v THE SCR ANTON TRIBUNE-THURSDAY, APRIL 17, 1902. f ' - I v & 5 V Mis E '-. W " ' Mf- i-. y - f j ' &;-' $. i)c $itato) $tCSune lib1i.lict Dully, K.rcept Siiwlny. br The Trlb. mitf I'ublbiilng tympany, at Kilty Conj'j MVY s. mcitAnD, r..lllor. O. K. nVXDEE, UuftneM M.muncr. New Voik Office! 150 Nimum St. .. 8. 8. VnCKt.ASO. Sole Agent tor foreign AihMljiItig Kntcrcd at ttie r-otofuce nt Scrnnluii, 1'J., i Second Claw AIjII Matter. When space will permit, The Tribune Is always glad to print short letters from Its friends bear ing on current topics, but Its rule Is that these must be signed, for. pub lication, by the writer's real name; and the condition precedent to ac ceptance Is that all contributions shall be subject to editorial revision. ". tub rr,.T turn roit mjvkiiti.oinu. KJ, The follonfiig tahlo aIiow.4 (lie pi Ice per ' If eath lncrllonp fp.icu lo be ueil within one J ear. if-, ' "" rjiTnnrnsriiTnTniil"- t'ffli- K - . ..J)ISPIAV. ILtier; Hnnlltig.1 rl'l'j. Sj' . I.ri"tlinn.V)"lntliciT M I 7V I .''" m. M Inclm 10 .14 .1" rji iijil " :;( ,:u I .!'! ft - W " '.'.',','.','. ,'5 '.' .'il ft., 111 " Ill .1". i .! f. WHX) " .V! .17 I .1W (wo " I .is I .iiVi I .n .' l-'or wiM o( tliutiK. reiolulloiu of cnmloHici, 4, ami clmll.if contribution ill the inline uf nil- L ritllng 'ilio Trlbuiio nukes a diaige of ft cents W- tine. it Hales of Clarified AdveilWiiR fuiiiMicil on i.' ' npplleatlon. jj SCRANTON, APRIL. 17, 1002. making; fncca nt the president for dar ing to nnino hucIi a man for office. But clarkson, If somewhat sanguin ary tit politics, Ih a first into man In every other wny-Htble, honest, gonial it ml capuble. lie knows politics, office holding mid liuniaii nutttrc, and what there Is to do, either In or out of the oflteo of surveyor of the port, liu will uo quickly and well. Although no longer ii ttedgllng he Is not too old to play a stiff hand In tho politics of the Kinplre state! and one characteristic of Jim Clitrksou Is that If ho gives you his word you don't need to ask for a bond. That between Teddy ltooscvelt, the civil service reformer, and this bluod-stalticd veteran of the guillotine there could be enough In common to warrant the former In giving to the latter n fat olllce may pusisslc the Inli-dc-dah boys; but It Is easily explained on the very simple and Hiiillclent basis that James f. Clarkson Is In the class of the One Hundred per cent. net. .Such men always appeal to men of tbelr kind, no matter what tbe differ ences In race, creed or beliefs. Attorney General Knox seems will ing to take the beef trust by the horns without the aid of congress. Was Quay Himself? WHEN Colonel Quay per mitted John P. Klktn to carry forward it cam paign for coventor to a. point where it had gained large pro portions, It was by the assurance that if Elkln made ills tight before the peo ple and they looked favorably unon him he (Quay) would place no obstacle In the way. Had Quay said, early in the game, that he regnrded Elkln's cniidldacy as politically inadvisable at this time, we have reason to know that Klktn,' from friendly feeling, would have deferred to Quay's counsel and bided a more auspicious spason. But no. Quay encouraged Elkln to carry his ambition before the people. Klktn did so, and won overwhelmingly in every county where an issue was raised. He asked no aid from Quay; all he wanted was a free Held and fair play, lie frankly said that if he could not win on that basis he would be the first to bow to the choice or the ma jority and strip ofC his.' coat to help lo elect the more popular candidate. That was manly, fair and square. Then came Quay's knife thrust: a blow struck with inconceivable brutal ity amidst the utterance ot professions oc friendship. As Quay struck it, he admitted, so the story goes, that lie was ashamed to look Klktn in the face. Tills blow undoubtedly crippled ' El kin, but. how does it leave Qnav? El kln is young and sturdy; lie will re cover. But what a perverse and un toward, climax to the fast-ending polit ical career of Mutthew Stanley Quay, the man of whom It used to be said that he "never went back on a friend".' Was Quay himself when ho did it? Thousands of Iteuublicans who have been his friends are reluctant to think that he was. They prefer to think that he acted this perfidious and re volting part while under some malign spell from which lie will yet awaken ere the mischief is beyond repair. The present sluto of temperature will cause big trout fishing yarns to be re ceived with n grain of suspicion. T King Leopold will go down to his tory as a monarch who had the faculty of pleasing and displeasing his sub jects at the same time. A'" Take Your Tlmt. -THOUGH he lias the reputa tion of being "a glutton for work," Attorney General Knox ought to think twice before undertaking any more anti-trust eiigagements.Ho lias three already the Northern Securities company case, the case against the rebating trunk line railroads and the so-called anti-beef trust case and these are ample to oc cupy his energy and develop the powers and limitations of the federal govern ment in the premises. It Is, or course, very desirable "that the people should be safeguarded against Imposition from soulless octo puses, but on the other hand it Is equal ly desirable that legitimate enterprise should not bo subjected to a mania of attack. There is a happy medium be tween these extremes that needs to be sought out by conservative statesmen ship and, when found, occupied and held. To make a big show of pursuing corporations when public outcry, is clamorous and then In reality to do nothing would be even worse politics thanv,to let the public clamor without heeding tts alarms. HjT-hS people are convinced that In the iZMP? Which Jt has thua far tulten to iMUfffrco tho Sherman law the present jSJaliohril administration is absolutely isls?6"0? It means to do Its duty wtth jjjtft'fenr or favor. Hut prudence warns Tfi'at It Is as posslblo to overdo, as to ;5sF9l,e Ba teBt cuso fught through ilov;flnlsl and clearly won on legal ftie'rit' would do moro to discourage the .ti"lpHH?s tl,an tno exuberant starting fc,fi dosen cases wltlr tho consequent inevitable diffusion of energy und inter est. President Roosevelt should not let ;jiButtorney general champ too furious UyUtlio bit. SlSnSDM?3 r We new pension commls- T5eiV 'Eugene F. Ware, are now get- oven oy rouging ms poems to be shed in the dally press. A Man of Teddy's Ilk, nAMKS ,B. CbARKHOX, whom the president lias decided to appoint surveyor of the port of New York, Is a politician of the old Kchopl,'; wli03e boast was that as "Jieadsman" of tho Harrison adminis tration he decapitated iiO.OOO Democratic fourth-class postmasters in four years and replaced them with stalwart Re publicans. For this dexterous swing, ing of the uxe General Clarkson got himself very ardently disliked by tho civil service reformers, who today arc Turn on the Light. HE PRESIDENT'S decision that charges of inhumanity JL. against Amerldnu military operations In tho Philippines shall be probed to the bottom and tho facts developed regnrdless of whom they help or hurt is satisfactory to tho American people. When responsi bly made bv men of character and judgment, they demand Investigation. Once this is entered upon there Is no halting until the end. It is evident to all that the work of the army, hard ut best, is being made more difficult by being dragged Into party politics. Partisan motive sticks out from every corner of the minor ity's attitude in congress. Kagor cur rency is given by political opponents of the administration lo ovorv idle rumor wafted from the far Pacific that is calculated to reflect upon