lr 7 4 TJ-lJa SOIiANTOiV TJtlBUNJ'J-WEDNESDAV, NOVUMJ3EK 5, 1002. V? UHblShc Dallj Ktre pi Bilnday, by Ths Trlbuno Publishing Conipnn7,at rifty Cents n Month. MVYH. IltCltAlU) KMTOR. o. r. nvxiini: iilmvmi mahaium. Entered at Iho I'o.tQflc nt Semiton, M Second. Him Mali Matter. ', When upmie will permit, Tlin Trlbuno ! lwnr Rind to iirltit altort Inttcra from It frlonili bonrliiff on current topic, but id rnlo I that tlioio mint I) tlcncit. for til Mention, lijr tho writer roiil nnniol mitt thn condition precedent to nccoplnnco li Hint nit contributions hnll bo aubject to editorial rovlilon. THE IXAT KATE l'OR ADVEKTISINO. Tito following table slions ttie jirlce per Inclieacli Insertion, spaco to bo mod w Itliln one yenr: ltitnof riJ!f I " mil ''!'" lAsl1'08'"0" .611 , .'.I I 1" III J I .w ,!i) i .11 .31) .2G .'.ITS i .!0 .at i :: i .-' .Ill I .ITS 10 nisrr.AY teTTtiian ao IiicIim . to Inches . . . . loo " 110 " wo "..... 1000 ' For cnh of thanks, resolutions ofcondotonce, anil ilmllar contributions In thn nature of mlertislnif, The Trlbuno makes a charge of S cents n lino. TEN PAGES. Kl'ltANTONY XOVUMlinil '". IflOJ. Fop nit Institution liiivliirr Its vutlc Batcil ami dlscoitinKliiff iust, the Do iiiuim .itV I'crtnlnly lctiilns remitik.iblo rcLUiietatlvc jiowor. .he Result In Nnv York. NOUMAI.I.V closi', the Kniplic itnto witi this ,vrni' uuulo tU' li.ttnblo l n number of s-pcclnl causes. Flist of these ai the (llMirfrctlon of tlio Kioiit cor poi.ito Intel ests. It luul two ouii'C". The cliiuf of those was losentinent of the lefonns in titration wrought by tlovoinor Oiloll, by which bin dens lifted fioni le.'il estnte wete placed on the coiponitloiis. Roosinelt liml rullled the corporation1 by his luiiicliNe tax. Then when OuVH not only lefued to penult a iepe.il of this tnv but added other forms of tavitiou, tliev became Kunulnely alarmed. They hcpliett the nomination of C'olcr, effected the solid ifle.itlon of the Hill and Clo eland fac tions of the Bemoci joy and fuinlhed llbeially tlie sinews of war. For the lit st time in many yeaif. the Republi can campaign tieastiry was fiusal In funds. The other sotuoe of the eoipoi.ite an tagonism to Odell was his political ti iendllness to Piesldeiit ftooevelt and the idea that his defeat would consti tute a punishment ot the latter because t Ills vlgotous piosecutlon of tiusts and his evident sympathy with organ ized labor. The pait taken by Odell In efiectlng a settlement of the coal stilKc no doubt contilbuted to the coipoiate opposition to his le-elettion. Aside front tlie oorpoiatlons, theie is leason to bellce that Odell had to face a considerable the fioni within the ranks of the Republican oigunliMtlon. The sweeping economies Introduced by him in administrative expenses threw many party woiket.s out of places of piofit and piominence. His stubborn assertion of ofllolal Independence and his refusal to take humiliating oidcis gave offense to numbeis of oig.inlatlon wlieel-hoi.ses, by whom tlies-e attitudes were unexpected and who looked upon them as little less than tteasonable. There is no evidence to com let Senator Piatt of lukewaininess in Odell's be half; but it Is noteworthy that Odell had piactlcally to oiganlne ills own i.impaign and make his tight well-nigh single-handed. That under these handicaps he has won, albeit by a nairow niaigin, is creditable to the undei lying good judg ment of the Xew York votei s. The ti I umph of Din id R. Hill would have been a national misfortune, since Hill, -with all ills intellectual forte and cunning, is essentially Inslnceie and untiust,-woithy. The corpoiatlons who stiuck at .Roosevelt over Odell's bead will hme to strike again. The Education BUI. Tin": ruocnriDixap in the House of Commons on the opening of the Eiitish par liament were prcnionitoiy of the political ordeal which the 'i'oiy government will have to face dining the lemalnder of tlie session. The ministry has to controut two gjeat is sues, Ireland and tlie