REVOLT OF PLUTOCRACY Wealth Arrayed Against Con stitutional Government. MONEY MENACES THE PEOPLE. Till' Millionaires of This Country Openly Assert That Property Has tlio Divine ltlfflit to Utile Manhood -Triumph ol Cold Means the Servitude of the Masses. No single issue ever raised in the his tory of American politics exceeds in im portance that of opening our mints and redeeming our currency from the con trol of those foreign and domestic cor porations which seek to inflict on us as u permanent system their usurpation of the sovereign power of issuing and reg ulating the circulating medium. The only single evil greater than cor poration control of the taxing power is this of corporation control of the cur rency. It is greater because when the people are robbed, whether by direct m indirect taxation, the results quickly appear. But when tho robbery is carried 011 through contraction of cash and tin inflation of corporation credit paper they are brought to bankruptcy before realizing the cause. The entire plutocracy is in revolt against our system of popular constitu tional government-. So menacing a movement of class against people lias never occurred before l in our history— not even when the same class, under the leadership of the Biddies of the United States bunk, captured the administra tion of John Quiney Adams and so in trenched themselves in control of the government that they looked with con tempt on the attempt mad' by the pro pie under Jackson's leadership to dis lodge them and restore popular govern ment. Tho wealth of the plutocratic class of that day was trivial compared to the holdings of the same class now, but nevertheless the points of similarity between tho campaign which won against them then and that which ha? now been inaugurated arc striking in their suggestivoness of tho way history repeats itself both in causrsand results. John Quiney Adams had been el. eted as a Democrat, but he abandoned tlu party, repudiated the principles to which it had pledged his administration and endeavored to revive the Federalist ic party, whoso fundamental maxim, as defined by Daniel Webster himself, was that all stable and orderly govern ment must be based on property. As tho fundamental tenet of Democra cy is that all just governuu ut must he based 011 manhood right and 011 the consent of the governed, the masses ol the Democratic party ft It the same hot resentment against the Adams adminis tration which they now feel when they see federal officeholders controlling the action of convi ntions called at the in stance of Mr. Whitney of the Standard Oil company and Mr. Belmont, Ameri can agent of the Rothschild banks. Andrew Jackson but voiced this just resentment of tho masses when in his inaugural address h< declared that it was the right of the people to eject from office those officials who had used office in an attempt to dictate the result of elections. It was because tho people had seen federal offices use d to control state legislatures, to dictate nominations, to interfero at the polls, that Jackson de nounced life tenure in office as foreign to the spirit of America and declared that whatever tho evils of chang s they were less than those of the permanent tenure, which breeds in the officeholder the spirit of insolence and of despotism. He was again the exponent and cham pion of tho mass 1 s when he followed his attack on federal bureaucracy with a determined assault 011 the national bank and its control of the treasury and of congress. For this he was denounced in New York city and Boston as no othci American president had ever been de nounced before. But lie did not swerve. With a supremo confidence in the peo ple and in his own integrity, lie forced the fighting, keeping the aggressive al ways and not stopping to defend him self until overwhelming victory show ed that no man who really represents the cause of popular freedom need fear to appeal to tho musses for support of tho principles on which their freedom and progress depend. On the issue as it was then presented appeal has once more been made to the people. Tho plutocracy has once more usurped control of the government. De mocracy lias once more been b< trayod by those it trusted. Once more the mil lionaires of tho country are in the field openly asserting that property has a di vine right to rub manhood and that it is treason to deny it. They have drawn their lines of class and caste and drawn them hard. Those of them who once called themselves Democrats do so no longer. They call tho Democracy of Jefferson and Jack son, as they do tie- li pnblb anism of Lincoln, an evil thing. They say that the rule of the people is anarchy, and they threaten tho country with the worst they can do against it unless they are allowed to name tho next president and put Messrs. Ilanna and Morgan, Whitney and Belmont in control at Washington us their agents. Tho issue against African slavery was never so vital nor so sharply defined as this, for if theso few thousand men who control more than half the wealth of the country can use it to control the gov ernment it means servitude for the peo ple, regardless (if race or color. But they cannot win. There is not money —there arc not rifles and cannon enough in America or in tho world to impose plutocracy on America us a permanent condition. Against plutocracy and class govern ment the Democratic party has made its "appeal to Cwsar." And in Ann rieu there is 110 king but Cotsur and no (,'u ear but the people.—St. Louis Post-Dis patch. DEMOCRACY'S BATTLE. It 1 . ! iglitiiig For F<|iiul nights For AH, rrivilrgi-H For Noun. The Democracy of the United States knew what it was about and knew what it would have to face when in national convention it declared for free coinage of gold and silver and a stable dollar. It knew that it would have to meet all the tremendous power of tho whole privileged class, who have come to be : lieve that they possess a divine license to prey upon the masses. A nation of ■ 26,000.000 was taxed to starvation to maintain the 2.000 or 8,000 aristocrats wl 1 glittered around Louis XVI and Antoinette at Versailles, and those gor- , geous gentlemen and ladies were not ; more profoundly convinced that Provi- |, deuce had created France for their bene- j lit than are our own money grandees ! that their special interests are para- 1 mount to all other considerations. That they should rise in a body against tho I Democracy when it has the courage to , declare war upon tin ir unjust privi leges is only natural. It is only natural, too, that all tlio faithful retainers of the plutocracy should draw the sword and charge upon the Democracy with a fury superior even to that of their mas ters. It has ever been so with retainers. As there are "Catholics more catholic than the popp," so then- are multitudes of dependents 011 the wealthy who are more capitalistic than capitalists. Suck of these dependents as have called them- j selves Democrats obey the law of their j parasitic being by going over to Ilanna, j advance agent of the plutocracy, who is wallowing in money. But as the United States happens to . he populated chiefly by men, not coo- j lies, the Democratic party asks with con- ; fidonce for tlie support of the plain peo- ' pie, wlioso battle it is fighting. The 1 contest, us a contributor to The Jour- 1 mil's fund for the education of voters ! happily put it, is between those who make things and those who take things, j The issue is too clear to bo obscured. ! On the Republican side are ranged all \ the 111111 whose hands are habitually in the people's pockets, all tin men who seek to use the power of the government to further enrich themselves, all the shearers of the wool of tho labor sheep, all the men who understand and prac tice the art of getting much for littlo. ! These are the kind cf enemies the De- j inocracy is and ought to be glad to fight, j They are the natural foes of the Dem- j oeratio idea, and their success in this j campaign fvould advance prodigiously the movement for turning tho republic j into an oligarchy. The plain peoplo arc not to be do- I reived. They know with which party : their interest, the interest of the couu- | try, lit s in this great struggle for the supremacy of manhood over money. As j for the leaders who have gone, let them go. Generals who deem it wise policy j to be friendly with tho enemy are not ! the sort of generals who win victories ! that tell for Democratic principles and the welfare of the masses. The party is ! bettor off without them. Every American who owns himself and stands by the doctrine that the ma- j joritv of its citizens should rule tho re- i public for the common good will vote 1 for Bryan. Equal lights for all, privi- ; leges for none; that is true Democracy. —Now York Journal. If gold is a better metal fur coin than silver because it cau be handled easier— that is, because largo amounts of it are ICHS bulky—why not have diamonds as a standard and let one South African trust control tho world? Who Fight Should Govern, Says llryun. .Show me those people who now call us anarchists and I will show you a class of people who, if wo had a war, would never go to tho front, but they are tho ones who abuse those who would tight and save their own proper ty. I believe that the men upon whom the nation most i'< lies when it wants to increase its martial strength are its se curity in hours of peril. I believe that theso people can bo trusted to cast their ballot in times of peace to deviso tho various polities for this nation. If under a free silver law the Hilver dul ler fell below par that is, below the gold dollar as silver men believe it would not, we should make all our own goods in stead of Importing tliom and paying the difference. His Duty Clear. Huiiuu says that there is 110 more in telligent class of citizens than tho farm ers of the west, which is to say that they have too much good sense to vote for a man whoso policy is bound to in crease their burdens and lessen tho chances for tho fullest development ot intelligence in their children.—St. 'Louis Republic. If with tho free and unlimited coinage of hilvcr the dollar would be only a 53 cent dollar, tlio law of supply and demand must be a myth. There would be an un limited demand for all Hilver up to $1.29 The Outlook In Kentucky. The majority in Kentucky for Bryan and lTee coinage is more likely to bo 10,000 übove tho majority for Clove land than 10,000 below. Save this to ."Mupurrwith tho returns.—St. Louis Post-Dispatch. If under a free Hilver law the Hilver d Jl - remained at par, as Hilver men believe it would, tlio country would be benefited by having more money and not borrowed money. It could Hupply itH own capital. It took tho whole of the world's hint cry up to tliin century before It wan discov ered that gold was better for money than -diver, and by far tho larger part of th i world doesn't think HO yet. One Way to Get It. If tin Ilanna crowd want to get bank : the money they paid out to rescue Mo i Kinley's property from the sheriff, they , should take it out of the Republican J trtiupaigu fund.—Exchange. THE CLERGY. Rubenstein's "Christus," which was performed in Bremen last \ear, has been forbidden in Berlin on lue ground that the Prussian law prohibits the representation of the Saviour in public j entertainment. M. Francis de Pressense, son of the best known Protestant pastor and |X)li tician in France, is about to be received into the Catholic church, and probably will he follow ed by a number of French pastors. Leo X 111. is the doyen of the Catholic episcopate. He received Ids episcopal consecration in 154.1, and there is no bishop living whose consecration is so old. It. lias rarely happened that the j ope was the oldest bishop in the Cath olic world. A Congregational church as a mano rial of John Robinson, the pastor of the Pilgrim Fathers, is to be erected at Gainsborough, England, where Robin son gathered his first congregation of dissenters. The church will cost $.lO,- | 000, and Ambassador Bayard will lay j the corner stone. Prof. George Adam Smith, of the , Free Church college, Glasgow, Scot- ' land, who is described as "oue of the j leading scholars of Christendom, and j one of the greatest preachers of Great ; Britain," preached on a recent Sunday ! in the Old South church, Boston, and not a paper in Boston had a Hue about j him or his sermon. GRAINS OF WHEAT. Italy raises 102,000,000 bushels of wheat. Russia raises 180,000,000 bushels cf wheat. The wheat crop of India is 2.15,000,000 1 bushels. France raises about 231,000,000 bush els of wheat. The wheat product of Hungary is 110.000,000 bushels. The wheat fields of South Australia yield 7.0 bushels per acre. Great Britain produces 71,000,000 bushels, all consumed at home. The average wheat crop in England if 30 bushels per acre. In the wheat belt of Tndia the average product ion per acre is 9.3 bushels. The average yield of wheat in New South Wales is 15 bushels to the acre Manitoba, the great, wheat farm of British America, raises 19.7 bushels to ; the acre. New Zealand is more productive than New South Wales, yielding 20.5 bushels ! | per acre. INTERESTING SCRAPS. Tll Paris there are over 1,000 profes sional fort line-tellers. Tlio food nil elephant eats in captiv ity costs about $25 a week. Some of the London theaters are < wanned by electric radiators. A bicycle with wheels of pure gold ! has been presented to the queen of Italy. The largest standing army belongs j | to Russia, and the strongest navy to | Great Britain. 1 I. is said that the earnings of William I 1 F. Sims. M. F. Dwyer's jockey, average I $25,(100 n year. The largest edible oysters are found : in Australia. Rome of them measure a ; foot across the shell. A new style of cat has just appeared j j in Banbury, Conn. It is a kitten, with ' | t wo tails and six legs. I The births exceed the deaths tli rough - | out the world by over 1,500,000 a year , an averneo of three a minute. INDUSTRIAL ITEMS. j The great wheat countries of the j world are tie- baited States, Russia, 1 Turkey, Hungary, Chili, Australia and | India. j Of the total of :.-.0C0,000 sheep re -1 ported in the Faile d States last year it ! j is computed that one-fourth graze 011 j I 1 he mountain slo; e?; and valleys of the ; west and son lb v. est. I A \Vh ennshi lend improvement com- ! ; pnny, wiih a main irrigation canal 2(: ! j feet w ?1 • and six feet deep, has re- j ! elaimed square miles of good farming laud in the Muskegon hike region, j A Chicago factory has the largest belt ever made. It ir. 150 feet long, seven feet wide, weighs pounds, and seven •hrhtln of an inch in thickness. It is \ •ofiposed of I*. 1 oak-tanned hides, held (( ■ ether by glue, and there is not r. stitch or rivet in the entire belt. FOREIGN PICKINGS. Vienna's dentists have formed a so v! y whose oh j*• -t r practice in ploas a.il conversation while operating on patients. Orange-colored flannel shirts are reo intended for the English troops in i'gypt, til yellow is a protection against the sun. '1 lie Marquis de Mores has started for the Egyptian Soudan in order to draw together the Arab chiefs and resist the l'l itish advance. Five composite first-class torpedo boast are building at Cherbourg, of which the hull is rteel niul all other | met alio parts are of pure aluminium or aluminium alloys. Sautorini, the ancient Them, chief island of the Rporades in the Aegean s. a, has prehistoric remains which will he systematically explored by the Ger man school at Athens. NATURAL ODDITiES. The wheat fly is of an inch long, having a red body, white wings and black eyes. A newly-discovered west African but terfly spins a cocoon which resembles a mask made for a hnuin face. In India there is a species of butterfly in which the male has the left wing yel low and the right w ing red. Tliccolors pn the female are vice versa. The Atlas-moth, a gigantic fur-coated, I.'ght-llying insect of central Brazil, is I said tola- the very largest winged "hug" ! in the world. lie measures 14 inches ' from tip to tip. I HIGH MONEY, LOW TIMES. | j Mr. Bryan Says That Phrase Strikes the | Keynote of Political Economy. Lexington is said to be the citadel of I tiie gold sentiment of Kentucky. Yet it turned out—it and the regions round about—fully 40,000 people to greet Mr. | Bryan. j The Lexington procossiou, which | came off in the rain, was a striking fea ture. It was made up of horsemen ami I was fully five miles in length, j Mr. Bryan was interrupted by tho passing of the procession for 25 minutes, j When it had passed, he continued: ! "FELLOW CITIZENS— I have been in terrupted in the midst of speeches be fore, but I can say to you that of all this is the most pleasant interruption of which I have recollection. I shall re • member this speech which was cut in two by tho most remarkable parade which it has ever been my good fortune to witness. And they bore banners which presented mottoes which make any further speaking unnecessary. "If I were to tallk to you from now until night, I could not more than em phasize tho mottoes which have passed in procession by you. I noticed one mot to, drawn with letters not altogether ; according to the latest patterns, but it represented n sentiment that ought to find a lodgment in the memories of all —that is, 'High Money, Low Times.' "I challenge you to find in any of the speeches that will be made this year by I the opponents of free silver a single seu -1 tence that contains as much of political \ economy and common senso as is con tained in that phrase, 'high money, low times.' It seems that those things which are hidden from thoso Mho are themselves all wise are revealed unto those who in the estimation of the finan ciers are but babes and sucklings. I saw | another motto, 'Our Barns Aro Full, but Our Pockets Are Empty. 1 And in that sentence is epitomized 20 years of farming history, j "Nature smiles upon your husband ry, your soil gives forth in rich profu i sion, but according to tho experience of ! tho farmer, with all that he can do with his industry, with his economy, with j all his patient toil, ho finds that the load of the American farmer grows hard cr every year. "In modern times, under tho rule of thoso who ruled and swept the saber, as they said, by divino right, complaint was answered with the lash, but now tho just complaint of the toiling mil lions of the United States is answered by charges that they are anarchists and socialists. "My friends, there is one unfortunate thing in connection with the use of the word 'anarchist' as applied to those who aro handed together to restore the money of tho constitution—there is one unfortunate thing about it. Anarchy is a thing not to be considered in a land liko this. Anarchy can have no homo among the people who have the ballot to right their wrongs. And the unfor tunate thing about this campaign is that the name anarchist is applied to the bone and muscle of this country by men who are doing more to ovorfchro,, our government than any anarchist who over carried a red flag. "I say that when this word anarchist is applied to the toiling millions by men who seek without toil to usurp the fruits and reap the rewards of those who toil the danger is that it will make the name respectable because of its associa tion. "I protest against tho use of that name for the purpose which deprives it of all its terrors. My friends, those who are opposed to us cannot afford to place tho farmers of this country in tho posi tion of enemies of the government, be- : cause they are the only friends that any government ever had. "My friends, these very men who are abused and despised by those who doubt the capacity of the masses for self gov , eminent —these are the very people who in time of emergency must protect their calumniators from themselves and their associates. My friends, there is not a syndicate that has preyed upon the pub lic which would not rather try its case against another syndicate beforo the common poople of this country than bo fore a jury made up of a syndicate, j "Now, just one word more. There was one motto that impressed me more deep ly than any other motto, and I want you to carry that niotfcQ home with you when you leave this place and bear it in your memories everyday, so that you can read it when you rise up and again when you go to bed, so that it will bo a part of j'our political life. It is a short motto and contains but few letters. It j was, 'We Mean Business.' " If under a free tdlver law our foreign debtors think tliey would be robbed, they cau prevent that by adopting similar lawn Hud keeping the silver dollar equal to the gold dollar ins tend of forciug It down. That is probably what they would do. In ternational agreement would quickly fol low. What Will the Farmer Answer? Whenever any one tolls you that i farmers' crops are cheap becauso of i overproduction, ask him if ho would advise smaller farms and poorer land. I His opinion will be valuablo to culti vators of tho soil. —Cedar liapids Ga j zetto. Great Britain clings to the single gold ; standard not because it Is best for the world, hut because it is best for lier. She owns the gold hotli above and below grouud. llut is it the best for us? llanna's Army. Every trust, every desporato specu lator and option gambler, every usuri ous money lender, every stock waterer and inflationist, is in Hanna's army be hind the McKinley breastworks.—St. | Louis Post-Dispatch. A Call For Cockran. If Mr. Cockran could bo induced to speuk in tin* south as he did in Madison Square Garden,gold standard Democrats , would all come back.—Nashville Arnpr -1 icau. ILLINOISSAFEFGR BRYAN What a Close Canvass of the State Discloses. RURAL DISTRICTS FOR SILVER. 11l Chicago the Free Silver Candidate Is tin* Avowed Choice of the Trades Colons. A Conservative estimate Gives the State to the Democrats by 20,000 Plurality. A ransack of Illinois politically brings cheer to the free silver Democra cy. Both sides have of late laid violent claim to Illinois. Hanna and his coterie said it was to bo for McKinley; Jones, Altgehl and the Democratic leaders at Springfield and Chicago wore equally vehement in giving the state to Bryan and free silver. They declared the bat tle won for Bryan. The Hannacrats, in an ecstasy of eager voracity, announced, and do still, that McKinley would carry Illinois by 100,000 majority. The wish was fa ther to this bluff, for such it was. A bit of research disclosed this claim of 100,000 for McKinley to bo feather headed nonsense. lii Marion county, where the Repub licans solemnly assert a Mc-Kinley cer tainty of 100 majority, a house to house poll, mado with hair line patience, gives it to Bryan by over 500. The saiue might be saitTof all the country coun ties. Tho Republicans lay hands 011 them, but don't know whereof they speak and don't dare make practical in vestigation for fear the discoveries might blast and wither them. Altgeld, on his part, working with his lieutenants, Buck Hinriehsen and Fithian, has made, one following the other, two thorough canvasses, school district by school district, of every foot of Illinois ground lying between Cairo and the Cook county line. They made two becauso tho iirst cast such an uu looked for glow 011 their prospect that they couldn't believe it true. 80 they made the second. They declare—Altgeld and aids that their search was so thorough that not even a pin point of political chanco escaped them. They slammed every front gate, pulled every doorbell save in Chicago and its coun ty. As a result, they assert that both Altgeld and Bryan will como to the Cook county line with a clean majority of 50,000. They tell, too, that a poll has been made of Chicago and Cook county, and that the free silver Bryan-Altgeld forces will win there by 55,000. They claim the stato without tremor by (15,000 for Altgeld and Bryan. Conservative ones with whom I con versed cut tho rural majority which they claimed down to 20,000. That fig ure, it would seem, everybody agrees Altgeld and Bryan will have. But, taking tho best and most con servative testimony of both sides, Bryan today stands to get the state by 20,000. It remains to be seen whether the Mc- Kinleyites can bribo or browbeat this down. All honest future changes of po litical faith in the state will be from gold to free silver. One hears of new converts to free silver daily. This is particularly truo of the southern half of the state, where Bryan met such enthu siastic thousands as 110 crossed it Mon day. In Chicago Bryan is the open and ad mitted candidate of all of the trades unions. His speech Labor day made a profound impression. By the way, the labor men say that the attendance at the park where Bryan spoke that day was over 100,000. The labor unions make 110 doubt of Bryan's success in Illinois. To sum up, from all I could sec and learn, Bryan and free silver will carry Illinois, and do it handsomely. The Populists will do their part, and tho free silver Republicans would seem to out number the gold Democrats about 10 to 1. Bryan should win by a good majority. All he has to fear, for it is the only loopholo of Republican escape, is tho MeKinley syndicate's money in Chica go. If they can buy or bribo a victory, they will do so. All of tho Chicago papers are for Mc- Kinley aud violently against Bryan. This need breed 110 alarm. They were as violently against Cleveland in 1802, when he carried Cook county by fully 40,000 majority and took the state out of tho Republican list for the first time since the days of Douglas. They were as violently against Carter Harrison when he was mado mayor by a large majority. Bryan need have no fears of tho Chicago press if tho past is any guide. As the day stands, put Illinois in tho Bryan column. Lot it stay tili further orders.—Alfred Henry Lewis in New York Journal. Free silver would benefit the farmers If raising the price of the (diver in itllvir using countries. It Ih that silver price, cut In half wheu measured In gold, that he has to meet. It is oriental silver coun tries* competition aud not overproduction that causes the low price of wheat. A bushel of wheat In Mexico will buy the dollar there as easily as it ever did. A bushel of wheat here will buy ouiy half as much of our dollar. The Moral Side. The efforts of the goldbug orators to put their eauso 011 a high moral plane will make their situation worse rather than better. They merely show the des peration of u had position. Tho immor ality is on the side of thoso who are try ing to forco tho people to a single gotf standard. —Cincinnati Enquirer. There is nobody with us but the people, my friends, and they are the ones for whom this government was Instituted.— William J. ltryau. That's Another Matter. It is wicked for the poor to be preju diced against the rich; but*, as for the rich being prejudiced against the poor, you know how it is.—Detroit News Tribune. for Enfants and Ghiidren. THIRTY years* observation of Castoria with the patronago of millions of persons, permit na to speak of it without gnessinq;, It is unquestionably the best remedy for_lnfants and Children the world has evep known. It is harmless. Children liko it. It gives them health. It will save their lives. In it Mothers liavo something which is absolutely safe and practically perfect as a child's medicine. Castoria destroys "Worms. Castoria allays Feverishness, Castoria prevents vomiting Sotir Cnrd. Castoria cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colin. Castoria relieves Teething Tronhleß. Castoria onres Constipation and Flatulency. Castoria nentralizes the effects of carbonic acid gas or poiscnons air. Castoria does not contain morphine, opium, or other narcotic property. Castoria assiniilatos the food* regulates the stomach and bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. Castoria is put up in one-size bottles only. It is not told in hulk. Don't_allow any one to sell yon anything olso 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. The fac-simile y/ * is on every signature of Cwrapper. Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria. ji (f rrt A LOOK. MOTHERS A 3ARE TREAT FOR YO'J ALL. nr iA ih ) lill B°y s Sampson Surf, Kith extra Pair of Panto, for\) lt\ I AND WB PAY EXPtfHSS CKAR3ES TO YOVI DOOR. " I ftSMCMBER, you buy direct from one of the!; •> tV !, ; : lU - Manufacturers in America. In J,t CUR JL,SBPSOH Biu ' SUIT'S | ford SJb : ;\\P"k"t ' Grey ' ' i ' 2-Jti OL'R FACT- RIPB, E. ROSENBUHGEM & CO., 201 I lit, Nsw York City [ BASK BALL! Tigers 2?a,rlr. OCT. Championship of the Lehigh Region. Second Game. TIGERS vs. ATHLETICS of Hu/.lcton. Game will begin at 3 p. 111. Admission, 15c. Ladies Free, Grand Stand, 5c to All. GRAND OPERA HOUSE John J. Welsh, Manager. Just One rtTig-lit. Tuesday, October 6. FIRST TIME OF Ed. F. Rush's Big Spectacular Production, New and Novel Specialties. Pretty (J iris. Witty Comedians. Con/eons Costumes. Elaborate Scenic Ejf'ccts. PRICKS—nOe, ;yo and 25c. Seats on sale al i oodring's three days before date of show. j JBEBEiF 8 # Rest Cough fSyrup. Tastea UOCKJ. Uso JJ I'hV ! , '< % " 1 v ! Roys Sampson Suit i Inipirt d Wool t :tvi r. in |ct Black, Dark Blue, j Oxford Grey and olive Brown, in sizes from !• ; ••- _11 are ld<up as per cut villi vide run:' ■ Pt..id linni with a'fast Black Albert 1 will Sat .1 , rrimming and Work* "J n'- 11 ' !; '■■ i :it the best money can procure, i Coat 1 ■ .• : ' I ockcts. a Ton ana Cash Pocket. Patent \s..i<t Bands used on all Pants, also Pistol Pockets ci a'.'. Pants. 1 to 15 years of age ma le up as ted with extra Pants TO EVERYBODY I find 'Boys Suit' - Our") Pants Suits from! Oxford i "• ■■ * Printing! Billheads. There is a vast difference be tween asking a man bluntly for money and presenting a Ifill to him. The begging method is not business-like, and there is great risk of offending the sensibility of your debtor, thereby perhaps los ing a customer who might other wise be retained. It is a satisfac tion to every man who deals with you to receive an itemized account of his purchases and a receipt in payment for the same. A Billhead is the handiest means of giving him both. He will know what he pays you for every article, and when he gets an opportunity to compare your prices with others he will have them handy for ref erence. Do not use the common stock variety which is furnished by wholesalers. Be a little above your competitor. Have nothing but your own name and your own business on the heading. That is tbe proper kind of a Billhead. The Tribune (liven Sal in! 'net ion on Kvery Job. Harness! Harness! Light Carriage Harness. 16.50, $7, $9 and £lO 50. Heavy Express Harness. £16.60, £l9, £2O and £22. Heavy Team Harness, double, £25, £2B and £9O. GEO. WiSE, Jeddo and Freelaud, Pa.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers