FREELAND TRIBUNE. Established 1888. PUBLISHED EVERY MONDAY AND THURSDAY BY THE TRIBUNE PRINTING COMPANY, Limited. OrriCK: MAIN STREET ABOVE CENTRE. LONG DISTANCE TELEPHONE. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: One Year $1.50 Six Months 75 Four Months 5U Two Months 25 The 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 figures in j advance of the present date. Report prompt- ! ly to thisofllce whenever paper is not received. Arrearages must be paid when subscription is discontinued. Make all money orders, checks , etc., payable tv the Tribune Printiny Company, Limited. FREELAND, SEPTEMBER 28, 1899. WASHINGTON LETTER. Washington, September 20, 1899. Since Reed's retirement there has boon much talk about members of tho house being allowed more liberty at the coming session of congress, but an an nouncement of Speakor-to-bo Hender son's programme for tho Republican financial bill does not Indicate an in crease of liberty for members; only a transfer of silent obedience from Czar Rocd to King Caucus. It is said to be Mr. Henderson's intention to bring the financial bill before a Republican caucus, as soon as congress meets and to get it endorsed and ordered passed. Then the bill will be railroaded through tho house before the committees are announced. The excuse given for this action, which will be decidedly unusual, In dealing with one of the most import ant subjects that cougress is ever called upon to handle—the country's money— Is that if the bill was allowed to take the usual course, it might never get out of the committee on banking and cur rency, to which it should properly be roforred after being introduced in the house, or might be changed by that committee. If this programme is really to be carried out, tho house caucus should first vote to abolish the banking and currency committee. t t t A distinction without a difference is that made by Republicans who say that Mr. McKinley will not make some speeches in Ohio, but will probably make speeches from tho rear platform of the train upon which he will pass through Ohio on his coming trip to and from the West. It really looks as though that trip had been arranged solely for tho purpose of giving Mr. McKinley an opportunity to make some speeches in Ohio, which he has been assured by his party managers are very much needed. lie and his party managers may call them "roar-platform'' or any other kind of speeches they please, but the people will know them for tho stuinp speeches they will be, and they will not be Inclined to think any more of the president who is willing to ongagc in such business. X X i Boss Piatt has been in Washington, and it is believed that he tried to make a deal for the vice presidential nomina tion for a New Yorker, it being now protty gonerally understood that Mr. Ilobart Is to "voluntarily" retire, and that Governor "Teddy" doesn't want tho nomination. It is said that Piatt told Mr. McKinley that any man from his state would please him, but suggest ed Senator Depew and Secretary Root. XXX Representative Berry, of Kentucky, has boen somewhat annoyed by boing misrepresented as to his attitude to wards Colonel Bryan. While In Wash ington, a day or two ago, Colonel Berry took occasion to say, with an emphasis which left no doubt of his meaning every word: "My opinion is that Bryan will be the nominee of tho Democracy, and I have a further opinion that he will get votes enough to elect him presi dent of the United States." X X X The kicking of Senator Wellington out of the chairmanship of the Mary land Republican state committee has. in the opinion of those who know the situation thoroughly, made the carrying of tho state by the Democrats a certain ty. A Maryland Republican is rpiotod as having said: "I would not be sur prised If Smith should be elocted gover nor by 40,000 plurality. The Welling ton incident, the independent revolt, and the Schley affair have givon the Democrats an advantage that cannot now be overcome." Tho turning down of Wellington makes it certain that he will join Senators Hoar and Mason in attacking the Philippine policy of Mr. McKinley, In the senate. Take it all in all, Mr. McKinley has no reason to look forward to tho coming session of con gress with pleasant anticipations. t i t Late advices do not bear out the statement so often made in official documents, that Filipino private sol diers only participate in tho war be cause they are afraid of their officers. General Otis believed In that theory once, but since he offered £4O cash and personal immunity to every Filipino soldier who surrendered a gun, he has changed his mind. Only one Filipino offered to take advantage of that offer, and before tho money was paid to him, It was found out that ho was acting in partnership with one of our own soldiers, who had captured the gun surrendered, and was trying to secure some pocket xuonoy through the credulity of Otis. BOODLERHRIALS OFF. A Political Judge Comes in Handy For the Machine. GEN. HEEDER PLAYS GOWfIRDS ROLE How Quay, Penrose and Stone, Masquerad ing as Friends of Organized Labor, Are Backing Judge Paxson, Labor's Arch En emy, For llnterstate Commerce Commis sioner. (Special Correspondence.) Philadelphia, Sept. 25.—1t required no political Wiggins to forecast Chair man Reeder's rejection of Chairman Hillings' general challenge for palaver between the stump orators of both par ties of living campaign issues, the freemen of the state to act as judges. Reeder's ridiculous and Fallstafflan retreat has raised a broad grin on the fair face of the ancient commonwealth. The independent papers have nailed him to the cross for a coward. They have javalined. him and his party as being afraid to meet honest discussion of Republican trusteeship of the state. The Quayites have barricaded them selves behind the dusky warriors of Luzon, who are struggling for their God inherited liberties as the American colonists fought for theirs against George 111, and into whom the McKin ley administration is shooting the con stitution of the United States through the muzzles of Springfield rifles and Mark Hanna's dollar mark tattooed person as though American imperial ism as decried by Washington and Jefferson and Lincoln, and the un speakable Hanna's continued pro prietorship of a president, has to do with the election of a judge of the su perior court and a state treasurer of Pennsylvania. Their armor is so weak and flimsy, their cause so indefensible, that no wonder it is General Reeder slinks like an abashed canine to the precincts of his own kennel. The Quav machine has secured a ma terial vantage, however, within the week. It has succeeded in warding off the trials of the indicted boodlers who were caught redhanded in their at tempts to bribe Democrats and insur gents in the last legislature to defame themselves by voting for Quay for senator and for the McCarrell bill, which he thought necessary to save him and his son from the frowning walls of the penitentiary. If these uotorious cases, which were billed for trial in the Dauphin court last week, had gone on they would have given the machine's campaign a pair of beautiful black eyes, and would have provided the Democrats with an ammunition train sufficient to have blown up the Harrlsburg plat form and the entire Quay aggregation of plundering patriots. But witness how fate is employed by the Key stone's Napoleon of politics to keep him on his roller skates. WHERE A POLITICAL JUDGE COMES IN. A United States district judge is re tired on ago. A judge of the Dauphin court who possessed some little in dependence of thought and action and some true conception of the law and how it should be construed is made a federal Judge by Quay, thus filling the vacancy. The Dauphin court is an essential function and asset of the dominant machine, since its jurisdic tion extends over distinctive state questions and particularly questions arising under the accursed Baker bal lot law. Quay, mark you, puts in this vacancy on the Dauphin bench a pro fessional politician and henchman who for some years had been at the head of the aub-machine as chairman of the county committee. To the shame of the judiciary, this political judge had the temerity to cling to his chairmanship of the Re publican executive committee of Dauphin county long after he had qualified for a judge. And this po litical judge was a handy thing for the machine to have in these hoodie cases. He and tho amiable district attorney conveniently found that the stuffed docket was too crowded with petty of fenses, such as hen roost robbing, as suult and battery, crap playing, for niflcation and bastardy and corner lounging, to try these hoodie cases, which aim at the very vitals of popu lar government and in which the peo ple of the whole state are intensely concerned. In order thus to save the Republican campaign from embarrass ment by reviving at this time the crowning scandal of the last legisla ture the Dauphin court has postponed these boodle cases until the January term of court.. This Is another case of Quay "winking the other eye" at a political judge. HERE, LABORING MAN, LIST. Governor Stone has Justly aroused the wrath and indignation of organized labor throughout the state by person ally visiting Washington and adding his squeak and "me too" to the power ful appeals of Senator Penrose and Quay to President McKinley to name ex-Chief Justice Paxson as a mem ber of the interstate commerce com mission. Two years ago a similar attompt failed through the protests of the la bor organizations and by Senator Cul lom, of Illinois, the father of the law creating the commission, threatening to defeat Paxson's confirmation by the senate should the president nominate him. The presidential nerve then failed, although he and Hanna had solemnly obligated themselves in the campaign Of l v :"i to thus appoint Pax son in return for boodle and votes the great eastern railroad corporations gave McKinley and Hanna. Paxson's utter subserviency to any thing and to everything in the cor poration flesh pot line while he adorn ed the supreme bench of Pennsylva nia and his hatred of and antipathy to the right of the common people, and particularly of organized labor, mark ed him as a useful man for the rail roads to use as an entering wedge for the prostiti ion of the interstate com merce commission to their own sel fish end. Every honest man in the state had given hrce choers when Paxson hi id aside his ermine to accept one of the receive hips of the gutted Reading railroad. He had earned the hatred of the laboring g'asses by his action in the Reading railroad strike, when the late President Frank Gowan drove the organized labor interests from the road, and again in 1891 in indecently rushing with his judicial gown to the rescue of Carnegie in the great strike at Homestead. Here we have the great triumvirate —Quay, Penrose and Stone—thus urg ing Paxson, the arch and dangerous enemy of labor, for a powerful federal post, and who notoriously seeks it, that he may serve his corporation masters and help neutralize this beneficent law which the people only secured from congress by taking the corporations by the throat. If the laboring man be searching for a substantial reason for jabbing the Quay ticket at the coming election here is one that should ap peal directly to his own sense of self protection. FUSION IS THE REAL THING. The horse play of Senator Snyder, Auditor General McCauley and Larry Eyre, the Republican ringsters of Ches ter county, who are stretching out their arms to high Heaven to save them, to bolster up a straight goods Democratic ticket in that county, In order to crip ple "fusion." by screaming that Colonel Guffey and State Chairman Rilling are agin it. has fallen like a chunk of lead. It declined to say propped up on its legs. There are in Chester, as I wrote last week, some half dozen of a false breed of Democrats who are willing to do dirty work for the Quay machine in exchange for being permitted to retain minor jobs under the McKinley ad ministration. Their pretended indig nation at the consummation of "fu sion" between the Democrats and in dependents is so bald that it can be classed as the prime Joke of the cam paign. They have been playing the Three Tailors of Tooley Street by meetin' in convention and resolving that "we the &c." and nominating an alleged square timber Democratic tick et. planting it on a platform thinly varnished with eulogies of Colonel Guffey and Bryan, although they mean to vote the Quay ticket this fall and against Bryan next fall. In deed. they are stumped to find a name for their decoy duck ticket, as the law prevents them from masquer ading as Democrats, and which they don't intend to vote themselves. In the meantime both Colonel Guf fey and Chairman Rilling came for ward and gave these ex-Democrats and Quay tools a blow between the eyes. "The fusion ticket in Chester," says Colonel Guffey "will win. The Dem ocratic party is practically solid, des pite the feeble efforts of a few office holders to protect their jobs by car rying out the orders of the Quay ma chine. I most heartily endorse the position taken by State Chairman Rill ing and County Chairman Cavanaugh. It is unquestionably the duty of all true Democrats in Chester county and elsewhere to form fusion with all ele ments that are working for the over throw of the Quay machine." HARMONY IS THE WATCHWORD. Colonel Guffey and Candidates Reilly and Creasy, when they visited state headquarters last week, reported that nowhere is a sign of discord in the Democratic phalanx to be found. There is not a single threatening cloud on the fair and promising horizon. In Phila delphia, which is the weak spot, be cause of the thorough organization there of the ballot thieves by the Re publican state and city machines, all factional rancor and discord has dis appeared, giving place to amity and sunshine. The county conventions the other day were harmonious, and the ticket honors divided between the late warring factions. The outlook for the Democratic state ticket coming under the wire a winner is brightening every 24 hours, and the danger to the Quay machine is assuming such a threaten ing aspect that "the old man" has been compelled to take the reins in his own hands and play some of those al leged masterful and magical political strokes of his which he failed to do last winter, when his 'prentice boys were fooling "around the legislature trying to elect him United States sen ator. The state Democratic leaders and the executive and finance committees are booked to confer in this city this week, when campaign plans will be mapped out., the question of financing them discussed and a red hot fight or dered all along the line of hostilities. The Business Men's State League is prepared to meet and formally en dorse both Superior Court Candidate Reilly and State Treasury Candidate Creasy. The Quay candidate for the court, Commodore Ad ams, has such an unsavory reputation as a lawyer of the shyster class, while so much is known of his private life as a sport, that the independents find it impossible to hold him on their po litical stomachs, even with anchors and guy ropes, while the honesty and claims of Creasy cannot be ignored. The independents want to break into the state treasury and learn the dark secrets of its vaults. They look upon the state treasury as the machine cit adel, which It truly is, believing that if it can be captured Quay's grip on powerful moneyed interests can be broken and his opportunities for spec ulating with its funds prevented, that his downfall and end will be hastened, since he will be unable to command the money to corrupt and buy the venal, on whom he relies for his suc cesses. AND THE CAT CAME BACK. The joy of the Quay 'prentice boys, Elkin, Durham, Eyre and Penrose, over the demotion of Uncle Bill Andrews from his place as chief of staff was as short as a butterfly's life. He failed to oblige them by taking himself off to his mines in New Mexico, so as to give them a clear swing at the "old man's" ear, but remained to haunt them and make their lives miserable by prevent ing their blunders and schoolboy tac tics. His business just now is that of platting the hair of the insurgents, and he carries with him a full assortment of combs for that purpose. He and Dave Lane, the owner of the new mayor of Philadelphia, are now devoting them selves also to "feeling" the insurgent members of the legislature and of fering them inducements to change their vote to Quay in case enough can be driven into the barnyard to elect him at a special session of the legisla ture. Lane is a professional lobbyist, who has been handling members of the legislature and city councilmen for years, as the beef trust handles cattle, and is reputed to be able to size up a man's price and a fix a valuation on a vote quicker and more exact than any other man In the business. The North American is on his trail, however, and has served due and time ly warning that an exposure will be made of the methods that are being employed to thus manufacture votes fur the dethroned boss of the machine. THE JUDGE. POLITICAL NOTES. The old gag of citing certain de linquent corporations Into the Dauphin court and threatening them with heavy penalties for failure to report to the proper department of the state gov ernment is again being worked by the attorney general and the auditor gen eral. It is not on record that any of fending corporation was ever made to disgorge on this account. A contribu tion to the Republican state commit tee often times induces a state official to wink the other eye and forget that he ever had a memory. But this cita tion affords lawyer pets of the ma chine a chance to pocket fees at the expense of the state. The rutabaga at the head of the ag ricultural is just now working over time in attempting to prove that the Quay machine and the Stone admin istration loves the man with the hoe. The tremendous inroads that Farmer Creasy is making on the farmer vote has thoroughly alarmed the machine, which has been ignoring farmers for state candidates for years and which has denuded the agricultural depart ment of attaches devoted to their in terests and filled their places with town henchmen who know far more about stuffing ballot boxes and rough ing primaries than they do of sub-soil ploughing or the rotation of crops. Governor Stone has his ear to the ground. He has heard the rumbling of the storm of the people's wrath. That is clear. He is quoted as say ing that he will concur in the will of the people in the selection of judges and that he will under no circum stances attempt to force an approval of his selections by making premature selections before the people have had an opportunity to declare their choice. Such a change of attitude is an indi cation that the voice of the people has at last been heard and the machine leaders are beginning to understand that they cannot always do as they please. Since the inauguration of the present governor he has shown utter contempt for the desires of the people, who were buncoed by his-stump asser tions that he was no man's man, and that he would execute the laws fear lessly and Impartially. A change has been brought about by the indignant protests of many county Republican conventions and the criticisms of those who have a right to speak of servants who occupy public stations. The editor of the Philadelphia Sun day World, who is a political mouth piece of Dave Martin, and who is recognized as a political authority, says: "Despite all statements to the contrary, the signs all point to an extra session of the general assembly, provided Matthew Stanley Quay's ticket is 'put through' by a handsome majority, and towards which all ends are being shaped. As elections are now conducted under the Baker ballot law, only the necessity needs to be named to he complied with. 'Tie true that with the machinery in the hands of the so-called insurgents in the county of Allegheny trouble may be caused and the Brown-Adams-Barnett ticket cut many thousand votes. It must be borne in mind, however, that there is to be no factional feud in Philadelphia, and therefore the ma chinery here can be relied upon not only to make up any deficit so caused, but also to swell the figures to any amount required." Thus, as this good Republican authority admits, the re peaters and ballot thieves in Philadel phia are to he used again by the Quay gang to roll up the regulation moun tain of fraud, and that is the reason why all bills for the protection of the ballot were strangled in the last legis lature. There were no fewer than 20 bills introduced in the last legislature look ing to the safeguard of the ballot. All were put to sleep save two constitu tional amendment resolutions one providing for personal registration of voters in the cities and the other pro viding for the introduction of the vot ing machines which are in successful operation in some of the big towns in the state of New York, and which Gov ernor Stone ruthlessly killed. Why is the Quay outfit afraid of honest elec tions and why has it obstinately re fused to mend the rotten Baker ballot law? The reason is obvious and may be read by a blind man. Without the loopholes in this law the cities could not manufacture their bogus majorities to overcome the honest vote of the country. The elections in Philadel phia, Pittsburg and Lancaster have be come shameful farces, and no longer record the will of the people. State Chairman Reeder has assessed all the employes of the state govern ment 3 per cent of their salaries and directed them to hand over to their respective chiefs. No guilty man will escape the frying pan. It will be either pay or get out. This is the same Reeder who, while fattening on an income of $20,000 per year from salary and fees as secretary of the commonwealth, re fused to put up a dollar when asked to chip into the Republican fund. But Reeder was not then fingering the campaign hoodie. As Mayor Warwick would remark, "Things are different now." Now, if Mark Hanna only had an election system akin to the Baker bal lot law there would be no need to send Teddy Roosevelt, Postmaster General Smith and a host of Republican stump scrc?amers into Ohio to save McKinley. The ballot thieves and the corporation bosses who "assist" their slaveß to mark their ballots could do the sav ing. Senator Penrose says a deal has been made with the Republican state chair man of Ohio by which Pennsylvania and Ohio are to swap stump speakers in the campaign, which goes to prove that he boss is really alarmed at the uprising of the farmers and inde pendents of the Keystone state and that in order to preserve his hide and tallow imported talkers must invade our fair domain to distract the voters' attention from the diseased pork in the bottom of the barrel. But all the im ported talkers in the western hemis phere would not save them this time irS'DIFFEDENT THE NORTH AMERICAN (PHILADELPHIA) IT'S DIFFERENT, because It prints all the news, and all the news It prints Is true. IT'S DIFFERENT, because It's bright and brisk, up-to-date and vigorous, but not yellow. IT'S DIFFERENT, 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 DIFFERENT, 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 DIFFERENT, 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 DIFFERENT, 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 DIFFERENT, because no boss, no corporation, can control one line of its space. IT'S DIFFERENT, 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 DIFFERENT, be- cause It upholds faith in ONE humanity, and the pro- CENT gress of mankind toward r w -, w . higher Ideals, larger . hopes and better living. WhOPC IT'S DIFFERENT. It will continue to be different. Watch The North Ameri can and see it grow. Mgjlf A Cure for Constipation. I have been troubled with constipation for ? 'ears. It was ruining my health, my com brt and iny complexion, and I ain glad to . say that Celery King has restored all three, j and this after trying many other medicines I that were supposed to be good, but which* were of no value whatever. I would like to tell every suffering woman what Celery K Ing has done for me.—Nellie Gould, Medina, Ohio Celery King cures Constipation and all dis eases or the Nerves, Stomach, Liver and Kid neys. Sold by druggists. 25candG0c.. 3 P. F. MCNULTYT FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND EMBALMER. Embalming of female corpses performed exclusively by Mrs. P. F. MoNulty. Prepared to Attend Calls • Day or Night. South Centre strcot, Freeland. Are Your Shoes Run Down ? The Black Diamond SHOE REPAIRING HOUSE Will Make Them Good as New. The quality of our work cannot be surpassed, and we uiuke repairs quicker than any other establishment in town. Call here when you want the Lowest Prices in the Town. H. MOWER, Prop. Hadesty Building, 109 S. Centre Street. GEORGE FISHER, dealer in Liquors, Wines, Cigars, Etc. FOR A GLASS OF FRESH BEER, PORTER OR ALE call at NO. 6 BAST WALNUT STREET. it Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use Hi in time. Bold by druggists. IH Krn<l ths Reward. "Ma, Mrs. Smith gave mo n lilj? piece of cake." ".Timmie, I've often told you not to ask for anything to eat when you are over there." "But ma, she gave me the cake be cause I told her who was here to din ner last night."—Chicago Record. A Delict. Task. "I Bee a light In your study Utr every night," said the politioaus neigh bor. "Tou must be working hard.' "I am." "Oetlng up another party platform?" "No, Indeed. I could dash off n party platform In ten minutes. I'm at work, now on a conditional acceptance of a political dinner Invitation." PBINTIITG Promptly Done at the Tribune Office. I FALL.. 1 1 Announcement, i P _ p I The fall season is again || Is upon us; how fast the seasons hi come and go. It seems but a few P [i days since we were advertising hi LA! our spring and summer goods || S and now it is time to talk winter hi wear. Before the rush and hurry Is of fall business commences we hi S want to say a word or two to our U® s friends, and we take this method hi g of so doing. M pj First—For favors of the past we wish to p] tgl thank our patrons, one and all; never has a store h] S tried harder to please its customers, and we realize Ei ISj that our efforts have been appreciated; no pains I® W have been spared and nothing has been left undone SJ pi to give our patrons the best goods obtainable for pi r3| the lowest prices possible; that we always have what rs3| Pi wu a< -l vert ' se > arK ' that we always do as we advertise, sn hp every customer of this store knows full well. S Ej Second—We believe we have earned your [Sj P confidence by deserving it, and we trust that our PI [rcl store shall ever have an abiding place in your mind pj p] when thinking of Hats, Shoes and Men's and Boys' Igjl rgj Furnishings. Now, at the opening of the fall sea- try sal son ' we ex ' en£ l to overy person in Freeland and EJ ISI vicinity an invitation to call, and, if pleased with our l®| |e| goods, our prices and our business methods, to favor pi P| us with his or her patronage. pi ™ Third—Our guarantee is nothing less than r3j p| perfect satisfaction or your money refunded. Let bp ■=] i 11s occupy the first place in your thoughts when you £7l Ej think of buying anything in our line. IS* I McMENAMIN'S I m Gents' Furnishing, Hat and Shoe Store, § II 86 CENTRE STREET. l§ pWITi a rpm m We own and occupy the tallest mercantile building in the world. We have ZrtjT/f IV\TI over 2,000,000 customers. Sixteen hundred clerks are constantly jffin 1 engaged filling out-of-town orders. r ■ / OUR GENERAL CATALOGUE is the book of the people—it quotes | Wholesale Prices to Everybody, has over 1,000 pages, x 6,000 illustrations, and Xljl? I jm 60,000 descriptions of articles with prices. It costs 72 cents to print and mail jjj j I each copy. We want you to have one. SEND FIFTEEN CENTS to show refill 1 IV\ your good faith, and we'll send you a copy FREE, with all charges prepaid. I£V w MONTGOMERY WARD & Co. MichisanA^„?Si A M G "r nS, " e,^^ffi =*i se n n o d MONEY THIS AD. and || *" ,( 'y a * bu j* t | an( j nefh ' liy oo .jgß&fc examine and try it express office JL it found perfectly satisfactory, ex actly us r. prrHciin (l or of p * 7 ub and e*pm' yQ^Pg- j9Rj charger ;expreß charge* will averse 60 to 76 This Circular Plush Cape im" Hall's Heal I'lu.h. So inches long, cut full sweep, lined throughout with Merrerlie-' Hllk In bl ek, blue or red. Very elaborately embroidered with aoutaebe braid and black beading as illustrated. Trimmed all around with extra fine Rlark Thibet Fur, heavily interlined with wadding and fiber chamois Write for free Cloak Catalogue. Addrraa, p-ftl QB BUYS A $3.50 SUIT Wf B,unu ( KLKHIIATKD "NKVICRWICAROI'T" IHX IILK ACA HhAT ANDKNKK. HKM'LA R OS. 60 HOYS' TWO XVK/X Plkt'K kXKfci PANTS 81T18 AT $1.68. /) ]\A HEW SUIT FREE FOR ANY OF THESE SUITS /UT* 4 WHICH DON'T GIVE SATISFACTORY WEAR. MS. . 1 SEND NO MONEY, euttbl.ad. outond J send to us, elate age of boy and say whether JOl* • d large or small forage and we will send you i l" P framlnntion. Von run exumlne It at your I I L) express office and if found perfectly satis- I / J factory and equal to suits aold In your town for I fl I 88.50, pay yourexpress agent our Rpcolal I / I Offer I'rloc, *I.DM, nnd express charges. mm W THESE KNEE PANT SUITS re for boys 4to W W5 15 > are °* aRO nnd ,r * retailed e.eryuhere at ■ ■ f3.il). Made with DOl ItLK SKAT and KMCKB, i jn 4\ : latrat 1000 alyle aa Illustrated, made from a #M&3 aperial heavy weight, wear-re.l.llng, all-wool Htnnton Caaalmere, neat, handsome pattern, lino Italian lining, genuine tlrnydon Interlining, padding, atajlng and reinforcing, allk anil llnrn sowing, fine tailor made throughout, h suit any boy or parent would be proud of. FOII FRKK CLOTH BAHPLKS of Hoys' Clothing for hoys 4 to 10 TKAItS, write for Sample Honk No. USK, contains fashion plates, tape measure und full instructions how to order. Men'a Suits made to order tVoin *5.00 up. Ham pies sent free on application. Address, SEARS, ROEBUCK & CO. (Inc.), Chicago. 111. (Hears, Roebuck Jk Co. arc thoroughly reliable. Editor.) | Read the Tribune for All the Local News. SEND US ONE DOLLAR SSWftY&ntYSffl new 1800 pattern high-grade HKHKHVOIR COAL AND WOOD COOk HTOVK, by freight C.0.1>., subject to examination. Pxg I.™i the FOROOR ma FREE E?\si&V stove catalogue. nnd freight charges. This stove Is slse No. 8, oven Is 16*4x18x11, ton is 42x23; made from best pig iron, extra large flues, henvy covers, heavy linings and grates, largo oven shelf, heavy tin-lined oven door, handsome nickel-plated ornamentations and trimmings, extra large deep, genuine RtandUh portelaia lined resarvolr, hand somo largo ornamented baso. Beat coal borner made, and wo furnish FRKK an extra wood arrato, making It a per fect wood burner. WR IBBUH A HINDINU GI.'ARANTKK with eve™ stove and guarantee safe delivery to your rail road station. Your local doalar would charge you 826.00 for such a stove, the freight Is only about 81.00 for each r>oo miles, ao we Bate yon at least SIO.OO. Address. SEARS, ROEBUCK A CO.tfNC.) CHICAGO,ILL QBmts, Roebuck A Co. are tborongkly rellablo.—Rdltor.) f,75 BOX RAIN COAT _ A ltKtll LAK 86.00 WATKRPKOOF 3IA( KIN rosit FOR $2.75. :nd No Money. SdYendtomJ close up under arms, and wewni presi oflice and ft found exactly as represented and the most won and equal to any coatyoucan buy 15.00, pay the express agent our apeeial prlec, 82.75, and express charges. tyfe mifl^nom 1 !.?.?*" !?4Z? double breasted, Soger velvet ir, fancy plaid lining, waterproof and cemented scum^ us or any other house. Fur Free h Sample* of Men's Mackintoshes up irt> 85.00, and Mnde-to-Mensure Suits nnd Overcoats at from 85.00 to §IO.OO, write for Frae
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