Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, March 28, 1890, Image 5

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ET AE TT 1 ET SSE TTS EM TT TT TO mA TA LT RIO PT Tae
ADDITIONAL LOCALS.
Rev. Ed. Everett Hoshour and
wife have gone to Gettysburg to spend
afew days, consequently there will be
no preaching in the Lutheran Hall on
next Sunday.
Mr. Geo. Schoof, the assistant
mixologist behind the bar of the Bush
House, who is an expert in his business,
has brought his wife on from New York
and intends to become oneof Bellefonte’s
family men.
FineD For WORKING ON SUNDAY.—
Port Matilda people have been lately
struck with an exceedingly moral streak
and, on Sunday of last week,determined
that the spirit of their meditations and
the quiet of their sabbath’ should no
longer be disturbed by the ungodly
shrieks of the locomotive. When the
freight train on the Bald Eagle Valley
came along, Mr. Robert Patton took the
name of the employees upon it, and on
Monday morning made information
against them, before esquire Reese, for
sabbath breaking. Warrants were is-
sued, and the nine employees brought
before the Justice, who after a hearing
—the men being represented by attorney
Blanchard of this place and assistant
Supt. Woods of Tyrone—they were each
fined $4.00 and costs, The costs and
fines, we understand, will be paid by the
company, and Mr. Patton, it is also
stated, intends making information
against them every Sunday that freight
trains run on the Valley road.
Jupee FUrsT's SENSIBLE VIEWS
oN THE LICENSE QUESTION IN HunTt-
INGDON.— Last week the four applica-
tions for license to sell liquor in Hunt-
ingdon county were rejected. It was
the work of the two fanatical associate
judges, who are tobe held responsible
for the unregulated traffic and illicit
drunkenness that have prevailed in the
county since the restrictions of the li-
cense law were removed. Judge Furst,
who does not agree with his associates
on this question, gave the following ex-
pression of his views from the Bench :
“The associate judges and myself re-
spectively hold the same opinions on
this question of granting licenses in this
county as were entertained by us three
years ago. This seems to be the settled
policy of this court, and I regret that I
can’t see my duty in the same light as
my brethren on the bench. I would do
anything in the world to break up the
“speak easies” and private drinkiug
clubs in this town and county, but un-
der the present state of affairs the accom-
plishment of this would seem well-nigh
impossible. I think that a reputable
hotel, kept by a worthy and conscien-
tious landlord, would contribute largely
toward this result ; but my brethren on
the bench think differently, however,
and they are entitled to their judgment
as well as I. Under the present regime
beer and whisky are supplied to this
town from other places in amazing
quantities, and only on Saturday last, I
am reliably informed, there were over
one hundred kegs of beer delivered to
customers in this place. This is to be
deplored, and if the citizens of this town
do not see fit to suppress it the court can-
not be expected to become a spy. When
by reason of a different sentiment of this
court I formerly granted license in this
county, was careful to place restrictions
around the suecessful applicants, which
were in themselves sufficient to main-
tain a careful and respectful obedience
to the law. This is the way it works
under a well-conducted license-system.
Otherwise, however, it opens a way for
‘“speak-easies’’ to open up and flourish,
where young and old men alike congre-
gate and drink their beer and whisky
ad libitum.”
In referring to a particular case of
hardship resulting from the pig-headed
action of his associates, the Judge said :
“In respect to the application of Mar-
tin Grube for a wholesale license, I re-
gard its refusal by a majority of the
court as a denial of justice. The thous-
ands of gallons of whisky now in his
bonded warehouse must be taken out
within two years orit will be confisca-
ted. This will entail an irreparable
loss. It will be necessary for him to
dispose of this liquor in order to pay the
government tax, and it would require al-
most the entire amount in bond to pay
the tax.
tity as the court would suggest, not less
than a gallon ; that he would conform
to every reasoi ble regulation ; that his
object was to se | not to be used in this
county, but to n.arket it where he could
find a purchaser elsewhere, which, with-
out a license, he could not do in this
commonwealth. A license to him
would not have brought a single quart
more of liquor in this county than what
is now clandestinely shipped into it.
His counsel also stated that he would
not manufacture any liquor and that
when the present stock is disposed of he
would permit the court to revoke his
license. According to the decision ar-
rived at by a majority of the court,
therefore, the licenses are severally de-
nied.”
‘While congratulating the Judge on
the position he thus took in behalf of
justice, we would remind him that he
might bave done something very simi-
lar by licensing the Haas brewery in
this county, but he failed to doit. The
stoppage of its business has ‘‘entailed an
irreparable loss” upon the owner of that
establishment, and, as the Judge said in
the Grube case, that “a license to him
would not have brought a single quart
more of liquor into the county than is
clandestinely shipped into it,”” it may be
said of the Haas brewery case that a li-
cease to its proprietor would
not have furnished a single keg more of
beer to this community than is being
supplied by the brewers of Rochester,
Philadelphia, Baltimore and other
places.
He agreed tosell in such quan-’
Pine Grove Mentions.
G. W. Williams, one of our extensive farm-
ers, is preparing to build a barn which he is so
much in need of the coming season. W. B.
Ward will be the builder.
Mr. W. A Tanyer, who is one of the largest
candidates for the office of sheriff,was last week
prospecting in Philipsburg and Rush town-
ship where he was greeted by many old timers.
James Gramley, of Miles township, was last
weelk hopefully looking up hispoliticalinterests
for County Treasurer, of which position he is
no doubt deserving and would fill the office
with credit to himself and his constituents.
That memorable day, April 1st, is fast ap-
proaching, and many changes are being made
! 1 town and county. Quite a number have al
| ready given vent to their feelings. What joy
| some men express when trying to get stove
| pipe to fit. Many are the expressions of senti-
ment then made.
On Tuesday evening the 26th inst.,a spirited
railroad meeting was held in the Academy
Hall with a view of securing the right of way
for theiproposed road. G. D. Danley was elect-
ed president and G. W. Ward as secretary. J.
G. Hess, J. B. Mitchell, and J. K. Krebs were
appointed a committee to secure the right of
way. When Jas. B. Ard was elected corres-
ponding secretary the meeting adjourned to
meet at the call of the President.
The several Insurance Companies, represent
ed by their agents, have been on the scene of
our late fires. The amount of insurance on
Keller'sand Harper's buildings were immedi-
ately adjusted in full. William Sausserman
received $10 damage sustained from the flames
to the outside of his house,and slight damage
to the furniture. Mr. Erb’s policy in the sev-
eral companies will be adjusted on the 1st of
April for four thousand five hundred dollars
on store goods, which amount Mr. Erb is just-
ly entitled to, having had a large stock on
hand, in fact one of the best country stores
in the county.
An order from the post office department has
been received by Post Master Heberling of
this place for the removal of the office to some
suitable place west of the bridge. It looks
very much now as though the old one story
building up town in which the office was kept
thirty years ago, will be the place, and a very
suitable situation, until a building can be
erected on a site on the north corner of the
diamond of the town and near the bridge,
which site M.J. B. Ard has granted for the
purpose, which will excite the feelings of our
down-town friends who recently encountered
some of the up towners in pugilistic combat.
It is almost necessary to wear a sword and belt
to cross the bridge in safety either way.
In our last we made mention of the exten-
sive ore fields in Stone Valley to which point
it is now definitely known that it is the inten-
tion of the Collinses to extend the railroad this
coming summer if a possible grade can be
found to cross the mcuntain at some point
most convenient to tap the ore field over the
mountain. Their presentintention is to strike
the mountain at Shingletown, gap, to which
place the right of,way has been secured, and
from where they believe they have sufficient
distance to make an easy grade up the moun-
tain. In our opinion never before was the
railroad to this place so near within the grasp
of the people as at this time, it being assured
that if the right of way is secured to this
place a corps of engineers will at once go to
work to ascertain if possible to get across from
this point. To this end every possible means
will be put forth by our citizens to secure the
necessary right of way. Whatever is to be
done in the matter should be done at once.
The line once started via Shingletown, it
would be impossible to get it changed. All
that is in the way is the right of way. Let it
be secured at once and insure the long looked
for railroad to Pine Grove.
An Answer to “Gregg.’’
Farmer's Minis, Pa., March 2, 90.
Editor WarcHMAN.
Dear Sir.—Please allow us a little space in
your valuable paper, to make a reply in self
defence, to the revengeful effusions and mis-
representations of the Spring Mills correspon-
dent signed “Gregg,” ot a few weeks ago
This fellow “Gregg” is simply a proxy detail-
ed to do this contemptible business for par-
ties who imagined they were touched at a ten-
der spot, and don’t like to show their own
hands to the public in such a maligning style.
Less conceit and more good judgment would
be a good medicine for this party.
This party yelped “boss’’ at ug, merely to
hide their own political sins, which no doubt
are many.
But this party may be digging their own po-
litical graves, {and some one may improve
the opportunity and cover them up nicely;
for the time is past for one or a few “to carry
political campaigns. Even if this party con-
siders us “dropped,”it is gratifying to know
that we “got there,” more than once, and they
did not, for our own!citizens occasionally con-
sidered it the part of wisdom to‘‘drop”them be-
fore they “got there.” And any fellow that
would kick an official for doing a sworn duty
ought to “go west,” and no doubt the Yankees
or Indians can soon contrive a remedy for
them.
Next this party rubbed around Maj. Fisher,
to make the public believe they ranked with
good men like the Maj; merely to conceal
their own errors,(in that way) ; but this proved
a failure too, for all who have learned the real
object of their attack condemn it and many of
our best citizens requested to have them
shown up in a worse style than we shall at
this tinfe.
And next this party attacked us for daring to
criticise a party who acknowledged and pub-
licly stated at different times and places, that
he had committed a public wrong on innocent
people. We simply did our duty as a parent
and citizen in this matter and received the
approval of at least nine-tenths of the peo-
ple who were under the lash. Criticism has
often improved men’s actions, but where there
is too much conceit it may fail to have an ef-
fect, and if this party and their pet don’t
deem this sufficient we can give this matter
in detail, which will give the public a fair
chance to decide whose “items are hollow,”
and also who has a big head, chiefly filled with
conceit and malice.
We would rather have the consciousness of
being right than to have the reputation of being
a good tool to accomplish a mean purpose.
R:PorRTER CORRESPONDENT.
[This closes this controversy, as both sides
have been heard.—Eb.]
Tea CAkE.—Put one cup of swee
milk, two heaping cups of sugar, two-
thirds cap of lard and a little salt in a
pan on the stove to melt. When it
cools beat three eggs very light, stir
them into the milk, add two quarts of
well sifted flour, three heaping tea-
spoonfuls of baking Joyden or two
teaspoonfuls of soda and four teaspoon-
fuls of cream of tarter well mixed with
the flour ; roll thin and bake quickly.
Gregg township in their vest pockets,” during:
Obituary.
Died at Marsh Creek, Centre county, on the
8th of March, Elder Conrad Singer, aged 52
years, 10 months and 23 days.
The deceased was born in a small province
of West Prussia, on the 15th of April, 1837, was
baptised in his infancy, and at the age of 14
was received into full communion with the
Church. Soon after his confirmation, he,along
with his widowed mother, a younger brother,
and two sisters, emigrated to America and set-
tled at Marsh Creek.
As amember ofthe Marsh Creek Reformed
Church, as an elder in the congregation, and
as a teacher and an officer in the Sunday
School, he was faithful and took a leading part;
and in the absence of the writer, who has
been his pastor the last eight years, he took
the pastor’s place and conducted divine ser-
vices. His consecration was complete, and
he entered with enthusiasm in all church
work, his zeal often proving an inspiration to
others. His influence was not confined to the
narrow borders of his congregation, but was
felt throughout the different congregations
composing the Nittany charge.
Asa citizen and business man he was rigidly
honest, and could neither be led or driven in-
to a position which he conceived to be wrong,
or where he would have been obliged to com-
promise his sense of honor.
His sickness was brief, grippe followed by
pneumonia; but having lived right, he was
ready when the summons came. During the
latter stages of his sickness his sufferings
were intense, but he bore all] with true chris-
tian fortitude.
He leaves an aged and feeble mother, main-
ly dependent on him for support, a sorrowing
wife, two sons, and four daughters. Curtin
township loses one of its best. and worthy ci
tizens, his pastor a true friend and co-worker,
the church of Marsh Creek a faithful member
and devoted official, his wife an affectionate
husband, and his children a kind father.
D. 0. 8.
Books, Magazines, &c.
Harper's Magazine for April is a distinctive-
ly national number.
A great manufacturing industry which ranks
fourth in importance in the United States de-
partment of literature, in which Yankee profi-
ciency has become proverbial, a colossal mili-
tary enterprise in the West, and a commercial
institution illustrating in its development the
American genius for organization,are the sub-
jects of notable articles in Harper's Magazine
for April. The series of comprehensive ar-
ticles on “Great American Industries” is con-
tinued in “A Suit of Clothes,” presenting the
complete history of a piece of wool from the time
of its growth on the sheep to that of its trans-
formation into the manufactured article. An
article on (“American Literary Comedians
The story of stirring incidents in “Three In-
dian Campaigns” in the West. Maps and illus-
trations showing the peculiarities and the dif-
ficulties of Indian warfare. The remaining
article on a national subject is the methods
and achievements of the New York Maritime
exchange. “The Merchant of Venice” is the
comedy selected for the second in the series of
Shakespearian Revivals conducted in the pages
of this periodical. The Rev. W. H. Milburn,
the blind preacher, in his article on Thomas
Young, revives the memory of one of the most
brilliant of scientific men,the‘“Admirable Crich-
ton” of this century, The fiction of the num-
ber is especially interesting. The poetry is
excellent, and the Editorial Departments ave,
in their several fields, vigorous and enter-
taining.
Cephas and the Coon.
|
Coon hunting still gives great enjoy-
ment to hunters in the mountainous
districts of Massachusetts. The skin
of the animal sells for a dollar or more,
but this reward is a mere trifle compar-
ed to the pleasure the hunter finds in
tracking and treeing the coon and
bringing him to the ground. Few men
ever appreciated sport of this kind
more than a certain old farmer named
Cephas Green.
He and his wife were one day jog-
ging along toward town 1n the carryall,
their business in the town being of es-
pecial importance, nothing less than
the signing of papers which should
transfer half of their farm to a neigh-
bor.
They had still four miles to go,
when an acquaintance hastily crossed
the road in front of them, his gun on
his shoulder.
“After a coon,” he said, hastily ;
“my boy seen one in the woods up
here.”
“Is that so?" cried old Farmer Green,
excite lly. He passed the reius to his
wife, leaped from the carryall, and dis-
appeared after the sportsman.
Six hours later a neighbor, driving
over the road, found the carryall drawn
up under a tree, the horse turned out
to grass, and Mrs. Green sitting in the
shade, with alook of disgust and wear-
inessin her face. Usually the most
placid and even tempered of women,
she now said, with pardonable sharp-
ness:
“If you see Job Sanders in town,
please tell him that Cephas Green has
smelt a coon, and that that trade of
ours won't be made as long as that
coon is alive. If you're hurried for
time you needn’t say anything bat
‘Cephas Green’ and ‘coon.’ Job’ll
know the rest. ’— Youth's Companion.
Not too Many Rules for a Child.
To the first lesson, not to put his
knife to his mouth, can be added turther
injunctions just as - important, which
must be taught some time, with no real
reason why they should not be taught
now. The only objection can be that
too many rules bewilder and perplex,
and that the most important are those
of principle, not behavior. But princi-
ple should guide behavior. And object
teaching is said to be wearisome. If
one sees and knows only the right way,
how will he learn the wrong ?—Good
Housekeeping.
PoraTors CREAMED AND BROWNED.
—For two cupfuls of potatoes (cold
bojied) heat in a double boiler one cup-
ful of milk, thickened with a table-
spoonful of butter rolled in flour. Sea-
son with salt and pepper. Into this
stir the potatoes, cut into dice, letting
them remain on the fire just long enough
to become smoking hot throughout.
When well heated turn into a greased
baking dish,cover with buttered crumbs,
and brown in a quick oven. If parsley
is liked, cut some fine and stir into the
milk with the potatoes.
Kills Himself When Discovered.
WiLksBARRE, March 24.—On the
night of February 6 the Postoffice at
Nicholson was robbed of considerable
money and postage stamps. A few days
later, Alfred Sprague, Jesse Thomas and
Bill Casterline, of Dalton, were arrested
and committed to the Lackawanna
County Prison to await trial.
To-day one of the prisoners gave
evidence implicating Jesse Thomas in a
number of robberies committed through-
out New Jersey. Joseph Thomas,father
of Jesse, was called upon by two de-
tectives this morning at the yards of
the Delaware, Lackawanna and West-
ern Railroad in Scranton and was re-
quested to go with them to his re-
sidence in Dalton, as they desired to
search the premises. On reaching the
place they found his house locked.
Thomas volunteered to open a window
and by this means they could gain en-
trance. He did so and the officers wait-
ed on the outside for him to open the
door. After he had been in the house
ten minutes or more, nothing being
heard from him, the officers concluded
to kick in the door.
On entering the house they found the
old man lying on the floor in a pool of
blood, he having cut his throat with
a razor, It appears now that he, as
well as his son Jesse, had been
‘crooked’ for years past. They found
in the house chests of valuable tools be-
longing to the Delaware, Lackwanna
and Western Railroad, which had been |
stolen by the son and father. Thomas
was alive at nine o’clock this evening,
but cannot recover.
Where the Trust Get Their Nourish-
ment.
Senator Vest in a speech in the Senate
last week showed by the following facts
how the trusts are sustained by high
duties which remove all possibility of
competition from other countries and
enable them to fix their own prices:
1. The steel rail trust, buttressed by a
tariff tax of $17 per ton.
2. The nail trust, by a tariff tax of
$1.25 per 100 pounds.
3. The iron nut and washer trust,by a
tax of $2 per 100 pounds.
4. The barbed fence wire trust, by a
tax of 60 cents per 100 pounds.
5. The copper trust, by a tax of $2.50
per 100 pounds.
6. The lead trust, by a tax of $1.50
per 100 pounds.
7. The slate pencil trust, by a tax of
30 per cent-
8. The nickel trust, by a tax of $15
per 100 pounds.
9: The zinc trust, by a tax of $2.50
per 100 pounds.
10. The sugar trust, by a tax of $2
per 100 pounds.
11. The oil cloth trust, by a tax of 40
per cent.
12. The jute bag trust, by a tax of 40
er cent.
13. The cordage trust, by a tax of 30
per cent.
14. The paper envelope trust,by a tax
of 25 per cent.
15. The gutta percha trust,by a tax of
35 per cent.
. 16. The castor oil trust, by a tax of 80
cents per gallon.
17. The linseed oil trust, by a tax of
25 cents per gallon.
18. The cottonseed oil trust, by a tax
of 25 cents per gailon.
19. The borax trust,by a tax of $5 per
100 pounds.
20. The ultramarine trust, by a tax of
$5 per 100 pounds.
Verily the tariff protects. That is, it
protects trusts.
A Dawdling Congress.
The Philadelphia Ledger usually
sides with the Republicans and is slow
to wrath, but that it doesn’t approve of
the way this Congre:s is doing business,
or rather not doing business, is indi-
cated by the following sharp language
it indulges in :
The only people that are busy are the
lobbyists; the only business that is
brisk is the attempted raiding on the
Treasury. Any scheme looking to this
end has plenty of active backing. Ar-
rears of pension bills, dependent pension
bills, service pension bills, schemes to
lend out the public money as if the
Government was a great loan office,
schemes for Federal buildings in every
little town that chooses to make a claim,
education bills, ship canal bills—in a
word, “bills to give everybody every-
thing’’—after the fashion of the dema-
gogues who figure in Dr. Warren's
“Ten Thousand a Year’’—are encounter-
ed everywhere—invited by the surplus
and threatening its annibilation. If the
tenth part of them should get through
v.eshould have, in place of the “surplus,”
an aching void in the Treasury vaults.”
He Was Born To Be Drowned.
CHAMBERSBURG, March 24.--A
young man named Lewis left Johnstown
after the the flood of last year and came
to Franklin county. His family had
perished in the great rush of the waters
and he desired to make himself a home
in 8 country where there was no danger
ot death by water.
Saturday night he met his death by
drowning. He was employed on the
farm of Hamsher Clippinger, near
‘Welsh Run, and was endeavoring to
drive a colt into the creek. The colt
hesitated because the creek was high
and Lewis struck him sharply.
The animal gave a wild leap and fell
in the creek. Lewis was thrown from
his back, and as the two flourdered in
the water the colt kicked him in the
head, so stunning him that he was un-
able to grasp a pole thrown to him, and
drowned before the eyes of his comrades.
He was 24 years old.
A Rising MUSICIAN.—A young man
had sat at the plano one evening and
bored the majority of the guests for two
hours, and one man was bold enough to
ask who he was.
“Why, sir,” was the indignant an-
swer, ‘that's Mr. Allegro, a rising
young musician of our city.”
“Oh, is he.”
“Yes, sir, he is.”
“Well, I don’t believe it, for I'll
swear I’ve been waiting here all the
evening to see him rise, and he has kept
right there at that poor, helpless piano
as if he was nailed to the "stool and
clinched.”
Some Great Unexplored Lands.
A great part of Asia and nearly three-
fourths of Africa is a sealed book to us
moderns. The explorations of Stanley,
and those who preceded him, are mere
spider tracks in the desert, and our best
maps of Africa are half guesswork.
In Asia there is Thibet and Turkes-
tan, and in Africa the great desert of
Sahara to be explored. We know al-
most nothing of Borneo, Papua or
Madagascar, and thousands of islands in
the Pacific ocean are still unexplored.
Great tracts of Australia have never
been trodden by the foot of a white man,
and nearly all of South America inside
of the coast lines is know only by hear-
say and tradition. Coming up to our
northern haif of the continent, we en-
counter more unknow lands. Central
America and Mexico offer fertile fields
for exploration, and lower California has
never been thoroughly explored.
In the far north is Greenland, and
Baffin Land, the great Hudson bay re-
gion, all of British America north of
latitude 60 degs., and our great territory
of Alaska. -
TaE Ricur NAME For It.—“Is that
immovable man sitting on the hotel
piazza one of your citizens?’ asked a
visitor in a neighboring town.
“Yes, he’s an old resident,” rep'ied
the party addressed.
“He is a very dignified man, I judge,”
continued the stranger.
“Oh, no, that’s not dignity you no-
tice,” exclaimed the other, ‘‘that’s
aziness.”’
New Advertisements.
Pleasant and convenient. Reasona-
ble rent. Inquire Of
35 11 3t A. M. HOOVER,
Bellefonte, Pa.
H OUSE FOR SALE OR RENT.—
A brown stone house on corner of
Curtin and Spring street. Fourteen rooms.
All modern improvements. Either for sale or
rent. Inquire on premises or of
35-10-4¢ JOHN G. LOVE.
AUTION.—AIl persons are here-
by cautioned against meddling with
the following personal property: One gray
stallion, one gray mare, one bay horse, 7 vind
cows, two head young cattle, one sow, five
shoats, one champion reaper, one champion
mower, one wheel cultivator,one hay rake, one
grain drill, one set bobsleds, one two-horse
wagon, four pair Crippen ong sleigh, one bug-
gy, one sulkey, one plow, one harrow, one cul-
tivator, one wheel-barrow and all household
goods, together with all the personal property
of A. L. Archey, as I have this day purchased
the same at private sale and loaned them to
Ada L. Archey at my pleasure.
Pine Grove Mills, Pa., March 19th, 1890.
35-13-3t% W. H. HENDERSON.
OTICE OF APPLICATION FOR
CHARTER.—Notice is hereby given
that an application will be made to the Court of
Common Pleas of Centre county, on Saturday,
March 29th, 1890, at [0 a. m., under the Act of
Assembly, entitled “An Act to provide for the
incorporation and regulation of certain corpo-
rations,” approved April 29, 1874, and the sup-
plements thereto, for the charter of an intend-
ed corporation to be called “The Bellefonte
Church of the Evangelical Association of North
America in Centre county, State of Pennsylva-
nia,” the charter and object of whichis the
promuigation of the interests of religion in our
midst and the spread of Scriptural holiness
throughout the world.
CLEMENT DALE,
35-11 Solicitor.
OLIDAY; BEDUOTIONS:
HOLIDAY REDUCTIONS
——o=fodmo—
SPECIAL BARGAINS!
SPECIAL BARGAINS!
0
A reduction from 20 to 30 per cent on
our entire stock fom this date until
after the Holidays.
WE ARE NOT AFRAID TO SHOW YOU
—=toj=—
Children’s Suits (Knee Pants) from
$
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Soy
28834
888
Boor
Soo
Boys Suits from 14 to 18 years from
$5.00 to 4.00
6.00 to 4.75
8.00 to 6.00
10.00 to 8.00
$6.00 to 4.50
8.00 to 6.00
10.00 to 8.00
12.00 to 10.00
15.0 to 12.00
18.00 to 14.75
Men’s Suits Reduced from
“ “ “
$4.00 to 3.00
5.00 to 3.50
6.00 to 5.00
10.00 to 7.50
12.00 to 9.50
16.00 t014.00
18.00 to 15.00
Over Coats Reduced from
“ “ “
“ “ “
Reduced Prices in Underwear,
£ £4 Shirts.
Gloves & Hosiery.
Mufflers & H'dk'r'fs.
Hats & Caps.
Trunks & Valises.
CALL AND SEE OUR STOCK AND CON
VINCE YOURSELF THAT OUR RE-
DUCTIONS ARE GENUINE.
ree pr,
34 49 3m. SIMON LOEB.
Sechiler’s Grocery.
TOVRREERTTE
..¥.
Te THE HUNGRY PUBLIC.
eo)
It is only those who
eat—the many who re-
quire the necessities of
life, to prolong their ex-
istence, that we address.
Those who use no-
thing,—who think they
need nothing,—who live
on expectation, hope or
some intangible nothing,
will save time by passing
this column by. It is not
intended for; them but the
other fellows. We write
what is here put down for
the people who are mortal
enough to get hungry,and
in consequence of getting
hungry are sensible enough
to try to get what is good,
pure, wholesomeland nec-
essary, at prices that don’t
require them to lay out all
that they earn, to appease
their appetites. We have
been in the hunger appeas-
ing business for many,
many years. We know
what men want, we know
what women and children
desire, and we know how
much better and how much
more pleasant it is to re-
side in a community where
people enjoy good health,
than among dyspeptic com-
plainers, growlers and suf-
ferers. To have healthy
people pure food must be
used. We understand this,
and understanding it, keep
nothing but the purest of
everything that can be
found in the market. To
satisfy the demands of the
many different stomachs
that we try to gratify, re-
quires a vast variety of
dainties, condiments and
relishes, as well as the sub-
slantials; and knowing this
there is nothing that is eat-
able, relishable or appetiz-
ing, that we do not keep.
It is for you who want, or
use anything eatable, eith-
er as meats, fish, groceries,
fruits, nuts, relishes, or in
fact anything from a piece-
of chewing gum {o a first
class beef steak. that wa
write and pay the printer
to print this invitation for
you to come and see us.
Ifyou live in town drop
in and see what all we have
and what quality “of goods
we CITY.
Ii you live in the country
come in the first time you
come to town and learn how-
easy it is to get good, pure,
fresh groceries, as low it
not lower than many have
been in the habit of paying
for old, impure and
strengthlessarticles of diet.
If you have any good fresh
farm produce bringtit along.
Under any and all cir.
cumstances
COME AND SEE US.
SECHLER & CO.
06 & 68 West High 31;