FREELAND TRIBUNE. Eatiblished 1888. PUBLISHED EVERY MONDAY, WEDNESDAY AND FRIDAY. BY TBI TRIBUNE PRINTING COMPANY, Limited, OFFICE: MAIN STREET ABOVE CENTKE. LONG DISTANCE TELEPHONE. SUBSCRIPTION RATES. FREELAND.—The TRIBUNE is delivered by carriers to subscribers iii Freelaud at the rate of V£X cents a mouth, payable every two months, or 81.60 a year, payable In advance. The Tin BUNK may be ordered direct from the carriers or from the olHoe. Complaints of irregular or tardy delivery service will receive prompt attention. BY MAIL.—The TRIBUNE is sent to out-of towa subscribers for $1.60 a year, payable in advance; pro rata terms for shorter periods. The date when the subscription expires is on the address label of each paper. Prompt re newals must bo made at the expiration, other wise the subscription will be discontinued. Entered at the Postofflce at Freeland, Pa., as Second-Class Matter. Make all money orders, checks , etc., payable to the Tribune Printing Company, Limited. FREELAND, NOVEMBER 3, 1902. 'LABOR WILL NOT BE DECEIVED. In nothing has ex-Judge Pennypack er more clearly and discreditably shown his utter unfitness for high pub lic office than through his small, petty, selfish references to the settlement of the coal strike. With characteristic stupidity, he assails other men for not taking action in this matter, when he never opened his own mouth upon the subject. It would have been of no use, as his meddling political friends soon found out. When the proper time came the power of public sentiment forced peace, in the name of humanity. No credit is due the terrified schemers who have road the handwriting on the wall. It was Quay hirelings in the legislature who killed the bill the pas sage of which might have prevented the conflict. The Quay machine has shown its selfish indifference to the in terests of labor, and at this hour it Is only desperately trying to deceive and use miners and other workingmen to save Itself from utter destruction. No amount of trickery or lying can hide the truth or mislead honest men. Governor Pattison's record, in the ur gent recommendation and approval of wise and just labor legislation, exceeds that of all Republican executives for 20 yeurs past. Nearly every enact ment of Importance on this subject bears his signature. The coal miners know how valuable have been his ser vices, and upon many occasions they have so testified. It is the same with other workers, as was suggestively shown at Reading, where the railway men came forward with offers of earnest support. Dema gogic appeals to class prejudice, un manly attempts to excite unjust hostil ity to honest representatives of the people, will not save the doomed Quay machine, and the weakling who de lends it and serves it so slavishly will he swept from public sight. The people must be taxed $30,000,000, the increased prices to pay for the coal strike. Charge it to the machine, which killed the miners bills in the last legislature. Delamater was dignity, ability and eourtesy, compared with Pennypacker's clownish foolishness; yet the Quay can didate of 1800 could not win. The Pattison campaign managers have had no bar'l to draw upon, but the strength of a just cause outweighs stolen millions. Brleklnylng Tiy Machinery. A Canadian had Invented a machine for laying bricks which does the work of six or seven skilled bricklayers and costs ssllO, says the New York Press. In common house walls a bricklayer, with a laborer to keep him supplied with materials, will lay, on an aver age, about 1,500 bricks In a day of ten hours. -In the neater outer faces of back buildings he will lay 1,200; in good, ordinary street fronts, 800 to 1.000, and of the very finest lower story faces from 150 to 300, depending on the number of angles, etc. In plain, massive engineering he should aver age about 2,000 a day. The new ma chine is adapted only to plain work and should lay from 9,000 to 12,000 bricks a day. Two men and a lad are required to operate it. FixiiiK tlie Illume. Mr. Snow was seen holding the week ly pa per as fur away as he could get it and working his head from side to side, with squinted eyes. "Soho! Your sight's begun to fail ye at Inst," said the visitor bluntly. "Well, 'tain't sur prising at your age." Mr. Snow glared. "My eyesight's all night!" he roared. "The only trouble Is my pesky arm isn't long enough!"— Youth's Com pan ion. POVERTY IS A CURSE IT MEANS WANT, COLD, HUNGER, VICE, SHAME AND CRIME. Yet There Are I'IOIIN People Who Prate About ltd IlleMNinKM and Try to JiiNtlfy 11n ICxintenee From the Word* of the Snrloar, History repeats itself. Just as in the past, no evil has been attacked but that "some sober brow would bless it and approve it with a text," so now the most serious question with us is tire question of poverty, and the apology which pious men make for not removing the cause of this evil is couched in the words of Jesus, "Ye have the poor always with you." Jesus might have said: "Slaves ye have al ways with you." lie might have suld: "Emperors ye have always with you." lie might have said: "Lepers ye have always with you." The people to whom lie spoke never knew a civiliza tion without these. He stated what was a fact, that when he was gone there would still be opportunity to help the poor. To distort this statement into meaning that never in all the cen turies could men hope to solve the brob lem of iioverty—this interpretation is either puerile or malicious—although it is continually made by men who think well of themselves both for wis dom and piety. Not only do men resign themselves to the incvitublenesß of poverty, but they even try to persuade themselves that poverty Is a blessing. They never think It Is a blessing to themselves, but they talk softly about the blessings of other people's poverty. General Booth of the Salvation Army recently preached a sermon in which lie gave seven reasons for considering poverty a blessing. The Salvation Army cluims to have fed Christmas day in New York city 23,000 people. Monstrous! Seven reasons for the blessedness of eating your Christ mas dinner at n charity trough with 23,000 other paupers! The blessings of poverty! You might as well talis of the gentleness of a Dakota blizzard. It would be as appropriate to speak of a balmy St. I-ouis cyclone. Cannot the preuchers give us a sermon on the hopefulness of despair or on the pleas urableness of pain? I have heard it said of these preachers that they think in their hearts. They seem to me to think in their stomachs. Poverty means want, cold, hunger, shame, hate, vice, crime; it means bodily sickness and moral degradation. Poverty is a curse and I know of no work so deeply religious und so truly in accord with the spirit of the Nnza rene as the work of using the political tools thut are within our reach in this republic to put an end to the wrongs which breed poverty in the sight of plenty and cause the slums of human misery to mock the triumphs of civi lization. Let us not blaspheme the /nemory of that Lover of Men by quoting his words against those who point the way to a higher civilization in which pov erty as we know it will not be. Let us rather address ourselves to this splendid task as the only wuy in which we in our time have opportunity to continue his work iu the world. In the garret of a tenement house which stands in the shadow of five churches there lived a family with seven children. During the intense heat of last July the youngest, a nurs ing baby, fell sick. In a single day it wilted like a flower. Night brought no relief. All night long the ugly brick walls gave forth heat like great hu man ovens. The mother carried the little sufferer down in the street In the hope of linding u breath of air. She went to a market place near by and, sitting on the curbstone, rocked the babe in her arms, watching its twitch ing hands and pleading face. The old cathedral clock tolled away the hours. At last the clatter of hoofs and rumble of wheels announced the rising tide of humanity. But that day brought no light to the mother's heart, for in the gray dawn of that morning she saw the light of her life go out, and on her arms she felt the heaviness of death. You may read in the health reports that the baby died of some disease with a Latin name. It died of starva tion. The father wdrks from G in the morn ing until 7 at night. On Saturday he works until 12 at night. On Sunday he works until noon. For all this he re ceives $7 a week. A more sober, hon est, industrious, willing man never lived. And the mother? Ah, the strug gle she has had to make $7 satisfy the claims of the landlord and the grooer, and pay for shoes and clothes and school books! The truth is, she had not enough to eat, and the baby, therefore, was not properly nourished. Its puny body became the culture ground for disease germs, which it would have had a chance of resisting if it had had good food and pure air. Not having these, it died, virtually, of starvation. Mothers, have you known what It means to stand In the lonely nursery with arms so empty and breasts so full? Fathers, have you listened in vain for the music of the little feet and the merry voice In the silent hall? Ilave not tlieSe common experiences of Joy and sorrow taught you the great lesson of human brotherhood? How long will you insult your unfortunate fellows with alms? When will you see the need of changing the laws that deny them justice? When will you learn to hear in the cry of these chil dren of poverty the voice of your Christ? "Inasmuch as ye have done it unto one of the least of these ye have done It unto me."—Rev. Herbert S. Bigelow in Pilgrim, Cincinnati. ngfPSTORIA f ASTORIA P he Kind You Have HElaSll| Always Bought AVegetable PrcparalionforAs- |ij * " similating the Food andßegula- f # tingtheStomachs*andßowelsof | tll6 W 4 1g- ture Promotes Digestion,CheerFut- ■*( M -X 14^ ness and Rest.Contains neither r> w jf . j Opium.Morpliine nor Mineral. ~ 01 /1\ *\ if NOT "NARCOTIC. J A 11. LR tooft of OUnrSAKVEL PITCHER | | \AA' fampkui Seed" x |H ■IF V Mx.Senna * 1 ,iL ■ KMU.UtS- J i| At! I „ Sbw* Seed * 1 § A 1 1 (\ LA ) .1 Mk Y it _ Apeifect Remedy forConstipa- g I l| iV UO V lion, Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea i | Worms,Convulsions,Feverish- II wT P. „ ft,. - „ ness and Loss OF SLEEP. | \jH rQr HYyf Facsimile Signature of 1 Thirty Years ■KnaBSEBIESSEHHi ®™p®|nflQTfl|lA EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER,; ■II lj 911 IB I gj| CHILD LABOR IN ILLINOIS. A Belated Effort to Check n Great and Growluif Evil. Mr. E. T. I)uvies, chief factory In spector of the state of Illinois, has be gun proceedings against M. Born & Co. The charge involved is the em ployment of children under fourteen years. Such children are protected from employment by the state child labor law. Mr. Da vies lias seen reason to believe that this law is being con tinually violated. He says that he has made up his mind that it shall be vio lated no longer. Ilence his attack on M. Born & Co., ami hence his promise of attacks on other firms suspected of similar practices. It is time such attacks were made. Illinois was gratified when the census of 1000 showed that it was securely established in third place among the states of the Union in value of manu factured products. It was less grati fied when the census showed that in the percentage of children between ten and fourteen who could read and write its rank was not third, but fifteenth. It was not gratified at all when from the reports of the factory Inspectors it appeared that in number of wage earners under sixteen it stood not fif teenth, nor third, but first. That is a humiliating distinction. To have put more children into the factory and the otlice than any other state Is 110 cause for pride. Today Illinois has 10,000 child laborers. Cook county alone has 15.000. All New York, on the other hand, has only 14,000. Further, child labor in New York is remaining year after year at about the same figure. In Illinois it is increasing. It has in creased 100 per cent in the last five years. It is evident, therefore, that Mr. Davies Is in the position of a man swimming against the current of the stream. It is his duty to swim as hard as he can. If he makes progress he will deserve the applause of the pub lic. A community which wears its chil dren out in the factory must expect to produce debased, ignorant, vicious, in efficient men and women. It cannot be said too often child labor is waste. England found that out years ago, but it has not yet recovered from the blow which was given to the physical and moral vitality of its workers by the conditions prevailing in its factories during the first half of the last cen tury. Illinois can profit by England's experience. It can determine now to give its children that freedom from labor and the opportunity for play and study which will result in an intelli gent, capable adult population. Mr. Davies, therefore, should have the at tention and encouragement of his fel low citizens.—Chicago Tribune. Lnlior In Europe. In both England and Germany the period of prosperity which began in 1893 culminated in 1000 and has since diminished. In Germany speculation and overproduction in certain indus tries induced a financial crisis, which led to real business depression and i\ vast amount of unemployment, the rush of applicants for situations through the public intelligence agen cies having nttained abnormally large dimensions. A slight improvement has manifested itself this summer, but in'J dications point to the presence of largd masses of the unemployed in many German cities this winter. In England the reaction in IJKK) was less marked, but the number of trade unionists out of work has steadily increased, having been 40 per 1,000 members at the end of July, 1!M2, as compared with 154 at the corresponding date in 1001 and 27 in 1000. Prices having declined, wages have followed In industries like mining, wherein wages are regulated by sliding scales. Hence, notwithstanding ad vances in other the changes hi rates that nave taken piace'ln 1001 and 1902 have in the aggregate resulted in a net decrease.—Bulletin of Depart ment of Labor, New York. liicrcnne In Union Prentice. It Is estimated that there are 1,500,- 000 trades unionists In America today, and the number Is constantly increas ing. The vast majority are men. There are varying opinions regarding their general standard of intelligence; but, wisely led In a well disciplined army, they might exert potential influence in state or national legislation or paralyze national life for a time by a common strike. They are capable of Improving tremendously the intelligence and sta tus of manual labor and will be a per manent feature of our future social life, whether its development be 011 lines corporate, socialistic or individ ual. Thus far their increase In prestige lias been steady, and at present they are better united than ever before in the American Federation of Labor, with shrewder leaders and stronger financial sinews. They are recognized by the press, their magazines receive contributions from able economists, and more politic tactics in their issues with capital have forced recognition of their organizations by financial mag nates.—Boston Advertiser. Cliurcli and Workmen. It would be nn exaggeration to say that all working people feel antago nistic toward the church. Their general attitude Is rather that of Indifference. The thinking poor are well enough aware that there Is nothing unnatural In the situation and that if (lie tables were so turned that world advantage shifted to their side It would probably remain unchanged. At times their feel ing, especially toward the clergy, is cu riously sympathetic. "Say," remarked a labor leader of vivid mind to the writer—"say, I'm awfully sorry for ministers. Most of them are real good men. They know well enough what Christ meant, and they'd like lirst rate to preach if they dared. But, Lord, how can they? They've got to draw their salaries; they've got families to support." All this quite without a touch of irony.—Vida D. Seudder In Atlantic. Pull IN: Out TLIC PORS. Susie, aged four, had been out In the country on a visit. On her return she urged her mother to let her keep a cow. "But, Susie," said the mother, "there is 110 one here to take care of the cow and milk it." "Oh, yes. I'll do that, mamma." "Can you milk a cow? How do you do it?" "Oh, I know how. I'll just pull the pegs out like the man does."—Llppln cott's. The lUvspoiiMlhillty. Anxious Father—Do the lwt you can for him, doctor. That is ill! 1 can ask. If it is the will of Providence— Surgeon—Don't try to place the re sponsibility on Providence in this case, Mr. McJones. You bought the toy pis tol for the boy yourself. 111 M Art. "Oh. Mr. Growelle," gushed Miss Nupson, "bow did you ever learn to paint such beautiful pictures?" "I asked a man once," replied the art ist. "and lie told me how."—lndianapo lis News. PLEASURE. November 20.—Thanksgiving Eve ball under the auspices of the Crescent Athletic Association at Krell's hall. Ticket, 50 cents. Ice crcaui—all flavors—at Mcrkt's. soooockxkxkkkxkjooooooskm R p | Men's and Boys' ;; | Overalls, Blouses, | r, | Working g 4 Shirts and Shoes, if 1 i jj g g Complete Lines g y § of Si l p Fall Hats and Caps, jj| y Underwear and Hosiery, K 4X X Furnishings and Neckwear. J? 8 p c H | Shoes for Men, Women, Boys § | and Girls at Very § ! 1 Lowesi Prices. g /1 i s s 6 | McMenamin's Gents' Furnishing, | J 5 Hat and Shoe Store. | yx S $C South Centre Street. J? x* W 0 * **, *, X, XFXX XAXF XXXXX XXXX.XXXX XX * FX* X Nate's ME. A ride in the open, For Health, For Pleasure, For Business. You should ride a Bicycle, RAMBLER. $35 to SOS. The 1902 Models Bristle With New Ideas. CaUaiiEiaiine. A complete stock al ways on hand. For Sale By Waller D. Daiis, Freeland. j RAILROAD TIMETABLES IT EHIGH VALLEY RAILROAD. J A_< May 18. 1902. Arrangement or Pabsjcnoek Trains. LEAVE FKKELAND. 6 12 a i for Weatherly, Mauch Chunk A lion town, Bethlehem, Huston, Phila delphia and Now York. I 729 a in for Handy Hun. Whit© Haven, Wilkes-Borro, Plttston and Sorantou. 8 15 a in for Hazleton, Woatlierly, Mauch Chunk, Allentown, Bethlehem, Ea6ton, Phihelolphia, New York, Deluno una PottsviUo. 9 58 a m for Hazleton, Delano, Muhunny City, Shenandoah and Alt. C'arrael. 1 1 45 a in for Weathorly, Muueh Chunk, Al lentown, lletlilebeiu, Eaaton, Phila delphia, New York, Hazleton, Delano, Mahiinoy City, Shenandoah and Mt. Cariuel. 1141 a in for While Haven, Wilkea-Barre, Scran ton and the West. 4 44 Pin for Weatherly, Mauch Chunk, Al lentown, Bethlehem. Eaaton, Philadel phia, New York, Hazleton, Delano Mahiinoy City, Shenandoah. Mt. Carnio. and Pottaviliu. 6 35 p in for Sandy Hun, White Haven, Wilkes-Barro, Serantou and all points West. I 729 p m for Hazleton. AKKIVB AT FREELAND. 7 29 a rn from Pottsville, Delano and Huz lcton. 9 12 a in from New York. Philadelphia, Hus ton. Bethlehem, Allentown Munch Chunk, Weatherly, Hazleton, Muhanoy City, Shenandoah and Mt. Carinel 9 58 a m from Scranton, Wilkes-Buire and White Haven. 1141 am from Pottsville. Mt. Carmel, Shon andoah, Muhanoy City, Delano and Hazleton. 12 35 P m from New York, Philadelphia, Easton, Bethlehem, Allentown, Mauch Chunk and Weatherly. I ! 4 44 p ni from Scranton, Wilkes-Barre und i White Haven. 6 35 P ni from New York, Philadelphia, Easton, Bethlehem Allentown. Mauch Chunk, Weatherly, Mt. Carinel, Shenurt doah, Mahunoy City, Delano ami Hazle ton. 7 29 P in from Scranton, Wilkea-Barre and White Haven. For further information inquire of Ticket A pouts. , KOLLIN H.WILBUK. General Superintendent, ' 20 Cortlandt street. New York City. ) OH AS. S. LEE, General Passenger Agent, 20 Cortlandt Street. New York City. G. J. GILDKOY, Division Superintendent, Hazleton, Pa. THE DKLAWARK, Pubqubhanna AND SCHITYLKILI. RAILKOAD. Time table in effect May 19, 1901. Trains leave Drifton for Jeddo, Eckley, Brook, Stockton, Beaver Meadow Howl, Koan and Hazleton Junction at 800 am, daily except Sunday; and 7 07 a m, 2 38 p ni, Sunday. Trains leave Dritton for Oneida •)unction. Bar wood Koad, Humboldt lioad, Oneida and Shoppton at 000 a in, daily except Sun da v; and 7 07 a m, 2 38 p ra, Sunday. Trains leave Hazleton Junction for Oneida Junction, Garwood Koad, Humboldt Koad, Oneida and Shepptou at ti 32.11 10 am,J4l pm, dally except Sunday; and 7 37 a m, 311 pm, I Sunday. TraiDH leave Deringcr for Tomhicken. Cran berry, Hat wood, Hazleton Junction and Koan at 800 n rr, daily except Sunday; and 0 37 h m, 507 pm,Sunday. Trains leave Sheppton for Beaver Meadow Koad, Stockton. Hazlc Brook, Fokley, Jeddo and Drifton at 5 20 p in, daily, except Sunday: and 8 II a m, 3 44 p in, Sunday. Trains leave Hazleton Junction for Beaver Meadow Bond, Stockton, Hazle Brook, Eckiey, Jeddo and Drifton at 649 p m, daily, except Sunday; and 1010 a in, 540p m, Sunday. All trains connect at Hazleton Junction with electric cars for Hazleton, JeaoeevHle, Audeu ried and other points on the Traction Com j pony's I in* Promptly DODO t the Tribune Office,