IMucatlon bill, either of which might lead in easily conceivable contingencies to Its over tin ow. Two inoi e contentious subjeols could jfot occupy the attention of the house. Tito education bill in its main fea tuies provides for the further endow ment of what nio known as denomina tional schools, schools in other woids which are under tlie management of , liutch of Unglaud cleigymuu. Theso schools havo nil nloiiR lecelved n stiini , Jntedisubslrty ftoin fho state, calculatea Mipon tljijlr cnicleney, but this was luu-dly svilllcieiit lor their limlntonauco and the deilclency liad to bo made up throtigh school fres and other resources nioio nV less prolileinatleal nnd flUPtii '. '"!.1" ,'n"' P'liH-ntluii bill would place the parochial schools, tluancially, on a , Hbnllnr Unsls U, publlu scliools whhh iv(we iniblk-ly entlowod as they me In P. thlft.roimtiy and siipet Intended and adiulnlBleiril by elected school boaids just us heie. Hut neither the Roman fathollcs nor the Chinch of Ihiglaud ailliec.ents jvlU send l( clilld of thehs to tho public scliools, which they silg. i . u.atsu as godless. The object of the education bill is to ' " rt'liovb"thse conscientious people ijoni fupiiortlng thole own schools Jaigelj - Ji,Jf 'leli i'tlvale lesouices and thu lioaid schoolri as tuxpajeis, The pre- 5ontler.inccroi; .Von-ninforinlst opinion Ibso passionately and aggicsslvely hos- i... nlHy,'0 tlp education bill that they havo founed associations tlnougliout Iing- " Wmi lit which they pledgi) tlieniselves to leslst the jinyment of tuea which . Xvll(.go to tho support of the llnanclui giantH cieateil by the new bill. Con, ' Hldered abshactly, the' opposition of the Noii-ConfonnUts seems unieafcon- Stlo, ,Tliey nio not compelled to send their children to iljiircli schools und If Mrcj-i-uiiiwiiuia uwnin tie support of J (licso scliools, Chtii'Ahuinit pay propor tionately for the support of hoard or pnbtlo schools which ate mote numer ous, nioie expciiHlvo nnd on the whole not inure olllelent in their administra tion nor intne progressive ill their cur riculum than their older coinimtllors. null tho Foster JMuctttlou Act oflSTO, piactlcally the only pi hunt y public schools In Ijiiglnnd' wete those main tained by tlie Anglican chinch; they ltcclw-tl no state aid and tellod wholly for their suppott on voluntary contil butlons. Tlial act, one of the most bi'iielltent In the hlstoiy of Jhlttsh leg lAlatlou, ttansfcired the responsibility of educating the people ftoin voluntaiy effort to tho state. II was accom plished mi a bio.id and nutgmiiilmotts lusls In Its secular conception, it ex cluded the teaching of religion, how over, In any foini, eveepl the tending of the Rlble without gloss or comment. From this fact the Intel mluable and not edifying coillllct between Chuicli inen and Xon-Confoi mists lias con tinued (luting the last thirty yeais. The dlfTleully lies fat too deep for po litical letucdv. It Is piliuurlly a le llglotis cutest Inn, or, lather, a denomi national one. The Hrltlsh Non-Con-fot mists are opposed to a, slate church on hlstoileal and conscientious giounds. The illssentots constitute the gtcnt bulk of tho Tjlberal parly and while that paity Is not piepnicd to dlsestab sh and disendow the Church of Eng land; wlille public .sentiment Is far from ripe for a indtcal dissolution of church and stale, the opposition, as custodian of the "Xon-Conformlst conscience," Is bitterly opposed to any further endow ment of the chut eh schools. Mr. Chamberlain, who Is himself a leading Xon-Confoimlst, in a speech which he made some time ago, declined that while he thought that the educa tion bill might be linpioved, the gov ernment was piepaied to stand 01 fall by It. .Mr. Ralfour's decimation in the house of commons that the bill would not lie withdrawn means that the bill will pass. The government malm Ity In the house of commons Is extiavaganlly huge, too large, that Is to say, to Indicate dearly the balance of enlightened public opinion upon a fundamental question of domestic pol icy that scarcely, if at all, attracted tlie teasoned Judgment of the people at the last geneial election. The thie.it of the Xon-Confoi mists to lefuse to pay tlie taxes that 1he (duration bill in opeiatlon will necessi tate need not be taken seiiouly. A 1 1 iv fanatics may do so and be sent to jail for their obdiuacy; but no one in England supposes lliat theie will lie uciuY, or uiul uit'ir e.xamjiic w 111 pune contagion". To kindle and sustain the vital llnmp ol a national levolt against general taxation demands fagots and tinder enough for a i evolution or a le belllon. The education bill may be shoit-slghted in piinclple and faulty in detail, but it. is not vicious or menac ing enough to endanger the public pc ace. Ren Odell might have had moio, but for what he got let us be duly thankful. Tho Edinburgh Review. THE CURREXT number ot the Kdinbuigh Review celebiates the centennary of its biitli. It gives a shoit autobio graphical sketch of Its institution and its caieer, with portiaits of its foun ileis and editois. It Is an unique fact in the history of poilodlcal llteiature that the Edinburgh has had only four edltots dining tlie continy In which it has appealed with the sol emn regularity of the piecession of tlie equinoxes. Ksaetly one bundled yeais ago, in October, 1S0J, the first number was issued in piecisely the same typographical form In which it appeals today, with the familiar blue cover and buTC back. It is inteiestlng to note that these colois were chosen by the AVliig parly, of which tlie rele nt n ted quaiterly was the Intellectual and political exponent, because of their sympathetic admliatlou for "Washing ton and his aimy, who woie blue uni forms with buff facings dining the war of independence, when they wore a tinifoim at till. The Edinburgh Re view was not an oiiglual conception In Us geneial scope. The liteiaiy and po litical icview Is the lineal descendant of the pnillsan pamphlet. The evolu tion twin the spoiadlc pamphlet to the peilodical icview was easj, Inevitable, dignified and profitable to publisher and publicist. Tho pamphlet In Us day was a foimldable weapon of political offence and defense. It had, too, an Inciedlbly largo cii dilation, If it ap pealed witli anything like literal y or polemical effect to the ji.niy passions of the hour. Tlie pamphleteer was the buccaneer of journalism before tho newspaper became a definite institu tion with a mission and the icsponsi blllty of its incalculable opportunities for good or evil. "We tuo sympathetic ally Inclined to legaid the pamphleteer as a man of genius vho starved In a gauet wlille ungiateful patrons and bookselleis leaped the fiults of his pet vet ted talents and Indusny. This is very far from being a coriect estima tion of his place in tlie history ot peilodical llteiature. There weie pamphleteers like Defoe, Swift, Ftank lln and 1'alne, whose ephemeral pio ductlons can still be lend with pleas uie mill piofit; but of the lucubrations of the u vet ago hack who moulded pub lic opinion befoie the eia of tho dally nowspaper, it can be tiuly said of him that he was both vile and venial. The advent of the dully ptess Killed off the peitlnaclous piolMty of the pamphleteer without iibsoihlng iilm. The peilodical or icview became less political and initio llleiary. They weie, however, badly w'lltten, hazy, pioll.x and sjsteinatleally uiiiiileiestlng. It was not until Sidney Smith conceived the idea at tlie IMIublttgh llevlew. until Jeltieys gave It a shape and n policy, until aiacaitluy cteated the ihetoilcal taste and lltnughain u public uppiecl atlon of Incisive ciltlcism of men and books, that peilodical llteiatmc In Us modem sense began to assume iho shape unci Impoitnuio which It holds at tho present hour and to which theio seems to be no limit beyond tlie limi tations of oilglnallty. Tlie Kdlnbuigh Iteylew wtis not always light in Us Judgments and it was sometimes sav agely tittcttleiit