Wrecked by Grip. Terrible Pains in Head, Neck and Spine, Weak Back, Appetite Gone, no Sleep for weeks and Nerves all in a Commotion, Relief came with D*. Miles' Nervine. No disease plays such havoc with the delicate nervous system as that terrible scourge, LaGrippe. It tears ; and strains at your spinal column. j It twists at your neck and seems to fairly split your head wide open. In vain you strive to throw it off. In vain you try to get away. You are racked and buffeted until your strength is worn out and your vi tality is gone—then left to die. Dr. Miles' Nervine will help you. It is a wonderful nerve-healer and health restorer. It litis closed up the lacer ated wounds of thousands of grip's unfortunate victims and started them on the road to recovery. Dr Miles' Nervine is a nerve food as well as a medicine, and it not only feeds but lieals the nerve tissues, Dry Goods, Groceries and Provisions. IAI S BROTHERHOOD HATS 0 0 A celebrated brand of XX tiour always in stock. Roll Butter and Eggs a Specialty. AMANDUS OSWALD, N. W. Cor. Centre and Front SU.. Freeland. SA( KI.MIIMI'MIU $2.75. Send f. OM °ney-. number <>f inches around body ut brrust taken over vest under coat closoup under nrniH, and we will send you this coat b> < press. C. O. .P., hulijcrt (uCYsminntlun; examine f pres.* ottlce unci ?f found exactly as represented and the most won dcrftil value you ever Haw or heard of and equal to any contyoucan buy or 15.00, pay tlieexpri'ia ntr.-m our cpi-rial THTS 'MACKINTOSH PWI style, in ELE I I Hvy^alarpioof, one, double breasted. Suiter velvet ollar, faney pluid lining, waterproof ewed. strapped and cemented seams, suitable for both rain or overcoat, and guaranteed jrreatr'.t a!ue ever ottered by m or any other house. For Free tioth Samples of Men's Mackintoshes up to 85 U>, and Mude-to-Meiisure .Suits and Overcoats nt from 85.00 to eio.uo, write for Free SEARS'!' ROEBUCK & co., CHICACO, ILL. (BM?koeback At o. are thoruu K kly reliable.-Editor.) " 50 YEARS' 14 i DESIGNS ' COPYRIGHTS &C. Anyone sending n sketch and description mny quickly ascertain our opinion free whether an invention is probably patentable. Communica tions strict lyrontidential. Handbook on Patents sent free, oldest agency for securing patents. Patents taken through Munn & Co. receive special notice, without charge, in the Scientific American. A handsomely illustrated weekly. Largest cir culation of any scientific journal. Terms, a year: fourmonths.fi. Bold by all newsdealers. MUNN & Co. 36,8r ° ad * a > New York Branch Office. 025 F 8t„ Washington, I). C. FDATEWY© TRA™ARKS i TR AI CFTL 1 ► ADVICE AS TO PATENTABILITY ff 41 IQ g* g" 1 K Notice in " Inventive Age " MB* tra PM * ► Book "How to obtain Patents" gj Kane an 1 T Charges moderate. No fee till patent is secured. 1 i Letters strictly confidential. Address, I E. G. SIGGERS, Patent Lawyer, Washington, D. C. j IPIR, X IST Tilts Promptly Done ut the Tribune . Office SB "o D MONEY si ( J|pi This Circular Plush Cape Hall's Soil Plufeh, 20 inches long, cut full sweep, lined throughout with Merei-rlie-' Sllfc In Id rk, blue or red. Very elaborately embroidered with aoataehe braid and black beading as illustrated. Trimmed all around with extra enc Hlark Thibet Fur. heavily interlined with wadding and fiber chamois Write tor free I loak ( atahuriie. Ad drew, SEARS, ROEBUCK & CO., CHICACO QHsrt, Boebuck A to. arv thoroughly reliable.—Editor.) makes new nerve fibers, increases tile red corpuscles in the blood and strengthens the brain cells. When you find yourself so nervous, restless and irritable that you cannot sleep at night, Dr. Miles' Nervine will soothe your weary nerves and bring restful, refreshing sleep to your tired and worn-out brain. When you are weak, exhausted and run down so that you have no desire for food and no ambition for work, Dr. Miles' Nervine will stimulate your appetite, invigorate your digestion and build up strength for body and mind. "I-a Grippe left my stomach so weak that could scarcely eat any kind of food and was nervous and sleepless. I look three bottles of Dr. Miles' Nervine and was cured." MRS. Wm. B. SWANK, Miamisburg, O. FREELAND TRIBUNE. E:ta'cli:hoa 18S8. PUBLISHED KVEKY MONDAY AND THURSDAY ITV TUB TRIBUNE PRINTING COMPANY, Limited. OFFICE: MAIN STREET ABOVE CENTRE. LONG DISTANCE TELEPHONE. SUBSCRIPTION KATES: One Year $1.50 ' The dute which the subscription is paid to is | on the uddrcss label of each paper, the change of which to a subsequent dute becomes a receipt for remittance. Keep the figures in advance of the present date. Report prompt ly to this oliice whenever paper is not received. Arrearages must be paid when subscription is discontinued. Make all money orders, checks, etc., payable to the Tribune Printiny Company, Limited. FREELAND, PA., FEBRUARY 1, lUOO. WASHINGTON LETTER. Washington, January 30, 1900. The absurd contention of the present Anglomaniac administration that thu Transvaal is not a sovereign state, and is therefore not entitled to send nor receive ministers, has been definitely answered by Montague White, the South African diplomat now in this city. He said recently: "Dr. Leyds, the Transvaal agent, has been oilicially received and recognized as minister plenipotentiary by Russia. Holland, France, Germany, Belgium and Portu gal. ll(j is successor to Jonkheer Blockland, who was received at these courts before him, and who for many years represented the South African republic in Europe. To deny this is to disclose either unbounded ignorance or wilful hostility to my government." Dispatches from Paris, printed this morning, show that Dr. Leyds has been received by the French minister of foreign affairs and has dined with Presi dent Loubet. In view of these facts, of which the state department may pos sibly have been ignorant, it has become probable that a representative of the Transvaal would now be received if one should come to this country. The Re publican leaders have become alarmed at the rising storm of indignation to wards the administration for its con spicuous violation of neutrality. New York lias withdrawn from the race for the Democratic convention, sur rendering the rooms engaged here for the meeting of the national committee. The light now lies between Kansas City, Cincinnati and Milwaukee, with the chances largely in favor of the last named. It is believed that New York withdrew at the instance of Mr. Bryan, who objected to the convention being hold in the East. Kansas City is making a hard light for the choice, but its loca tion is against it. Milwaukee, on the other hand, is in the centre of the Ger man disaffection on the expansion ques tion and it is hoped that the holding of the convention in that city may in fluence the voting in pretty much all the Northwest and with six or eight doubtful states. X t X The growing extravagance in public expenditures may well be regarded with alarm by the conservatives. It is not con 11 nod to any one branch of the | government, but may be found in all of | them, and if not checked, will sooner Jor later leud to ruin. A member of the j house committee on naval affairs figures j that the cost of educating each cadet at Anapolls, after the proposed new build ! ings there are completed, allowing legal interest on the money invested in the plant, will be fully 813,000 a year. X X J Mr. Roberts has been "excluded" from congress, in defiance of the law in the case, hut in response to an over whelming public sentiment. Soanxious were the members to range themselves with what they believed to be the feel " Last February I was taken with the grip and it brought on nervous prostration which lasted for three months. I was so weak and exhausted in body and mind that I could not sleep and my nerves were all in a commo tion. I had terrible pains in my head, the back of my neck and down my spine, my back and legs were so weak that I could not walk, my appetite was gone and I had no sleep for nearly nine weeks. Noth ing that the doctors gave me seemed to do me any good and at last I sent for a bottle of Dr. Miles' Nervine. The first dose brought refreshing sleep and from that time on I improved very rapidly. I used three bottles of Nervine and two phials of Nerve and Liver Pills and my health was restored." MRS. E. C. BAWLBY, Waterloo, Ind. Dr. Miles' Remedies are sold at all drug gists on a positive guarantee. Write for free advice and booklet to DR. MILES MEDICAL CO., Elkhart, Ind. ings of their constituents that they refused to expell Mr. Roberts in a con stitutional way, and adopted revolution ary tactics to get rid of him, even though such were entirely unnecessary. The majority report of the investigating committee, recommending that he be excluded, was adopted 268 to 60, after the minority report that he be seated and then expelled had been voted down by 244 to 81. The Roberts case may not end with this action, as he has been advised to appeal to the courts, on the ground that the house violated the right of a sovereign state in declaring his scat vacant. X X X Discussion of the disgraceful New York custom house deal was revived recently by the sending to congress by Secretary Gage of a request for an appropriation of 8109,847 to pay rent to the "Rockefeller" National bank for the occupancy of the building. It will be remembered that in answering the demand of congress for information on this point, the secretary stated that no rent had been paid. This was, of course, literally true, but, in view of the agreement to pay rent shown by his own request for an appropriation, it can only be characterized as a pitiful evasion of the facts. That the senate so considers it, is shown by its refusal to place in the urgent delici ncy bill, now under consideration, an appropria tion for the purpose. X X X The Republican senators have been compelled to change their program on the gold standard bi I. They had not intended to do any speaking, but under the taunts of Senator Jones, of Arkansas, Senator Allison announced that himself and other Republicans would speak in defense of the bill. The action of the Democratic caucus in deciding to offer a free coinage sub stitute for the gold standard bill, at the proper time, lias been well received by Democrats. While this substitute can not pass, it will receive the votes of all the Democrats who supported the Chica go platform, of all the Populists and of all the Silver Republicans, and will spike a few Republican guns. V f r - -- 1 * t t t ' Representative Moody made a hit when he made a few remarks in opposi tion to a hill, authorizing the secretary of state to pay to a Rritish company the cost of repairing the Manila Hong-Kong cable, cut by Admiral Dewey. He said with strong emphasis: "Before we spend any money doing grace to citizens of Great Britain, let that government pay what it owes to the citizens of the United States." He suggested that, the secretary of state, instead of urging the passage of this bill, send to the house a list of the claims against the United States and Great Britain by the citizens of those countries, with a view to legis lation for the establishment of a com mission to settle them all. X X X The sturdy opposition to the sh'p subsidy job has frightened Mr. McKin ley no little, and it is among the I probabilities that the bill providing therefor, may be held over until the next session. This isn't because the Hanna-McKinley crowd have any idea of abandoning the job, but because they are beginning to lie afraid that if it is jammed through before the presidential election, it will defeat the Republicans and elect a Democratic president and congress. 1 t t The iiouse committee on militury aifairs will begin the investigation, ordered by the Sulzer resolution, of the Idaho labor troubles and the connec tion of United States troops therewith, on February 14. General Merrfam, who commanded the troops, and the governor and auditor of Idaho, have been summoned as witnesses, and the names of others will be furnished the committee by Representatives Sulzer and Lentz, who have been active in pushing the investigation. CURRENT COMMENT. VotM .ind rmmrnti, Political and Otiierwhe, on Matters of lutervat. By Andrew J. Palm. Gold is to be made the standard, the only standard of value. Gold that has played the coward and traitor in every time of danger, gold that sneaked away at the first alarm of conflict in our : vil war and did not come out of Its hole till long after the danger was over, gold that never was true to any nation in time of dire distress brazen ly comes to the front and asks to be crowned king, and the demand has been granted. Wail street's god, the golden calf, is to be set up as a fetich for the nation to worship. Great is the Dower of mammon. Supreme at last is the will of Wall street. Who says that monopoly doesn't pay? The Pullman Car company has oeen declaring 8 per cent dividends 01 $54,000,000 of Btock, and in addition a present of $18,000,000 in stock has been made to the stockholders. The stock has been watered over and over again until it is now many times the amount paid in, yet the public must pay big dividends on the whole $54,000,000. Since the Wagner nd Pullman com panies have united the last hope of anything better from the Pullman company has disappeared. If tL.is were a government of the people, by the people and for the people, something would be done, and that right speedily. Mark Manna is annoyed by the many suggestive cartoons in which he is made to appear as the leading man. With an air of injured innocence he declares that the position of United States senator should be one of dignity. Marcus is quite right, but unfortunate ly in this world, populated chiefly by sinners, of whom Mark is not the least, and what should be is not permitted to be. Senators who get their seats by bribery should be ousted and con signed to political oblivion, but in stead of that they are sometimes placed at the head of their party. It is the man and not the position from which {lignity must come. Some men would dignify a prison cell, while others would disgrace a throne. Mar cus Aurelius Hanna doesn't belong to the first class. The independents have been making much ado over Beveridge's speech in the senate. He was selected to go over to the Philippines because of his spout ing ability and not because ne is a man likely to say anything against his em ployer. His speech was the effort of a special pleader, and to a great extent squarely contradicts Prof. Schurman, the head of McKinley's Philippine commission. Analyzed, Beveridge's speech simply means that because the Philippines offer a good opening for American speculators and office hold ers and has abundant room on which to plant the American flag we should take the islands by force. All this, of course, in the name of God and des tiny. Beveridge had spent months In preparing his speech and repeated it verbatim as written, yet Senator Hoar punctured his bubble in a ten minute speech. The man who looks for the Republi can party to kill the trusts might as reasonably expect a father to murder his own offspring. The leaders of the party are sharers in the plunder of the trusts, and the policy of the party for years has been indicated by men prom inent in trusts, syndicates, combina tions and monopolies. The party that imposes a high protective tariff to en able the manufacturer to sell goods to his countrymen at a higher price than he sells them abroad will never lay a straw in the way of trusts. The G. O. P. will, of course, threaten them with dreadful things in its platform to fool the rank and file, as it has done for a generation on the silver question, but do anything to curb the trusts! Never. Why the senate a few days ago killed an amendment to the census bill which proposed that the census should in clude information regarding trusts. Dictator McKinley and bis advisers are sorry that the people know as much about trusts as they do. and he will take good care that the census doesn't add anything to their information. Prof. Jacob G. Schurman. president of Cornell university and chairman of the United States commission to the Philippine Islands, is of course an ad vocate of McKinley's policy of benevo lent assimilation. If he hadn't been he would not have found a place on the commission. It's a bitter dose, how ever. judging from the wry faces he makes when giving out information for McKinley's benefit on the Philippine question. In a recent article in The Independent he says that he considers Aguinaldo an honest man. animated by the highest idea of loyalty to inde pendence. This was about all that could be said of iur revolutionary fore fathers. He says that the Filipinos knew the white man by one specimen, and they will not trust any of them. From what the Filipinos have seen of the Spanish and of our soldiers would Schurman ask them to trust them? Mr. Schurman says the sight of a drunken man creates disgust in the mind of the Filipino, and this argues that the Filipino is in this respect at least considerably in advance of the average white man. He declares that he never saw a Filipino drunk. Take it all in all, it is hard to see where Mr. McKinley is to find any comfort in Prof. Schurman's article. Toward the close Mr. Schurman says: "But one thing I wish to emphasize more, than any other one point I have dwelt upon. We mu§t make an nonest civil service a permanent institution on the islands." Prof. Schurman well knows that McKinley needs a scoring on this matter, for how could we expect the president to have an honest civil ser vice In the Philippines when he has incurred the contempt of all honest intelligent civil service reformers by his course at home? Schurman feels in his soul that our treatment of the Filipino is outrageous, but ne dare not say so. His whole article clearly car ries out the idea that his sympathies are with the brown man. At the be ginning he was outspoken against the slaughter of the Filipinos, but, like others, he was bribed into favor by getting a place of profit and promi ueuce. PUBLIC OPINION. Opinion* From Vurloaa Source* oa (location* of the Duy. The National City bank of New York is unanimously ror a second McKinley term. In fact, it would like to see Mr. McKinley in the White House for life. —St. Louis Post-Dispatch. That William McKinley is by nature a wtbbler on all questions is now known not merely by all Americans, but by all living people of the civil ized world.—Chicago Chronicle. A number of Republican editors are making a great pretense of hunting for a man for the second place on their ticket. They know perfectly well that Mr. Hanna has already made the se lection.—Atlanta Constitution. McKinley prosperity takes a fall out of the man who wishes to build a house of the man who wishes to build a house. A year ago lumber was sl2 a thousand feet; now it is $lB. The increase in the cost of production is nothing; the increase in profit to the lumber trust is 50 per cent. The in crease in cost to the householder is 50 per cent. Such is the McKinley plan for encouraging people to build and own houses.—Asheville Citizen. From his home in Pennsylvania the lion. Matthew Stanley Quay sends out an admission that he will not grace the senatorial chamber with his presence during the present session. In rele gating the speckled Pennsylvania boss to private life the senate of the United States will not only purify the person nel of the upper house, but It will rec ognize and set forth the limitations which even a plundering political boss may not overstep. Between Roberts/' the polygamist, and Quay, the political scoundrel, the arguments were in favor of the Mormon. He was at least hon est In everything outside of his polyg amy. When the time comes for voting on the question of admission of Quay the decision is likely to be quick and decisive. The senate should devote no more time than is absolutely necessary to the fate of worthless and indifferent characters. —New York Journal. Harper's Weekly is opposed to ex pansion because it believes that the at tempt to govern distant possessions and barbarous and alien people under our present system of government will bring harm to the republic, and will discredit the cause of democracy throughout the world. We are so con fident in this belief that we are ready to say that no man who believes in de mocracy intelligently—no man who knows its virtues, which ought to be perpetuated for the welfare of human ity. and its limitations, that make for good as well as for evil —can be an ex pansionist. No movement that ha* ever yet been imagined by sordid poli ticians or grasping speculators, and that has been fanned into flames by the public press, is, in our view, so un- American as this reaching out after colonies. We believe that it is imitat ing Europe instead of moving along the lines of our traditions and our history.