Freeland Tribune Established 1888. PUBLISHED EVERY MONDAY AND THURSDAY, BY TUB TRIBUNE PRINTING COMPANY. Med OWICE: MAIN STREET ABOVE CENTRE. FREELAND, PA. SUBSCRIPTION KATES: One Year $1.50 Six Months 75 Four Months 50 Two Months 25 The date which the subscription is paid to la on tnc address label of each paper, the change of which to a subsequent date be comes a receipt for remittance. Keep the figures in advance of the present date. Re- Eort promptly to this office whenever paper i not received. Arrearages must bo paid when subscription is discontinued. Mal>e nil mcnuy orders, checks, ttc.,pay able to the Tribune J'rintiny Company, Limited. A Chicago banker who accepted de posits after his bank had become in solvent has been lined more than S4OOO and sentenced to work it out at the rate of $1.50 a day. As this will require him to work about eight years and a half, he will have ample time to reflect on the sinfulness of fraudu lently using other people's money. Eight young women were recently admitted to the bar in New York City. The logical sequence of women at the bar is women on the bench. The woman is doubtless now living whose portrait will grace the newspapers of some not far-off year as that of "the first woman jiulgeiu New York." And the logical sequence of women at the bar and on the bench will be women in tho jury-room. Parliamentary rule les3 and less seems adapted to the Latins, say the New York Commercial Advertiser. They simply do not know how to handle that instrument of govern ment. It is not so much that they are ready for it as that it does not snit their temperament. The success of it and its growth among the Teu tonic -races has inspired the Latins to adopt it in part, but less and less is it successful with them. Italy and Bel gium add occasional illustration to the constant demonstration of France. There is more wealth in the United States than in any other country in the world. This fact would be dis creditable rather than honorable if the men of weulth in the United States, or i. great proportion of them, did not ure their money for noble purposes. In no nation is so much given to charitable and educational institutions. Thi3 record for the past six years will astonish most of our readers. Here it is: In 1833..., £29,000,000 la 1H94. 32,000,000 In 1893 32,800,000 In 1890. 27,000,000 I" 1897 45,000,000 In 1833 . 38,000,000 Total $203,800,030 This year the spirit of giving has been strong in our men and women who are blessed with an abundance of this world's goods, and by the end of the year we shall probably see that something like $50,000,000 has been devoted to charity and education by liberal-minded, big-hearted Ameri cans. % Ever Beady lor Duty. It is toM that a telegraph operator at Springfield, Mass., was kept at his post of duty for many hours receiving special news. After losing two nights' sloop, he was relieved from duty to get HP me vest. Jle went to his room at the hotel, and soon was fast asleep. 1 When the lime came for him to return to his instrument, he could not be iiwakened. Loud pounding on tho door did not result in arousing him. An operator then, with his knife handle, tapped "Springfield" on the door, in imitation of the clicking of tho instrument. At once the sleeping operator sprang from his bed, and was soon ready to continue his work. r.roku I'p the Show. An actor tells of a tragic experience he had recently while playing to an audience in a little town in southern Texas. In one of the scenes of the play, In which he acts the villain, he hides himself in a barrel, that he may listen to a conversation between the hero and heroine, whose future well being he is trying to destroy. In the town hail there was little if any "property" material. A barrel would do to conceal himself in, so a "hired hand" was sent out to find one. He succeeded. He slipped in the barrel with ease. The man and the woman appeared, and while they were in the midst of an animated conversation there came a howl from the barrel that fairly shook the rafters. This was fol lowed by the eavesdropper crawling out with his hands to his face, and he In turn was followed by a swarm of wasps. The wasps got among the stage people and those in the audience, which created so much confusion thai the show was broken uc. Notwithstanding the fact that there Is nothing new undgr the sun. the United States Patent Office granted nearly 25,000 patents last year to peo ple who had hit upon a new idea. THE QUESTIONER, 1 fair-faced woman found a whitened skull Amid a ruined garden's tangled bed. She placed It on a rose-twined pedestal And thus to it she said: ••Grim relic of some far-forgotten time. Whose flesh hath blossomed in such fair decay, [pray thee tell, in what sweet 3uminor clirao Dost thou reside to-day? I THE FACE IN THE GLASS J JACK, I really £ don't think I can ie!©f©K?K^ef^ie(©K An Adorning and Adorable How. I have a pattern for the most adorn ing and adorable bow you ever saw. If you like the idea after my descrip tion I will send it to you. I have just made myself one to wear over some of my untriinmed skirts, and I feej so dressed up when I put it on that I don't care if I never have another ruffle. In the first place, there is a narrow belt of moire ribbon to go around the waist. Then about three inches from the front on each side is a piece of the moire ribbon (which should be at least six inches wide) which reaehes down to the knees. They are there tied in front in a large, full bow. The ends are trimmed with plissed chiffon ruffles and come quite down to the bottom of the skirt. Go to workund make yourself one.—Edith Lawrence, in the Ladies' Home Jour nal. Tho Grent-Granriniece of Washington. Miss Mary Washington-Bond is not only the descendant of George Wash ington, but she is as well one of the most beautiful girls in New Yor* society. At the Charity Ball last winter she was considered the most beautiful woman present. Miss Washington-Bond is the great grandniece of Georg9 Washington, and the great-granddaughter of Gen eral Samuel Washington, the brother of President Washington. Miss Bond has some rare relics which ouce beloiiged to her illustrious great-grauduncle, and has also many old portraits of the Washington family. This fair descendant of the "greatest American" is tall and slender and blonde, and in every way is worthy of her ancestors. Her miniature is in the famous collection of "Beautiful American Women of Society" belong ing to Peter Marie, of New York."— Philadelphia Saturday Evening Post. OHIO of Hie COMPLEXION. If you begin in good time you may prevent freckles by using the following lotion two or three times a day instead of washing the face. Get one ounce of simple tincture of benzoin and add to it, drop by drop, a quart of cider flower or rosewater, stirring all the time. The addition of fifteen drops tincture of myrrh aud a few drops of glycerin is an improvement. An other good wash to be used in the same mauner is made of equal parts of fresh lemon juice, rose water aud rectified spirits. Mix thoroughly and leave until tho next day, then strain through muslin, when it will be ready for use. Oneo the little brown spots have made their appearance the following is excellent for driving thein away: Powdered borax, two drachms; chlorate of potash, ono drachm; rec tified spirits, three drachms; glycerin, one-half ounce; rose water, six ounces. Apply with a soft sponge several times a dRy. For winter freckles, or those which are inclined to remain all the year round, a more powerful remedy is needed, and tho following will be found delightfully effective: Take of the above lotion 100 parts. Add to that sixty parts of glycerin, ten parts of hydro-chloric acid and eight parts of chlyro-hydrate of am monia. Your druggist can easily mix it for you in these proportions. Ap ply night aud morning with a small paint brush.—Chicago Record. Women Artists. Those who have watched with sym pathy the light women have made to secure broad-winning careers, says the Saturday Review, or the right of en trance to intellectual occupations, aud tho success that has crowned these of forts in various directions, have been unwilling, however free from illusions as to the upshot, to pronounce judg ment before the experiment in this line l;ad been tnirly tried. The experiment lias been tried, girls in vast numbers have studied art under the same con ditions as men—the statistics of art studentship at the end of this century, if ever worked out, will form a curious and incredible chapter of social his tory—aud practically nothing had come of it. In other fields there is a different story to tell. Women have made good their foot ing iu all the subordinate ranks of the teaching and medical professions, and in these professions the work of sub ordinate ranks is valuable and neces sary. They have also proved them selves capable in clerkships, and even tho direction of business. Again, where there is an executive depart ment in the arts, now as always they reach first-class rank—namely, in act ing, singing, dancing, and the per formance of music. Modern literature as well as ancisnt counts women of genius, and modern education and freedom have opened the learned branches of letters to the sex with satisfactory results. But the arts of music and design have not from the beginning of time till now a single woman of the first rank, or even of very high rank, to name. A Professional Anxiety Rearer. How to be happy though the host esss of a large dinner party is what a young woman, at the rate of from $3 to 85 an evening, is showing a number of wealthy women. This young woman, in looking around for a means of bread-winning, decided to become a professional bearer of dinner party anxieties. What she does is to man ago dinners or wedding breakfasts or large luncheons, and though she neither cooks nor waits on table, she fulfils a most important mission. She stands before the hostess in all worry. A half honr before the meal is served she appears in the dining room and sees to it that the butler has got the table set. Then she dons her big apron, ami as guests file into the (liuing room she takes her stand by the pantry's dumb-waiter to see that every dish comes up exactly on time, piping hot when it ought to be hot, chilled to the marrow when the chill is necessary, and, furthermore, she tastes it to see that its llavor is exactly what it ought to be. Having a quick wit, resourceful mind and a knowledge of French cookery, she takes care that no dish passes to the table that is not above reproach. Where she stands in the pantry there is heard none of the crash and grind of dinner party machinery; no long waits between courses elapse. Now, this may seem a sinecure, but grateful hostesses look upon her work as exalted modern philanthropy, for even if the butler is a new man, the cook a possible traitor to her trust, and the caterer apt to play tricks with ices and sorbets, so long as the dinner manager is at the pantry helm nothing can go wrong. With all the ease of an unfettered soul the hostess can give her whole mind to her guests. If she is a hostess new at the business she can send for the manager before hand and have her dinner all planned for her, every detail considered, even to the color of the flowers and the pattern on the tablecloth, and the very latest surprise in an epicurean delicacy worked up for the envious delectation of her guests. But this is an extra.—New York Sun, GOBfllp. A woman ninety-seven years old, in the North of England, has just died of excessive tea drinking. The French Parliament has adopt ed a resolution authorizing duly qual ified women to practice at tho bar. Olive Schreiner has never told her age. There is no mention of the year of her birth in any of her biographies. The Empress of Germany is a champion knitter, and uses large wooden needles for the work she does. Queen Victoria's hobby is garden ing, and she is passionately fond of dogs and ponies, her especial favorite being her old black pony Jessie. Madame Dreyfus, wife of the world-famed prisoner, is a handsome woman not yet thirty years old. She is the daughter of a rich Hebrew. An odd thimble is in the possession of the Queen of Siam. It was given to her by her husband, who had it made in the form of a lotos flower studded with diamonds that form her name. Mrs. Helen Loring Grenfell has again been unamimously elected sup erintendent of public instruction in Colorado. She has appointed as her deputy Mrs. Celia Osgood Patterson. Princess Mathilde, the last Bona parte of her generation, lately celebrat ed her seventy-ninth birthday. Dur ing the second empire her house was the meeting place of many of tho most brilliant artists and writers of France. Francis Nightingale is weal thy in her own right. She owns a house in London, but spends most of time in Buckifighamshire, at Claydon House, the country seat of her sister, Lady Verney. Despite her poor health, she still keeps up a large correspondence. A colored woman lawyer, Miss Lut tie A. Lytte, of Topeku, Kan., is a member of the faculty of Central Ten nessee College, Nashville. She is an instructor in the law department, teaching especially the law of domes tic relations, real property, evidence, crimes and criminal procedure. Mrs. Annie Bcsant is said to have renounced England altogether and to have adopted Eastern customs of liv ing as well as thinking. She is start ing a school and college at Benares for Hindu boys, helping to make it the Eton and Oxford of tho East. The school will have a European head master. Fashion's FnUs and Fancies, Gray is as popular as ever. Linings this fall will be of the most vivid hues. The newest foulard gowns are the purple ones. White shirt waists of thiu materials with insertions of laco are rejrlaciug the ungainly white piques. Crepons in new designs are still in favor. A new weave in crepon has a black silk thread, a twist-thread in green or blue, and the effect is very pretty. The fastidious girl has numerous sets of skirt-studs and elceve-links to wear with her innumerable shirt waists—gold for white, silvor for blue and enamel in colors to match the rest. Veils with borders of chantilly in both black and white are always be coming and fashionable. Blue veils are to be worn with sailor hats. Brown veils are said to enhance the complexion. An abundance of jet, filigree, spangles, cut steel, rhiuestones and glittering beads wilt decorate the win ter gowns and wraps alike. Eur and velvet will be the height of oleganc 1 and extravagance. Good velveteen i:' said to wear better and look richer than cotton velvet. One of the very prettiest, daintiest and most becoming materials for wear this season is gingham. Fine checks, broken plaids, narrow stripes and old fashioned designs make a woman look five years younger, cool and com plaisant, comfortable and stylish. The Persian effects in silk are in higher colors this season than ever before. The coming rage for velvet this fall and winter will find good use for the Persian fad. Velvet coats trimmed with jet nail-heads and lined with a brilliant Persian Bilk will be gorgeous affairs. Not less than 1,000,000 persons at tend the seventy-three branch Chau tauqua assemblies every summer. ARCTIC BASEBALL. The Point Harrow Whalers Played tho Gam© in Odd CoMtuiuos. Tho nine months that the American whalemen, who were recently ice bound at Point Barrow in the Arctic, were compelled to lie in idleness, while not enlivened by social gayetiee, were far from mrnotonous. With i lumber brought up from fcan Francisco I there had been built on shore a com* I modious one-room house, whose most 1 conspicuous articles of furniture wero I a big stove, that roared day and night, a billiard-table aud a number of benches and chairs. This was tho club-rooin of the sixty or seventy offi cers of the fleet, and here they con gregated to play billiards and whist, or sit about through the long Arctio evenings, while the wind howled out side, smoking aud spiuuing yarns of many seas, or of boyhood days at New Bedford, New London and Marthas Vineyard. There were veterans who had whaled on every ocean, and had been in nearly every port on the globe; men who recollected well the raid of the cruiser Shenandoah, when she burned tho fleet on the coast of Siberia thirty years before, aud who had been in the Point Barrow dis aster, when nearly a score of ships were crushed in the ice-floe. The sailors and firemen of the fleet did not have the privilege of this house, but contented themselves with games and amusements of their own. They had an orchestra that played long aud vociferously, and there was an amateur dramatic troupe that gave entertainments during the winter. But it was on the great national game of baseball that officers and men most depended to break the tedium of their long imprisonment and furnish the necessary out-door exercise. All tho whalemen were dressed in the Esquimau fur costume, only the face being exposed, and on their hands wore heavy fur mittens. These clumsy mitteua, together with tho fact thatoue was apt to fall on the ice un less he gave a large part of his atten tion to keeping his feet underneath him, made good catching practically impossible. "Muffs" were tho rule, and the man who caught and held the ball received an ovation, notouly from the whalers, but from the hundreds of Esquimaux who were always crowded about tho rope. With tho ball frozen as hard as a rock, ho one was apt to repeat an experiment of catching with bare hands. One of the centre-fielders was a corpulent Orkney-Islander, whose favorite method of stopping a hct grounder was to lie down in front of it. The Esquimaux considered him tho star-player of the fleet. Sliding was the ouly thing done to perfection, the ice offering excellent facilities for distinction in that line; and there was always a wild cheer when a run ner, getting too much headway, knocked the baseman off his feet, aud both eamo down together. Tho scores werd ridiculously large, seldom le3S than fifty on a side, and sometimes twice that. On the smooth ico a good hit meaut a home-run.—Harper's Round Table. Earlier Scouts Were Originally Haulers. The earlier scouts, like Kit Carson and Jim Bridger, were originally trappers and hunters, born and reared in Missouri, Tennessee aud Kentucky, who had a fondness for adventure. They had pushed their way across the border of civilization of those days and had gone upon the plains of Kan sas, Nebraska aud Texas for big game aud excitement. The Mexican war in 18IS and tbo movement of troops through Texas and along tho Rio Grande brought scouting into the army service. When the era of ox teams and trains of excited gold-seek ers headed toward California began in 18-ID, there was a great demand for scouts at very profitable wages. Hun dreds of young men with a smattering of pluius life, an expertness in fire arms and a little knowledge of In dians' ways, became professional scouts. No emigrant train would leave St. Joseph, Mo., or Leaven worth, Kan., on its journey of four or five mouths to tho Pacific Oceau, without an accompanying scout or guide for at least a part of tho way. As the chain of army garrisons was extended out upon the plaius tho War Department employed more and more scouts for tho troops, and scouting be came a sort of science of the plaius iu which there was competition iu expert ness. During the Apache aud Sioux wurs in 1877, 1878 and 1870 the Gov ernment had about 1200 scouts on its army payrolls. Then tho Indians, who had adopted white man's ways, became scouts, aud the pursuit of the white man waued fust.—Chicago Record. The Popularity of Novel*. It is a curious fact that tlje books which have had the most influence iu England have nearly always been works of fiction, and it seems prob able that this will always continue to be so. The only J, way iu which the public pulse can be efficiently felt is by means of au examination of the free library returns from the various most important centres in the coun try. From an inquiry of this sort we learn that fiction still holds the first place in the affections of readers. The novel is still a most powerful influence for evil or for good. At least sixty five per cent, of the books which are taken from libraries in the ordinary eourse of events are novels.—London Mail. Where False Hair 1B Secured. People who wear false hair will be interested in the announcement of a strange discovery made at Antwerp, Belguim. In that city a bale of human hair, weighing 172 pounds, was stolen from a railroad station. It was after ward learned that the hair had been clipped from the heads of lunatics and convicts in public asylums and prisons.