FREELAND TRIBUNE. Established 1888. PUBLISHED EVEKY MONDAY AND THURSDAY BY THE TRIBUNE PRINTING COMPANY, Limited. OrriCK: MAIN STHEET ABOVE CENTHE. LONG DISTANCE TELEPHONE. SUBSCRIPTION KATES: One Year ..$1.50 Six Months 75 Four Months..... .50 Two Months 25 Tho date which the subscription is paid to is on the address label of each paper, the change of which to a subsequent date becomes a receipt for remittance. Keep the ligures in advance of the present date. Report prompt ly to this otllee whenever paper is not received. Make all money orders, checks, etc., payable to the Tribune Printing Company, Limited, FREELAND, SEPTEMBER 11, 1899. The Voice of the People. Tho election of Judge Shackleford to congress from the Eighth Missouri dis trict to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Mr. Bland has a significance which, to the ardent expansionist, man ifestly is not a pleasant subject of con templation. The loaders in opposition before the vote was taken were loud in their assurance that the contest was one of crucial importance nationally. They Insisted upon this in season and out of season, and in all the varieties of verbiage which the practiced politician knows how to emit. That particular cloetion in that dis trict meant, they ceased not to proclaim, that the administration, with "My Philippine Policy" of President Mc- Klnley, was on trial, and everything that could possibly bo done by them was done, in order to "get out tho vote." There was no mistaking about wherein lay tho point of the fight. Judge Shackleford stood upon a platform of which tho main declaration, was this: "We are unreservedly opposed to the militarism and imperialism of President McKinley. We want no empire. Wo aro willing to stand by the old republic." Ills opponents did not hesitate to charge those striving for his eloction with "giving aid and comfort to Philippine rebels." The point of tho contest, sharply and throughout, was the war. It was a fight over the Philippine ques tion. And the administration and its sup porters woro defeated. Not only did they fall In reducing tho majority se cured for Congressman Bland last Novombor—a thing which for several reasons might warrantably have been expocted—but that majority was not ably Increasod. Mr. Bland, with his national reputation of unusually marked character, was able to overcome his opponent last November by only 3,800 votes. Judge Shackleford's plurality was 3,443. The facts speak for themselves. Tho imperialists invited the country to watch the voting in the Eighth Mis souri district and soo tho president indorsed. The answer is an emphatic rebuke. It is also a distinct encourage ment to all opposition parties to con centrate upon this great issue of Americanism and loyalty to the De claration of Independence against imperialism and militarism. One of the most noted newspaper writors in the world and a student of human nature Is James Creelman. lie Is a Republican, but he says of Bryan In a recent article: "Mr. Bryan de clined to accept a salary of ten thous and dollars a year from tho Standard Oil Company, preferring to live more economically and fight against the abuses of such overgrown corpora tions. lie has a much more solid record as a lawyer and business man than President McKinley. For one thing, no man has ever been called upon to pay his debts, and I personally know that he has helped many an un fortunate friend out of his troubles." Somebody very aptly rises to remark, says an exchange, what a howl would go up if the newspapers were to criti cise tho individual as freely as many people criticise the newspaper. Every issue of a live and reputable newspaper is a mantle of charity, and the matter left out—truth, not gossip of dames — would often more than equal in volume the matter published. If any editor could get out a cold-fact edition some day, and get up a tall tree and watch the result—whew! What a panic there would be. Why does a circus want publicity? Why does tho politician want publicity? Because it pays. Business men ought to possess as much common sense and shrewdness as tho average circus press agent or tho average politician. For overy census plum that is landed by a Republican congressman, there are at least a dozen votes made for the Democratic party by the disappointed applicants. WARS CAUSED BY TRIFLES Englund and Her AlUos Drifted Into ' the Crimean Troubles. Many wars have had trifling causes. A dispatch altered in one or two points by Bismarck brought ou the Franco- German conflict. Paimerston said fac etiously that only three men in Europe ever knew what the Schleswig-llol stein troubles which led to two wars wore about, and two of them died be fore the couflicts began, while lie, the third man, had forgotten. A slighting reference by Frederick the Great of Prussia to Mme. Pompadour of France was said to have been one of the causes of the Seven Years' War, some times called the "war of three petti coats," from the fact that the France of Pompadour and the Russia of Cath erlne 11, joined the Austria of Maria Theresa against Frederick. According to John Bright, England and her allies drifted into the Crimean War without realizing it until after they got in, and they did not know "'hat they fought for even after they started while it is certain that every thing which was supposed to have been fixed by that conflict was disturbed af terward. Tbe results of the quarter of a century of wars beginning tVTtb the commencement of the French Revolu tion and endiug with Waterloo, "pleased nobody and settled nothing," according to Sheridan. The average person who lived in those days knew as little about the causes of the slaugh ter as old Kaspar did about tbe battle of Blenheim when questioned by little Peterkin. Quail. Pliny was much more accurate as to the habits of migrating quails than most observers of his day. He men tions that when crossing the sea they were sometimes blown out of their course and drowned. He was also aware that they migrate by night, and makes the curious statement that when the multitudes were Hearing land they were dangerous to small boats, on whose sails and rigging they settled, "often by night." and overset them. Tens of thousands are taken on the coast of the Pontine marshes, and in Sicily one hundred thousand are said to have been captured iu one day. In the islands of the Greek Archipelago they are caught and cured just like sprats or pilchards, with the difference that they arc netted on the land in stead of iu the sea. The heads are cut off, tho bodies cleaned, and then salted and packed in tubs. Further East one of the greatest of the annual quail catches takes place on the Bos porus. The main body of these quail are looked for on the return migration In autumn, uot in the spring . It is then thut the birds hatched during the summer on the plains of Poland, of Turkey of Rumania, aud South Russia are on their way South, and pass in myriads over the straits aud along the Asiatic shore. But in old days there were often years of respite for the birds. War on tbe Bosporus, or In Greece and the Archipelago, or in Egypt or Spain or Italy, might at any moment give the birds an "open door" for a series of years: nod population not only failed to increase, but often re coded; aud there were no railways or steamships. The demand was a local one: and as in the days of Moses peo ple tired even of quail. Now the pop ulations of Paris, London and Berlin are added to the eaters of spring quails. The birds are caught louu and are forwarded alive to be fattened. The demand increases, population Is everywhere growing, engines for their capture are better devised, and the de mand Is clearly overtaking the supply. Oyster Shell Windows Among the various and curious ob jects brought from Mtiuiln by some of our returning soldiers none excite more interest than the delicate plate-lllie shells called conchas ;uot only because they belong to the usually unattractive anil rough-sbelled oyster family, but from the fact that shells serve as win dows In may of the buildings of the Philippines. The shell is nearly round, about four Inches in diameter, compressed, and so tbiu that it is nearly transparent. In appearance the interior of the shell re sembles Isinglass, with opalescent tints, tho Interior being lightly rough. The animal is so exceedingly flat that when the valves are closed they ap parently touch. This is probably the same species of mollusk which is known in China as the Chinese win dow oyster, aud which is used for win dows, lanterns and similar purposes. These Ingeuious people also powder the shells, which they use for silver in their water colors. The better class of houses In Manila have window frames which slide in grooves, so as to bo opened or closed, as desired, and in these are set the conchas, which soften the bright tropi cal sun rays. As a further protection against light and heat .blinds are used which run In the grooves with the win dows. The Governor's Palace, which was rebuilt about two hundred years ago, lias for windows the same sliding frames set with many panes of the window oyster. A Carlo A resident of Bristol, I*a., owns a curiosity in tho slinpc of a copper but ton. the kind said to hnvo been worn by the servants of George Washington when the latter was President of the United States. The button is about one and one-half inches iu diameter, and is quite elaborately engraved. Around the edge are the words: "Long live our President." In tho centre is a monogram, "G. W." There are said to be only about three of these but tons now in existence, and two of them belong to members of the Wash ington family. East Indian famines have had some comic features. In Aurungabnd the priests were paid to pray for rain and did so, day after day. but the rain fulled to appear, though very costly processions were organised. At last the people became angry, threw the gods into the rnhhtsli heaps and blocked up the entrance to the temples with masses of thorns as a penalty for keeping the fields dry. It is Just as well for a Hindoo god to attend to t>usl aess if be wants to keep ids job. A North Carolina woman has invent ed an appliance for keeping poultices wartu, a receptacle for hot water hav ing n face in which the sack contain ing the poultice Is Inserted, with an opening in the receptacle for changing the water as It cools. ... j TAKING TRE OATH: ■ VARIOU9 METHODS THAT PREVAIL IN CERTAIN COUNTRIES. In Some lustanooM Solemn and In Others laughable—Substitutes for the Bible Used In India—Tbe Terrible Norwegian Oath— Iteverenee uf tbe Mohammedans. There is more tlian a touch of the grotesque, us well us of the solenui, In the modes of administering oaths in | certain couutrles. When a Chinaman swears to tell the truth he kneels down and a china saucer is given to him. j This he proceeds to break in pieces, and ttie following oatli is then admin istered: "You shall tell the truth and the whole truth. The saucer Is cracked and if yon do not tell the truth your soul will be cracked like the saucer." Other symbolic variations of the Chinese oatli are the extinguishing of a candle, or cutting off of a cock's head, the light of the caudle repre senting the witness's soul and the fate of the cock symbolizing the fute of u perjurer. Iu certain pnrts of ludla tigers' and Hoards' skins take the place of the Bible of Christian countries, and the penalty of breaking the oatli is that iu one case the witness will become the prey of a tiger, and in the other that Ids body will be covered with scales like a lizard's. One of the most terrible of European oaths is that administered iu Norweg ian courts of law. The prelude to the oatli proper is a long liomily on Ike sanctity of the oatli and the terrible consequences of not keeping it. Part of this lengthy sermon takes this form: "If you swear a false oath the good ness aud mercy of God will not avail you. but you will be punished etern ally in hell as a perverse and hardened sinner. If you swear falsely all your possessions will be cursed; your land and meadows, so that they will yield you no fruit; your cattle and sheep will lie lumen, and all that you eujoy in this world will become a curse to ,vou." When the witness is duly crushed by the sense of ids fearful responsibility, the oatli is administered, while he holds aloft liis thumb and fore and middle lingers, as an emblem of tbe Trinity. It is a little curious that the expres sion, "the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth," iu very slightly varied forms, runs through almost ail the oaths administered iu European courts. In an Italian court the witness, with Ids right baud resting on an open Bible, declares, "1 will swear to tell the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth." The Mohammedan takes the oath with his forehead reverently resting on the open Koran. He takes his "bible" in his hands, aud. stooping low, as if in the presence of a higher power, slowly bows his head until it touches the book, which to him is in spired. In the reverence of his acts and the unswerving loyalty to an oatli many Europeans have much to learn from a follower of Mohammed. In certain pnrts of Spain the witness when taking an oatli crosses the thumb of one hand over the forefinger of the other, and kissing this symbolic. If primitive, cross, says, "By this cross I swear to tell the truth." In the more usual form of adminis tering the oath iu Spain, the witness kneels solemnly before the Bible aud places his right baud revenently upon it. The Judge then asks him, "Will you swear, in the name of God and His holy Book, to speak the truth iu answer to nil questions that may be nsltcd you?" The witness answers, "I swear." The Judge then concludes, "If you do tills God will reward you." An Austrian takes ids oath in front of a crucifix, flanked by lighted can dles. With upraised right hand lie says. "I swear by the nil powerful nnd nil wise God that 1 will speak the whole aud clean truth, and nothing but the truth, in answer to auy ques tions that may be asked in tlds court." No Cold* in t he Arctics. Nansen and ids men during the three years which they spent in the Arctic regions never caught a cold. Yet they were exposed to eold, fatigue and wet to a degree whicli we at home can hardly realize, says a writer in the Spectator. Especially oue remembers how Nansen and his comrade Johnn sen during their wonderful expedition on foot over the polar iee went on, day after day, clad ill clothes which were so saturated with perspiration that they froze by day Into one mass of solid ice. aud even cut into the flesh; how every uiglit, when they tucked themselves up in tlieir sleeping bags, jtlie first hour was spent in thawing; how they lay shivering, their frozen socks spread across their chests, until their clothes actually became wet and soft, nnd eventually comfortable aud warm. Yet they never caught a cold, nnd, mark this, for it Is very import ant. with the exception of Nanseu's brief attack of lumbago, their health did not suffer in any way from the ex posure. Directly they reached civiliza tion they all enught cold. Nanseu's own statement to the writer was: "There is. of course, no doubt thut cold is an infections disease. We had none during our journey, and we all got It (very badly, too.) at the very moment we readied Norway." Tlie Kinljfrant's Fortune* An estimate lias been made of the average amount of money which Eu ropean emigrants tnke with them to America. From this it appears that the first place is held by the German, who takes over just ten guineas with hiin, while tbe second place belongs to the Englishman, with about six shillings less. The third is the Frenchman, who lias nine guineas, nnd he is followed by the Belgian with Just over £O, while the Irishman's enpltnl is £l, the Rus sian's £2 1 (Is., and the Italian's barely £2. He is, therefore, tile poorest, but It is believed that when he returns to Ids own land he probably carries away more money than any of the others. "This makes tbe tenth morning, ma'am, that I have tried to collect this milk bill." "I have tried more mornings that, sir, to collect a tittle cream from your milk, and I have nover hud any better Htiecesa than you-re going to have this time Don't step on the cat whon you go out please," ' CUTS OFF THEIR HEADS. This Is How the Sultan of Moroccc Treats Tax Dodgers. The Sultan of Morocco is going t< prevent his subjects from evading the payment of tlieir tuxes, even If by do ing it he has to behead every tax dodger in the country. In his majesty's domain tax dodging by the rich Is well nigh universal, and well-informed students and travelers, knowing how corrupt and rapacious the Sultan's government Is, do not doubt that much of it is justifiable, But the Sultan looks at the matter in a different light. He declares thai there is no excuse for tax dodging, that It is criminal, and, moreover, that he has hit upon a punishment to tit the crime. Frank B. Jackson, a globe trotter ol thirty years' experience, has recently made a tour of North Africa, including the accessible parts of Morocco, and in u personal letter to Frank L. Dlngley, of Lewlston, Maine, a brother of the well-known representative of that name, he gives a graphic necount of the Sultan's bloody and desperate method of procedure. While iu Tangier, Mr. Jackson learned that tile Sultan at the head of a large body of troops was marching through tlie country collecting taxes, aud that at Laroiclie he had ffcapita ed a large number of tnx dodgers and spiked their heads above the city gates to serve as a warning to others who might not he disposed to pay their dues promptly. "A company of five was formed," writes Mr. Jackson, "to visit Laroiclie aud see if the ghastly report was true. The party consisted of an Englishman, who spoke Arabic; a Herman aud three Americans. "We reached Laroiclie about noon. It is Impossible to describe the sickening sight which met our gaze as we rode up to the main entrance of the city. There above lis, in 11 ghastly row, were fifteen human heads, shriveling In the broiling sun. We rode around to the other gates, only to find the same grewsome display. 111 all we counted forty-five heads spiked to the board arches over the city gates. Our curios ity was fully satisfied, and nil of us re gretted that we luid traveled so far to learn that there was at the close of the nlnteenth century so barbarous a country on the face of the earth us Mo rocco." To Make Artificial Fog The lieatiug of air by means of small fires scattered about through orchards or fields lias been found a very effec tive protector against frost In the drier parts of California. One lngenlus de vice for the same purpose, designed by O. F. Ditzler, consists of a deep sheet iron tank, three or four foet square, mounted on a truck. About six Inches from the bottom of the tank Is a wire grate, beneath which, through a hole In the bottom of the tank, Is admitted a blast of air, Tliis is produced by a revolving fan operated by a sprocket chain aud wheel attached to the wheel of the truck. A water cask and force pump complete the outfit. Tar or other fuel is placed on the grate aud Ignited, and the tank Is tilled with wut straw or manure. The blast of the fan blows It Into an Intense fire, all the heat of which has to pass through three feet of wet straw before it can reach the ulr. Naturally the evaporation Is very active, and the vapor rising from the wet material Immediately condenses, forming a dense fog or rulst As the machine Is driven backward nnd forward betwen the rows of trees in the orchard, water is continually pumped from the ensk and scattered over the fuel. The machine is said to evaporate 100 gallons of wnter nu hour. Often tliis artificial fog is so dense that the driver has to go forward and lead his horses. Tlie Cruel Mantis It Is as observant and quick as a monkey, as sly and stealthy as a eat; It is the tiger uot the saint, of tlie In sect world. Its so-called devotional attitude Is simply nothing hut a lying in wait for what the gods may send In the shape of food. Establishing It self, 11s if In rapture, upon some twig or leaf. It will remain tlius absolutely stationary, prepared to seize any un wary insect that may fall within con venient reach. After it exhibits a wonderful degree of patience, let us say an insect happens to alight within a short distance of it. Instantly It catches sight of tlie new-comer and begins, with slow, silent tread, to steal toward it. So Imperceptible the mo tion, it can only be appreciated by steady nnd prolonged watching. At the same time the forelegs, which up till now had been bent hack upon themselves, commence to open. Little by little the hunter creeps near Its un conscious prey, its goggle eye stnrlug upon this object of absorbing Interest. At Inst it is close enough to strike, and with celerity of movement the eye cannot follow a formidable foreleg 'is shot out to Its full length and brings hack the victim, hopelessly secured anil crushed between the slutnk and thigh, and scarcely more than a mom ent is lost ere the body is torn to pieces and devoured. What We Go to Church for We go to church to worship God; nnd Ills attributes Include all that is noble In lire, all that Is hopeful In death, and all that is beautiful In thought or nature. What a man wor ships determines what he Is. To sin cerely adore and appreciate goodness, wisdom, power, loveliness and Intelli gence, as exhibited in tlio character of the Christ of the Bible, Is to be In spired with tlie highest thoughts and become a partaker in an increasing measure of that grand Divine nature. We go to church to reform evil, to se cure strength in our wcukness, to re vive our hope, to obtain comfort In grief, to elevate our thinking, to purify and intensify our feelings, to preserve and restore our health, to increase our knowledge, to arouse our love for all that is good, to make our home more sweet, to make society more brotherly and peaceful, to get rest from care, to be better fitted for business, to secure enthusiasm for lierolc deeds, and to find happiness.—Ladles' Home Journal. In a now bicycle tire u series of helical springs is arranged around the Interior connected, to thimbles on the side of the ttre nenrest the rim, with a metal rim inside the fnoe of the tire, against which the springs press to form a resilient tread. \ The Cure that Cures 1 P Coughs, S \ Colds, J Grippe, (k Whooping Cough, Asthma, ) Bronchitis and Incipient A tU* Consumption, Is tg [oITosI Tk German £ Pcvir\yTwfcjH\4 Vvhwm A'tssfasea. 7 Dry Goods, Groceries and Provisions. 0 A celebrated brand of XX flour always in stock. Roll Butter and Eggs a Specialty. AMANDUS OSWALD, N. W. Cor. Centre and Front Bt.,Freeland. DePIERRO - BROS. -CAFE.- Corner of Centre and Front Htreets, Freeland, Pa. Finest Whiskies in Stock. Gibson, Dougherty. Kaufer Club, Kosenbluth's Velvet, of which wo have EXCLUBIVE SALE IN TOWN. Mumm's Extra Dry Champagne, Henuessy Brandy, Blackberry, Gins, Wines, Clarets, Cordials, Etc. Imported, and Domestic Cigars. OYSTERS IN EVERY STYLE. Ham and Schweitzer Cheese Sandwiches, Sardines, Etc. MEALS - AT - ALL - HOURS. Ballcntine and Hazleton beer on tap. Baths, Hnt or Cold, 25 Cents. T. CAMPBELL, dealer in Dry Goods, Groceries, Boots and Shoes. Also PURE WINES I LIQUORS FOB FAMILY AND.MEDICINAL VURPUSKS. Centre and Main streets, Freeland. VIENNA: BAKERY. J. B. LAUBACH, Prop. Centre Street, Freeland. CHOICE BREAD OF ALL KINDS, CAKES, AND PASTRY, DAILY. FANCY AND NOVELTY CAKES BAKED TO ORDER. Confectionery § Ice Cream supplied to balls, parties or picnics, with all necessary adjuncts, at shortest notice and fairest prices. Delivery and supply wagons to aU parts 0] town and surroundings every day. Are Your Shoes Run Down? The Black Diamond SHOE REPAIRING HO|USE Will Hake Them Good as Mew. The quality of our work cannot be surpassed, and we make repairs quicker than any other establishment in town. Cull here when you wuut the Lowest Prices in the Town. H. MOWER, Prop. Hadesty Building, 109 S. Centre Street. Condy 0. Boyle, dealer in Liquor, Wine, Beer, Porter, Etc. The finest brands of Domestic and Imported Whiskey on sale in one of the handsomest sa loons In town. Fresh Rochester and Shenan doah Beer and Youngling's Porter on tap. 96 Centre street. LIBOR WINTER, Eating House and Oyster Saloon. No. 13 Front Stroet, Frccluud. Temperance drinks, cigars, etc. Fumiles supplied with oysters direct from the shore. ZPIRinSTTIZTsTGr l'romptly Done at the Tribune Office. Hp [S lIS IT WORTH I 1 SAVING? I @ P ® If it's money? Yes, by all y§ fs means. Well here's a chance; [ji I® p p start at the feet first and se- p p cure a good foundation by || I j buying your Shoes of arelia- pj || ble Shoe dealer. Even in js p| Shoe buying there's chances p p to save; and without buying P H| inferior quality either; if you pj [g buy here you save money. || P When you want to be hon- p I estly dealt with, come to ® II p] I McMENAMIN'S j ishing, Hat and Shoe Store, • j| :ENTRE STREET. [I \l__ We own and occupy the tallest mercantile building in the world. Wc have /j/*' \ over a,000,000 customers. Sixteen hundred clerks are constantly l^rl / jfr [ GENERAL CATALOGUE is the book of the people —it quotes I W-Vj Wholesale Prices to Everybody, has over 1,000 pages, 16,000 illustrations, and \]:J> J /■ <V: 60,000 descriptions of articles with prices. It costs 72 cents to print and mail J/Xf J \ Wrr each copy. We want you to have one. SEND FIFTEEN CENTS to show rW]i your good faith, and we'll send you a copy FREE, with all charges prepaid. I\J W MONTGOMERY WARD & C 0, Michisan A c e S" mS[ " e ' P. F. McNULTY, FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND EMBALMER. Embalming of female corpses performed exclusively by Mrs. P. P. MuNulty. Prepared to Attend Calls Day or Night. South Centre street, Freeland. SEND US ONE DOLLAR Examine it at and freight charges. This Btove Is else No. 8 oven IS 16:4x18x11, top is 42x23; made from best pi# iron, extra i!M£? A*"*, heavy covers, heavy linings and grates, largo oven Hhelf, heavy tin-lined oven door, handsomo nickel plated ornamentations and trimmings, extra largo deep, genuine HtandUh poreelaia lined rtwnolr, hand some largo ornamonted base. Best eoal burner made, and *° furnish I'liKK an extra wood grat~, making it a per fect wood burner. WB IHSOB A BINDI3<J)ARAtITKK with every stove and guarantee safe delivery to your rail road station. Your local dealor would chargo you 925 00 for such a stove, the freight is only about #I.OO for each 500 miles, no we aave job ni leant SIO.OO. Address SEARS, ROEBUCK & CO.ONC.)CHICAGO. ILL. pMn, ltaa ac. an Unroll, nIMIh-IUIM.J -I &sss s no d money c H cu fy** ctT d T " 18 AD * t °£ T and J| d r °" l fc? naw''nV heard charges jeipreaa ehargM will average 60 to 76 llf ( ct-aIH for 1,000 mllea. ' Th ' s Circular Plush Cape J^^JTiuKSoYflnSt Ball'e Heal Plunk, i> Inches long, cut full sweep, lined throughout witli Merreriles Slla la bl ek, bloeorred/Vcry elaborately embroidered with aoutaehe braid and black beading ns Illustrated. Trimmed all around with extra flneßlark Thibet Kur, heavily Interlined with wadding and fiber chamois Wrlfe for free Cloak Catalogue. Addrraa, SEARS, ROEBUCK & CO., CHICAGO (beam, Hoeboek A Co. are thoroughly reliable.—Editor.) JHAiraiTcTFRIE ON EASY CONDITIONS. Cut this ad. out and mail to as. Send a human hair, to k ro?t to'us I *B ltCh BUfflclent but if found exactly as represented aifd most extraordinary value and you wish to keep it. either arnd ussl .50 hr mall within 10 daya or TAKK OKUKKB FOB 8 SWITCHKH soil(1 to°u8 A wUhout an* a° Ur fr,wndß n " d the 3 switches to them direct by mall, to be paid for 10 days after received If yeeeta ilmlim In a day a. OrdcrV Nwltrh"a?ifnrr or write to-day for FREE PRBMIIM OFFER. Addrean, Ladles' Hair Emporium, Chicago. " " v Read - the - Tribune.
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