I Giant Strides by a Giant Company l j j | l! OFFICERS LIFE INSURANCE WRITTEN AND PLACED during 1901, over 273 MILLIONS _ . , . j! JOHN I. DRYDEN, PRESIDENT. Twenty-sixth Annuel Statement if. j. U sui. D -. B " r ' Mident E "d'and counsel. PAID POLICY-HOLDERS, in 26 years, over .... 53 MILLIONS January I, 1902 ij ! J FORREST F. DRYDEN, HORACE A LUNG, FT j I Secretary. Treasurer. a* i i T - C - i:ss, jACOB E - WAR ciu„so. ASSETS, end of 1901, over 48 MILLIONS ASSETS $ I! WILBUR S. JOHNSON, F. C. BLANCHARD, ]j Comptroller. Supervisor Loau Dept. Bonds aild Mortgages $11,163,73793 f[! ii IO^ A RT D L H BVR A RAOE:} JOHN K - GOR W. INCOME, during 1901, nearly 29 MILLIONS Real Estate .0,075,68. 22 f i! FREDERIC'AIBOYLK,"' Assistant secretary. R.R.Bondsand Stock (Market Val.), 14,251.857 50 jlj f! . „ Cas^' r - v - H - PAID POLICY-HOLDERS, during 1901, over .... 8 MILLIONS I Municipal Bonds (Market Value), . 5,077,99203 I ft J) VALENTINE RiKER, 1 Associate Actuary. 1 J* LESLIE P. WARD, 1 W. P. WATSON, U. S. Gov. Bonds (Market Value), . 112,00000 ft | I Supervisors. Asst. Medical Director. X L_-——————————J SURPLUS, nearly 7 MILLIONS Cash in Banks and Office 4,285,41180 jSj ~,lnterest and Rents, due and accrued, 362,020 30 i! I * _ --_ ,1 , . Loans on Collateral Securities, . . 915,000 00 '/• .! Pollc,es Force nearly 4a Millions, Covering !AlB9 „ Life lnsurance of over $703,000,000, P ~55£?65.,68. „ '' Surrounding with Absolute Pro- j Total, I // • / # tection • More Than LIABILITIES I! il (f & / I Reserve on Policies $41,012,766 00 I |* t I All other Liabilities, 753,200 09 I .Ij 1 f/ ne Million F am '®' es |j I I I )| A- Progressive Company in which the Safety and Advancement of Its ji | ® Ij Policy-holders' Interests are the Chief Considerations. i! | The Prudential jM\ j I N?WARS F N CE I' INSURANCE CO. OF AMERICA. j! | OFFICE I3ST FEEELAND. || | W. R. Donmoyer, Assistant Superintendent, Room 2, Birkbeck Brick. | FREELAND TRIBUNE. XlUbliihll 1883. PUBLISHED EVERY MONDAY, WEDNESDAY AND FRIDAY. BY THI TRIBUNE PRINTING COMPANY, Limited. OFFICE: MAIN STREET ABOVE CENTRE. LONG DISTANCE TELEPHONE. SUBSCRIPTION RATES. FREELAND.—The TRIBUNE is delivered by carriers to subscribers iu Freelaud at the rate of 12X cents a month, payable every two months, or $1.50 a year, payable in advance. The TRIBUNE may be 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 $1.50 a year, payable iu advance; pro ruta terms for shorter periods. The date when the subscription expires is ou the address label of each paper. Prompt re newals must be made at the expiration, other wise the subscription will be discontinued. Entered at the Postofllce at Freelaud, Pa., us Second-Class Matter. Make aU. money orders, checks, etc., payable to the Tribune Printing Company, Limited. FREELAND, PA., MARCH 24, 1902. If Treasurer-elect Harris can find any consolation in the verdict in his libel suit against Hon. P. Gray Meek, he is satisfied with the thinnest sort of a husk. We admit that it looks rather rough for a man to take the treasurership of a great state like Pennsylvania while resting under the charge of being the prince of thieves and the chief of crooks, but it looks far worse to have it practically proved in open court. Mr. Harris evidently depneded on the favor of the court to convict Mr. Meek without incriminat ing himself. The jury must have con cluded that Harris was guilty of all that Meek charged him, but disliked to make him pay for it besides. If the witnesses who were on hand had been called and testified to what they knew, the jury would have felt that the whole gang should be hanged as high as Haman. The Democrats of New York had an able and stainless candidate for mayor, yet he was defeated because he was held responsible for Tammany's sins. The Republicans of Philadelphia, on the contrary, stood by and elected Quay's ticket, composed of his known tools and satellites, In the face of such exposures of official villainy as would have paralyzed any other community on earth pretending to be civilized. It would thus appear that the premium on rascality in the Republican party is as great as the discount on it in the Democratic party.—lndianapolis Sen tinel.. CHILD LABOR IN THE SOUTH Sentiment and LefclMlntlon In Ala bama and South Carolinu. The Rev. Edgar Gardner Murphy of Montgomery, Ala., chairman of the Al abama state committee which seeks to abolish the labor of young children In that state, it at the Hotel St. Denis, says the New York Times, where he said to a reporter that New England capitalists were largely to blame for the conditions under which it has been conservatively estimated that in some sections of the south more than 20 per cent of the employees are less than fourteen years of age. The protection to children, he said, was removed as a concession to a mill brought into Ala bamu by Massachusetts capital, and in efforts during the last sessions of the legislature to have the protection re stored the most aggressive and ef fective opposition came from salaried representatives of northern investment. While New York and Massachusetts; he said, protect children up to fourteen years, Alabama only seeks to protect hers up to twelve, and he holds that it is an economic as well as a human itarian question. "To protect these children is to pro tect the operatives of the future," he said. "The conditions of child labor result-in the depletion of the vitality and efficiency of the future opera tive." Chairman Murphy said that he had heard it stated that the northern own ers of the mills are striving to perpet uate present conditions with this very end in view, reasoning that as long as they can keep down the intelligence and efficiency of southern operatives their great New England mills will be safer from competition in the finer grades of products. He said he did not share this opinion. Reform in child labor and the educational move ment in the south have much in com mon, he said. "When children from six to twelve years of age are at labor in the mills i for from ten to twelve hours a day, the I educational provisions of philanthropy j or the state must seem like u mockery of their helplessness." In regard to statements that great philanthropy was shown to the child workers in the mills by their employ ers he said in one mill controlled from Boston a little girl of eight years old j had all the fingers of her right hand torn from their sockets, being the sec j ond accident of the same kind in the same factory. As compensation for the loss of her hand the owners prom ised her continued employment at 9 cents a day. "The fundamental principle of our appeal is not that Alabama is guiltless or that the north is willfully indiffer ent," Chairman Murphy concluded. "That would he unjust to the north and unjust to our own sense of right and truth. Our elementary condition is simply that the common conscience will hold, and should hold, the capital of the east to the moral and economic standards of the east. The appeal of our committee lias not been without response. We care to indulge in no recriminations for the past. We huve prayed that in our approaching strug gle the north will stand with us and not against us, for we have no inten tion whatever of seeing her invest ments at the south embarrassed by complex and oppressive labor legisla tion. Our motives cannot long be mis understood." In South Carolina the sentiment for the more humane regulation of child labor is growing, as the following dis patch from Columbia shows; "The bill for the restriction of child labor In the cotton mills has been re jected again, the house refusing to con cur with the senate, as was the case a year ago. A decided advance in pub lic sentiment, however, was indicated In the house vote, which this year was 52 to 54. A year ago only thirty-two members of the house favored the measure. This year, too, the bill was given more consideration. Long hear ings in the committee room were fol lowed by two days of debate in the house. The debate followed the lines of a year ago, pleas for humanity's sake being met by claims that the agi tation was prompted by mill owners In the north and that such restrictions In South Carolina would drive needed mill labor into adjacent and more "lib eral" states. SplcH In tlie Unions. Edward Boyce, president of the West ern Federation of Miners, has in his possession a statement from a mine owner who sympathizes strongly with organized labor and who, although a member of the Mine Owners' associa tion, does not approve of the attempts that are being made to destroy labor organizations. "I can inform you," the mine owner writes to Boyce, "that your unions are honeycombed with spies who will try to make them the scapegoat of other people's schemes, claiming that the shutdowns in Butte, Rossland and elsewhere are on account of stock jobbing, but the real Intent is the suppression of your unions. The Mine Owners' association, which ex tends over the continent wherever min ing is carried on, as well as in England and other parts of Europe, realizes that your organization is getting far too strong and will have to be checked, and it has outlined and is putting in operation a system to accomplish tills object. It realizes that it can not cripple the federation by making the fight In one place, such as Rossland, but will work all other lo calities in sympathy wherever possi ble." Boyco's friend says the working forces are to be reduced and every ef fort made to create a large surplus of unemployed miners. When the idle men become restless, It will lie an easy matter to create confusion and dis cord, force strikes and lockouts and break the union. A. Oswald has the agency for the cele brated Elysian's extracts and perfumery. The finest goods made. Try them. QUININE. Oh, the city Is sounding with beautiful bells. When your system Is full of quinine! You list to the chorus that echoes and swells, And the shivering germs hear their fu neral knells As In terror they fly down your spine, And the microbes, like sprites who for mischief still lurk In your head build a sawmill and set It to work. All the world Is astir; 'Tls a resonant blur. The universe whirls with a whiz and a whir; The stars and the planets rush on till you feel Like the dull, helpless hub of a hurrying whesl You long to keep still, And you try with a will. For you fear the results of a general spill That will send you afar like some recreant star Through the vast milky way with a Jolt and a Jar. And your dreams—they are full of such dreadful dismay That memory revolts and forbids them to stay. You try to get rid of these fancies malign, But you can't when your system Is full of quinine. —Washington Star. An Eany Mark. "I hope you and I won't quarrel when we are married like your father and mother do, my dear." "Oh, dear, no! You'll be so much more easy to manage than poor, dear pal" A Ilappy Thought. "Yes, Jones struggled along with his toric plays and melodramas, but they wouldn't take. Now he has a wonder, a record beater." "You don't say! What's the plot?" "I don't know, but the play ends In the middle of the last act." "The mid—say, what are you giving me?" "Straight goods. The idea Is to fool the peoplu who always begin putting on their wraps before the curtain falls."—Baltimore News. Trnfh nt bant. "So this is what I married you for, is it?" said the angry wife as she help ed the other half of the combination up the stairs the other morning just as the clock struck 2. "Can't (hie) shay, m'dear," answered the weary husband, "but it's what I (JUJc) doubled up with you (hie) for, jesser same!"— Chicago News. She Wanted an InJnnctlon. "Is Mrs. Brimfield-Baker the daugh ter of a judge?" "Yes. Why do you ask?" "Because I just now met her, and she said she was hurrying down to ask her father to grant licr an injunction to prevent her husband from beginning divorce proceedings."—Cleveland Plain Dealer. Grouchmnn'a Advice. "And what do you think is the proper way to address the prince?" asked the gushing creature. "That all depends," growled Grouch inan. "If you get close enough, ad dress him in a natural tone of voice, but if you're off some distance use a megaphone."—lndianapolis Sun. The One Cloud. lie—Darling, tell me truly, does the fact that I weigh 100 pounds less than you make any difference in your love for me? She—Of course not, dearest, but sometimes 1 would like to know how it feels to sit in your lap.—Brooklyn Life. find Them Located. "Young man," said the stern physi cian, " do you know whore the evil ef fects of tobacco are first felt?" "Yep; In dc woodshed," responded the depraved youngster.—Philadelphia Record. Evidently. The Amateur—Sometimes I think 1 have artistic talent, and sometimes I think not. Iler Friend—Well—er—you cuu't be mistaken all the time.—Puck. Overworked. Mrs. Gotham—Why, dear, you're home very late from church tills morn ing! Mr. Gotham—Yes; 1 overslept myself. —Youkcrs Statesman. Tint a Bad Cook. "I have a friend who has kept a cook for nearly a year." "Is it possible?" "Yes; he's a Jailer." —Philadelphia Bulletin. Velvet Mantles and Coats. Black lyons velvet of the richest quality Is much used for the mantles and long coats worn by women who can no longer make any pretense to youthfulness of appearance, and Paris is particularly successful in the shap ing and trimming of such wraps, pro ducing some magnificent models rich with jet and having lace designs show ing linings of deep violet or emerald green and edgings of fur or ruchlngs of lace and chiffon. The three-quarter velvet coat, with straight hanging back and large, very open sleeve turned back with important cuffs, makes an Ideal autumn wrap for the elderly lady. The Willing; Worker. "Why Is it," naked a modest young breadwinner, "that when 1 stay at the office after hours to voluntarily do an extra amount of work somebody who is in charge pounces upon me as his justifiable victim and gives me still more to do? "That has happened to me time after time in my business, and at each repe tition I ha' 3 taken a vow that if I am ever in charge of an office I shall give any one of my subordinate who sits down and does work which isn't specif ically required of him credit for what he does do and let it go at that, with out adding insult to injury, as it were, by giving him something further to da. "Of course it's an old saying that the man who docs the most work is the man usually 'worked;* but It's discour aging, don't you think? Strangely enough, though, he goes ahead and lets himself be 'worked,' with only a weak objection to ease his feelings."—New York Mail and Express. Munhroomn Are Filling;. One virtue of the mushroom that of tentimes is not realized by its cham pions even is its nutritive qualities, for it is often considered fit only for a sauce or a side dish. Recently I ate dinner with a friend who is a bon vi va nt and gifted with an abnormally large appetite. To my surprise, he or dered nothing but mushrooms, bread and butter and, of course, drinkables. We had mushrooms raw, stewed, fried and broiled on toast. It was my first experience, but I found them excel lent. I certainly thought they would not "stay by me;" but, to my surprise, for many hours afterward I had as complete a sense of fullness as rare roast beef or juicy steak ever impart ed.—New York Telegram. Runiilan Women. Russian women, writes George Ken nan, are among the finest in the world. In the upper classes they are the most markedly individual, the most brilliant, the most accomplished. They are all highly educated, many of them speak ing a number of languages fluently and being at the same time accomplished musicians. But in upper or lower class es the women of Russia are the most self sacrificing in the world. The girls have the most exalted ambitions and will make marvelous sacrifices in order to accomplish them. These ambitions are ideals. Their desire does not seem to be for personal advancement nor to make a career for themselves, but to work for the good of the people about them. Cigrnra nntl Tobacco. There are between 1,500,000 and 2,000,000 brands of cigars sold in this country, and your average smoker thinks that every brand means a differ out kind of tobacco. As a matter of fact 150 is an outside estimate of the different kinds of tobacco that can be procured from all sources, and even ex perts can't tell some of these apart. #1.50 a year is all the TBIBUNE costs,