Freeland tribune. (Freeland, Pa.) 1888-1921, February 26, 1900, Image 4

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    DYSPEPSIA.
Nervous Dyspepsia. Caused me Great Distress for a Number
of Years. Finally I was Cured by
D*. Miles' Nervine.
An active mind, suffering from
overexertion, grief, trouble, worry of
household cares, demands from the
body a greater amount of fuel for the
vital fires than the digestive organism
can supply. It requires a certain
amount of vital force to operate the
human machine, and when all the
available supply of force is absorbed
by the overworked brain there is noth
ing left for the stomach. It is easy
now to understand why irritability
and dyspepsia have become almost
synonymous; why a nervous person is
usually so very particular and capri
cious about food. It is an almost un
disputed fact that no marked progress
can be made toward the ultimate cure
of any disease until the mind is put
into that calm, serene condition
which is natural to people in full
bodily health and vigor. Dr. Miles'
Dry Goods, Groceries
and Provisions.
S BROTHERHOOD HATS 0
0
A celebrated brand of XX Hour
always in stock.
Roil Butter and Eggs a Specialty.
AMANDUS OSWALD,
y. W. Cor. Centre and Front Sts., Freeland.
P. F. McNULTY,
FUNERAL DIRECTOR
AND EMBALMER. j
Embalming of female corpses performed
exclusively by Mrs. P. F. McNulty.
Prepared to Attend Calls
Day or Night.
South Centre street, Freeland.
" 50 YEARS'
DESIGNS
r Twin COPYRIGHTS 4C.
Anyone Rending a sketch and description may
quickly ascertain our opinion free whether an
invention Is probably patentable. Communion
tlonsatrictlycofitldeiitial. Handbook on Patents
Bent free, oldest ugeney for Hecuring patents.
Patents taken through Muun & Co. receive
tptcial notice, without charge, in the
Scientific American.
A handsomely illustrated weekly. Largest cir
culation of any scientific journal. Terms, fli a
year: four months. Sold by all newsdealers.
IYIUNN & Co,36lßroatlay. New York
Branch Office, G25 F 8t„ Washington, D. C.
LIBOR WINTER,
Eating House and Oyster Saloon,
No. 13 FrontlStreet, Freeland.
Temperance'drinks, cigars, 'etc. Fainiles
supplied with oysters direct from the shore.
JDATCBtSY£ trademarks j
T r A I til i SAND5 AND O C B°TAIN R ED H ' S
► ADVICE AS TO PATENTABILITY PHPP <
MJotice in " Inventive Age " P Kr 1 i 1 i
► book "How to obtain Patents" | 11 Sal MS j
T Charge* moderate. No fee till patent is secured. 1
r Letters strictly confidential. Address,
[ E. G, SIGGERS. Patent Lawyer. Washington, D. C. j
se N n O d MONEY
kU CU ClT <| T " 18 , * D ' t ° t ' T * nd
< 11 1| * n(i{i
charge* ,n prr*>
This Circular Plush Cape
Salt's Seal l'luh, '<2o Inches low?, cut full sweep, lined
throughout with Jlßmrlafl Hllu in hi fk, hint or red. Very
elaborately embroidered with ouUrhe hrald and black
beading A* illustrated. Trimmed all nmund with extra
fine Blark Tlilhri lur, heavily Interlined with wadding
and fiber chamois Wrlla for free (1ok ( •taloue. Addreu,
SEARS, ROEBUCK A CO., CHICAGO
(bew, Bo,buck k to. arv thoroughly reliable,—kdltar.j
Nervine puts the mind in just that]
condition. It is a brain and nerve
food and tonic whose important ele-j
ments, acting upon tiie body and mind!
with equal force, possesses remarkable!
efficiency in nervous disorders.
"I had been troubled with dyspepsia, for
nearly thirty years and two years ago I was
taken with a nervous trouble which caused me
much distress. I could not eat nor sleep, was
losing strength and flesh and was melancholy
and very unhappy. I employed the best phy
sicians who said the trouble was with my
nerves, but they were unable to do me any
good. I tried several advertised medicines
and at last began taking Dr. Miles' Nervine.
By the time the first bottle was half gone I
could sleep some, could eat a little and the
world seemed to get right side up agaiu. I
kept right on taking the Nervine and when I
had used fifteen bottles my stomach trouble
was gone, and I felt well and strong. I feel
very grateful for the good I have received
FREELAND TRIBUNE.
Established 1888.
PUBLISHED EVERY
MONDAY AND THURSDAY
BY THE
TRIBUNE PRINTING COMPANY, Limited.
OFFICE: MAIN STHEET ABOVE CENTRE.
LONG DISTANCE TELEPHONE.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES:
One Year , $1.50
Six Months
Four Months
Two Mouths
The date which the subscription is paid to is
( the uddress lubel of each paper, the change
of which to a subsequent date becomes a
receipt for remittance. Keep the figures in
advance of the present date. Report prompt
ly to this office whenever paper is not received.
Arrearages must be paid when subscription
is discontinued.
Make all money orders, checks, etc., payable to
the Tribune Printing Company, Limited.
FREELAND, FEBRUARY 26, 1900.
The Beauty of Expansion.
Under the heading "Whiskey Perdi
tion in Manila," the Michigan Christian
Advocate prints the following choice
excerpt, which It, characterizes as "glee
ful," from the Wine and Spirit News , one
of the leading liquor papers of the
country. It indicates in a very untuistak
ablo way a phase of tho vaunted enter
prise that is pushing this nation into
imperialistic expansion wherever it can
in the earth, and with all the power
1 hat is involved in and lies behind it.
The excerpt is called a choice one,
; because it is believed to bo a piece of
• writing difficult, if not impossible, to
! match in certain qualities and a tono
! whicij, if he can sufficiently master his
j disgust, the reader can bo trusted to
! discern and feel the force of more effect
■ ually left to himself than by any aid
I that may be proffered him. Said ex-
I ponent, as we may venture to call it, of
the prevalent commercialism of the land
at tiiis hour, says:
As one result of American occupancy
of Manila, the liquor business has
reached enterprising proportions, and
is now considered as one of the leading,
as well as one of the respectable, kinds
of business. Nays one correspondent:
"On the Escolta, tho principal street,
only a quarter of a mile long, there
were but two places where intoxicating
liquors were sold when we entered the
city, whereas now there are eighteen.
There are 300 licensed places in the
city where liquors may be obtained,
licenses costing three dollars a year.
• The income of the largest, the Alhatu
bra, is stated on good authority to be
S7OO a night. Already the street-cars
are topped with large signs detailing
the exquisite qualities of certain
whiskies. One-quarter of the daily
I issue of the principal English newspaper
published is devoted to extolling the
A Cure for Constipation.
I have been troubled with constipation for
years. It was ruining my health, my com
fort and my complexion, and I am glad to
aay that Celery King has restored all three,
and this after trying many other medicines
that were supposed to he good, but which
were of no value whatever. I would like to
tell every suffering woman what (Celery King
has done for me.—Nellie Gould, Medina,!Jhlo
Celery King cures Const! pat ion and all dis
eases of the Nerves, Stomach, Liver and K id
nejs. bold by druggists. 25c and 50c.. 8
from Dr. Miles' Nervine and would be glad if
I could induce some other poor suffer to give
it a trial." MRS. JENNIE COE,
Warren, Ohio.
"I was very nervous and restless and weak
and through the advice of a friend I bought a
bottle of Dr. Miles' Nervine, which cured me
entirely. Seeing how much benefit I received
from the medicine, my husband, who suffered
from nervous dyspepsia and indigestion in a
very severe form, thought he would give it a
trial, fie was very weak and nervous and
was able to sleep but little. After using three
bottles of the Nervine he could eat well and
sleep well. My husband is very happy to
think he has recovered from that terrible dis
ease which had made his life miserable for
over three years and he says he will always
speak a good word for Dr. Miles' Nervine."
MRS. ETHEL DANIELS, Upland, fnd.
Dr. Miles' Nervine is sold at all drug stores
on a positive guarantee. Write for free
advice and booklet to
DR. MILES MEDICAL CO. Elkhart. Ind.
perfection of a brand of beer, while the
largest drug store in town devotes a
whole column to advertising its fine
line of liquors, with no mention of Its j
medicines."
The Advocate in commenting upon
this remarkable declaration, speaks in
strong terms of the "ire" which almost
necessarily must be aroused "against a
national administration which will per
mit such a diabolical revolution as the
above indicates in a conquered city."
The Pennsylvania Methodist , employing
still more vigorous and pointed lang
uage, says:
It is a condition of affairs in Manila
that President McKinley could have
prevented with the same authority that
he put a stop to the bull fights of the
Spaniards, and the chicken lights of
Malays. Ho, however, permitted that
over which the liquor paper gloats, and
did it in the interest of the American
distiller and brewer, and evidently for
the purpose of capturing in a second
election the saloon vote.
Then, quoting the question of another,
the editor of the Methodist pointedly
asks:
What could tho boss distiller, brewer,
or saloon-keeper of this country have
done for tho saloon if he had been
president that McKinley has not done?
Let tho reader not get angry, but
calmly and candidly think that query
over.
Suffering Porto Rico.
From the Philadelphia North American.
Dispatches from Porto Rico show that
the condition of the island which wel
comed our troops so enthusiastically is
most deplorable. "There is no money
to plant now crops or to pay laborers,
thousands of whom are on the point of
starvation. The local press expresses
the opinion that the conditions were
better during tho darkest days of the
Spanish regime."
Imagine that, and try to put yourself
in the place of the American citizen
who is willing to have that shame re
main upon the American Hag because
ho thinks that if the starving Porto
Ilicans were allowed to sell their pro
ducts freely in our markets, as the
president has recommended, his profits
might be diminished by their competi
tion.
Suppose that when we were expanding
so blithely in August, 1898—when the
Porto Ricans were scattering (lowers
before our invading soldiers and shout
ing "Vivan los Americanos!"—some
cynical, unpatriotic, Small American
had said: "What fools! These people
have seen their best days. Spain has
been their true benefactor. Spain has
made them prosperous. Under our rule
their industries will decay, their labor
ers will starve, their crops will rot on
their wharves, and we shall let them go
to ruin, so that they may not bother us
in our markets." What should we have
said to the base libeler of his country?
The present condition of Porto Itico
would have been absolutely incredible
and inconceivable to Americans of two
years ago. We thought we knew our
own hearts, and we should have said
with entire confidence that wherever
our flag went it would go as a messen
ger of benediction. lias a year and a
half of empire stripped us of all the fine
feelings of humanity with which we
wont into the war for Cuban liberty and
turned us into a race of mercenary op
pressors?
Many Pennsylvania towns voted
favorably on Tuesday on the question of
municipal ownership of light and water
plants.
A GIRL OUTLAW.
Remarkable Career of "the Wild Rose
of Wilton."
Within the gloomy walls of a Con
necticut prison, drooping and pining
for the wilderness of the forest, lan
guishing for the lack of the sunlight,
is "the Wild Rose of Wilton," says the
New York Herald. Not yet out of her
teens. Minnie Sturm, brown eyed and
beautiful, has had a career that well
might puzzle a philosopher to account
for.
Reared in a quiet, old fashioned
house near Norwalk, thiß girl, with a
rich profusion of dark brown hair, with
hands soft and white, with a beauty
such that many a maiden of lordly
birth might envy her, untutored and in
tatters, is yet a queen of men, lawless
men though they are.
Not more than a mile from her
home, beneath the shelter of two great
rocks, was a rendezvous of a maraud
ing band of idlers. There this farmer's
daughter found them about two years
ago. She cast her life with theirs.
When a raid on neighboring cellars and
hen roosts made provisions plentiful
there in the rendezvous, it was Minnie
Sturm (Minnie Brotherton) who cook
ed the viands over a fire of logs.
But the band became too daring.
The band of the low seized them. Some
were imprisoned and the others scat
(Minnie Sturm.) '
tered. Minnie Brotherton promised to
mend her ways and the lenient authori
ties let her go her way.
For a short time she lived quietly,
but not contentedly, in the old house.
A few months later she married Valen
tine Sturm, of Norwalk, and went to
live with the family of her husband.
Her stay there was remarkably short.
Seven months after she left him, and
in the winter of 1898 applied to the Se
lectman of Norwalk for support. Bhe
was sent to the Town Farm.
Even there she showed her wild ten
dencies. She fell in love with a pauper,
"Jim" Collins, a gray bearded man
with a wooden leg. One day they
eloped from the Almshouse, an 1 for
several days there was no trace of
them. Then Collins limped back to the
institution and was restored to his
former place, but the "Wild Rose" had
no love for life in an Almshouse, and
she soon found a companion In Howard
Dauchy. A few days ago Dauchy and
the "Wild Rose" entered the Norwalk
Selectman's office and applied for ad
mission to the Poorhouse.
Instead of accommodating them the
Selectman notified Strum. ho pre
ferred a charge of infidelity against his
wife. It was learned, too. that they
had borrowed a horse and wagon to
drive to the Town Clerk's office, say
ing they wished to get a marriage li
cense. The horse and wagon were not
ieturned, and a charge of horse theft
v/as made.
The "Wild Roff's" indignation was
aroused. She first pleaded with the
owner to withdraw his charge, promis
ing to bring back his horse and wagon.
He was determined to send her to Jail,
and refused. "You'll never see that
horse again!" the "Wild Rose" ex
claimed. "I'll go to jail and stay
there." And she did.
An Historic Farm.
The Warwick farm of 515 acres, five
mile* !rom Spring Field, Chester Coun
ty, Pa., around which cluster interest
ing memories, was the other day sold
by the heirs of Thomas K. Sterrett tJ
Albert Maerz, of Reading, for 112.000.
On the farm stood the old Warwick
furnace, built in 1730, and at which
many of the cannons used in the Rev
olutionary army were cast. In the
meadows many of them were buried to
prevent them from falling into the
hands of the British after the battle of
Brandywine, in 1777, when General
Washington and his army were re
treating northward through Chester
County, leaving this important iron
furnace exposed to the mercy of the
enemy.
Several of the cannons were dug up
and some sent to the Centennial Expo
sition in Philadelphia in 1876 and ex
hibited as relics. The old bell cast in
1777 at this furnace and used in the
belfry for a great number of years is
now in Independence Hall, in Philadel
phia, as a relic.
The Word "Admiral."
The word "admiral" is of Arabic
crJgin, and dates back to the time of
ihe Crusades; it is but another form of
the familiar Eastern titles, Emir and
Ameer, and simply signifies prince. The
D is intrusive and there is no connec
tion with the Latin "mare," the sea. or
vith the root from which we get ad
miral. In European mouths the word
has been variously contorted; the Teu
tonic races have Introduced the D and
suffixed, instead prefixing the article,
or we may consider it as a contraction
of some such phrase as Admir-al-Bahr.
prince of the sea. The Portuguese,
again, have taken the article for the
first syllable, and make Almirante, but
there can be no doubt as to the identity
of the word. As a nation the Arabs
were never a maritime power, but after
their conquest of Spain they found It
necessary to have a naval force, and
from them both office and name were
adopted by the neighboring Powers.
An Appalling Famine.
The famine which Is spread over the
greater portion of Bombay is daily be
coming more acute. The enormous
number of 951,523 men are employed on
various relief works, but there are still
millions of persons destitute for whom
no relief can be provided and who must
Inevitably starve to death unless im
i mediate outside assistance is forth
coming.
THE EXPOUNDER.
_
Love and money are dear absent
fiiends that almost never meet.
The pocket is the heart's ther
mometer.
Love may be a dream, but, thank
God, it is a progressive and revolution
ary dream.
Eternity will show self-love to have
been a horrible illusion.
Creed crucifies love dally, not with a
groan, but with a chuckle.
"Good stuff," sayß man to money;
"stuff,'' says echo.
Every man thinks himself taxed for
more than he is worth —and he gener
ally thinks rightly.
To shift capital is no great hardship
—to shift without it is the rub
When you get down to the bottom
of human nature what do you find?
Wickedness? Not at all—only weak-
A thousand dollars for your dreams
—lf you tell them true.
"Arise, let us go," is Bible. "Let's sit
down and dream" is /mother book.
The timid soul is like the frog who
dried up ashore for fear his colors
wouldn't wash.
Go ahead! Help yourself! Nobody
will stop you, man, woman or child (in
the way of honesty, of course), provid
ed you are bold enough, and not too
bold.
No close time in "shooting folly as it
flies"—if you see the game pull the
trigger any day you like.
To look man in the eye is the art of
the commander—to look him in the soul
is the gift of the poet.
One half of the sum total of human
energy is wasted in combatting its
own inherent laziness.
If all the actors would stop and
think and all the thinkers start and
act, the world would be better present
ly.
Nature is too straightforward, man is
too twisted.
Hearts are ventured once too often
and are broken at last.
When two meet, one must yield—ex
cept in love. 0
We are being whirled along, like
leaves in a gale, to tremendous issues
—conscious, but careless.
Heaven gives us enough to experi
ence, more to hope, everything to im
agine.
Although charity cannot purchase
heaven, heaven will gladly be given in
exchange.
Thank God, it does not require
strength to build up strength—only vir
tue and patience.
All sins are equal or the penalty
would not be the same.
Some of the best souls have con
quered the worst vices.
The finishing touches of goodness are
often wanting, so that what is excel
lent is not charming.
Our angels—those whom we are
privileged to love and help.—H. A.
Kendall, in the Boston Transcript.
THE FOREIGNER.
Ten days per annum is the average
sickness in human life.
Nearly 10 per cent, of the recipients
of the Victoria Cross are military doc
tors.
Only one person In every four of the
Inhabitants of London earns more than
£1 a week.
No person in Norway may spend
more than threepence at one visit to a
public-house.
It is estimated that considerably over
a million's worth of property is stolen
annually in the United Kingdom.
More than 2,000 people make a liv
ing in Paris by fortune-telling, th lr
total yearly earnings being estimated
at £BOO,OOO.
Iron visiting-cards, with the name
printed in silver, are used in Germany.
The cards are one four-ttundredth of an
inch in thickness.
Someone has calculated that the
postmen of London walk, together,
something like 48,360 miles per day, a
distance equal to twice the circum
ference of the globe.
A vineyard on the Moselle, which
contained only one acre of ground, re
cently sold for £II,OOO, which is the
highest price ever paid for the vine
land in the Moselle territory, or, prob
ably, in the whole of the Rhine d.s
trict.
The German Emperor's new stables
are to cost about £400,000, and will ac
commodate 270 horses and 300 vehicles.
There will also be lodging-rooms for
fifty married grooms and coachmen
and their families, and for eighty single
hostlers and other servants.
THE MORALIST.
The Intoxication of anger, like that
of the grape, shows us to others, but
hides us from ourselves.
An old man is easier robbed than
a young one, for his locks are few, and
his gait is generally broken.
Ever since Rebecca met Jacob at the
well, mothers have been taking their
marriageable daughters to watering
places.
It is said that people who change
their minds often never get a betier
one. They are, perhaps, not to blame
for trying.
There is a club in Penang, on the
west coast of the Malay peninsula,
composed of Chinese who hold debates
in English.
In Ireland an acre comprises seven
ty-eight hundred and forty square
yards, while in Scotland sixty-one hun
dred and forty go to the acre.
I find nothing so singular in life as
this, that everything opposing appears
to lose its substance the moment one
actually grapples with It.—Hawthorne.
Character is power; it makes friends,
creates friends, draws patronage and
support, and opens a sure and ea-y
way to wealth, honor, and happiness.--
J. Hawes.
THE MORALIST.
Industry gives the devil no elbow
room.
Culture will never convert tares Into
wheat.
Many are sick of evil, without the
courage to be well.
True education never Induces con
tempt of the Ignorant.
To love upward is human, to love
downward is divine.
A good conscience is the best armor
against column*.
The Book of Life will last when all
other biographies have burned.
The body is the temple, the heart is
the altar, love is the incense.
A crack in a wall may be very small,
Dut you can see a great deal through
't.
I' Tin Miti of Our Golds 3
jffll
Has given our store a reputa- |®j
tion which we propose to pro- In
tect. We are noted for selling P
none but reliable goods in all JaJ
our departments. If you have ®
not yet purchased any of our S
stock of P
gji
Hats, Caps, Boots, Shoes, Rubber |
Goods, Underwear, Furnishings 1
or Men's and Boys' General i*j
[ffl| Nil
I PplieS ' 1
We cordially invite you to exam- [S|
Pine our present stock, make P
your selections, give the ar- ®
P tides bought a fair test, and [c^
1® we assure you that the money M
P invested will be considered P
I? the most profitabiy spent you 1®
P have ever parted with. P
lItMBSAIirS I
1 Gents' Furnishing, jjf
P Hat and Shoe Store. Ijg
111 IP]
LB6 South Centre Street. p
" ne I!n k, New York, or milroo'd or r , rrH >
L'Sgo£,ilX, , Lo, H.011.1H0 .11 et.rl, .■ or till- target Limine., block: 1,
..rf iui .of ' , - v , IJ P . oup "" n building. IH. SKI.I. Oltll.l.SS AT ,'ra.OO ami no; PIANOH, sll.O,
nl„. or.rythlng In itm.lr.l Inotrnraontn t lowert wholcln win Jror ITroo .7,-l.lnrnn n,n!
SEARS* ROEBUck'&'coi'hhc.), Fulton, De.fe.'M?W*,™n7t^^?CA(M"iftL'
SEND MO NSONEY ssi;& <Ci —
MADE D^P^C AIHtT SdTc SEwiNGMACtfIrtE ..>Tr-Jk-,n i /o. I IS
found pwrfMtly MtUrarterr, exactly uh ropreentti. *" il 1 L J
W|B*l to marliiurt othi- t*li a* high ufOO.OO, Arvl r " 1 , 'tWCT.l^s.
(iMKITBSI BAItUiUI Tot fcT H JIKAUD or, par your'%?*£ • 'A
esiss iis^o
MlpSllil
we will return ypur 115.50 a y day you are not xiuiiiled. > c!l U>r- fiStf ft .* '• M
'it" r r w**" ' Marhlntk at (8.60, 010.00, fll.oo, wn
f\s I S?SIN ""?
BEWARE OF IMITATIONS by nnitDKwa concern* I jf ?S "
AIIK'KOT. ""** '" e ° d '■ ch "*° ■'" l "" Ibfl rrre,hrMKsiSS^-1 i I
THE BURPICK ' r
divyctsopkohk. m.VIO. IIY thk blStmak" i" i"* amkVi YJ-'A'T II
jhwiUWu nwvy.. * itM i in: msi mateuial I
SOLID QUARTHB SAWED OAK gjopgmy
S '['"' n with fill": length t;\..!n end benil in pi,tee for Hewing, 4 f..,,
• S i ln'irKhu l K7° , * hAr " l I, "^hil , '''* , r e
\'n Fn M SKStS!
S i m W'SiSMwSFS
1I IT COSTS YOU NOTHING to 1 8 *|8 Jndesamlne this i.tachlne, cortiparelt
-aj ~, <r>r> ■ — wh wo® your storekeeper sellsat $40.00
j"' ' .. sis.so. WB TOVKTIK? 1 Yopu hri'i!!it .ri,TJL'.°
™ ?• h(IVT I.ri.AT. ISean.Jlnnbl.cl: 4: Co. am thoroughly r.11.T5." '" "*
Address, SEARS, ROEBUCK & CO. (Inc.) Chicago, 111.
TRUSSES, 65c, $1.25 AND UP
We are telll*| the ir; ABHI <** '
at FACTORY PRICES, less than one-third V I
it
Tort KwrrtlbU KUtlle Tra.a, llluntrated aboTe. cut thin
ad. out and send to ua with OCR SPECIAL PRICK naurd
itate your Htlfhi, Wl|ht, Agg, howl on t? you have been
ruptured, whether rupture la large or small ; also state
number Inches around the body on a line with the
"Aether rupture Is on right or leftside,
I P n . e . ,ther yo the under
standing. If U la not a perfect lit sad equal to traeaea that
retail at three times our price,you can return It and wo
will return your money.
WRITE FOR FREE TRUSS CATALOGUE V'
of Irntaaa. Including the Saw §IO.OO Laa Tnua An yr
that enraa alrnoat aay ca.e, and whleb wa tall for AZ, / □
u.m.SEARS, ROEBUCK & Co. CHICAGO
I
I
Swsl.©B E'JYS A $3.50 SUIT
U 7 3,1*10 IkU lib VIED >EVHinK*RtUT" IMILHI K
AfcA. SEAT AND KiIKR. RKM LAU VU. SO BOYS'TWO.
PIECE k.M.K I'A. V .TH SLIIS AT SI. 08.
/yl> A NLW SLIT TREE FOR any of these suits
/ Zyf • A WHICH CON T OIVE SATISFACTORY WEAR,
fnjjo . I IS'cNO NO MONEY, rat iblaaa! .uai!d
► | I send to us, uat- ate of hoy nt.d say w hethor
KJI* • G llargo or email forage and we will send you
, L I r'tho i u!t by express, C. 0.1). aubject to
i I 1 Rumination. >ou enn < > nmlno it at your
I I kl express office and If founl perfectly katis-
I / I factory an.(equal to aulta told la ynnr Uw far
1 I A I pay yourexpreeeogent our itpeelal
I /1 I OlTrr I'rlor, ♦ I.IH, and express charaas.
KB fa .JKWE P * HT SUITS sic for boys 4to
■IB 16 J oniv of ago auil rc rriabad everywhere St
Kf Made with DOI.TILBftKAT sad KKEEt,
JH iV lilMt lltOO style n* llliutratrrt, mt.de frem a
sprrlnl heavy weigh', nur rr.|ii„ r , a'l-wswl
Mantua .i.-lmera, neat, handsome pattern,
fine Italian Hninpr, geuulne (JrsMdua Inlrillnlop, padding,
thrimclinnt.n a:ilt niir boy or parent would he proud ivf.
FOR KIIEK CWITH HAhPI KS of II.UK' lluthlay for boya 4 i#
10 YKAIIM, wrlle for S.impla ll.tofe Ho. 05K. contains fashloa
plates, tape measure and full Instructions how to order.
Men'* Suits made to order tYom $5.00 up. Sanv
; pies stmt free on application. Address.
; SEARS, ROEBUCK & CO. (Inc.), Chicago, lit
I (bears, Roebuck * Co. arc thoroughly reliable.-Editor, >