FREELAND TRIBUNE. Eitrtlishei ISSB. PUBLISHED EVERY MONDAY AND THURSDAY TRIBUNE PRINTING COMPANY, Limited. Office: Main street above Centre. Make all money orders, check*, etc., payable to the Tribune Prtntiny Company, Limited. SUBSC K11TION R ATKS: One Year $1.30 Six Months "3 Four Months— : "o Two Months ~3 The (luto which the subscription is paid to is 011 the address label of each paper, the change of which to a subsequent date becomes a receipt for remittance. Keep the figures in advance of the present date. Report prompt ly to this office whenever paper is not received. Arrearages must be paid when subscription is discontinued. FREELAND, PA., NOVUM HER 22,1897. Somebody In 1-1 eg the Money. From the Wilkesbarre Newsdeuler. It is a crying shame, as well as a dis grace to the state, that the moneys allotted the various school districts have in many instances only been half turned over. The injustice of this is flagrant. In many districts they are really crippled for lack of funds and unless prompt aid is had the school term will have to be shortened or closed. There is a big balance to the credit of the state treas urer in the banks of the commonwealth, or an apparent balance. imiU if it really exists there is no valid reason why the obligations of the state to the school districts should not be satisfied. Rut if the state treasury is bankrupt, and without funds to discharge the debt duo to education and progress, that is a very good reason for turning the rascals in control out and filling their places with men of a dilTerent stamp. The Quay machine control grows more odious and oppressive to the people, but the revolution that will change this condition of affairs is mak ing swift progress. The Swallow vote is only an indica tion and a finger guide to what is coming. Tho Higher Courts Will Change This. From the Philadelphia Times. A charge often made by the profes sional labor agitators that upon issues between the workiugmen and corpora tions, the courts always side with the corporations, lias been disproved many times, and a new illustration to the con trary has just been furnished by a Chi cago court in which a railway conductor, blacklisted by the Northwestern Railway Company for participating in the Pull man strike, has been awarded damages to the amount of 521.1fiC.33. In facts brought out in the course of the trial, which were to the effect that tho plaintiff was always discharged with out cause or explanation shortly after obtaining a new job, convinced the jury that he had been blacklisted by the Northwestern Company and that he was being peristontly hounded out of any means of earning a living for himself and family. If tliis verdict is sustained by the court of last resort, to which it is certain to be appealed, the blacklisting of men who engage in strikes will go the way of the boycott, which lias been decided by the courts to be unlawful. Clone to the Eternal Bow-Wow A. Recently the Tiuuim: gave the opin ion of u Schuylkill Republican exchange on the late eh t.ion. It was certainly one of despair and disgust, hut here is V. something which goes to show the feel ings of Republicans in Carbon. Listen to this wail of hopelessness from the La lis ford J.nnh r: (Jentlenien of the Republican party, patriots, traitors, boodlers, cadavers and leeches on their last legs, get to gether and kick yourselves. The de molition of the Republican party is so rapidly taking place that you had better make one supreme effort to hold one more of our glorious old pow- wows before the. party takes it- final plunge Into the eternal bow-wow-. Editor Davis voice- the sentiments of Republicans everywhere, but some are not quite so frank with the truth. — Suil New* for llu/leton I'rljj*. It is privately announced that the | military authorities of the state have i agreed to the appeal of several towns to authorize the formation of another troop I of cavalry for the National Uuard, and I that Pittsburg has already been given I the tip to gel ready for the place. Over f In llazleton a crowd of corporation I lackeys and ex-deputies imagine they S' are to be tho chosen people, and tire I meeting and drilling regularly with an | enthusiasm worthy of a better cause. The coal companies of the Lehigh re gion are lighting hand to have the new troop located in this section, but those who ought to know say Pittsburg has I the call. CASTOriIA. A Scheme That Failed. A nice young man resolved the othei day to present his beloved girl with a nice pair of shoes. He accordingly procured her measure and purchased a $2.30 pair. In order to make the pres ent appear more valuable, be marked six dollars upon the soles of tlie shoes, and, at liis request, the shopman, who was a friend of his, put a receipted bill for six doliurs into one of them. The presentation was made and the lovers were happy, as lovers should be. But mark the sequel: The girl examined the shoes in the daylight, and was not satisfied. She was convinced that her lover had been cheated in the purchase of such a pair of shoes at that price. She decided to go and change the shoes and obtain a better bargain. The next day she appeared in the