Freeland tribune. (Freeland, Pa.) 1888-1921, April 18, 1902, Image 2

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    FREELAND TRIBUNE. 1
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MY TBI
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FREELAND, PA., APRIL IS, 1902. j
THE PASSING OF QUAY
The Power of the Boss Slipping From
His Grasp to Younger Men.
(A. J. PALM.)
It has been evident to the careful
observer for some time that Quay is
no longer the absolute dictator in ;
Pennsylvania politics, notwithstanding <
the fact that those who look upon him i
as a political demi god still insist that I
ihe political situation rests entirely in I
the hollow of his hand. When Dur- j
ham. Stone, Elkin & Company elected ;
Quay to the senate in 1901 they felt
that this ought, in all decency, to be
the Old Man's farewell appearance,
either as a candidate or a dictator. He
has been in the political swill with
snout and both feet for over forty
years, and these men have reason to
feel that, in view of his many sins, he
ought now to begin his preparation for
death, and leave the political corrup
tion counter to younger men. They
no doubt feel that they have done his
dirty bidding as long as he can rea
sonably ask and that, in the language
of the vernacular, he should now "go j
way back and sit down." The ruling
passion is, however, strong even in
death and the Old Man, tottering on
the verge of the tomb, still imagines
that his advice and dictation are ne
cessary to keep the politics of Penn
sylvania pure and unspotted from the
world.
He was ignored in the Pittsburg
deal and it is safe to say that he will
be ignored from this time forward ex
cept when he sees fit to go along with
those who have decided that they will
hereafter run the political machine in
Pennsylvania. Whether he pretends
to oppose Elkin simply that he may
have a little more influence later on
with those who are against the Indi
ana man, or whether lie really is op
posed to his nomination makes but
little difference; for those in charge
of Elkin's case propose to nominate
him whether Quay sanctions or ob
jects, and nominate him they will.
Why should Quay oppose Elkin?
Elkin has been an apt pupil in the
Quay school and stands near the head
of the cIaRS in the art of managing the
political mill so as to get the biggest
possible grist to be divided among the
faithful henchmen. Elkin has never
done anything to equal Quay's politi- j
oal iniquitous transactions in politics •
and it looks cowardly now in the Old
Man to begin to hedge and doubt El
kin's ability to carry the state. Elkin
is smirched with Quayism and that
is the reason why the people don't
want him for governor.
It is simply ridiculous to hear men ,
talking of Quay as a candidate for gov
ernor in order to harmonize the party.
Those who think this would be a so
lution of the Republican problem must :
place a very low estimate on the in- j
telllgenee ol those who are opposing j
the machine and its methods. The
machine is what the honest voters of
the state are opposing, and all ma
chine men look more or less alike to
the man who has become disgusted i
with the high-handed outrages that
have recently disgraced the common
wealth. To say that any man would
prefer Quay to Elkin is to say that he
would prefer Beelzebub to one of his
underling angels.
Jhe surprising thing is not that
Quay has lost his grip, but that he
lias held it so long. That able men
have been willing for so many years
to carry out bis orders, no matter how
groat the loss of self respect it im
plied, is utterly incomprehensible.
Quay lias been charged with all sorts
of misdoings, from manipulating state
funds to causing several men to com
mit self murder. We do not know
ihct the new boss will have any more
conscience or that he will have any
more regard for the welfare of the
state; it is hard to believe that he
ran he worse. As there has been a
constant growth of sentiment against
Quayism, it is to be hoped that bosses
may hereafter be squelched as soon
as they show their heads. The time
for such a work is long past due.
Ilasy Cliolce.
"Which do you prefer," asked the
friend, "classical music or classical
plays?"
"Classical music, every time," an
swered Mr. Cumrox. "There's always
noise enough in that to keep you
a wake."— VYasliington Star.
Not Used to Them.
Carryp—Cholly never eats brains.
Maye And why not?
Carr.ve W li.v, lie is afraid they will
jgo to hi* bead.-Judge. ,
WHAT THEY SAY
Extracts From Various Sources Indi
cating Democratic Opinion Con
cerning Questions of the Day.
The Republicans who are so wise
in the condemnation of free silver at
the present time forget that the Re- J
publican state platform of 1892 com
mended the silver purchase act as a
"long yet prudent step toward the free
! coinage of silver." What was meant
by that if it did not mean that the
Republicans of Indiana were in favor
of free silver? —Michigan City (Ind.)
Dispatch.
The charge that Senator McLaurin i
was bribed to vote for the ratification ;
of the treaty of Paris, and the counter i
charge that Senator Tillman in making
it has slandered his colleague, stand |
undisposed of by the senate. Both are
of the highest importance and dwarf
into comparative insignificance the
matter of fisticuffs, gross and unseem- j
ly as that was, to which the senate has
addressed itself. —Washington Star.
The logic of the imperialistic or
gans is something wonderful to be- i
: hold. They tell us that the natives of ;
! the Philippines are savages, barbarians, j
! heathens and blood thirsty head-hunt- !
| ers, and in the same breath boast that j
! we are violating the articles of civiliz- I
j ed warfare by enlisting the aid of .
these same barbarians. The logic of
I the imperialistic organs may be de
i pended upon to answer itself. —Com-
moner.
| At any rate it might be well to ar-
I range a few large Boer demonstrations j
on coronation day so that the true ;
j sentiment of the people may be made
' known to offset the demoralizing in- ;
: fluence of the president's act. When j
the real feeling of the people is ex
pressed the president may regret the
concession he has made to the mon
archal and aristocratic ideas which
have developed with the progress of
imperialism.—Muncy (Pa.) Democrat.
The United States senate is the busi
est body of men one most ever heard
of. From the days of the great San
hedrim to this good hour no set of
legislators ever had so much to do.
And what are they doing? They are
sweating over subsidy schemes and
canal projects and high tariffs and im
perialism and the reception of princes
and the subjugation of far-off islanders
and a whole lot of other things which
will result in no good to the toiling
and struggling masses whom they mis
represent.—Lexington (N. C.) Dis
patch.
It is neither fair nor just that' the
enormous newspaper interests of the
country—interests in which the gen
eral public is deeply concerned, to say
nothing of the hundreds of thousands
employed by the newspapers —should
be bled for the benefit of the wood
pulp trust. Among the lattest utter
ances of President McKinley was one
in favor "of remitting those taxes
which experience has shown to be most
burdensome to the industries of the
people." And to no-thing more burden
some than the tariff duty on wood-pulp
could his words he applied.—Cincinnati
Commercial Tribune (Rep.).
The sentiment in favor of tariff re
vision is gaining in spite of the hercu
lean efforts of a few party leaders in
the Republican camp to keep it in the
background. The pernicious system of
protecting the giant monopolies with
their accumulated millions, is so gross
i ly wrong that a revolution must short
ly set in that will demand a revision
of the whole protective system. The
principle of the protective system is
grossly misrepresented under our pres
ent tariff laws, and instead of affording
protection to our industries, permits
and encourages a "community of in
terests" for the restraint of legitimate
trade. —St. Mary's (W. Va.) Oracle.
The testimony given by soldiers at
the trial of Major Waller, on the
j charge of killing natives of Samar
without trial should be interesting to
Secretary Root, who declares officially
that it is not true that there has been
"marked severity" in the conduct of
warfare by the American troops. The
execution of 12 unarmed natives with
out trial may strike the secretary as
an instance of "marked humanity and
magnanimity," but some persons are
likely to regard the evidence in the
Waller case as justification of General
Mileß' very fnoderate condemnation of
military methods employed to assimi
late the Filipinos.—North American,
Philadelphia.
Senator Hoar, in a recent speech in
the senate, referred to the fact that an
order had been issued by the Philip
pine commission prohibiting the read
ing >t the Declaration of Independence
in the Philippine islands. The sena
tor further pointed out that by the
law promulgated by that commission
it was a penitentiary offense to read
the Declaration of Independence. The
I declaration is said to be barred from
the Philippines on the ground that it
is an incendiary document. Is this
not a curious charge to make against,
that document? It sets forth certain
self-evident truths and discusses the
inalienable rights of man. Are we as
| a nation in a position to punish peo
ple for believing in that declaration or
in reading it aloud to others? Imper
ialism has certainly brought us into
a strange situation, and one is forcibly
reminded of the time when a christian
monarch felt it necessary to suppress
a publication which contained extracts
from the Bible condemning monarchy.
If we are going to have imperialism we
will find Jt embarrassing to preach free
government here while we practice im
perialism elsewhere.—Commoner.
NEW SHORT STORIES
Gallant S|opolip.
Americans have not the reputation of |
Europeans for gallant speeches, yet I
there are many occasions when they |
earn envy of the people who are more
given to saying pretty tilings. At a re- '
cent private dinner at which Seth Low
and his wife were guests one of the
diners said to the new mayor:
"You must be proud to be the bus
band of the first lady in New York."
"I am proud," said the mayor gal- ,
lantly as he glanced tenderly at Ids
wife, "to be the husband of Mrs. Low."
011 a similar occasion recently the 1
American embassador to the court of
St. James paid a graceful compliment j
to his wife.
It was at an informal dinner, at j
which the guests were intimate friends. 1
Some one proposed that each in turn
should answer the question:
"If you were dead and could come j
back to tills world in another body, who
would you prefer to come as?"
When it came to Mr. Choate's turn,
he said, "I would prefer to come as
Mrs. Choate's second husband."—New
York Times.
A Trifle EmbarraNNliiK.
Senator Dolliver came away from
home the other morning without any
money in his pocket. lie hopped gayly
on a street ear and started for the cap
ital. The conductor came around. The
senator searched ids pockets, but he
couldn't find a cent or a car ticket.
There wasn't a soul on the car he
knew.
Much chagrined, he hopped off the
ear again and stood on the corner of
Fourteenth and F streets, wondering
where he could borrow a nickel.
Through the window of the next car
that came along he saw ltepresenta
"l CAN'T HEAII A WORD."
live Ketehain of New York. lie got
aboard and sat down next to Ketcham. |
When the conductor came around, Sen
ator Dolliver leaned over to Ketcham
and said confidentially:
"I wish you would pay my fare."
Ketcham is deaf.
"What's that?" he asked.
"I say I wish you would pay my
fare."
"I can't hear a word." protested
Ketcham. "Speak louder."
By this time everybody in the car
was looking at the senator, lie blush
ed rosy red and shouted:
"1 wish you would pay my fare!"
"Oh," replied Ketehain, "certainly.
The house is always glad to come to
the assistance of the senate."—Wash
ington I'ost.
Tip* on the Market.
Berry Wall and James (J. Blaine had
both been very fortunate in speculation
in Wall street, and both looked like
winners, to use a racing parlance, as
they sauntered up the avenue.
"Oh, well," observed a friend to Mr.
I Wall in the Waldorf, "you have so
j many friends who can give you tips."
| "Never made a cent 011 a tip in my
life. In fact, quite the reverse. I
went broke once on points from good
friends who were anxious to make my
fortune for uie."
"Well, you have good inside informa
tion."
"No; I simply studied the situation
and bought 011 a rising market and
sold as soon as there was a decline."
Mr. Blaine, who had been listening
to the conversation, chimed in at this
point by observing:
"My father's friends have been most
kind to me and have given me points
on which I have made money, but this
waiting for tips is like waiting for
dead men's shoes. I follow the market,
and when there is nothing doing I do
nothing. It is better to do nothing than
to be active and lose money. I am con
tented with the nimble shilling."—New
York Letter.
Tough on the Tuba.
This is the season of the year when
each congressman receives from the
agricultural department several thou
sand packages of garden seeds. When
a congressman's district consists of
nothing but houses and where there arc
not even back yards for a bunch of
radishes to grow, like Representative
Ruppert's bailiwick, t lie seeds are trad
ed off for public documents. Mr. Uup
pert, however, concluded that he would
send a few packages to his New York
city constituents as an experiment.
Some of the seeds went to people living
in a model tenement. A few days ago
Mr. Uupport received a letter from the
owner of the tenement.
"Please do not send any more seeds,"
he wrote. "The people in my building
have converted ail their bathtubs iuto
gardens. The scheme is all right so far
as irrigation is concerned,but it is tough
011 the tubs."—Washington Letter.
BOYCOTT UPHELD.
Drcialon of .Mi**ourl Supreme Court
In Good Newii For Labor.
Labor men in Chicago have a pe
culiar interest in the decision given by
the supreme court of Missouri, sitting
In banc at Jefferson City, upholding
the* right of the labor unions to levy a
boycott, says the Chicago Inter Ocean.
Judge Kohlsuat of this city has the
distinction of being the only judge in
the country to issue an injunction re
straining a labor union from notifying
its members, 'either by moans of tele
phone, telegraph or any other way,
that a certain firm did not employ un
ion labor.
This temporary order was issued sev
eral months ago by Judge Kohlsaat
against the Custom Clothing Makers'
union on the petition of the Globe
Tailoring company of Cincinnati. The
injunction was not made permanent,
as the firm made peace with the union
before a hearing could be had, but the
temporary restraining order was wide
ly commented on throughout the coun
try.
The decision cf the Missouri supreme
court was given on a petition of the
Max & Haas Jeans Clothing company
of St. Louis to restrain the unions
from issuing circulars calculated to in
jure its business. The injunction had
been refused in the circuit court and
an appeal taken to the higher authori
ty. The bill was dismissed, the court
holding that it had 110 power to abridge
the right of free speech or free publi
cation, the person making such speech
or issuing such publication being re
sponsible. The decision said the fact
that such persons in this case were
: tinancially irresponsible did not en
| largo the power of the court.
In the opinion Justice Sherwood said:
"If these defendants are not permit
ted to tell the story of their wrongs,
or, if you please, their supposed
wrongs, by word of mouth or with pen
and print and to endeavor to prevail
on others to aid tliem by all peaceable
means in securing redress of such
wrongs, what becomes of free speech
and of personal liberty?"
The decision is regarded by labor
men in Chicago as the most important
given in years, as there are certain in
dustries where the boycott is the only
available weapon, and the labor union
must guard it as carefully as it would
the right to strike where the conditions
of employment become irksome to its
members.
AGE LIMIT OF WORK.
The Folly of Trying to Entabli*li It
at the Curly Aj;e of Forty-live.
In taking up the question of an "age
limit" and opposing the practice which
tends to disqualify men over forty-five
years of age as too old for useful labor
the Chicago Federation of Labor is
fighting against a cruel and senseless
discrimination. At forty-live men still
have twenty-five years to live before
their allotted span is run. The majority
of them have from fifteen to twenty
years of very useful activity before
them. Frequently men attain their
fullest and best powers at fifty, when
any loss of mere manual dexterity is
more than compensated for by experi
ence and ripened judgment. Indeed it
may be set down as a general truth
that among men who have lived sober
and careful lives the years immediately
following forty-five are among the best.
It is a trite declaration that the pres
ent age is the young man's age. but the
men who are young today will them
selves be forty-five tomorrow. Neither
they nor their elders can afford to em
brace the false hypothesis that the la
bor market with propriety can he reg
ulated by an arbitrary adjustment of
age limits. The labor supply is regu
lated by the number of sound and ca
pable men who can work, be their age
twenty-six or sixty. It. would be an
absurd economic doctrine under the
present condition which held that the
activities of the world were to lie car
ried 011 by men between certain ages
and that all others must consent to be
shelved as unfit for further service.
It is worthy of note that employers
(if labor who rule out men of forty-five
or over are toiling effectively to make
operative the dreams of those who ad
vocate socialistic ddbtrlnes of govern
ment control of industries. Such in
dustries they would have carried on by
young men, while those of innturcr
years were supported free of work on
the bounty of the commonwealth. Thus
the socialist and the foolish employer
box tlie compass between them by go
ing in opposite directions. Chicago
News.
Labor Troubles In Italy.
During the debate in the chamber of
deputies on the policy of the govern
j ment and replying to criticisms Signor
I Giolitti, the minister of the interior.
| made a strong speech, in which he in
sisted that many of the recent strikes
wore part of a great social movement
of all classes of the proletariat to se
cure bettor conditions of life. This was
a justifiable aspiration, said the speak
er. and since the demands were not po
litical the movement could only become
dangerous if the government tried to
suppress it by force. The duty of the
government was to be impartial and to
respect the right of strike propngan
disin so long as there was 110 incite
j ment to violence.
State KiiipiToynicnt Ilureann.
The state employment bureau plan
has met with great success in Seattle,
Wash., according to the report of the
operations of the bureau of 1001. The
Seattle bureau was established in 1804
and ill the first year found places for
2,823 persons and last year for 20,500.
Free employment otfiees are now es
tablished in New York, Vermont, Con
necticut, Massachusetts. Ohio, Illinois
and Missouri, and in many instances
I the law was enacted through the ef
' forts of organized labor.
LAXAKOLA
does it
NO ONE BUT A MOTHER
uleep gifei to an ailing, teething, fcrerish, colicky, fretty infant.
Almost distracted by its constant crying:, and worn out witb
weary, anxious care and watching:* she tries every thing possible
to obtain even relief for the little sufferer.
With what comfort and delight she sees her little one drop
off into a deep peaceful health-giving slumber, after Its little
clogged bowels are cleared of their poisonous burden by a single
dose of Laxakola, the great tonic laxative and mother's remedy.
Laxakola is a pure, Rentle and painless liquid laxative, and contains valuable
tonic properties which not only act upon the bowels, but tone up the entire system and
purify the blood. A few drops can be given with safety to very young babies, which
will often relieve colic by expelling the wind and gas that cause it. Great relief fc ex
]>erieneed when administered to young children suffering from diarrhoea, accompanied
with white or green evacuations, as it neutralizes the acidity of the bowels and carries
out the cause of the fermentation. LAXAKOLA will aid digestion, relieve restlessness,
assist nature, and induce sleep. For constitution, simple fevers, eoated tongue, or any
infantile troubles arising from a disordered condition of the stomach it is invaluable.
I ..ixakola, the jjreat tonic laxative. Is not only the most efficient of family remedies, but the most
economical. liecause it combines two medicines, vf/. : laxative and tonic, and at one price. No other
remedy cives so much f..r the money. At .ironists, as.. and $<K., .-r send for free sample to THE
LAXAKOLA CO.. 13a Nassau Street. N. V.. or 356 Dearborn Street. Chicago.
HINTS FOR FARMERS
Better Fanning Needed.
Agriculture is the occupation of the
majority of the people of this country;
hence it seems when agriculture is
flourishing all other business should be
prosperous. Therefore it follows that
anything which aids the agricultural
cause benelits the whole country and
the whole people, for all its inhabitants
must be fed and clothed.
The improvement of the soil should,
then, be the aim of all true farmers
and especially all farm owners. As a
rule, however, we have two distinct
classes of farmers, the first and larger (
class being those who farm for dollars j
and cents that can be got out of the
farm during the current season; the
second class are those who farm for
permanent improvement and the dol
lars they expect not only in the pres
ent, but in the future. If their crops
do not pay the first season for the ex
tra labor, they know they will certainly
pay the second season, the future crops
being benefited thereby.
I low much better, then, the country
at large would be in a few years if our
farmers would till the soil for perma
nent improvement. It is said that "he
who makes two blades of glass to grow
where but one grew before" is a public
benefactor. Our farmers at large do
not generally see this or will not see it
and so keep on with the old skinning
process, their farms going down and
producing less each season.—A. E.
Fauglit in American Cultivator.
FortiII.or For Potntoe*.
Fertilizers for potatoes received the
best and widest of tests till over tin
country in the American Agriculturist
crop contests of 1881) and again in 189;).
The ten largest crops averaged 533
bushels per acre the first year and <133
bushels the next year. Most of tliein
were grown by the use of high grade
special potato fertilizers. The amount
of fertilizer used ran all the way from
uiiO to 5,000 pounds per acre, but the
largest yields over the greatest variety
of soils and climates were obtained
from 1.800 to 2,500 pounds of fertilizer
per acre. Plant food in excess of 2,000
pounds per acre did not materially In
crease the yield, and that is probably
the utmost fertilizer that can be prof
itably used per acre by expert grow
ers. All these large crops of potatoes
paid handsome profits. Some put half
the fertilizer In the furrow, running
through with a brush harrow to lightly
mix it with soil before planting, the
rest of the fertilizer being sown be
tween the rows just before the first
cultivation. Others broadcasted half
the fertilizer and harrowed it In be
fore furrowing out for the seed and
cultivated or hoed in the balance. Sta
ble manure does not produce as large
crops of potatoes or as good quality as j
the best grades of fertilizers.
Vnlne of Good Seed Corn.
As an illustration of the importance
which some corn growers place upon
having good seed The Live Stock
World tells of a Missouri man. who
usually grows several thousand acres
of corn, who applied to an Illinois man
to furnish him the seed to use this
spring. The Illinois man also raises
several thousand acres of corn and has
a reputation as a grower of one of the
best varieties, but he hud to decline
the liberal offer made for what the
other wanted, as he thought he had
not enough to fill It after filling other
orders taken and taking what he would
need for his own use. lie had lots of
corn to sell, but not such as he would
send out as well bred and carefully se
j leclod seed. The would be buyer also
j had corn to sell, and he was asked why
I he did not save seed from his own
crop. He replied, "Because \ have not ,
! the time and cannot hire men to do it
properly." Breeding good seed corn is
a special business in that section, us
much as breeding the stock to feed it
to.
Potnnli In the Orcliiiril.
I Potash is the fertilizing element of-
needed in an orchard. The roots
or fruit trees in most cases find all the
nitrogen for growth and enough
of phosphoric ucid to perfect the seed.
With the exception of nuts, the seed is
not an object to bo fertilized for. but
the flavor and color of the pulp, and
there is where potash gets in its work.
Kainit or muriate of potash—soo to 700
pounds of the former or 250 pounds of
the latter per acre—will nearly always
prove beneficial even when repeated
every year. Wood ashes can always
lie used to good advantage in large
quantities. We have never known too
much wood ashes applied to an or
chard.
Where Do the Fruit Tree* Go?
Professor L. H. Bailey makes tlie
statement that of 250.000.000 fru't
trees sold Ly nurserymen last spring
only 150.000.000 are alive now. includ
ing all planted in former years. Only
one tree in sixteen lives at ail. only
one in five cf these lives to bear fruit,
and only one tree in a hundred that
lives gives anything like good results.
The above statement is remarkable,
and. if correct, it indicates great care
lessness and lack of knowledge in
planting and caring for the trees. Pro
fessor Bailey says farther that "the
?oss of seeds is equally great."
Feed! mk: (lie Soil.
A soil can be termed fertile only
when it contains all the materials
requisite for the nutrition of plants in
tin required quantity and in the proper
.'O/111. With every crop a part of these
lngicdior.ts is removed, and it remains
for nature and man to make good this
loss. Practical experience lias proved
that nitrogen, phosphoric acid and pot
ash are tlie substances mo; needed to
lie applied to soils to make or keep
them fertile. No crop can be grown on
any one of these eleme-jts if the other
two are lacking.
OASTOHIA.
Bears the Thfl Kind You Have Always Bought
' v :r(2^M,iss7
Fl.lilnjt Thrnneii Street Grating..
11l Winchester, England, it is quite a
common thing to see men fishing
through the street gratings. Under the
High street there How several streams
which ultimately discharge into the
river Itchen, a noted trout stream.
These streams receive the storm and
surface water from the street by menus
of the ordinary street grating. The line
is dropped through and fastened to the
end of a stieU small enough to go
through the grate. When the fish is
hooked, the line and stick are dropped
through the grating, and the fisherman
rushes to the point where the stream
emerges from under the street and is
there able to recover his line and land
his fish.
Cnnne For Separation.
Iler Pastor-Do you not know that
what God has joined together man
should not put asunder?
The 'Divorcee—lt was not a man in
our case. It was a milliner.
"A what?"
"A milliner. Yon see. my husband
said he'd rather pay alimony than buy
hats, as it would be cheaper in the
long run."—New York Times.
'YOUR. FAITH
ours if you tr y ~—
Shiloh's
Consumption
f* j .if and ours is so strong we
1 JII I C guarantee a cure or refund
, money, and we send you
free trial bottle if you write for it.
SIIIUOH'S costs 25 cents and will cure Con
sumption, Pneumonia, Bronchitis and all
Iyiing Troubles. Will cure a cough or cold
in a day, and thus prevent serious results.
It has been doing these things for 50 years.
S. C. Wr.M.3 & Co.. I.c Roy. N. Y. j
Tea corrects tbc Stomachy
' n time. Sold by drußciHts. ®