wiTreT t " V ?' Aflrrtrjjri kV' )!??'' 'W jV "vt4' sa .s; iiok j ?, lV V" THE SCRANTON TRIBUNE-SATURDAY, DECEMBER 13, 1902. 13 THE FAREWELL ADDRESS OF ;-- GALUSHA A. GROW ffV -y V" VT ua9jSSAMj(nutrrAjvJmtjvJ!.,jS(!. C?J.Js &fiu&S8CMt,kt,st& ... y rv .cr . , r-r '- ri&Jttmti vtnvnfv0 . .&aMM&4-464mtt4&ZZf(&&l mWMBBmm v ' Veteran Publicist Concludes His Long Career in Con gress bu the Delivery of an Address in Which He Defines His Views Upon the Proper Relations Between Capital and Labor. Following Is the uddtess of ex-Speak-er Galushu. A. (limv, the father of the Amui'lcitn Congress, defining his care Cully matured convictions lib to the re lations which should exist between enp ital nntl lubor. It Is the last address which he will make In the Congress which he has so long and so honorably adorned: Of all the baneful Influences which lead to national decay, the most per nicious Is a policy that degrades or Im poverishes labor. The real strength of a nation eonsfsts not alone in fleets unci armies, but in the manly spirit of an in dependent yeomanry, and In the Intel ligence, comfort and happiness of ltri laboring people. Of all Industrial questions, tho one that most directly affects the general welfare Is the relation of American la bor to capital. In the prosecution of business of any magnitude three things are necessary capital, supervision and labor. For success, wise supervision Is unite as important as either. "Without capital and wise snpprVMnn it would be Impossible for labor alone to accom plish any great lesull. Yot labor, whether of brain or muscle, is entitled to receive out of the accumulations of wealth in proportion to what It con tributes toward the accumulation. "While this theory Is just, tho difllcully In reducing it to practice is to devise a satisfactory method by which it could he done. Copartnerships in nil cases are baaed on the principle that whoever shares in net profits must in the same proportion be responsible for losses. But profit or loss in a business cannot be ascertained until after the expiration of a period in the business. Yet labor must be paid In current expenses whether there is any net profit or not. Statistics show that a large percentage of alt kinds of business ends in bankruptcy, thus sink ing the amount of capital invested. In such cases it is clear that labor re i elves all that it could possibly be en titled to under any theory of profit sharing. As wages are paid in current expenses, and capital takes all risks of losses, some method ought to bo pro vided for the repayment of the capital invested. Rten in successful business there would be no additional accumu lation of cnpltnl until the money al ready invested should bo repaid. '' Copartnerships between the owner of the capital in any business and its la borers would not be practicable, for the risk of losses and investment of money would all bp on one side, without In vestment or responsibility on the other. Incorporations or associations of labor ( culd not change these conditions. In corporating individuals or associations without capital would be a mere fiction of law, like John Doe and Richard Roe in legal proceedings. Business cannot be prosecuted successfully on mere legal fictions. Therefore corporations or associations for business must be based on actual capital. To woik is a right of every self-supporting, law-abiding person under any form of government, and the highest duty of free government is to protect Individuals in this right. To invest nipnry or not to Invest is the right of t)ie owner of capital. But whenever it is1 invested in business or any lawful pursuit it Is entitled to tho protection of law the same ns labor Is entitled to protection for its rights, Law cannot create or compel tho In vestment 01 capital any more tlnin It cjrn compel labor to work, outside of jjhal and chaiity institutions. But un iyJse legislation can prevent the lnvest 'nient of capital and may destroy it. Unreasonable demands by labor upon capital, if persisted in, can do tho same thing. Arbitration No Real Remedy. Voluntary arbitration of disagree ments between employer and employe, well enough in Itself, only settles, how ever, the existing dispute, which may occur again in the same or a different lorni, as often as tho old disagreement may have been fettled, Compulsory arbitration between em ployer and employe would bo a usur pation of the inherent rights of both by the lawmaking giower. And could It lawfully be done, the tendency would be, on ono side, to prevent the In vOstnient of capital, and on tho other to a llnal establishment by law of a hystem of peonage of all labor. Law can no more compel capital to pay to labor a specified rate of wages than It tan compel labor to work tit a fixed rate of waged, , Hut If tho proportion that ought to ho paid to labor out of net froths In a Wusluess could bo ascertained with mathematical exactness, It would not l)i a determination of tho real relation of American labor to capital. Tho great question In this country, In addition to that of profit sharing, 1h to determine how high he wages of labor can go without destroying labor Itself. The higher the wages of labor and re tain the market for Its products, the better It Is for everybody. To that point In all cases the employer can go. But beyond thnt point It is an Impos sibility. For labor cannot bo paid in the production of nn article more than the article Itself will sell for In tho market. Tho market price for nn ar ticle and the wages oj labor in Its pro duction are not fixed by this country alone. In respect to both market price and wages, this country Is In competi tion with tho markets and the labor of the world. A wise adjustment of tariff duties on tho Importation!) of the pro ducts of foreign labor can, to a certain extent, prevent tho reduction of prices In this country to a point ruinous to la bor. But the wages of labor can reach m high as to be beyond the power of tariff duties to overcome the competi tion of the poor!' paid labor of the world. Freo trude with the nations would glvo to labor everywhere t .c lowest wages paid anywhere. In tho countries of Europe there nru ! to-day twenty millions or more of la borers and artisans producing articles lor human consumption. And their dally wages are greatly less than those paid to labor in this country in like employments. It would cost any one of these laborers or artisans to remove from his homo in the Old "World to ono in the New not to exceed .$50 or $G0. For very such person who should come there, would be room for one less Amer ican laborer, provided there is Ameri can labor enough to supply the demand for labor. The great atti action heretofore for emigration to tills country has been that it is the land of liberty, home of the oppressed, and an asylum for the txllo. In addition, make It by undue stimulation the most attractive country for high wages and short hours for ! work, and how lone would It be before ! our home labor market would be over stocked from these beehives of Indus try, beyond the power of legislation or the capacity of consumption to save American labor, from the low wages of tho Old "World? To determine the point to which the increase or wages in this country can go and not produce such a result is the real solution of the prob lem of American wages. Entitled to Fair Compensation. The employe is entitled in all cases to a lair compensation for the time he uses his brain or muscle, or both, for the benefit of another. The time 'thus consumed and paid for belongs to the employer, and he has the right to di rect the mode and manner of Its use. The time not paid for belongs to tho employe, to do with it within legal limits as he leases. And the employer has no more right to say how it shall be spent than has the employe to say to the employer whom he shall hire or how he shall conduct his business. The right of the employer to control the time or the acts of the employe ends where payment ends. These are the relative lights of empoyer and em ploye, and they cannot be violated by either without Injury to both. Either has the right to organize for the pur pose of improving their condition or prospect in life. But no voluntary or ganization or association has any greater power or rights than the Indi viduals composing it. Any attempt to exercise any greater power or rights than those possessed by the individual becomes an organized attnek upon so ciety itself, which, in self-defense, if there was no other reason, orderly gov ernment must repel and prevent if they would preserve their own exist ence. labor, whether of brain or muscle, has two indefensible rights, both en titled to full, absolute protection under any form of government. One is to contract for employment on such terms ns may be satisfactory; the other, to refuse all employment provided no application is made on the community for personal support. Every person self-supporting and law-abiding has a right to work or not to work. This is an individual right, which the laws of a free gov ernment are bound to protect. But no person, hns a right to prevent an other person who desires to work from doing so. Every person hns the right to work without molestation, hindrance or intimidation of any kind. The rights of one man end where the rights of another begin. In free government there Is no right in any cltisen to combine for tho Injury of tho general welfare, whether capital ist or day laborer. In this respect, law applies alike to both. The primary ob ject In tho establishment and malnten anco of free government Is tho general welfare, and In its administration that is paramount to nil elhe. While all have the right to work or not, no one hns tho right to prevent, or attempt to prevent, by word, 'act or deed, the prosecution by others of any lawful pursuit or the development of any industry useful and beneficial to mnnkiud. Nor hns any one a right, by word or deed, to nid or abet in any way persons engaged in ob structing or in hindering the prose cution or development of enterprises and industries calculated to promote the general welfnre. Boycotting, ns It Is called, hi any business rests on tho assumption that nobody lias any rights except the boy cotter, and that he la privileged to fix the terms on which labor may earn Its dully bread by its dally toll, and the conditions on which all business In a community must be conducted. The fundamental principle upon which which free governments rest, and without which they cannot exist, is the protection of the inalienable right of every person to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. The inalienable right of life and liberty is of little consequence with out the inalienable right of the pur suit of happiness. The pursuit of happiness includes' the right in the individual to pursue any legal em ployment in a lawful way, without hindrance, molestation or Intimida tion in any form, laws in just gov ernments are made for the protec tion of these fundamental rights, and whoever violates them or attempts to is subverting the spirit and gen ius of free institutions, Whoever prevents or attempts to prevent the development of nn industry bene ficial to mankind, or prevents or at tempts to prevent the prosecution of such industry by others, becomes a conspirator against the general wel fare, Just the same aa a combination of capitalists might become injurious mm to the general welfnre in their com binations. No War Between Capital and Labor. A disagreement between the employer and tho employe as to the wages of la bor Is no more a war between capital and labor than Is u disagreement be tween tho merchant and his customer as to the price of articles offered for sale a war between the producer and the consumer. There can be no war, or even con flict, between cnpital and labor when their real interests are rightly un derstood nnd fully appreciated. They are mutually dependent on each oth er, and neither can accomplish any great results without the other. Of what use Is labor beyond the supply ing of mere physical wants by the cultivation of the soil, without capi tal to furnish transportation to mar ket for the products of labor, as well as for the development of all indus triesP And of what use would cap ital be without laborP In the world's commerce the locomotive is of no use without cars filled with the products of labor, and such cars would be of no use without capital to build the j railroad and buy the locomotive. In" the old system of mining in Mex ico the peon dug the ore deep down in the earth, filled a sack of rawhide with the material, nnd threw the sack over his shoulder with a leather strap across his forehead to hold the sack while he used his hands in climbing a single up right pole, with notches cut into it like stairs for his feet. On reaching tho top he emptied the sack of ore Into larger ones suspended on pithpr side of a donkey. And the donkey transported them along a. zigzag patli down the mountain side to a smelting furnace erected on the bank of the nearest stream of water. Capital drives a tun nel through the mountain, lays an iron or steel track, and puts upon It a lo comotive and cars, into which tho peon loads the ore as he digs it, and in as many minutes as it took hours before the ore is transformed from a drudge, doing tho work of a beast of burden, into a man, with wages sufficient to ( make Dome comlortnble. instead or the hovel of the peon, side by side with the stable of the donkey, there spring up comfortable dwellings, homes of happy childhood. So in all the pursuits of life, in order to accomplish the best results for the Individual happiness of all, capital and labor must go hand in hand, mutually dependent on each other. All manual laborers cannot be equally successful any more than can all professional or business men. There is no possible way by which incapacity or improvidence can be made equally successful with capac ity, prudence and economy in the struggles of life. If this inborn in equality of capacity in individunls be nn evil, it must be charged as a fault in the wisdom of creation. ' "Whoever Is contented with sufficient menus for making himself nnd those dependent upon him comfortable has attained all there is of real happiness In the accumulation of wealth, and has therefore no reason to cpmplain of his lot. Ail cannot bo poets, painters or sculptors, nny more than fill can be i lawyers, doctors or merchants, or tradesmen of any kind. Yot In this country every business pursuit or call ing Is within the reacli of nil. The highways to honorable distinction lend from the lowly cot of honest in dustry the same as from the gilded palnces of wealth or the halls of learning, and they are nil open alike to the humblest child of the sons of toil, from whom have sprung most of the historic characters of our coun try, and in which the passing gen eration nas not been deficient. Rise from the Ranks of Toll. The great soldier who sleeps on the banks of the Hudson, and who will through nil time hold a foremost rank with the great captains who have led mighty armies over victorious battle fields, began life us a day laborer In a tnnyard. Our first martyr president was burn In abject poverty, and to his mature manhood earned his dally bread by his dally loll. Yet of all tho i world's civic rulers In poaco and war, ' ho will forever hold no Inferior niche in the pantheon of human greatness, Ills two martyred successors, each without wealth or family Influences, nehloved honorablo distinction In all the pathways of life, and won the highest honors in the gift of a. froo tieonln. In 1 all tho great enterprises of this genera- tlon, ns well as of preceding ones, the Individuals who have achieved the greatest success In the world's estima tion have, hi most cases, begun actlvo life with tho smullest ot pecuniary means, The grievances of labor In free elec tlvo governments llko ours are to be removed In the same way as other grievances are removed by an appeal to tho Intelligent judgment of public opinion. In free elective govern ments, with free speech, free press nnd unlvorsnl ballot, there can be'uo excuse for a resort to lawless vio lence for the correction of any griev ance. In such governments, obed ience to the commands of law and to the mandates of duly organized courts is paramount to all else. No matter what the grievance com plained of may be, a resort to law less violence is nn attack on the tights of every law abiding citizen and upon organized society itself, and if successful it would be the first step in the road that lends to anar chy nnd national ruin. An enlight ened publics opinion in a free govern ment will in the end correct all real grievances, It peaceablo means only are employed. It may reunite time and J il-i- V sir " ' ;: patience. But that Is the case with all attempts to remove long standing abuses or to establish Improved condi tions. No causo, great or small, was ever benefited by the violation of funda mental principles of right. God rules tho universe by Immutable laws of justice, and It is in vain for man to attempt to nullify them. One person's rights end where another's begins, is a fundamental principle of all just laws, and is the basis of civ ilized society, liberty is the right of every person to engage in any lawful pursuit for a livelihood, nnd to continue therein without hind rance or molestation by any other person. And it is despotism in its worst form that deprives him of this right, a crime against humanity scarcely less than the taking of life itself. Shylock said to the judge, whose sentence of confiscation spared to him only his house and his life: "You take my house when you do take the prop That doth sustain my house; you take my life, "When you do take the means whereby I live." The discontents and complaints of in dividuals in this country as to their lot In life spring in most cases from a mistaken notion as to life's most desir able aipis and ends. No matter what the condition may be, there is more or less uneasy longing for something dif ferent. And when that something is reached or obtained the longing is not satisfied, and there is still something a little ahead, almost within reach. Like the child who hastens toward the place where the rainbow seems to touch the earth, no matter how near he ap proaches the apparent spot, the dis tance still remains the same. Most of a man's discontents in life, whatever may be his pursuit, are either from impatience or from a longing for something which, if attained, would add little or nothing to his real happi ness. "Wo scorn to wait fo& the thing worth having. We want high noon at the day's dim dawn, Wo find no pleasure in toiling and sav ing, As our forefathers did in the good times gone." The Essentials of Happiness. Tho man of imense wealth Is no hap pier than the man with moderate means, provided each is comfortable and equally contented with his lot. Comfort and contentment are the two essentials for happiness In this world's pilgrimage, and whoever possesses them has no occasion to envy any other con dition in life. Riches are not necessary to man's enjoyment, but the means to prevent starvation are. Nor is a splen did palace essential to his real happi ness, but a shelter against the storm and the winter's blast is. These Indis pensable requisites to man's comfort can be secured only by labor. Divine wisdom, In the economy of creation, made labor a necessity for human ex istence, and also made health and happiness dependent upon it. Labor therefore Is not an evil to be shunned, hut Is the means for the attainment of tho most desirable ends nnd alms in life. "In the sweat of thy face shalt thou eat bread," was not a malediction against the race, but was a statement of the condition on which man could still be happy In his fullen stale. All labor useful to man Is equally honor able, and Is entitled to public consid eration, nnd in all cases is entitled to something more than mere living wages. If the foregoing views as to the rights of labor and the relation of American labor to capital are correct, then It Is Important thax some feasible plan mutually satisfactory to employ er and employe should