tlio good faith of our civil or military represen tatives in the Philippines; and Inevit able shortcomings are magnified tre mendously. All this, while exasperat ing, is to be expected. It conies as a natural sequence of the nearness of a congressional election. Rut because the opposition is cap tious and unfair is not a reason why the administration should seek to evade any responsibility or shirk any duly in connection with the Philippine problem. Its conscience is clean and if the hands ot any agent are dirty, tin sooner the fact is known the sooner It can be remedied. Without corrobor ation we will not believe that our army ofilceis have changed since be ing sent to tho Philippines fioin Amer ican gentlemen to savages. Until there is clear proof to the contrary, we shall decline to give credence to the nara tlves of trans-Pacllle horrors that are doing duly in the vicinity of congres sional committee rooms as prelimin aries to a wholesale partisan raid on Republican ascendancy in congress. Yet if the obstructionists want in vestigations, let them have them with out limit. Turn on tho calcium ray put every suspect through the and gauntlet. It may be a little hard for the American soldier to fight foes in front and rear at once: but he Is be coming used to doing that. The experience of Secretary Hay and Pension Commissioner Ware should be a warning- to young men who have an inclination ut write poetry. An inju dicious rhyme will often haunt a man thiough life with greater persistence than the "damned spot" upon the fair palm of Lady Macbeth. Utilizing Waste Land. A m m ' m mf' Mr .si Mr' WfTdZ ' ' V '' ' V, n UK.4',. , ' u '&2ti' M-Afr1'' i&Nw CCORDING to the Xew York Times, there arc in Northern Minnesota some :!,000,OUO acres of sandy, hilly, or rocky land lit only for tho growth of pines. "If the state should begin now to set out trees on this land and continue at 'the rate of say :.7,500 acres annually, tho whole of this waste area would in eighty years," our New York contem porary estimates, "become a well stocked pine forest, yielding for at least a century thereafter, with proper man agement under a system of pcleiulflc forestry, at least 673,000,000 feet, board measure, of merchantable pine lumber annually. The revenue to the state from tills vleld should Am something over $.1,000,000 per annum." The cost of planting pines as close as. would bo advantageous Is estimated not more than S3 per acre on tho average. This calls to mind what lias been done on a smaller but even moro inter esting si-ale by a dtlaou of Pennsyl vania Colemun K. Sober, of Union county. Five years ago last fall ho planted on 205 acres of wasto mountain land, laud like much to be seen in and around the hard coal mines, laud so utterly barren and useless, to alt ap pearances, that If anybody had offered it to you on condition that you would have to pay the taxes you would have run away from It at the speed of a small boy hastening to seo tho circus parade, more than 100,000 young chest nut trcps. Last fall ho harvested his first crop. There were only thirty bushels, worth $7 a bushel nothing to speak of, yet. Hut do a little figuring. If each tree at maturity yields on an average one iiuart, you have li.U'o bush els, At $0 a bushel that Is $18,750 a year gross. Allow ?3,7."0 for protecting and gathering tlio crop and you have $1,500 annual net return on not to exceed a $3,000 original Investment to say nothing of bark yield or fuel, Few oil wells pay better. Wo know of iiO'goia mine ut present undeveloped offering half so good a show of profit, Looking out oyer tho rocky waste lands in the vicinity of Scrnnton, the thought is suggested that If we hud a few Coleman K. Sobers thero would soon bo Uttlo need to wonder what will happen when our coal gives out. The misfortune of a lady at Pasadena tho other day who was severely wound ed by u bullet fired by u boy hunter, Illustrates anew thecvil of placing flre arma In the hands of urchins, an evil that should he suppressed by state leg Illation If city- ordinances cannot be framed to regulate the nuisance. Prob ably no city In the country Is cttt'sod to u greater extent by the Flobcrt rifle than our own. tinder the pretense of shooting sparrows, numerous boys of tender years arc. sending bullets In every direction regardles.i of what may bo in range, It In not hard to under stand the course of tho savages of the western plains of the Philippines June tcs bringing up their young by methods that foster bloodthirsty propensities which they deem essential for self pre servation, but why Christian parents In an enlightened laud, who would shudder at the thought of attending a bull fight or at cruelties often practiced upon domestic animals, aro witling to arm their offspring with deadly weap ons and encourage In them a spirit of indirferciicc for the sufferings of any living thing that Is liable to destroy tho last spark of humanity that may have smoldered within the youtliful breast, Is n puzzle that Is dlfllcult of solution. If parents have no regard for the rights ot people who are victims of the Flo bert rlllo nuisance, some laws should bo enacted to regulate It. Tho man or woman who places a weapon of this kind in the hands of a boy under eigh teen years of age is, unwittingly or otherwise, endangering property and often lives of his neighbors. it v OMIine Sttdies of fltintan NaUire, Keene and the Bootblack. On tlio Morning thill .Iiiinci It, Krcnc ! firmed in Wall eticot ullcr lili icivul nines'1 me of thMi! iMonipiir.ililc miih of ficccloiil, III whose lesitoii no null wuril u.t "kowtow" appears nncl tlio miclein uf wIiih-p foiltmo ly in Ills Mick ini lo, f-plnl the fciv.il pi'cnl.itor in lie ttroiie into the tticol, uml he, nniK-imceil It to n pal thus : "Hoy, MII.C, here's lie filciul 'Jim' Keene biek all liclit, all light!" "Your filtiul," said Hie other with a fine sir win. "You talk a.s if j on Knew liini." "Sine." Mid the other, iiinl to prove It lie hailed the speculator llnii: "Have u xhliie, .tim?" 'the refreshing fainlllniity liroiiRht n Millie, to Mr. Kcene's fnte. Ills eyes twinkled ami, flop pliilf, he placed lili haiitl on the lioj's hlioulder, and In pleading; tonci fald: "My hoy, pleaje don't call mo Jim; call mo .Jiinmle." Xew Yolk Tillies Magazine Supplement. Their Spiritual Adversary. The llcv. William ( Slair, an Kpiefopal 1rrjgm.w llvinj; in Philadelphia, once took the services for a hiother clcrs.ym.iii In u Xew lci?y liai i-h. The Sunday rcliool superintendent Introduced him to tlio cluldien by name, and l.e slralshtwaj' began to ailvUo and instinct them as to :i ii(;hteoii, exemplary life, dwelling upon the necessity for waifaie with our spnitual ad veisaiy. "And now, childien," he nked, "iho is our .piiitu.il adversary?" ".Mr. Stair!" saiouled bojs and gun in nil parts of the loom, apparently pioud of their quality of quick compifhen'lon. Xew York Til liune. Just Wild to Try the Bath. A conlituenf. of one of the. Virginia. iepiec:i. tatives took lib lut tlip lo 1'Iotid.i a i-hoil time ago. Today the leprescnlalive received a slow ing letter from the con-titucnt telling of Iii ex pel ience. "f am down here in lTorida." lie wiite, "and I am li.nlng a gloat time. At the hotel they gae mo the finest room ;ou ever kav, and ju-t off it i-t a bathroom lb it N simply great. It :ii a shiny while tub nud silver-plated trimmings and it loiJ fo lino 1 can hardly wait until fc'at unlay night." Washington (.'or. Xew Yoik Woild. Difficult to Count. In the tiilllinciy .show loom of one of the 'aige department stores In Philadelphia u customer in quiied of a .aIowouian what they charged lo clean feathers. "Ten rents apiece," was flip an swer. "Oh, I could nrNcr pay that price!" ga.