rri.-L, rear Ml lackauanna avenue inanulicriner ot Wire Screens ot all Kinds, dill) prnpirid fni 111 rprinj 'ca.on We mike ail k nds I poult ereen, elr PETER f,riHP, General Contractor, Huilder and Dealer in liullnini; l"ne c emeni,n or rcnais a spe cult) Telephone IWl Olftce. .',.'7 Wailnnston avenue more new contestants received in 1 , Jf Allis-Chalmers Co Successors to Machine Business of Dickson Manufacturing Co., Scranton nnd Wllkcs-Barre, Pa. Stationary Engines, Boilers, Mining Machinery, Pumps. HOTEL TERRACE. Parlor Hotel Accommodations unsurpassed f-pecial eUMVfi:R HATES to permanent suests. (let them Tahlc Doard W H VVHYTE Hanlevs Bakery, 420 SPRUCE ST. Successor to HUNTINGTON We maka a specialty ol fine breal stuHa. Orders for Salads, Oysters, Croquettes, etc., promptly filled. A lull lino ol I-ce Cream and Ices. W. A. HARVEY. Electric Wirins and Fixtures. Electric Hell and Telephone Work. 309 Commonwealth Buildno CIlIinMC WsLAMS SPECIALTY. DR. S. GERTRUDE EVAANS OSTEOPATH. 13? nnd 12H Washington avenue, Fcranton Pa Ottl. o hours ,) to 12 m , 1 30 to S SO p. m Only practirin; lady osteopath In Northeast ern l'ennsvlcania FRED H. WINTER. aS4 CAPOUSE AVENUE, Maple firocerlM and Provisions. A lull line cl vegetables, etc, received dally THE SCRANTON VITRIFIED BRICK AND I ILE MANUFACTURING COMPANY. Makers ol Pavins Urlck, etc M II Dale n.irral ales Agent, Otflce 8J Washington ave Works at Nay Aug, Pa . I; & W V II It Kinqsbury & Scranton. Manufacturers' Agents MINE AND MILL SUPPLIES. District Acents for John . IlncblniKS hons (o s vVirc Itope and l'lcc tri al Wire Outta Pen ha and llubber Mftf, to'i Ilcltinc, Parkins:, Hose and Mechanical llubber floods hiiowlton Parkin; Carter's Oil Clothing Itnom .110 Paull Bldg SEOURITY BUU.OINO 4 SAVINGS UNION, Heme olfce, CO? JOT Means Buildine, transacts a general building and Iran buslne) tluoughout il'i' stale nl Pennsvlvania x JAMES J. MURRAY, c-urcessoi to ib Hunt A Cornell Co, in tin end sheet metal noik ani sentlUtion Carton tuiiac.es, irpaira anl genenl tin vsork u specialty No U I icacvanna avenue WLSOV 4 COMPANY. Pashlonahle Tailors (Hotel .lermvn MuiMIng), S'1 !-piiie street Scnnin Pa Milts rreNSed, Pi .ents pants pres'erl in rents Clothing re. Pan I nlled for and delivered Se'V Phone Wl l,WW. M.H..H"1" IHWM "WWW ASK YOUR GROCER FOR KIRKPATRICK'S PURE SPICES AND FRESH ROASTED COFFEES. r , ..-, iftry, j. mi -JuMmt Jriiri 0,. - - - --- tsh1sii a. jJt jMtfgaHHHNBM&s. JJlli!lEIlJil!JSgSJ5S " lJr-w in ft4SSmSSSBA .7 mmm m 4 iiiitt.iir.iMi 1 ii i g ni ',m lis