In Us ctlllclsius, but It maintained n wholesome abhorrence of shams, whether they weie the pre tentious otncles or eonteiiipoiniy men of genius or the solemn platitudes of nipdlocilty. The Edlnbtitgli Itevlow at tacked Hymn, Sottthey, Wordswoilli and Scott, nnd this hits been one ot the standing reptonrhes of Us lack ot pei spleuelty. alcatel n ciltlcism has piac tlcally Jttstllled Its estimate of Sottthey Of Woidsvvotth It innv be said that while his genius Is unassailable, the woist that had been said ot him by the l'dlnlniigh was excusable In a conltin poiaty critic dealing with a poet w'iioso pL'isonal Idlosvnciacies too often be ll nyril themselves in Hie pleblun self consciousness of his vetsc. AVoulswoith was not always lusplicd, and when lie was commonplace he became vety dull indeed. Its attacks on Hymn weie, per haps, less deseied on jiuiely llteiary giounds, but they had the effect ot giving oecasloii to one ot the finest sathlcal poems In the English language. Scott was too sane n man to lie tilfcited by hostile ciltlcism. He could thor oughly nppieciale .lelfrey's golden nile, so awfully perverted in those days, that neither an author's leputatlon, a pub lishers Intel est, nor any measuie of personal fiiendshlp or peisonal enmity weighed a feather In the honest esti mate given to book or poem. The Edlnbttigh had, .Teffiey told Scott, two legs to stand upon, one llteiary and the other political. The political policy ot the Edlubitigh Review is today, making allowance for tho tinnsmuta tlon in time and circumstances, what It was a hundred yeais ago. It no longer numbeis a aiacaulay or a Uiotigh.im among Us contilbutors, but air. Glad stone contilbuted to Us pages while lie was inline minister of England. If It no longer exercises the vast influence which it once did, Us ciitical estimate-) will still bear compailson with those contilbuted by men whose names have become household woids in the glib association of English llter.ituic. A look tluough the pages of the collected wilting of the galaxy who made their own names and the name of the Edln buigli famous in England and A met lea In the flist decade of the nineteenth centuiv will show that while their llietoiic was magnificent in its audacity, its egotism and Iiillty, it was lacking in that equable scientific judgment which makes political and liteiaiy ciltl cism woith anything as an Inheiitanco. aiacaulay is still lead, but who leads Jeffrey, Hinughnin, Smith, Hoinoi or IjI ow n .' Rut it is ns an advocate ol lefoim that the Edinbuigh deseives tho grati tude of the genet ations which it served. It was almost a sollt.nv advocate of influence for the abolition of the siu0 tiade, for Catholic emancipation, lor tlie lelorm of the rilminal law, the abolition of leligious tests, lor munici pal tefoini, and many other fnr-reaeh-ing piojects which weie so many steps leading to the higher civilization -which the Anglo-Saxon lace today enjojs. The campaign fiction w liter can now turn his attention to the composition of next season's snake stories. Tilings appealed mote loggy for tlie Democracy at the closing of tlie polls ;esterday than at eaily morn. Tlie lesult shows that few In das of prospeiity cue to listen to tlie howl of calamity. m The attention ot tlie public may next be livetcd upon the football leturns. TO THE COLLEGE LAD. Some say that tho dajs of contentment aio o'er. Whin a boy takes his leave fiom the old college door; That the halo ot glory sunouncllng him then, Diops oft on the campus when he mingles witli men. Hut show niu the lad who contintul will be With the casli of his dad, and tho wl-,o Faculty i'ou have hut a diono in tho lluivhig bee hive. A( but den to otheis, better dead than alive "J'is a notion quite wiong to live in tho past; To sigh lor joung das and giovv old at last; For the .oars will roll on, rcgiet though ou may. Your footsteps gut feeble, jour hair will giovv giay. "While those who build castles la mcio Idle ill earns. Will discover too into life Is not what It seems; To tlnlve and glow lleh, you must labor today; Tonioi i ow 's uncertain, last jeai's passed away. Theie ale locks to be hewn for tho tem ple of lainn; And giiibblng and digging If 1,011 seek but a name; Tho win Id hath no honor o.cept tin tho burnt; While tlm iiiwatd, neglected, slips down to Ills giave. Remember, jour sheepskins and books la u low. Ale all well enough, It something ou Know ; Hut If voted successful nnd wiso and nil that, It must bo I10111 success, not the bUo ot your hat. Xo means of deception will over last long; And tho lad who adopts it Is surely gono wiong; For the wisdom of ages stales him full in tho fuco; Ho will tall by tho wajsldo and full in the laie, Alus, for the wiecks In piofetHlons and tiade, "Who lloiulsh today and lomoiiow they fade; Who bulliled, pei hups, fiom tho blood hi ihcir veins, Xot holiest mdeavor, nor tho weight of their Inalns! The muii who would tlnlve 011 what oth- eis havo done. Will cat of tho husks, Lo the I'lodlgnl Sou, Xor lumen, 1101 itches In thin fair wot Id of ouis, Will beui him aloft 1101 11 own ids last bonis -t' 11 Hope 1. Seianton, Nov 1. Boys' Clubs at Philadelphia, Uj I'lihisItH Wire f rum Ilia .V3otlalpd I'rcsi. liilludclphla, Xov I. The second mi miul i (invention ol the Stulo Fcdciatiou of Hoys' 1 lutis opened hem toda. Dele gates 1110 hi attendance fiom Wilkob Dane, Suuuton and Heading, wheto the fe'deiation has a laigo inenihotship. Tiieie 1110 about 3,000 membeis In tho cltlej named while i.i'un bos belong to tho federation in this city. ABE Ml RIMS WEAK ? Thousands Have Kidney Trouble and Never Suspect It. To Prove What the Great Kidney Remedy, Swamp Root, Will Do for YOU, Every Reader of The Tribune May Have a Sample Bottle Sent Absolutely Free by Mail. U used lo bo consldcted thai only titlnaiy and bladder ttoubles weie to be traced to the kid neys, but now model 11 science ptoves that nearly all diseases have their beginning In the dlpoider of lhsc most Important. 01 guns. Tho kldtievs lllter und puilfy the blood that In their work. Theiefoic, when jour kidneys tuo weak or out of onler, joti can understand how quickly your cutlio body Is tiftected, and how eveiy 01 gun wuniH to tall to do its duly. If jolt nte sick or "feel badly," begin taking the gicnt kidney lemedy, Dr. Kilmers Swtunp Itoot, because as toon as your kidneys 111 e well they will help nil Hie other oigans to health. A tilal will convince anyone. Weak and unhealthy kidneys aio lcsponsiblc for mnny kinds of diseases, and If peimlttcd to continue much suffering with fatal icsults arc sntc to follow. Kidney trouiile Inltatcs the nerves, makes you dlzx.y, lestless, sleepless and Irritable, aiakes you pass water often dining the day and obliges you to got up many times (luting the night. Unhealthy kidneys cause rheimiatlsm, gravel, catnnh of the bladder, pain or dull ache in the back, joints and muscles; nnkes your head ache and back ache, causes In digestion, stomach and liver trouble, jott get a sallow, yellow complexion, makes you feel as though you hod heai t tumble; you may have plenty of ambition, but no strength; got weak and waste away. The cure for thcc tioubles Is Dr. Kllmei's Svv.inip-ltoot, the woild-famous kidney lemedy. In tnking Kwnnip-Itoot ou aftoid nutuiul help to Xatuie, lor Swamp-Itoot Is the most pet feet healer and gentle aid to tho kidneys that Is known to medical science. If theiu is any doubt Inyotir mind as to your condition, take fiom our' mine on rising about four ounces, place it in a glass or bottle and let It stand tvvi nty-four hotus. If on examination It l milky or cloudy, if theie Is a bilck-dust set tling, or it small paiticios float about in It, your kidneys ale in need of Immediate attention. Swaiup-Uoot is pleasant to take and Is used In the leading hospitals, lecommended by phy sicians in their private practice, and Is taken by doetoi s themselves who have kidney ailments, because they lecognl.e In It the gteatesL and most successful remedy for kidney, liver and bladder tioubles. If jou are tilieady convinced that Swamp Root Is what jou need, jou can puiehnse the EUITOUIAIj XOTE It you have Hie slightest symptoms of kidney rr bladder tumble-!, or if theie Is .1 liace- ol It in our family hlstoi.v, send at once to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Bingliamton, X. Y., who will gladly send jou by mail, immediately, without cost to you. .1 sample bottle of Svvump-Ttoot and a honk containing tunny of the thousands upon thousands ot testimonial lettets lecelved fiom men and women citicd. In wilting, be sine to say that ou lead this generous offer In the Seianton Daily Tiibune. ttA)Afr$AttfAiAtW Announcement Mr. George Watkins most earnestly recommends his patrons and the people of Scranton and vicinity generally, the mag nificent collection of Oriental lugs and Carpets Now being shown at his store, 500-502 Lackawanna avenue, by j Mr. ifarten tfasat), This stock undoubtedly comprises the most beautiful Oriental Rugs and Carpets ever brought to Scranton, and will be sold at i... ... ,.: ji ijuiitBiiuiiuiiiu uniii.y 1. 31 . and continuing daily this week 502 Lackawanna Avenue, f: (?(B?fM(?Mf(fMMBM?MWS(fM?V?MM?Mf(fMB(OW(?,?lv h'tj v, & f, , vi s t & fc vu t v Take a Look AT OUR FALL AND WINTER LINE OF ii tnesD lines mo not uetter tntui nny otner in town, uon't nuy $ them, but nt nny mte have a look. Our nsovtment of Undeivenr is . so lnigc, wo cannot specify each kind in this small space. They tangs j f In piice fiom 50c to $5.00. $ ti fa" ti GLOVES J Wo havo foity different kinds to show you, fiom tho 25c Woxk- X $ ing- Glove, tho ?1.00 Walking Glovo, to tho pine Otter or Sealskin, X U including Dent's, Fownes', Penins', Tannoit's, also "Illii-Pioof" X $ Dilvlng Glove. X V .V S 309 Laclca. Avenue. ( Solo Aircnt for J)r, .lacjrer't. Sanitary Underwear. v 'A 'A "A '4 "A " "A A 'A "A 'A "A 'A A A A "A "A "W U 'A "A "A 'A "A A 'A 'A 'A 'A 'A A A '4 'A A aH S S S ! I "! '5 J ' J " ' "$ 'b 'h ? l ! J' J 't l " 1 !' i J ' If YOU Want OI A IVTO for Cash or on Easy J The Best Ji IHLl 1 J faymeiils. Cull on J N. A. HULBERT, Wareroom, . Vaiious Makes of Pianos struments Taken in Exchange. j t j jt a ! j j j iw3& XVl.1 .JL M MO liill li'. . tl H I DR. KILMER'S I 11 B SWAMP-ROOT A H Kidnsy.Ltver&Bladdsr Pjj CURE. KM H nirtEcnoN?. EM MtVTKtton,,two or Ihrre 9M UUUm Cei.ruDnrtli bttort or CUr flH 1H ttioiUau I RlliFilllnif, HSa HHH UMIIrftllPMn lopllnetoilt MUM BKH May conimfnro will, ,mall HH HSjH itn,ian(llnrrfA to full drop H "I""! or more, 11 tbft caw irotill " rSpjH Fstn to roqtilre. "" KnM TI1I1 prent rmflr rtirr, all uE rijR3RI llln,ISer,blall,r amtt rlo SE MjtDa AcM IrouMra aal dlaonler, 3B jJDjmm ' tn tTPaK- ' lory', ait. h a, fgX mfiMa rttlrt of tlio Ma I f,r, grarrl UU WM rtiuinat(,m, JuinlaKo at, 1 SB jH llrlt'hl'a lllwi.e , which h tlir HPm uXu wnr.tf.rniof kllncvil'seaie. B"fl idpgSdCj lt!srlcaa3nltoUke. HnSS gH FRrraritn 0LY Br jefFlM Eaffi DR. KILKER & CO., Sgl KJhS WNOIIAMIOV, N. Y. R vHB SolclbynllDrugKNts. KPJ cl i, ...I, i itSnr Swamp-Iloot Is pleasant to take. legulur litly-tenl and one dollar sUe bottles at the diug stores eveivvvhere. Don't make uny mistake, but le meinbcr the name. Kw.imp Itoot, Dr. Kilmer's Svvnmp Itoot, and the .uldicss Uing liamton, X. Y., on eveiy bot tle. 8?: of Constantinople 1 2fr . '. ?" a ni .1 " . ut .i .niu ir is:- iSh t e t D v, v. ti v, t v. t tyj ; 6j n X X X X a 412 Spruce Street J , .117 Wyoming Avenue .j. at All Prices, Old In- tj j ij ji j J ! t ji ij WHO WANTS $20.00 in GOLD For a Christmas Present? Twenty Christmas Presents $50.00 To Be tilvcn by The Scrnntoii Tribune to the Children of Scrniiton and Northeastern Pennsylvania. One Present $20.oo In Gold $20.00 One Present 10.00 In Gold 10.00 Ono Present 5.00 In Oold 5.00 Two Presents 2.1:0 Facli e nn ri vc i-resents Ten Presents Total Twenty Presents THE TKIBUNC'S SECOND ANNUAL Junior Educational Contest. A Contest In Word-HulldinK. Who Can Alakc the Most Words Out or the Letters in T-H-E H-O-M-E P-A-P-E-R THIS IS much easier than last year's contest, and twenty of (lie brightest boys and girls will secure Christmas Gifts in cash for making the largest number of words out of these letter. Jt is lots of fun lo think out the words and hunt them up in the dictionary, and besides it will help you with your, spelling. You will be surprised at the number of different ways these twelve letters can be used. Rules of the Contest Presents will be given to the boys or girls, whose parents oi guardians are subset ibers to THE TKLIJUNE. building the largest number of words out of the letters contained in "The Home Paper.'' Xo letters must be used any more times than they appear in lltee three words. As an example, only one "A" could be ud, but there might lie two "leV or three "E's." Only words defined in the MAIN PORTION of "Web ster's! International Dictionary" (edition of 1S0S) will be al lowed. Anv dictionary can be used, but in iudging the contest 'HIE TRlIi'l'NE will debar all words not foiuufin Webster's. Proper names, or any other words appearing in the "Ap pendix" will not be allowed. Obsolete words are admitted if defined in the dictionary. Words spelled two or more ways can be used but once. Words with tuo or more definitions can be used but once. io single letters counted as words except "A'' and "O." How to Write Your List. Write on one side of the paper only. Write very plainly ; if possible, use a typewriter. Place the words alphabetically. Write your name, age, address and number of words at tho top of your list. , Write the name of parent or guardian with whom you live and who is a renular subscriber to THE TRIBUNE. Fold the list DO NOT ROLL. COISTEST CLOSES SATURDAY, All letters of inquiry for information will be promptly an sweied. ddress your list of words, or" any question you wish answered, to CONTEST EDITOR. SCRANTON TRIBUNE. SCRANTON. PA. BED ROOM FURNITURE We have now in stock the finest display of these goods ever made in Scranton. Mahogany sets in the 'Colonial and Na poleon post bed styles. They are ele gantly rich. Dressers and Chiffoniers in beautifully finished Mahogany; Colonial and Louis XIV styles. We Invite Inspection Whether You Are Going to Buy at Once or Not. EDUCATIONAL. SYRACUSE UNIVERSITY, Syracuse, N. Y. OriMirtS, lioMilo tlio lrnulill' CoIIoko (.'diii ho1-. Mefliiiiilt.il, I'.leLtilc.il mill Civil IIiiBlni'i'llHK. Aitllittitiim, Allele. I'lhilhiL-. I.iw. MliIIiIik, Sutlolocj H unit rCilnKHKV ,, , V iwfi i'nii'i'" nf tlio pint nir milvor- SMWh of tlil.i fiitiiiln mid lliuopn mo ii'iiusriiti'il mi Hi' UK'iilU 'H t'i I.H' lil'll lt- I'ollnsi' Tuition ONprnsos nn- hi luouoimo in it iin" niu ii'ii thill thf Ires in Homo colk'His iliiuo tii-o tuition In irhcu Send for Catalogue. Lager MiuniJ'ncturoi's of j. . .j j. i i j ! j & ; i i ; ? t i ! ! '! 'I i' J" J ! ! nSL ScrantonXa. Old 'Phone, 3.i3i. New 'I'hone, 12935. i nis o i.oo Each . . Soc Each. . t 5.00 5.00 $50.00 DECEMBER. 20TII at 5 P, M 121 Washington Avenue EDUCATIONAL. Do You Want a Good Education? I.'ot a tliort course, nor an ruy courae, ncr a cheap course, but tho best education to be had. No other education Is worth ipenJiiK; time and money on. It you do, urito (or s catalogue ot Lafayette College Easton, Pa. which eBtti Ihorouih preparation In tha rnglnecrlng and Chemical Professions aa well m tho regular Colleee course STATE NORM SCHOOL, EAST STROUDSnURG, PA. Hi'Kiiliir Stsitn Nnim.il CiiuihOH ami Spul.il Depai lincuts nf Muslr i;iuci. tlun, Ait. Uiaulutr. StcuoKiapliy niui TMiewiltinB HtroiiK Collt'jju I'tojiaia toi Uciuituu'iit FREE TUTION, lloaitlliiB epnses flDO per week Pupils mlitilltril at mi time Winter Tfini opt. lib Xte. :-Jtli Wilto for ulu. louuc E. Ii. KEMP, A. M., Piliutpjl. TON CORRESPONDENCE SCHOOLS bCUANTON, lA. T.J Tostcr, I'lvis i:imor H. Uiw.ill.'l'icas. It. J. I'Woi Htunloy P. Allen. VUo PicsIUeiit. Stticlaiy.