-ped tho uomun, "How many have you? If you bale a Mini cient number, wo might make a i eduction in the price. "Why, I couldn't count them, for 1 have two beds full." Philadelphia Time?. CEYLON TEA GREENor BLACK Is meritorious tea. It gives greater gratification to lovers of tea than any other variety, because It is pure and uncolored. That's the secret of its success. i . ASK YOUR GROCER FOR SALADA Ceylon Tea REFRESHING. DELICIOUS. Sold only In lead Faoketn. 60c, 60c and 70c Per Pound, SCRAWTUfVS' BUSINESS HOUSES. 2p.'lL)l.-ySu" "emoa of nvmnr ZliUfST.V PROMPTLY AND BATI9-FAOTOniLY, FOR SALE nUfldlES und WAOON9 of ill IdndNi ulna M . T. KELLER Lickawinni Carriage Work. J.B. Woolsey Co CONTRACTORS AND BUILDERS. Dealer j In Plate Glass and Lumber of all kinds. ALWAYS BUSY. Spring and Slimmer Oxfords and Roots that con tent the mind and comfort the feet. Men's "Always" Busy Oxfords, 33.00 ladles' "Melba" Oxfords, ?2.30. Lewis & Reilly, 114-116 Wyoming Avenue. s pecial ale tiff Bosom. BECURITY.aUlLDINB ASAVINasUUION Homo Office, MS-tlOD Hears Iiulldlnf. V are maturing tlimc earli month which Hiovr a net ttaln to the investor of about U per cent. Wc loan nionev. Wo ulo Hiuo HIMi PAID STOCK Jltw.00 per share, Inter est payable semi-annually, AI.DIiRT BALL, Secretary. - E. JOSEPH KUETTEL, rear 511 Lackawanna avenue, niaiiuf,u:tui"r of Wlro Serecns of all kinds; lully prepared (or the spring scajon. We make all kinds of porch screens, etc. PETER STIPP. Ucncr.il Contractor, Rullder and Dealer in IlulldliiR Stone, Cenientlns of cell.il a pc daily. Telephone ."t)i. Olflce, 32" Washington nienue. THE SCRANTON VlTRIPlEO BRICK AND TILE MANUFAGTUttinaCOMPANr Maker of Pa!nc "rick, ete. M. II. Dale, General Sales Atfent, Otfk-c .".23 Wahl:i;ton lie. Worku at Xay Auk, Pa., II. & V. V. lt.lt. The Greatest oi All Educational Contests OVER $9500iSPECIAL REWARDS The Scrantoii Tribune will open on May 5 Its third great Educational Contest. Like the others, whjch proved so profit able to the contestants during the past two years, this will be open to young people, not only of Scrnnton. but throughout Itcka wanna and other counties in Northeastern Pennsylvania,.. There are offered as Special Rewards to those who secure the' largest number of points, Thirtythree Scholarships institutions in the country. in some of the leading educational The list is as follows : 2 Scholarships in Syracuse University, at $432 each. . . 864 1 Scholarship in Bucknell University 520 1 Scholarship in The University of Rochester 324 Brass Beds Elegantly Rich . Designs The new patterns we are now showing are beautiful specimens of the metal worker's and designer's skill they possess charac ter and finish that appeals to the exacting purchaser. The prices, too, are as at tractive us the designs. We invite inspection nnd comparison. Have you seen the new patterns in the twin beds we've something worth seeing, whether, you wish to buy or not. Many new and beautiful patterns in odd Dressers and pieces for the bedroom. Hill&Connell 121 Washington Avenue, ill lis, 98c Former Price, $1.50 and $2.00. EDUCA TIONAL. Announcement During the summer of 1902, in struction in all the subjects required for admission to the best colleges and scientific schools will be given at Cotuit Cottages, a Summer School of Secondary Instruction, Cotuit, Massachusetts, under the direction of Principal Charles E. Fish The courses of instruction are for the benefit tf live classes of students: 1. Candidates who have received conditions at the entrance examina tions. 2. Candidates who have postponed examinations until September. 3. Students in Secondary Schools, who, by reason of illness or other causes, have deficiencies to make up. 4. Students in Secondary Schools who wish to anticipate studies and save time in the preparation for college. 5. Students in college who have admission conditions which must be removed before the beginning of the next Scholastic Year. For particulars address, CHARLES E. FISH, Principal School of the lackawanna, Scranton, Pa. 412 Spruce Street. NEW YORK HOTELS. WESTMINSTER HOTEL Cor. Sixteenth it. and Ir ,n: nice, NEW YORK. AniMkin Plan, 3.50 Per Vtj and Upward. European Plan, $1.00 Per Day and Upward Special Rate lo Famlltea. T. THOMPSON, Prop. 4-f-f-f-f-V-f-f-f-t------- -f For Business Men In the hsrt ot th wholesale, district. For Showier. minutes' 'irallc to Wnnnmakera; S minutes to Slccet Cooper's Big Store. Easy ot access to the ureal Dry Goods Stores. For Sightseers On block from E'way Cars, citr ine easy transportation to all points of Interest. l HOTEL ALBERT NEW lOKK. rer. Mth 6T. A UNIVlinSITT PI Only one Block from Broadway. Rooms, $1 Up, ffiT82SL, Do You Want a Good Education? Not a tliort course, nor an easy course, nor i cheap course, but tlio bct education to be lud. Xu other education is worth spendi'iiR time and money on. If you do, write for a catalojue of Lafayette College Easton, Pa. nhicli ofli-M thorough preparation in tlia Kngineeriiii; und Chemical ProfcHunn an ncll as the regular College courses. Scholarship in Washington School for Boys M OO Scholarship in Williamsport Dickinson Seminary . . . 750 Scholarship in Dickinson Collegiate Preparatory School -. 750 Scholarship in Newton Collegiato Institute 720 Scholarship in Keystone Academy 600 Scholarship in Brown College Preparatory School . . . 600 Scholarship in the School of the Lackawanna 400 Scholarship in Wilkes-Barre Institute 276 Scholarship in Cotuit Cottage (Summer School) 230 Scllolnrsliins -In Scrnntnn Conservatoi'V of Music, at $125 each 500 Scholarships in Hardenbergh School of Music and Art 460 Scholarships in Scranton Business College at ?100 each 300 Scholarships in International Correspondence Schools, average value 857 each 285 Scholarships in Lackawanna Business College, at S85 each. 170 Scholarships in Alfred Wooler's Vocal Studio 125 $1708 6023 1840 33 $0574 Each contestant failing to secure one of the scholarships as a special reward will receive ten per cent, of all the money he or she secures for The Tribune during .the contest. Special Honor Prizes. A new feature is to be added this year. Special honor prizes will be given to those securing the largest number of points each month. Just what the prizes will be are to be announced later, but they will consist of valuable and useful presents,- such as watches, books, etc. The best explanation of the plan of The Tribune's Educational Contest will be found in the rules, which are here given : - RULES OF THE CONTEST. The special rewards will be given to the person accuring the largest number of point. Point will be credited to contestants yc curine; new Mib-cribeM to Tho Scrauton Tiibuue n. follous: Points. One month's Mib-Lription "r .' 1 Tlnec months ,-ulweriptloii... 1.23 U Six nioiitliV subscription 2.30 One year's subscription 5.G0 12 The contestant ivltli the highest number ot points will be ghen a choice from tho li-l of jpceial lewaiib; the contetant with tho second hlshest number 6i points will bo gHcn a choice of the reiiuiiihu re waul", and so on through the ii.t. The 001110.41.-1111 who hi'curci the highest number of points during any calendar month of the contest will rccoUo a special honor rcwaid, tills reward bcinc entirely independent of the ultimate disposition ot tiic scholarship. Kach contestant failing 'to secure a pc cial reward will ho given 10 per cent, of all money ho or she turns in. All subscription:! mast bo paid in advance. Only new subscribe! will bo counted. Renewals by persons who.?o, names ore al ready on our subscription list will not be credited. The Tribune will investigate each subscilptiou and if four.d irregular in any way leserves the right to reject it. Xo transfers can be made alter credit has once been given. All subscriptions and the cash to pay for them must bo handed in nt The Tribune of lice within the week in which they are se cured, to (liar papers can be sent to the subscribers at once. Subsciiptions must bo written on blanlts, which can be secured at The Tribune office, or will be sent by null. TRIBUNE WANT ADS. BRING QUICK RETURNS THE SLAG ROOFING OF- THE WARREN EHRET CO., washinotoTavenue Is the BEST roofing, It is guaran teed for 10 years. Is absolutely FIRE PROOF. Never requires paint ing or any kind of coating Write us and our representative will call town or country. , , Dr. & Mrs. John MacDuffie's SCHOOL FOB GIRLS 2Sth yr.ir. Twcnty-lho years under the manage ment of MISS HOWlum, College prepaintory and uradpiiilo (ouisrc Itesldcnt pupils limited to 21). CO girls iioti-iealilcnt. Dcautlful grounds. Tenuis comts. Instruction in arcordanro with highest requirements ,of best colleges, l'or par ticulars ami catalogue address John Jfaclhifflc, l'h. D Spilnglleld, Mass. Those desiring to enter the Contest should send in their names at once, and they will be the first to receive the bopk of instructions and canvasser's outfit when the contest opens onMay 5. All questions concerning the plan will be cheerfully answered. Address all communications to CONTEST EDITOR, Scranton Tribune, Scranton, Pa. i. For Wedding Gifts, Silverware, Gut Glass, Clocks and Fine. China Alercereau & Connell, 132 Wyoming: Avenua. 'Phone 2007. Old 'Phono 792. Don't Strike ! Buy the S0RANTON COURESrONDENOE BOKO0L3 SCRANTON, I'A. T. 3. Foster, President, nimrr II. Lawill, Iteiv It. J, roster, Stanley V. Alltn, Vice President. Secretary, SPRING AND Atlnntitfcity. Hotel Sothern Set end of Virginia aieiiue, the most fashion. able avenue in Atlautlu City, Within a few lepa of the faniotn Steel Pier, t'ompleto with alt conveniences, Including .tram heat, un par. lor, elevator, and hot ami cold baths. Table uiuurpjaticl; dlicct ocean view, lUtes-J'.'.liO to $3.00 per day; frr.'.OO to IJOJ weekly, Write lor boollct. Tho N. R. BOTHWELL, Formerly of Scvantou, H OTEL DALEIGH R Atlantic City, N. J. Capacity enlarged to 400. New and Modern. 1 300 I'.tiAUTIKUL ROOMS Will make a Special Spilng- ltato of $2 and $1M per day; $10, $12 and 913 per week. Tlio kupertor wnlco and cuUIno of the past two teuont will be maintained throughout lift entire year. JOIi II. &COTIT Matchless Splendors ortlie Canadian Rockies I3ANKF tho IjAKKS in tho CLOUDS, VOHO VAUaKY, tho OltKAT OLA CIKIt a region described by Whym lier, th'j toiifiuoror of tho Miitterborn, an lifty or sixty Swltm'luwls rolled Into one reached only by tho Canadian Pacific Railway Dully trniwontinontnl train service throiifiliont the year from Toronto and Montreal. IMPJSWAIa LIMITED, cron3lnEr tlio continent In 97 hours, leaves Toronto mm .uontreai (com uieiiclng Juno intlt next) every Sunday, Wednesday and Friday, Bleeping und dining cars attuched to all through I ruin. Flrst'Cluss hotels In tho mountains. Swiss guides at tho principal points, For rates, etc., apply to nearest ugent of the (J. 1, H., or to K. V, Skinner, 333 EroudwaV Now York. ROBERT KERR, Passenger Traffic Manager, Montreal "Smoot," the Typewriter Man, takes pleasure in ex hibiting its merits from morn till night. 1st floor Guernsey Building, Scranton, Pa. tniAA PARMKlU J ttCHCROPfll Headquarters for Incandescent Gas Mantles, Portable Lamps, THE NEW DISCOVERY Kern Incandescent Gas- Lamp. Gunster&Forsyth 233327 Penu Avenue. Sf ,3?iiL! " -' ' ''3&m f'"'&Ai ' w, -j- tfi 'fe;V ''', -k -jp'if .' ifJ'v -iVA-' -'; :A 1 2iM$m&KikV!fti m wwrmmmmrWBm mmWfmttimvi
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers