Grip Hangs On. It Destroys the Nerve Force, Reduces the Vitality, Fills the Blood with Millions of Poisonous Germs and Opens wide the Door for Disease and 'Death. Driven out with Dr. Miles" Nervine. LaGrippe destroys the health by paralyzing the nervous system, there by undermining the very foundation I upon which life and health are built. When the disease gets a hold on its i victim it tills the blond with myriads of the disease germs which tind their way t,o the little nerve centers scat tered throughout tlie body and there begin their work of destruction. Then follows the c 'Stion of the small blood vessels. % iness, fever, cough, sore throat, sneezing, running at the eyes, splitting headache and j pain in the spine, it is this intol- ! erable aching of the body in general and the sudden less of strength which proves beyond a doubt that LaGrippe is a disease of the nerves. The best method of combating tiie , Dry Goods, Groceries S" 0 0 A celebrated brand of XX dour always in stock. Roll Butter and Eggs a Specialty. AMANDUS OSWALD, N. W. Cor. Centre and Front Stß., Freeland. ,7S POX RAIN COAT A BKUILAR *(.00 WATKKFHUOF AKkIkTOSH FOH $2.70. Money. (Sy?e! raft eßom\ [r/fanc/ plaid Jtninjr, waterproof 'us' other houte. For Kre lh Sample* of Men's Mackintoshes up and Overcoats at "from <5.00* to IMMW, JUe (Bears, Roebuck A Co. are thoroughly reliable.— Kdltor.) .kUkiit "" 50 YEARS'*B EXPERIENCE 1 t DESIGNS ''m" COPYRIGHTS 4C. Anyone sending a sketch and description may quickly ascertain our opinion free whether an invention Is prohnbly patentable. Communica tions strictly confidential. Handbook on Patents sent free. Oldest agency for securing patents. Patents taken through Munn A Co. receive specuU notice, without charge. In the Scientific American. A handsomely Illustrated weekly. Largest cir culation of any scientific Journal. Terms, |3 a yenr: fourmonthß.fi. Hold by all newsdealers. MUNN & CO.^ 61 Broadway, New York Branch Office, >:2o F Bt., Washington. I). C. TDATCIITC TRA™ S RKS 1 iu n I tN I O AND O C B°S G D HTS J ► ADVICE AS TO PATENTABILITY FIIPF ] MJotice in " Inventive Age " ■KP ■■ < i Book "How to obtain Patents" | ■■■■■■ j T Charges moderate. No fee till patent is secured. 1 r litters strictly confidential. Address, ' C. SIGGERS. Patent Lawyer, Washington, D. C. J PEI NTI N(! Promptly Hone at the Tribune Ofli ce =;§ A- sr N N o D MONEY Uj rr* fMZ C! 1 1,1,8 AD* 011 and ■ ,,D T0 " TAT ° Y° UR tO II wf number Inches around CD I bod y at bual and or * k < Z I WL and we will send this ■" Ht BeauUrul Plu.k tap* to VCV" you by express, C. on your office found perfectly satisfactory, ex actly r*preeUd Charges ;aiprvs /-Bf* rharyea will average 60 to 7 6 This Circular Plush Capa '.'JWiltTn.'^ofnn'Si Ball's Heal Plu.h, 'At inches long, cut full sweep, lined throughout with MerferUe-l Hlls In bl fk, blue or red. Very elaborately embroidered with aootaehe braid and black beading aa Illustrated. Trimmed all around with extra flne Black Tklbt Far. heavily Interlined with wadding and fiber chamois Write for frae Moak Catalogue. Addraaa, "SJSSi.SSI£ISSA'S.?~i.S,!!iSfi, 0 deadly effects of disease and restor-1 ing the broker down nerves is to! feed them; and no medicine yet dis- j covered contains so much Derve and brain food and so many strengthen-1 ,ing and health-restoring qualities as Dr. Miles' Nervine. This truly great remedy quiets the irritated nerve; centers, cools the feverish brow and 1 soothes the tired brain to sweet, re freshing, restful sleep. It brings back the lost appetite, stimulates the digestion, overcomes the exces sive waste of the system and replaces the vitality aud strength that dis ease had robbed it of. Dr. Miles' Nervine cures the grip. " l.ast winter I had a very severe attack of tile grip and try as 1 might 1 could not get i over it. For months 1 suffered with a terri- FREELAND TRIBUNE. litabliihil 1888. PUBLISHED BVERY MONDAY AND THURSDAY BY TUB TRIBUNE PRINTING COMPANY, Limited. Orrics: MAIN STREET ABOVK CENTRE. LONG DISTANCE TELEPHONE. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: One Year $1.90 Six Month* 75 Four Months 50 Two Month* % 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 reoe+pt for remittance. Keep the figures in advance of the present date. Report prompt ly to this ofllee whenever paper is not received. Arrearages must be paid when subscription ta discontinued. Make all money orders, checks, etc., payable to lbs Tribune Printing Company, Limited. FREELAND, PA., FEBRUARY 5, 190b. Peril of the Country Press. The International Paper Company, the most voracious babe ever conceived by the Republican party, has advanced the price of white paper on which all newspapers are printed 60 per cent, and as a result every publisher is now pay ing more than one-half of his paper bill into the pockets of this greedy trust, and unless there is soon a remedy forthcoming many country editors wiil be compelled to close down their busi ness. They cannot well advance the prico of their papers, and with many it wiil prove an expense too much for thera to bear. The only relief is to put white paper and wood pulp on the froe list, and the paper trust is doomed. It is astonishing that in this kge of intelligence, and in a country that loves to boast of its freedom, we should find the press hampered by a law—reeking with dark-ago injustice and Stupidity that is more deadly to its existence than the rigid censorship of a despotism. And the most dangerous feature of the law is its evident purpose to weaken and destroy the influence of a free press, by making it impossible for any class of periodicals to exist except those that are sustained by large aggregations of capi tal or by special combinations, all of which are to a degree subservient to trust influences. The law that brought the paper trust Into existence and enables it to live, was aimed directly at the country press, the last defender of the people's rights. With the independent country press out of the way the path to imperialism will be straight and smooth. There ought to be no difficulty in having the tariff removed from paper and printing materials, for in a financial sense it benefits no one except the trusts, which are outlaws under the statutes and should be made to suffer the penalty of their illegal acts. But wo can expect no relief from a congress that is wholly subservient to trust influences, nor from the namby pamby representative of corporate greed who today sits in the presidential chair. The cowardly assassination of Gov ernor tioebel, of Kentucky, Is the first shot fired in the war of corporate wealth vs. socioty. The powerful Louisville and Nashville Railroad Com pany is one of the several hundred monopolies in America which are de termined to plunder society even if cowardly bullets must bo used to lay low the brave men who dare to oppose their criminal aggressions. Those yvho | ble pain in my back, my legs seemed so heavy that I could scarcely lift them and 1 i was so nervous and restless that I could not I sleep at night. I would be more tired in the morning than when I retired; lost all de ! sire for food and became so despondent and ! tilled with gloomy forbodings that I lost all ambition for work—in fact I had the blue 3 jin tiie worst way. I tried several kinds of i medicine without getting any help, and fi j naily commenced taking Dr. Miles' Nervine. It brought sweet rest and refreshing sleep almost the first night, and after using five bottles I was perfectly cured. I now enjoy a good night's sleep, my nervous system is re stored to its normal condition, and I am myself again, thanks to Dr. Miles' Nervine. CHARLES L. DEWAELE, Prosecuting Att'y, Roscommon, Mich. Dr. Miles' Nervine is sold at all druggists on a positive guarantee. Write for free advice and booklet to DR. MILES MEDICAL CO, Elkhart, Ind. hold up their hands in Pennsylvania and cry "Shame, Kentucky," take a narrow view of the situation. The causes which lead to the trouble there exist in far greater degree in our own commonwealth, and It will require but little to induce the powerful corpora tion of this state to throw off their masks and shoot down any of our citi zens who dare attempt to curb their power or prestige. The Pigmy and His Party. From Wilmington, Del., Justice. The more McKinley and his admin istration are scrutinized the greater must grow the disgust and contempt with which they are held by all honest Americans. Politically a trimmer, following always a policy of expediency rather than right; religiously a canting hypocrite; as a statesman weak and vacillating, but ever the political tool and creature of moro accomplished rascals, it is not strange that his de cisions and policies are those of the monopo ists and plutocrats whose poll tical tool he has been and whose presi dential candidate he was and again will be. Rising to the highest eminence in the nation through the unfortunate mis judgment of the American voter, an accident of war placed at his disposal the life and civilization of a people struggling to be free and self governing. A true republican; a believer in re; 1 democratic government, would at once have sought a solution of the problem that confronted him by an application of the principles and experience? by which his own country had realized and maintained its national life. To such a man the Declaration of Inde pendence, the constitution, and the historic traditions and aspirations of the American people would have furn ished the standard and the rules for judgment. Rut to the eternal shame of America the unexpected has happened. Liberty and democracy, and all that they im ply, have been slaughtered almost in their own house. The traditions of the past, the teachings of the father?, the aspirations of the century, have all been blown to the winds. In their stead we are asked to adopt those policies upon which all the republics of the past have gone to pieces. More pitiful than the exhibition by our presidential pigmy is the ignomin | ious depth to which the great party of Lincoln and Sumner has fallen. Liv ing in the glory of its past, it lies pros trate at the feet of men who see in the Philippine problem another opportunity for the extension of thoir system of monopolistic spoliation. "There never was a time," says the Indianapolis Sentinel , "when the strength of newspapers as advertising mediums was so apparent as it is at the present day. Advertisers are using them to a greater extent than ever before. Within the last few months business that once appeared exclusively in the magazines has begun to appear in the dally press also, while the trend of events seeuis to be towards including the latter in every advertising campaign of any pretensions whatever." And it is the business men who advertise In the newspapers that are doing the bulk of the business that is done in this country today. In fact it is getting so that a business man who does not advertise in the newspapers cannot do business. CURRENT COMMENT. "Jfc Notes nml Coinmentn, Political nnd Ollicrvi Ist*, on .Matters of Interest. By Andrew J. Palm. Our Republican friends are boasting considerably about what they call ttie absence of the soup house, and hold forth the idea that everybody is pros perous. It is worthy to note, however, that the Republican papers of Phila delphia on the day after Christmas gave a list showing the number of per sons who had been fed by ctsarity the day before. The number fed in differ ent places varied from 75,000 in the homes and asylums to 225 fed by the Life Line League. The totaV*'umber was 110,425. It would be wel. n view of this not to destroy all the soup houses just yet. They will be in great demand by and by. McKinley has sent many thousands of our idle men to ri3k their lives in killing off our fel low men in his scheme of benevolent assimilation, but as they will all be asking for pensions by and by, it isn't much advantage after all over the soup house. The New York World has done a great work In securing a monster pe tition of the best men of the country urging President McKinley to offer his services toward stopping the criminal aggression of the English against the Boers in South Africa. But what does the World take McKinley for? He has no sense of consistency, and he has never been credited with courage, but lacking both consistency and courage he still has sense enough to know that if he would say to John Bull, "You are murdering innocent men in the Trans vaal, let me show you how not to do it," Bull would quick make reply, "You're another. You began first, now quit before you begin lecturing us." Oh. no, Mr. McKinley isn't going to mention anything like that to England. He is more likely to send a commis sion of college professors over to learn how an Englishman can stick a lance through two prisoners at once, a bril liant feat that they call "pig sticking. ' It's so English, you know, that we ought by all means to have it. The United States mail service now carries a letter 7,000 miles for two cents, and yet nobody is complaining that it is too cheap. The telegraph com panies, however, continue right along exacting at least three times as much for their services as it is worth. There is no more reason why the govern ment should not assume control of the telegraph than there is why it should give the mail service over to some trust or corporation. The wonder is that the Mark Hannas and Pierpont Morgans have not discovered before this that the government ought not to be troubled about the matter of carrying the mails. If the mail service at the present time were in the con trol of private individuals it is safe to say that the powers controlling our public affairs would see to it that the government should have nothing to do with it. They would point out the dangers of government control of the mail service, and the majority would be foolish to believe them, or at least not take enough interest in the matter to declare that private control of the pub lic mail service should cease. The public ownership of the telegraph and railroads never ought to have been given into the hands of private parties, and should be taken charge of by the government without unnecessary delay. We hear so much flapdoodle about the dear old flag, exalted patriotism, how sweet it is die for one's country, etc., that one would almost be led to believe that men are anxious to give themselves a sacrifice to the god of war that they may be referred to as heroes. We find, however, that of the patriots who were so madly in love with their country that they were willing to leave the comforts of peace and civil ization to fight against Spain, 5.772 de serted. In the civil war the desertious from the Union army were 117,640. The sweetness of dying for one's coun try may sound well in story books, but it is the mythiest sort of myth when it comes down to actual business. The sweetness in military matters 1b con fined exclusively to those gentlemen who draw big salaries as officers and to the shallowpated hero worshipers who seem to think that the business of de stroying life and property and caus ing untold suffering is more worthy of honor than saving life and relieving distress. If it were not for the army contractors who grow rich by stealing from the government and the brass buttoned dudes who receive big sala ries and the plaudits of the multitude the war spirit would die out in a gener ation. It is high time that wo should either cease to hang men for commit ting a single murder or quit paying and teaching thousands to commit wholesale murder. John Rockefeller, the pious man who rakes in a million dollars clear cash every two weeks, refused to appear be fore the industrial commission at Washington to run the risk of being asked annoying questions, condescend ed to write out answers to such ques tions as pleased him to notice. He is rich, and why shouldn't he be allowed to have his own way? Mr. Rockefel ler founds a college occasionally, but the professors must take good care to teach that the earth Is round or flat, according as the founder may dictate, or they will wake up some morning and find themselves out of a job. His reply to the industrial commission is simply adefense of trusts, which he de clares are a necessity as well as a good thing. He admits that they might pos sibly abuse their great power and charge too much for products, or they might engage in hazardous speculation, but of course the Standard Oil trust wouldn't do anything of the sort. The same day, however, on which Mr. Rockefeller's opinion appeared in the papers the announcement was made that the price of oil had gone up three cents a gallon. This would add a mil lion dollars a week to the the profits of the Standard. It is not surprising that Mr. Rockefeller appears as a champion nV the necessity and good ness of trusts, for there is no business so mean that it will not be defended by those engaged in it If IK AN HI. The Keynote of Boxing As Ex emplified By an Expert. BRAIN, EYE AND MUSCLE The Art of Ducking, Side Stepping in Fighting, and Gymnasium Work— How to Avoid a Rush—lmportance of the Shoulders and Quickness. In boxing the celebrated half hook is a short arm swing delivered at close quarters with the arm crooked at the elbow instead of extended as in a swing and the hand landing on the thick portion just below the thumb in stead of the back of the knuckles, says Terry McGovern, in an exchange. A jolt is a blow delivered at close quarters, the arm being bent and al most rigid and most of the force de rived by "throwing your body into the blow." An uppercut is really a vertical half hook or swing. When an opponent in rushing you or in close quarters work (Straight duck, right hand counter.) leaves chest and jaw sufficiently ex posed, bring your left arm up in a sort of swing, which should travel upward in a straight line, landing if possible undei his chin. If you can't land there hit his face. Throw the shoulder and body into this blow, getting in as much of a swinging motion as you can. If the blow lands squarely and with much force just under the chin it will proba bly floor him. It Is better for fighting than for a friendly bout. The straight duck is most often used. Stand In your usual position. When I lead for your face with either right or left hand bend your head forward and to the left, moving It in a sort of half circle far enough to let the blow pass over your head. Aa you do this you can either take a step backward with your right foot, following it with the left, and thus getting out of reach, or you can step in with the left foot and land on heart or wind. In straight ducking keep your knees rigid and your left arm in such a position that your adversary cannot uppercut you. Ducking to the side is also useful at times. When I lead for you with my left, turn your left shoulder forward and to the left, letting the head and the rest of the body above the waist move naturally with the gesture. Turn until your shoulders are about at right an gles to their former position; at the same time bending the left knee. This will usually take you out of the way of your opponent's blow. You may at the same time lead for his body with your left hand. When at close quarters try to get your arms inside your opponent's and deliver as many blows as you can for heart, wind and face before he can retaliate. When, for instance, he swings or leads straight for your face with either hand, block his blow and while your glove is still between his right guard and his face strike a short arm blow for whatever portion of his anatomy is nearest you. When you can get both arms at the same time into this enviable position you can have a really delightful time with him. This is known as in-fighting. In such cases don't draw your arms back In order to deliver the blow, but make your shoulders supply the force. Remember in all sorts of boxing that the whole body must do its share and that the shoulders are an important factor. A good way to avoid a rush is by •'slipping." (Practise this also with dumbbells in the gymnasium). When a man rushes you duck to the side and step out with the left foot at right an gles to your regular position. Then turning sharply to the left and bring ing your right foot around at the same time you can easily fall into position facing your opponent, wherever he may happen to be. All depends on absolute quickness. If you are rapid enough in this manoeuvre you may even be able to get back at him before he recovers from his futile rush. Side-stepping is a similar trick. To do this, wait till your opponent leads heavily for your face. Then bring back the left foot alongside of the right, move the right foot quickly to the right, following it with the body and with your left foot, and falling into po sition so that you can, if possible, get in a blow at your opponent before he recovers his balance. There is one evil you must avoid. Don't allow yourself to get overtired or to box too long In a single day. As soon as you feel fatigued stop. At most you must only box about six rounds of two minutes apiece each day. Tuke a minute's rest between each two rounds. T also advise you to avoid swings until you become a good enough box er to decide for yourself whether or not they are of any use. Personally I nev er use them, as I have said before. I think they leave a man too much ex posed. I am always glad when an op ponent swings for me, for then I am sure to find he has left some opening that I can take advantage of. Wrestling is good exercise if you have any strength left over after your daily gymnasium work. But if you wrestle at all do it in moderation, and avoid straining yourself. Also avoid too much work on horizontal bars, or swinging from rings by the arms. To much of such work is liable to make you muscle-bound and destroy your hitting powers. In all your ath letic work employ swift movements; den t loaf or go slowly. Any carthorse can do that. You lose by it. 1 A FULL LINE OF J 1 MEN'S UNDERWEAR! | H H pj Men's and Boys' Fine Hats. K p Winter Caps, all kinds and p |i] styles. Li g Men's Fine Dress Gloves, also [s y heavy working gloves and mit- gj S tens. PS 111 [ia| p Umbrellas. p SJ Boots, Shoes and Rubber §1 p| Goods of every description. s P Working Jackets and Over- p alls; quality guaranteed and [ffij [£j prices reasonable. p a] Warm Hose for Men and S [I Boys. [| [q White and Colored Shirts in P 11 1 endless variety. pi I A full line of the latest shapes fs in neckwear and collars. We can y furnish and fit every one that S calls. gj We sell Boys' Knee Pants; we Nl recommend them. p 111 McIEN AMIN'S 1 [I Gents' Furnishing, Hat and Slice Store. 1 jj| 86 SOUTH CENTRE STREET. ||j orilrrman Exchange Hank, New York; or any railroad or expres* . I 1 ccrj.oo.inio.no, occupy entire one of the largest business IdorkHJa li -.- i?JILi?? e ? rly l*">>leln onr own otiilditifr. Wh &KI.I. OKUAXH AT a. till and npi PIANOS, SI It.Ml .i i \ r 1,1 "V"" ~al Instruments at lowoHt wholesale prhc*. Write for free special organ, piano sii'DQ Kd,' c n "• tkoreafkly SEARB, ftO&BUCK A CO- (Inc.), Fulton, Desplaines and Wayir.an Sts., CHICAGO. ILL* SEND WO WIGNEY r ± GRADE DROP C/\b"M£T BURDICII o. g Mfc nation, Y yti can examine It at your nearest ireicht dejot and II Of fxfjw R _ round pcrfietly sstikf.-ietary, er.nctly as repre>-cnte<,. 1 JL aaS-"i A KniH KniH ' pay" jtm'r w Cl^rK'lT^THßk^^ONTM^ prndti TSi 'irl *?* t'jh l''" " r " <i,r " /ji $ S BEWARE OF I|VT ATI OP'S by unknown concerns Sifij jjjj ; m H? sr&s^• K* ™j||ipi ; f THE BURPICK S!S.VSa B ",rVoJ"iJS?v , ViiSi unco, MM,. ~J |l JK3CTB*fTW*VKSVr*+ FIIOM 1 Il£ BKMT MATEIiIAL * 3 ™A\*isfv[ SOLID ouflnTEn sflWF.n OAK g?S" : PIAXO POLICED, one 11 nstrnt mil shews machine closed, (bean <lropi ■5 IfiSirrf ping from htsbtto be used as a ecutcr table, aland or da.k, the *ib*r * Irfflti ' "l""" Wlth fuil length table and head in place for sewing. 4 faaey - Reir Si '' t Wtt a. _ | itlgA' >*-'a decorated ca>lnet llnlsh. finest nickel drawer pr.lla roots on 4 caa -2 (T ■ , ters. ball bcarlnjf adjustable treadle, pronuine fiinyth Iron itand. * m tfTI r H Sso||H|n Hnestlarfo High Arm head, rw.sltivo f->ur motion feod. scl threading vlhrai * a.''J f Y I feb KLIw'I jnir shuttle, au'.oauvtic bobbin winder, odjuataole bearings, patent tension • Si A B Wksel Utenaton.l in proved loose wheel, adjustable nreauer foot, improved shuttle *f*~ ■ m K Wcff. v l peJlo r patent needle bnr. natei.t di essenard. bend is handsomely decorated ■I s: = 1 IB ri NICKEL TRTT/IIVIED. • ™ Mttlffl GUARANTEED the lightest rnnnlnj, moat durable and nearaal nnlaela.s MM chine c ° Irt <s7AfivoA&fln made, kvrrr Lnuwn i.ttarliiarnt i fnrnUhrrl and our Froo Instruction Book telle f 2t-j rll vMmgWgftl3 A rTn-°? l XT lor nny kind of fancy work. - t \St f*^ A3O*\EARJ LIUTHNa GUAIIANTEu, IS pent with every machine. W| IT COSTS YOU NOTHING t-> see and examine this machine, compare It „ ■ ; —with thoße.vourFtorokocnerallsat $40.00 .... . . . „ to $60.00, and then if convinced you e-e r.nln JU.no •• tin.on. D ar I!. SfSL. lh * •16.60. WR ™ "KM H\ YOtlt $15.10 If at any time nlihl,. th.-o month, to* aar via art aot ,ail,Oad. OUUKIt TO DAY. UOX'T DELAY. (Scars. Uoobuck t Co. aro thirouplily rollablo.—Editor.) Address, SEARS, ROEBUCK & CO. (Inc.) Chicago, 111. TRUSSES, 65c, $1.25 AHn HP| n M 1 I ~ the price charged by others, and WE % / w^feer^yoa New York Itevrrslble Blaatle Truss, illustrated above, cut this ad. out and send to us with Ol!R HPkIIAI, PKU'K nam, ,i state your Height, W,i p hl, Age, how lon* you have l>cen ruptured, whether rupture is large or small; also state number Inches around the body on a line with the rupture, say whether rupture is on right or leftside 1 and we will send either truss to you with the under standing. If It Is aot a perfert lit sad equal to trusses that retail at three times our prlee,youcan return It and we will return your money. WRITE FOR FREE TRUSS CATALOGUE ril'iaihS HM of trusses. including the Sew f 10.00 Lea Truss f) 7C thateuras almost aay ease, nnd whirl, we sell for Waif J WJr,,.SEARS, ROEBUCK & Co. CHICAGO I i" BUYS A $3.50 SUIT | \t 7 B,UH t M.MIIiA'I Kl> "MKVRItH-KAKOIT" IMIIhU Mf(K SKAT AM) K.MCE. I! KM LA It S3. 60 RUTS' TWO* /l®/\ PIMK KM'IC I'A.i'lß MIIB AT s|.t>B. /)>* J A Ml W Sl'IT TREE ICR ANY Of THESE SUITS (Ml. A |SENDWoVoME S "a 1 , "y I'M ► I J send to us, airte aye of b< j and s.y whether KJh • Q {large or i mall forage and we will send y.u I L I I". the rult by oxprcw, t\ o. I>. euhject to e\- I T |"" W ttninatlon. Ton ecu cjttulnr Itst your I I W ®*P ros: offlceand 11 found perfectly tetls- I j / factory and equal to culta sold In jnnr lowa fer 1 M I * 3,60 Py yourexpresa agent our Upeelal I LJ\ I Offer I rice, < l.bM, and express charges. ! nj j| j.THESE fUEE PAST for ho^s^to '| W Wii Matlo with bnlllLßeKAT T aßd W KRB).B, IT/JA latent li'lH) style ns illnstrnted, tutde from a t ijg<v3 sperl.il I , a,/ weight, wear resist leg, all-weal Htsiitnn Cas-lmern, neat, handsome pattern, 1 fine Italian lining, genuine flrsjdnn lm, rllnlng, padding, Maying ami rrhiforcln,-, lllk end Unci sewing, due tailor mode tbrouiriKMit.n null any hoyorpnrcnt would be proud of. FOII KIIKK I t'tTll NAIIPI-K?) ,r H ijk' (hi thing for buys 4 I* I 10 YkAHS, write for Sample |i„nk So. 058, contains fashion . plates, tape measure and full instructions how to order. Men's hulls made to order from up. Haut ■ pies sent free on application. Add res*. i SEARS, ROEBUCK & CO. (Inc.), Chicago, 111, I ttbsni llvebHCk * Co, arc thoroughly reliable.-Kditor.j
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers