fRfUJtiD TRIBUNE. L.STAKI.ISIIJ;I IBSB. PUBLISHED EVERY MONDAY, WEDNESDAY AND FRIDAY, BY TIIE TRIEUNE PRINTING COMPANY. limited OFFICE; MAIN STUEET ABOVE CENTRE. LUNO DISTANCE TELEPHONE. Si r.SCKII'TION KATES FREELANI). J heTitiiiUNE Is delivered by I carriers t subscribers in Freelandatthe rate j of J-V6 cents per month, payable every two ] months, or $l o< a year, payable in advance The Tuimr.Ni: may be ordered direct form the I carriers or from the office. Complaints of irregular or tardy delivery service will re ceive prompt attention. BY MAIL The TRIBUNE is rent to out-of town subscribers for $5.5a year, payable In advance; pro rata terms for sbortor periods. I Tbe data when the subscription expires is on I the address label of each paper. Prompt re- i uewals must be made at the expiration, other- j wise the subscription will be discontinued. i Entered at tbe Postoffice at Freelnnd. Pa., j as Second-Class Matter. Make aV money orders, checks, etc. ,p iyib!e to the Tribune I'nnling Company, Limited. Nothing less than the invention of | an automatic horse will bring the au- j tomobile up to date. People are still trying to find out how to prolong their days. Yet the oldest man in the world is in a New Jersey poor-house. That must have been an interesting ! paper that was not read before the j American ornithologists in Cam bridge, Mass., owing to the absence of the author. It was "The Ptery losis of Podargus, with Further Notes on the Pterylography of the Capri mulgidae. The Massachusetts law declares that the display of advertisements on the highway, if unauthorized by the abutting property-owner, constitute a nuisance and the offender is punish able by a fine. A municipal order recognizing an essentially similar principle has been recently adopted in Chicago. A crusade against this form of public disfigurement has been started in New York City. For several years the supply of rub ber has been short, and prices have ruled high. The advent of the bicycle as a popular vehicle, and later the use of rubber tires on automobiles and carriages of all sorts, boomed the j cost of the material to an unpre cedented point. Some anxiety has been felt with respect to the supply, and many efforts have been made to discover a satisfactory rubber substi tute. However, apprehension of the failure of the supply has been allayed by the discovery of a great forest of rubber trees in Bolivia. But this dis ao\< ry should not discourage the ex periment in rubber-tree cultivation which is being made in Florida. More than 35.000 per:-:, ns, with 1427 vessels, are engaged exclusively in the fishing industry of the United States, according to the annual report of Commisioner Bowers, who runs the fish and fisheries bureau of the Federal government. The annual catch is nearly 400,000,000 pounds, worth about $10,000,000. Strenuous ef forts have been n.r.deto increase the supply of the edible species of fish but those endeavors scarcely keep pace with the growth of population, and increased price: haw been noted accordingly for what should be a cheap and general article of food sup ply. However, the fishermen have prospered, although their market has been in many instances limited or reduced. A missionary trust is the latest thing in organization, according to the New York Sun. The six great societies of the Congregational church are now considering a plan by which more united efforts may be secured, and much waste of time, material, and ef fort may be prevented. These socie ties are the American board of com missioners for foreign mission, the Congregational Church 8.-.i filing so ciety, the Congregational Education society, and the Congregational Si*- day School and Publishing society. Th.e most important feature of the plan proposed is that the solicitation and collection of funds for all the so cieties shall be in charge of a sub committee of nine to be chosen from the several boards; and that this com mittee shall be a board of arbitra tion, which shall adjust and decide any work or territory in dispute. on Wagon TopS. 'Enterprising merchants in New York have learned that a majority oi the residents of the metropolis look down on the streets from above, and hence they are beginning to paint elab orate signs on the tops of their uelivery wagons ae advertisements of their •tores. (cHILBRENjs COLUMNI ' A Bound Trip. At 'tiledvl 1 It l the trip begins. We soon roach Drowsy Centre: i The gates of Sleepylund wo push I Apart, and slowly outer. Within are dreams of every kind. And naps of every nation: ! We must take rare, or nightmares mad Will ehasc us from the station. But. when we've onee reached Slumber towu. We've no more need to worry. ! The journey bark to Wide-awake i We take in quite a hurry. • —Christian Itcgister. The Cat ami Pincushion* Miss Clara Rossiter had a cat that amused itself by drawing all the pins out of the cushion. When the last was removed, it would look up into | its mistress's face with an expression , that meant, "Please slick them in j again." And, as often as they were [ put in, just as often were they drawn j out. This eat had another favorite amusement, if a vase of flowers ! stood within reach, it used to pick the flowers out one by one and eat them. A Fortunate no-. A Chicago school has lately fur nished a very pretty instance of child ish sympathy and childish resource fulness. Some people having com plained of a dog which had no home and no visible means .of support, a policeman was detailed to shoot the animal. When he appeared near the | schoolhouse with his revolver, ono | of the little girls asked him what he j was going to do. He told her. and she begged him not to shoot the ani mal. "Rut I must," he said, "for fye \ hasn't any license." "We'll get him j a license if you won't shoot him," j said the little girl; and so the po liceman granted a few days' respite. I The little girl interested eight or ten I of her friends, arranged for a "show," consisting of speeches, recitations, and music, to be given by themselves, and persuaded their teacher to an nounce it, with its charitable object. | They cleared enough money to raise j the dog from a condition of vagrancy S to a position of affluence and independ j ence. They paid his license foe | bought him a new collar and were even able to deposit a small sum I with the butcher to provide their | caniue friend with juicy marrow-bones and choice cuts of chuck steak in days to come.—Youth's Companion. Ihivv n Thunderstorm Forms, j Tile formation of a thunderstorm ! is one of the familiar things that few iof us know anything about. That sounds like a contradiction, but it is not, for while we are familiar enough with the impressive spectacle made j by the clouds as they gather and with the sometimes disastrous and always ] startling effects of the storm when it j breaks over us. how many of us can j trace it back to its origin, step by j step, and tell how and where it got \ Its terrible power ? i I.et us try to do this; There is no doubt that the electric charge of a cloud comes from an initial charge j multiplied by induction. The initial charge may be acquired by evapora j tion, for we know that electricity may Ihe generated in that way. Or it may , he generated by the friction of vapor | laden air, which, moving as wind, | comes in contact with objects on the I earth's surface. j This vapor is composed of very I minute particles of water, each of J which becomes electrified, the charge j accumulating in its surface. Now, as these particles or drops come together j and are condensed into large drops | the surface area is reduced in pro j portion to the volume and an in , j creased electric accumulation is the j result. In other words, when two ! drops are condensed into one, there is the same quantity of water and . j of electricity as when the drops were j separate, but there is a good deal less i surface, and the electric charge is in | tensified to that extent. J The drops so formed attract smaller ■ j drops by their great power, and thus , | condensation, with continual increase . j of power, goes on rapidly and a thun : dercioud begins to form. As the cloud is sent forward by the wind it , affects the earth's surface hy indue ' | tion, and the earth's surface affects it in the same way, tile cloud becom- C I ing positively and the earth negative -7I ly charged. Tnis goes on rapidly. , | electric energy being, continually j drawn to the cloud from the air, and J the same quantity being replaced • from the earth below. Thus it is that • | tile thundercloud forms as quickiy . and acquires so great au electric i Dower. —Chicago Record. "As Slow as a Snail." There are some slow little walkers '■ that move round and round our gar . j dens. You have often seen and won 3 I dercd and exclaimed over them. 1 I They are said to be deaf and dumb i and blind, hut after aii these draw backs, and their slowness, too, they j manage to walk a good deal by keep i j ing at it, and to gee their living after . ' a fashion of their own. j These snails—for no doubt you ' I know the familiar little creatures— '' j live upon the tenciorest loaves and 1 the most perfect fruits of the gar j den. So the snails cannot be such I very stupid creatures, for at least the j know enough to select the best of ail t they find for their dinner. The snail 1 I hunts his dinner by night, like many k other animals, and he has a pleas [l antly persistent way of going straight | ahead and directly over everything y | which comes in his way. i Snails have many peculiarities. Of course you know they carry tfieir houses upon their backs. The house is made of a prettily marked shell. While a snail walks along he comes out of this house, but still takes It along with him. Naturalists tell us that when a snail wants to breathe he must draw himself into his shell to expel the air from his lungs, and come out when he draws air into his lungs again. This seems to be a very elaborate and troublesome way of breathing, and it is to be hoped the snail doesn't have to do it very rapidly. It is a curious fact that the spiral pattern of the snail's house nearly always turns from light to left. But occasionally a snail is found with his snail pattern turning in the opposite direction. A snail, then, of this unique variety is regarded as a great curiosity, and if you ever find one, keep it safely as one of the orna ments of your collection. The shell j is a heavy one, marked with brown j stripes, and the snail's body is gray, j Ho enjoys his dinners and his slow i perambulations all summer. On the | approach of winter he selects a snug j corner, and there he makes a close j cover for himself out of leaves and dirt, fastening tiiem together with a sticky lluid which nature has provided him to do the work. Tlie Uniiie of Ouam. In a new game of "Guess" the con- ! testants are told that each question must be answered with the name of ; a man who has attained some sort of ! fame during the last 100 years. ldaeh j guest is given a little tablet with his | name written on every one of the pages, which are numbered from one I to 39. Two minutes are allowed to each question. The questioner sits j with a bowl before her. into which, when she calls time, each player drops j a slip upon which he has written his ! answer. This is the kind of list that the Woman's Home Companion sug gests that the questioner read, omit ting, of course, the answer: Why did England so often lose her way in South Africa? Mr. Rhodes. What did the Emperor of China do when the Empress usurped the throne? Custer. Whose was the first zoological gar den? Adam's. What is Li Hung Chang credited with being? Schley. The lane that has no turn is a what? Longstrcet. How did Pharaoh's Jewish steward sign himself? Joseph Chamberlain. What does a Chinese lover say when he proposes? Dewey. What is in the graves of the three kings that followed Richard 111? Henry Clay. What do the waves do to a vessel wrecked near shore? Heeclier. If the statue of Liberty came to life it would be a what? Livingstone. What does a ship do to a seasick man? Rockefeller. A story of Senator Depew's when it is known to be old, is what? Spotted Tail. What will Turkey's exchequer be if she pays the indemnity claim? Leiter. What is the chairboy likely to do to the old lady he has to push on a hot day? Wheeler. What is a novel military name for a cook? Kitchener. When do you get up to see a sun rise? Early. What were Burns and Southey in infancy? "Little Bobs." When Max O'Rell gets on a plat form what does he do? Speaker Reed. What does a waiter do after he has filled half of the glass at a table? Fillmore. What does the wind do in a col lection of dried herbs? Hussel Sage. In the settlement of disputes, do the European nations quarrel? General Lee. The towns taken by the British generally lacked what? Garrison. The big Northern Pacific, while be ing built, had to pay a big what for meat? ' Buffalo Bill. A little laurel wreath pin is an apropos first prize, with a copy of "Representative Men" as a consola tion. A booby is best dispensed with; it is apt to embarrass the recipient. Almost any person can prepare an original list of questions and answers. Perhaps the easiest method to fol low in doing this is to seek out a number of names of celebrities, or the names of cities, which might serve as answers to possible queries, and then prepare the questions to which these names will be replies. The Indian Doctor. A very interesting character fre quently met with in the Andes is the Callaguaya, or Indian doctor, as he is familiarly known. You find lilm everywhere—resting upon the bench es of the plazas in the city, tramping iver the mountain trails, sunning him self against the wall of a cabin by the ailway station, drinking chica in the market place, inspecting cattle in the corral ol' the hacienda, and curing the sick persons in their mud huts. You find him in the railway cars and among the deck passengers on the coast steamers, where ho pays his way by practicing his profession. With no wardrobe but the clothes upon his back and a bright-colored poncho, he travels farefooted from the Isthmus of Panama to Magellan strait, carry ing a pack filled with dried herbs done up in neat paper packages, cheap jewelry, pocket handkerchiefs and ribbons, watches and other articles for personal adornment, knives, forks and spoons, scissors, small mirrors. comb 3 and brushes and other small merchandise, which ho sella for cash or trades for eggs and poultry, choco late, beans, and cocoa, to bo ex changed at the next town for moro portable property.—The National Geographic Magazine. ELOPED IN A BALLOON. *USE BY WHICH A DARINC AMERI CAN WON A SENORITA. fhey Were Married After One of tlie Mo*t I'm'iloim Aclv>ntTwo I.ovt>rs Evnr Experienced Rage or the Mexi can Don at ili Daughter's Flight. Since the world began, lovers have always been equal to the task of unit ing their destinies and fortunes in spite of opposing parents and guard ians. They have eloped on horse back, escaped the vengeance of irate fathers by sailing across stormy wa ters, and they have used special rail road trains to put themselves beyond the reach of angry pursuing parents, but in Mexico for the first time a heroic young man and a brave girl used a balloon to escape. Randall Howard, a wealthy young man, whose home is in Marion county, Mo., went to southern Texas about a year ago to get the benefit of the salubrious climate of the valley of the Rio Grande. He divided his time between Eagle Pass and Del Rio, fre quently inaldng ' excursions into old Mexico. He seemed to be well sup plied with money, and being of a jolly, liberal disposition he soon be came well known and popular with the best classes cf people, both in Texas and Mexico. He was fond of hunting and nothing pleased him better than to collect a crowd of your.g people and make a trip to the Santa Rosa mountains, where game is abundant and the finest fish in the world are easily caught in the clear waters of the numerous beautiful streams. During one of these pleasure ex cursions young Howard made the ac quaintance of Don Antonio Sanchez, a wealthy ranchman, and was invited to visit his hacienda. Howard accepted the invitation and he was warmly welcomed by the old Don's wife and his beautiful daughter, who had just returned from a con vent school in the City of Mexico. Not many walks had been taken through the orange groves of the old hacienda, where the frost never gleams and the flowers bloom for ever, before the young Missourian be came satisfied that the beautiful Spanish girl reciprocated his af fection for her. lie abandoned his Texas friends and moved his effects to a little village not far from Don Antonio's ranch. Howard had been warned by his sweetheart that her father's remarkable politeness and apparent warm friendship for his guest could not he relied upon to withstand the test of parting with his daughter. "He likes you very well, Senor Howard," the young girl would say, "hut he is the son of one of the veterans that Santa Anna led into Texas, and it is hardly probable that he will permit me to marry, an American." The ardent lover soon discovered that the young girl was well informed. One day when the old Don was gradu ally falling into one of his most hos pitable and affectionate moods over a bottle of wine the young man boldly approached the subject. The glass dropped from the old Don's trembling hand and his eyes flashed with rage. The hilarious, amiable host of the previous moment was in stantly transformed into a furious human tiger. "What!" he roared. "My daughter marry a Texas American? Never! Such audacity! 1 invite you to my hacienda and you take advantage of my hospitality to steal the affections of my innocent child." As Howard prudently began to rise to his feet, Don Autonio began to shout orders to his peons. To one he said: "Bring me my pistols;" to another, "Lock up my daughter;" and to another, "Call the dogs." It suddenly occurred to the young Missourian that Texas was a nice country, and it did not take him long to find a t*ail that led toward a crossing on the Rio Grande. After sending his sweetheart a letter by a faithful peon he set out for St. Louis, where he developed a plan to accomplish his purpose, which has succeeded after one of the most desperate and perilous adventures that two eloping lovers ever ex perienced. Mr. Howard secured the services of an accomplished aeronaut, and after purchasing a good balloon he returned to Texas. Taking several faithful friends into his confidence, he sent a trusty Mexican to the little village of Santa Rosa, which is only a short distance from Don Antonio's ranch, to distribute circulars announcing that Prof. Le Roy, a famous aeronaut, would make a balloon ascem ion froia the plaza of the little pueblo on the 14th of October. Senorita Alma was well informed as to the part that she was expected to act in the plan that her daring lover had devised. Promptly at the appointed time Prof. Le Roy appeared on the plaza of Santa Rosa and began to inflate his monster balloon. The well-dis guised lover mingled with the great crowd that had assembled to witness the ascension. The old Don's curi osity had drawn him to the plaza, where he was walking about, paying little attention to his daughter, for he thought that he had scared Iter au dacious lover far away. As tne big balloon began to sway in the air the lovers drew closer together and at a signal rrom the aeronaut they ap proached the balloon. When the air ship was ready to start on its voyage Prof. Le Roy stepped into the basket and a secret signal was given. 'Before any one realized what was taking place the daring lovers spratag over tho side of the car and accomplices cut the ropes. Tho airship shot toward the clouds. but not before Don Antonio had seen his daughter in the arms of the hated American. With the agility of a youth he seized one of the ropes and draw ing his revolver, he shouted, "My daughter," and instantly fired. Le Roy seized a knife to cut the rope, but the girl caught his arm. She realized that the balloon was already so high in the air that the fall would kill her father. Howard grasped the situation and with heroic generosity he turned to Le Roy and commanded him to let the airship descend. "I will doubtless lose my life," he said, "but I cannot consent to be responsi ble for the death of Alma's father." Don Antonio was still clinging to the rope and rapidly sending pistol balls into the car. The balloon slowly descended until the feet of the en raged father were almost upon the earth. Howard bent over the side of the cai, and after cutting the rope he waved his hat at the old Don and shouted: "I will be good to Alma, and when you wish it we will come to st% you." The airship, relieved of the weight of the defeated and furious old man, shot upwards again. The lovers could only hear howls of rage, and they were glad to be beyond the reach of the desperate man who was clenching his fists and shaking his pistols toward them. Some hours afterward the balloon de scended near the little city of Del Rio, in Texas, and the lovers took the evening train for San Antonio, where they soon found a priest who made them happy. On the next day, after writing a letter to Don Antonio informing him of their fortunate voyage and mar riage, they started on a bridal tour. Those who are bast acquainted with Senor Sanchez says that his rage will soon cool and that it will not be long before he will he ready to welcome and give his blessing to his darling children.—Chicago Tribune. BOSTON'S BUSIEST WOMAN. She Manages Her Ileal Kutatn Personally and Has Made 8200,000. Boston has among its citizens the busiest woman in the country, if her wealth and freedom from the neces sity of doing the work in which she takes so much satisfaction be con sidered. She is worth a quarter of a million of dollars, and made the money recognizing the direction that business in a certain part of the city was going to take. Boylston street was a residential thoroughfare when she first became acquainted with it.. After a while the idea took possession of her that business was coming in that direction. She had acquired money enough to become the owner of a house, and she decided to conveit it into a shop. She went to see the carpenters and builders, and bought every piece of woodwork and glass that was required in making the change from an old fashioned home to a new-fashioned shop. She inspected the work as it proceeded, and paid off the men every Saturday night as they filed through her kitchen. When this undertaking had turned out according to her wishes after some delay and trying waiting, she got another house and had that turned into smart shops with plate-glass windows and ever/ other feature to attract the merchant who wanted the best quarters and could pay for them. She got a long lease on a third house after a while and altered that just as she had the others, paying the same close attention to the practical side of the work. When all these changes wore made, she did not hire a janitor to look after her buildings nor did she hand over the management of them to a firm of real estate dealers. She remained in charge so practically that to this day nobody can control them but her self. She scrubs the stairways her self, she washes the windows and she has carried the bricks from the wagon to the sidewalk they were to repair. She lives in an unoccupied basement of one of the houses, and through her kitchen and dining room passes everybody who comes to the upper rooms of the house, through the basement. Every detail of the management of the property comes under her per sonal control. She began to take this close personal charge of her property when her first house was altered into a business building, and economy was at first her object. Later, she continued the work in the same way because she found it interesting, and now that her property is valued at nearly a quarter of a million of dol lars, chiefly as a result of this in dustry, she finds nothing extraordi nary in the fact that she should con tinue to work so hard. There is no trace of the miser in her conduct and there are many in stances of her generosity, which is especially likely to show Itself toward her own sex. So there is no question of her parsimony, in spite of the way in which she lives. Sometimes her generosity to women in business has proved an expense to her, although she is proud of the fact that since the day she flr3t went into the real estate business, nobody has lost a cent through her. —New York Sun. Applying tlio Kulp. After Sunday school little Ned and his younger cousin, Horton, were per mitted to play in the yard on condi tion that they would be very good and quiet. They had not been out long when Ned's mother heard loud screams. Upon investigating the cause, she found her small son sit ting on his cousin, pounding him vig orously in spite of Horton's pitiful walls. "Well, mamma," Ned explained, "I wanted to teach him the golden rule, and ho said he wouldn't learn It." — Detroit Free Press. CURIOUS FACTS. A ronn in Atlantic City, N. T., has made himself famous. In a whoie A year he kept a quarter of a dollar in his mouth, and thus won a wager of $lO. An ostrict seldom jumps over an ob struction of some height, as a well o* mound—perhaps fearing for its frail bones—the usual way of clearing the obstacle being to breast the wall or mound, and then to roll over it somc kow- In ruling paper the worker, using quill and ruler, seventy years ago, took 4SOO hours to do work now done by machine in two and three-quarter hours. The old-time worker got $1 a day; now the two men employed earn $7 a day between tliem. Canton. China, possesses the queer est street in the world. It is roofed J witii glazed paper fastened on bam boo, and contains more signboards to the square foot than any street in any other country. It contains no other shops but tiiose of apothecaries and dentists. In 1051 the Massachusetts Court ex pressed its "utter detestation that men and women of meane condition, edu cation, and calling, should take upon them the garbe of gentlemen by wear ing of gold or silver lace, or buttons or poynts at their knees, or walke In great boots, or women of the same ranke to wear silke or tiffany hoods or scarfs." Bavaria has the most curious of all claims to notoriety, which Is that *t possesses the longest lightning con ductor in the world. It rises some yards above the top of the meteoro logical station on the Zugspitze, the highest point in the German Empire, and runs down tlio side of the moun tain to the bottom of the Hollentlial. where there is running water all the year round. The length of the rod is five and a half kilometres—nearly three and a half miles. Always Watches the Trail. Senator Sboup, of Idaho, never sits with his back toward a door. If he goes into the Senate restaurant for a midday meal he seeks a place about the board where any one entering the room will face his stalwart figure and keen blue eye. Likewise when he scats himself in a committee room, where several men may be gathered, he picks out a chair where he can keep a clear watch on the trail by which lie entered. It is simply the force of habit. For thirty or forty years of bis eventful career he lived with a gun in his hand. A Pennsylvanian by birth, he, nevertheless, took part in the stir ring life of the frontier at an early age. For many years his home was in a log cabin, with only one window and one door, and where, when he was within, it was a matter of reasonable caution to keep an eye on the ap proaches. During the Civil War per iod he served almost continuously as a scout along the base of the Rocky Mountains in New Mexico and along the Canadian, Pecos and Red rivers. So thoroughly accustomed did he bo come to this that the habit of the scout and frontiersman clings to liim uncon sciously after a decade of service in the United States Senate. Two New Words Coined. Two new words were brought into Kansas City by travelers lately. One taken from a poster somewhere is "laugliiest." It was applied to a show and was merely a variation on "fun niest," which has become too common for the average circus billboard writ er. The other new word is "mortician." It is a puzzler till one studies over is a while; then lie becomes enlightened. It menus "undertaker." Rut how ele gant! It is unto the plebeian "under taker" as "tonsorial artist" is to "bar ber," and even "funeral director" looks like a Canadian dime beside it. Who will he Kansas City's first "mor tician?"—Kansac City Journal. A Wonderful* Old Lady. Lord Kosebery's mother, the Duch ess of Cleveland, is a wonderful old j lady. Though she is in licr eighty first year, she is still lull of energy and is a delightful companion. The Loudon King mentions as an illustra tion of her activity that sh< did nof indulge her love for travel until she was over seventy years of age, and since then she lias made many a jou: ney, including a tour to India, the West Indies and British South Africa. The duchess was married to the late Duke of Cleveland in 1854, three years after the death of Lord Dalmeny, Lord Rosebery's father. Comforting. Upon the farewell appearance of a popular prima donna, a local paper in- jeeted in its report of the same the following comforting paragraph: "The house was packed, and as it had been positively announced that it was her last appearance, the enthusiasm was unbounded."—Boston Courier. How to Learn Your Friend's Income. Do you know how to discover a mail's income? Ask liim what lie thinks a comfortable income should be and divide his answer by two. This is the rule given by a Harvard pro fessor of economics—a shrewd man!— Boston Journal. A Chinese Industry. An example of patient industry Is the sorting of hogs' bristles as it is carried on at Tien-Tsin, China. Each one of the bristles has to be picked out, measured and placed in the bundle of hairs of corresponding length.