iii -tA v mass ? Ji V ff i'-f T,1 ! it p '. v ' ' 4,f" "'- 4 r " ' e s ' ' ' il y,ri V-p '"''T'' "' ,ir a fit" I' THE SCRANTON TRIBUNE-IONDAY, JUJuY id, 1902. SHn" &' i r r s-f ' 0 a. fevv; 1 w i w 4 I K TV V, v. i. ft- L y I ? i 1 a l$ V' is; iv." f;- I. r&v 5 llA r rfs - f K & (Se $crAtrfon $r(Butte Publldheil TJnlly Except Bimdny.y Tho Trltiuno Fubllslilus Company, at tiny Cents a Month. . lilVY 8. ntCliAIlD, KiHtor. O. P. BYXBEK, Biiglncin Mutineer. Now York Offlco.BiJa $u0t Solo Agent for Fol o1b Advertising. Entered nt tlio Poslomoo nt flcrnnton, Pa., ns Second CliiBS Mnll Matter. When spnee will permit The Trlbuno Is always glad to print short letters from, lta friends bear ing on current topics, but its rule is thnt theso must be signed, for pub lication, by the writer's real name; nnd' tho condition precedent to ac coptnnco la that nil contributions shnli be subject to editorial revision. THE VtA'V KATE VOU ADVWnTISINCI. Tlio fnllowliiR labia hIiows tlio price nor Inch eneli Inucition, spuco to bo used witn- In one enr: Siding I mm oii i ViilJ of neiid-l Po&l' DISPLAY. I'anrr. Iiik. I tlnn1 Less than M Inches .no ." m no Inches 10 .11 .N inn no .w ."' SMi ' ;.-, .275 .11 wot a) .a .-I 1000 " Hi 1 .17.7 .10 For cm els of tlinnkM. resolutions of con fidence, nnd xliniliir contilbittlonr, In tlio nature- of iidvortlfliiK The Trlbuno makes n rhnrgo nf r rents n line. Hales of ClHsslfied Advertising fur nished on application. Sen ANTON1, JULY 11, 1002. BEPUBLICAN" TICKET. State. Jnvernor-8. VT. PENNYPACKHIl. .leuteiiiint Oovei nor "W. 31. BROWN. "Sccictnrv nt Internal Affairs ISAAC B. JMOWN. County. rniiBrcss-WII.I-IAM CONNEMj. Judjro-A. A. vosBrno. I'onimlsMnners-.JOIIN COURIER MOR R1S. JOHN PENMAN. legislative. First nisliIct-JOSEPII OI.TVER. Krcond nistrlct-.IOlIN SPHEFEIl, JR. Third District EDWARD JAMES. Fourth District P. A. PIIILBIN. Election day, Nov. 4. Following the example of he Ameri can tobacco trust, our beef trust has Invaded England. Instead of the yel low, It Is the Yankee peril. Ten Weeks of the Strike. w ITII DUE allowance for the uncertainties of con ventions, it Is now pen- crally expected that the Indianapolis national convention of mine workers will not vote to call out the soft coal miners, but will decide to assess them for the support of the an thracite strikers. This would be a sen sible move. It would avoid tho viola tion of contracts representing tho fruits of years of effort, and it would assure to the anthracite workers some Income In Idleness. As an Incidental result It would spare tho country the inestimable ills of a tie-up of fuel pro duction and supply, vUiich, should it bo attempted and succeed, would liter ally prostrate American industry and commerce and throw into idleness mill ions of wage-earners In every corner of the land. It Is proper that the soft coal miners should pay the expenses of the hard coal strike, for they are reaping' the neneius ot it. Tlio work and wages that the anthracite. miner loses through this strike the bituminous miner gains. It takes just about a flxed quantity of coal to meet the market demands. When the anthracite mines are work ing they get a share of this trade; when they are Idle the soft coal necessarily is used. It lias been pioved already in .he course or this strike that It is not possible to keep soft coal out of the hard coal market. Industry must go on. Steam must be made. If It cannot bo made by means of one kind of fuel it will be by another. There could not bo freedom of internal trade if It were not in the power .of the manufacturer to purchase any kind of fuel offered for sale if in his judgment It were needed. Meanwhile there seems to be little doubt that numbers of strikers who went into the strike reluctantly are tired of idleness and want to go to work. AVe think the companies are to be commended for not Inviting the bitterness and posslblo turbulence which would come from a premature effort to resume mining. As it is now, they are losing little except ordinary profits. Their coal remains, If it Is not iiIiiDd and sold nt present It can bo mined and sold later, no doubt at an advanced price. From the standpoint of the companies It Is only necessary to have enough patience to win back nil that is lost. An aggressive policy on their part would bo more dramatic and ' perhaps thnt is why some ot the sen sational papers are clamoring for it; but tho waiting policy bus tho advant age of preserving tho peace of tho mining communities, except for "minor disturbances, and from every