Freeiand Tribune Established 1888. PUBLISHED EVERY MONDAY AND THURSDAY, BY THE fRIEUNE PRINTING COMPANY. Limited OFFICE: MAIS STIIEET ABOVE CESTEE. FUEELAND, PA. SUBSCRIPTION KATES: One Year $1.50 Six Months 75 Four Months 50 Two Months 25 The ilate which the subscription is paid to is on trie address label of each paper, the change of which to a subsequent date be uomea a receipt for remittance. Keep the figures in advance of the present date. Re port promptly to this office whenever paper is not received. Arrearages must be paid when subscription is discontinued. Ma'.e all memy orders, checks, etc,.payable iu the Tribune PrinLnj Company, Limited. Glasgow, Scotland, in its twenty five years of munioipal ownership of the gas works, has spent $6,000,000 in improving the gas plants it bought for $2,600,000, and has paid off half the debt, accumulated a sinking fund, reduced the price of gas from $1.14 to $0.54, and earns $150,000 per year net in the city. The heroes of the Spanish-Ameri cau war whose bodies now rest in Ar lington Cemetery, Washington, came from every section of the Union, and each newly made grave is a pledge and assurance of an indissoluble bond of national unity under the Stars and Stripes. Those brave men who gave their lives for thoir country in Cuba aud Porto Rico did not die in vain. Under authority given by a law just enacted by the Michigan Legisla ture, the Common Council of the city of Detroit has appointed three com missioners with power to buy the street railways of that city and man age them on municipal account. The voters of Detroit several years ago, when the question was submitted to them, decided iu favor of municipal ownership of the street railways. The new law goes farther by providing for municipal management as well as ownership. The world is so surfeited with ma chinery, it hears so constantly of new machines invented and of old ones per fected, that people forget that evolu tion iu any new line of machinery is almost as slow and painful and full of failures as evolution in animals—at least when directed by men. The bi cycle and tho American trotter, so of ten contrasted as rivals, afford an in teresting study in comparative devel opment. They are nearly of an age; the trotter perhaps ten years older, with the pacer considerably younger than the bicycle. And the bicycle is one of tho simpler forms in mechanics, much more so than a watch, or a thresh ing machine, or a printing press. Looking at the bicycle from tho jioint of viewof the present act accomplished, it seems as if it might have been pro duced in a few years. Yet it is thirty years old, and the latest development, the chainless geariug, is the growth of the last two years; and while the bi cycle now seems as near perfection as we may attain, no one iu the light ol pa3t events would dare declare it so, Rliling a IVlinle. A story comes from Cutler, Me., to the effect that William Davis, a lob ster fisherman, recently had a brief ride on the back of a whale. Mr. Davis was in n small boat, fixing his lobster traps, near Libby Island, when a great whale's back loomed out of the water only a tew feet away from the boat. The giaut creature began to spout and the spray from the col umn of water blinded the fisherman. In a few seconds the boat had drifted on the whale's back, and before Davis could make a motion toward escape the whale flapped its tail, nearly fill ing the boat with water, and disap peared in the deep sea. Davis re ported that the whale was from sixty to ninety feet long. It was the first seen in the locality for several years. Experiments have been made lately by French Government officials with s new telephone, which enables persons to converse without putting their mouth and ear to the apparatus, the words beiug distinctly audible iu any part of the room. The Chinese tael is a coin which has never existed. It is simply a unit used for convenience. Won.® Than New Tort. In the first four weeks after the opening of the electric railroad at Cairo, Egypt, it is said that no less than eighty persons were killed, and since that time the weekly average has been seven or eight. This very high rate of casualties la supposed tc ho due in part to the Imperfect sight of many natives in consequence of the prevalent eye diseases, but fully as much to the fact that they are un'a miliar with such swiftly moving ve hicles. It requires $100,000,000 capital to mnkt candy for our nearly 80,000,000 inhab •tants. f^fpetioo -1 STORM AND SUNSHINE, I Mist upon tho mountains, and mist on field and plain. But ever sunlight gloaming in tho silvery drops of rain. Should any heart bo sorrowful, and sigh ing, still complain, I When tho mist but fills tho lily-cups for honey-bees to drain? Unknown, In all our sighing, Love Is lead ing us to light— See, where tho groat sun glimmers o'er the iron hills of Night! And all the swoethoart-roses—for all the storms that boat, i Aro blooming for tho lips of Love in many i a red retreat! ! ipefoieieioieiee; mewum joaetasiesa^ fjTlje Strange Story | II of M. Smythe. | | jk ComrUed by John G. Row., From the h'arra ye tiro of John Smythe Baxter, Grandson $ 1 ay of the Hero of the Adventures Sr J £2 Uerem Recorded. gold fever was I attracting "all sorts ' " 1 and conditions of men" to the newly jpgjPjßjWt) discovered fields of Victoria in the year i 1851. Rich and y the harrow. The ground is thoroughly stirred around the roots, which is a benefit to the crop after ward. On light, loamy land, care must he taken to use n light harrow. For corn ground all strawy manure or stable should be well plowed un der. If this lins not not been done the harrow will be clogged and the cultivator interfered with later. The more frequent the rainfall the more frequent must he the cultivator, for the crust must bo broken as soon as possible after the rain. A light har row on corn sown broadcast for feed will prove beneficial. This harrow ing should always be followed by the raking so as to uncover tho hills that may have been disturbed.—J. AV. McEenzie, in New England Home stead. Cliarretl Grain For Stock. It is always customary with farmers who feed much com to fattening hogs, to give them a little charcoal daily, to correct acidity arising from its fer mentation in the stomach. It is fre quently taken from the wood stove, using the remains of fires that have died down before the wood was wholly converted into carbonic gas and ashes. It is the ashes mixed with Lliis charred wood which corrects acidity of the stomach. As for the coal itself, it is only partly burned vegetable fibre, and even when charred it cannot furnish More nutriment than would be found in sawdust from the same kind of wood. Charred grain, of which only the outer husk is vegetable fibre, is mucb better, and by charring carefully it can be fed in quite large amounts with docided advantage, as it is quite fattening, besides not being likely to cause souring of the stomach. If pop corn is not thoroughly dried, many of the grains will not open showing the fleecy whiteness of the starch they contain, and as these grains will nat urally fall to the bottom of the popper they are likely to be burned. Both hens and fattening hogs will eat these charred grains with great avidity. A still bettor grain to char is the oat, as it contains moro of tho strength giv ing and egg producing nutrition than does corn. In charring oats for hens and we think also for hogs, it is best to exposo tho grain to enough heat to burn off part of the husk of the grain. Tho oats w ill then lie eaten with avid ity, and if the grain is itself charred it will be a nitrogenous charcoal from which the more easily burned carbon has been removed. Iu extreme cases, as when a horse has colic or a cow lias bloated, grain that is pretty thoroughly charred may be given, but only in small amounts, and to restore tone to the stomach. It shttuld not be continued nor given very often, as the effect of potash which tho charred grain contains is to debilitate tho stonlaeh instead of to strengthen it, \\"e never gave charred grain except very rarely to any ani mals except what wo were fattening, and then only to correct evils of diet, which wo learned afterwards to avoid. A few weekH before fattening hogs were to be killed, it makes them fatten better to give them some charred grain with their other food. But we would not give charcoal to a breeding sow or to any other animal that we meant to keep long except to a hen. The giz zard of a hen is so strong that it prob ably does no harm to punish it with some charred oats, which with the hull burned off are as good as wheat, and are perhaps even better. In the cold est weather in winter we have fed charred oats to both fattening hogs and to poultry while the grain was still warm. They wer very greedy for this warmed grain, yet it is proba bly really no better for them than if the grain were eaten cold. Taking hot victuals and drinks into the stom ach is bad for human digestion, and it also probably is for the digestion of animals.—American Cultivator. Cream lclpenlne and Butter Flavor. The process of cream ripening is a kind of fermentation, just as the formation of alcohol or vinegar is a fermentation. The cause of the fer mentation which takes place in cream is the growth and development of an immense number of bacteria. The proper ripening of cream takes place when the right kind of bacteria pro duce the fermentation, and the pro cess is allowed to proceed to exactly the right point. Some bacteria pro duce substances that give fine flavors, others produce butter which is almost worthless. The chemical nature of the substances constituting the flavor iB not known, but it is probable they are decomposition products from the milk sugar. Hundreds of creumeries are losing thousands of dollars each year, because cream ripens im properly, due to injurious kinds of bacteria. Considerable trouble can be avoided if the creamery operators use the proper mothods. One of the lowa dairy school instructors is often sent to creameries that are unable to produce the desired quality of butter and he assists them to fix the trouble and provide a remedy. The methods this instructor geuerally uses to cor rect these faults are to require strict cleanliness about the buildings and utensils, rejecting milk which has not beon cared for in snch a manner as to prevent it from becoming tainted, and by the uso of good starters. These are all applications of the principles of bacteriology. Good, cleau milk is absolutely essontial to produce the best results. No buttermaker can take milk foul with dirt and filth and all that goes with them nnd make a first-class product. There are, of course, cer tain ways iu which such milk can be improved nnd serious results some what uverted. What we want to pro duce a good butter flavor is cream that will sonr with no other taste, especially of unpleasant taints sug gestive of filth contamination. To secure this there are two points to be always kept iu mind: First, unde sirable fermentations must bo kept out; the second point to be kept iu mind is desirable fermentations must be present, i. e., those which cause souring. Simply keeping bad flavor out is not nlways sufficient. The germs which produce a good flavor must be added if not already there. This is accomplished by the uso of starters. As used in dairying a starter is a portion of milk or buttermilk contain ing a large number of the germs of fermentation supposed to give a good flavor. The purpose of its use is sometimes to husteu the souring, but its greatest valuo is in controlling the flavor. I consider the uso of u startor as absolutely necessary if the butter maker expects to make uniform high grade butter. Under the best condi tions, that is when the milk is clean, free from filth bacteria, as is more apt to be in summer, butter can bo made with no startor probably sometimes just as good as with one, but at least iu the statu with which I am most familiar, it is impossible to make good butter in the winter time without a starter. When a starter is iu the proper condition it has a sharp acid taste, with no unclean or disagreeable taste or odor. It does not whey oil as soon as it thickens, but remains in a solid curd with no bubbles showing gas. The only way to tell when a starter is right is by taste and odor, nnd the user should learn to judge this cor rectly. The temperature at which milk is ripened is not so material if tho ripening is stopped at the proper stage. It can be ripened at fifty-five or ninety degrees. At high tempera ture it must be watched very closely, as ripening advances very rapidly. However, prefer about seventy to seventy-five degrees in the winter and sixty-five to seventy-five degrees in the summer. Some means of test ing the acidity of the cream is very useful. When not sour enough the butter shows a lack of flavor; if ripened too high tho flavor is some times rancid.—C. H. Eckles, lowa Dairy School, in tho Amoricau Agri culturist. Extinction of tlie I'rnirlo-Chlckcn. To-day tho reign of the old-time "chicken dog" is done iu America, aud the day of tho great brown grouse is also done. One can see no future for this, one of the most noble, though easily the most helpless, of all our game birds. To-day tho centre of the chicken country is no longer al Dwight. It moved West from Illinois into lowa, then up into Lower Min nesota, then a short way into lower Dakota. It crossed tho sand hills of Nebraska aud the wheat belt of Kan sas, tarried for a long time in the In. diati Nations, aud then dropped swiftly down across the State of Texas. I should be disposed to say that to-day it is perhaps located iu some of tho lower tiers of counties of Texas, and closer to tho Gulf const than most persons would imagine. There are some prairie-chickens left in Wisconsin, yet more iu Minnesota, aud, together with the sharp-tailed grouse, these birds yet furnish sport in widely scattered localities over North and South Dakota aud Nebras ka.—Harper's Weekly. TAKI C IT TO HEART. Ther- are tw t rts of people who bother That I lint-- t look Into the news; There'- tin- • i with the ready grandilo quent flew, Who aev- r known to refuse A char. ■■ 1 "Ut and make comments about Al things a.. eon heaven nnd onrth; Who -oars d who bores till you really doubt W.iether 11 ■ not more work than it's wortb. And it.cat-- re" the other who could if he would Clear up t - e nfnslons which fret; "bo p. . these dark problems so • well u 1 i- i '-rod If In- did .1 .le to forced It's entirely ior inult If my hair's turn ing gi r And mv-i -li -..-row saggv and woak— Tlie person i i a Iks nnd has nothing to suy Al- 1 tho ,er who knows nnd won't speak. —Washington Star. HUMOR OF THE DAY. "If Wiggins called yon a liar you ought to make him prove it." "What good won 1-1 that do?" Chicago Rec ord. "V. hat ! .nd of a tree is the hardest to olimh ' a ker the teacher. "One that hain't ; >1 no limbs," little Albert replied. - Uicago News. "I don'; see what is to become of all these new doctors!" "Oh, new microbes are being all the time discov ered."—Detroit Journal. " V\ ou you call Uncle Amos a stingy i!f .:i ■ "No, I should say he bad all his generoui impulses uuder perfect oo trol " —Chicago Record. Jones "You needn't be afraid to pin - that book in the hands of your children Smith—"H'tnl I guess yo don't ; -,w mychildren."—Brook lyn Life She- I'm sure I've cast my bread on the 1 many a time, and I don't set- any re tits ' He—"No; I guess you or ■ i would sink, dear,"— -Yon kers Sta smau. "The idea of her having ihe nerve tc lorn lie first sawtlielight in 18T8." "I w. not judgo her too harshly. F-'rhnii- sic meant the are light."— Indianapolis Journal. Miss P.—"lf he really loves me, as yon say, why should ho bs sileut?" Miss S.—"He maynotbe ina position to get married." "But he knows I am."—Detroit Free Press. An editor at a di iner table, being asked if he would mice some pudding, replied in a fit of abstraction, "Owing to a crowd of other matter, wo are un able to find room for it." "When your parents first refused me yonr hand I was so wretched that I wanted to throw myself out of the window." "And why didn't yon?" "It was so high!"—Lustige Blaetter. "Ah, yes," shesighed, "I'm saddest when I sing." "Then," he replied, "you must he an exception to the rule." "What rule?" "The rule that people are oblivions of their own de locts."—Chicago News. "How do yon, manage to find yonr way across tho ocean?" said a lady to a sea captain. "Why, by a compass. The needle always points to tho north." "Yes, I know. But, what if you wish to go south?"—Tit-Bits. The Artist—"A flattering likeness! No, indeed, Mr. Cashleigh. It's only the matter-of-fact, stingy, purse-proud man of pedigree we artists have to flatter. The artistic, generous, mod est, self-made man, neverl"—Brook lyn Life. Mr. Staylate—"l hear your mother's step on tlie stairs, and I shall ho nble to bid her good night." Sleepy Eeau ty (wearily)—"lt can't lie mother, Siio's a lato sleeper. Probably it is the servnnt coming down to light the fire."—Standard. The whizzing autotruck may come, tho horseless carriage, too; Tho elements may do the work tlint horses now must do; llut as long tie men keep striving on for fortune or for fnmo You will lluil that moaey'll nlways make tho rnaro go, just the same. —Chicago News. "What I can't understand," re marked Billies, "is how Tottenham died and didn't leave a debt in the world." "Oh, well," responded Sloops, "folks sometimes do that." "Yes, I know," continued BilHes, "but just think how popular Totten ham was. Everybody liked him, and that's why I can't understand how he came to die without owing one cent of borrowed money!"— London Judy. About Cold Storage Game. Dr. Robert T. Morris has con tributed valuable testimony to the movement against the use of eold storage game. It is proved that the selling by restaurants of frozen game results iu a much greater slaughter of birds tbau would be the case if only enough were shot to supply the mar ket during the open season. Frozen ' game is distinctly inferior to fresh birds. It lacks juiciness, while being so fiat in tasto that any one with a normal palate nnd tho slightest knowledge of game can tell the dif ference at the first mouthful. It iB now recoguizod that cold storage game is not served at any decent restaurant, as its lost flavor keeps away tho most desirable class of patrons. Dr. Morris proposes that every first-class restaurant will find it to its advantage to state on the menu that no cold storage game is served, to imperil the stomachs of its guests.—Chicago Record. The Editor and Her Gowii. "We, the editor, were dressed in black and white,' nnd wore an ermine cope lined with brocade, aud a large black picture hat with white feathers!" A correspondent sends us tho cutting from n Sunday pajer of a loading ar ticle on the recent Women Journalists' Matinee containing the above marvel lous sentence. As our correspondent > says, "it is a grand attempt to com- bine the personal with the anony mous." —The Academy.