FREELAND TRIBUNE" Established 1838. PUBLISHED EVERY MONDAY, WEDNESDAY AND FRIDAY. MY THE TRIBUNE PRINTING COMPANY, Limited. OFFICE: MAIN STREET AMOVE CENTRE. LONG DISTANCE TELEPHONE. SUBSCRIPTION RATES. FIUSELAND.—The TRIBUNE is delivered by carriers to subscribers in Freeluud at the rate of cents a month, payable every two months, or SI.OO a year, payable In advance. The TRIBUNE may bo ordered direct from the carriers or from the office. Complaints of irregular or tardy delivery service will receive prompt attention. BY MAIL.—The TRIBUNE is sent to out-of town subscribers for sl.">U a year, payable in advance; pro rata terms for shorter periods. The date when the subscription expires is on the uddress label of each paper. Prompt re newals must be made at the expiration, other wise the subscription will be discontinued. Entered at the Postoflice at Frcoland, Pa., as Second-Class Matter. Make all money orders, checks , etc., payable to the Tribune Printlno Company, Limited. FREELAND, SEPTEMBER 17, 1900. End of the Horton Law. Boxing la now not legal In New York state. A great many sporting men of the better class think this Is a good thing for the game. There are a great many people who like to see a good ex hibition of scientific boxing, but will not countenance the slugging matches and disgraceful scenes witnessed under the Horton law In New York. One of the things that went a good way to ward causing the repeal of the Ilorton law was that the promoters and others worked so many fakes In on the public. Boxing in New York has Indirectly had a good deal to do with the decline In interest noted in many athletic sports in the past few years. The yel low journals came out every morning and evening with their sporting pages completely filled with large pictures of fighters posed In every imaginable po sition and the remaining space with gossip of the "pugs." People who read such papers naturally came to the con clusion that boxing was the only sport left. In small type, put in here and there to fill up space, would be short accounts of the doings ou the tennis courts, baseball diamonds and other places of sport. People flaturally began to think other sports were not flourish ing and of small Interest and that box ing was the only live one left. There Is an old Chinese legend, per haps the oldest of the traditional lore of the Middle Kingdom, as it relates to the very beginning of the empire, that the first of the Chinese emperors was half dragon and half ox, who set up his government In precisely the region whither, if reports be true, the royal family and clan have betaken them selves to escape "the foreign devils." There seem to be some elements of truth In the story that the Chinese em pire began and gradually grew up around the province of Shensi, and there Is significance at least for the fanciful that after many centuries—so many indeed that they cannot be num bered with any degree of accuracy— the Chinese imperial court is again in its earliest home. It has traveled a wide orbit in the Intervening ages, but it returns to the starting point scarcely changed from what tradition says it was originally. The description of the first emperor as half dragon and half ox is of course figurative, but the figure is not altogether inappropriate as ap plied to his latter day successors. One must trust to imagination for an idea as to the Intellectual qualities of a dragon, but they are probably ruthless and malicious, while we generally re gard the ox as stupid and strong. If these are not the traits of the actual holder of the Imperial title, they are remarkably well developed in the real holders of power, who are using him as a helpless Instrument. Thus the resem blance between the old and new re mains perfect, and the ancient legend holds true today. There is a general impression that the Chinese language, being made up largely of words of one syllable, Is easy to learn, but this hardly appears to be the case. The tongue of the Celestials has plenty of monosyllables, but those who speak It usually have to employ more of them to convey their meaning than they who speak the Anglo-Saxon. For example, "Go there" in Canton Chinese is "Iloay-gaw-chew-ee," which is three syllables more than the Anglo- Saxon. "Come here" is "Loy-ha-clia." "Can you Is "Nung-but-nung-ah?" And "What is your name" Is "Ne-qu-zu-mut me-ung-ah?" These examples are quoted from a circular to American soldiers in tended to enable them to learn some thing of Chinese. They seem to show that the soldier has a hard task before him to pick up even a few Chiuese phrases and that as a world conqueror the Chinese language has no chance with the Anglo-Saxon. The progressive nations of the world are II e greut food consuming nations. Good food we 1 digested gives strength. If you cannot digest all you eat, you need Kodol Dyspepsia Cure. It digests what vou eat You need not diet your self. It contains all of the digest ants com tuned wit h the best known tonics and reconstructive?. It. will even digest all classes of foods in u bottle. Noother preparation will do this. It instantly relieves and quickly cures all stomach trouble. Grover's City drug store. Smoke and chew Kendall, Clock it CO.'H XXXX union-made. Mnftd by the Clock Tobacco Co., Scranton, I'a. ISR. ROOSEVELT'S REPLY Formally Accepts Vice Presi dential Nomination. THE LEADING ISSUES DISCUSSED. Governor DevoleH Much Space to the Philippine Quentton. Which. He Sny N. IN Not a Xew One— lll* tory of ICspitiiMion. New York, Sept. 17.