IS HHS IBS But McGinty at Last Met More Than His Master, HE HAS A CRUSHED LEG. How He Lost His Seat But Did Not Los. His Nerve—McGinty Was One of the Most Modest of th. Rough Riders. The bucking bronco of th,e West Is more dangerous than Spanish bullets, according to William McOlnty, who has had experience of both. McGinty was one of the famous band of Rough Riders who charged up San Juan Hill on a certain memorable occasion near ly two years ago. More recently he has been engaged nightly in charging up the mtulature San Juan Hill in Madison Square Garden, New York, along with the other troopers and cow boys of the "Wild West" show. At present he is laid up with a crushed leg. as the result of a close range en gagement with one of the prize "Puck ers" of tlje outfit McGinty was not thrown. The horse has yet to come out of Texas that can unseat the diminutive trooper once he gets his leg over the saddle. This particular animal, however, being full of original Ideas, as well as a devil Incarnate, thought to rid himself of hlB unwelcome rider by a flying side wise leap. In the course of this leap he brought up against the side fence of the arena. McGlnty's leg was be tween the wall and the horse. One bone was snapped short off, and the other was crushed. The little man did his "turn," rode the four footed cata pult across the arena and then slid (A Tough Customer), out of the saddle close to the side wall so that the audience might not see that he was injured. That 1b > Mc- Glnty's way of doing things. Although the most silent and unas suming man in the Rough Riders, Mc- Ginty probably had a wider circle of friends among the members of tjie regiment than any other man who was in the ranks. He found favor with his comrades while they were drilling at San Antonio by the char acteristic humor of a reply that he made to Colonel Leonard Wood. The cowboys of the regiment were more accustomed to the saddle than to walking, and they found difficulty in keeping step, McGinty was a particu larly arrant offender, and at length the commander directed a particu larly sharp query In his direction, asking him If he could not possibly keep in step with the other men. "I'm afraid I can't sir," said McGin ty, saluting respectfully; "but If you'll give me a horse I can keep step with the best of them." McGinty Is a representative of a rapidly disappearing profession—that of the "bronco buster." No man who has not tried to remain for two min utes atop one of the genuine "man killers" of the Western plains can realize what that means. "Major" Burke.-who Is an authority on the sub ject, says that men in that business do not last for more than a dozen years on the average. Aside from his present serious injury. McGinty Is still strong and wiry, but at different per iods of his career he hns had a dozen or more individual and separate hones broken in the course of his encounters. "It isn't a business a man would nat urally pick out," said McGinty, In dis cussing his occupation, "but I sort of drifted into It. I started out as a cow puncher, and, of course, it was a part ef our work to break the range horses to saddle. When they found out that I could stick onto a bucker pretty well they gave me harder and harder ones to try. That's the way I got into the work. I rode broncos all along the Pecos River. I rode 413 In one year that I kept account of. You never can tell what one of these 'outlaws,' as we call them down in Texas, may do. The one that smashed my leg the other night has a trick of shutting his eyes tight and making a wild leap. That was the way he run into the wall. Of course the buckers used are the very worst that can be obtained. They all have records and are bought for that purpose. They get worse instead of better as time goes on, as a general rule. The horse I was just speaking of had only been mounted once before the other night, so I am not predicting what he may accomplish before he gets through with me." McGinty said this as thoiigh he were talking about the wenther. But Mc Glnty is not theatrical or Bpeetacular He is one of the everyday heroes. A nugget taken from one of the Joplln. Mo., zinc mines the other day weighed an even ton. This sparkler was principally of zinc ore. trimmed fn calcite, pink spar and cubes of galena. "*> TRAVERB' GOAT. ft Ate the Horse's Tail and Strained Friendship. Henry Travers and Otto Koop, who lives a few dors away, have long boon the closest friends. But now they never speak as they pass by, and 'tis all owing to Travers' goat and Koop's long-tailed bay mare. The bay mare had a tail that reached the ground, and the goat an appetite that was indiscriminatlng and only limited by his ambulatory and reach ing powers. But the horse's tall, in stead of sweeping the floor as of yore, is now but a jagged bunch of hair, a foot and a half from the ground. The facts in the case are somewhat hazy, but Mr. Koop says: "My heart is almost broken. Why, the tail of that horse was the best part of it. I wouldn't have taken s.">oo for that mare, but now look at it! That confounded goat of Travers* had to come In here and chew off her tail and disfigure the finest looking horse in Toledo. Why in heaven's name didn't Travers feed his old billy goat so that he would stay at home instead of trespassing around chewing up horses' tails. It's a blamed shame, and I'm going down town to see a lawyer friend of mine and see if I can't get damages. No; the mare ain't much of a runner or trotter, but you Just ought to have seen that tall. I'll kick a lung out of that goat if I get a chance." "Kick a lung out of my goat, will he?" indignantly snorted Mr. Travers when told what Koop had said. ".lust let him try it. Damages? Kiddle sticks! How is he to sue me? I didn't eat the tall. Why doesn'e he keep Ids stable door closed if he is so particu lar?"— Toledo News. Regard For His Reputation. Lemuel Gulliver was strolling about town one day during his visit to the Brobdingnngians, when one of the court nobles accosted him. "Mr. Gulliver," he said, "are there any people on earth as small as you arc?" "Sir," returned Gulliver, straighten ing himself up to his full height, " there are people compared with whom I look like a Chicago policeman. They live in Lilt But what's the use? You would not believe me, and if there is one thing I cannot bear it is to have anybody doubt my word." Hereupon he took out his notebook and furtively jotted down a few more facts about Brobdingnag.— Chicago Record. Not Needed. American Statesman (to Porto Ri can): "The arrangement Is altogether for your benefit. You will not have to pay any duty on the goods we send to you. Consequently, you will get them cheap. And we only put enough tar iff on your products to keep them from coining into ruinous competition with the products of our own ijuaun factories. Don't you see?" Porto Rlcan: "But how about our manufactories?" American Statesman: "Oh, you won't have any; they are already pet ering out!"— Chicago Tribune. The Modern Murder. "Oh, why," moaned the hapless vic tim, "did you kill mo?" "Because I am of unsound mind, of course," retorted the assassin, brusquely. For this was no time to be asking questions which in the light of events a casual knowledge of contemporary jurisprudence answered themselves. Why? He: "Why are women afraid of mice; the little things can't hurt them V" She: "Why arc men afraid of pink dragons aiul green snakes that they think they see in their boots some times? The things are only imagin ary, and they know they can't hurt them-"—New York World. The Evidence of a Bill. "A man with a hill," announced the court chamberlain. The king was visibly affected. "He must be a bird," exclaimed his Inajesty, thinking of the rigorous measures he had taken to prevent creditors approaching the royal per son.—Detroit Journal. Would Have Been Hard on Her. "I wish I had studied law," she re marked, regretfully. "It would have been a bitter experi ence for lie answered. "Why so?" she demanded. "You would have had to let the Judge have the last word."—Chicago Post. Mean Mf fi's Scheme. Bloobs: "Close fist ought to bo ashamed to teach his wifo to play poker." Sloobs: "Oh, there's method in his madness. He gives her an allowance, and then sits down and wins it all back."—Philadelphia Record. Great Chance For Him. "I see by 'the newspapers," said the casual caller, "that there is a man In Canada with three lungs." "Oh, me! Oh, my!" exclaimed the baseball fan, enthusiastically, "what a 'rooter' he would make, wouldn't he?"— Chicago Post. The Facts o the Case. "I understand that Banker Bustupp was really the victim of people in whom lie had placi d confidence." " I guess It is sc. Poor man, he was more skinned . gainst than skin ning."—ludiana pel is Press. PORTO RICAN SCHOOLS. RAPID PROGRESS IN THE PAST FEW MONTHS. Two Races Side by Side—The New Free Schools—American Teachers Have Shocked the Natives—A Word of Warning. (Ponce, P. It., Correspondence.) Through the schools nud the church In every land come civilization. He liable statistics from the Insular Board of Education show that only one In a hundred can read and write in the Island of Porto Rico; that there are 2.10,000 children without school privileges; that it will cost about $2,000,000 to build the necessary school houses, and an annual expendi ture of $500,000 to maintain them. In the city of Ponce there are sev eral small schools still taught by Spanish teachers. The American school, which is the largest, has a commodious building, built for school purpose by the Spanish Govern ment. During the last fifteen months 300 pupils have been In attendance, wllh seven American teachers. The principal, a male teacher, has charge of the high Rehool department, with about twenty pupils under his instruc tion. The remaining six teachers are young women, nearly nil of tlicni from the State of Virginia. The teaching is entirely in English, or supposed to he. hut I noticed the teachers seemed to speak fluently in Spanish occasionally, and that most of them had acquired the language by absorption or contact with the chil dren. The kindergarten class, numbering 50, were at their eulcsthenlc exercises, something of great value to these peo ple, as they never exercise In any way. The children are of slight build, keen and bright looking, decently clothed, fairly clean, and all wore shoes and stockings, a rare tiling in this slipshod land. The school building is very cool and airy, one story In height, with a court and large playground. The school is opened each morning with our nation al airs, which are sung with true vim ami fervor. The listener feels a curi ous emotion as he listens to his "home songs" so dear, sung by these little people, and feels that through these miniature men and women are com ing the future thoughts and forces that are to change this narrow, bigot ed little island Into broader and more intelligent living. No young girl In Porto Rico goes to any place without a chaperon, and more often a dirty little pickaninny is the unlimited pice" of humanity that Is considered a sale escort for women grown. Such was the escort a young woman brought with her the other day who enir.e to distribute supplies to the destitute. Tills diminutive specimen of human depravity was scarcely clothed and was seven years old, perhaps, sent cut with this well dressed girl of mature years to pro tect her—from wlit? The present teachers have seen lit to walk about the streets without this Important adjunct, have received their men friends nnd 'alien drives about the city with them, and otherwise eon ducted themselves as young women are wont to do In their native land; all of which shocked the senorltas, and more especially their mammas, the senorns. A word to some of those young women contemplating coming to Porto Rico to teach may "ot be auiiss. It is always well to remember In going to a new country to assimilate one's self with existing customs. Teachers going to San Juan, Mnya guez or Ponce can innke themselves fairly comfortable and acquire the language more readily by living with Spanish people. It Is true, few Amer icans like native cooking, and if at all fastidious will become heartily sick of it. There arc a few Americans who keep hoarders and make life livable to their "countrymen. If a teacher is assigned to a coun try school she will In all probability he the only English-speaking person there; will get her mall semi-monthly, suffer tortures with the food, coffee and Innumerable Insects. To such a one I say; Don't, under any circum stances drink water not boiled. Don't employ a native doctor, hut bring a few simple remedies nnd a knowledge of their use. Don't bring a lot of silver and jewelcry. You will be re lieved of its care sooner or later. Don't fall to bring a dialing dish and n knowledgu of its uses. Don't bring any warm clothing except the suit necessary for the journey. Linen skirts and shirt waists, witli pretty muslins, are worn the year round. Don't accept invitations without prop er chaperon. GOSSIP IN WASHINGTON. Society Pleased Over the Prospect of a Veritable Palace. (Washington Correspondence.) Society in Washington is much in terested in the new palace, not yet finished, of Mrs. R. H. Townsend, of Philadelphia. Before her marriage she wtts Mary Scott, a daughter of the late Colonel "Tom" Scott, of Penn sylvania Railroad fame. Her wealth runs up into the millions, and the mansion aforesaid will cost her about $400,000. It will be nearly twice the size of the famous Leiter house on Dupont Circle, being 125 feet in width and 123 in depth. Mrs. Townsend is building it, she says, for her young daughter, now seventeen years of age and almost ready to enter society. It will be the scene, doubtless, of some of the most gorgeous entertainments ever given at the national capital. The front will be of Indiana lime stone, having much the same effect as white marble, quarried at Bedford, in that state. There will be four stor ies, and the ontire west wing will be occupied by a ballroom, by far the fin est that has been seen in Washington. Entering the great house, one will find himself in an immense stair hall, forty-six feet long by thirty-six feet wide, on the left of which will be a spacious reception room and a billiard room with two tables, one for billiards and the other for pool. On the right will be Mr. Townsend's own particu lar den, in which he might work if he were obliged to do so. As a matter of fact it will l>e hi* playroom. All the rest of the space on this floor will be devoted to service purposes; that is, kitchen, scullery, servants' hall,* man servants' roms (the maids will be quartered upstairs), chef's cold room, laundry, drying room, etc. The establishment will employ übout. thir ty-live servants, and a French chef will superintend the commissury de pa rtmont. Even the servants In this establish ment will enjoy every luxury. Each of them will have a room to himself or herself, with running water, and their bathrooms will be reserved for their own exclusive use. In all there will be fifteen bathrooms in the man sion. There will be an elevator, oper ated by electricity, so that nobody need walk upstairs unless so inclined. The apparatus, indeed, will be auto matic, so that a person will only have to step aboard, touch the proper but ton, and find himself in a moment at the floor desired. THE PARIS EXPOSITION. Features of the Great Show—The Commissioner General (Paris Correspondence.) One of the many beauties of the ex position and one of its permanent fea tures, which will remain after the other ephemeral adornments of the magic city have passed away, is the Petit Palais. Compared to the Grand Palais, the Petit Palais is insignifi cant, but it will attract great atten tion, nevertheless, In spite of its being overshadowed by its greater rival, for were it alone by itself, it could not be considered a sninll building by any means, and it is is, reality a perfect gem of architecture. Its proportions are harmonious in the extreme, and it carries with it an air of aristocratic elegance that seems to breathe the very spirit of old France—the France of the Louis, the France of olden chivalry and nobility. With one exception tho United States has the largest amount of space —210,000 square feet, partly in the heart of the exposition grounds and partly in the annex in the Rois do Vencennes. There will be five build- A PI CARD.. UJ_H ings In I lie main grounds and two in Vencennes. One national pavilion will be the only expensive building we will construct. This will be on the bank of the Seine, alongside the structures of about thirty other na tions, with Austria on one side and Turkey on the other. In general this building bears a remote resemblance to Grant's tomb. In the porch, which opens on the Seine, there will be mi equestrian slatue of Washington, sur rounded by a quadriga, representing the Goddess of Liberty In the Oar of Progress. The main hull of the build ing will contain reception rooms for the different states. Of course, the show is constantly compared with the World's Pair at Chicago, hut comparisons are odious. It Is both bettor and worse than that exposition. Hut all In all, tho Paris full- is u marvel, and Its success is largely due to the wonderful execu tive force of M. Alfred Plcnrd, the commissioner general of the exhibi tion. | THE PRINCE OF NAPLES^ HOW HE IS TAUGHT BY THE QUEEN OF ITALY. He is a Fine Young Man of Thirty- One Years and It is Declared Will Make an Ideal King—Good Queen Margherita. (Rome Correspondence.) The life of King Umberto and Queen ! Margherita of Italy Is spent so quiet j ly in tho almost monotonous fulfil- J ment of tlieir duties that they enjoy | the privilege of having little or noth ing said about them. Whether in the royal palace of the Quirlnal, or in the villa at Monzu, or In the shooting box among the crags of the Gran Pada diso, tlieir habits are the same; early rising, frugal table, wholesome activ ity and the company of a few' select friends. The King generally retires at 10 anil the Queen about 11 o'clock. The education of the Prince of Nap les up to the ago of 13 was intrusted to his mother. No more accomplished or loving mother could be found for him, mens sann in corpora sano being the cud at which she successfully aimed. It is not through a short otti- I ciiil audience that one can appreciate the full value of her accomplishments, no matter how deep an impression . her beauty aud grace may create. | What makes her a model wife, I mother and Queen—the person, in short, to whom the education of the heir apparent could he intrusted with absolute guarantee of success—is not : so much her learning, her command of tlie German, Italian, English Span ish nnd French languages, her artistic ; instincts or her musical talent, as lier courage and exquisite sense of honor and uprightness. The education of the Prince of Naples lias not been too indulgent. Ho was watched si riot ly, even in his be havior towards his playfellows. After a boyish quarrel with one of tliem he was heard to say: "It is well for yon that I am not the king, or I would have your head cut off at once." These words reached the ears of the King, and the punishment was not long in coming. When that very afternoon the Prince, alt I red In his dainty military uniform, drove out of the Quirlnal, the sentinels and the other officials at the gate failed to recognize liis pres ence and to pay him the customary salute. He had been deprived of the privileges of royalty for a week! Ills military education was intrust ed to Colonel Oslo, aud Ids scientific training to some professors from tho University of Rome. He was not al lowed to advance a step In liis career unless by passing through strict ex aminations. English he could speali from child hood, liis governess being an Anglo- Saxon in tlie truest sense of the word. He grew fondly attached to this lady, and was deeply grieved at the news of her death in 1887. I do not know how many languages he eau speak now, but I know that while traveling from one end of Europe to the other lie could address all the personages whose hospitality he enjoyed in their native language. His great passion is numismatics. When lie first began collecting coins and medals he slept with the key to the treasure box under liis pillow. For many years his father has given him valuable collections of coins us Christmas presents. After traveling in Egypt, England, Germany, Russia, the Levant, the Black Sea and Turkestan, lie was sent to Naples to serve with Ills own regi ment stationed there, nnd In 1894 was promoted to the command of a divis ion whose headquarters are in Flor ence. I hear that the place of honor in liis library is given to books on wars and travels In tlie East. This particu lar is best known to those who follow auction sales of hooks in Rome. When we detect the familiar outline of a certain Couquincur, who bids high prices for such books on war, and for searee editions of Italian poets, we know that he is trying to secure tlie first for the Prince, the others for the Queen. In spite of his 31 years, the Prince of Naples is rather tiuihl In the pres ence of ladles, quite the reverse on tills pednt from Ids cousins tho Duke d'Aosta, Royal Artillery, and the Comte de Torino, of the First Dra goons, who are the greatest favorites In aristocratic circles, nnd who seem to bring life aud entrain wherever tliey appear. There is a third cousin, that Is to say, a third cousin of the Inte Duke of Aosta, who is more like the Prince of Naples In timidity of manners, modesty of life and devotion to Ids career. To this enthusiastic sailor the steel deck of a cruiser is far prefer able to the waxed floor of a dancing hall. Following In the footsteps of Queen Margherita, he has taken up mountaineering when on leave of ab-* sence. The Stamp Question. Meaning that she should purchase a few stamps ahead and not he both ering the druggist every day in tlie year, he said: " Don't you know that a druggist doesn't like to sell stamps in that way ?" " Is It possible lie is afraid I won't pay Idm'/" she asked spiritedly. "Pay him?" he demanded. "What do you mean?" " Why, I purchased four yesterday and us I forgot my purse I asked him to chnrge tliem—the mean thing." " Have mercy!" he cried. " Woman spare me auy mure." -Indianupolls Sun. 1 The Tribune Is The Leading Newspaper In Freeland! At the subscrip tion price of $1.50 per year the Tribune costs its readers less than one cent a copy. Think of that! Less than one cent a copy! And for that you get all the local news, truthfully reported and carefully written up. Besides all the local news, the Tri bune gives the news of the world in a con densed form. Thus the busy workman can keep in formed as to what is going on in the world without buying any other paper. The Tribune is essentially a newspa per for the home cir cle. You can read it yourself and then turn it over to your chil dren without fear of putting anything ob jectionable into their hands. Order It from The Carriers . or from The Office.