Royal makes the food pure, wholesome and delicious. m. BAKIHC POWDER Absolutely Pure FREELAND TRIBUNE. Iltablilhod 1868. PUBLISHED EVERY MONDAY AND THURSDAY BY THE TRIBUNE PRINTING COMPANY, Limited. OFFICE: MAIN STREET ABOVE CENTRE. J Make all money orders, checks, etc., payable to I the Tribune Printing Company, Limited. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: One Year $1.50 | Six Months j Four Months 50 Two Months 25 ; The date which the subscription is paid to is on the address label of each paper, the change of which to a subsequent date becomes a receipt for remittance. Keep the flgtiros in advance of the present date. Report prompt- j ]y to this olhee whenever paper is not received. | Arrearages must be paid when subscription is discontinued. j FREELAND, PA., OCTOBER 14, 1897. ! Fighting the "Respectable" Sharks. The Philadelphia Inquirer is fighting a ' valiant battle against leasing the city's gas work to a private corporation. Its editorials in favor of the retention of j this valuable franchise, and the operat ing of it for public profit, are unanswer- | able. Those who are arguing that the 1 people should turn over a thirty-million dollar plant, and receive dollar-gas in i return, which they now have, claim that ' the lessees are "eminently respectacbie'* men and would do no wrong. The Inquirer properly takes the ground that "an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure," that the city should not give "eminent respectability" an oppor tunity to do wrong. The light is a pretty ono from this distance, with the people on ono side and the corporation sharks on the other. The sharks, however, have a ma jority of the councils and will probably j win. That eminently respectable fraud, John Wanamaker, is a stockholder of the leasing corporation, and the threat | that his page ad will he withdrawn from , any newspaper which champions the the people's side of the battle has closed the columns of the Philadelphia press, except the Inquirer , against any thing unfavorable to this, the greatest ; grab of the century. The latest labor organization to enter \ this region and hold out a promise of hope to the miners and laborers is meeting with unexpected encouragement. The branches already formed have a large membership, and it seems that the entire anthracite field will be covered within a few months. The United Mine Workers of America is a union which has accom plished much for many who have enroll ed themselv.es under its banner, and if the same spirit characterizes its actions here as in other parts of the country, It may bring a betterment of conditions in the Lehigh region. The organization is fortunate in possessing leaders who know the wrongs to which mine workers are subjected, and while the latter act as a unit they are bound to secure relief from some of their burdens. The contest for the mayoralty of Greater New York is attracting more attention than any other political fight in the country. The entrance of Henry George into the campaign as the candi date of those who want a man elected has thrown the politicans into spasms. There are live active aspirants—three Democrats and two Republicans. •Hol land," the New York correspondent of the Philadelphia Press, whose judgment on matters political is conceded to he very good, says that present indications favor < Jeorge's election. For New York's sake, it would be well to have it so. Paul Dasclfs vigorous canvass of the county continues to make friends for the Democratic ticket. The voters every where recognize in him a man who is qualified for the position, one who can transact public business in the manner it should be done. Dasch has caused a split in Republican ranks which is doing immense good for the whole ticket, and the success of himself and associates seems reasonably certain. There prom ises to be an unlimited amount of in dependent voting on November 2, but the Democratic ticket will not suffer by It. Educate Your llowelH With Cascaretn. Candy Cathartic, euro constipation forever. 10c. If G'. C. fail, dniKirlsts refund money. CASTOR IA For Infants and Children. Tho fie- Bachelors, Bctvarc I The city of Boston was the scene of a queer meeting a few days ago, at which Charlotte Smith and a number of up-to date women arranged a plan by which all men will be compelled to wed. Mrs. Smith declares that Jerry Simpson is to have the pleasure of introducing the radical movement to congress. The scheme suggests the establishment of a national matrimonial bureau. Since Mrs. Smith considers that there is at present no place in this country for the unprotected spinster, she advocates the setting aside of a plat of land to be known as No Man's territory, where all unmarried women may retire, to earn their living free from the tyranny of the sterner sex. Statistics show that CO per cent, of the marriageable men of New York and Massachusetts do not take unto themselves a better half. This leaves an immense surplus of un attached women, and Mrs. Smith desires congress to make an appropriation by which 100,000 healthy, industrious women may be transported to Alaska, where they may stake out claims and make fortunes, as do the male miners. Congress failing in this, Mrs. Smith wants some law passed which will com- ' pel men to marry. Speaking of treasure, reminds us of the Klondike gold fields, and the rush there reminds old men of the California gold fever, says an exchange. As it may be in the new gold fields, there was a great amount of money made in those ; early California days that was not dug j out of the ground. In 1850, our consul at Valparaiso, Chili, went in with two j partners on a flour scheme. They formed a company, with $75,000 capital, I bought flour in Chili at six dollars abar- j rel, paid one dollar a barrel to have it shipped to San Francisco, and there , sold it for sls a barrel. The company kept it up for 14 months, and, having ; realized $700,000, dissolved partnership, j Something like that might be done in the frozen north nowadays, and it would pay better than the average gold mine. Next spring we will hear of hundreds who will wish they had farmed instead of mined. In Chandler, O. T., the other day Wil liam Overman was the defendant in a breach of promise suit brought by Grace Allen. The plaintiff's lawyer in- ! troduced William to the jury by say ing: "This is the male calf who took buggy rides with this fair flower, lisped dulcet strains of his puerile passion into her ear, and now says she asked him to take her buggy riding. Gentle men, this lousy cur should be thrown into a well filled with scaly snakes that they might hiss and hiss at him for all eternity." The punishment suggested is ! rather severe, but perhaps not too se- ! verc for a calf who lisps into the ear of a flower in a buggy. How much pleasauter it is to swing in a hammock and watch a man strug gling with a lawn mower, says the hu- I mcrous genius of the SoanervilJe Jour- > jial during one of his funny spasms, nnd think how much pleasanter it is ! to swing in a hammock and watch a i man struggling with a lawn mower, fhnn.it is to struggle with a lawn mow- | er and think how much pleasanter it i is to swing in a hammock and wntch a j man struggle with a lawn mower ; .than it is to struggle with a lawn j mower. Lizzie Hagan, a bright girl nine years of age, a few days ago swam the Ten- j nessee river at a point which required her to be in tho water nearly half an hour, the distance traversed being three-quarters of a mile. The feat was accomplished without resting and al most entirely by forward swimming, she floating very little during the trip. The test was made on? a wager of her father, who followed in her wake with a skiff. Douglass White, of Montgomery, Ala., killed a woman some five years ago. For that crime, through mistrials, reversals and so on, he has enjoyed six trials. At the first he was sentenced to death; at the second to life imprison ment; at the third to 50 years' imprison ment; at the next to ten years, and now he has been acquitted altogether. Singularly enough, also, the man is a negro. Kansas and Missouri are rejoicing in big apple crops, while every where else I in the union the fruitseems to be scarce, email and of rather poor quality. New York buyers are reported to be swarm ing in the two states, buying up all the apples in sight. "Marry a man whose gaze is steady nnd unwavering," says a phrenologist to girls contemplating matrimony. But this does not include the man who stares. Tho proper treatment for him is tho icy glare and the marble heart. The Baltimore & Ohio road, which j was the first to carry bicycles free of charge, has advanced, a stage further by agreeing to check wheels, and a.<> sumes responsibility for damage as is done in the case of other baggage. "The railroad ran over us recently," writes a rural Georgia editor, "but in this, as in all other instances, Provi dence was against us. The fool engine only cut off our wooden leg, and wo can't get damages." A Lcwisfen (Mo.) man, who is only 50 years old, has ten. children working in tho mills, and all of them turn their pay over to him every Saturday uigbt. NEWS OF THE WEEK. Wednesday, Oct. 6. Henry George was formally notified of his nomination for mayor of Greater New York by five independent Demo cratic organizations at a big mass meeting in New York While working on the construction of a large hotel at Charlevoix, Mich., two people were killed and many injured by the collapse of the structure Three minors were killed by the explosion of gas in a coal mine near Wilkesbarre, Pa.— * A runa way hansom horse In Madison square. New York, knocked down * d injured four persons, one of them f *illy Pe ter Lynch of New Brighton, N. Y., mur dered his wife and attempted to kill himself in the presence of their three children The Greek boule met, but the proceedings attracted little atten- I tion. The vote of confidence Is regard- j j od by the cabinet as equivalent to the j I acceptance of the treaty by the cham- I her The bodies of six more fanatics j who had sought salvation by burying themselves alive have been discovered near Odessa, Russia The president appointed Laurits S. Swenson minister j to Denmark and Dr. Edward Bedloe l consul at Canton The executive I committee of the National Municipal I league at Its meeting in Philadelphia appointed a subcommittee to work for the election of Seth Low The Wever faction won in the Clinton county (N. Y.) Republican convention, a roll made up by the county committee having been excluded by a court injunction The libel suit for $250,000 damages brought by the Rev. Dr. Daniel C. Pot ter against John D. Rockefeller was dismissed by Justice Gildersleeve in a New York court, Dr. Potter not being ible to proceed with his case. He claims that his attorney abandoned him Sixty villages near Tung Chou, China, were destroyed by Hoods, and from 15,- )00to 20,000 persons are reported to have perished The court of appeals of New York state has decided against Riley Grannan in his suit against the West chester Racing association, whose board of stewards ruled him off the track Burglars entered the residence in New Yoijk of Miss Anne Potter, a niece of Bishop Potter, during her absence in I the country, secured rich booty and played poker while removing the goods. Thursday, Oct. 7. The nomination of Seth Low for may or of Greater New York by the Citi zens' Union was formally ratified at a big meeting at Cooper Union Great Britain has declined to take part in a sealing conference in Washington with Russia and Japan, owing to the insist ence of Canada, which had fears of be ing outvoted Sir John Gilbert, presi dent of the British Royal Society of Painters In Water Colors, died in Eng land A disastrous Are raged in the stockyards district of Chicago, many horses being burned to death and one man losing his life Seven young wo men were burned to death at a state institution in North Dakota The De troit Opera House and several business buildings in the heart of the city were destroyed by fire, the loss being esti mated at $200,000 Captain General Weyler cabled Premier Sagasta his re fusal to resign. He told Havana depu tations he wished to remain In Cuba, saying, "The war should end with war and not with shameful dealings." Later the Spanish cabinet decided to grant autonomy to Cuba under Spanish su zerainty and to continue the campaign as long as necessary The new steam ship Kaiser Wilhelm der Grosse has reached Plymouth, England, in 5 days, 15 hours and 10 minutes from New York, reducing the record by over half a day Sheriff Doht of Long Island City, N. Y., has made public letters which have passed between Martin Thorn and Mrs. Nack, the alleged slay ers of William Guldensuppe, proving that the pair have contemplated death by their own hands. They also show that Mrs. Nack has lost all hope Five deaths from yellow fever and 38 new cases of the disease were reported in New Orleans Information reached Washington that the government forces in Guatemala have recaptured Quezal tenango from the insurgents The Baltimores won the last of the Temple cup baseball games against Boston The sum of £IOO,OOO in gold was with-* drawn from the Bank of England for shipment to the United States. Friday, Oct. 8. Emmet C. Gibson, a noted promoter of booming schemes, was arrested in ! New York on the charge of passing a j worthless check on the Imperial hotel. It is said that he has operated in many | c ities, and that he has obtained more than $400,000 by questionable means Senorlta Bvangelina Cossio y Clsneros, heroine of the sensational adventure with the Spanish governor of the isle of Pines, escaped last night from the Casa de Recogidas, in Havana, where she had been confined for several months on a charge of conspiracy against the crown of Spain and of an attempt upon the life of Governor Berez of the Isle of Pines Seth Low was indorsed for mayor of Greater New York by the Na tional (gold standard) Democracy Two thousand men at Newport, Ky., threatened to lynch 11 men arrested for i assaulting a bride Two deaths from yellow fever and 31 new cases of the disease were reported in New Orleans Patrick Conway killed his brother James near Plattsburg, N. Y., as a re sult of an altercation with their moth er, in which .lames took her part The loss by the Detroit opera house fire was $600,000 or $700,000. FMve large buildings and two smaller ones in all were con sumed A dispatch received in Vienna says it is reported in Tokyo. Japan, that the king of Korea has proclaimed himself emperor of Korea The na tional council of Switzerland has adopt ed a bill providing for the acquisition of the five principal railroads in Swit zerland at a cost of about $200.0000,000 who was made famous by the Transvaal raid, will try for the Cape assembly on a platform calling for South African federation The schooner Bryant, re ported lost in Bering sea, has returned to Puget sound The fish commission has made extensive preparations for the fishery congresß at Tampa, Fla., next January Colonel E. L. Smith, Indian agent at Price, Utah, is believed to have perished in the train wreck near New castle, Colo., on Sept. 10 Ten or 12 people are thought to have perished in forest fires In Manitoba. Fires are also raging in Michigan and Indiana. Saturday, Oct. O. John Roderick McPherson, formerly United States senator, died at Taylor's hotel in Jersey City Professor Sla by of Berlin has succeeded in exchang ing telegraphic messages without wires at a distance of 21 kilometers Gener al Sir William Lockhart, In command of th< British punitive expedition in In dia, has issued a proclamation to the Tlrati Afrldis and Orakzais advising them to submit instantly The Span ish cabinet decided upon the immedi ate recall of General Weyler from Cu ba. A decree was issued appointing Captain General Blanco y Arenas, mar quis of Pena Plata, governor general of the Island The death of El Con selheiro, leader of the Brazilian Insur gent fanatics, is reported More than $4,000,000 In gold was shipped from Eu rope for this country Black announced the appointment of Jesse Johnson of Brooklyn as a Justice of the supreme court for the Second Judicial district (Kings county), to fill the va cancy caused by the death of Justice Osborne The Lehigh and Wilkesbarre Coal company's breaker employees are again on strike at Hazleton, Pa., having failed to receive the advance In wages they were promised when the former trouble was settled S. G. Thomson of Princeton won the championship in the intercollegiate tennis tournament at New Haven by defeating J. D. Forbes of Harvard In the finals Dr. George H. Brldgman of Elizabeth, N. J., was appointed minister to Bolivia by the president Lyman J. Gage, secretary of the treasury, made an address on present social problems at the dedlca- j tlon of the Bradley Polytechnic insti tute in Peoria, Ills The independent nomination of Charles Frederick Adams for chief judge of the court of appeals of New York state on the ticket of the United Democracy was filed in the of fice of the secretary of state at Albany There were five deaths from yellow fever and 46 new cases In New Orleans, breaking the record of the present epi demic. New centers of contagion were discovered Two parties of Klondike gold seekers who are stranded at St. Michaels assumed a threatening atti tude toward Mayor Wood of Seattle and D. K. Howard, the managers of the expeditions, and are restrained from violence only by the presence of troops. Monday, Oct. 11. A big demonstration took place In Glasnevln cemetery, Dublin, at the grave of Charles Stewart Parnell, the day being the sixth anniversary of his death A serious fire that cost three lives occurred in the Broken Hill mine In Australia New York detectives ar rested two thieves who robbed the house In Orange. N. J., of Francis H. Scott, president of the Century compa ny, and recovered a lot of stolen goods A man on Skookum creek, In the Klondike country, shoveled out $21,000 of gold dust in 12 hours An 8-year old girl captured a burglar in New York. He dragged her down a flight oi stairs, but she hung on to his legs and screamed till help came Mrs. Susan Corbln of Brooklyn is dead as the re sult of a bicycle collision while scorch ing A New York widow is going to take a party of women to the Klondike. They will wear bloomers The en gagement of Miss Antoinette Woerish offer, daughter of the late Charles- Woerishoffer of New York, was an nounced in Paris M. Pierre Botklne, Russian delegate to the sealing confer ence. has arrived in Washington Ma ry Miller, a New York girl, killed her self with poison because her stepmoth er reproved her Superintendent E. F. George of the orphan home for girls at Tivoli, N. Y., admits the truth of the charge that three little girls were con fined in a pigpen for 12 hours to cure them of laziness The centennial an niversary of the founding of the grand chapter of the Royal Arch Masons in the United States will be celebrated In Baltimore this week Allen W. Van Deuzen, art editor of Outing magazine, New York, died at the home of his father, in Gowanda, N. Y. A 48 inch water main burst at Forty-eighth street and Madison avenue, New York, and flooded the neighborhood for many blocks. It is estimated that the damage may reach $50,000. The accident wa§ caused by the heavy blasting of rock during the construction of the new sew er in the avenue Detective Wil liam Moore was held without ball by the coroner on suspicion of be ing implicated In the murder of his wife. Tuesday, Oct. 19. A statue of Commodore Cornellut Vanderbilt was presented to the uni versity in Nashville founded by him and bearing his name by the people ot that city, Chauncey M. Depew deliver ing the principal address of the occa sion President McKinley in Wash ington touched a telegraph key and started the machinery at the New Bed ford (Mass.) semicentennial industrial exposition General Blanco, the new captain general of Cuba, announced that he would proceed with great ener gy against the insurgents in Cuba The Irish Independent league held a convention in Dublin. The resolutions demanded home rule and praised Par nell's policy. The policy of Great Brit ain was severely denounced Eliza beth Bowles, 7 years old, was killed by an explosion of a siphon of selters in New York The United States su preme court began its fall and wintei term in Washington Judge Cowing, in part one of general sessions, New York, discharged John H. Staats, as sistant superintendent of the Hotel Waldorf, who had been accused of rob bing the hotel. Mr. Boldt, the proprie tor, urged clemency in the case Mrs. W. Butler Duncan, Jr., and Harry Havemeyer won the mixed foursome golf team match on the links of the Country club, in Westchester county, N. Y. Alfred Murphy threw a rock at Peter De Grisselt in front of a hotel near Newburg because the latter re fused to give him a cigarette. De Gris selt's skull is fractured, and he is ex pected to die Dr. Stoeber, a membei of the recent geological congress, wae frozen to death on Mount Ararat The international leprosy congress in Berlin elected Professor Virohow chair man Ali Ferouck Bey has been ap pointed Turkish minister to the United States, to succeed Mustapha Bey A procession of tradesmen called on Pre mier Rudini in Rome to protest against the increased taxation. The crowd out side the ministry became riotous, a.id one man was killed. Six policemen and many persons were hurt, and 24 arrests were made Herr August Bebel, the famous German Socialist, has been nom Inated as a candidate of the Hamburg Socialists in the forthcoming reichstag elections Herr Stenzel, editor in chief of the Hamburg Echo, has been sen tenced to eight months' Imprisonment for leze majesty committed against King Leopold of Belgium Governor Mc- Laurin of Mississippi appointed Senatoi Elect Money to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Senator George. THIS AND THAT. Two-third® of all the letters that pass through the post offices of the world are written or sent to people who speak English. On some of the western ranches the cowboys use bicycles, instead of horses, In herding the cattle, while the ground is free from snow. A bee stung David M. Kepley, of Louisville, on the top of the nose. His face turned purple, and for hours the doctors thought he would die, but he recovered. In the basementof Rev. Dr. Rancher's Methodist church, in Kansas City, is a room where bicycles are checked, and another where babies are checked while the mothers attend Divine service. Miss Phoebe McThoy, who for the past seven years has worked as a serv ant in Flushing, N. Y., has been In formed by her uncle's solicitors, in Scotland, that her uncle has left her a fortune of over $1,000,000. A Brooklyn burglar entered a room In which a young lady lay peacefully sleeping. He admired the pretty pio ture, and stole a kiss. The lady screamed, the house was aroused, and the burglar was captured. In 1858 Mrs. Margaret Kirchoff, of Teignmouth, England, went to bed in good health, saying she would remain there until she died. She kept her word, and died there the other day, having spent 39 years itn. bed. t An immense phonogTaph is in course of construction for the Paris exposition of 1900. The apparatus will be of such large dimensions that it is expected it will make the human voice heard by an audience of 10,000 persons. Nothing of importance, not even a crime, ever happens in Baltimore, a lit tle town in Windsor county, Vt. In 1810 its population was 207; since then its inhabitant® been constantly de creasing in number, until to-day they are only 59. During recent tests benzol has fur nished favorable results for illuminat ing purposes. An addition of 15 per cent, of benzol to alcohol for an incan descent alcohol lamp showed a saving of 26 per cent, as compared with pure alcohol. FOREIGN CHATTER. Urbino, Raphael's birthplace, has col lected 120,000 francs for the monument it is going to erect to his memory, but wo-uts more. Verdi has handed over to his friend Boito a box, containing the complete score of an opera, which is not to be opened till he is dead. All Menelek's power cannot make The Abyssinian® take to the new dollars with his image. They still want the effigy of Maria Theresa on their coins. Ludwig Fulda, the author of "The Talisman," has written a four-act comedy called "Friends," which will be brought out at the Berlin Deutches the ater. Ten judges of the English supreme court continue on the bench, though they have passed the period at which they are by law entitled to retire on a pension. There is a great deal of sickness in the British Mediterranean fleet, the Malta naval hospitals being full. One storesliip from Crete brought 70 men sick with dysentery. Light opera is no longer to be given Vienna's Theater an der Wien, grand opera taking its place. A beginning will be made with Puccini's "La lio heme" and a new opera by Igna/. Bruel. England's 30-knot torpedo boat de stroyers fall far /below their trial speed in actual service; 28, 27 and 2G knots was all three of them could make when tried after being jpul into commission recently. DOINGS OF THE AUTHORS. C. D. Gibson and Phil May are to illus trate a new edition of Dickens. "Songs of Liberty and Other Poems" will shortly be issued bj' Robert Un derwood Johnson. Burns Is to join Browning as the sec ond non-American poet to be put into the Cambridge edition. A new novel by Bret Rarte is an nounced, "Three Partners; or, The Big Strike on Heavy Tree Hill." Before the end of the year a new re ligious work by lan Maclaren will be published, "The Potter's Wheel." The author of that popular book, "Cape Cod Fo'.ks," will soon issue an other volume, "Stuart and Bamboo." Thomas Bailey Aldrich Is reported to be dramatizing his poem, "Jud.ith and Ilolofernes," for Olga Xethersole. It is told of "Oliver Optic" that his first school composition was eight pages, his second 25 and) bis third 8(f. Mme. Janauschek affirms that she cannot get on a friendly footing with Ibsen's plays nor feel any sympathy with their characters. It is proposed to purchase Lowell's old home, Elmwood, in Cambridge. Mass., and use it for a public park. This is a poetic and beautiful idea. POINTED SHAFTS. Why is it that visitors always come when you are busiest? The older a man g*t the more regu larly he m ants his meals. Every man who is up in 3*earsha6 had rome trouble in traveling. People who occupy the inside seats j ■ t the opera house always come late. The more worthless a man is, the i more apt he is to want to live his life ! over again. You can always tell a woman's desk in on office, for if there are any flowers they are on her desk. A man who doesn't dress better after he is married than before husu't im proved much by marriage, A woman thinks every time she Is In a real big hurry to do a little sewing on the machine the thread breaks.—Wash ington (la.) 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