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FREELAND, PA., JANUARY 19, 1903. FACTS FROM FRANCE. Complaint is made that out of 51,000 street lamps in Paris only 39,000 are lighted at night Skyscrapers are not wanted in Paris. The new regulations limit the height of a building to sixty-six feet. Two motor cars are to be provided for the free use of the tenants of some fiats now being erected in Paris. In France there are some roads which are reserved for automobiles and others on which they are not allowed. The Paris Guulois thinks that the collapse of the Grand Palais in the Champs Elysees is only a question of time. It was built iu the years 1896- 1900. In the center of Paris there have .been recently built several lurge "ho tels" in which homeless men may for 4 cents get a plate of hot soup and an all night seat on a bench. They are so crowded that no one can lie down. CYNICISMS. Nobody loves you enough to burn your foolish letters. You do not thoroughly enjoy a story unless it is "on" some one you hate. It is one sign of approaching age when you can see where you have blun dered. 15y the time a girl lias reached four teen she has discovered that she can lord it over her mother. Ever notice that when a man asks your opinion on a question he nearly al ways kicks on your decision? One of the most Incomprehensible things in life is that one's mother and father were once in love with each oth er.—Atchison Globe. A Cheeky Cnatomer. "I had a unique but tantaliziug ex perience the other day," suid a clerk who works in a hair store. "A man came into our place and asked to look at some false beards. Of course be was accommodated, and lie spent over an hour going over the lot, trying them ou and examining himself In a gluss. He took up my time, and after lie hud ex amined everything in that line In the store lie thanked me und said he was considering whether to raise a beard or not und wished to see liow he would look iu the different styles." A Witty ltetort. As is generally the case with people who have nothing to say worth hear ing, a conceited drummer talked a great deal, to the evident disgust of a number of his drummer friends who were dining at a country hotel. When cheese was served, it was of u decided "lively" brand, much to the delight of the irrepressible. He attacked it with great gusto, remarking, "I'm like Sam son, slaying them by the thousand!" "Yes," replied a quick witted diner at the end of the table, "und with the same weapon too!" An Alternative. "Now, then," said the professor of logic, "give us an idea of your knowl edge of the question in plain words." "Why—er—l'm afraid," stammered the student, "that 1 can't Just exact ly"— "Perhaps then you may give us an idea of your ignorance of it iu any old words." —Philadelphia Press. Luxury. Alice—Uncle Gabe, what would you do if you bad a million dollars? Uncle Gabe—Well, 1 doan' rightly know, 11T missy; but ef I bad a milyun dollalis I believe I'd git my ole shoes half soled.—Puck. The Struggle For Office. If titiK free people. If this government itself, is ever utterly demoralized, it will come from tills human wriggle and struggle for office—thut is, away to live without work.—Lincoln. A trick is like a cheap firecracker— when It seems to have done Its work and lost Its vitality it is apt to explode and hurt the man who set it off.—Sat urday Evenlug Post. The kind that cured your Grandfather. DR. DAVID FREE KE NNE D Y S p, iswpws £ PIIfIIOITC I,Ter or blood troubles, FAYUnI 11 ■ FBirillf thin paper and address Dr. Mli M W David Kenned/ Corporatjpn, H|p IVI Mm U I Roudout. N. Y. THE LABOR "SCAB." Tle Difference Between I.efful Rlgbt and Morul Obligation. The doctrine that a man's right to sell his labor when and where he pleases— to be a "scab"—ls a right so sacred as to transcend all others found a good many defenders at the session of the National Civic federation. Mr. Samuel Gompers riddled this plausible assumption, which Is so popu lar among gentlemen who do not have to work with their hands for a living. He said: "The labor union movement does not deny a man's legal right to work for whom and when and where he pleases, but there is something apart from the legal right, and that is moral obliga tion." He illustrated his point with the case of a man who is free to set tire to a hut that he has built out on the prairie, but let him attempt to do that in one of our cities und he will be put in Jail. Out on the prairie he does himself the only injury that is being done, but In the city he endangers the life art'd prop erty and peace of his neighbors. If, expounded Mr. Gompers, the non union man "did but himself a wrong, we might pity him and concede not only his legal but his moral right, but the workman who tolls for wages and expects to end his days In the wage earning class is bound by duty to him self, to his family, to his fellow men and to those who come after him to Join in the union with his fellow craftsmen. "The workman who does not do this is a traitor to his order. He wars upon the union, which is battling for higher wages and better conditions of life battling for those things not only for the members of the union, but for all workmen, the 'scab' Included. There fore the 'scab' excites hostility as a wage cutter and is despised as an in grate and a sneak." Of course it is both legally and mor ally wrong to offer violence to the "scab." The state will rightly use its whole power to protect him. Hut union men, the men who make common cause for the uplifting of labor, are entirely Justitled in refusing friend ship, fellowship and courtesy to the renegade. He is made an outcast in the world of labor, a world where much work is done for small reward and where there must be union if strength is to be found to resist oppres sion. Oliver Wendell Holmes, now of the United States supreme bench, when chief Justice of the supreme court of Massachusetts put the whole matter clearly when he said: "It must be true that when combined they [the workingmen] have the same liberty that combined capital has to support their interests by argument, persuasion and the bestowal or refusal of those advantages which they other wise lawfully control so long as they do no violence or threaten no violence." At the bottom of the fashionable in sistence upon "the sacred right of a free man to sell his lubor freely in a free is Ignorance of existing economic conditions. When naturul resources are, as now, monopolized and the public highways are privately owned, there can be no free market for labor. In the anthra cite region, for example, the only thing that stands between the worker and starvation wfges is the miners' union. Outside that union "the sacred right of the free man to sell his labor freely in a free market" amounts in actual prac tice to his right to sell himself into vir tual slavery to the coal trust. Men cannot stand alone. They must combine to enforce their rights and ad vance their interests. The individual who refuses to Join his fellows for the common benefit, so far from being the "hero" that President Eliot of Harvard acclaims him, is the hut burner of Mr. Gompers' illustration, a source of dan ger to his fellows, a betrayer of the common interest. He deserves no re spect or good will from workingmen and is entitled to no sympathy what ever from anybody when he finds him self disliked, looked down upon and shunned by union men. What the American Tory was to the Revolutionary patriots the "scab" is to wage earners who make sacrifices and undergo hardships by which the "scab" i must profit no less than they them selves do. Were it not that unions raise | wages the "scab" would not have the ' opportunity to cut wages, for without unions the recompense of labor would Lbe Just enough to sustain life. No won der, then, that the union man feels to ward the "scab" much as the Ameri cans of Washington's time felt toward ! Benedict Arnold.—New York American. WOKCD In Indiana. I The average wages of skilled labor | in Indiana factories, not including rail road repair shops, for last year was $2.27 a day and for unskilled $1.29. The average wages of skilled labor in railroad car shops was $2.47, unskilled $1.44, boys 98 cents. Skilled labor in stone quarries received as high as $2.85. Reportß from 660 industries controlled by corporations showed an average for skilled labor of $2.43, un ! skilled $1.33, boys 71 cents, girls and women 93 cents. Reports from indus tries controlled by individuals or part ; nerships show that the average daily wages for skilled labor was $2.13, for unskilled $1.25, boys 66 cents, girls and women 87 cents. The average number of hours a day was a little over nine. Divided the Office. | The referendum vote of the United j Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners on the question of separating the offices of secretary and treasurer hns carried by a large majority. This makes i Thomas N-ale of Chicago the national j treasurer, as he was elected to the of fice at the last convention pending the 1 result of the referendum vote. HINTS FOR FARMERS Keeping Meat. Ho? killing time Is naturally hailed with pleasure by families who live In the country far remote from market, Rays Eleanor B. Parker iu Texas Stock man and Farmer. The oue regret is that It lasts such n short time, and I want to tell some of the readers of this paper how they keep bones and fresh meat for some time without the least injury. Secure from your drug gist a l>ox of pure pulverized borax. Sprinkle a little salt on the pieces of meat and cover well with the borax. It will not Injure the taste of the meat and Is said by the best authority to be perfectly harmless when used in this way. It is also excellent to preserve hams and shoulders and keep them free from flies. It Is used for this pur pose In the packing houses of large cit ies. Leave the hams and shoulders in salt as long as desired. Take them out, wash and dry carefully, covering the flesh side with the borax. Be care ful to put it In every crevice where a fly might locate. Some immerse the Joints in strong pepper tea before using the borax. This Is scarcely necessary, but will do no harm. Meat treated In this way may be left hanging in the smokehouse all summer without sack ing. Cuttlnfr Wood Lota. We scarcely need to suggest the cut ting of wood to the farmers this win ter. The high prices that have pre vailed have made many a farmer who has a wood lot decide that another winter will not find him without a good supply of eordwood ready for market if the supply of coal Is short. The question with many will be whether to cut all clean us they go or leave the younger trees and merely thin out the older ones that have but little more growth to make. We favor the latter plan when one can cut the larger trees without having them break the smaller ones as they fall. When this cannot well be done, it Is better to cut clean and then as new sprouts come up keep them so thinned out as to give each a chance to grow Independently of the others. In twenty years there will not l>e as many trees, but there will prob ably be more wood, and In forty years twice as much wood, with more growth to come In some varieties.—American Cultivator. The Beat Cttlaen. "Why are you forever patting the farmer 011 the back and picturing him as a saint?" asks a city reader. We are not patting anybody 011 the back, and there are very few saints 011 earth. A farmer can be just as mean as a coal baron or a railroad magnate if he wants to, though happily his meanness would not touch so many people. We do say that farm life gives a man and his family the chance to develop in the most natural and harmonious way. The furmer who is true to his calling und mokes most of his advantages is the best citizen in the country. We do not say the richest or the most influen tial in politics, but the best. Why, there are some good folks who suy that when we demand the common rights which belong to the farmer we are preaching revolutionary doctrine! What difference does it muke what they call It? The demand will go on! Tuk Core of Your Tools. Implements not in use need shelter as much as horses or cows or people. The ancient custom of putting the wagon under a tree prevails 011 some farms to day; also the ancient custom of leaving the plows against the field fence and storing the cultivator on the north side of the barn or stable is still practiced to some extent. Is it any wonder that such careless wastefulness entails com parative poverty and superlative dissat isfaction with the things of this world, political, social and economical? He member that in consequence of these practices you have to buy twice as ninny implements In a given time as would be necessary If they were prop erly cared for, and, besides, the work with these would be better and more easily done. Root Tubercle* on Legume*. E. Laurent of the French Academy of Science experimented with fertili zers 011 various legumes, such as peas, hairy vetch and common vetch. lie found that the plat treated with a ni trogenous fertilizer tended to form few er root tubercles, while the plat treated with potassic fertilizer made them nbundautly. After awhile the plants grown continuously with a nitrogenous fertilizer only failed entirely to make root tubercles in that soil, but when planted in other soil made them again. On the plats treated with potash there was no diminution of the tubercles. It seems evident that these legumes not only do not need the nitrogen, but the application of nitrogen hinders their getting it from the air.—Practical Farm er. Thrifty She# • To keep the sheep in r.'- t l condition they should be fed some Kind of juicy food. Chopped potatoes are excellent. Sheep are often neglected In the mat ter of water supply, but they need and appreciate plenty of water as well as do other farm animals. Ewes with lambs at their sides should be fed with a safe grain ration, such I as one composed of Ave parts oats, one part peas, two parts corn, giving a pound of this mixture to each ewe. An Item In Ice Packing;. Thofie who put up only a small quan tity of Ice find it wastes faster by melt ing than by use und that the cracks and crevices between the blocks grow wider as the sawdust does not closely Incase the ice. If the spaces between the blocks are filled with snow at the time of packing, it w 1) freeze into a solid mass thnt will last longer, re • marks u farmer. SMILE AS YOU GO. Everybody Love* the Man Wjth a Shining Countenance. Brighter than the moat brilliant of gems, electrifying with a radiance that does not dazzle so much as it calls forth a reflection of brightness, is the shining countenance. The soul of each man is a sun of in finite energy aud glorious light. But how few allow themselves to shine! How few faces are lit up with their possible divine life! Take your thoughts away from the swumps of fear aud evil, center them ou the Uleala of faith and love, on good Intentions for others, and your counte nance is at once Illuminated. Look In a mirror, and you shall see that my words are true. Absolve your self of all troubles, be peaceful, he still, cense all your repining; then your countenance will shine. That such an Instantaneous physical change can take place by a change of thought suggests what power there Is In a renewed habit of thought, n habit created by repeated conscious repose ful efforts of calm, concentrated think ing 111 line with the Ideal. Not only Is the countenance changed by a bright thought, but the whole body. The atoms ore so many vortices of ether, and the central force of each Is the mind. A shining countenance Is a smiling countenance. Look on life rightly, and you cannot but be pleased. Then you will smile, you will laugh with joy, he cause of life's possibilities. You have perhaps desired to reach greater heights of power. You will reach them easier If you will hut smile as you go. There Is every reason why the heart should be glnd, aud your love for oth ers will show this so. This Is the sun shine that expresses Itself In your countenance. The mere fuct of loving drives away fear and darkness. All false conceptions of duty, the conclu sions of a biased reasoning, vanish nt the appearance of love. Every one loves the sunshiny days, and every one loves the man whose soul or Individual sun shines through his face. Such a man will be trusted wherever he Is. He Is an Interpreter of life; he will intuitively grusp the meaning of things; lie will be welcomed every where; he will recognize all and he will he recognized by all; he will he re ceived as the Son of Man, a true exem plar of his race, a leader In the evolu tion of humanity; he will he an encour agement and an Incentive to all. A shining countenance is first of all an Immediate phenomenon expressive of the proof of right thinking, and the same source of this illustration con tains the potency of completely chang ing character, body, surroundings, of Influencing the person, the community, the race, of Issuing forth from Its in finite, solar center great stream of life, giving out more vigor, raising the whole realm of existence to the higher plane. —Fred Burry. Too Generon*. "What was the trouble between Ara bella and her young man that they gave up the idea of marrying?" asked a former resident of Busliby. "Arabellu was always techy," said the young lady's aunt, with imperson ul calmness, "and that was the trouble —that and her being so literal. It's a terrible resky combination o' quali ties. "They kept having hitches all along, but come Christmas time Albert asked her right up and down what she want ed, for fear of making the wrong choice, and she said, 'You can give me enough candy to All my slipper,' looking at him real coy. "Well, her feet aren't as small as some, but that wasn't his idea. 'Twas bgcause he's generous and not literal. He sent her a five pound box, poor, de luded critter, and she up and broke the engagement, and Ills little sister ate the candy and enjoyed it, by what I bear."—Youth's Companion. In n Critical Attitude. SoiAe people seem to be born in an unhappy frame of mind. They cannot admire excellency without making some comment 011 deficiencies. With them the "times are always out of joint." They are simply in a critical attitude, and nothing except grumbling will satisfy their morbid condition, says the Pittsburg Tress. They remind one very strikingly of the old lady who, when she was asked how she felt, re plied that she felt better, but thnt when she felt better she always felt worse, as she knew if she felt better she was going to have a worse spell again. The Curat.'. Compliment. In a west end church 011 a recent Sun dny the junior curate was preaching on reasons for coming to church. "Some people," he remarked, "come to church for 110 better reason tlinn to show off their best clothes." Then lie paused and glanced thoughtfully over his audience. "I am thankful to see, dear friends," he added, "that none of you has come here for that reason." London Tele graph. Penalty of Lantnena. Head of Department—What's this ly ing on my desk? The last dunning let j tor received from my tailor, duly ini tialed by all my clerks! Oh, dear, what have I done? Actually sent it round to I be duly noted without taking the trou ble to look at itl—Fliegende Blatter. *1 50 a year is all the Tkiiicnk costs. (To Cure a Cold in One Day Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. & nu// ? Seven MJfflon boxes sold in post 12 months. ThlS signature, bOX. 25c. Tlio Kind Von Have Always Bought, and which has been, iu use for over 30 years, has borne the signature of - and has been made under his per- SJ/J. sonal supervision since its infancy. /-tMc/LcM Allow no one to deceive you in this. All Counterfeits, Imitations and "Just-as-good" are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Children —Experience against Experiment. What is CASTORIA Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Feverisliness. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy aud natural sleep. Tlio Children's Panacea —The Mother's Friend. QENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS yO Bears the Signature of v The Kind You Have Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years. THC CENTAUR COMPANY, TT MVIRRAV *T*ECT, NEW VOW* CITY. THE ART OF LACEMAKING. A Renaissance Centerpiece and How It Is 1111111 L'p. The difference between embroidery and lace Is a radical one and Involves a definition of both 111 order to be ex plained. Embroidery presupposes a fab ric. something to answer as a ground through which the stitches can be tak- ' en. Lace is made complete. Both the pattern und Its ground have to be built up. It Is an entire creation with liotb- | lng to start from, as It were—stitches j 111 air, as the Italians call it. "Real lace" Is made by hand, either with the needle or ou a pillow with bobbins, aud, RENAISSANCE CENTERPIECE. as everybody knows, the process is a most tedious and trying one as well as one which requires great skill. The lira id laces are a compromise be tween real and machine made laces, and if well executed they are very beautiful as well as valuable. The real lace stitches are used In this work to weave together the braid which forms the design. Our illustration is a very fine example of the Battenburg or Re naissance lnce. Lace centerpieces over white cloths are very dainty and are used now quite as much as the em broidered ones. This kind of lace is made over a de sign stamped on cambric. The braid is made to follow the lines of the pattern. The design of this centerpiece is a very rich one, and the braid is so closely laid that there Is not as much work on the piece as one might imagine. The tine linen center, a delicate filmy piece of French lawn, is basted over the plain center of the eamlirie. and the braid is then basted over the lines or bars of the pattern. The basting of litis work must be done with groat care. Lay the braid on tlie pattern and sew>lt through t lie center with rather fine hi itches. When this is all fastened to the cambric backing, the lace stitch es are woven into the spaces between with linen thread, thus uniting the whole Into one delicate fabric. The spider web work is usually made to fill in the background spaces, and the more complicated stitches are used in the spaces of the design. The foundation of the lace stitches is buttonhole work, and nearly all the stitches are modifications of it. The edge of the design which touches the linen is buttonholed all the way around after the cambric is removed from the back of the completed laee by ripping out ibe basting. It is evident i that n new fabric is made, with the j exception of the linen center. Many of the finest needle point laces are made after this plan—that Is. the design Is marked" on a fabric, and the mesh is lmilt upon it, but independent of It.—Lilian Barton Wilson In Collier's Weekly. Tnnte In Drenn Versus Money. A woman would often insure greater success by giving a day or two to tho study of her gown and how to put it 011 and all its accessories than in buy ' ing another and a very one. j She would give expression and indi viduality to her dress. All should ! know the colors that suit them, but they must bear in mind that what is becoming at seventeen may not suit at seven-and-twenty and Is very likely to look grotesque at seven-and-thirty. Many women who, keeping in their minds the ideal of youth, follow in the same lines at forty-seven for their pains look nearer fifty-seven or sixty seven than youngerlt is quite absurd to wear what is fashionable, but unbe- coming. The first duty of a woman Is to dress to look well, and It does not come within her obligation to be a mere block for tho display of her dressmak er's inventions. Clean the Sink. Don't let your kitchen sink get clog ged with grease and crumbs. Keep a strainer over the waste pipe and wash the sink out thoroughly after every meal. It is a good plan after dinner, If you have had chops or anything spe cially greasy, to flush the pipe with a hot sal soda solution. If a stone sink gets a coating of grease, sprinkle with chloride of lime, let It remain over night, and the next morning wash with hot water. Attention to these details will prevent both the advent of roaches and the escape of noxious odors. Gam Water. To make gum water take one ounce of the best picked gum arable and one quart of water, put the gum to tho water In a stoppered bottle and put In a warm pluee, occasionally shaking till all is dissolved. A teaspoonful tak en occasionally for troublesome coughs Is useful in allaying irritation. To Ilnve Clear Window., Tiie easiest and best way to clean windows is to have two chamois cloths. Dust the window panes; then partly wring out a chamois In cold or slightly warm, clear water. Hub the window, wring out the other chamois well nnd go over the window again. Do not try to dry the windows. First Judicial Honor. For a Woman. To Henry VIII. belongs the honor of having conferred judicial rights upon a woman. Lady Anne Berkeley of York was allowed by the sovereign, who had the widest experience of the virtues of women, to sit as Judge, appoint a commission and actually to pass sentence 011 some men who had been killing her deer and despoiling her park. His Maxim. "It's always well to lie on the safe side," mused the burglar, with a glow of satisfaction, as he crawled into the j bank through the opening in the wall.— New York Times. Any person attending a spiritualistic seance in Bohemia is liable to a tine of 840. PEI NTINGr Prompt! r TV-p Trthnn# OOI*