shop and select- : ed a better pair of shoes, price four dollars, and politely requested the clerk to take back tlie shoes for which she said her husband had paid six dollars. The receipted bill was produced in proof, and the boot man found it im possible to go "behind the returns." The smart girl took her four dollar shoes and obtained two dollars in money and went home happy and sat isfied. The bootseller sent a bill for ; four dollars to the young man, who j promptly paid the difference, but lie \ thinks that girl a little too smart for hi in. Proud of the Capital. The people of the country are fond of their capital. More than the Wash- ' ingtonians themselves, they have seen the wonderful progress of Washington, for by visits at intervals—some of them j extending over years—tliey have met with some contrasts which tell the story to the spectator more thoroughly than constant living in the city could do. In different parts of the country, says an eastern exchange, we have heard j $ cople discuss the growth of Washing ton with pride and relate the compar- j isons of the various visits. The man ( who was there ten or twenty years ago j and who goes again this year, takes a 1 tide back home which lie never tires oJ telling. And not only will Washington j have no rival in the sense of conipeti- , tion, but it is destined to be beautiful beyond any other city or any other cap ital in the world. What has been done is simply an earnest of what is to come, j It will be the capital of society, as well as of politics. Art and education will follow, and already it is a fact that more learned and authoritative men ca.i ' be gathered in an audience in that city than anywhere else in the country. In these enlightened days it is rather I queer to hear of anyone being skinned alive as a punishment for a crime, but that is the penalty that is staring a Chicago boy in the face. Paul Czyet, a 14-year-old boy of Hie Windy city, became involved in a quarrel with An ton Ivwitke, another lud about his own age, and threw a pailful of boiling t.ater ou him. Kvvitke's skin dropped off in large patches, and the only way i:. ' which to cure him, according to the doctors, is the operation of skin graft ing. The justice before whom Czyet i was taken learning this, gave the boy I the alternative of allowing the doe tors to take enough skin off his body to cover the scalded portions of his vie- i tim. or being held to the grand jury on ' a charge of assault. He gave the boy a few days in which to decide. In an Indianapolis church the basso of the choir intended to leave the city, and his friends gathered to hear him sing a farewell solo. He had two cf the best numbers in his repertory unci was in excellent voice when he reached the church, but a most curious Occident silenced his voice temporarily. Jus! as he stepped into the church door- 1 way a little gnat flew into his uosc and caused him to sneeze violently, ami the sneeze brought on a severe cough, which, in turn, ruptured one of the small blood vessels near the vocal cords. He took his place in the choir, but soon found that he could not ut ter a sound audible five feet away. The ! injury to his voice will not prove per manent, but it was certainly very nn aoying. An exchange says that a dashing St. j Louis widow has a sprightly daughter j of about 17. The daughter, xfhose name j is Jennie, met a schoolgirl chum by the name of Mamie, who asked: "1 say. ; Jen, how are you and your mominer ! coming on?" "We don't get along at i all. If a feller comes along and I like him and mamma don't like him, then I can't marry him, but if mamma (! ( ocs like him, then she tries to marry bin. herself," replied Jennie, blowing a tired sigh from her lips. A juror at Worcester, Mass., aecoril ing to a local exchange, recently asked to be excused on account of deafness. The judge refused to excuse him, and he sat patiently through a. trial lusting several hours. At its close the other II jurors were for conviction, but he voted persistently for acquittal, on the ground that as lie could not hear the testimony he could not vote forconvic t ion. Edward Bellamj' has kindly arranged j a plan for all of us by which every man I is to draw $4,000 a year and retire on n pension at 43. is is good enough for I ;he most of us. but there are a few wfho are hard to please and these will prcb- hly want to retire on a pension before .hey re ask 43. | A WOMAN'S SAD FACE. | w BV TH2S. P. IBONTFORT. | ♦S c- - THERE was a time, but a few years since, when the prairies of western Kansas were the scene of bitter rivalry betweeu the rich cattlemen and the poor homeseekers. Naturally it was to the interest of the cattlemen to keep homeseekers out of the country, for so long as the land remained unsettled just so long did it furnish rich, free pasturage lor the great herds of cattle. In their efforts to keep the pioneer settlers from taking up claims and building homes the cattlemen very oft en went beyond the limit of the law. In fact, in many instances they ignored the laws altogether and were governed in their actions simply by their per sonal wishes and their power to enforce them. Out in Ness county there was a big cattle ranch owned by a wealthy syndi cate. The manager of this ranch, a man by the name of Roberts, was one of the coldest blooded and most unfeeling wretches that ever lived, lie cared for nothing save his own interests and the interests of his employers. He was dead set against homeseekers, and no matter what their condition might be, nor how much they were in the right, he never yielded an inch to them. The ranch comprised several hundred acres of the best government land in the county, and in time homeseekers began j to hover about it and covet the rich j prairie. But Roberts warned them to keep off, threatening to burn the wagon j and kill the horses of the first man who | should attempt to enter a claim on the i grazing lands of the ranch. He went ; further, and hired the toughest and most j lawless set of cowboys he could find, and to them lie gave instructions that j they must keep the tv.nge clear of set tlers. no matter to what length* they i were forced to go in order to accomplish ! that end. The cowboys nodded know- | ingly, touched their pistols significantly | and remarked that they were there to obey the boss' orders. Several attempts were made to enter claims on the range, but the cowboys were always promptly on hand to dis courage anything of that sort, and after the}' had thrown out n few hints regard ing the "unhealthiness" of the location, and the general advisability of seeking a home elsewhere, the would-be settler was persuaded to move on. After awhile the character of Roberts' cowboys be came notorious, and the Romeseekere gave them and their range a wide berth. Thus for a long time the range was not bothered with settlers, and the cat tle continued to graze the grass aud turn it into money. Roberta saw the lands all about liim taken up for homes and he congratulated himself on his foresight and his promptness to act in taking care of his own interest. Things had been going on in this even way for some months when one morn ing Roberts called his cowboys about him and said: "I have received a letter calling me east, so I shall leave the ranch in your hands. I shall probably be away two or throe weeks, but I think I ran trust you boys to look after things all right. I'll give Jake Kline the management of j the ranch and 1 shall expect the rest j of you to obey his orders. Keep the eat- i tie together and keep those settlers off j the range." "We'll manage tilings all rigfiit, Mr. Roberts," Jake said. "We'll take care of the cattle, and if you find any settler on this range when you get back he'll be. a dead one." Roberts had been gone about a week, when one evening some of tlie cowboys saw an old covered wagon rolling slow ly across the prairie behind a pair of small, scrawny mules. They watched the wagon and at last saw it stop at tlie foot of a little mound, right in the cen ter of their best grazing land. A man got out, unharnessed the mules and turned tlieui loose to graze. Old Jake Kline's attention was called to the wag on and forthwith he sent a man to in form the owner of it that he must move i on. This message was delivered promptly, and with more force than elegance. The homeeeeker, however, received it quiet- j ly, not to say indifferently, and re marked that he'd sec about it. "You want to be seeing about it pret ty sudden, then," the cowboy said, "be cause we won't stand any foolishness. We'd just us lieve. make a bonfire of your wagon and coyote feed of your mules as not." "I'l leave here when 1 get ready 1o go," the man replied, "and not before." The cowboy rode back and reported to old Jake. The latter's eyes Hashed with anger in a moment and he swore a string of the most horrible oaths. "So the chap thinks he'll go when he gets ready, eh!" he cried "Maybe he will, but if he does, he'll get ready pret ty soon, for 1 tell you he won't be long about going." lie then called his whole force and rode down to the wagon. The settler was sitting on the ground with his hack against a wheel, his knees drawn up and his arms folded over them. His lend was bowed down, and his whole fftlitude was that of the deepest dejec tion. The cowboys had approached to within a few steps of him before he heard them, and then he looked up listlessly, but did not offer to move. Jake reined his horse and said: "Are you figuring on taking up n claim here, stranger?" "I reckon maybe," the other answered, carelessly. "Don't you know you can't do it?" "No." "Do you know whose ranch this is?" "Yes." "Have you ever heard of Roberts' cowboys?" "Yes." "Well, we're them." Jake uttered this in away that was intended to stir the man with fear and I dread, but he missed the effect. The i man showed no interest whatever and S merely grunted some unintelligible re | ply. After a short pause Jake said; j "You'll have to get out of here, and be | blamed spry about it. too. We dou'i | allow any squatter on this land." j "Does this land belong to you?" tbt ! man asked, with a little interest, j "No." ; "Doesn't it belong to the govern : ment?" "I reckon so." 1 "Then what right have you to order me off?" "Maybe we have no right, but thai has nothing to do with it. It's oui ! business to keep settlers off this range ! and we've got to do it. We've talked I enough. Now hitch up and get." The man arose to his feet, and firing up with life and animation said: "I'll not go." Old Jake was thunderstruck for a mo ment, and he sat looking ul the man in j silent astonishment. Finally, bow i ever, he cried; j "What! Do you mean to defy me?" "I do." "We'll burn your wagou. We'll kill your mules. If you cut up much we'll i kill you." j "1 don't doubt it. Cut burn and kill I if you want to. What's the difference. I I'd better be dead than alive, anyhow. : I left the east with my wife and child and came out here to take up land and build a home. What is the result? I've chased up and down this country in search of a claim, but 1 can get none except in some arid spot where nothing | will grow. The good land is either all j taken up, or held by the big cattlemen who have no right to it. 1 have been I driven about by the cowboys till I ain i tired of it, and I am not going to be driven any more. Through exposure and hardships my little child sickened ! and died, and now lies buried back j yonder on the prairie. From the same | causes, together with worry, my wife I lies in this wagon now hovering be tween life and death. I have dragged , her about till I can drag her no more. 1 We have used up all our money and | provisions and have nothing left. My j wife will soon be dead, and if you kill I me, all the better." | The cowboys exchanged a look of in | quiry. and then old Jake dismounted j and'walked up to the wagon and looked in. lie gave one quick, searching glance, then strode back to his companions. They all gathered eagerly about him. and for two or three minutes there was an earnest conversation carried on in low tones. Then old Jake turned again to the settler and addressed him. but this time he was not loud and boister ous. On the contrary, he was almost kind and sympathetic. "Stranger," be began, "we have strict orders from our boss to keep settlers off this range, and I don't see anything for us to do but obey. We'd lose our I I •• I LL LEAVE I.ERIC WHEN I GET READY TO GO." ! jobs in two minut.es if we didn't. So 1 | reckon you'll have to move on." | "I won't go," the settler announced, flatly. "1 reckon maybe we can persuade you to go." "That means you will drive me. I know what kind of persuasion you cow. boys use. It is guns and pistols." "Sometimes we do use that kind o persuasion, but not in a case like this. Stranger, we're tough, but we're not heathens. We've chased many a home seeker off government land, but we j never yet made war on a woman who j looked like that one in there. We are | not brutes, and if we had the say about j this claim you could keep it. Rut we are under orders and we have no sn\ I in the matter. You'll have to leave the j range. I see no help for that." "I tell you I will not go." "I reckon you will, if we make it all right for you. .Now. just across the creek there you can bu.v a claim as good as this for SIOO. It has a sod cabin on it. too. and a well. There's five of us. and that means that we'll put up S2O apiece to pay for 1 hat claim for you." The settler stared at old Jake in as tonishment. "What!" he gasped, "you'll buy that -ilaim. and give it to us?" I "Sure. We've got to obey orders and | keep this range clear, and i don't know 1 any other way for us todoit. We can't 1 act the fool and go 1O cutting up rough with a man who's got a wife like that.' i So the matter was arranged, a nd. how ever much other settlers disliked Rob erts' cowboys, there was one who had a warm place in his heart for them - ' Detroit Free Press. ('nrlon, SlomcHP Decoration. j His majesty of Sinm is I i hern I with liisortlers. lie reeenily gnve an Italian painter (for painting one ot his wives from a photograph) "the tlrand Cross of the Siamese Crown." It is rather i large order. "This cross" said or | majesty, "will entitle you lo marry 1:. | wives. It is a distinction I seldom cor j fer, so I hope you will soon make gone use of It." nrttl.h Cnrrtilfve Keepers. j In (Jreat Itritain lit persons in evert 1,000 keep a carriage. CHOICE VERSE OF THE SEASON. 'l.ns 'limit Tlinliiclvln* Time. We hear good many people talk 'Bout songsters in the spring- How sweet un' purty they do sound, An' all that sort o' thing. That's all right, too; 1 tell ye VV'en th' storms hev passed away, An' th* sun comes up or smilin' On er pleasant April (lay. Er bluebird or er robin's note Does sound tremendous good, An' I don't say it don't, but yet I'd hev It understood Th' sweetest song 1 ever heerd, In enny land or clime. Was th* gobble of th' turkey 'Long 'Bout Thanksglvln* Time. | The eagle is a glorious bird, An' one we all admire; An' we can hear the poet sing His praise an' never tire; But take It w'en th' frosts hev cum An' all the trees are bare, An* bashful snowflakes fust are seen In th' November air; 'Tain't eagles then we're thlnkin' 'bout, Nor birds that sweetly warble: We want that dear, ol'-fashloned fowl, Th' turkey with his gobble: 'Tis then we're ready to declare, In plainest prose or fhyme, Th' turkey is our favorite bird ! 'Long 'Bout Thanksglvln* Time. —B. T. Warner. In Up-to-Date. ; Cupid in Dlnkklnp, flweot Cupid sat on a mossy bank j With a tear in his round blue eye, His wings were draggled with silver dew. And his quiver and bow flung by. The butterflies came from the garden near And perched on his dimpled toes. And a honeybee sipped at his crimson lip And thought it an opening rose. "Not an arrow went to its mark to-day, I wasted them all," he sighed. ! "My wings and my curls too well they know. i So the men and the maidens hide, j My mother must clip my pinions close I And must braid my locks of gold, And I'll borrow a frock of a damsel fal* My roseate limbs to fold." j So now no more In the flowery field j Or the wood where the thrushes sing Do we hear the patter of naked feet ! Or the sweep of an airy wing. ; Ho has stolen the gown of a pretty girl, ; And her hat with Its drooping plume And a cluster of velvety violets blue From his breast to shed i>erfume. He has donned her veil with Its broidered edge, And her gloves of the palest gray, And hides his how In her fluffy fan Before he goes out to slay. He has clipped his wings and braided his curls, But beware of his roguish eyes, For sly little Cupid Is still the same In spite of his new disguise. —Fenny Magazine. The Hand for Mo. The hand that lends enchantment to The harp-strings may be fair; The hand that woos the sweet guitar And makes the music there May he a slender one and soft. And beautiful to see. But the hand that rolls the doughnuts is The little hand for me! i The hand that is ablaze with gems May be the hand for you: For some one else the hand that sweeps I The Ivory keys may do: | The hand that goes with millions oft Is beautiful to see, ! But the hand that rolls the doughnuts Is The little hand forme! j My Bessie's arms are soft and round, And she is plump and fair: j She's been away to cooking school I And learned some wonders there— Oh, other's hands may be as small And beautiful to set. But the hand that rolls the doughnuts Is The little hand for me! —Chicago News. She Threw Me a Kins. Fhe threw me a kiss and the air felt sweet: A rose tint glowed through the gloom of the street, i As Dorothy leaned from her window seat And threw me a kiss. I She threw me a kiss with her finger tips: As a springtime scent from a flower dips From the roseleaf dawn of her willing lips. She threw me a kiss. Yes, threw me a kiss, and the world seemed bright. The cares of life were all hack In the night, For Dorothy said to my heart: "Delight!" And threw me a kiss. She threw me a kiss, and I strode away, I Smilingly humming a roundeJay gay. Ah, Dorothies, smile on your swains some day And throw them a kiss. Yes, throw them a kiss, and the whole day I long j Their hearts will be steel to dream of wrong; i Their blood will pulse to one joyous song: "She throw me a kiss." —J. Percival Pollard, In Vogue. The Ma 1(1 ot nnd Hie Brook. They sat beside a babbling brook That tumbled through a vale, And in his eyes there was a look That told a simple tale. She watched the limpid waters flow And with the lilies play, She saw the bubbles come and go. Well knowing what he wished to say. The moments sped! Tie dared not speak. And she sat silent tin re; A sunbeam sported upon her cheek, Breezes sported with her hair. At last, without a warning word, She slid into the stream. And folks a mile off might have heard The splashing maiden scream. And did the brave young lover stay- To lay his shoes aside? Ah, no! He plunged In right away And claimed her from the tide. They barely got their ankles wet. But why upbraid the muld? His love might he unspoken yet But for the little game she played. —Cleveland Leader. At Dntvn of Day. Unbroken silence, brilliant eastern skies. Without a stirring leaf. Incense from celestial chalices, Afloat in midair brief, Giving to mortal sight nnd sense New beauties, rich and rare, To the thoughtful mind a moment For reverent praise and prayer. Praise for our Great Creator, Prayer for our wayworn hours, Hope for fulfilled promises, Trust In benignant powers, '.Mid awe-Inspiring silence. As night shades pass away, New life In slow procession Proclaims the Dawn of Day. —Clark W. Bryan, in Good Housekeeping. Thanksgiving Day. Come to us cheerily. Thankful day, Out of the sweet blue sky! Hearts are hoping and laughs are gay. Flowers are blooming along the way. E'en if the frost be nigh. Come to us hopefully, Thankful day, Out of the tearful tomb! Stars are steady and sure to stay- God Is watching forever and aye— L'en In the darkest gloom! —Will Carleton, in Everywhere. A Word With You... It is worth your while to give attention to some rea sons why you should be a reader of "The Philadelphia Press." "The Press" is the greatest home newspaper of the of tlie United States. Its record of each day's events, in all parts of the world, is more complete than that of any other paper. It has no space for sensationalism or any thing tending to lower the moral tone. No other Philadelphia paper lias equal facilities for obtaining prompt and accurate reports of news events, wherever they inn occur. 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