Freeiand Tribune Established 18S8. PUBLISHED EVERY MONDAY AND THURSDAY. BY THE TRIEONE PRINTING COMPANY. Limited OFFICE: MAIS STREET ABOVE CENTRE. FREELAND, PA. SrBiCr.U'TION RATES: One Year $1.50 Six Months 75 Four .Hon-lis 50 Two Months 25 The ilute which tho subscription is paid to l on the uddross label of each paper, the chanKo of which to a subsequent date bo comes a receipt lor remittance. Keep the figures in advance of the present date. Re port promptly to tills office whenever papel is not received. Arrearages must he pail When subscription is discontinued Male all men. y orders, checks, do,.payable to the Tribune printmj Company, Limited. Incidentally the automobile will provo a potent ally in the good-roads movement. Early marriages are less common than they used to be, and they will probably be rarer still in the future. A German inventor is said to haro discovered a smokeless, noiseless and odorless powder. If this be true, its use should be made compulsory ou the glorious Fourth. The difference between women who belong to clubs and men who belong to clubs is that the first are supposed to have views ou every subject and the second are not supposed to have views on any subject. The cities and towns which used voting machines at the recent election knew the results long beforo the poll clerks in other places were-well under way with counting the ballots. And there were no marked aud defective tickets to fight over. California promises to become one of the leading manufacturing States in the Union. Its backbone, the Sierra Mountains, is the home of in numerable streams, which are being harnessed to generate electrical power thirty to forty miles for light and power purposes. Derby, Conn., steps to the head in the list of novel causes of strikes, j Thirty girls in a factory there stopped work because one of the employes per sisted in eating limburger cheese with her luncheons—and as the factory happened to be rushed with orders, the strikers won, and the limburger cheese luncheon was banished. "The schools in the majority of our cities have so far overcome the habit of resorting to corporal punishment that the school room now assumes the atmosphere of a pleasant and urbane assemblage of a well-mannered family in the home. The air of freedom and polite behavior takes the place of the suppressed and sullen mien of old tiinos. The significance of this upon the formation of the future citizen in a democracy is obvious," observes United States Commissioner of Edu cation Harris. The New York Press merrily says: "Chighte, Choinge, Choga, Chrecage, Cigaigo, Czikago, Dsicago, Gaceco, Gigaga, Hicago, Kikago, Sohikka, Sehogio, Schicliaeo, Shkago, Sjicago, Stikago, Sugargar, Tschicago, Tchigo, Tezhiago, Zhtjgo. The postal author ities dumped these various ortho graphic curiosities on as many letters into the Chicago bag and found tbey all fitted." This is a graceful ac knowledgment of the fact that Chicago is practically the whole thing, and the postal authorities know it, adds the Chicago Times-Herald. Too many young men are educated to do the things that they are not fitted to do. Boys should rather be taught to use the tools that they will be most likely to need in their life-work in order to support themselves and those who will bo dependent upon them for their living, aud largely for their hap piness, thinks Collis P. Huntington, This is au age of specialties, and those who confine themselves to one kind of work aud become as nearly perfect in their particular line as it is possi ble for a man to become, are the ones who will succeed best. Icing Range Rifle Shooting. In the current number of the Nine teenth Century Mr. Bo.illie-Grohman says British rifle shooting suffers by the Britons' preference for long range shooting. He points to the defeat of the English team at the recent In ternational rifle match in Holland. Out of eight competing teams Britain was fourth in the prone position, fourth In the kneeling position, aud a bad eighth !n shoulder shooting, thus receiving the seventh place in the aggregate, l'his is due, he thinks, to the British neglect of shoulder shooting and shoot ing at short ranges. He contends that the British long dlstanco shooting aorders perilously near upon "fancy work." He advocates the formation of riflo clubs on the analogy of local toot ball and cricket clubs. THE RETURN TO TNE OLD TOWN. 0 the little old town that 1 left one day. Because It wns quiet, still Has the name that it had when I went way, And stands on the 9ame old hill; But the ones that were dear In the little old town, With its one wide street running up and down, Have ceased to sit on tlie pofches where The roes were trained to climb; They have ceased to sew and to whittle there. As they did in the dear old ticne. The little old church with its wooden sheds .Still stands as it stood of yore; But the ones who kuelt and who bowed their heals Are worshipiut? there no more! And the little old school whore I carved my name On the homemade desk stands just tho But the boys who are battincr the b ill to-day Aud the little maids, fair and free, Are not the children who used to play On the common there with mo! I THE PORKS OP THE ROAD. | An Episode in the Business Life of $ }s• a Young Man.