LIVE QUESTIONS. A Series of Articles Contributed by Advanced Thinkers. SUCCESS. 1 would not be a quueu I Verily, "lis better to be lowly born And range in humble lives in content Than to bo penk'd up in u glistening grief | And wear a golden sorrow. Thero are many crude ideas of success. I B\)r convenience, let us inquire what is not success? The careers of such men as labor for wealth, notoriety, fame, ease, position, power, are not commendable nor success ful. Our material progress, railroads, telegraph lines, cities, industries, inven tions, etc., are not success, but may bo its outer indications. Success really means to seek—to go after. Its prime conditions are intelligent action or work. Wo must measure success, then, ! by mental, moral and spiritual stand ards. In other words what one is and does marks one as a success or failure. Just now when wo measure everything by a money standard, it is difficult to believe that success is altogether a mat ter of the soul. Soul success is inclusive. What is success? It is to succeed. Some one said, 44 Nothing succeeds like success." Equally true is it "that noth ing fails like failure." The real mean ing of success is to go after, and of course to get what you seek. I want to emphasize two root ideas (a) to go and (b) tho purpose. Success then is action, intelligent action, or ac tion with a purpose and especially the ' results of moral conduct. But all real success is measured by what a man is mentally and morally. What does a man know and how does he live? are the fundamental questions in testing suc cess. According to this view, then, Socrates, Plato, Aristotle, Isaiah, Galilei, Bruno, Spinoza, Paul and Tschcrnuitschooski were all successful. For instance,Tscher nuitscheuski was imprisoned for writ ing a book—viz, "What Is to Be Done?'' It appeared on the occasion of an at tempted assassination of tho czar. It was a wild plea for universal human liberty and equality. The author, a brilliant scholar, was banished to the hard frontiers of Siberia, where he has been confined in a cold, wooden prison, with barely enough clothing and food to sustain him. He was so earnest in tho advocacy of his plea that he tore a splinter from tho wall of his prison, dipped it in his own blood and wrote upon tho walls. For humanity, liberty I and progress lie is successful in a high degree. Success is to form pure, refined char acter. It is to be noble, to bo tender, to be enlightened, to be free, useful, earnest just and peaceful. Freedom from tradition, hobbies, opin ions, prejudices, vanities and conceits, to be allowed to think and act in har mony with the eternal nature of things, to live to learn and to learn to live. My angel—his name is Freedom— Choose him to be your king. Ho shall cut pathways east and west i And fend you with his wing. -Emerson. ' Nations are "lifting their right hands up to swear the oath of freedom." Yes, over all the western world, yea, over all the east, shall palpitate the warm, free heart of liberty. The god dess shall wave her wand, and flowers shall bloom in souls now barren aad waste. Success will result in such noble types of men and women as wo dream of, described by Tenusyon in 4 4 ln Me- 1 moriam." This freedom to think, inquire and act is the highest gift of God to men. It is the nature air of the soul. It is tin sal vat ion brought by him who is the j master teacher and who broke the glad ' message to men which fell like distant music on their ears, like refreshing dews on their drooping hearts, that message ! which said, "I came to bear testimony to tho truth, and if tho truth shall make you free, you shall be free indeed. " J. W. CALDWELL. LET THIS WORLD BE FOR MAN. If God over manifested his power on tin* mountains of Jud.caor tho shores or Galilee, he is also active throughout j America today, and his hand can b- 1 seen shaping events in New York, Chi- j eago, New Orleans and St. Louis, .as i Bible history tells us he shaped the events of Sodom, Babylon, Damascus and Nineveh. Many people say, "Do not mix religion with politics," but ! that is just what is needed. Not sec tarianism and politics, because sectari anism is irreligion. But the need of the hour is to take the commandment "Thou sliult not lie" out of tho Bible and mix it with everyday business. Take it to the Merchants' Exchange, even if it burns a hole through the floor, j and also place it at tho counter of the dry goods house and grocery store, even if half the wheels of traffic cease. We must take the command "Thou shall not steal" and mix it with St. Louis politics,even if the mixture causes an ( x plosion. Wo must continue to stir it and rub it in, even if many of our rulers be forced to give up their drunken feasts for prison fare and substitute striped clothes for broadcloth. The foremost need of the army of righteousness in this world at the pre s ent time is not for more soldiers, but . for better generalship; not an increase in tho number of privates, but for a few bold commanders who will introduce discipline and order into that chaos of moral and religious sentiment, now largely dissipated by eternal strife. Tho church must stop theorizing and quar reling about the nature of God and he gin to do God's work. It must step dc - voting tiie chic f part of its energies to the study of ancient literature and mod ern theories which tieat of his disposi tion and proceed to realize his kingdom in this world. A business man fits out a company of laborers with brooms, scrubbrushes, 111 ops, scrapers, water spouts and bottles I of carbolic acid and starts them toward u block of old buildings which he wishes ; renovated and cleared of rats, mice, i spiders and other insects, with their cobwebs and mud huts. Suppose that toward evening while walking down the street he finds that his men, instead ! of doing their work, have been engaged all day in a free fight, and he sees a dozen laid out bruised and bleeding in : the street and the rest hammering each j other with their brooms, mops and scrub brushes, and one fellow actually empty ing his bottle of carbolic acid, intended for insects and bacteria, over tho head and face of an opponent. Tho employer asks the cause of the difficulty, and the leader of one group says to him: "Mr. Business Man, wo have boon defending your honor. The leader of tho other fellows, bleeding there on tho curbstone, said that you had a wart 011 your chin, that your nose was red, and that you did not love your wife, and for this I and my friends havo been trying to punish them." Another man runs up and says: "Mr. Business Man, my friends have been martyrs to the cause of trying to ex plain the true nature of your disposition to these ignorant disturbers of the peace. They claim that you have a mole on your left ear, that your complexion is ruddy and that you spend too much money 011 your family. You should dis charge them ut once. They are your mortal enemies." What do you suppose Mr. Businc as Man would do? Ho would say the same : thing to them that God Almighty says in thundering tones to the wrangling mob who claim to bo his workers in tho world today: "I sent yon to clean up and renovate a portion of my belongings. Instead of doing tho work I sent you to do you havo wasted your efforts, quarreling over your differences of opinion concern ing my appearance and my disposition. I never asked you to defend my appear ance, nor to force others to sco me ex actly as I am or as you think me to be. j I asked you to do a definite and specific work and you have failed miserably. 1 Begone 1 You shall never behold my faco j again." Friends, Christ is tho head of tho church. He is our great employer and has said: 4 Tf you love me, keep my com • mandments." "Feed my lambs." "Even as ye do it unto one of the least of these your brethren ye havo done it unto mo." About us there is a poverty stricken humanity, bruised and torn by supersti tion, prejudice and unrestrained greed. We are here to heal these wounds, calm theso passions, dissipate this ignorance and displace prejudico and bigotry by ' enlightenment and kindness. If wo do tho work properly that ho has com manded u, we will liavo neither time nor inclination to quarrel and argue about hairsplitting differences of doc , trine. ' Let all who believe in tlio reign of good adopt tho ono watchword, "This world for God." And let us who hap pen at the present time to bo located in this particular community begin opera tions at once to inthrono God in St. Louis. Let us declare that boodling, ! bribery and bulldozing must go; that • 1 lie affairs of the city hull must bo con sidered as sacred us the affairs of tho sanctuary, becunso they have to do with all our intimate relations of life, thoed ; ueation of our children, the protection of life and property and the supervision of all of the primary and important ac tivities of our people. As we would clean rats and spiders and parasites from the holy places of our cathedral or synagogue or meeting house, if by some 1 negligenco of ours they gained access I there and took temporary possession, so let us clear our central public building i of St. Louis of the parasites, the hungers j on, the public plunderers, jury pluggers ; and ward heelers who have made jus -1 tice a commodity to be bought and sold and polluted tho whole stream of our public life by the contagious poison of 1 I their uvarice. The church has a great ' opportunity. It is to regenerate our civil ; institutions and to co-operate with God j in tho creation of a higher civilization. Will tho church embrace this oppor tunity? WALTER VUOOMAN, Secretary St. Louis Civic Federation. RAILROAD RECEIVERSHIPS AND RE ORGANIZATIONS. Chief Justice Hussell, in his address 1 before tho American Bar association, touched upon the quest/on of railroad receiverships. He showed iiow great in justice is done to tho stockholders and suggests u remedy. He says: ! "Many of the securities represent in vestments of more than their face val ue. Capital stock has been frequently issued without payment, often as a bonus to go with the bonds. In this | way the money of creditors has been invested and the control of the property retained by the debtor—the railway ! company. The failure of a railway com pany finds tho managers united and fully prepared for the emergency which they inevitably have foreseen, while it finds the creditors scattered, ignorant and frighte nod and entirely unr< ady to act. What has happened in practice? | We havoseen the managers, while stout- ' ly denying up to the lust moment that i my such step was ccutimphitcd or that the property was in any way cm bar -1 assi'd, secretly prepare a bill in equity ) -id without rtoticc to any one interested j 1 le it in a court of tho United States, 1 sking for the appointment of receivers. As a matter of fact, in every case tho proceedings have been collusive. Tho manager ; of the insolvent company have eontroll-l both sides of thv litigation. The selection of receivers is a matter of the deepest concern to a great many persons. There should be no undue haste in the choice of such officers. A restraining order will hold everything until after rot ice and hearing, leaving the property meanwhile to be managed by its officers us before. Every bank rupt or insolvent law that wo have known lias left the choice of assignees to the creditors and 110 reason exists lor not applying this rule to railway re ceiverships. " SUPPLY. "Why does nil heaven move toward be seeching souls." Nathaniel Burton. Empty the brook-fed busin high on the mountain side, Drain it drop by drop, and make it dry as you will, Tho forces that guide the waters no vacu um can abide. They rush, they Join, they link thelr*threada in a foaming tide, And down they hurry and hasten the spent pool to refill. j Empty tho sphere of glass, exhaust Its last spent air, i Seal It and make it sure, and deem your work complete, Eot but a pin pierce the fabric anywhere, ' And the urgent and crowding ether, for all your guarding care, Will enter and fill the space, and laugh at your swift defeat. So to tho empty chambers of these crav ing souls of ours Conies the Invisible grace which breathes from the Lord of Heaven, i Comes as comes to the sand the tide with its freshening powers, , Comes as come to the harvest the solac ing summer showers, As to thirst of the desert the draft which is life is given. Only be ready and wait, and Heaven shall haste to bless, j Empty tho old wine out and nmlce a place for the new, Swifter than rushing wind shall the force divine down press. And the pitiful Lord instead of the want and tho loneliness Shall give the peace of peace and the fullness ol joy to you. —Susan Coolidge, In S. S. Times. LAST OF THE BUFFA LO. Tho American Bi3on Is Fa3t Disap pearing from tho Continent A New Breeding Ground lias Recently Been Established at Adrian, Mich.— A Happy and Growing Fam ily ut I'age i'ark. ERIIAPS one of the < most remarkable iggSfSya lionuJ history ol Jfy the North Ameri- L&w\ys can continent is V* the rapid disap penrance of tin fylW buffalo,which erst while roamed ovei vast ranges of territory in almost count less herds and in absolutely countless numbers. The American bison, more popularly and commonly termed the buffalo, is the last of three varieties of this peculiar species of the ox family. The first was the Eur-Asiatic variety, uhich in the days of Komulus and Heinus roamed through the forests of (Saul and Gerniania, now, like its Amer ican cousin, nearly extinct, being-found very rarely in the forests of Lithuania. The second of the species is the Indian bison, frequenting the wooded ranges <>f the Himalayas; and tlie third, the short-necked, broad-breasted, hairy shouldered with whose appear* \ - 1 GROVER CLEVELAND. r.nce every American schoolboy is fa- | miliar, although living specimens have \ for some years been growing l more anil j more rare, until the entire family has i been threatened with extinction. The American bison has a reputation ns a tighter. Vet naturalists say he is the most peaceful and inoffensive of the mammal family. If the scientists who write books on natural history are to be credited, then plainsmen, hunters and all writers of the wild western school must be tlie direct descendants of Ananias. These animals in days of yore ranged over ail that portion of North America west of the Hudson ami Alleghenics and south of the Columbia river; but i for many years they ceased to exist | east of the Father of Waters and erowd- j i:1 ever westward toward the setting j sun, having apparently distanced the j Indian on the route toward utter ex- j ti net ion. In anticipation of such consumma- j tion the Smithsonian institution at ; Washington, anxious to preserve some specimens of the American bison, not i many years ago sent a commissioner I into the far west to procure the neces sary hides and heads of male and female sjecimens, to he stuffed and set up in the museum. So rare had these ani mals become that it required long and vigilant search, and then only through the most unexpected luck, after divers discouraging failures, was the messen ger able to secure the desired trophies. With the exception of a small and rap j idly-diminishing herd in the Yellow stone country and another among the hills of New Hampshire, the types o! buffalo to be seen to-day are almost entirely confined to one or two mangy specimens in menageries and zoos at tached to public parks. Their propaga tion by private enterprise has. however, recently been attempted, and what promises to be n well-equipped and suc cessful breeding ground lias just been established with flattering prospects in the suburbs of the Adrian Mich. Two of the leading 1 spirits in the enterprise are Messrs. J. Wallace Page and Walter Clement. Commencing in a small way some time ago they fitted up a coraJ in which were inclosed a cub bear, a coyote, a wolf, n wild cat and some deer, trophies of the hunt and donations from time to time of friendly Nimrods. These constituted u sort of happy family, until their num bers increased to such an extent that it no longer became possible to maintain the necessary entente eordiale. Final ly the advent of some trained elk made an extension of the territory devoted to this incipient zoo a matter of neces sity. A picturesque location of some 40 acres was purchased in the north west ern suburb of the city, which was strongly fenced in and duly partitioned, and into this tlio amateur menagerie was turned loose. The park consists of rich, rolling land, partially wooded, with lots of good pasture, and a minia ture lake of about three acres. In the soilt.hwest corner is what was once a commodious farm dwelling, which is now used as a residence by the keeper of the grounds. The original arrivals turned loose here comprised a number of deer, indigenous to the forests of iipj>er Michigan. These wore reinforced by some 18 elk, several of which have l>ecn trained to harness. About one third of the total number were females, and during last summer a number of deer and elk were bred there. A short time ago Mr. Clement con ceived the idea of introducing a herd of buffalo, believing that the shaggy de scendants of the erstwhile monarchs of ,the plains would increase, flourish and grow fat. The culmination of this idea was seen a little later, when a massive male specimen, about nine years old, with four females as a retinue, was im ported and turned out to browse on the rich sward of Page? park. The female quartet of the combination consists of one yearling heifer and three cows, just past two years old, their weights rang ing from COO to 000 pounds. The procurement of the Page herd was not altogether an easy matter. It was one thing to resolve to get and raise buffaloes, and quite another thing to find the. necessary nucleus for such a family. In order to carry out his proj ect Mr. Clement found it necessary, in stead of seeking the land of the setting sun. to stalk the wildsond fastnessesoj Lincoln park, Chicago. Not long ago ho noticed tliat the superintendent o| Lincoln park, 11. C. Alexander, had de termined to dispose of a surplus of n great variety of the animals there, in order to introduce n better and choicer variety. Mr. Clement at once decided upon Lincoln park as his future field of operations, but before he could gef there he found that the pork authori ties had already sold several specimens to the government, to be turned loose in Yellowstone park. Mr. Clement found, however, that there were five more i which might be had. lie at once toolc j i them. Since the five animals were corraled , in the Chicago jungle, thanks to Mr. ; Clement's diplomacy and long-range j bank account, two new bulls have been | secured from a park near Fort Wayne, j Ind. These are pronounced very fine j specimens, weighing something in ex | cess of 2,000 pounds each.—G. W. Lur will, in Chicago Chronicle. (iec.ie, Ptga and I'luma. A gentleman living in eastern Geor* ! gia owned a pair of geese and some I half-grown pigs, both of which rcsort ! cd to a small plum thicket on the hill ! side, to pick up the fallen fruit. A : mall branch of one of the trees was ; broken and bent down to the ground, and the geese had somehow discovered ; that by catching the end of the branch ; in their bills and shaking the tree by | means of it, they could bringdown the | plums. The pigs, seeing what was go ing on, soon found it for their interest to follow the geese to the plum thicket.. The geese would shake the tree, and the sound of a grateful shower of fruit | would be heard; but before they could | cat the plums the pigs would have greedily gathered up most of them, | (ircatly exasperated, and with good I reason, one of the geese would seize a pig by the ear, while the other ! inarched 011 the other side of him, j screaming and scolding. In this way, ! beating poor piggy with their wings at every step, they would escort him to 1 the to] of the hill and there let him go. ! Then they would return to shake the j tree again, with a similar result. This I scene, says a correspondent, I have witnessed daily during the plum sea son.— Youth's Companion. Tansies, ever since Shakespeare's time, and perhaps for ages before, have been symbolic of thoughts or remem brance. Two or three poets, a hundred years earlier than Shakespeare, men tion the flower as having this symbol ism. _ AGiJSE C7 THE STOMACH. k Restaurant Observer M uken ooiuo )'h <- I was trying to dispose of a straw •ierry breakfast and my morning pn ■cr at the same time—about 11 o'clock, it was a public restaurunt in Herald square, and the late break fosters be gan to become adulterated with early hincliers. The world never stands still in Herald square. The kitchen here, shifts cooks, u new set of waiters go on at given hours, a change of faces in the cashier's window—that's nil. Hut men and women come and go at the little, clean bare tables all day, while new forms and faces are reflected from the mirrored walls at night. There are men just finishing their suppers be fore going to bed when the early work ers begin to pour in for their break fasts. There are breakfasts being or dered ns the midday business lunch is being bolted by hurried hundreds. In short, there are breakfasts, lunches, dinners and suppers being served dur ing every hour of the day and night— and no questions are asked and no troublesome explanations required as to the comer being too late for the one or too early for the other. Only in such a resort can one get n realistic glimpse of the great city. ). was thinking of this when a young man carrying n dress suit came in and took .1 scat opposite to me, ordering a straw berry shortcake and a glass of icc<l tea. This served ns an appetizer, ap parently, as he immediately followed it with a beefsteak, fried potatoes and coffee. All of this vanished before I had finished my strawberries, and the young man's place was taken by a sleek looking gentleman, who got a single egg with brown bread and a glass of water, upon the destruction of which lie drew from his rear coat tail pocket a small parcel, took therefrom a glass about as big as a thimble, and poured some sort of medicine iuto it, which be tossed off with an nir of patient resigna tion. A woman with a face that-would split wood sat just beyond, reading a newspaper through a pair of gold glasses between desultory nibbles of dry toast and furtive assaults on a little metal teapot on her right. The tea and the toast cost five cents each, but she got five dollars' worth out of them. She looked daggers at a young gourmet across the way, who began breakfast j with an omelet, called for a clean plate ! and got away with a huge veal cutlet and fried potatoes and two glasses of [ milk, closing things with ttvo big sec tions of fruit cake as an evidence of good faith. | Such terrible abuses of the human stomach as can be witnessed in these ]ilaces would frighten a savage. Dur ing business hours an amount of food is bolted within a few minutes—or, nt least, but half masticated—that ought, to have claimed half or three-quarters of an hour. The women, ns a rule, cat sparingly. Women in restaurants ala carte are more economical than men. The price is a leading consideration. They look over the bill of fare for the bargain counter. Next to the surpris ing number of women who live in res taurants is the surprising cheapness with which they live. They can get all that is necessary, and get it good, for about three dollars a week.—N. Y. Cor. Pittsburgh Dispatch. SPONGING WOOLENS. How to Renew Various Kind* of Glossy i l>rcsn Good*. Since the popularity of tailor cloths it seems strange that it lias not lieeome the custom to sell cloths already riponged. Dealers declare that the average shopfier is so taken with the specious gloss of the unsponged cloth that it does not pay to sell it without this gloss. As a matter of fact, this gloss, which is removed by sponging, is put on by the manufacturer at- eon side ruble trouble, merely to attract cus tom. Tailors invariably display "sponged cloths." As no such fictitious wilue seems to attract the male cus tomer or the woman who goes to the tailor for her gown, it is quite probable that the slight shrinkage to which n sponged cloth is subject is cause for the ordinary merchant's objection to the sale of sponged goods. The coin petition in all dry goods is so great that the few pennies loss from the shrink age of a yard of goods would neeessar- l ily affect the price that must be ; charged. It. is not. always easy to find a regular spouger. Such jiersons charge about three or four cents a yard for spong ing double-width goods, and it pays to employ him, because he does his work thoroughly. Where this work must be done at home the best way is to wring out in cold water sheets or pieces of cot ton the width of the cloth, which is usu ally a yard and a half, and lay the pieces ' smoothly over the cloth, and roll it up I firmly. Wrap a layer of dry cotton ; around this roll, and let it rest in some j place where it will not be disturbed j for 24 hours. At the end of this time | unroll it gradually, and press it with a hot iron on the wrong side until almost or entirely dry. Hang it on a line for 12 hours, and it is ready for use. A great many styles of dress goods not included in tailor cloths arc improved by spong ing. l'ongee silk and other soft India silks arc always treated in this way by expert dressmakers to prevent tliein fading. Any very glossy goods of such high finish as to suggest their having Ijeen passed over hot ealenders to give j them a specious gloss, should always 1 be tested with watei to see if it spots ! them. If it. docs, sponge a sample and j see what the goods look like after this I process.—N. Y. Tribune. Confectionery Chips. Take half a pound of flour, ten ounces of sugar, three or four entire eggs, and a little vanilla. Mix and whisk the sugar and eggs, add the flour, '•lit the paste into sticks six or seven inches long, on a slab, waxed and dust ed with flour; bake in n hot oven; when •lone twist them round a little stick to j give them the spiral shape.—N. Y. Mer -1 vUry. ICASTiRIAI for infants and Children. THIRTY years* observation of Castoria with tlie patronage of millions of proog, permit ns to apeak of it without guessing. It is unquestionably thojbot_romedy for Infants and Children the world has ever known. It is harmless. Children like it. It Cives thorn health. It will save their lives. In it Mothers have something which is absolutely safo and practically perfect as a child's medicine. Castoria destroys Wormi. Castoria allays Fevorishness. Castoria prevents vomiting Sour Curd. Castoria cures Diorrhcoo L and_Wind Cello. Castoria relieves Teething Tronbles. Castoria cures Constipation and Flotnleney. Castoria neutralises the effects of carbonio ocid gas or poisonous Mr. Castoria does not contain morphine, opium, or other narcotic property. Cast or I a assimilate s the food, regulates th nstomuc h and bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. Castoria is pnt up in one-size bottles only. It is not sold in bulk. j. on 'i allow any one to sell you anything else on tho plea or promise that it is jnst as good " and " will answer every purpose." Seo that yon get C-A-S-T-O-R-I-A. Tho fao -amllo y / <&/• . , —' On .very gignatnro of wrappor. Children Cry for Pitcher's Casfcria. 'A (PC A A LOOK MOTHERS A i2A ESE TREAT FOR YOU Af.L. S7\ !A &°y s Sampson Su/t, with Extra Tair of rants, for V/ /ft I ANl> WE PAY EXPRESS CHAP3ES TO YOE3 DOOR. • V I ftMCMBER, you t.oy du; >. • Manuuctunr. In Anuria. I In Jit &£> CUR yy" . oijq FACTonirs. lE. RQSENBUROrER & CO., ZM K. 10-J St., ITsv/ York City | Printing! Envelopes. Do not be deluded with the notion that a Printed Envelope is not seen by anyone but the postal clerk. Consider your own Enve lopes in the light that you consider others. What an advantage it is, j when you receive a letter, to know, ! by simply glancing at the corner, who it comes from! A neat card on your Envelope will insure im- 1 mediate attention, if you are well established; it will assist you in dealing with new firms, if you have been in business for a few years; and it will materially help to give you a standing, if you are just starting in business. The Tribune (lives Silt inflict i O II on JCvery Job. Harness! I larness! Light Carriage Harness. $5.50, $7, $9 and $lO fit). Heavy Express Harness, $10.50, sl9, S2O and $22 Heavy Team Harness. double, $25, S2B and S3O. GEO. WISE, Jeddo and Fiveland, Pa. Boat Cough Byrup. Tastes Good. ÜBO in time. Hold by druggists. Watch the date on your paper. . ,Tl-c above mentioned $2.76 Bovs Sampson Suit y. h I \ir.l Pants is guarantied to be made from an impoiUii Won! ( heviot, in Jet Black, Dark Blue, Oxford l.rey and Olive Brown, in sizes from •5 to o ye; -rf .. e . 1 hey are made up as per cut Ivlov. I I dou' elreested with Sailor Collar, braided I with wide surtasch Braid. lined with a fast Black P Albert I will Sateen lining, Trimming and Work ii ' 'i' t:.' • ■'. !.■ Nt tl • Li'-t money can procure. Coat has 2 Side l ockets, a Top and Cash Pocket. Patent V-... t Bands i 3( .d on all Pants, also Pistol Pockets 0:1 :-d I I'ants. In Sizes l:iim to to t s years of age made up as per op". v cut. Double Breasted with extra Pants at same Price §2.; *2 ;o un. Prow.i CoSsT THE BEST W.! r. *t uar.tittol uvnS'nrltigMachine do n< i l-of.t ! bvnllunn.ru ivertiscments un'l or nt !,a.k you can get tlio bedt made, fill est. liOluuOtl and Most Popular for a mere ".en *. Pec fo it that nVr A v o froia reliable iiinnu- Light Running There is none in the world that struct inn, d inability of working v iinprovcuicutsas t-ko " - UluUy Nkw Ho me: It Lar Automatic Tension, Double Peed, alike on both sides in- die ( patented), no other has it; New Stand i patented i, driving wheel hinged on adjust? hie centers, kius reducing friction to the minimum. WRITS FOR CIRCULARS. THE NEW HOME SEVBIHG MACHINE CO. MAO 3. BOSTV* 23 T'KK.JF SQTTARS, N. Y Ci.iCAQo. !c „ UT T.oni,Mu 'viu.t?.Tus. HAN Fiunr * ' 1.. An.- HTA.GA. i F ttY 0. S. Ewing, general agent, 1127 Chestnut street, I'liila., Pa. it Scientiilo American jfl ARSCB, , . , COPYRIGHTS, ato. .r.. n J'.'- r,u^tlon nn'l free llundhook write to .i i & co J bnoAUWAT, NEW YORK. oiliest bureau for securing patents in America. Every patent token out y us Is brought before ttio public by a notice given free of charge lu the jptmatt iSJJK 8 * of nn >* r lontlflc paper In tlio man Ji, -l" ,| dly Illustrated. No intelligent man should I*, without it. Weekly, &3 <)<> a WANTED-AN IDEA&So thing to patent? Protect your ideas; they may i' J r , 1 T l if.. y f u ,.?y L ' l ! l . lh W,itu JOHN WEDDEII it Jy CO., 1 a tent Attorneys, Washington. I>. C.. tor their JI.BW priae offer. -
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers