FREELAND TRIBUNE. Established 1888. PUBLISHED EVERY MONDAY AND THURSDAY lIY THE TRIBUNE PRINTING COMPANY, Limited. OVTICE: MAIN STREET ABOVE CENTRE. LONO DISTANCE TELEPHONE. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: One Year 81.50 Sl* Months 75 Four Months 50 Two Months 25 FREELAND, SEPTEMBER 25, 1899. POLITICAL NOTES. PENNSYLVANIA LEGISLATURE. The legislature of Pennsylvania is one of the biggest and boldest legalized blackmailing concerns on earth. The big corporations, the Insurance com panies, the Standard Oil company, the brewers, the counterfeit butter mak ers, the pawnbrokers, the lottery pol icy knaves, the school book trust, the adulterers of food, trade outlaws and Interests that have shady and "under the rose" dealings, all dread the ap proach of a new legislature as the people of a southern community fear the coming of the yellow fever season. They can scent the presence of the brigands and know that the hour has come when they will again be "held up" by Quay and his gang and com pelled to disgorge and pay tribute to them. And this Is how the game is worked: A new and guileless member is in duced to introduce a bill belonging to the "snake" family, or better known as a "pinch." Then the little joker Is taken under the wing of the old and experienced machine blackmailers, who In the meantime have had them selves fixed on the gilt edge commit tee to which these "snakes" are re ferred by the speaker, who is of course fully posted and Is a partner. The favorite plan Is to allow the queer bills to pass the house and go to a senate committee on the promise that there will be a divide of the swag. This course thoroughly alarms the victims, who at once hustle to get a fund together to purchase the strangu lation of the measure thus threatening their Interests. Thousands of dollars are raised on the "camptown" prin ciple, and a representative sent to ne gotiate with the blackmailers. It sometimes happens that the black mailing cabal saves them this trouble, as was the case a few years ago when the speaker pro tem. of the senate was tracked to the office of a foreign corporation which had its headquar ters In New York city, and which was invited to come down handsomely. The guilt of this legislative blackmail er became known, and there was a Ecandal and a mock Investigation. The senate committee on finance Is one of the headquarters for the most notorious of the gang of Quay black mailers, and membership on It Is worth thousands of dollars each session. Certain of the favorite interests of the blackmailers, notably the school book trust and the insurance companies, are compelled to protect themselves by maintaining lobbies at Harrlsburg, but Quay, the boss, never undertakes to purge the legislature of these specula tive and highwaymen statesmen, so that It has come to pass that each leg islature is more disreputable than its predecessor and comes to be more dreaded and feared. Turn the rascals out. REPUBLICAN CLERKS. General Poo Bah Gobln, the Quay soldier-statesman of many jobs, was entirely right, although unjustly criti cized for It, when he told the farmers at William's Grove that the state treasurer Is "only a clerk." Under the Quay machine this functionary is af ter all "only a clerk." He Is directed by others and has pratlcally nothing to do with the cash of the treasury, which la farmed out among the po litical banks that pay interest to the boss and allows the money to he used by him and his family and favorite lieutenants for speculating In stocks and entering Into speculative business deals. William Llvesey was a smooth and obliging "clerk." He was state treasurer for nine years, and when he was not state treasurer he was the state treasurer's cashier. He visited Canada, you will recall. He thought he would be safer there than in Har rlsburg, particularly If he kept him self disguised anu went under an as sumed name. He remained In the queen's domains for a long time. He Is now said to he living in Chicago in strict retirement. BOYER AND HAYWOOD CLERKS. Boyer was state treasurer, and it will be remembered that the legislature undertook to impeach him because he had had queer relations with thai colossal rascal, John Bardsley, of Phil adelphia, Haywood, the predecessor of the present treasurer, and who was "only a clerk," had his death hasten ed by worry and fear of exposure. He entered the office a strong, lusty and happy man, but broke down under the strain. Had he lived the courts would have sent him to the penitentiary. What the people want is a treasurer who will not be "only a clerk" or a ■weak Democrat like "Square Timber" Noyes, who was used by the Republi can bosses through his cashier. Blake Walters, and whom the position ruin ed. Farmer Creasy, if he be elected, will not he "only a clerk." There will be no speculating with the state's funds and payments held back from the counties that it may earn private Interest from the political banks. And he will turn the searchlight on the books and the papers, and what he will discover will be enough to raise the roof off the state house. BOODLE USED IN CHESTER. The Quay machine, driven to desper ation, went its limit to boodleize the Democrats in Chester county at last ■week's primary, at which the question of fusion with the independent Re publicans was submitted to vote. Where the great wads came from is a mystery, but thousands of dollars were In the hands of the Quay agents throughout the county. The machine's cash failed to defeat fusion, however, which was overwhelmingly carried. Balked In this corrupt conspiracy, Barry Eyre and the virtuous Auditor general McCauley then turned their Ittention to the county convention to nave fusion rejected after the party had instructed for It at the polls. The Quay machine was materially aided by certain miserable and traitorous Dem ocrats who hold jobs in the federal departments In Philadelphia—Cleve land holdovers, who thus sold them selves In order to retain their places. PENNSYLVANIA'S CZAR. William A.Stone la the first governor of Pennsylvania who has undertaken to set himself up as superior to the constitution and to usurp the functions of an emperor In a sovereign state 01' the American union. He appoints a United States senator when the consti tution requires him to summon the leg islature in extra session and when he knows that the senate from its estaV lishment has never received, but has always rejected an applicant applying under such circumstances with a gov ernor's credentials. He vetoes two proposed constitution al amendments looking to a clean and honest ballot because his boss disap proves of them, and which the consti tution withdraws from his considera tion. He takes his pen and roams through appropriations which hedeems too large, striking here and there, thus constituting himself bigger than the legislature, and which no other gov ernor ever dared to do. He signs a bill and files it among the statutes, but sub sequently, forming an unfavorable opinion of the law, he reconsiders his approval and imagines that he has re pealed the act. He sends for the au thorities of state and eleemosynary in stitutions that have been given appro priations and compels them to accept a lower amount at the point of the pistol, or through the threat thatarefusalwill cause him to veto the entire appropria tion. Thus things have come to a pret ty pass in Pennsylvania when a gov ernor becomes greater than the legisla ture and breaks the laws which he has sworn to execute and obey. PROOF IS WANTED. The claim is flaunted in the faces of the people by the Republican machine managers that the state treasury has never lost a dollar through the gutting of banks holding state deposits, such as the Delamater. the People's, the Key stone, the Chestnut Street, and other notoriously rotten political concerns. But how do the people know the state has never lost a dollar? Where Is the proof of it. where is the audit? We have only the "say so" of the Quay henchmen. The state is bankrupt and cannot meet its obligations even in boom times, and the governor is com pelled to strike right and left with his veto, starving the schools, the insane and the charitable Institutions in order, as he shouts, to save the state's credit. As Hamlet would remark, "There's something rotten in the state of Den mark." VETERAN QUAY. Senator Quay is the possessor of a medal voted him by congress for al leged bravery In the rebellion, but he loved his comrades so dearly that dur ing the late national encampment held : In Philadelphia he was bobbing for eels and angling for trout In the wilds of Canada. Quay has no time for an old soldier except as a delegate to a politi cal convention or on election day. A JOB FOR BEATH. It Is now in order for General Bob Beath to reassemble the Pennsylvania War Veterans' Association, as he did in Philadelphia In August, 1898, and again eulogize Governor Stone as the soldier's friend and flamboyant cham pion. Of course a little thing like Stone's discharge of old soldiers from the state departments at Harrlsburg to make room for Quay henchmen who never saw a "reb" or smelled gunpow der In their country's defense, and which caused the McKlnley Veteran association of Dauphin county and Ma jor John C. Delaney to denounce him need not be alluded to. But as De Wolf Hopper would sing: "There are things and there are things't were better not to dwell on." WHY JOSIAH WAS NAMED. It Is the usual thing for the Quay machine to allow the railroads and the Standard Oil company to name the judges of the supreme and the superior courts, but having a nomination for the latter this year at his disposal the boss, in order to bring the mayor of Phila delphia Into camp, so as to have tne use of the delegates he controls and make the city "a wide open town" for election frauds, permitted that ambi tious gentleman, who is pipe laying for the next Republican nomination for governor, to name the candidate for the superior court. This compelled the boss to offend a great corporation by scratch ing the eminent jurist whom It had In duced Governor Hastings to appoint. The mayor of Philadelphia, through some subterranlan reason, named Jo siah Adams, who has since been found to be morally and professionally unfit to a place upon so Important a bench as that of the superior court. There Is a grave scandal connected with his stew ardship of an estate which brought him to the verge of disbarment as an attor ney. Nearly nine years ago he was ap pointed. through the influence of the men who had skinned the Penn Trust and Safe Deposit Company, as its re ceiver, and he has managed for a long period to nurse this to his great finan cial benefit. BOGUS ASSESSMENTS. The September return of the voters of Philadelphia lias been completed by the machine assessors, and shows that the bogus and rotten assessment Is still being kept at high water mark. This indicates that the old game of voting the names of dead men, of dogs, poll parrots and monkeys Is again to be re sorted to this fall by the gangs of trained home and imported repeaters from Washington, Baltimore, Wilming ton and Chester. A boy not of age re cently admitted before a magistrate he had voted 3fi times at the last election in Philadelphia, receiving $1 for each vote he got. A total return of 318,151 1 is made, and yet thousands of addltion i al legitimate and illegitimate voters will swear In their votes. On the basis I of one voter to every five Inhabitants i this return gives Philadelphia an indi j rated population of one and a half millions, which Is preposterous. There are 80.000 names on the voting lists | that do not belong there and which ac i counts for the fact that Philadelphia is the only great city in the United Ktates that is overwhelmingly Repub | limn. HOME OF MRS. GRANT AN ELEGANT RESIDENCE OF MASSA-' CHUSETTS AVE., WASHINGTON. j senator Kftrauiidfl Uaed to Call the Dwell. InR .She Now Occupies HU "Little Co*. tH(f"— Mrs. Oraut In Good llealth— I'rouil of Her Sons. About the time tliut Mr. Richard Ol ne.v was moviiig from the office of At torney General under President Cleve land into the office of Secretary of State, and when he was living on Mas sachusetts Avenue, beyond Twenty lirst Street, In a house built by Sena tor Edmunds, at a time when he sup posed that he was to remain a member of the Senate for many years, Mrs. Ju lia D. Grant, the widow of Gen. Ulys ses S. Grant, called upon the Olney family. Upon entering the house she saw at once, upon the wall near the door, u portrait of Gen. Grant, and soon after, while she was enjoying the sunlight that poured into the drawing room windows, she found another ex cellent portrait of the same subject. She was looking for a home In Wash ington. The location of this house Its liberality of arrangement, its adapt ability to the uses to which Mrs. Grant expected to put her home, together with the ugrecuhle impression made by the discovery of the two portraits so Interesting to her, helped Mrs. Grant to determine that tills was the house she had been looking for, and here she would make her home for the rest of her days. She bought it and bus since lived in it. MRsi U. a C3RANT." ' " 1 Senator Edmunds used to call the dwelling in which Mrs. Grant now' lives his "little cottage." Well, it is j a house lacking in pretense, but it is not small. About tlfty feet in breadth i it reaches well back on the lot, and rises three stories to a roof that slopes j toward the front. It Is a modern house, having its central doorway on the! the ground Poor instead of by the once- j favored high stoop. The lower windows, are barred against Intrusion by stout I Iron guards of ornamental pattern. The material is brick, with stone trim mings; there is no excess of decorative features, ami the windows, excepting those in the corner tower at the west Bide, are large but not too numerous. The outer sliding doors of glass open upon a vestibule, and'inner doors ad mit to the wide hull lined with oak. Just in the rear of the library is a commodious and cheerful apartment, finished in polished wood of light col or, which is used as the breakfast room. The two windows give to the north and overlook a good neighbor hood, and the cheerful Interior is made attractive by a wide fireplace In which a blazing fire often contributes a home like cosiness to the room. The rooms at the left and back are put to various domestic uses. THE HOME OF MRS. U. S. GRANT IN WASHINGTON. ITalf way to the rear of the first tloor a stairway leads to the west and to a landing a few steps up, then turns and, with a second flight, reaches the main room. This is a large room, facing on Massachusetts Avenue, and adjoining It and scarcely separated from it by an open door ami portiere, is a second par lor, which is Mrs. Grant's own room. Here she passes much of her time, sur rounded by interesting inememtocu of her husband, the gifts of many friends and admirers. Both these apartments are handsomely furnished. In the large drawing room are curtains and vases and fans, and other objects of an ar tistic character that were presented by tiie Emperor and Empress of Japan, the Chinese Emperor, and by other no table people at home or abroad. A large portrait in oil of Gen. Grant by Healy hangs in a conspicuous place, j Mrs. Grant says It Is a good likeness ; of her husband. In an opposite corner |ls another portrait. Strangers seeing ! It for the first time at once remark up on the youthfulness of this profile por trait of the younger Ulysses S., and not of the father. The profile like ness is startling. Over the mantle is a framed medallion, in bronze, carrying the superimposed heads in relief of j Washington, Lincoln, and Grant, with the inscription below "Pater, 1787—Sal vator, 1805—Custodius. 1872," in a scroll below the portraits. Mrs. Grant is in good health and in excellent spirits. She follows closely the movements of her sons and is i proud of them. She declares that she never could understand politics, and that Oen. Grant never would tell her enough about them to enable her to comprehend their meaning. She refers without a trace of apparent resentment to the fuct that Jesse has "turned Democrat." II THE SULTAN OF SULU. The lailnnd Potentate Whom We Have Annexed by Treaty. The Sultan of 9ulu, the potentate whom we annexed with his grand vi zer, his harem and his slaves, by vir tue of the treaty of Paris, was thus de scribed by a correspondent of the Philadelphia Times, who visited him In his home at Maybun, on the south ern coast of the Sulu Islands. The Sultan's palace he found to be a large, well-constructed building of wood and bamboo, with a spacious vestibule dec orated with shrubs and tropical plants. In this vestibule the sultan sat attend ed by three island chiefs and a retinue of servants. "His excellency was dressed," he wrote, "in very tight silk trousers fast ened partly up the sides with showy chased gold or gilt buttons —a short Eton-cut olive green jacket with an infinity of buttons, white socks, orna mented slippers, a red sash around his waist, a kind of turban and a krls at his side. One could almost have Imag ined him to be a Spanish bull fighter with an oriental finish off. We all bowed low, and the sultan, surrounded by his sultanas, put his hands to his temples, and 011 lowering thorn he bow ed at the same time. There was a pause and the sultun motioned to us to repose 011 cushions 011 th% floor, and we did so. The cushions, covered with rich silk, were very comfortable. Ser vants in fantastic costumes were con stantly in attendance serving betelnut. "One sultana was fairly pretty, or had been so, but the remainder were heavy, languid and l*zy in their move ments; and their teetft. dyed black, did not embellish their personal appear ance. They all wore light-colored dual garments of great width and light bodices. Their coiffure was carefully finished, but unfortunately a part of the forehead was hidden by an ugly fringe of hair." His highness is a Mussulman by faith, acknowledging the supreme re ligious authority of the Sultan of Tur key, and being under the religious ob ligation of all Mussulmans of having to make a pilgrimage to Mecca. The sultan is supreme In his author ity over the lives and property of his subjects, but is advised in matters of state by a council of elders. Under him, but not fully acknowledging his authority, are a number of petty chiefs, called Dattos, who collect trib ute in his name, and pay over to the royal treasury, not that of Spain, but that of the sultan, such portion of their revenues as remains after satisfying their own wants. Heud llunter of Samoa. It is stated on the authority of Ad miral Kautz, of the United States navy that the head hunting custom among the Samoans is an oid one. The Sam oan first cuts off the head of his dead or captured enemy. Then he carries it around in triumph, dances round it and holds a feast in honor of it. After this he prepares it with skill and care at his leisure in order to preserve it permanently as an article of domestic decoration and an heirloom in his fam ily. He stuffs the neck with hot stones, and repeats the process several times a day for three days. The stones are not hot enough to roast the flesh. The process has the effect of drying the head very effectively arid of preserving it. The flesh assumes a leathery ap pearance. After the process is com plete, the head will last for an Indefi nite period —almost as long as a piece of old leather. The Samoan takes the preserved head and puts it in a network bag with very large meshes. Through this the dried and grinning features may bo observ- 1 ed, and it need hardly be said that they present a very awful appearance. The netting is red, which heightens the effect. The Samoan hangs this tro phy in his principal living room in order to remind his children how val orous and fearful a man he is. Ilcad hunting flourishes in many of the Pacific Islands, and to a fearful extent In those Islands which fringe the eastern coast of Asia. The Phil ippine Islanders are generally addicted to it, and the Dyaks of Borneo excel all other races in the persistency and frequency with which they collect their I grewsome trophies. To the credit of the Dyaks it Is said that they prefer Dyak heads. Among the Ilongotes, on the other hand, an Intending bridegroom has to bring his bride a certain number of human heads preferably Christians. Among the Dyaks heads are in de mand to place under the posts at the foundation of a house as a gift to a dead man, or to ornament the hall of a chief's house. None but a successful head hunter is entitled to the honor of being tattooed. Skulls are used for drinking cups while the teeth and hair serve for the adornment of the body and weapons. The Dyak head hunter when he goes hunting takes a large basket with him, in which to place his trophies. He slings this over his shoulder like a fishing basket, and throws heads into It with as little emotion as a German fish erman would put a porgy in his basket. These receptacles are made of shells and wicker work, and are often very handsome. Head hunting among the Dyaks. al though it originally proceeded from religious and political motives, soon ex tended the circle of its victims, and the desire of possessing skulls became a passion. Every neighboring village was looked upon as hostile, and the heads of sleeping men were cut off'. The Dyaks prepare for head hunting by religious consecration. They build themselves a hut with a roof on four posts, and the floor raised a yard high. The entrance Is barred with COIIR of rattan, which are hung with red flow ers. young palm leaves and a quantity of little wooden images of swords, shields, spears flying, hornbills and the like. Inside the hut are spears, blow guns, quivers with freshly poisoned arrows, shields, swords and cuirasses enough to equip a band of head hunters. 111 this hut the company stays for a period of four to six days, according to the omens. Before they leave it they hide in the ground a number of rudely carved figures equal in number to themselves, in order to appease the evil spirits. No man who does not belong to tlio band Is allowed to approach the bale! but under pain of death. IT'S DIFFERENT THE NOKTII AMERICAN (PHILADELPHIA) IT'S DIFFERENT, because It prints all the news, and all the news it prints is true. IT'S DIFFKW KXT, because it's bright and brisk, up-to-date and vigorous, but not yellow. IT'S DIFKEHKXT. because its only policy is to tell the truth. It has no covert or personal interests to promote. It serves no political ambition, no creed, no class prejudice, no mere partisan purpose. IT'S I) I FFK H KXT. because It advocates equal taxation and battles against the existing system, which favors the rich corporation at the expense of the farmer, the merchant, the manufacturer and the wage-earner. IT'S D 1 FFKRKNT. because it stands for Republican principles, and makes war upon all who, under the stolen name of Republicanism, are disloyal to those principles. IT'S IJI F-'EK K KNT. because it believes manhood and not money should rule. Therefore it upholds the rights of all, as against the aggressive power of the privileged few. IT'S 1) I FFK R KXT. because no boss, no corporation, can control one line of its space. IT"S D 1 FFKIIKXT. because it is non sectarian and broad; every party, every faith, every class, and the workingman equally with the millionaire, gets a fair hearing in its columns. IT'S DIFFER KNT. be- cause it upholds faith in ONE humanity, and the pro- CENT gress of mankind toward Everv higher ideals, larger hopes and better living. Where IT'S 1)1 FFKWEXT. It will continue to be different. Watch The North Ameri can and see it grow. \ The Cure that Cures i Coughs, (s\ \ Colds, J Grippe, (k Whooping Cough. Asthma, J Bronchitis and Incipient /> d* Consumption, is g hIM } j The German remedy fa fcT Curfcs \\vrcra\. -axxd J §o\& \v\} 25^50tte^ P. F. McNULTY, FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND EM BALM ER. Embalming of female corpses performed exclusively by Mrs. I'. F. McNulty. K '') Prepared to Attend Calls Day or Night. South Centre street. Freehold. HAIR"SWITCH FREE L\ ~ ON EASY CONDITIONS. \ cut this ad. out and mall to HS. Send a f V J snmll s-niple ol' .vour halr.cn t close to the V V"\ r-mts. Vhlllnii lvi.h'l \T\ Homiym hy mull. pHt|>ald. n FINE HUMAN AJ m c fl'om u A riiLT&z t V\\ ~'i ounces, Hhort aU-m. We will ineloj V / | ill I k;itry\vith swie h MinMentiiOKtajto ( \W b'ut'ir'i'''iiHl""m tly lis r.',.i'^ente.lai. ; l V tIA in-ft extra ordinary value and you wish A,T i to kiop il.Hll.tr H.n.lii #1.50 ly mall within / 10 tints or'l AKK OKHKUS KOII 3 SWITCHKH V Al 1't 50 / An tl""l "y monay'wetoVend \ .v" A the 3 l Hw"tcheVT them"Turoct hy mail. v ■■ v ,o l !;;; I'jy'f J.Vj!" 1 u!I , jj"- Cilinrraa iT'lihrr |.ro2lumV for'Va 1 •" in 9 .In,a. Order.. KwlGli utomeor wrltcto-duy for FUEF IIIEM I I'M OFFF.IC. Aldrs Ladles' Hair Emporium, Chicago. GEORGE FISHER, dealer in Liquors, Wines, Cigars, Etc. FOll A GLASS OF FRESH BEER. PORTER OR ALE cull at NO. G EAST WALNUT STREET. Low Kate Excursion to New York Via Lehigh Valley Railroad, October 11, 1800. Faro from Froeland for the round trip will be $2.4. r >. Tickets will ho sold fur all trains, except those con necting with Black Diamond express, October 11. Limit for return October 13 inclusive. Consult Lehigh Valley ticket agents for further particulars. Grand Army Day and l'arado. Slatington, October 7, 1809. The Lehigh Valley Railroad will sell tickets on October 7, good for return to October s. at low rate of single fare for the round trip from Froeland. Consult Lehigh Valley Railroad ticket agents for further particulars. Carbon County Fair. Special low rates via Lehigh Valley Railroad. Tickets will be sold from Froeland to Leliighton and return. Sep tember 2d to 20 inclusive, limited for return to and including September 30. Consult Lehigh Valley ticket agents for further particulars. IjpfWna fiii frtU fsi [rtLflsTpßJ Ef ra HrtU &S frtjJ Si frtLj^j I FALL.. ' 1 P] =============== |gg| I Announcement, i Si || I The fall season is again i|U upon us; how fast the seasons [S come and go. It seems but a few || days since we were advertising K our spring and summer goods [§ and now it is time to talk winter K wear. Before the rush and hurry bj * of fall business commences we PS want to say a word or two to our || friends, and we take this method of so doing. b; First—For favors of the past we wish to gfl thank our patrons, one anil all; never has a store S tried harder to please its customers, and we realize |£i that our efforts have been appreciated; no pains [®j have been spared anil nothing has been left undone fM to give our patrons the best goods obtainable for Igjl the lowest prices possible; that we always have what nipl we advertise, and that we always do as we advertise, S every"customer of this store knows full well. I—, Second—We believe we have earned your lE confidence by deserving it, and we trust that our [®| store shall ever have an abiding place in your mind s|] when thinking of Hats, Shoes and Men's and Hoys' Igjl ran Furnishings. Now, at the opening of the fall sea- Lru [7O son, we extend to every person in Freeland and Ei I=3 vicinity an invitation to call, and, if pleased with our lHjl Ira goods, our prices and our business methods, to favor Ira |l%j| us with his or her patronage. I®] raj Third—Our guarantee is nothing less than rj]] fin perfect satisfaction or your money refunded. Let I™] Si us occupy the first place in your thoughts when you b, El think of buying anything in our line. [E 1 McMEN AIIN'S I' Gents' Furnishing, Hat and Shoe Store, 1 86 CENTRE STREET. ti'.'wo'.'uou.oo r wJJ'duy'" jjjj: rt v> We own and occupy the tallest mercantile building in the world. We have /I over a,000,000 customers. Sixteen hundred clerks are constantly f OUR GENERAL CATALOGUE is the book of the people —it quotes 1 W—rh Wholesale Prices to Everybody, has over 1,000 pages, 16,000 illustrations, and \l;J> I Jjl jfe' 60.000 descriptions of articles with prices. It costs 72 cents to print and mail I <Yrrf' each copy. We want you to hove one. SEND FIFTEEN CENTS to show J^MJ your good faith, and we'll send you a copy FREE, with all charges prepaid. 1 <-T W WARD & C 0. Mlchiga " SEm D'N'd'M'O<C 1 m * GRADE DROP CA6INET BUHOJCR SfWINU MACHINE I' VVrolu-ht r/>. o.'suhjrM°i„ vb l ulh.'atkst V h.!oa"x"tor'>V u Miai'V o""' li ln $15.501 for thu DROP DESK CABINET' JBURDIck /f\ d) 9 it; the reatest value over offered by any houau. n | n1 • B jum'H THE BURmcK ? f „O t MAI>K J I || |libw K '-" M THE IIEKT MATERIAL M a r , 'r.'v,:',v„H 0L ' D l sAwsn ° AK 1 * " /i I 8 ln'S u'uttTp'"mimau.'^^lilii'n'wii^ir!'^ *" a ao'-YKAiis-' BnroiNO'aVAßSS^Ttßll."nt with ovory'moohlne'. ■* IT COSTS YOU NOTHING ;° u f , t s^ 1 0 72™ 1 Zni^rK^a^o'oo ,oor twirtt u.at Ifc. $15.50. ""'to*®?!?!?'VOtln tl |:. I .W^r l rilrmo°wUH*ili;' , !itf. ! ™ 4 iV < Mi>SS nut aaiUfU-d. OKDRiI TO oai. OON'T I)hI,AY. (Scars, Roebuck A Co. aro thoroughly reliable —Editor.) Address. SEARS, ROEBUCK & CO. (Inc.) Chicago, 111. Are Your Shoes Run Down ? The Black Diamond SHOE REPAIRING HOUSE Will Make Them Good as Hew. Tho quality of our work cannot be surpaHsod, and we make repairs quicker than any I other establishment in town. Cull hero when you want the Lowest Prices in the Town. I H. MOWER, Prop. Hadesty Building, 109 S. Centre Street, j SEND ONE DOLLAR g < ■ liilsome delivery. Kraralne It at your frelitht depot, and if • found perfectly*alUfactory, ciactly a* represented, equal to ■tone* that airrnt Kpeeiul ijjL with order. He -1 prepay the rrelaht to 3*?.. **- nnj point POMI of the VlAr'i > i a THIS HAND SQM EQR AVE STONEmade, rut, traced, let torn! and ppllHlied In very latest style, from finest Knyal I Itlue Close Oinln Marble, Is non-destructible, and ha* a rich, highly polished, unfndinir color. draw-stone Is 'JO Inchi-a hlfrh 1 16 inches wide at base. WHteforprleeHonotheratyleaandidiea 1 Address, SEARS, ROEBUCK & CO., CHICAGO!
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers