v . V' -t t- J , ' ' "' trf'-W" J ,,? 'N n '.. THE SCRANTON TIUBUJNE-'JiDJNTJi!SDA, NOVEIMBER 26, 1902. jfi , . . J Vt ,J'-i,- i.. Published jftiiy Kxcc-pt Runrtujt by The Tribune rubllshlng Comrny,i rifly Cents a Month. MVV R' JttOltAltl) o. r. JiyxiiKU r.MTon, lltnlKEM MANAimn. i:nterpd il' the I'oslofTlca ni RernMofi, as Second tlnsi Mull Matter. When tpneo will permit. Tim Trllmno I nltrnjn Kind to print hortlrttern from Iti frlnmta bnnrlne n current topic, but lta rulo It tlint IIicsii muni lio alcncd, far pub ltmitlon, by tho writer' ronl nnniol nntl tbo condition iireVcilfcnt to neeeiitnnro li tlint nil contribution ilinll bo aubject to eilltorlnl revision. THK UXAT KATE FOB AOVBItTISINO. The following table shims tlia price per Inch each Insertion, ;pac to he inert within uno year: pwtL J ''"Per I g Poslllon 1 rsi than 60 Inches . .60 ,M 1 0 '0 Inches 40 .tl .4 100 " 30 .li .30 250 " 15 .275 ."0 MO " M -.-J .21 1009 " 16 .17.1 .19 For cards of thanks, resolution, of condolence, anil similar contribution In tho nature of advertising, 'Iho Tribune makes a charge, of 5 cents a lino. TEN PAGES. SCRAN'TON, NOVllMUCU L'fl, 1B02. Says Rlshop Potter, very Duly: "Or Kiinlzed hodles of lubor are making' a mistake In trying to fotce men Into their membership and In committing acts of violence and I hope that they will learn that their crusade Is only of value when It Is can led on along great moral lines." It will take more than .hope to stop these mistakes. The Inquiry to Continue. Tim HALTING of compromise proceedings In the strike In iltihy Is not necessarily a misfortune. If only ii com piomlse was sought, th.it could have been effected at any time dining the past five months, on teims ceitalnly as liberal as those now suggested. When the strike commission was appointed, the American people accepted it as a guarantee that the whole matter would be ventilated and all the facts eltell id for their Information. Nothing less than this will fulfil their jtibt expecta tion. Anything les-s would he a reflec tion, ih st, upon tho commission, whose charter Is not limited by ex parte law- jers' agreements, and, secondly, upon the good faith of the piesldent of the United States. There can bo no unlahness to any Interest in a full and open hearing. To .say that It will take time and cost money is tiue, but peimanent peace is worth both. We hae had thiee years of secrecy and Intilgue .ind.mlsehlet In the coal business, with two main strikes and a host of little ones, involving eveiy conceivable phase of lawlessness, persecution and intimidation, and en tailing upon both individuals and the .state Intense annoyance and veiy con siderable bin dens of cost. These ate not to be brushed away lightly, nor solved by a veneer of compromise. Their leeuiienei' can be prevented only by a thorough pioblng and a settle ment which will settle. Introduce piofessional agitation among persons without a sense of hu mor and send at mire for the cot oner. Witness Cuba. The Stitch In Time. c ONSIDERARLF: space has been taken in the pnpeis of late in lecltal of labor dllllculties at Schenectady. That eit is undeigoing about the same kind of netful tut moil on tho pait of men in labor elides, newly upheaved into positions of power and lesponslblt ity that Scranton has undergone. The ferment Is on nnd must woik off. Doubtless the labor movement in Schenectady, as we expect of it In Scranton, will then become sane, con servative and regardful ot the fact that there are otheis. ! It is lnteiesting to note the starting point of tho labor exeeBses in Schenec tady. As in Scranton, tho fltst fault iluy with the employers. In Schenectady the big employing concern is the Gen rial Ulectilc company. It Is a llbri rtlly managed institution as such insti tutions go, but it has its shaie of sub ordinate officials moie intent upon the mathematics of economy in pi eduction than upon the ethics of the wage ptob lcm. What happened may best be told In tho language of a Schenectady cor lespondent of the New Yoik Sun, a paper which will not be accused of pre senting the employets" side in terms of unjust criticism: Tiado unionism never got a really s(1- tire foothold In this elty until after tho big btilko lat spring. That It Is so stiongly eutiencheil now Is p.utlallv duo to the course puisued by the Ui'-ucial IHectrlo otllclals when that tioublo be gan. Tho stilko usulted fiom a iletet nilnalion to cut down the wages of a few men-less than twenty In the polishing depaitniont. Tho cost of living hcie Ih iNcecdlngly high, almost as lilhli U', In Tow Yoik, la fact, and tho men pro fstvn 'vigorously against tho ic'duetluii illegltig that' t hey rould not suppoit heir famtlios on less pay than they vvero cceivlng. Tho mnmiger.s vvcio obilurute, lowovcr, and tho men In the polishing IH'!i1i'-?.lt H'rUL'lc "CTlnst tho i eduction. '1 heTci Wore Hum .somuthlug les.s than 3.0uo union-men In tho entire plant, but the non-union employe, fearing a reduction, went out, too. In nil ne.uly s,cmn men Shuck1, eomplhtoly thiir up tho plain hi a vory Iniby season. Tho lesult was that the employes won a hIhiuiI vlcloty. Tho stiikn was shoit Jived, but It (might tho lneu.lhclr povver. Then began tho union Ixliwr.of Hclicutct.idy, Most of tho bkllleil wotltmcn tumbled over ono another to olu tho labor niganl.iUon, Otheis were forced to eomo In by the usual methods. Tod.ii- theie am JUtj-llvu dlutlnct unions Irl this town, r.ven the bootblneks and the cleikH In tho iliy goods stoics uto onsillllccl. Tho blunder of the fieneiul Klettile Diuemis In giving a eiiuso for giieviiuces alul 'a soil for agitation Is ulmost n, dlrfecf pauilh'l of tint stupidity of tho mqnuglng Inteiests of the nnthraclto iuuVch p 1000 Ip declining to Jieed the ndylco of far-seeing men In tho coal llejdp who uiged voluutaiy tonectlon of the powder overcharge, an IneicuFo Df wages- before commanded by main force and the aiiungcment of n mu--hlnery of' adjustment of loenl gilev intes wheieby the Individual miner ould feel assuied of fnlr tieatment .vlthout mnnlng lsk of icysngo ftom m unprincipled foi email. All of these things are being foieed upon the big wmiuuiiles at incalculuble money and Boclnl cost, Ineluillnrr n delirium of vlo lence nnd Incipient anarchy whlolt will lonrr lenvo a ilntk nlulu upon this tin hhIm of the anttnnultc Industry, when till Of tllCRC! OXCCHSdH nlltl CX)CIIB04 I'Olllll linvo lieni avoided unci averted b.v n policy of cutullil honesty tit the. Ik'kIii nlnj;. If llioie Is nny leaeoii fioin the vurl oti4 pliasci of sttlfo nnd turmoil now to lie neon In the IndiHlilnl woilit which mcciIh einphnHlH above tmothcr It It thai the stitch In time huvch nine. Let tho employer who fears n ptilke make surcs that lio'l rIvIiik; no JitHt provocation for one, ami then If It comtt he can feel pretty sine that It won't put him out of huslnrpq. Thete uie times n.f exclto menl nnil ferment when the jusl suiter alike with the unjust, both anions tin pIoyetH anil amoiiK employes hut tho olil rule still liolcla rooiI In the long' nut that honesty Is the licit poljc.v. Tho man who hullils upon It can await the passing of the storm. In other words, the Moinoo doetilno Is not n South Amcilcaii licence to steal. Two Interesting Predictions. I N 1S9 1 Herbert Spencer, the great Ungtlsh philosopher, wiote to a friend In Brooklyn his opinion that tho world-wide movement toward the dissolution of existing social foims and a reorganization of society on a socialistic basis was "Ineslstlble" and ho added this cheer ful picdlctlon: "Wo have bad times before us nnd you have still more dieadful times before you civil war, Immense bloodshed, and eventually mil itary despotism of the severest type." Others have piedlcted similarly. Lyman Abbott Is a scholar having some points of computibon with Her bert Spencer. He also offeis a pre diction on the same subject. He, too, looks upon reorganization of social forms us irresistible, but expects It to come to pass by evolutionary i.ithcr than levolutoinury processes, and ho sees this evolution at work today. Listen to his view, as expi eased in The Outlook: la the pilmllivo state each Individual himself conducts nil forms of industry necessary for his comfoit. He kills the game, skins It, makes of the skins moc casins for his feet and a cloak for his body, digs out the log to serve for a ennoe, erects his wigwam, cultivates his little patch of corn, makes and strings his own bow and lashlons his own at rows; Is, In short, butcher, tanner, hoo- m.ikoi, tailor, boat-bulldcr, house caipen tcr, fanner, ai motor, all In one. This is Individualism, puie atn simple. (Jindually ho lenins that In- Is moio skillful In the chase than his neighbor, and that his nclifhbor can mnkc a bet ter bow and anovv than he. So one slns at homo to eonstiuct, the other goes foi th to hunt, and tho two exchange their pmducts to mutual advantage. As this exchange ol products glows more extensive and complicated, u medium for the exchange is lmented, and thus money i iiraos into u and baiter becomes trade. It is discovered that different communities have different advantages In soil and climate, or the taste and temper of tlie people; so communities as well is individuals begin to exchange, .ltd trade becomes commerce. Steam Is tlls coveied and maehlneiy invented. With steam and machinery conies a necessity for a laiger iiulustii.il organiatlon. Com bination, of capital is now required. Cap ital Is what a man muUes b- his in iltistiy mmo than ho consumes In bis suppoit or his j)leasiucs. When the in dividual housewife spins tho wool 'and weaves it In her loom into a homespun gaimenl, u single man in a single life time can easily accumulate, tho capital uicessaiy for such housdiold industiv. Hut when a. thousand spindles me i evolv ing and a bundled looms aio clanking under a single roof, one man cannot hi a llletlme accumulate the capital for such a nvmufacturlng Industry. Viulous individuals must combine theh saving:?. Thus the. coipoiatlon Is created. When a slngli) housewife spins and weaves tho wool, no industthl otganlzatlou Is neces sary; she spins and weaves as sho chooses and as other duties to her house hold permit. Hut when the bundled em pln.vos aio winking under a single roof In the manufactuie of woolen Raiments for n widely t xlcnded maiket, the for mer individual llbeity Is no longer pos sible. These live bundled woikeis must woik togethei. Thus labor (OiganlsMtlon Is cieaUd. Organized labor Is as essential to iuul em civilization ns organized capital. The onlv question is, Shall laboi oiganiza tloiis bo autocratic cu democtatle; shall thev be organUed under capital and wholly subject to Its will; or shall they have something to say respecting the foi m. uatuiQ and spirit of the oiganlza- tlonV Shall they woik under the condi tions wlili h capital pttscilbes, dining tho bonis which capital chooses to pay, or shall they havo a voice in determining the tondltlons, tho wages, the houis? Tills Is the hist and fundamental ques tion involved In our Industilal problem. The mliio, the factoiy, tho railroad, aio prlvato enteipilscH, owned by tho capi talists, who buy their labor as they buy their machinery, nnd dlschaigo tho ono ns they discard tho other when It censes to be piolltnlilo: this Is one vluvv. Tho mine, tho rallroul, the factoiy, aio a Joint-stock onteipHse, to bo can led on b.v capitalists and Uboteis as partneta who shoio the control and the pi outs, neither being Independent of the other, each fulfilling an iipproprlato tuuctlon In a haimouioiis organization, for mtitunl piolit and luspiicd by a, splilt of mutual i expect: this Is the other view. Which of the two Is mnro In haimony with tho principles of ilii'iiocnuV.' To ask this question Is to urswer it. Whatever may be said of tho Old Woild, In tho New, whoie the plain people control tho gov ernment of city, suite ami nation, vvheio they dliect and ( dmlnlster tho public educntlou, whent tliey aio Iho final au thoitty In thilr celtnlastlciil Institutions, It Is not possible tha they will peiman ently consent to a system whhli allows them no voice hi their IndiiHtilal oigan l7titlnus. Tho eoiinttv which Is ilemo cratlo In polltlci', educdtlon, and leliglou, will not bo automatic Jn industry. Tho nrguments agah.st tho organisa tion of labor uto plausible but not sound; they an derlvul from an obsoivallou of Hiipuflcliil Incidents, not from a study of fundamental piluclplcs. "Labor unions nre hu sponsible uigiiiilzailon3 " AVo doubt tho until of the statement; vvo are Inclined to believe Unit In law a labor union Is nothing bit a gieut pnit neiship In which every member Is person, ally responsible for all the pecunlaty oh ligations of tho organization. Hut If it Wtio otherwise tho lomedy would bo lu cniporatlon, not dUsolut on "They rnuso sulkes," On tho conliai, they have i educed still.es; It would bo moio ttuu in say that, hHtnilca.ly, unions liuyu Blown out of stlkt.s -111111 thai; stiikes luivo ginwn out of uulom. "They bunk contracts." Sometimes, but on tho whole they huo kept their ngrtemeuta qute us loyally as capitalistic orcunU.i. tlous. "They vlolato tliu law." Then punish them; no one pioposes to ills pensei with combinations of c-uplliil by. diuso In souiu cubes they have ilo'ated jaw, in moio cases havo evudul It, and pot lnficquently Jiuvo conupted It nl Its spilng and source. "They aro led by bosses ami demagogues." So huvo polliU cul organUatlons been led by bosses and demagogues; they aio moio nppaient In politics than In Industry, and me 1101 wholly absent from tho churches. AVhai then? Wp will Bet lid of them; we will not tako tho counsel of tho anaiclilsta and dissolve society Into Its otlglnal elr incuts. "Thoy destioy Individual ucIIok. dood laborer and poor laborer nre pilld the same vvngo!. nnd both, follow the die tntlon of their wnlklindelegnle." Thfc aliroWd buslnern man nnd tho unbind nessllkn widow Invest their earnings In the same company and both gel tho same Intel est on their Investment, Hoth lenv their capital ot the absolute disposal ot trusted dhectors, J 'or they havo learned that In combination under chosen lend uts both got nn mlvutuiiRit which neither cntlld get acting nlone. The skillful iilul the lcs.t iiklllful laborer, acting on tho saino pilnclple, unite tuul put, their labot hi the conttol 01 ch'oden leaders, because they hellevu that by coniblniitloii both can gel an advantage, which neither oaii got It ho aels separately.' And they ate right. In Industries whcio labor Isullsor. ganged, conditions mo bud, hours tun long, wages 'are poor sweatshops, for Instance. Willi rate If any cx'ccpllom( the organization of. labor has been fob lowed by Improved conditions, lessoned bouts, better wages. The light ot a liihoier not to Join a labor ntgiinbntlon Is absolute. The right of the Individual to work untedntea and Is the neicssnry foundation of the rigid of laboieis to unlto In thel." work. It Is lllio the light of tho capitalist not to Invent his money In a corporation, but to conttullo In nn ludlvldunl cntorprjse. To foi co n fnctory Into a ttust, to force 11 lnborcr Into 11 union. U to vlolnle tho fundamental rights ,of man; 'for no right Is more fundnmeutul tlfan that of an owner to his ptoperty und that or a workman to his labor. Tho labor unions which try to cocico liib'orois to Jptit thcmwcakon their own cause and delay that organization of labor which tliey Imntilm llml tlwiv ni n MUiimotlnEr. Hut. more than that, they violate tho rights of labor and give excuso for Its viola tion by others. Theio hnvo been eases In which capitalists' havo stood hfuvcly for tho light of the Individual laborer against tho attacks of labor unions which, however unconsciously, were be ttnjlng their own cause. All honor to such defcndcis of ficedom. Rut too of ten tho right of the lnborcr to employ ment so valiantly defended by capitalis tic organs means only the light of the capitalist to pav lower wages, require longer hours, and Impose worse condi tions than would bo possible If labor wcro organized. Combination both of proptily and of Industiy, of cnpltal and ot labor. Is In evitable, because It Is tho dlvlno order of human development. It would bo no more possible to go back to tho Individu alistic oiganb.iliou of the Ilrst part of the nineteenth ccntuiy than to go back to the feudalism that preceded It. To do so we should luiie to forget the invention or machinery, the dlseoveiy of steam, the utlli.itlou of elcctiielty, division of labor, the ml of co-opcratlon. The lem edy for tho evils Incidental to the com bination of capital Is not ptohlbllion of comblratlon, but 11 wiser and moio ben eficent combination; Iho remedy for tho evils incidental to Iho oiganlzitlon of labor is not its disorganization, but its more efficient oignnlzatlon. Theie- can be no question as to which is the moie houeful and reassur ing view Spencers or Abbott's. In the main we Incline towntd the latter. Rut if Lyman Abbott could have lived for the p 1st tin eo years In thr nnthiaolte coal fields, in daily touch nith the dis till bed conditions so gr tphically de picted in ceitaln now famous letleis contributed to his admliable magazine, it would have taken 1 uge faith and al most superhuman iatlence to uphold confldenue in the pioposltion that the violence, Intimidation and ncouiage ment ol" anaichy then pievalent were a necessary pi ice of labor's evolution or that in all eases the end justified the Just think ol it: Ono day last week there stood on the sidings of a single lallvvay In the vicinity of Pittsbuig, 0,000 loaded fi eight cars stalled owing to a jam. This was equivalent to a tiain of cms leaching fiom' Scranton to Hoboken, and almost back to Pat leison. No wonder .such iiiteinpeiatc piospeiity Is ulaiinlnrr. It is now guild ally admitted by those qualified to testily that banishing the canteen has injuied the army. Yet tho well moaning people who laboied to accomplish the unpleasant lesults may congiaiiihite themselves that they acted on pilnclple. The fact tint the joint assembly of Oklahoma is Demociatle by one vote may have a dampening eflect upon the statehood movement in Washington. The voteis In those ambitious. South west totiltoiles ceitalnly won- not po litic. in the event of a war between Ven ezuela and Colombia, It would conduce to civilisation to have the annihila tion mutual and complete. It Is piobably loitunate Unit Mr. "Jones, he pays U10 tielght," was not called upon to settle for the accumu lation at littsbuig. WAYSIDE NOTES. To an oiillnary luyniau It would o sn that about tho most lmpiobablo pliuc for u dlsastious tire in New York elty would bo ut tho top ol a steel bildge lowei. Unco bundled fi el fiom tho gi omul. And yet, th necessary elements woie all llieie, namelv, 11 lot ot loose linnlei, a wooden sluintv, filled wlt'i laiiols 01 coal tar, and a gang ut wnir. pion lighting their pipes pieparntory to pihi,r homo tor the day. Hiidgo bulldeis, like the lost ol us, muse leain vvIdom hi tho bitter school ol expel lence. Kaiser William, among his accomplish incuts, which 1110 uumuious nnd vailed, seems to bo n cinik shot, During the leceut shoot at K.indi Ingham, ho Is said to have lugged about 1.00 pieces of giuno, having Unco assistants to load for him. Tills may bo good spoil, but to a plain Ameilcau (Itl.tn It looks moio IIUo mi ni cissary slaughter. It' the Kaiser wished to show his maiksmaushlp ho i ould do It equally well with clay pig tons, Jt Is also slated that ho luu kept a recoid ot his "kills" sluco ho com menced shooting mid that it figures up 17,-l'i"i (icatuies, Including IS.i'.d hates. J'cihtips the iccoril Is something to ho pi 0111I of, but 11 good iiiiiuy peuplo will ant look at It In that lluht. Tho neoid or fnlallltes on Iho font ball Held this year is somowhal still tliug, no less than eight deaths lesulllug fiom injiules ifcclud In tho game; and pin slblv some weio not upoited, These deaths weio not all those of uuscusouci! young players, but Included somo epu fenced men of tho umnl ago for the lust pluyeir. Hesldcs tho fatal lujuiies, theie weio somo twenty or thirty seilous outs, some or which mm cause death lata Ol limine It Is well for ouug men to develop physical pinwess, strength and couiuge, ii good loot hall players must, but It looks us If It was at u protl , near cost, mis ear 11 1 icasi. 1110 game 1 4 necessuilly dungerous, but It Is feiuid thut nianv playeis mo unuectssailly rough against their opponents, and in line them without Itgaid to consequence In older to aid their side to win. This feature ought to bo ellmiuuteil In sonio UU), Some government ilciks hnvo voluu tecicd to imdeituko 11 diet of adulter ated food In detetmtuo Just to what ex tent It may bo detrimental to health. It Is hoped they may survive and bo of somo set vice to the public. Hut us a matter of fact, adulteiatcd food should not bo allowed to bo sold, whether lmi in fill or not. The puichasur who bus Blight's Disease and Kidney Trouble Of Loup Standing Cured by War ner's Safe . Cure Many Cnso3 In vestlgjitca ' by tho editor nnd found to Be Completely Cured. A TUTAL IIOTTM; OP WAIlNllll'S SAl'13 CIJUI2, Tim f?ltl2ATi;ST KID- niiv ftinniciNn known to hciuncu will hi: shnt ausolutulv KJtnu, POSTPAID TO ANY 11UAUUII Ol-' THIS l'Ai'un. An Investigation by the Ldllor of Ihls paper or tho inanv mluicitlous cuies mailo b.v Win tier's Hnf. C1110 hns so linmesscd tH with tho dilutive poweis of this gieat medicine thai vvo publish two of these letters for tho bencllt of our leadcis. Mr. J. William, of 7s Columbia St., Deliolt. Michigan, IIx.-UiIr.-iIcii. Older Sons ot St. Oeotge, mijs: "l-'or yeuis I sillTeied fiom kidney nnd bladder tioubles und tiled ninny doctoi . but 110110 of them seemed to help. Klnallv my doctor hud 1110 tiy Wnitier'H Sale Cine, which help ed mo fiom Iho lhst dose, und after 1 had taken thieo bottles I wus completely cur ed My general health Is 'better and I have not had tho slightest attack of kid ney or bladder Unable kIiico. If nny ono has weak or unhealthy kldncvs I henitlly iccommend Wni net's Safe Cine." Mis. Lucy Baxter, of Newpoit News, Va.. who la c2 irni.s old. navs: 'Almiit twenty yens ago I was given up by doctois, who said I was so far gone with Plight's DIse.iso that 1 could not 1 mover. Dropsy was well developed. Dr. Mai tin. of Syiacusp, .N. Y piescilbcd Wninei's Safe Cuio In conncetlon with Safo Pills After taking Unco lioltlcs 1 was ablo to esumo woik, and by degiei's ciued. 1 huvo to tliuuk Winners S tfo Cuio for being ullvo today." If j oil have pains In your back or side, pain vvhllu passing mine, difficult v In passing It, dizziness, nausea, torpid liver, your kidneys iue diseased. MAKJ4 TiflS I'EST AND PIND OUT. I'ut somo urine In a glass or botllu. After It lias stood it bonis if It is n 1 eddish or blown color, If particles Uoat about In It. or It1 It Is cloudy, ou can lest nssiued your kldnes aio diseased and unable to do their woik. and If not attended to im mediately Plight's dlscasc.dl 1 botes, ihcu in.itlsm, gout, uiic acid, lull imatlun of tho bladder, gall-stones or miliary tiou bles, will develop and prove tatal In a shoit time. AVainei's Safe C1110 Is the onlv absolute cure lor ah these fotms of kidney, liver and bladder tioubles. It has hi ought tho blessing of health to thousands upon thousands of suffcieilng men and women. AVuinei'.s Safo Cuio Is ptuely vegetable; fico fiom naicotlcs and other liaimfiil diugs found in many so-called kidney cuus. It Is pleasant to lake nnd fiee fiom se'dlmeiu. (Howaie of so-called kidney lemedies which aie full of sedi ment and of bad odor: they aio h 11 mini ) It does not constipate. Warners Sale Cuiu can be puichased at nnv chug stoio or diiect in two sizes r.0c. and Jl 00 a bot tle. He sine von set "Winner's." WARNER'S SAFE PSLLS move tho bowels gently and aid a speedy cuio. Refuse Substitutes: thev aie daug geious. Ask for Warners, it will cute ou. Il theie aio sjinptoms In jour case you do not undei stand, send a sample of mine 10 me mccucni aep utment anil tlie doctors will analyze it and send you lepoit and advice fiee. TIUAL BOTTLE THEE To convince eveiy suffeier fiom diseases of the kidnevs. liver, bladder and blood tll.lf rn I lini '- Slnt., iit.r. ,.111 nut.-. ,!.. a til.il bottle will be sent absolutely liee! postpaid Also a valuable medical book let wiuen lens an nnouc tlie disease i or tbe lllrltievs. llvnt 'mil lln,1.1.,i. ., m. . picscilptlnn for each disease, and m.inv ,r !, i....nr....i.. ... . . -. , , . . , . "' .iiiiuaiiiiu- ui icsciiiioiuais lecetveu dally fiom gi.ileful patients who have been ciued by Wainci's s ifo Cine. All vou have to do It to wiite Wiirnci's Safo Cute Company, Hochester. N. Y. and mention Paving nnd tills libeial offer In this paper. The genuineness of this offer is fully guainnteed by the publisher. sugar. Hour, cofioe, tea or spice, or any other aitlcle should bo entitled to get just tlin-n ai tides nellhcr moto nor less. Tho millennium will not bo heio until then. The labor convention down at New Oilcans objected to a losolution which spoke of Ihuvaid as a leading unlvcislt, and amended It to lead "piomlnent." Hut slnco that little game ut Now Haien last week It isn't even piomlnent; It h actually obscuie. A iiu.ailer of a million. 11101c or less, to build a (h.illeugei for that cup, unci as much more to build a defender for It. And the cup Is fifty cais old and vvav out of fashion, and didn't cost over a thousand, any way. Some people have money to bum. Hut bear, ho jes' fool Jlassa Koosc velt completely. Obsciver. tpm be 25 English Box Coats of imported zibiline cloth, in black and oxford; a 35 value for the low price of $27. Interesting, is it not? SO Monte Carlo and English Walking Jackets, in ker sey, Montenac and all good cloths. They were made by a good manufacturer to retail at $30. Our capacity for quantities enabled us to buy the lot and put them out at $25. 250 Jackets, in addition to the above, all new goods, for we did not carry any over from last year, ranging in price from $8.50 to $40.00, are placed on sa'e at prices that can't be undersold, when the quality is taken into the consideration. These I Host 0! Mighty Values Every Item a Bargain Every Bargain is Genutne 324 TAKE ELEVATOR. ... s . n t n s t h X K DICKSON'S .V .1 V SC w K a ft u tc ts K K u tt a a: w v K n v &' t; ts e; ft a' & Best ITFJT F1.0UH The Celebrated WH WHITE! Always reliable. Dickson I & Grain Co Scranton and Olyphant. .j ts MUM Slanufacturoi's of Old Stock :3 Brcwry, I. Scranton, Pae .. 43St0 45 n. sevenin Old 'Plione, 233 1. New 'Phone, 2P35. rrnrmsfsssismems leadquart&rs for Incandescent Gas Mantles, Portable Lamps. THE NEW DISCOVERY Sri Kern Incandescent Gas Lamp. i irSForsylli 1 323-327 Pcnn Avenue. BimtVZ!i!SXVa!!XAKJ IMMBIBR Tho Tribune will guarantee to print your paper book quicker than any oth er prlntliiE house In tho city. Are LACKAWANNA AVE. l His is Lager wy PISCO 0D Scllfe1 H1S1 & Connel! TLj- ?wjTJsr EDUCATIONAL. .:. liiU MUUn m P Who J Wants 1 ft iban Twenty Christmas Presents $50.oo To He Given by The Scranton Tribune (o the Children of Scranton and Northeastern Pennsylvania. One Present $20.00 in do;d $20.00 One Present 10.00 In Gold 10.00 One Present 5.00 In dold 5.00 Two Presents 2.50 Each 5.oo Five Presents 1.00 Each 5.00 Ten Presents 50c Each 5.00 Total Twenty Presents THE TKIBUNirs SECOND ANNUAL Junto Educational Contest A Contest in Word-HiiildiiiK. "" Who Can Make the Most Words Out of the Letters in T-H-E H-O-M-E P-A-P-E-R. T 'HIS IS much easier than last Drigntest coys and girls will making the largest number of lots of fun to think of the words and hunt them up in the dictionary, and besides it will help you with your spelling. You will bo surprised at tho 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 or guard ians are subscribers to THE TRIBUNE, building the largest number of words out of the letters contained in "The Home Paper." No letter must be used any more times than they appear in these three words. As an example, only one "A" could be used, but thero might be two "H's" or three "E's." Only words defined in the MAIN PORTION of "Webster's Inter national Dictionary" (edition of 1898) will be allowed. Any dictionary can be used, but in judging the contest THE TRIBUNE will debar all words not found in Webster's. Proper names, or any other words appearing In the "Appendix" 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 two or more definitions can bo used but once. No single letters counted as words except "A" and "O." flow 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 regular subscriber to THE TRIBUNE. Fold the list DO NOT ROLL. CONTEST CLOSES SATURDAY, DECEMBER 20TH at 5 P. M. All letters of inquiry for information will be promptly answered. Ad dress 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 Nob SYRACUSE UNIVERSITY, Syracuse, N. Y. OITKHS, lieplilo tin) icffiilur CollOK" Coulter), Mcihuukul, Klcctilc.U ami civil rnLrlin'Citnt.-. Ale lillccltlio. Music. I KiliitluiT. l.uw, Medicine, Sociology ! and I'ctltlKUKN . .. OVJIll KUHTV nl" tlio loading unlvcr hUIch of tills rouulii mid Kin ono ura icpunc nli'd on Iho lucidly of lliu Lll). cml AitK C'ollLtfo 'llilllim cwponics nro o iiiudniatu Unit lliuy uto U'h3 than tlio teis In somo uilleges whcio fieo lultlon Is bIvpii Send for Catalogue. SCRANTON CORRESPONDENCE SCHOOLS hCRANTON, . T .1, KoaU r,l'un Klliior It. Uiwull.TlCuU, It. J. I'ostei Stanley 1 Alton. Vice Picsldcut Suciolaiy The ffllms&c Powder Rooms 1 nnil 3 Commonwealth Bldg, SCRANTON, PA. MINING AND BLASTINQ Hade at Moojlc ami lluihJile Worki K Lafllix & Rnnd Powder Co.'a bKANGB GUN POWDER LUutrlo llattciici. Ucdrlo Kjrloderj, L' pluding lilasti. bjfcly t'utc. REPAUNO CHEMICAL CO.'S HIGH EXPLOSIVES. For a Christmas Present In sold $50. 00 year's contest, and twenty of the seenre Chrismas Gifts In cash for words out of these letters. It Is 121 ? Washington Avenue EDUCATIONAL. Do You Want a Good Education? Kot a riioft course, nor an tuj court;, nor a clieap course, but the best education to be li.id. No other education li wortb (pending time and money on. U you do, write for citalosuo ot Easlon, Pa. whlcb cfTcu thorough preparation to tha Lnjliicerln. and Cleinlcal l'rofeaoBi u well a) the ntulir Colleei) counei. ijaMraTTit,,w"'"J'i"J'"""'M1tM'1MMal;"?",Ma ISTATE NORBAL SCHOOL, EAST STROUDSBURG, PA. Hcuulnr Stato Noinml Courses and Ppccial DciuitiuontH or Music, Ulocu. tlon, Art. l)t.iuln', Stenography and TjpouiUInK, htioiiu Collect) I'loiuru. lory Pcpaitment. FREE TUTION. no 11 dint: expenses W50 per week Puplh admitted at any tlmo. Winter Ti'ini opens Dec, ,.'9tli. Wilto for cata. loguu. E. L. KEMP, A. M., IMnclpal. inimmwi Lafayette College