Highest of all in Leavening Strength.—Latest 1 . S. Govt Report. Paw/Ipv l ABSOLUTELY PUKE FREELAND TRIBUNE. PUBLISH KD EVERY MONDAY AND THURSDAY IIY TIIK TRIBUNE PRINTING COMPANY, Limited. Office: Main Sthki:t a hove ( 'lathi:. Make nil iiiniicii i lb i'*, chocks, etc., paunblc to the Tribune Printing Compang, Limited. SI'HSCUII'TION KATI>: l)no Year SI-"'" Six Mouths Four Months W Two Months -■•" The date which the subscription is paid t< is on the address label of each paper, the chanjro ol' which to a subsequent date becomes a receipt for remittance. For instance: (jrover Cleveland 28JuneUT means that Grover is paid up to June 88,1WC. Keep the flgUl'CS 111 ftd\UlU of tllC pi. iOllt date. Report promptly to tin-ollio wlwuevi r paper is not received. Arrearages must be paid when subscription is discontinued FREKLANI). PA.. OC I'D BE U . I . Samuel A. Davenport, the Rcpubli an candidate for congressiiiau-at-lnrgn. in a speech at Erie on October 17. IS'.m.. said: What you workingineii want to under stand if. that your employers are your brains. Can any free American citi/en read such sentiment as that without feeling moved to the deepest indigiiationV IP buUe that man by your vote- at the polls. Morgan Must Go It Alone. it is said that Morgan i'. will !><• thrown over bodily In tin- Republican leaders to save the county offices. There is nothing remarkable in this, since Republican politicians are in the light for what tliey can get *i l of it. and as Morgan i. will have-no patron age to distribute they cannot be expect od to work for him. Willi Bryan in the White Hou-eaml a Democratic m • '..nr. in congress. Morgan Ik's say will he more limited than liis famous four-line speech of acceptance, and the Republi cans know this. Consequently they are utilizing their strength to capture the Luzerne offices and will take no chance-. with the congressman. That Williams is aware ot .-oim lliii :■ being crooked is shown by hi- refusal to sholl out his assessment. The county committee fixed 500 as the am -nut In shoukl pay. but Williams said "nay." iIo lias paid half that amount to the committee and refuse-, to send any more good money after what lias gone. Morgan *ls. is going it 'alone, lie knows tiiat is his only hope, bin ho thereby lias incurred tin-enmity of the county candidates and they are not going to lose a vote where one can be made, by sacrificing Mr. Williams. With Republicans everywhere work ing openly against him, the \ ollfclcians deserting him and the Democrats show ing hint up in his true colors Mr. W il liam-' pathway i- not strewn with Row ers, and the indication- are that the "Last Chance eaudidate will uu-' t his deserts on election day. Democrats and independent Republi cans should remember .that in this cam paign tin! Democratic county committee has no funds to pay out for watchers, poll men and other -uch incidental ex pense. The committee men and the candidates have spent their own p r sonal money to pay the expense- of the campaign, and they rely upon the active men of the party in each district to see that the full vote is polled. This is not asking too much, for the light is of as much, or more, interest to the working classes as it is to the candidates. The few rich men in Luzerne who heretofore associated themselves with the Demo cratic party, and usually contributed t<> the campaign, have gone where all the monied men of the United St at gone—into the Republican rank- mil are pouring out their ill-gotten gains to debauch the voters and defeat the poor people's ticket. Therefore, every man who desires that monopoly and corporate rule in the nation and county should l>< overthrown, ought to stand ready to sacrifice his labor on election day and respond to the call for volunteers to save old Luzerne from the disgrace that a Republican victor, carries with it. Unless a man lias lost all inti n st in government, and n ally biii.-vr thai high political honor- should I" vivrn to tiiose who want them only for tic tith*- t hy carry, he cannot pr nt one soli tary reason for voting for tie- Republi can candidate for congress. IJeiwei-u (la nil an and William - the pat riotic voters can have but one choice. One i- a brainy intelligent man who will repre sent Luzerne with credit, the other is a man who wants to have a distinguished title to his name to parade in foreign lands. Colonel Scott cannot bo blamed for beginning to feel uneasy as to what the result will be in the senatorial conte-t. Americans admire a man whogoe- forth to battle against tremendous odd-, such as I). .1. McCarthy i- doing, and they are not going to elect a man for that office who can do nothing mote than stand on his dignity. The senate ol Pennsylvania needs men who have eon Dictions and can express them, and I). J. McCarthy is one of that class of men. PLUTOCRACY LAUDS IT. • ale College students Commended For Insulting liryitu. IL iv are the remarkable editorial views of the New York Sun upon the •onduct of the Yale students in break ing up the Bryan meeting at New Ha ve ii. Beyond trailing attention to the simple fact that The Sun is the leading organ of the New York plutocracy com ment is unnecessary: "They ought to have done it, and the ► aliment to which they gave utterance was honorable to them. The boys made u great noise, cheering for McKiuley Mid yelling and jeering at rt pudiatigp, so that Mr. Bryan could not bu heard for several minutes. If they had ap plauded him incessantly for even a full half hour, would there have been any complaint of their preventing him from starting out in Iris speech? Has not a crowd in the open air as much right to hiss as to clr ( r? At v\ hat period in our history was that privilege taken from Americans? "The Yale students did right. They may have been boisterous beyond tlie measure of necessity, after the fashion of college buy s, but the spirit animating them was wholly honorable, wholly commendable. Their fathers have good reason to be proud of such sous. When General Webb calls tin ir conduct 'das tardly and outrageous,' he proves him self to bo a man disqualified to be a college president and an exemplar for youth. He and not they deserve tho ro proach of his unjustifiable letter.'' Measured in the leading coin modi ties of the American market, includ ing real estate and labor, the national debt is greater than it was In March, 1 £•>((>. Professor .John Clark Rblpatli proves this by facts and figures in his work, "The Bond and flic Dollar." OPPOSED TO TRUSTS. Mr. Hrjuii, us < hief Executive, Would Drive Them Out of Existence. My friends, in so far as Republicans and former Democrats liavo criticised my election as a menace to law and or der I want to say to you that their fear is not that as an executive I will be lax in the enforcement of law. Their f ;r is that as an executive I would not respect persons. Who is it that is so afraid that law will not be enforced? Those who are most f arful that there will in a lax en forcement of the law are the very per sons who would suffer most if tho laws were enforced. Those persons who are afraid that law will be violated with impunity are the <)>n who have violated Jaw with impunity. If Mr. Harrison wants to raise the question of tin survival of our institu tions, I will tell him that the great trusts of this country that are support ing tin- Republic ail ticket are the great est menace to our government. The Coal trust sends its representative to sit by every fireside and exacts trib ute from those who need warmth. Tho trust .-ends its representative to collect a tribute from tiiose who use light. The trust - of this country, with their representatives, are collecting tribute from the people, and when we protest against it they call us disturbers of the peace and anarchists. 1 am opposed to trusts. As an execu tive I shall use what power I have to drive (.very trust out of existence. If present laws are not sufficient to meet iliis evil, 1, if el etcd, will recom mend such laws as will. If tin- constitution of the United States is so construed as to prevent any interference with the operations of the trust, I shall recommend such amend ment to tlie constitution as will permit the punishment of these men. My friends, the re is a great contest in this country which must be settled, together are more powerful than all tho people. And while I do not want to array class against class, 1 am willing to ar ray all the people who suffer from the operations of these trusts against the few people who opera to the trusts. Tlic real issue of this campaign Is not the question of l'roe coinage, nor of ail Income tax, nor one of life tenure of office. It is simply a question oj whether this country Is lobe ruled by Urn trustthe plutocrats and by Wall street or by the plain people. The JVople Are Ji Earnest. Tlic niassi s everywhere are for the Democratic ticket this ycur. They rec ognize tJi: laet that the issues joined in this campaign aro between the people on one side and the plutocrats on the other. In ord< rto resist the encroach ments of the money power it is neces sary for them to stand firm and united. Such, indeed, is the earnestness of the people in the campaign which is now pending that no consideration whatever eon swerve them from tie lines of pa triotism.—Atlanta Constitution. Ilu sin ess must be good when prices are rising. It must be bad when prices are fulling. Free silver coinage will cause rising prices. MENACE OF THE . 1 MONEY POWER. lis Tools Are Threats and "Boodle." Its Object Is Plutocratic Rule And Death to Organized Labor. The Poor Man's Ballot In Jeopardy. The largest congregation over seen at i Sunday service in any place of wor ship in Lynn, Mass., assembled to bear ho Rev. Herbert N. Casson preach on j •he subject, " Who Is tho Anarchist, I Bryan or Hanie;?" The auditor was crowded with ! people of all shades of political opinion, including leading Republicans, Dem- I ucrats and Populists, several city offi j cials, local labor leaders and a delega tion from the Bryan-Sewall-Williams | club of Boston. Tho preacher's fume as ' | a pulpit orator is not confined to New | j England alone. He spoke for two hours and roused his hearers to a high pitch of enthusiasm when he said that "No j brasku never had a better loved sou than I Bryan.'' The Rev. Mr. Casson said that as his | sermon was a political one he would : omit tho reading of tiro Scripture les | son, and byway of preface read portions l of several editorial articles bearing on his subject from the New Y'ork Jour- 1 ; mil. Mr. Cassou said in part: Tho laws of prosperity are to bo (lis j covered, not constructed. The real leg | islator for whom this nation waits is lie who shall find and dare to proclaim the perfect social order foreordained by justice from the beginning of the world. The real anarchist is he who seeks to violate the laws <if nature for the exclu sive benefit of a small fraction of the ; community. During tho present campaign the epi i tliet anarchist lias been hurled at the heads of some of the noblest and most j capablo men that this generation has 1 produced. The fierce searchlight of publicity has blazed upon these men for years, and not a single corrupt official \ act has over been discovered. [ Bryan is caricatured, just as Lincoln was, as n highwayman, as a pirate, even as the devil, and in many similar ways. Whether Bryan's political views ; are entirely correct or not, who can de ny that he is a citizen of whom any na tion in tho world might boast? Whether wo consider tho sustained ability of his addresses, his gentleman ly endurance of slander and misrepre sentation, his unsullied public career or the magnetism of his unaffected cor diality to tho sweat stained masses that greet him at every depot, wo cannot avoid admiring him us a sturdy speci men of our American manhood. Compare him with tho gagged indi vidual who trembles in his mortgaged house lest Hannu may foreclose. Com pare him with that unfortunate Napo leon who has already mot his Welling ton and surrendered his convictions, and it is plain to see which best repre sents the principles of the Declaration of Independence. Bryan is tin spokesman of tho half awakened producers, who form nine tenths of tho population, lie and his associates have revived the apostolic power of "casting out devils" in the Democratic party and of raising the dead to life among tho Republican rank and file. They have given us at last a real is sue instead of a sham one, and though their remedy may seem inadequate to progressive thinkers it is in tho right direction and in accordance with the people's will. During tho last few years wo have been rapidly developing a slave element in our population—a propertyless class, entirely dependent upon the saloof their labor. No longer does Jack hobnob with his masti r. Tho rich and poor do not live in tho sumo quarter of tho city. A second secession has split our society into two hostile elements, and it is childish to howl " Anarchist 1" at the patriot who proclaims tho unwelcome fact and seeks to weld the nation into unity again by repealing the laws that caused it to split asunder. America Is the vvorkingiuaii's "Paradise Lost," and it can never be regained by passive obedience to the serpent. Our carpenters build magnificent mansions and live in rented tenements themselves. Our mechanics construct electric lights and use kerosene at home; they manufacture pianos and do not own a tin whistle; they build carriages und go afoot. Our miners dig gold and | die poor; they delve in dangerous coal minis and lack fuel in the winter. Our farmers raise grain and want for food, export cotton and wool and lack cloth ing. sell cattle und are witiiout meat. Our marve lous inventions have been monopolized so that, in spite of tho daily miracles of our machinery, the hungry still lack food and the homeless wander through tho streets. Step by step tho moneyless man is losing his right to exist. Every recent chango in legislation has been made to protect property and to disfranchise men. Ar mories are erected and schoolhouses for gotten. Immense grants of land are be stowed upon railroads, but the settlers upon those grants are evicted. Trades union leaders ure imprisoned for having contempt for a contemptible judge, j while monopolists are aided by injunc tions and federal troops. Today Shakespeare has been revised ind Shy lock is the hero of the play. Portia's pica f< r mercy is called revolu tionary and Bassanio is branded us a repudiator. Tliere Is hardly a trust or a syn dicate that lias inaugurated this campaign of threats and ridicule and object lessons that dares open up its twii business career to the public. One of these defenders of law and na tional honor, the Standard Oil compa ny, has illegally increased freight rates, closed rivers and canals, destroyed in tentions, bought up inspectors and put its stamp upon explosive oil, attacked the property of competitors and blown up rival refineries. These trusts are re ligious at one end and murderous at the other. This law breaking, aggressivo spirit of monopoly has found a perfect embodi ment in the person of Mark Ilannu. lie today towers above McKlnley and above the Republican party, the American Bluebeard, who slays his workers instead of his wives. Give llunna four years of power, and he will paint the White House black. He will utterly destroy every vestige of trades unionism, for lie will have the army, the navy and the treasury at his command. Ho will discover tlujt it 1 is cheaper to abolish manhood suffrage than to buy votes, and next November may be the last chance that moneyless men ever may have to record their vote for president. Many Republican work i ingmen are thoughtlessly going to the ' ballot box just as an ox goes to a barbe i cue—gayly decorated in honor of its j own death. I Mayor Pingree gave us a national motto when he said, "Give the people what tiny want." I am not one of those who regard the people as danger ' ous, covetous animals who must bo j chained and muzzled. The experiment I of the referendum in Switzerland has I proved that when the people are left ! entirely free they are naturally conserv i ative. French revolutions never occur I except when some King Louis has re ' pressed the people and goaded them to resistance. "I am the state," said the boastful king, and the peoplo replied with the guillotine. 1 trust in the common heart of all more than in the private scheming of any financial syndicate. I don't excuse the ignorance of the masses, I don't celebrate their poverty, I don't ignore their frailties, but, 1 say that they are far nearer the truth regarding all social and political problems than those hood lum students of Yale whose only argu ment is an insane college yell. It is time to co-operate and enjoy the creation of our hands; otherwise all the ! energy and daring and inventiveness of I our fathers have come to naught. Ido not believe that Columbus discovered America for Hanna or that the monopo list is the last and highest product of human evolution. The day before his assassination Lin -1 colli said, "Now that the rebellion Is over, and we know pretty nearly the amount of our national debt, the more gold and silver we can mine makes the payment cf that debt so much | easier." LOGAN'S PROPHECY. | He Foresaw the Evils Wliieli Have Now Kecuuie Realities. j The following is an extract from a I speech delivered by John A. Logan in the United States senate on the with | drawal of treasury notes: 1, for one, can see benefit only to the money holder and those who receive in terest and have fixed incomes. 1 can see, as a result of this legislation, our business operations crippled and wages for labor reduced to a mere pittance. 1 can see the beautiful prairies of my own state and of the great west, which are blooming as gardens, with cheerful homes rising like white towers ulong, the pathway of improvement, again sinking bark to idleness. I can see mortgage fiends at their hellish work. 1 can see the hopes of the industrious farmers blasted as they burn corn for fuel because its price will not pay the cost of transportation and dividends 011 millions of dollars of fictitious railway stocks and bonds. I can see our people of the west groaning and burdened under taxation to pay debts of states, counties and cities incurred when money was more abundant and bright hopes of the future were held out to lead them on. I can see the people of our western states, who ;ire producers, teduced to the condition of serfs to pay interest on public aud private debts to the money sharks of Wall street, New York, aud of Thread needle street in London. ; Every unprincipled corporation, ev i ery trust, every hater of labor organi | /.ations, every money gambler and ev ! ery simpering snob Is for McKlnley. Can such a combination win thiselec tioii? Gold I'ower mid tlio I'ress. | Never since sluvexy days has the press in the parts of the country familiar to nie displayed such disregard for truth | and such stubborn obtuseucss to tho | most obvious considerations us it does ;at present 011 the silver question. This ; means that the money power seated in ! London, but with representatives in ! New York, Philadelphia and Chicago, is determined to continue the apprecia tion of gold, and determined, therefore, 1 that tho facts shall not be known. Tho bankers and the press are almost entire ly under its influence.—Professor E. : Benjamin Andrews of Brown Univer sity. Workiiigmcn, stop and think! Free silver coinage will bring rising prices; ; rising prices make good business; good i business makes plenty of work; plenty til work makes g'ood wages. ELEVATORS DISPLACED. Naw Systoin of Handlinsr Grato Retires Thom from Use. btoel Storage Tanks aud Puriunatlc Tillies Are Now UeliiK Largely Used In the Transportation of Cereals. Steel storage tanks for grain ore rapidly taking the place throughout the country of the old wooden elevators, and pneumatic tubes are used to con vey the grain from the jitaee of tin storage to the mill, whereas formerly it was wheeled in barrows over bridge* between the buildings or through uu derground tunnels. The proper storage of grain for mill nig purposes has for ninny years been a question of the first importance to mill ers and mill owners. Fire was the om destroying element most dreaded, am the erection of wooden elevators foi storage purposes near the mills greatly increased the lire risks, and in conse quence the item of insurance was by uc means a small one. The erection of air-tight, steel storage tanks or bins for grain in place of th< old wooden structures not only doe* away with all danger from fire, but i* is claimed that it preserves the grain foi an indefinite period of time and also makes impossible the presence of weevils or other vermin so destruetivt to grain in storage. There being no in flammable material used in the eon st met ion of these steel tanks, there i* 110 need for insurance, and mill men claim that within six or seven years the saving of insurance alone will mon than pay for the first cost of the con st ruction. Two of these steel storagt tanks are now in operation at Toledo 0., where they have proved even a great er success than was anticipated. With the air-tight steel tank taking the place of the old-fashioned elevatoi comes the new method of handling tlit grain. The steel tfins are connecter with flic mill by immense steel tube* and air pressure moves the grain as j is needed from tire storage tank to tin mill. The system could not be put it operation with the old-style elevator, but the tubes are now in practical ojiera tion at Connersvillc, Ind. The machinery used in this pneu matic S3 - stem is extremely simple in construction and requires very little power to operate it. By a system of nil currents the grain is tnken from tin storage tanks on a current of air exactly as a ship of wood is carried by a strean of vvatar. The air current is cliangec by manipulating two valves, one causing a blast, the other suction. A valve ii the tank is opened, allowing the graii to enter the pipe or tube. When thai valve is closed another at the end of tin tube and within the mill is opened and the grain falls into a receiver. Exactly the reverse operation is gom through in putting the grain into tin air-tight storage tanks. It is first taken into the mill, then put into the receiving bins, and by pneumatic pressure forced through the tubes into the tanks. Thi introduction of air-tight storage tanks and the pneumatic system of transfer ring the grain practically revolutionizes the manner of storing and milling, and ore long will probably be introduced into the big grain depots throughout the country.—Baltimore Herald. Orchestra Heady Tor Engagements. T. .1. Watson, leader of Watson'* Freeland Orchestra, is now ready t,( furnish music for private parties, con certs. balls and all kinds of orchestra playing. Parties wishing to engagi music are at liberty to engage one. two. three or as many performers as the* prefer. Terms reasonable. Address T. J. Watson, Main street, Freeland. How's Tills I Wo oiler One Hundred Dollar*! Re ward for any case of ('atarrh that can not be cured bv Hall's Catarrh Cure. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Props., Toledo, Ohio. We the undersigned have known F.J. Cheney for the last fifteen years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all business transactions and financially able to carry out any obligation made by their firm. WEST & TRUAX, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, O. W A LI) 1 NO, KINNAN & MARVIN, Whole sale Druggists, Toledo, O. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken inter nally, acting directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Price, 75c. per bottle, bold by all druggists. Testimonials free. Tony Farrell in "Gurry Owen." Tony Farrell will no doubt be remem bered by the public through his numer ous appearances in various characters which lie presented during the last few years. 11 is fame as an able actor and delineator of Hibernian character parts was more especially established by the finished and cxcollunt manner whieli he, portrayed in "My Colleen," which characterization was so well given that it was made a matter of general comment from press and public alike. Tony Far rel appears this season in a new play. "Harry Owen," which Is termed an Irish comedy drama, and has unusually inter esting story running through flu? play. It is entirely unlike the ordinary run of Irish dramas, as the author was particu larly careful to avoid utilizing any of the" old conventional and threadbari features, which generally pervades these plays. His aim was to present a clean natural comedy, and he endeavored to garnish his work with a goodly portion of fun, frolic, charming songs, and characteristic dancing. In order to portray the action of the play in a proper manner the management has provided the company with new and elegent scenery, among which are a number of mechanical stage effects. The illuminated exterior of a church with its cathedral organ and choir of nine trained voices is gonerafly con ceded to be one of the most beautiful scenes of any of the many realistic sen sational features which has been seen on the American stage. The play is in terpreted by a carefully selected com pany of artists who have each beetj chosen for their individual capabilities.. It will appear here on Monday evening. CASTORIA for Snfants and Children. THIRTY years* observation of Caatorm with the pntronngo of millions of persons, ponnft nn to speak of it without gnpssiptj. Iti!L? n 9 n ®? tiona Wy the "best, remedy for Infants and Children the world ha ever known. It Is harmless. Children like it. It gives them health. It will save lives. In it Mother* havo something which is absolutely safe and practically perfect as a child's medicine. Castorin destroys Worms. Castoria allays Feverishness. Castoria prevents vomiting Sonr Card. Castoria cures Diarrhma and Wind Colic. Castoria relieves Teething Troubles. Castoria cures Constipation and Flatulency. Caatonn neutralises tho effects of oiirhonio acid gas or poisonous air. Castoria does notcontain morphine, opium, or other nnreotio jrroporty. Castoria assimilates tho food, regulates the stomach and bowels, giving healthy and natural sloop. Castoria is pnt up in one-sire bottles only. It is not sold in hulk. Don t allow any one to sell yon anything else on tho plea or pvomiso that it is "just as good " and "will answer every purpose." Seo that yon get C-A-S-T-O-11-I-A. The fac-almlla ___ uon every nignaturo of wrapper. Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria. I (tir A A LOOK MOTHERS A i:AI?E TREAT ROH YOU ALL. A,,-. Alb ) Ijl| Boys Sampson Suit, Kith Extra Fair of Panto, for V /n * ANI) IVE PAY EXPRESS CHARGES TO YOl'S DOOR. • U ftIMEMB£R. you I'uy direct from one of thel; i -t V. •a• < . ,n.- .v.anufacturers in America - |*r- IJ't 62? OUR "o" ffp*^\ BTOS fotJ .J J V, \ P Gray h. ,V 4 \ \• ' " °<' v' m,\l \ Y V \ o,s - Brow,, W- ? 'lir|\ t' '\ \ a, g QUI E. RQSEUBURGSR, & CO., 204 E 102J St, ITew York City | .is • VM?- npc's wee . \ 4 Eii Jo L*ui H vVh >n y. i are about to buy a Sewing Machine .d be to n:nk vou can get the best made, uest lu.isbv d and ' v !cst PcptsHar j >r a mere song'. See to it that ,iJ^\ on buy fio.ii p liable m nu ealing, you v.il. ticu get a L owing Machine that is noted s easiest to manage and is Light Running There is r.ono in the world that '/ UCt ''i'' 11 r f " l f j*'' • 'ft w jj Improvements as L-he , NEW Home it has Automrtic Tension, Double Peed, alike >n both sides ol tracdle (patented}, no other has t; New Stand i patented driving wheel hinged j m adjustable; centers, fcus reducing friction to j he minimum. WRITE FOR CSRCMLAW3. THE NEW HOME SEWING M ACHINE CO, •tunns, Mass. Borvrov, Mass. 28 Hotoj?Sottatr, N. Y OIUCA.JO, fl.£* t>T. I.OMS, i!o.^LALCA^Ti:XAi. • • 3Y I). S. Ewing, general agent, 1127 Chestnut street, Phila., Pa 1 Caveats, and Trade-Marks obtained, and all Pat-} 4 ent business conducted for Moderate Fees. # <Our Office is Opposite U. S. Patent Office? 5 and we enn secure patent in less time than those J # remote from Washington. 4 J Send model, drawing or photo., with descrip- 4 xtion. VVe advise, if patentable or not, free of 5 2 charge. Our fee not due till patent is secured. 4 J A Pamphlet, "How to Obtain Patents,'' with# Scost of same in the U. S. and foreign countries J 4 sent free. Address, 4 jC. A.SMOW&CO.j # OPP. PATENT OFFICE, WASHINGTON, D. C. # Head - the - Tribune. ' I • 1 ' 1 • ' '• it" he made from nn !>ark Rlue, < • • i >-rry <>;: .• I. . wn, in sizes from o ' ■ ' . -• I hey •• n.'dc up as per cut I- ••-• i . i ' 'I w.th S ii!or l o'.l.ir, braided *■•••> • • - .... lined With a fast Mack . I • ' .1 rin.min- and Work • "i procure. <•' • ■ I • • ' * •I. i■ and Cash Pocket." i'."f it W ' • uid on all Pants, also Pistol li •' * ;1 ' '' years of ae made op as I" Pica ted with extra Pants : 1 r'i i *— 5 , ! V- -ci,d Stvie oi,: ',- i . , w i.h WS& '° m d.-rl Kx( 3 to 9 FEES | TO EVERYBODY! * in which you will! VhJjjßr v Our] from 98c. up. Dark BaKa £ r,c * Pants Suits from oxl " rJ p r i ce J2 00 up and °™ y i&IaSL, 5-oo Mens Suits from otive gjr Is 2 un. 1 Rrown Printing! Cards. A Card is a good thing to ear ly with you when you gp to strange places. It is one of the easiest methods of telling your name, and will be found very serviceable in stating the business you are in. It will identify you at all times, and will hrinly connect your name with j your business, so that the trade : you are in will always recur to | every person hearing your name. . No business man should be with out a stock of cards. Tl© Trihiine Dives Satisfaction on Every Job. it Sclentiiio American TW> ar" TITN UI MARKS, B&SR* OESICM PATENTS, . . COPVRIOHTS. etc. KV.vV. rn A. at,, ' n a,vl fr<, ° bund book write to .• .1 ' ' ''• bIJMAI.U \V, N|'.w V<IKK. Jaleat "urenu for securing j intents in America. ' P\ l ' r y t'-jti-nt tahen out hy us Is brought before the public by u notice given froo of charge in tho giumau of rany "'"lpntlfle paper In tho I Yi.oL .'i ' l'l e J l didly illustrated, No intelligent v .i 1 * w 'tluut It. Weekly, ft.'t.OOa ■''l* months. Address. MUNN&CO PuuLisiißßß, 361 Broadway, New York City, WANTED-AN IDEA^ffiSS thing to patent? Protect your ideas ; they may ''rinK T y°u wealth. Write JOHN WEDDBR- I l ; () " Patent Attorneys, Washington. 1). C.. for tlieir sl,uou prize oiler. UIULUU [ Watch the date 011 your paper.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers