The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, August 04, 1891, Image 4

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    REPORT ER
Eprror and Pror'r
THE CENTRE
FRED. KURTZ,
“TERMS;—One yoar, $1.50, when paid in ad
vaoe, Those in arrears subject to previous
terms. $2 per year.
Advertisements 20 counts per line for 8 inser
ns. and 5 cents tor each subsequent insertion
¥
Crexroe Hauer, Pa, Tuors, Ava. 6
MORE CROOKEDNESS.
How It Cost the State $31,194.20 te
Collect 82,750.50,
PmiLapenpiia, Aug. 1.—City Treas-
urer Wright yesterday communicated to
Auditor General McCamant the resul
of an investigation by his officers inte
the matter of the assessment and collec
tion of the mercantile tax for the years
1889 and 1890. He says it has been found
that the lists are padded with the names
of persons who are dead, of people whe
had removed, and of small shep kee ’
whe were not liabg to the tax, i
whom nothing could be collected, yet
the appraisers charged sixty-two and
one-half cents for every one of these
names which they placed upon their lists.
The magistrates costs to the state for
collecting $2,726.50 in 1890 amounted to
$31,194.20. He asks the anditor general
to advise him as to what action he shall
take to purge the lists,
In his letter Mr. Wright says: “In the
course of my investigations it has been
established to my satisfaction that firms
and individuals engaged in business have
been exempted, although the volume of
business transacted by them clearly jus
tified and required the assessment and
ayment of t mercantlle license tax.
This irregularity becomes the more ap
arent and prominent because of the
act that in the same vicinity or locality
with them there were found many per
sons assessed and who are delinguent
who never should have been assessed
at all.”
UNCLE SAM IS RICH.
And Will Cheerfally Pay ior the Mis
takes of Government
WiraminaTroN, Del,
United States eneoi: }
wrong calculations when thew laid
the work for the government jetty at
Finn's Point, opposite New Castle. One
section of the pier was begun on the
New Jersey shore and built out, and the
other section was begun oat in the river
and built in.
Last week there was trouble
by the great flow of water through the
gap. Contractor McLeon's pile driver
was sunk there, and is still on the bot-
tom of the river. A new contractor was
engaged to assist in the work. It was
then discovered that if the work was
continued the two ends, instead of meet-
ing, would lop over each other. The
engineers had made a wrong estimate.
Now the contractors are busily en
gaged, at the g
1ISIineers,
Aug. 4,
4
His
vernment's expense, in
pulling out the j that have already
peen driven. The line of the jetty will
have to be changed in order to make the
ends meet so as to the gap. Had
the mistake not made the work
would have been completed and turned
over to the government by Oct. 1. Now
its completion will be much later,
1
Cis
1
Doe
Disastrous Rain at Williamsport.
WiLLiaxsrort, Pa., July 31.—One of
the heaviest rainfalls this city has
known occurred yesterday afternoon,
The sewers were unable to carry off the
water and the streets in the lower por-
tions were flooded three feet deep. A
span of the new Maynard street bridge,
an iron structure, was blown down by
the wind. Several mills were damaged
and thirty-five houses on the south side
of the river were wholly or partially
blown from their foundations. Ome
house collapsed over the heads of the
inmates, and Mrs. Frederacg, one of the
occupants, was badly hurt and is still
unconscious. The aggregate damage
was very heavy. The areaof the storm
was fortunately narrow.
McKinley on Wool.
PIrrseure, Aug. 4.—Major McKinley,
Republican candidate for governor of
Uhlo, accompanied by his wife and
party of friends from East Liverpool, O,,
were in Pittsburg last night. “What
about your wool schedule, which the
Ohio Democrats are raising such a ram-
pus about,” was asked the major. “That
rumpus yon speak of won't make any
political capital. The prevailing prices
of wool are lower becanse the price of
wool is down all over the world. The
wool schedule has not had a fair show,
because before the bill went into effect
the market was gutted with foreign wool
and foreign goods.”
Tried to Cremate an Official,
ABERDEEN, 8. D., Aug. 4.—Richard
Newton has been arrested charged with
attempting to burn up Chief of Police
Curtis. Two months ago fire started in
the northwestern block lmmediately
under Chief Curtis’ room. Detectives
Chapman and Resch were set to work
on the case, and Chapman had himself
arrested as a “boot legger,” thus gain-
ing the sympathy of the whisky men.
To him Newton disclosed the plot to set
fire to the bank block and burn up Chief
Curtis. The case against him is a clear
one, and it is believed he will turn state's
evidence and implicate several promi-
nent men,
She Conquered a Highwayman,
New York, Aug. 4.—Kate Wilson,
an actress, who was with the “Private
Secretary” company last season, was at-
tacked by a highwavman on Forty.
seventh street at 1 o'clock in the mom.
ing. Lizzie May Almer accompanied
Miss Wilson. A man who was a pas
er with them on the horse car grap-
ad Miss Wilson after leaving the car,
t Miss Wilson beat him oft with her
umbrella after a vigorous struggle,
Mrs. Lederer Disinherited,
New Yong, Aug. 8.—<By the will of
Richard 8. Newcombe, the lawyers,
daughter Flora, who was secretly mar-
ried to Theatrical Manager W. Lederer,
is disinherited. Mrs. Newcombe is given
the income of all the dead lawyer's es.
tate for life, and at her death the princi
jus to be divided among Flora's five
ers and sisters, Her name is not
mentioned in the will,
Diphtheria Epidemic in Scranton,
Scranton, Pa, Aug. 4. — Carbon
street, a small thoroughfare in the
Seventh ward, containing eighteen
dwelling houses, is afflicted with an epi-
demic of diphtheria, Since ri
four deaths of children have
ies fre the
prevalence of dis
ease. In some of the house there are
two and three cases,
a
saminda Ls P'S ii ms
| FOr \ORROW .
The Queen of the Belgians Said to
Be Dying.
A LUCKLESS ROYAL HOUSEHOLD,
Reception of Servia's Youthful King
in the Czar's Domains London's
Great Army of Strikers—An Al
leged Outbreak of Speculators in
Spain,
LONDON, Aug. 4.—The royal hoese of
Belgium is again stricken. Queen Marie,
wife of King Leopold and mother of the
hapless Stephanie, is said to be dying,
and everybody 1s talking about the i
luck that has attended the members of
the Leopolds’ house. Carlotta, his sister,
is the insane widow of the executed Em-
peror Maximilian ; Stephanie, his daugh-
ter, is the witlow of the late Crown Prince
Rudolph, of Austria, who ended his life
by suicide, and Baufdoin, his nephew
and idol, designated as heir to the
throne, was recently carried off by a
mysterious disease, not without suspi-
cion of self violence.
An Affectionate Wife,
Now Susan Marie, about a year
rounger than her middle aged husband,
18 dying at a time when he most needs
her company and her sympathy, And
yet Leopold is one of the most amiable
and democratic of kings. The dyin
queen is an Austrian grand duchess an
was married to Leopold about thirty-
eight years ago.
true helpmate in his queen.
The Boy King in
A very different spectacle
witnessed in the palace of the cz
is the name day of the czarina,
equal to a birthday among northern na-
tions, and the Rnssian court has been
holding to tradition, a grand circle,
King Alexander, the 14-year-old king of
Servia, gave his arin to the
tussia,
is
There has Tux pst dinner,
ever
ile
Greece,
and last
fireworks dis-
played, chiefly for the edification of the
young king Alexander,
Thirty-five Thousand Strikers,
The strike of the London building
trades has entered upon ti
week, Thirty-fi
members of the n
The men declare th
amply provided with
the struggle, and £
was paid on Sat
the unions that ti
ployers. The latter, however, are
termined not to yiel 5 they re-
gard as disastron In-
dustrial discontent vading
metropolis. Of the 30,000 drivers
wagons in London 6.000 have juined a
union with the object of striking in win-
ter if there is no my :
conditicn. The drivers
of their number average ninety he a
week for wages of from eighteen
twenty-eight shillings
as beneath the ordinary
common laborers, and public
is with them to improve the
id men, all
on strike,
JAITY On
L200 of strike money
lzimed by
t the em-
de-
AIOSsS,
in
in
sympathy
ir situation.
SAID TO BE SPECULATORS
But Zorilla Says It Was
Republican Uprising.
Maprip, Aug. 4.—Tne city 8f Barce
Ilona was thrown into great
by what ssajd to be a desperate
attempt
1
Bourse to force a decline
securities dealt in upon the exchange.
The troops of arrison of Barce-
lona were r and the
nsual guards were patroling their posts
when a band of fifteen men. all armed,
cautiously approached the buildings and
attempted to su ise the guards, it be-
ing their intention to force their way
into the barracks,
As they rushed upon the sentries they
delivered a volley from their weapons,
and some of the soldiers fell the
ground, having been struck by the bul-
ets of their assailants
The other sentries an wered the volley
from the attackers with a fusilade, A
regular battle of short duration fol
lowed, a number on both sides being
wounded. In the meantime the officers
stationed at the barracks called the
troops to arms, and the attacking party
were soon surronnded and compelled to
surrender. A court martial will be con-
vened to try them, and it is believed
they will all be shot.
Panis, Ang. 4.-8enor Zorilla,
interview, denies all complicity with
the uprising in Barcelona. As for him.
self, he said, he wonld attempt nothing
without a certainty of success, The
latest advices from Barcelona justified
the belief that was a genuine republi-
can uprising.
MOKS
in ir
to
in an
Webster's Victim Dead.
NEw York, Aug 4. Charles E. Good.
win, the commercial agent who was shot
Sunday hight by Bertram CC. Webster,
the horse owner and bookmaker, in the
apartment house No. 230 West Forty-
second street, died yesterday in Roose.
velt hospital. The cause of the shooting
was jealousy. Webster lived with a
woman known as his wife, who was
formerly an actress known as Evelyn
Granville. The other tenants in the
house noticed her flirting with Goodwin.
Webster had been drinking all day and
about 7.80 o'clock in the evening went
to Goodwin's apartments and shot him,
He coolly walked down stairs, telling
some one he met on the way to send for
a doctor, that Goodwin was hurt,
A Clergyman Burned to Death,
Paruen, Mass, Aug. 4.~The Weeks
house, on South Main street, was de
stroyed by fire yesterday. There were
about thirty-five guests and boarders in
the house, and they had barely time to
escape. Rey. Mr. Williams, a retired
Congregational minister, who preached
last year st Holland, and who has been
boarding about a month at the house,
was burned to death. His body was
found directly in the front entrance,
burned beyond recognition, nothing but
the charred trunk remaining. The
guests lost all their effects, The loss
will be about $30,000,
A Btatue of the Pope,
WasHINGTON, Ang. 4.--A statue of
Pope Leo XIII for the Catholic univer
sity near this city has arrived at the
town custom house, It will be
with appropriate ceremonies
Sept. 28. The statue cost $10,000 and is
100 feet high. It will be A iaetited to
the universit by fossph . DeLoubat,
a wealthy New York gentleman, who
superintended its execution in Rome by
the Sculptor Luchette,
un
RS
Kentucky's New Constitution,
LovisviLie, Ky., Aug. 4.— Yester-
day's was the last election by viva voce
vote that will ever be held in Kentucky.
The new constitution, despite its power-
ful oppssition of railroads, banks and
corporations generally, has carried by
an overwhelming majority, and the last
state constitution that still recognized
slavery is a thing of the past. The new
constitution will tax railways, banks
and stock companies, abolish the office
of public printer, provide for a secret
ballot system and municipal government
reform, and also carries an anti-lotter
clause which will wipe out the halt
dozen lottery charters now being oper-
ated with semi-daily drawirgs at Cov.
ington and Lowsville in the mterests of
and towns indicate that the Democratic
ticket has its usual majority, probably
20,000,
Chicago's Million Dollar Fire.
CHicago, Aug. 4.—Fire involving a
loss estimated to be at least $1,000,000
broke out yesterday in the large retail
dry goods and notion store of Siegel,
Cooper & Co., southeast corner of State
and Adams streets. It was bat a few
minutes after the first alarm was given
till the entire interior was a mass of
Every available piece of fire
apparatus was called to the scene.
There were about twenty-five employes
in the store at the time, but all of them,
as far as known, managed to escape un-
injured except one cash boy, who was
on the third floor. He started to come
down by the fire escape, but became
confused, lost his footing and fell, sus-
tadning serious injuries. The loss is be-
lieved to be fully covered by insurance,
Tried to Drown a Boy.
New York, Aug. 4.—~Martha Wilson,
2 old, was charged in
a laborer, 21 3
the Jefferson Market police court with
attempting. to drown 14-year-old Dennis |
Sullivan. While boys were playing at
Twelfth street one of !
of brick which
He becane enraged,
f Sullivan and threw
river, The boy swam
Wilson saw that he
limbing up the pier he
Id the boy od oo the
Sullivan became unconscious,
about to sink when a man
and took him from Wilson.
Veurs
threw a
jece
the
when
mito
snd
him
about,
yunped in and hel
and was
ISIERN,
$4,000,000 Failure in New York.
New Yor, Aug 4. Abraham
Backer, dealer in commercial paper at
to B. F.
amount to
, it is said, are
creditors in fall
in trade
without
His
preference,
habilities
§ 3
tO
pay
Still Supporting Parnell,
Lospox, Ang. 4.—The Dablin Free
Parnell. It declares that the enthusiasm
displayed for Mr. Parnell Sunday at the
ie
sion of the secessionists that they had
FEVER.
bis disease We sav
it is a general
{ makes the vic
wns itu tion
tacks the wom
i gered. A good st
properly used soon WODes the weak
ing physicians of the land invaris
pd the vee of Pure Rye Whiskey in
Max Kieln'’s “Silver Age” and “Dus
Whiskies are sold under & sworn
oonsnner sees
1 Mjueshe ol
i wind Keeps
nd ios, Wines
ut by expres
» List
in, ¥2 Federal
apt prop
FINISTRATOR™S LETTERS
nitration upon the estate
11, dee'd , of Poller ton nship, hay.
¥ granted Ww the undersigned be
IT0AY request Ri Persons Bowing
lebted to the eslate 0 make lame
L, and these havitg claims sgainst
11y authenticated for
ROTICE
¥
of
LE
Adm instrsior,
Eon A LARGE BIZE IND
cook stove; apply at the KRPORTER
I FoAL NOTICE NOTICE 18 HEREBY
give that the account of Willem P
Humes, Committee of the estate of Benjamin,
Frazier, a Invatic, has been filed in the prothono
tary 's office, and that the sae will be confirmed
a1 our sext Uoart of Comm ou Pleas, udless ex
ceptions be filed thereto L.A, SCRAEFTER,
$i Prothonotary’
HAKD
offire
AUTION HAVING PURCHASED AT COON.
stable’s 2:le We following property of John
I. lee. 2 horses aud goars, 3 cows, 1 bog, | 2+
horse wagon, 9 bugky, Buckeye cultivator, ba
grain in bare and in ground, and all the defend
aul's personal property, all persons arc hereby
cantioned against meddling with same as | leave
sane in his possession at ny pleasure
Hinman Lux,
23 Tusseyville, July 22, 1591,
£3 DMINISTRATORS NOVICE LETTERS
of Adminstration apos the estate of Ose
oar Dock, dec'd., of Gregg tow, ship, having been
awfully granted to the undersigned they would
respectiully request all persons knowing them
selves Jndebled 4 the elale 0 make Immediate
payment, and those bavieg claims against the
same Uy present them duly anthentionted for set.
tisment. Lypia Douek,
Jag, Duck,
Administrator's,
JURT PROCLAMATION «WHEREAS THE
Hom. A. 0. Fart, President Judge of the
Court of Common Pleas of the dh Jadicial dis
trict, consisting of the counties of Centre and
Huntingdon, and the Hou Daniel Rhoades and
the Hou, Thos ¥, Riley, sssoc ste Judges in Cens
tre, having fsstied rheir precept bearing date the
Zith day of July 1891, 1 we directed for holdin
8 Court of Oyer and Terminer and general Jai
Delivery and Quarter Sessions of the Peace in
Bellefonte, for tue county of Centre, and com.
mente on the §th Monday of August the 24th day
of August 1591, and to continue two weeks, No-
tice Is hereby given to the Coroner, Justices of
the Pesce, Aldermen and Cotistables of said
county of Centre, that they be then and there in
the proper persous, al 10 o'clock in the forenoon
ol said day. with their records, inquisitions, ex-
amioations, and thelr own rememorances, to do
those things which to their offloe ne
be dene, and those who sre bound in 18
; prosecuie inst the prisoners that are,
or shall be in Ae fat] of Contre county, be then
4031 thare 49 prosts against them as shall be
st.
Ulven under my hand, at Bellefonte the 27th
day of July, ju the vear of onr Lord, 1991 and the
ooe hundred and fourteenth your of the Indes
pendence of the United States
WM, A. IBHLER,
Boeri,
Ajulyoe
A I
is hereby given thet an application will
be made to the Court of Common Pless of Centre
vonnty on Monday , the 24th day of A +A
1501 at 10 o'olock a. wn, vider as sot of Assembly
eutitied “Au Aot to provide fir the |
and ation of certain corporations.” approved
April Bab, A D IBY, wind the supplements there.
to, for a chiariar of an intended corporation to be
onlled the #1. Lukes Evangelical Lutheran church
of Centr Hall, Peonsylivanis,
cording 10 the frmula of the G
the B mi Lutheran ohare, of the Unlied
Amorioa, and for Uwse
fer
F* RMERS' BUPPLIES AT
ROCK BOTIOM PRICES,
CHILLED
Yiow
PRre
BOUTH
Bexp
¥
__ REDUCTION IN
GRP
SHARES
reduced from 40 to 80 conts, -
All other repairs reduced accordingly.
Roland
"N §
CHILLED PLOWS are the best bevel
landslide plow on earth; prices res
duced,
POTATO PLANTER,
The Aspenwall is the most complele potato
platter ever made Farmers who have them
plant their own crops sud realize rom $5.00 to
$30.00 per yeor from their ueighbors, who wills
Anely pay $1.00 per acre for the use of an Aspen
wail planter
HARROWS-.. The Farmer's Friend Horse Shoe Luck
Spring Tooth Harrow, seventesi eth , oue side
of which can be used as a single cultivator,
AND STEEL
TUGOTH HARKOW
THE HENCH KING BPRING
Atlen’a Cn ebrnted Cultivators, Garden
Tools and Seed Drills, which were practically
exhibited at the Granger's Vicuic,
NTERS AND CORN
- Intest improved,
CORN Plu FHELLEL=,
J mee HAY RAKES AND HAY TEDDERS,
at cut prices, Farmers who harvest fflecn or
more us of hay cannot afford Ww do without ove
of our Hay Tedders, which are built witk a fork
outside of each wheel, the same tedder can
opera ed by one or two Bore
ba
CONKLIN
CHANPION WAGONS,
bulid, fine finish and durabiiiny
WAGONS
fire supenior aa Leal
BUGGIES,
NOBBY ROAD CAR1S,
PHAETONS,
AND PLATFORM SPRING WAGONS
The Boss” Bet Wood, Oval and
Churns— he om, Hed
Is copslanlly Increasing
reale of churns
WHEELBARROWS
Our steel and
pds Of work of
wood wheelbarrows are adapted
fo all Ki which we bhave a
Ass tent al very ow prices
A largo sock of
AM AND GARDEN gp,
¥ah “L
FIOWER POTS HNE,
FERTILIZERS,
AND 1
Agricuitar bail,
Dollar , Vaosphate
Honest Phosphate for tse on be
toes and wheal, as well a8 Mapes Pot
er.all of which have the highest reg
producing an hotest return for Lhe money
wd,
our
Chait
1 $
fater’s
. Lister
Our large trade justifies us in
cur supphes 10 isrge qoantifies,
s¢ buy at the lowert prices, which
bles sell at the juwest
therefore, it will be lo the interes
every farmer 10 Central Pennsylvania
re pry figs ge
We take great plessare jo enter laini g
farmers, It does pot anything 1
exntine the articies we have on oxi
ton
buyiug
het Ce
LR
1s iO Prager
g
examines our stock Hel
Comt
McCALMONT & CO.
Hale Building, Bellefonte, Pa.
i
§
Business Managers,
}
apridm
EE PENNBYLVAKRIA STATE COLLEG
LOCATED IN ONE OF THE MOST BEAUTI
FUL AND HEALTHFUL SPOTS IN THE
ALLEGHENY MON; UNDENOMINA-
TIONAL: OPEN TO BOTH SEXES;
TUITION FREE BOARD AND
OTHER EXPENSES VERY
LOW. NEW BUILDINS
AND EQUIPMENT.
LEADING DEPARTMENTS OF STUDY.
AGRICULTURE {Tor Courses) and AGED
CULTURAL CHEMISTRY; with constant ii
justrations on the Farm and in the Labor
ory.
BOTANY and HORTICULTURE; theoret).
cal and practical, Sindents laughbt original
study with Lhe microscope,
CHEMISTRY: with an unusually
thorough ootrse in the Laburstony
(CIVIL ENGINEERING, These
« ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING: »oour se
{MECHHNICAL ENGINEERING: J eo» are
svoompanied with very extensive pencticsl
exercises in the Field, the Shop, snd the
Laboratory.
HISTORY: Ancient and Modern, with origi.
pal investigation
INDUSTRIAL ART AND DESIGN
LADIES’ COURRE IN LUTERATURE snd
SCIENCE: Two yeas Ample facilities jor
Music, vooal sod insrurental
LANGUAGE and LITERATURE: Latin
(optional) French, German and English re
quired.) one or more continued through the
entire course.
MATHEMATION snd ASTRONOMY: pure
and appliad.
MECHANIC ARTS: combining shop work
with study, three yearn’ course, New bulld:
ing and equipment,
MENTAL, ORAL and POLITICAL 8C1
ENCE; Constitutional Law and History
Political ep ete,
MILITARY SCIENCE: instruction theoreti
cal and practical, including each arm of the
service.
12. PREPARATORY DEPARTMENT. Two
yoars—carefully graded and thorough.
Winter term opens January 7, 1891; Spring
term. April & 1881. Commencement week, June
ww Jaly 2, 1881. For Catalogue or other inform a
jon, address
GEO, W, ATHERTON, LL.D, Prest.,
Suste College, Ceatre On, Pas
full and
12.
ARM FOR SALE A DERIRABLE FARX
situsted in Potter township, north of W,
H Runkle, Jr eontaiaing & acres and 56 perches
neat wessure, The sald farm under state of
cultivation, with buildings, water, timber and
fruit, Call on James C, Boal, agent,
ans Centre Hall,
— ————_-
T. ELMO HOTEL 317 AND 119 ARCH gT.,
Philadelphia. Rates $2 per day. Located
in the immediate centres of business, a0 pitces
of amusement and the different railroad depots,
as well as all parts of the city, are easily acoessis
ble by street cars constantly passing the aoor, Jt
offers special inducements 0 those visiting the
city for business or pleasure. Your patronage
respectfully solicited. Jos, M., Feoun,
.
A AO A 1. 5
Py Nesnmtdat sur FEW Asn uA)
ONEY:: oroah, borat
ds tive Any
cme can do the work. Kany te lear,
ape reine 11 yout , No viek. You devete
woud all your to the work,
Ey p from to a
ars : 2
mon HER. Ea
Consumption Cured.
An old physician, retired from practise, have
ing had placed in his havds by an East Indian
Missionary the formula of & shople vegetable
remedy for the speedy and Jurganstul cute of
Cntiiaptios Biunehith. On thus oe
A A Laatity. ho ai
Sah ure a ty DAVIDE Skellie a
~
Io be kt haa saflering
his
\ this motive a desire to
hog. will Ey
relieve hua ’
Thar? hei, Eu Sho
Holle wis lor
ne SIE RoW RR & guvie |
%
mail
hia
Wes ¥ lv
bs Lo A
“MONEY SAVERS” FOK THESE TIMES!
.
srk NT m— a ll Ymca
A limited quantity of yard wide, extra
quality, unbleached Sheeting at 6 cents
per yard.
A special lot of good quality and good
styles Dress Gingham at 73 cents per yard
Beautiful line of fine Scotch and Ze ph
yr Ginghams from
yard.
Only
one or two Dress Patterns in each
pied
THE “
an * * ”
Ask your
Dealer for it
Insist on
A A MMA
>
Neatest in
Design,
Best in,
Finish,
%* % &
il
i
WN A
AAG AAG APRA AAA AAA Al
Fully Guaranteed. All Dealers have them.
PRICES QUOTED ON APPLICATION.
GEORGE ENGER & CO., CINCINNATI, OHIO
“WANT A WAGON?”
We have wagons, buggies, surreys. High grade; as light,
strong, durable, stylish, as beautifully finished as modernized
manufacture can produce. Built on honor by men of life
experience. Honesty is our policy; prompt shipment our
specialty. We want to know you. Write us. Costs you
nothing. May lead to business by and by. Send for our
catalogue. It is free to every reader of this paper. Bing-
hamton Wagon Co., Binghamton, N.Y.
“BUILT FOR BUSINESS.”
AL
sore
Axles 1in. orll’ie
ble collar * :
1 Saal : es Oth
a and war.
™mn on