—Governor Roose velt's letter of acceptance of the nomina tion for vice president lias been issued. Governor Roosevelt says: 1 accept the nomination as vice president of the United Stated tendered me by the Republican national convention with u very deep sense of the honor conferred upon me and with an infinitely deeper sense of the vital importance to the whole country of securing the re-election of President Mcßinley. The nation's welfare is at stake. We must continue the work which hus been so well begun during the present administration. We must show in fashion incapable of being misun derstood that the American people, at the begin ning of the twentieth century, face their duties in a calm and serious spirit; that they have no in tention of permitting fully or lawlessness to mar the extraordinary material well being which they have attained at home, nor yet of permitting their fing to be dishonored abroad. Fundamentally and primarily the present con test is a contest for the continuance of the con ditions which have told in favor of our muterial welfare and of our civil ami political integrity. If this nution is to retain either its well being or its self respect, it cunnot afford to plunge into finan cial and economic chaos; it cannot afford to in dorse governmental theories which would unsettle the standard of national honesty and destroy the integrity of our system of justice. The policy of the free coinage of silver at the ratio of 10 to 1 is a policy fraught with destruction to every home in the land. It means untold misery to the head of every household and, above all, to the women and children of every home. When our opponents champion free silver at 10 to 1 they are either insincere or sincere in their nttitude. If insincere in their championship, they of course forfeit all right to belief or support on any ground. If sincere, then they are a menace to the welfare of the country. Whether they shout their sinister purpose or merely whisper it makes but little difference, save as it reflects their own honesty. No issue can be paramount to the issue they thus make, for the paramountcy of such an issue is to be determined not by the dictum of any man or body of inen, but by the fact that it vitally affects the well being of every home in the land. The financial question is always of such farreaching and tremendous importance to the na tional welfare that it can never be raised in good faith unless this tremendous importance is not merely conceded, But insisted on. Men who are not willing to make such nn issue paramount have no possible justification for raising it at all, for under such circumstances their act cannot under any conceivable circumstances do aught but great harm. Tin? Trnut Problem. One of the serious problems with which we are confronted under the conditions of our modern in dustrial civilization is that presented by the great business combinations which are generally knovyn under the name of trusts. The problem is an exceedinly difficult one, and the difficulty is immensely aggravated both by honest but wrong headed attacks on our whole industrial system in the effort to remove some of the evils connected with it ami by the mischiev ous advice of men who either think crookedly or who advance remedies knowing them to be in effective. but deeming that they may, by darken ing counsel, achieve for themselves a spurious rep utation for wisdom. No good whatever is sub served by indiscriminate denunciation of corpora tions generally and of all forms of industrial com bination in particular, and when this public de nunciation is accompanied by private membership in the great corporations denounced the effect is of course to give an air of insincerity to the whole movement. Nevertheless, there are real abuses, and there is ample reason for striving to remedy these abuses. A crude or ill considered effort to remedy them would either be absolutely without effect or else would simply do damage. The first thing to do is to find out the facts, and for this purpose publicity as to capitalization, profits and all else of importance to the public is the most useful measure. The mere fact of this publicity would in itself remedy certain evils, and as to the others it would in some cases point out the remedies and would at least enable us to tell whether or not certain proposed remedies would be useful. The state acting in its collective ca pacity would thus first find out the facts and then be able to take such measures as wisdom dictated. Much ran be done bv taxation. Even more can be done by regulation, by close supervision and the unsparing excision of all unhealthy, destructive and antisocial elements. The separate state gov ernments can do a great deal, and where they de cline to co-operate the national government must E\|ia u* ion. While paying heed to the necessity of keeping our house in order at homo the American people cunnot, if they wish to retain their self respect, refrain from doing their duty as a great nation in the world. The history of the nation is in large part the history of the nation's expansion. When the tiisl Continental congress met in Lib erty hall ami the 13 original states declared them selves a nation, the westward limit of the coun try was marked by the Alleghany mountains. Even during the Revolutionary war the work of expansion went on. Kentucky, Tennessee and the great northwest, then known as the Illinois coun try, were conquered from our white and Indian foes during the Revolutionary struggle and were confirmed to us by the treaty of peace in 17H3. Yet the land thus confirmed was not then given to us. It was held by an alien foe until the army under General Anthony Wayne freed Ohio from the red man, while the treaties of Jay and l'inckney secured from the Spanish and British Natchez and Detroit. In 1803, under President Jefferson, the greatest single stride in expansion that we ever took was taken by the purchase of the Louisiana territory. This so called Louisiana, which included what are now the states of Arkansas, Missouri, Louisi ana, lowa, Minnesota, Kansas, Nebraska, North and South Dakota, Idaho, Montana ami a large part of Colorado and I'tah, was acquired by treaty and purchased under President Jefferson exactly and precisely as the Philippines have been ac quired by treaty and purchase under President McKinley. The doctrine of "the consent of the governed," the doctrine previously enunciated by Jefferson in the Declaration of Independence, was not held by him of by any other sane man to ap ply to the Indian tribes in the Louisiana territory which he thus acquired, and there was no vote taken even of the white inhabitants, not to speak of the negroes and Indians, as to whether they were willing that their territory should be annex ed. The grent majority of the inhabitants, white and colored alike, were bitterly opposed to the transfer. Inmirrrctlon In l.ouiNiniin. An armed force of United States soldiers had to be hastily Font into the territory to prevent in surrection, President Jefferson sending these troops to Louisiana for exactly the same reasons and with exactly the same purpose that Presi dent McKinley has sent troops to the Philippines. Jefferson distinctly stated that the Louisinnans were "not fit or ready for self government," and years elapsed before they were given self govern ment, Jefferson appointing the governor and oth er officials without any consultation with the in habitants of the newly acquired territory. The doctrine that the "constitution follows the flag" was not then even considered either by Jefferson or by any other serious party leader, for It never entered their heads that a new territory should be governed other than in the way in which the territories of Ohio and Illinois had already been governed under Washington and the elder Ad ams. The theory known by this utterly false and misleading phrase was only struck out in po litical controversy at n much later date for the sole -purpose of justifying the extension of slav ery into the territories. The parallel between what Jefferson did with Louisiana and what is now being done in the Philippines is exact. Jefferson, the author of the Declaration of Independence and of the "consent of the governed" doctrine, saw no incongruity between this and the establishment of a govern tnont on common sense grounds in the new ritory. Governor Roosevelt then recites the history of the acquisition of Florida, Alaska and Hawaii, likening it to the his tory of the annexation of the Philippines, and closes as follows: Properly speaking, the question is now not whether we shall expand—for we have already expanded—but whether we shall contract. The Philippines ure now part of American territory. To surrender them would he to surrender Amer ican territory. They must, of course, he gov erned primarily in the interests of their own citizens. Our first care must he for the people of the islands which have eoine under our guardian ship as a result of the most righteous foreign war that has been waged within the memory of the present generation. They must be udminis tcn*d in the interests of their inhabitants, and that necessarily means that any question of per sonal or partisan polities in their administra tion must be entirely eliminated. We must con tinue to put at the head of atTairs in the differ ent islands such men us General Wood, Governor Allen and Judge Taft, and it is a most fortunate tiling that we are able to illustrate what ought to be done in the way of sending officers thither by pointing out what actually has been done. The minor places in their administration, where it is impossible to fill them by natives, must be filled by the strictest application of the merit system. It is very important that in our own home administration the merely ministerial and administrative offices, where the duties are en tirely nonpoliticul, shall lie filled absolutely with out reference to partisan affiliations, but tiiis is many times more important in the newly acquir ed islands. The merit systetm is in its essence as democratic as our common school system, for it simply means equal chances and fair play for all. (■ovorniiiu; the Inlands. It must be remembered always that governing these islands in the interest of the inhabitants may not necessarily be to govern them as the inhabitants at the moment prefer. To grant self government to Luzon under Aguinaldo would be like granting self government to an Apache res ervation under some local chief, and this is no more altered by the fact that the Filipinos fought the Spaniards than it would lie by the fact that Apaches have long been trained and employed in the United States army and huve rendered sig nal srviee therein; just as the I'awnees did under the administration of President Grant; just as the Stoekbridge Indians did in the days of Gen oral Washington and the friendly tribes of the Six Nations in the days of President Madison. There are now in the United States communi ties of Indians which have advanced so far that it has been possible to embody them as a whole in our political system, all the members of the tribe becoming United States citizens. There are other communities where the bulk of the tribe is still too wild for it to ne possible to take such a step. There are individuals among the Apaches, Pawnees, Iroquois, Sioux and other tribes who are now United States citizens and who are en titled to stand and do stand on an absolute equal ity with all our citizens of pure whHe blood. Men of Indian blood are now serving in the army ind navy and in congress and occupy high posi tion both in the business and the political world. There is every reason why as rapidly as an In dian or any body of Indians becomes fit for self government he ,gnu was refused by Charles llead Smith, hns broken down complete ly. Mr. Smith said he would be retired to the stud and as soon as possible will be shipped to Lexington, Ky. llnil Firi* In AiiiNli*rilniii, \. V. Amsterdam, N. Y., Sept. 17.—The large dry goods store of Young & Striker in this place has been entirely destroyed by fire. The bookstore of Seeley A* Con over and the furniture store of Hanson A Dickson were damaged by smoke and water. The total loss is *40,000, par tially covered by insurance. Proinlit c nl -101 in Irn Man Dead. Klmirn, N. Y., Sept. 17.—Thomas Ger ity, the oldest contractor and builder in this city, is dead at the age of 84. He constructed many of the finest public and private buildings in Elmira. He is sur vived by one sou, W. S. Gerity. head of the wholesale drughouse of Gerity Bros. TUJN IMPEACHED BY LI Recognizes Necessity of His Punishment. VON KETTELER'S ASSASSIN SHOT. Comm iNMloner Hocklilll Starts For lVkliiK-llenKal Lancer* Rescue n Com pit iiy of Fourteenth American Infantry—Other SliiiiiKhnl News, London, Sept. 17.—A Shanghai dis patch to The Times says: "I learn on trustworthy authority that before his departure Li Ilung Chang, having been convinced by his interviews with Mr. Kockhill and Dr. Milium von Sehwartzeustein that it would be useless to discuss any settlement excluding the punishment of the empress dowager and her chief advisers, sent a telegraphic memorial to the throne impeaching Prince Tuan, Prince Chang and Tsailan, Prince Tunu's brother, as well as Kang i, president of the war board, and Chao Shu Chiao, commissioner of the railway and mining bureau and president of the hoard of punishment. "Earl Li. being unable to consult the viceroys in from Scrautou, Wilkcs-Hurre ami White Huven. 0 34 p in from Now York, Philadelphia, Easton, Bethlehem, Allentown, Potts ville, shamokin, Mt. Caruiel, sheuuu douh, Mahanoy City and Hazleton. 7 29 p ni lroiu Scruntou, Wilkes-Harre and White Haven. For 1 uriner lntormation inquire of Ticket Agents. uuLijlN H.WI LIJUH, General Superintendent, 20 Cortiundt street. New York City. CHAS. S. LEI., General I'astenser Agent, 20 Cortlandt Street. New York City. J. T. KEITH, Division Superintendent, Hazleton, Pa. THE DELAWARE, SUSQUEHANNA AND SCHUYLKILL RAILROAD. Time table Hi effect April 18, 1807. Trains leave Urifton tor Jed do, Eukley, Hazle Urook, Stockton, Heaver -Meadow Houd, Hoan and Hazleton Junction at 6 Bb, 0 uu u in, daily except Sunday; und 7 U8 a m, 2 ;mj p in, Sunday. Truinsleuve Drifton lor Harwood,Cranberry, Touiiuckeu and Deri tiger ut 6 BU, 0 UJ a in, daily except Sunday; and 7 U8 a in, 286 p in, Sun day. Traius leave Drifton for Oneida Junction, llarwood Hoad, Humboldt Houd, Oneida and Sheppton ut oOb am, daily except Sun day; and i 03 a ra, 2 88 p m, Sunday. Trains leave Hazleton J unction l'or Harwood, Cranberry, Tomhioken and Derlnger at 085 a ui, daily except Sunday; und 8 68 a in, 4 22 p in, Sunday. Trains leave Hazleton Junction for Oneida Junction, Harwood Hoad, Humboldt Houd, Oneida und Sheppton at 0 82, 11 111 a in, 4 41 p ui, daily except Sunday; and 7 87 a in, 811 pin, Sunday. Trains leave Deringer for Tomhick n. Cran berry, Hat wood, Huzieton Junction and Bonn at 2 26, 6 40 p in, daily except Sunday; ana J 87 a m, 6 07 p m, suuduy. Trains leave Sheppton for Oneida, Humboldt Hoad, Harwood Houd, Oneida Junction, Hazle ton Junction and Hoan at 7 11 am, 12 40, 622 p in, uaily except Sunday; and all a ni, 844 p m, Sunday. Trains leave Sheppton for Beaver Meadow | Hoad, Stockton, llazlo Brook, Eokley, Jeddo and Drilton at 5 22 p in, daily, except Sunday; l and 8 11 a in, 8 14 p m, Sunday. 1 Train* leave Hazleton Junction for Beaver Meadow Hoad, Stockton, Hazle Brook, Eckley, Jeddo and Drifton at 5 46, 020 p m, dally, except Sunday; and 10 10 a in, 6 40 p in, Sunday. All traius connect at Hazleton Junction with electric ears tor Hazleton, Jeanes\ ille, Auden ried and other points on the Traction Com pany's line. Trains leaving Drilton ut 5 :>O, 0 00 a m make connection at Deringer with P. H. H. trains lor W ilkesbaric, Sunbury, liarrisbuig and i oiuts west. For the accommodation of passengers at way stations boiwoeu Hazleton Junction und lJer- I inger, a train will leave the foruier point at | iuO p in, daily, except Suuduy, arriving at I Deringer at a U) p m. LUTHEIt C. SMITH, Superintendent. The lint mid the Title. There is nu amusing English defini tion of "gentleman." It is "A man who wears a silk hat, and if lie lias no other title insists upon having 'Esq.' added to his name when letters are addressed to him." i The west end Londouer of social ! pretensions accepts this definition in j practice. Summer and winter, In rain i or shine, he wears a high silk hat in | the streets of London and carries it into the drawing room when he pays an afternoon call. It is only when ho : takes a train for the provinces or for the continent that lie ventures to use more comfortable headgear. lie also expects to have the distinc tion of "esquire" when a. letter is ad dressed to htm and is highly offended if he finds ou the envelope the prefix "Mr." As a matter of fact the num ber of English gentlemen who are le gally entitled to the mediaeval honors of "esquire" is insignificant. It is a self assumed title which signifies noth ing that is substantial in rank or priv ilege. In common use in London "esquire" simply means that the person so ad dressed does not choose to be associ ated with tradesmen and ordinary working people and that he is a "gen tleman" who invariably wears a silk tat.—Youth's Companion. xva co .i race a to nope. When the Empress Frederick, eldest daughter of Queen Victoria, was a lit tle girl, her disposition, to the great grief of the queen, was haughty and arrogant. Once, when about to embark on the royal yacht Victoria and Albert, she was lifted across to the deck of the boat by one of the sailors, who, as ho was putting her down gently, said, "There you are, my little lady." "I am not a 'little lady;' I am a princess!" was the prompt and indig nant reply. The queen, who had over heard the conversation, detained the man with gesture, and, turning to her spoiled little daughter, said: "Tell the kind sailor that you are much Indebted to him for his civility and tlrnt, although you are not a 'little lady' yet, you confidently hope to merit the title before long." Cot Their Fee* Anyway. Mc.Tlgger Young Dr. Downs recent ly made SSO in a guessing contest. Thingumbob—The only one who guessed correctly, eh? McJigger—Oh, no. Two other doc tors got the same, and all three of them guessed wrong. "You see, they were called in consultation over a pa tient.—Philadelphia Press. DJW'I.'J-IMM'V S ' effective pills made arc . itt > LittleEurlyKrsi'w. Ihe\ are uncmiiii. oil for nil liver und b wels troubles. Never grlj-e. Grover's City d yg store.