bo adopted for profit sharing by labor. It is obvious that as a business proposition It would be wholly Impracticable to make the laborers employed in any business stockholders of the association or cor poration. But It could be a part of the contract of employment that all per sons employed by tho association or corporation should bo paid out of net profits, at stipulated periods, on tho amount of wages or salary received for such period, the same percentage as would bo paid for such period to any stockholder on a like amount of stock. Such a plan, or something like It, would lemove the complaint made that labor does not rccelvo a fair share In the ac cumulations ofVealth. Labor contrib utes no part of the money capital In vested and takes no risk of losses, yet It would be paid out of net profits the same percentage on every dollar of wages received ns would be paid to any stockholder on a dollar In stock. Some such plan would seem to give to labor Its full proportion of tho net profits of the business in which it might have been employed. Such a method, or any other mutu ally satisfactory to employer and em ploye, that would avoid labor strikes, would save for general distribution a vast amount now invested in such strikes, saying' nothing of the enor mous losses of the whole opmmunlty In all brunches of business or of tho sac rifice of human life by tawless violence In such strikes. It has been estimated that' the losses In the late anthracite coal strike in tho state of Pennsyl vania were over $200,000,000. The fol lowing statement by items shows ?l'J7, 390,000: , . Slrlko began May IX, 1W.', dura tion ...131 days Minus and other tluowu out of woik -...., ,. 1SJ.W0 inntt , "V DETAILS OF THE TOTAL LOSSES BY REASON OF THE STRIKE. Loss In miners' wages $ 29,3"A000 Loss of operators CS,SOO,000 Loss of merchants in mlnhifr towns 2J,7,000 Ldss of mills and factoiies closed 7,520,000 Loss of merchants outside dis trict , 10,000,000 Loss of railways 54,000,000 Loss of business permanently ... 8,000,000 Cost of troops in field J.STiO.OOO Cost of coal and iron police S,."00,000 Loss to railway men in waes... 275,000 Cost of maintaining Idlo men.... 515,000 Damage to mines and machinery 5,000,000 Total $197,390,000 A labor strike is an unequal contest at best. It Is a contest of endurance between hunger nnd thirst of the human stomach nnd the Income of cubital. Capital in such contests loses none of its accumulation of wealth, unless an industry itself should be de stroyed: and in such case labor would be the greater sufferer. The Income of capital would bo temporarily lessened. That would be all. The existence of labor Itself Is dependent upon constant employment, and Its condition cannot be Improved by Idleness, or by lawless violence or a disregard of tho rights ot any law-abiding citizen. The obliga tion of both capitalists and laborers, like that of all citizens, is to promote the general welfare, or, at least, to do nothing to its injury. The paramount object in the establishment and main tenance of free government Is to pro mote the general welfare. Some method of prollt sharing between employers and employes that would secure an har monious co-operation of both so ns to prevent labor strikes and Improve tho condition of labor is of vital Import ance, for tho pillars of the republic rest upon the comfort of the home and tho happiness of the llresldo of labor. QUEER PACIFIC FISHES. Swarms of Little Creatures Built Somewhat Like Balloons. Avnlon, Cnl Letter In Los Angeles Times David "Wilson and his launch, the Alligator, aro becoming famous for the curious forms of sen. creatures they bring in. His latest tlnil consisted ot ilvo different kinds of jellyfish. Ono was shaped like n big cigar, blunt at tho ends, perfectly transpar ent, uud almost Impossible of detection In tho water, except by Its movements. Two spots in one end, a little moro dense than the remainder of the fish, evidently Its eyes, aro tho only things markedly visible about It. It Is about bIx Inches In length. Another species has tho appearance of a small bladder, and ono side is marked with a deep blue coloring, while tho end Is tipped with a bright grass green, A cord of roynl blue llfteen or eighteen Inches In length extends from Its body. It seems to be able to Inflate ts balloon at will and rest on the surface of the water, The specimens of this variety nre about three Inches In length, nnd It readily moves any part of tho body and ex tends and contracts the conl, Another Is about two Inches In length and an inch In diameter, perfectly transparent, with tho exception of three red spots. Two of these "spots" emerged from tho body and went cavorting about the pall after the fashion of a "wlggler." though much larger. Another is shaped llko a Japanese umbrella, half opened, and it moves through the water llko a flash. It has faint red markings along Its sides. Mr. Wilson says the first one of this kind ho attempted to catch Jumped two feet and escaped Him. Still another Is a delicate llttlo bulb of transparent Jelly an Inch by half am juch, with a icd rorcl fclx Inches long attached. It moves through the water as rapidly as a duck could go. Mr. Wilson says he encountered a mass ot luHflHrr-A KM M Namj ftor itmt imad ACKowLnaiejiPi tm hack. r"W'misbtoJii&Xitf' What Gift could be more use ful or satisfactorD than a pair -of Sorosis Shoes or Slippers. By ' means of this certificate1 a perfect fit and choice of style can be had, with no possible chance of dissatisfaction. r' This certificate is good for any style, any size, any leather, of over ioo different kinds. Buy one of these Certificates and give it to loved ones at home or in other cities. They can present it to the nearest dealer in SOROSIS SHOES and get their choice. Saves the annoyance of choosing for another. Thousands of these Certificates are used in this way all over the country. If you want to ssnd them to the old country they are good there too, as there are SOROSIS Stores In London, Dublin, Glasgow Leeds, Birmingham, Hamburg, Berlin and Frankfort-on-the-Main. AMTER BROTHER 3 Complete Outfitters. "fr "fr fr 4 4 4 $ 4 & I We Are Not I OUR MOiTO: INiilY DUAL FREEDOM IN BUi.NnSS Don't Be Misled A little pilding will covr a multitude of sins, but will not wear. If you want a gold filled case to wear, buy the best we have them. We cut out every un necessary profit in selling Diamonds. Up-to-Date with Christm is Gifts Fine Cut Glass for the Table BERRY, 423 Lackawanna Ave. ih 24a4'a3'4llia,laai'4a4a'Sli"Ea4'liai4a44'4'4'4'v4'I4l44l44 them this morning three miles off shore, there seeming to be millions, nnd there were yet other varieties which he failed to catch. The wonderful little creatures were preserved alive and taken to the aquarium. THE NEWSPAPER GETS THEHE. Its Vast Superiority ns an Adver tising Medium Shown. In the course of a recent lecture in Hartford, Conn,, on "Tho Muklng of a Newspaper," Charles Hopkins Clark, of the Cournnt, said: "How aro you going to get at the public? Mall them circulars, and the waste baskets In 10,000 homes glvo each a weary yawn, and the circular disap pears unread, Call upon tho people and explain tho merits of your wares. Tho hlgn 'Our Busy Day,' hangs in business ofllces; In private hoiifces you must ring tho bell, Oftenest you nre turned away. If you get in by nny shrewd ex cuse, you cannot go beyond the hall or reception room you nro quietly watched In the Interests of overcoats and umbrellas. "But put a cleverly worded adver tisement of these wares In a newspaper that has nn established circulation In tho city's home and business houses, and see what happens. You couldn't get In thoro yourself, but your adver tisement Is there on the breakfast table, In the library, in the parlor, In the sewing room, and when everybody Is Inquiring for the paper which can't , bo found, It Is very likely doing duty i on tho quiet In the kitchen, It Is all over (he house and wanted there. You are not. Similarly, at the ofllco it Is read and re-read, and part of the use of 'This Is Our Busy Day' sign Is to get tho cluuico to read the papers. And it Is interesting to note the advertise ment has another than a commercial use. It Is printed for business purposes pure and simple; but It Is often read as news," AMERICA VERSUS THE WORLD. Andrew Carnegie In tho AVoild's Work, America now makes moro steel thun all tho rest of tho world. In Iron and coal her production Is tho greatest, us it is In textiles cotton, wool and silk. Sho pioduucs three-fourths of tho cotton grown in tha world. Tho value of her manufactures is just about Unco times that your own; her exports aro greaUr, ,Tho dealing houso oxchunpes of Now Yoik aic almost doublo thuso of London Cirtr 4fwML fil Ob a iMtmmi. -'.'flBSTMBim I a 4 4 4 4 ! ! ! ! i in the Trust I 4 The Optician and Jeweler Headquarters for lD(andesc?nf Gas Mantles, Portable Lamps. THE NEW DISCOVERY Kern Incandesce f Gas Lamp. GiinsfsrSFors1! 325-827 Penn Avenue. I n-iwg.- 7iar-3 1 In amount, Slio furnishes you with most of tho necessary food products you Im port, She litis iwn-ilfths of the railway mileage of tho world, Thus sho has bo como the foremost nation hi wealth, man ufactuics and commerce, and promises soon, tu 8oino brunches, to occupy thu position which lliltiiln occupied when it was Biltuln versus thv woild. Sim nl leady does this with hteol, Althonsh no Ihitou can bo expected to boo with sat isfaction his country displaced from first pluce, there Is yet cause, for rejoicing that supremacy remains in tho family. It Is not altogether lost what thu race still holds. Macbcth's fate is not llritnln's. Tho scepter of nuUcilal supremacy has been wrenched by no unllneal hand, it Is her eldest bon, tho ilghtful heir, wlio wears tho crown, and ho can never foi get, nor cease to bo proud of, tha mother to whom he owes so much. See the Cut Man. Effectlvo and attractive half-tones and line cuts for card, advertising or any other purpose, can be secured at The Tribune olllce. Wo do work that is unexcelled, .do It promptly and at lowest rates. A trial order will eon viiice you.