stand point this is desirable. Tho tenth week of tho stiiko finds tlio situation unchanged on either side and offers no clue to when the end may be Xcxpected. I It "14 to bd hoped that the attempt jjto secure a pardon for Walter McAllls-Jte-r, one of tho Paterson quartette con tvleted of murdering Jennie Bosschle tter, will not succeed. Prison Ih the best .plnce'for a fellow of his habits. t Lord Salisbury's: Retirement. r-TpVirc HETXREMKNT of Lord 5 I Salisbury from the British JL premiership and from public life biings to a close a career avhlchjias been singularly enigmatic. ?n an use the whoe trend of which ins been. democratic, and against cur ients toward liberalism which seemed Jlttipst Impossible tb stein. this aristo crat of the aristocrats, coldly, stcudlly and cynically pushed himself forward, OyWthe heads of much nioro forceful liurt attractive men, to tho first place fn the, British empire next to royally lelf$ tjnd held the relna of power with apparent euise under circumstances seetnln'sly certain to culminate in his downfall, Vo have reurt no analysis of this itrango man's strange power which adequately accounts for Itr As an ad rfllnlstrator ho has committed nearly ivery political crime that would in the tfige of an ordinary man brine on dla- HBler. He has been reactionary', pessi mistic, contemptuous of public opinion, Indecisive In foreign policy nt times when decision seemed most needed, nnd decisive at other times, whclt caution was called for. He has carried nepot ism and preferment by "pull" to nn ex treme which has elicited frequent com plaint from even the rabid Tories who constituted the backbone of his political backing. He has been unfortunate In diplomacy and Inglorious In War and yet, In spite of these things, he has held on to the reins of power with a grip which could not be unloosened, nnd wo doubt not that he will go Into history as one of tho great figures of tho Vic torian era. That he had a great talent for man agement nobody will deny. Hud ho used this with greater recognition of the newer forces in modern life; had ho pcHsrarscd tho power to select for proferment cnlelcut nnd capable young men, chosen more largely for reasons of merit; and especially had he poscssed Iho amiability of temperament and of contact with public conditions so char acteristic, for example, of William Mc Ivlnlcy, a man who started much below Lord Cecil In ndvuntuge and with pos sibly an Inferior utontul equipment, tho retiring premier could hardly have es caped extraordinary greatness. Hut though he lived and worked and accom plished many large results In the nine teenth nnd twentieth centuries, ids at titude of mind wus essentially that ot tho seventeenth century, nt least two full hundred years behind tho times. The selection of Mr. Balfour as his successor Is doubtless tentative. The commanding personality of tho Salis bury icglme, next to the enigmatic old premier himself, was that veneered radical, Joseph Chamberlain. Ho will dominate the academic and scholarly Balfour as the oak dominates tho ivy and If he wants the premiership, no man in English public life can say him nay. In tile opinion of a writer In Harper's "Weekly, tho building of the Isthmian canal, among other striking effects, will revolutionize the revolutionists of Latin-America by giving them more sub stantial things than revolution-making to do. It is his opinion that under the stimulus of cheapened transportation the agricultural and also tho Industrial development of South America will be hastened; and the Inhabitants will be come too busy with personal affairs to give encouragement to military adven turers Intent upon upsetting the exist ing order of things. Let us hope so, at any rate. But the surest way to effect this lesult is by colonization. The mongrel combination of bloods and races dominant in most Latin-American countries Is fit for just the kind of Institutions now in vogue and cannot be fitted for a better kind except through control of supeiiois. Governor Taft at Rome. I T IS TO BE regretted that nego tiations at Rome for the early withdrawal of the Spanish-speak ing friars from the Philippine island", in progress between the Vati can and Governor Taft, after a prom ise of early and harmonious conclusion, should now appear to be entering a stage of difficulty. It is also to be re gretted that there should appear to be danger of u stirring up of prejudices to no good purpose. The friar question In the Philippines Is very simple, if we may credit tho testimony of American officials deputed to study it. In course of years, by nets and ways in no way reflecting upon the church to which they are at tached, but natural under the demoral izing Influences of Spanish administra tion, large numbers of the ecclesiastical brotherhoods In tho nrchipeIago have 'become obnoxious to the natlves.whose pacification Is retarded by tlielr pres ence. These friars, or many of them, being Spanish in speech and sympathy, have systematically obstructed the work of the American government and their continuance in the Islands would vastly Increase our difficulties. In this situation, the government at Washington, through Governor Taft, proposes to the Vatican tho purchase of all the lands and property owned by these brotherhoods, at a price to be flxed by arbitration; and also urges tho authorities at Rome to recall these friars and to substitute " priests who speak the English tongue and who are acquainted with the conditions of American administration, Including tho complete separation between church and state. Theie is nothing unreason able In this proposition; on the con trary. It has the support of the fore most American Catholics, who wish their church to put its best men In the new dependencies, In order that It may be built up In the same manner and with the same success which has at tended Its career in the United States, proper, But It seems that certain Spanish In fluences are at work In opposition to the proposals of Governor Taft; and It Is posslblo that these nre also respon sible for tho endeavor to carry this delicate question Into tho realm of sec tarian controversy. On this basis It is easy to understand the purpose of the recent report, so plainly without foun dation, that American teachers In the public schools In tho Philippines were conducting a Protestant propoganda. No doubt the brotherhoods whoso re moval our government, with the 'co operation of many eminent Catholics, Is urging upon the Vutlcnn, would be glnd to see a division of American public opinion on this question, corresponding with lines of creed, so that the whole matter would end In a bitter secturlan quurrel tit home, with nothing done In tho Philippines. But 'we feel satisfied that this hope, if It exists, will not be realized. There Is no room for It. In tho United States the Catholic church has every freedom enjoyed by any other church and Is prospering even more conspicuously than most chinches, So It will be In the Philippines, f the American basis nhall pie vail. Tho one thing which could hinder such advancement on Jta part would be an attitude of resistance by Its Philippine priesthood to Ameri can Influences unu methods, und that is Inconceivable. A novej plan has been adopted by the chief of tho Now York street cleaning department lo promote bc A: '' ui$u.' ,,. j, lary conditions. In different sections of the city he exposes gelatlno plates to catch lho flyihg microbes. Theso ure then analyzed microscopically, nnd If found dangerous they guide Hhe de partment In its efforts to clean up. Every wclNrcRUlated homo will soon need to be equipped with lis microbe catcher. Strikes In a rent Britain. IF IT 19 any consolation to know that other countries linve labor troubles also, Inhabitants of the onlhraclto region will bo Inter ested In a letter from London in tho July Protectionist, dealing with strikes und lock-outs In Great Britain. In ordinary times, this writer pays, more than 200,000 workers are annually Involved. In strikes and lock-outs. In the pnst ten years, England has had some 7,000 strikes and lock-outs, In volving a loss of 103,000,000 days In all or fourteen days ouch for every worker In that coun try. In a hundred years, there have been seventy big strikes, dis tributed over large areas. In some de gree, tho tendency ot labor to appcul to the strike tribunal seems to be just now decreasing In Great Britain, but rather because a number of recent big strikes were failures than from nn In creased recognition of the crudity ot adjudication by force. li Groat Britain, as' in this country, the trend of industrial conditions Is upward, and tho worker of today Is decidedly better oft than wus his father or grandfather, comparatively. But evolution Is of slowgrowth. It cannot bo hastened. Only through the lifting of the average fitness, by the education and development of capable and pro gressive Individuals wherever these can be found, can labor expect to make permanent advances. It cannot lift It self up by Us bootstraps. The example of Mrs. JohnGlonn, of Baltimore, merits notice. Until re cently, she was one of the leaders of society. At her marriage last May, In stead of nn elaborate reception, she entertained tho poor of the city; and It Is announced' that she and her hus band are now studying the best meth ods of promoting social settlement and other charitable work, with a view to applying them in lieu of the social di versions and dissipations common In their set. Will not her pleasure be more genuine than if sought In the conventionalities of fashion? Odds and Ends of Washington N?Ws Special Correspondence of The Tilbune. Washington, July 13. TIE FINAL settlement of tho Holt will case which has been pending before the courts of the District of Columbia since tho summer of 1S94 recalls a story told at the expense of William Greene Stenet, better known as "Bill" Sterret, at the time of Judgo Holt's death. "Bill" Sterret Is a. newspaper man und a nephew of the late Judge Ad vocate General Holt, over whoso estate there wa3 so much wmngllpB. At the time of Judge Holt's death "Bill" was the Washington correspondent of the Dallas-Galveston News. Tho night the Judge breathed his last "Bill" was en gaged in a game of poker at the old Press club of Washington. In thoso days It was customary for tlio friends of a man who was known to havo been on gaged In a game of "draw" the night before to Inquire: "How much did you lose last night?" "Bill" remained In tho game until a very late hour, and knew nothing about the death of his distin guished relative until he went borne along about the break of day, when he was notified by his family. After eat ing his breakfast "Bill" naturally called at tho residence of his deceased uncle, condoled with tho other relatives, and then came down town. When ho reached the club a follow newspaper man, who had heard of "Bill" being In tho poker game the night befoie, said: "Well, Bill, how much did you lose last night?" "Oh, about 8 and nn untie," replied Sterret. His friends twitted "BUI" a good deal about his remark, which he afterward denied most strenuously. "Bill's" share of Judge Holt's estato amounted to about $40,000. About 11 vo years ago ho removed with his family to Dallas, Texas, where ho built himself a house according to his own Ideas, and Is now living In that city. Ho is ono of the best known news paper wrlteis In the country. "Pilvate" John Allen, who represented a Mississippi district in congress for sev eral ;ears, but who was left at home two yems ago by his constituents who thought he was not serious enough to be u successful legislator, was In Washing ton a few weeks ago on business con nected with the St, Louis' exposition. While In congress John Allen wns known as "Tho wit of tho house." Dining bis last visit to Washington ho was dining with some f i lends at a down town hotel, Tho hour was lato and the conversation dragged, "Private" Allen began yawn ing. Finally ho stretched out (loth arms and with n long yawn said: "Well, gentlemen, I must got to my hotel and go ,to bed, for I havo soma bind woik lo do In the morning." Knowing Mr. Allen's aversion to woik of uny kind ono of tho party said: "Why, John, what work havo you to do In the morning'.'" "Oh," drawled the Mlsslsslpplan, "got up," i John Allen cot the title of "Pilvato" dining his llrst campaign for congress. His opponent had had the tltlo of "Gen eral" bestowed upon him by the. Con federate government during tlio Civil war. Dm lug tho canvass Allen and his itvul met In Joint debate. Upon one, oc casion the "Generul" spoko llrst. lie lold his hearers how he had sat In his tent ninny nights dining the struggle bo twceii tho north nnd south planning bis campaign against t,ho enemy. This gavo Jolpi Allen nn opening and when ha mounted tho platform he referred to what bis opponent had said about sitting In his tent. "But what wus Private John Allen doing nil tho tlmo my distinguished op ponent was sitting In his tentV" asked Allen, "I will tell you, gentlemen, lie was out In all kinds of weather dolus picket duty, keeping tho emeny from breaking through our tanks and cap tut big the general." This lost lemark caught the crowd and "Private" John Allen was elected. Since then ho has borno tho tltlo of "Pilvute" John Allen. Tho last speech ha. made In the house- bofoio his retirement fiom congress was In favor ot tho establish ment of a fish hatchery at Tupelo, Miss., his homo town. It wus one of tho fun niest speeches bo ever delivered. Tho hatchery Is now In operation nnd "Prl vnto" Allen Is now a member of tha Louisiana Purchuso exposition. There Is a snloop In Washington which has become famous In the past few years through the eccentricities of Its, owner. Its patronago Is cosmopolitan. At all hours of the day and night members cf congress, pewspaper correspondents, the atrical people, plate primers irom tns irnvprmnftnt bureau of enoriavinsr nnri printing-, hack drivers and blbulously In- ' - 4- 1 III .-"'' cllhetl persons In nearly all walk of life congregato there. It Is n smnll place, with 'a lllllo back room attached, where statesmen and tholr newspaper frlcpds gather to (nko n nip nnd exchango their views on tho burning Issues ot the day. Tho proprietor of tho "store," as bo' Is prone to call this thirst place, Is .a highly educated son of Erin. Ho Is also a Dem ocrat. Dining tho campaigns of ISM nnd 1900, when Brynn and free silver were the Icsties, ho was always ready and only too willing to discuss politics with nny and all of his sound nloney customers, nnd It was a mighty good ono who could hold his own with this Irishman. In ad dition to keeping on tnp very tine quali ties of whisky nnd beer ho sorvci it frco lunch, comprised of cheese, blind rob bins . or smoked herring, rorned beef, mustard nnd crackers, which ho never changes from ono year's end to another. His patrons sometimes tiro of tlio same bill of faro tho year round. The othor dny one of his customers complained of the sameness of bis lunch and asked him why ho didn't clmngo It occasionally. "1 may clmngo my politics nnd religion, but never my lunch," was the response. -W. B. Bell. - CONNELL FOR SENATOR. From the llariisburg Star-Independent. Whether Attorney General Elklu hns been reconciled to tho political conditions In the stato or not, It Is reasonably cer tain that his friends nio not altogether happy. Homo time ago tho Chester coun ty Republican convention brought Sena tor Snyder out for senator In congiess nnd yesterday, under tho direction of Deputy Attorney General Flcltz. tho Lnckawnnnn county Republican conven tion launched a senatorial boom for Con gressman Connell. Tho mnntfoHt pur pose of both movements Is to show u re sentment ngalti3t tho pait taken by Sen ator Penrose In the conspiracy to defeat Elkln's nomination for governor. Tho candidacy of Senator Snyder prob ably gavo Quay nnd Penroso little, if any concern, for though tho president pro torn, of the stato senate Is a popular gen tleman nnd a prime favorite among lho farmers, his ambition hardly takes tho direction of a scat In tho senate branch of congress. But In tho candidacy of Council thero Is it serious menace. That gentleman has senatorial ambitions, vast financial resources to hack them and with a practically unanimous support from tha northeastern section of tho stato and tho active asslslanco of Elkln In the fight, he would bo a most formidable can didate oven with a less enterprising and sagacious political manager than Mr. Fleltz. Thero Is reason, moreover. In tho can didacy of Mr. Council, under the circum stances. Senator Quay mlsht be ox cusable for advocating tho nomination of his cousin nnd panegyilst nnd as the methods employed were those usual to him there is no kick coinlns on that account. But the friends of Elkln justlyl reason that Penrose had no business In the qunirel nnd being a candidate him self ought to havo allowca inings to take their natural course. Therefore they are justified in putting even so for midable opposition to Penrose. In tho senatorial race as Connell nnd in his vic tory there will be poetic justice. A FERN THAT WALKS. Most feins are confirmed travelers. New fern leaves grow out fiom tho under ground roots some distance away from the old plant. Tho average observer scarcely notices this, but theie Is a na tive fern that steps off at so lively a pace that Its odd habit has long furnished one of tlio unceasing entertainments of the woods. Tho Walking Fern often carpets ledges and tops of (.haded locks. Tho slender, tufted leaf fronds are singularly unfernllke In appearance. They squirm about and "walk" by declining their ta per tips to tho soil and taking root thero and growing. In time, clusters ot new leaf fronds spring from such rooted tips. By-nud-by some of these, too, bite tho earth and taking root, start still other colonies, which In tutn will continue the progress again and again. Naturally, with the laspso of time, tho connection between tho older tufts and tho younger becomes broken, yet ono sometimes finds series of threo or four linked together, representing as many steps In the pretty ramble. Country Life In Amcilca. SHAKE HANDS WITH FATE. "lis a sad old world, and a bad old world, It is scaice worth while at all; Its sorrows cling and Us friendships sting, And even its- joys will pall. But dear Is life for all Its strife, And love Is better than hate You'll find a grace In tho surliest face If you Just shako hands with fate. With light In jour glance and right .In your glance And your lips In a curve to the sky; A tpiing In your walk nnd a ling In your talk, Sure, hope will not pass you by. Tho path that you will winds over a hill, But it leads to an open gate; So trill you a song to lure lovo along, And Just shake hands with fate, 'TIs In youiself Is the demon elf, "lis in yourself is God; And you'll nover stray from yoursolf away God's light or tho devil's prod. Whatever your mind you'll meet In kind. And what Is youiself create; Tho world will view what Is really you Therefoie, shako hands with fate! Regina Armstrong In Leslie's Weekly. StMnfWH RESORTS Atlanticity. Hotel Bittenlioilss New Jersey Avenue and thc,Bcacli Atlantic City. N. J. , Select, hleli class family hotel: ctlsliio the best; write for booklet. M.S. STIiVeS, Prop. John .1. Shaufelter, .Manager formerly of the l'arlc Hotel, Wllilamsport, THE AGNEW Directly on tho Beach In Chelsea, Atlantic City. Opens New, July 1st Location, appointments nnd services un excelled, Tho Uuest bath establishment on tho coast. Many novel features of equipment, which will make It an Ideal lesting place for anyone requiring speclul personal attention. Booklet and terms by addressing THE AGNEW CO., Atlantic City. HOTEL RICHMOND. Kentucky Aenue. I'liet Hotel from Uoacli, At lantic City, N, J,; CO Ocean Icnv rooms; i icity 400; write lor special rates. J, U. Jenk ins, Prop, BRIQANTINE, N. J. Holland House Benched by Beading Bollway from Phil adelphia and by ferry from.Atlantlo City. Electric lights; artesian water; resident physician; suit bathing; excellent fishing and balling. . CHARLES L. WALTON, Manager, PENNSYLVANIA, BEAUTIFUL XAKB WESAUKING On a truir of tlio Allrgliany Mountain?. Lehigh Valley railroad; near Tow anda. Bathing:, (Wilng, eporti, etc. excellent table, Reasonable rates. LAKE WESAUKINO HOTEL V. O., Apci, Pa. Bend for booklet. O. K. HATmiS. STROUOSBURQ, HIGHLAND DELL HOUSE &, Stroudsburp, Pa. Capacity, 160. Delightful, ly situated; enlarged, rcfurulsbert, modern, convenience; electrlo llgbti; eervloo first clMi. Bookltta, rlts Apply J. V, F0ULKE f J. MfaLlAte. ,Q,-it-J. 1 JP . ' Z, I I THIRTY-THREE SCHOLARSHIPS ill I $9574 1 Universities 2 Scholarships In Syracuse University, at $432 each $ 864 1 Scholarship In Bucknoll University... ' 520 1 Scholarship In the University of Roch ester ."; r ' 324 Preparatory Schools 1 Scholarship In Washington School for Boys 1700 1 Scholarship In Wllilamsport Dickin son Seminary ....'. 750 1 Scholarship In Dickinson Collcglato Preparatory School 75C 1 Scholarship In Newton Collcglato In- ' ' ctltute 720 I Scholarship In Keystone Academy. .. 600 1 Scholarship in Brown College Prepar atory School 600 1 Scholarship In tho School of 'the Lack awanna . , 400 The Scranton Tribune's. Educational Contest D The special rewards will be given to tho person securing tho largest num ber of points. Points will bo credited to contest ants securing new subsciibcis to Tho Scranton Trlbuno ns follows: Pts. Ono month's subscription....? .o 1 Three months' subscription. 1.-5 !1 Six months' subscription.... 2.B0 if Ono year's subscription 5-flO 12 The contestant with the highest num ber of points will bo given a choice from the list of special rewards; the contestant with the second highest number of points will bo given a NOTICE that according to the secure a Special Reward or not. Those wishing to enter the contest should send In their names at once will be cheerfully answered, Address all communications 'to CONTEST EDITOR, Scranton Special Honor Prizes for July To be given to the two contestants scoring the largest number of points during the month of July: FIRST PRIZE A Bird's-Eye Maple Writing Desk, Value $12.00. SECOND PRIZE A Gold Fountain Pen. Special Honor Prizes for August, September and October will be announced later. ALWAYS BUSY. SpiliiK nnd Summer Oxfoids and Boots that content tho mind and' comfort tho foot. Men's "Always" Busy Oxfords, $3.00 Ladies' "Melba" Oxfords, $2.50. Lewis 8c Re illy, 114-116 Wyoming Avenue. Tho Matchless Splendors or the Canadian Rockies BANFF the LAKES In the CLOUDS, TOIIO VALLEY, tho GBEAT GLA CIER a region described by Whym per, the conqueror of the Matterhorn, as fifty or sixty Swltzerlands rolled Into one reached only by the Canadian Pacific Railway Dally transcontinental train service throughout the year from Toronto nnd Montreal. IMPEMAL LIMITED, cross ing tho continent In 97 hours, lenves Toronto and Montreal (commencing June 15 next, every Sunday, Wednes day and Friday. Sleeping and dining cars attached to all through trains. First-class hotels in the mountains. Swiss guides at tho principal points. For rates, etc, apply1 to nearest agent of tho C. P. n., or to E. V. Skinner, 353 Broadway, New York. ROBERT KERR, Paosenger Traffic Manager, Montreal. Y'vx' I nr Swarthmore College SWARTHMORZ, PA, UNDMt MANAGEMENT OF FRIENDS f The Course in Arts Offer Pour Courses of Study Leading to DcgrecJS PREPARING FOR BUSINESS LIPZ, OR FOR THE SrUOV OP THE LEARNED PROFESSIONS Character Always the Primary Consideration Extensive Campus; Beautiful Situations and Surroundinj3j Sanitary Conditions the Host; Thorough Instruction: Intelligent Physical Culture. CATALOaUE ON APPLICATION DR, JOSEPH SWAIN, President. List of Scholarships 1 Scholarship In 1 Scholarship In mer bcnooi) Music, -$1708 Studio Rules of the Contest choice of the remaining rewards, and so on through tho list. Tho contestant who secures the high est number of points during uny cal endar months ot tho contest will re ceive a special honor reward, this re ward being entirely Independent of tho ultimato disposition of tho scholar ships. Each contestant falling to securo a special rewaid will bo given 10 per cent, of all money he or she turns In. All subscriptions must bo paid In ad vance. Only now subscribers will bo counted. Renewals by persons whoso names abave rules, EVERY CONTESTANT EDUCATIONAL.. Do You Want a Good Education? Not a thort course, nor an easy course, nor a cheap course, but the best education to be had. No other education is worth spending time and money on. II you do, 'write for s catalogue ot Lafayette College Easton, Pa. which offers thorough preparation fn tha Engineering and Chemical Professions as well aa tho regular College courses. I Sti State Normal I School. Q Root Ctrnnrlthlircr Pfl. U.U.O u...-e - -- NEW CATALOGUE. For 1902 giving full in formation as to free tui tion, expenses, courses of study and other facts of interest will be mailed without charge to those desiring it. Fall Term opens September8, 1902. E. L. KEMP. A. n., ' Principal. SCRANTON CORRESPONDENCE S0HODM SCRANTON, PA. T J. Foster, President. Klmcr II. Uwall, lreaa. H. J. Foater, Stanley P. Allen. Vice Trcjldcnt. Secretary, I Principal. I The Course in Science The Course in Letters . The Course in Engineering C Wllkos-Barro Institute 276 Cotult Cottage (Sum ,y 230 6026 Business nnd Art. Scholarships In Scranton Conservatory of Music, at $125 each 500 Scholarships In tho Hardenborgh School of Music and Art 460 Scholarships In Scranton Business College, at $1 00 each 300 Scholarships In International Corre spondence Schools, average value $57 each 285 Scholarships In Lackawanna Business College, at $85 each 170 Scholarships In Alfred Wooler's Vocal 125 1840 $9S?4 nro already on our subscription list will not be credited. Tho Tribune will Investigate each subscription anil If found Irregular In any way reserves the right to reject It. No transfers can bo made after credit hns onco been given. All subscriptions nnd tho cash to' pay for them must bo handed In at Tho Trlbuno ofnee within tho week In which they nro secured, so that pa pers can be sent to tho subscribers at onco. Subscriptions must ba written on blanks, whlchican bo secured at The Trlbuno office, or will be sent by mall. WILL BE PAID, whether they All questions concerning the plan Tribune, Scranton, Pa. Piazza Summer Furniture The Largest and most artistic line ever shown in the city. Hill & Connell 121 Washington Avenue, b,!. J ifUtn llAAfl t VYIIiJII HI IIIJGU Of anything in the line of .j, optical goods we can supply it. ,-, I Spectacles land Eye Glasses Properly fitted by an expert optician, From $1.00 Up Also all kinds of prescrip tion work and repairing. Mercereau & Connell, 182 Wyoming Avenue, HENRY BELIN, JR., General Agent for tho WyouJng District to D11 pontes Powder lllnlnj, Mutiny, Sporting;, Fmoktltss and tbj. Rtpauno Clieralcal Company') , HIGH EXPLOSIVES. r Safety fur, Capa and Eaplodtr. Room 101 Coar neu Building ,bcranton. ' 3r ant'K'niv'.a i JOII.V B. SMITH i: SON .....,,,,....... Plymouth K. W. 1IULUQA.S' ,,,,, WUiePiit wt-T La --t jE--4 -". f I and Lawn Swings