—Harper's Weekly, one year ago. Year after year the Republican party has caught the rural vote with fair promises, and has subsequently Ig nored the grangers. Legislative meas ures demanded by them have been re fused. pigeonholed in committee rooms, defeated or indefinitely postponed. The prayers of the agriculturists for relief from oppressive or unjust taxation have not been granted. Indeed, the farmers are compelled to pay more taxes for fewer privileges and less state protection than any other class of taxpaying citizens of the common wealth enjoy. In addition, the state administration denies to them partici pation in the fruits of political victo ries. on the ground that they are not competent to fill offices within the gift of the Republican machine. It is sel dom advisable or profitable for organ izations of business men to go into politics, but when there is class legis lation. class opposition Is Justified. The grangers, if they shall set about it., will find themselves well able to "hoe their own row."—Oreensburg Argus. When William Jennings Bryan ran for president q little more than three years ago he told the people that the triumph of the political party headed by Hanna and figureheaded by McKin ley meant the triumph of Wall street. He told them that if William of Canton wks elected that the money changers would take possession of the temple and the people would see the bliss of the occupants as they divided the spoils. What he then predicted has already come to pass. The trusts who have eoierged from Wall street, since a president elected by their contribu tions hung up his hat on the White House hall tree, h#ve covered the land like a swarm of locusts. They have laid claim to the credit—which in for mer times was given to Providence — for bringing bounteous crops and fruit ful herds to £he farmer. Prosperity— of which they swallow the feast while the producers pick up the crumbs — they declare is directly traceable to the intrenchment at Washington of their agent and to the adoption of policies pleasing to them. —Kansas City Times. Organized labor la lining up against the president's imperialistic policy and its leaders are outspoken In their op position. looking upon it as a menace to American labor and as sure to im pose burdens upon American taxpayers out of all proportion to the benefits which may be expected to accrue from the consummation of the policy. In his recent annual report submitted to the American Federation of Labor President Samuel Gompers says "a marked change within the recent past has overcome the policy and trend of our country in its international rela tions. The principle of self-govern ment is being denied the Filipinos. The people there are entitled to the right to institute a government of their own choosing, the highest or best form of government that they can institute and maintain, and to institute it, too. with out let or hindrance on the part of any nation, much less our nation, the re public of the United States, on whose foundation stone is carved in immuta ble letters the declaration that 'govern ments derive their just powers from the consent of the governed.'" I GOING TOO FAR Lj! Is something that often happens to people ® IS when they go to look for so-called bar- IE in Shoes, hut you would not "go too [®] (jU far should you call and examine the class fSj H] of goods we carry and learn .the prices at 571 ra]j which we sell. We are headquarters for tf] Ln Reliable Footwear and where quality is tq taken into consideration we will not be l!® Wj undersold. We are steadily increasing (§3 our shoe trade, because we handle only [®| r3] such goods as will give our patrons satis- rEDI ®| faction for the money invested. People £1 [3 are learning that many "bargains" are such in name only and to get full value [e ffi for their coiu they can with safety buy l®| ™ only from merchants who are above catch- fSj lEil trade schemes. Boots and Shoes and Kg] aj Rubber Goods of every description for mj sal Men and Boys. We call special attention L-J to our Guaranteed Miners' Shoes; nothing If— |Ej to equal them is sold in this town outside fSI yl!| of our store. igg] I In Men's and Boys' Furnishings, 1 [ffil Underwear. Hosiery. Shirts, Sweaters, 3J Overalls. Working Jackets, Neckwear, ra Hats and Caps, Boys' Knee Pants, Gloves, J3I etc., we present complete lines of the K latest and best goods, and sell them at the P same prices to a child as we would to an [SJ expert. We aim to give cur customers lp| I the best for the least money. Try us and a] see if this is not true. 5 McMENAMIN'S I |g Gents' Furnistiing, Rat and Shoe Store. g 86 SOUTH CENTRE STREET. |] I Isi fftii F. 3 ITtfJIS frtfl E& frill 51 iytLfl'3 frtfl 'ft frtifsi iRrTT I j-tli & frtfl fpfi li' 3 Uon eoatat ofMi,ouTebmfeedM. :' ;i ' only d u^°;ti. r 'lvl^!hT. ,, v e r l - V " T P , P ,° P ' e ,n ,mr "" " '"'ihlmg. K hki.l. umiaks at Va.io™d up" mM)B, •fIVJA a"rt tnstninient m tnVouii* I B {7"!. ,Rnts * L lowcHt wholesale prims. Write tor free special organ, pinno SEARS, ROEBUCK & CO. (Inc.), Fulton, Desplaincs and SEND NO MONEY Wjsar CR ADLE DRCP HWjHQ MACHIHE 1 hj freiriii u u. u/illif iV S found perfectly aatiafartory, exactly us rcpresente'i. ' WSSiAtI 1 A BE. J equal In machine-. others sell at a. fOO.OO, and Till , ■■■ 'TTC'T 'tlf^~Tn~rnTfWl?-■ (JKKATKST iIAItCAi.N fill FTKR IIKAUD OF, p.-.y vrnr Vv' 1 'ii/V"> SSf?i3!h *?"I"®?®?if inSl*!® e r .® c . o SiS'.CO ** fW '^ Civi' IT T T f.i'sisll'so' fcr ' l A i siViim!"iii<" ur". """" '"" 1 ,l " r " w,lt) Hjfi es*' " "A.,r.avMli&ffW|ftrat& JTi\ SJW-t* iT •TTTJ'*-. ei'UM lIIEBtSTSIAICKIAI, J *\snvx. SOUP OUAfITCR SAWED OAK t drawer* 1 feina' IH'ji Lvleit "' U ' ' n , l'' : | re f° r sew ing. 4 fnne • B IP®? tcvs. bii.i ben riiu: udji.stuolc t i>Hd!c. C gcmUi-e V'uvthirmlV^nV'^ ■ m fll ,r\ 9 1 50Ill r iliest lartre High Arm hrad, pr>fitlvo I • lir tnotlr n l'cfl. sic If' threading vlbrat ' 3 .'A IJ T I BBBfe HfiWl tiff shuttle, atit'.mnrlo bobbin winder, nlj istablo be n ings, patent tension - 2( Ut 9 ■ HrM.l l ,b! •'■ riai.fl?,""&S"f I EINDA NO GUARANTEE is sent xvith every maehi no. •* Mil COSTS YOU DO THING 1 W'" 6 ; 1 exainine this niochino, compare It tMJP -■ with those your storekeeper pelisat 540.00 w fi r. . ~ to $60.00, nnd then if convinced rou arrantln* fJ.'.no o floTtni, Var yoar frf'sht aemt the $15.50, K TO Ukll ltN YOI R 016.50 If at. ai.r ||m wli'ila tl.rc® inontha o.i ... ... !!I ■ot aatlaflcd. OHUKR TO OA?. DON'T DELAT. (Bears. Iloebuek A- Co. are thoroughly reiiaSdc.-KditoY " Address, SEARS, ROEEUCK & CO. (Inc.) Chicago, 111. sl-25 AND UP a I R Y''PKICKS7w *than " one - third |j the price charged by other*, ami WEI# rv3 M T ,u SuV. £ York Knrralbla Klaatic Truaa, llluutrnted above, out thin ad. out and send to us with Oi'R SI'KtTAL PRICK nnm.-.1. state your Height, Weight, Apr, how loner you have been ruptured, whether rupture is larprc or small: also Htate number Inches around the body on a line with the rupture, say whether rupture In on right or lertslde, and we will sond either truss to you with the under standing. If It U aol a perfrrt flt and equal In trUHir* thai retail at three time* our prlee,youcan return it and we , will return your money. WRITE FOR FREE TRUSS CATALOGUE ' of 1 ru.aea. including the Mew iIO.UO Lea Truaa in fc thatfur aliaont any rar. and whlrh ** sell for SZ. |D Uir... SEARS, ROEBUCK & Co. CHICAGO I " ssSLSe SUIT 7 8,04)0 t LLkiThil I : .\i:VF.UW KAKOI 1" IHM M.K ytiA bhAT A.MiKM t. liK-ILAIt tt.SO BOW TWll- Mbt'K h.VKK PA MS bin.S AT $1.06. / ) l> I A KIW SLIT FHfE F~R AMY OF THESE SUITS //rf° 4 WHICH ION T GIVE SATISFACTORY WEAR. \ r \M' • \ iStND NO MONEY, euitidaad. .uta,.i ' W;! J l sol 'd to us. tlnie t** .r bey and say whether Mj| • Q largeor ;• mall forage ar.d we will lend ycu L I -i .tl'.t:uit l.y express, C. O. ]. subject to e\- T If? "'"•nation. \cu i-uh examine It nt your I I IjJ express cKlceai.il It found jerfectly t atis- I I / factory and eqiiui in auiiß auld In }our toon tor I il F •••60, pay you rex pi est" agent our Special 1 /I / tiller I'ilee, r| 1.! >*, and express chnrges. W W ,r TIIES£ f'Af 1 SLITS ore lor boys 4to lu VI J eul\. ot nj'H and Tie mulled eter*wlrre at VB fs ifU.uO. Vudo with IMit Ul.fc: CI AT anil K.>kllß, H .AV Intrst ilUtll alylP cr lllmlrotid, Binile from a MvO aperlal l>i>n*y weight, wear reflating, all-wool Uiaiilnu Cna.lmrre, neut. hand: nine pattern, fine Italian 11111:1(1, grin.li' • timid ,n Inlrrlinlng, padding, at at liar .1111 reinforcing, -.llk nnd Hut 11 sewing, tlnetnilor aiada througinMit,ii i.iilt any hoy or parent would be proud 01'. POit YUKK Mini KAIPLKS of !<•>;.' ( Inil.lne for by* 4 id 1!) YKAKS, write tor Sample Bonk Nn. JSK, eon tains fashion plates, tape measure nrid lull instructions how to order. Men's Suite made to order iVom *.'.00 up. Saui- I pies sent free 011 application. Address. 1 SEARS, ROEBUCK & CO. (Inc.), Chicago. IN. ' (Scanit livebuck k to. are thoroughly reliable. - Kdltur. j