- II I gpMR supreme court of the atatt a lufir revenue la anticipated (or the coming Gacal year, but thta cannot be accurate ly measured, nor can It with any cer tainty be relied upon. I see therefore no fTlim II 1 nnniXIfl reason ,0 expect that our revenues, for M i KAI nHW the romln.; fiscal year will exceed the lAtULlUlL iluLM ILiMJ turn of lll.6S7.32S.50. as estimated by the r state treasurer. There may be more and there may be less. The estimated rev- . . . . .... nue for the past fiscal year was a mil- mfB of the senate and house of 4ctual Sentatlves and fellow citizens of nue , th)nk tne only 8afe way nnsy'van': will be to legislate with a view of real- jflth a full sense of the responslblll- tsng no more tnan tne revenue esti- accompanying the high office to mated. We turn hen to our only re- i h I have Deen cbosen by the peo- malnlng proposition, namely, the re- wlth gratitude for the trust lm- ductlon of the expenditures. , bv them, and invoking Divine The estimate of expenditures for the P"e(I 1 . , . flsf.nl vent-enrilne- Knv 5n 1899 as made i i aviunie tne amies ana unurriimc i P 1 1,sume ... , . , . . .. , by the treasurer of the state. Is $16,- obllga"""" - 164.168.37. This of course includes the jlnharge. amount due counties and school dls- J By purpose. In so far as I can dlKharge honestly and d.ductlnK tne avallttble ca8h ,n the L whole duty to the people -of 1 enn- tn amounts to about I3.B0O.O0O. as ErMia. 1 tan accomplish little wit- nerMofore mmtlonta. Some of these E their co-operation and without the ap 0 laton8 can undoubt-dly be re port nd co-operation of their chosen duced. aome of them may be wlthhe,d rtpresentatlves. It seems to me that entlre,y but ,h(f ,ar(fe 8Ums approprl. hat the tate needs at IMS USBt Is fM for pduratona, pUrpo.,.,, WP cftn. C 0f a business administration than wthhold We cannot wlthh()ld tne , political one. appropriations for the soldiers' or- is not my desire to criticise the phanfl nor thp dpaf and dumb chldreni jctien of legislative bodies In the pant. nof h tbf training schools yt of itatt for tne feel),(l nin(led at Biwyn and lu,y to the people of the state and to po nor . mdustrlal schools. The ' .Int .nit nlnlnlv Ih. finjlliclal ... . .. . . myseii i" v""" " ' state nas entered upon tnese projects, condition oi our iuir unu .-... has expended lare sums of money In the Btnd to tne Wium tu. . erection of buildings and must rontlnu.: teem to tie necessary w rem.u, ,.. f() approprlate Some appropriations Jim Impiessea n me .ur. uw, may ,)e wthh),1(1 frorn charitable instl legislative noaies nae nun a tutlons; but If all of doubtful merit are Criri to legislate for the counties and w,,nn.,d and mnn othpril th),re w!I . . ai.talota hc atntr Ihnn thev . . . . .. ichooi " - still not ne enougn to enter materially Uve had to legislate ir me upon tne reducUon of tne accumulated ,t legislatures nave apprupru.ieu ndebtedne8(I. A rigM economy must be ,re money vn practiced, and It shall be my purpose U the anticipated revenues, and Oil , a rases ,at , ran to wlthnold my Uh the Ktiowieaar as i'nuiiu ... approva! nf unnecessary expenditures Upon, or tne siaie ireat.ii.er ... r- and appropratlons. ting inaeiueun uue t nu( wp muat ,ook (r othpr rPmpdM si fh""1 . . , V, T,7. 0 meet the existing difficulties. A por- a the state today Is Indebted to )f appropraon of $5 . . . m UUV.1IUU III! lilt" (till Illllll L'llUUIB til HIT- Ml schools over three and a nan w,thneld Tnat couM be ons of dollars over and above the A w, ..f.i u i. anre or avauaoie cann in m , , ,K , .,,,i . And we find this Indebtedness car- by Qther sta(e9 u Uf ( p unu ." T" due and reasonable proportion of our comma uw " , ,.., ti ...i. v.. attd revenue for the omlng fiscal pntered upf)n th proJect and miKht u is no mure mo.. "."-" e- be unwise to reduce this appropriation. estimated current expenditures of T wou,d ke o reC(,mmend ,, . cept In case of necessity. I would not hesitate to do It if I saw no other way out of the difficulty, for there Is one nnlnt hpvnnrl which t cnuM nnt tunttfv rrer sums for educational purposes my8eIf , golng and that ,8 to approv! IB any oiner siaie in mc .......... H. h,h nI.PnnH,. f net receipts of the state available ,han hf UU , ,lkey tQ Psce1ve n the appropnauons .ur i .- rornnR-fiscal year. The larire annronrla LJ3S.20. while the total approprla- . lV). nmmn .hi- f P.nn.i. s for educational purposes for that , . mntrp- n. rrKat nrlH n mtr r alone were $6,831,436, being an It h, rpdncerl taxntlnn In m.nr .proprlatlon of 64 per cent of the en- gcnoo, dl8trlctg, It ha8 increased the at I revenue of the state for educational tendance upon the gcnoo)8, and ,n tri irpoi-es. New York appropriates only oplnlon of ,he superintendent of public per ceni OI ner revenue iu. miuuv i-.trnctlnn U wnrVlns- rri.nl crnnrl 1n lonai rurposes; aenUK. u.uy . th(1 educat!on and training of the chll cent; tmio, a per ceni; Illinois, dren cent; New jersey, is per ceni. i rue itprnnrlatlon of $6,831,436 Includes 1800,000 for the common schools of the ate; $99,000 for the salaries of the superintendents; $227,500 for rial schools; $180,00 for soldiers' or i schools; home for the training In ch of deaf children before they are lichool age, at Bala, $16,250; Pennsyl- i Institute for the Deaf and Dumb, hlladelphla. $120,000; Pennsylvania Oral lool for Deaf, $21,600; Western Penn vanla Institution for Deaf and limb, Pittsburg, $50,400; Pennsylvania Institution for the Instruction of the Blind. Philadelphia. $44,200; Western toinsylvanla Institution for Instrue- Of the Blind, Pittsburg. $24,670; "ennKylvanla Training School for th ile Minded. Ehvyn. $87,500; Western ennsylvanla Institution for Feeble Clnded, Polk, $107,150: Pennsylvania Meum and School of Industrial Art, hlladelphla, $20,000; Pennsylvrnla rnmlnir year exclusive of the In- tedness of three and a half millions dollars accruing In former yearB. Our state has been appropriating The legislature of 1891 passed an act known as the "revenue act to provide increased revenue for the purpose of relieving the burdens of local taxation etc." It Imposed a tax on money at In terest. These taxes are annually col lected and paid Into the treasury of the state. By the third section of this act three-fourths of the money collected from each county is repaid by the state treasurer to the county. The total fund collected under this law for 189S was $2,722,245.57, of which $680,561 was re tained by the state, and $2,041,684.18 was repaid by the state treasurer to the counties from which it was col lected. I think the people cnul.l bPt ter bear the burden of suspending the third section of this act, and allowing the state to retain all of the money collected for two years than they could the reduction of the appropriation to the common schools. Were this done it would Increase the revenue of the a College, $43,666; Lehigh unlversl- gUte over two mlulnn doari annually. Bethlehem. $75,000; University of and , tho ,wo years K,vp , ptatp toinsylvanla, Philadelphia, $150,000; ffllllamsport Training School, $1,500; hlladelphla Museum, $50,000; Corn- ever four millions of dollars. This would enable the state to meet Its neeessnrv exnenditures anil nnv Its inter Indlans,$400; Pennsylvania Nau- ., , ,hp,fnr(, r,.nm- cal sehoolshlp. Philadelphia. $12,000. m.nrl to ,h. ,piaiatur and nPm unon II find no evil In appropriating money t tne early pMaage of a )aw BU!pPnd r educational purposes with a liberal ,Bg the thlrd secton of the revenue uu. our i cannot approve ana ;jsiuy ,.w nf ,09, two v(.ar and dirP(,,ini, fproprlatlons that exceed the revenue ,hat a of ths tax bp retained by the f the state. We can afford to be liberal, itate durinK thnt tlme , 8ee no other d I nee no direction in which liber- .lr(lrr,,ivc This mnil ttm Hnn. nr Pi.. can be better expended than in . ,.... rpnI1(.p the annmnrlatlnn fnr hpport of the common schools and the tne common schools. ntutions enumerated above, nut our , r lo -,v-. ,,,,.,, Mallty should be limited by our reve- .... hnxv OP,,micoiiv nr nnr' he. We have created a sinking fund for nr.fnPeri that cn hrm the re. e extinguishment of the state debt, ef whlch we at preent dm4 Were EL ",B -nsing iunu nas ...creane,, ths done u wouI(j regult , sKhtly ,. RP our net debt over and above tho creaged county taxe9 Were the com. ping fund on Deo. 1 last was only ui aT,rnr.annn r.i,,,.,i tho 1025.9S1.93; while by our excess of lib- .m t i, nt tlitywehave Incurred a floating debt, ,. nn,,ntv i tho vnrinllu fcoally as sacred, of a little over three counteB S now much lighter propor- r n,r minions or aoiiars, wnicn is tlonatey tnan the school and municipal Pjualiy increasing at the rate of from taxegi The people generaiiy through- W" ,0 $1,000,000. with no provision out the 8tate wouId ee less the burden tttever for its payment, and with no .n.htiu i,,,.,......,t ,.n..niv ih.n Went and annarent Intention of meet- . -- i u i 1 t i l llcy nuu.u un 'ui ii' ii ui inticttnrii It. It Is not the fault of any one 8ch0ol and municipal taxes. It would 1 or of any political party of the fl1 with a heavier hand unnn the p. but rather grows out of that ex- iarger cities In the state, where Is found vagant disregard for plain business ,h lorire Hums at interest necessarily ftaelples which should guide the state resulting from the greatest accumula- r en as individuals. inn of wealth, but these laree cities 'an go no farther at the pace we would suffer enuallv as much and ner- P been going. One of three things ha.Ds more If a reduction of the to- pt now be done. We must either in-1 proprlatlon for the common schools w our revenue, reduce our expen- were made, and their school taxes PUres. or horrnw mnncv TVrnnvlrnnla n.. i . ... ,, . . . i " - j - 1(, , CBnt i 1 1 j ill' i. 'i- i ' "in .i ' il' I'll never more prosperous than at this consideration of the whole matter, and p. Her people were never more con- an earnest desire to recommend that 1 and satisfied. The state was never which in mv ludement In the moat Men as it is today. More people are feasible, I can reach no other conclu- Pioyed at fair wages who wish to be ainn than the one I havp named, anil Ployed than ever before. It seems to earnestly urge upon the legislature its mat everybody is prosperous but early consideration and adoption, "late of Pennsylvania. The proposl- it does not seem to me that there to borrow money to meet the de- will he anv occasion for an extended "n the treasury under all these con- aesslon of the present leeislature. and I Fns Is preposterous. It clearly was am very glad that an early day to intended by any one, and the adjourn has been agreed upon. Lcgls- fw to borrow money Is wanting. The latlon should be confined to clear and "frs of the constitution never con- admitted wants and should not be Plated that there would come a speculative nor adventuresome. P when the revenue of the state, A practice has grown up of carrying be insufficient to meet the ex- emnloves unon the rolls net nuthorlze.1 dltures. Neither Is It, In my Judg- by existing law, and -.vhose compensa- advlsable to recommend an In- t Ion Is fixed by appropriation bills in ' of existing revenues. Taxes have the closing hours of the session. There 'Imposed In such a direction as to. Is great danger of unnecessarily ln- ' most llkhtlv unon our nennle. hut crpanlnr the number nf emnlovpn hv I have rone nhnut aa far aa we ran thta nrnctlce. I ran aee no rpnson whv 80 with the present subjects of It should be continued. The legislature uon, for there Is a limit In taxing ' la the proper Judge of the number of employes necessary to properly trans act Its business, and the public will Justify a reasonable increase If there Is thises to tax without returning to a necessity for It. But the impression densome dava nrlor to 1M1. It la prevails that abuses hava grown an P. exceeded, ceases to be revenue Juclng. are no other properties or hrde through the custom of carrying tat employes upon the rolls and depending upon the appropriation bills In the closing hours of the teuton for their compensation. This custom should prevail no longer. If an additional number of employes la needed In the house and senate to properly transact the business of these bodies, let a bill be prepared reasonably Increasing the number. If such legis lation shall fail it would more th.iv likely Indicate that there was no neces sity for an increase. I do not know as yet whether a necessity for an Increase exists or not: It seems to me that the legislature Is the proper Judge of that, but I shall feel Justified In withholding my approval from bills appropriating money to pay employes not authorized by pre-existing law. I deem It also proper to express the hope that the present legislature may refrain from passing resolutions for investigating committees to investi gate industrial and other question. where the necessity for such investiga tion Is not clear. An investigation is never necessary unless to inform the legislative body fully upon the exist ing evils. Where sufllcient information exists to enable the legislature to remedy admitted wrongs by legislation there is no necessity for an investiga tion, and It is rarely that a subject comes before a legislative body where investigation and report are necessary to properly Inform the legislators. These Investigations withdraw the at tentions of the legislators from the proper scope and line of their legisla tive duties, prolong the session ot the legislature and are unnecessarily ex pensive to the state. The present legislature, by wisely re fraining from these errors, can do much to create that confidence which should always exist between the repre sentatives and the people whom they represent. There are many other subjects which I perhaps ought to discuss In this ad dress, but I have confined myself to those which It seemed to me to be my duty to discuss at this time. With a better knowledge of other matters I shall be better able to express my views upon them. 1 shall communicate freely with the legislature such views as I may have upon public questions, and hope that each member of each legis lative body will frrely communicate his Impressions and views to me. Uy this frankness and freedom upon the part of the executive und legislative de partments we will be the better able to avoid action detrimental to the state and to perform acts that shall be bene ficial to the state. I shall be glad to exchange any recommendation that I may have to make for a better one If a better one can he pointed out to me. I am Interested In and desire no legis lation that shall not be for the public good. I may not realize fully my ambition to be a good governor. That will be as It may. The people alone will deter mine that. But I shall earnestly try to make a good governor, and I prom ise to tell the people the whole truth about state affairs, no matter how un pleasant to myself and others It may be. The Miffli irg Steam Laundry . . . Is fitted out witli the lutost an.l very best mMulBttry. The pure liioiititiiii! water from the ue borough Dlant is now in use. It you were pleased with the work, better Rive the liiumlry a trial now, and note how Glean and white your shirt and collar have become. All Work Guaranteed To be First-Class. Will call for laundry and delivei at your door without, tiny extra chillies. Give us a trial. Wcsleij Klcckner, Proprietor. iiiti Wunlii K'AitrAiii. GRAPE HARVEST IN PORTUGAL. THE PORT GRAPES CARRIED TO THB TREADING VATS. i . . . Scene at the Vineyards of Boa Viato, valley of the Douro: Women Between Major General Miles and cut the bunches of gTapes into small baskets, carry them a short dis Oommissarv General Eaan. tance and fill large baskets holding near too pounds. Then men with sneepsKins inrown oyer ineir dmcks, anu piaucu aum iuw - mv heads, shoulder the baskets and move off in single file down the rug ged winding paths and flights of steps to large vats, where the grapes are mashed for wine. The soil containing a large amount of iron. EAOAN 8AY8 MILES IS A LIAS. lie Declare tho Commander of tin Army Unfit For Decent Society, should Be Put Out or the Army 111 Arrnlarnment Carefully Prepared. Washington, Jan. 13. Commissary Oeneral C. P. Eagan yesterday reap peared before the war lnvestlg-atlnR com mission to answer the charges of gen eral Nelson A. Miles concernlnK the rommlssary supplies furnished the army during the reeent war. Oeneral Ka zan's statement furnished the sensu tion of the war commission's history and was regarded by old army officers as one of the most remarkable attacki ever made in the history of the ser vice. Oeneral Eagan's statement to the commission was a bitter personnl at tack upon Oeneral Miles, so entirely unqualified, both as to scope and lan guage that the war commission return ed the document to EnRiin, Instructing him to expunge the objectionable lan guage. The subject In controversy was Oen eral Miles' already famous "embalmed beef" testimony and the letters and documents supporting it. Oeneral Miles had charged that the canned and refrigerated meats sent to the army In Cuba and Porto Rico were unlit for use, that they were preserved by th use of chemicals, and that they hud "been bought and sent to the army under pretense of an experiment." This reflection upon both the ability and honesty of the commissary depart ment had angered Oeneral Eagun and caused him to request to be recalled to reply to Oeneral Miles' charges. That his statements concerning the com manding general were not the result of a sudden outburst of passion was clearly shown by the fact that Oeneral Eagan read his remarks from a care fully prepared typewritten copy. Not the least remarkable phase of General Engan's statement was the language In which It was couched. There was scarcely a phase that would not have been characterized as sensa tional In an ordinary official utterance. After declaring that If Oeneral Miles' Sneer's Port Grape and Burgundy Wines are made from the same grapes grown on an eastern mountain slope in Passaic valley, New Jersey, the soil also anounaing in iron proaucea the real Blood-making, Llfe-prescrvlng Wines of the World the old, original Port wine grape of Portugal. No other wines equal these for invalids, weakly persons and the a;ed. None put tn market until nine years old. For Sai.k bv Druggists and Grocers. Also the P. J. Sherry, Burgundy, Socialite, Claret vin. iMi, and Climax Brandy vin. 1878, all used extensively in Hospitals and among the Medical faculty as the best to bt obtained. The unfermcnted Grape J uice is extensively used in New York churches for communion service. G. A. (iiitelitis, Agt., Mlddleburph, Pa. A SUMMER SAIL in ladies' shoes is a pleasant voyage afoot, For the pleas ure it gives, there's no sail like our sale. Crowds art enjoying it, and securing the prettiest, coolest'and best Ht ting Summer shoes now man ufacturetl, at prices which buyeis Iliad it a pleasure to pay. Iu house or street wear, pleasure or every-day practical purposes, walking, riding, or driving, we supply the ideal shoes demanded by fashion and the dictates oi individual taste. Ladies, whoever claims your hands, by all means surrender your feet to these shoes. 6. H. GIBSON, MirY OENERAL C. P. EAOAN. statement was true he (Eagan) "should be drummed out of the army and In carcerated in state prison," the com missary general continued: "If his statement Is fnlse, as I as sert it to be, then he should be drum med out of th'- service and Incarcerated In prison with other libelers. Ills state ment is a scandalous mei reflecting. upon the honor of every officer in the department who has contracted for or purchased this meat, and especially on the eommtssnry general myself. In riolnt; so Oeneral Miles Is a liar when he makes this statement. I wish to make It as emphatic und as course as the statement Itself. 1 wish to force the lie back Into his throat, covered with the contents of a camp latrine. "I wish to brand It as a falsehood of whole cloth, without a particle of truth to sustain it, and unless he can prove his statement he should be denounced by every honest man, barred from the clubs, barred from the society of de cent people, and so ostracised that the street bootblack would not condescen.l to speak to him, for he has fouled hi own nest, he has aspersed the honor of a brother officer without a particle of evidence or fact to sustain in any defrroo his scandalous, libelous, mall clous falsehood that this beef or any thing: whatever was furnished the army under 'the pretense of experiment." " General Eagan, referring to newspa per attacks, asserting that the secretary of war had ncthlng whatsoever to do with the furnishing of refrigerated meats or tinned meats. Nor had he attempted to control the contracts, awards or purchases, and In this con nection In heated language he attacked three New York newspapers and their editors and proprietors, whom he said should be Indicted and tried for treason. "Having traversed General Miles' statements." he said, "having shown him to be a liar, having dem4rstrated the animus that pervades the whole matter, I now go back to his state ment that In his Judgment food was one of the serious causes of so much sickness and distress of the troops. The design to say, to imply, to assert, to Insinuate that sickness was caused for such reason In Porto Rico Is to make an assertion wholly untrue, de void of facts, devoid of truth, and can only be prompted by a base motive an t under cover of the qualifications, In my Judgment." General Eagan said General Miles le gally had no such control of the purse as he assumed In Porto Rico, nor does the law authorize him to set aside food furnished under the law, but It does determine how to hold accountable the party furnishing Improper food. General Eagan concluded as follows: "The damage that has been done by these statements Is believed to be very great, but I indulge the hope and th? belief that my statement will offset the statements made by General Miles, and will, In some measure at least, do Jus tice to others that have been wronged, maligned and libeled. For myself, I content myself with expressing my profound belief that either General Miles or I should be put out of the ser vice: either he or I am right; either he dishonors his uniform with his false statements and libels or I dishonor mine In feeding soldiers with poison ous beef, causing their sickness, and doing 10 under 'pretense of experi ment,' " Orphans' Court Stile of REAL ESTATE ! The undersigned AdmlnlstTnlornl the estate ui HenrytJrubb, sr.. Ints uf centre iwp., Huyder ro.. Pa., (leoeasetl under mid hj h certain order i-.ui'ci out ui the ornnanfi' court 01 sio aer in, lor I lie pu lilt 111 on lie del it of s:ilil lie UMKl, win Mwise in public mile on itic piiini-r in huiil tOWDhlilp, oil FRIDAY, JANUARY 27th. 1899. Hie following (lescrlhed vuliiulilc icul cMu'o lo wit : TttAtT no. L Being H certain dense mid i"i nltuatelu the village of Osntievllte, Bayder ro. rn . loiiiiileii on me .Mri 11 n 1111 alley, on .in .nsi lu mi nl .I0I111 OllL' on 1 he : inn li 10 v :t I tl street and on ine west by . public si reef, oon inllilligONK-IIALF (V ACHE. whIi Hi"1 Ppur- "'liiinccH on which me eu-cit-o u 1 wil hum DWELLING HOt'BB, STABLE and other out buildings. Wi ll ot water near the door and CMlOC Iruli Irei h. TRACT No. 3. Being n wr'uln niosauagi'. tenement and truci or hunt hliuute in centre twp., Bnydir Co., Pa., bounded Nortli by lands nfHssr) snook, on ine Ban t v inniis 01 itsvid Hover, on the smith by lam of iiuvmi ockei mil thcticlrs 01 I'll il. ill S'ellli. 1I1 I'll mill n Public Road, and rn the WeM by 1 rliih tt'elrlclt roniainiOR bixti inn .inn s, mom or 11ns, w lib the appurtenarces on which are erected 11 large tiro Mory i.oi; HOCBK. hank hahn unjoin rout buildings, Nearly all tlw laud la clear and in a fair Mate or cultli hi ion. Bale to commence ai 100'ciock a. m. or said 1l.1v nr Tract No. J. and al I o'clock P. II. on Truci No. 1 . w hen line alii i.ilniici' w ill I c ulM'li mil lerniK of sale win he made known by I1KNRY oltriui', .111 , Administrator. a v- L - 7 V S v Ml 1 M v. Wfi v . f..i I " I 1 1 I I J Notice in Partition. In Hie estate or William nnllrnbncli, late ol Perrj Township, Bnyder 'o., ln deceased, l o Hannah Hollenbacb.wldow 01 William Hoi leubacn,rifc'd, of I'baptnnri iwp.. Bnyder Co., I'a.i v my Splcber (nee llollnnbucli) Intermar ried wilt! John L, nplcker 01 Liverpool, Perrj nil., pa.i Lavlna lleckert (nee llollenoacn) Inter married with William lleckeri ur Chapman two.. Snyder Co.. Pa., and Hamuel Hollenbach ir I'crn iwp., sn.Mlerro . I'n.i William Portline, husband ol Kvo Portzllne (nee Uolletibucn) now deceased; Catherine Shaffer (net Portzllne) in leruiHirled with James Shaffer, Henrj k. Portr line. Martha Btroub (nee Portrline) intermar ried with Wesley Blronh, ttertle I'omllno ami siissan Portzllne, minors above the age 01 U ears who have for tl.elr guardian Philip Kelter all of Perrj twp . Bnyder Co . Pa . and William 11. Portzllne or TrevertoOi North'd Oo Pa. Vo-: are hereny notified timt nj rirtuea of a writ of Inquisition issued 0111 or rne orphans' Court ot Snyder Co. ami to me directed, an In quest will be held on Tract situate In Perr twp . Bnyder Co., Pa., hounded and described an rot- h its, viz : on the North by lands or heirs or winiani portzllne. dee'd. on the Bast by lands ol o. Wi Portzllne, on the soul h by hinds' of lame, and QforgS 1. tun arid on the West l.y lands nt Hatnuei Hollenbach, containing about Klgnt; (mo Acre, more or less, with the appurtenances, on THURSDAY, KKHltl AhY 16, A. li.,Ri9, at 10 o'eiock A-M to make partition or ralua- Ion ol the real estate el said deceased, when mil where jou may attend It von rhlnk proper. Jan. Ii IMK.i. p.s. Itl'l Tl.lt. Sheriff. Look ! Look ! ! Look nt youpspJf w lien you buy clothing; al my ploie, I keepcou I stantly in stcck the best and Qneet line of Hats nml Gents' (Jlotbing. Furnisbina uuods, Underwear and Ciijif. Call to see luv stuck. W.B. BOYER'S BROTHERHOOD STOPE SCNBURY, - - PKNNA CAUTIOVIHOTICB. Notti-e Is 1 rn-hy Rivt n that W6 linvo n r- cIlHrifcl tlolll Mill. K. Unwell, t lift? fo'lowlllg niUni l urt n It - which Die Maid Howell pUrcbtMH ed ikt a onvtAblc nh i 'I w o homes, pt p wn- gbn. 4 nettn of ir nr-, hujry anil I- l- wnon. WC have left the al ovt i roprrty iti tin hand of H M. Rotviff and all m noni We rntitionrd not to iretldli with tin- Mimr BTR1KIKGEB BROS. Midd.rhu.K, PM Jan. M. IM9U. Vail neone Mttsred IS eti tartH yon or dr. frre. PoiXTI Co , 'JM Osk Blfcc., Jkhton. mMtISm wcT' 1. , OBTAINED. DnTENK rniLlllU TEEMS EASY. Consult or communicate with tho Kditor if thla paper, who will give all needed infor mation. Veterinary sOrceoN. SELINSGROVE. PA. All professional business entrusted to my care will receive prompt and carcfiil attention. p8. O. CROU8E, ATTORNKY AT LAW. HlDDLRBLRO, PA. All bueinecs entrusteJ to hie care ill receive prompt attrrjtion. mm mm in. USSR ..C'lyvV, ' St mk K " HA.- & M. XfPI mm IDi3 r- WANTED-BRAINS baltemaulUBtTliiTlol'raUlo t si! lines. sUtaM innm of Wuiltiten tij. nil look eon u mu in. ItwUlbimturnfttiotUu. Wriu nto-daj. CuTctuifiwiuuCH pttoiti rrotoct ow iaou: Umj b7 Mif jn rttiit. Won iwtotet for paUt' F nr llbtrtl oStn ie 4 lata'i Aulitut. Btifor ia ulK . OOPP A CO. Me IttufMTn VuVfaftaa n" II rrr? smz ey all I FIRST CLASS Ci:.AR DrALERS !l IN STATES $1.95 BUYSAiyo SUIT I.UUO IUIIUHU HUIOIIIIUI. C'tllBM MldMIIII IBM. BUSltr fB.IO b.i.t' I- Mm Imrul t.luiilu it $l.0S. iiiwwiTranrorur orti.,.uitu wlilch don't (lv Mikltfsxlory . nr. Send No Mom, cm tm vi om lit k '7 JiJ wijr hi'inci larfdor 111.11 ivi "Kv. wiu no wiii.iun juii .u oil tT eipreM.C O.il.. inbJert ti -tn.lB- ftttnn. Tou c&n eumlne it ilTouriiiDrHi office anrl If found perfectly prM.riwtory and equftl to outto told la your town tor .u, p7 jour exprew ngnnt ear af iiai offer BrM . ai.OOaad eteraaaeharirH. THKBB ENIE PANT BUIl tt ae for baya trm 4 U U ya ar agf . SM BraretalleA oioijebeeo at M.M, lade wilk dntitle ml end kneee. lauat Its elate aj llluatrated, made from a. aneclal waeeejalkw. fc.n- aUrkL A IX-WOOL Oal wall eeaeUKre, neet, hendi me rat- tern, tine Mrs Unlnc, Ctejiea patent tntrllplrir. pad dins, etartnej and reioxoroinf, ai I k end Uaen ecwlng. Ih Ullerede Ueeeoljeot. a nit Urf boTor parent x.mld heproudof. ma FBIB CLOTH liSFLCS ef B.;.' Or iM.t (111, OTereosle or oietere). for boyt 4 TO 10 una, wrHe ter UateJa Seek So. ISC, oonlaUM feehlon pUttaV m l Who neauur end roll Inaoi anil n how to i rrr. lew'a Sella ead Owereeaaa aaada lo eedwr frwia SI.09 SSw Samplee nml fro on eppUeetloa. Hewn, SfcAK. hoeBUCR a to. t ine-I.Chicago, iil a taken I Uut tram a roat dadaioa at tb MpMKnettem""' 1 C.e. wvUlv III I for retriL prlcee for this year. J mVm. V 0 .