isillr What is Celery King? It ia au herb drink, and is a positive cure I for constipation, headache, nervous dlsor- I ders, rheuniatisin, kidney diseases, and the various troubles arising from a disordered stomach and torpid liver. It is a most * agreeable medicine, and is recommended by physicians generally. Remember, it cures constipation. Celery King is sold In 25c. and 50c. pack ages by druggists and deulers. 1 DePIERRO - BROS. -CAFE.- Corner of Centre and Front streets, Freeland, Pa. Finest Whiskies in Stock. Gibson, Dougherty, Kaufer Club, Roaenbluth'e Velvet, of which we hive EXCLUSIVE SALE IN TOWN. Mumra'g Extra Dry Champagne, Hennessy Brandy, Blackberry, Gins, Wines, Clarets, Cordials, Etc. Imported and Domestic Cigars. OYSTERS IN EVERY STYLE. Ham and Schweitzer Cheese Sandwiches, Sardines, Etc. MEALS - AT - ALL - HOURS. Ballentine and Hazleton beer on tap. Baths, Hot or Cold, 25 Cents. ~T. CAMPBELL, dealer in Dry Goods, Groceries, Boots and Shoes. Also PURE WINES It LIQUORS FOR FAMILY AND MEDICINAL PURPOSES. Centre and Alain streets. Freeland. P. F. McNULTY, FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND[EMBALMER. Embalming of female corpses performed exclusively by Mrs. I'. F. MeNulty. Prepared to Attend Calls Day or Night. South Centre street, Freeland. An Advertisement In this position Is not very con spicuous. still it attracts the read er's attention and proves that ads in all parts of this paper are read. FDATERIYS TRADEMARKS ] TAI tn I o and o c b°t p a^ g d hts i \ ADVICE AS TO PATENTABILITY PfJtC i ► lJotice in " Inventive Age " Pnßi P 4 Book "How to obtain Patents" | Hluib 1 r Charge a moderate. No fee till patent is secured. 1 Letters strictly confidential. Address, r E. G. SIGGERS. Patent Lawyer. Washington, D. C. J 50 YEARS' t EXPERIENCE 1 K DESIGNS r rrvv COPYRIGHTS AC. Anyone sending a sketch nnd description may quickly ascertain our opinion free whether an invention is probably patentable. Comiuunlcn. Hons strictly confident inl. Handbook on Patents sent free. Oldest agency for securing patents. Patents taken through Munu er chamois. Wrile for free Cloak Cataloeua. Addresa, SEARS, ROEBUCK A CO.. CHICACO theari, Boobaek ACe. ore thoroughly re liable— Editor.; FREELAND TRIBUNE. Established 1888. PUBLISHED EVERY j MONDAY AND THURSDAY BY TIIB TRIBUNE PRINTING COMPANY, Limited. I OFFICE: MAIN STREET ABOVE CENTUE. LONG DISTANCE TELEPHONE. SUBSCRIPTION KATES: One Year $1.50 Six Months 75 I Four Months 50 | Two Mouths 25 j The dute which the subscription is puid to is -u tbe address lubel of each paper, the change of which to a subsequent dute becomes a | receipt for remittance. Keep the tlgures in advance of the present date. Report prompt ly to tikis 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, PA., MARCH 5, KMX). I The l)lßfufranchln(l of Freeland. j Some of our contemporaries are rais- ; ing a hub-bub about the dlseufranclise ment of the Southern negro. Perhaps j all they say is true, and perhaps not, | but if any sympathy Is to be shown for | the disenfranchised there is no need of | going outside of Freeland borough to tind a startling example of this evil. The total voting strength of the First, Second, Third and Fourth wards of this town is 008. Each of these divi sions has two representatives on the council and two on the school board, eight in each body, or a councilman and a school director to every 70 voters. In the South ward there are 428 voters. They have only two represen tatives on each of tho municipal bodies ! named, or one councilman and one school director to every 214 voters. In the matter of school attendance, valuation of property and estimated population the South ward's proportion to the whole is found to correspond with the vote as cast. The people of the territory embraced in the South ward are entitled to the same proportionate representation on the governing bodies of tho borough as is enjoyed by the people of any other ward. There is no reason, other than partisan prejudice, why they should be discriminated against. The voters of the ward which is so unjustly dealt with owe it to themselves to act promptly in this matter. They have a clear case of right on their side, and to advocate right is treason to no body but the little clique of small-fry politicians who happen to possess some power to object to a demand of this kind. Leg Irons for Otis. From the Philadelphia North American. The statement that General Otis has made a requisition for a thousand pairs of handculTs and leg irons for use in se curing those of his soldiers who have become insane in the Philippine cam paigns will be likely to startle those ebullient expansionists who have been holding out the idea that soldiering with Otis is so much of a pastime that the men who are engaged in the cam paigns do not want to quit. It seems, however, that being compelled to sleep for months together with both eyes open in order to avoid being caught in a Filipino night foray, is not calculated to give calmness of nerves and physical poise. The Philippines are beiug bought with a price which it is not yet possible !to compute. There is a waste of life j and a loss of moral force which cannot yet be put into dollars and cents and balanced up against the transactions of the Manila custom house. While congress dallies with the grave questions that have grown out of the Spanish war Otis is sending home for more leg irons, and transports crowded with dead men and invalids steain into the Golden Gate. Lest people with short memories should forget it, we call attention to the fact that the war in the Philippines is over. Geueral Otis, who is on the ground, declared it at an end several weeks ago. Nevertheless, the long casuality lists continue to come to Washington every Monday with terrible regularity. The Ohio legislature Is going to see ; that women are paid just as high wages as men. Such a reform is absolutely necessary in Ohio, where most of the betrousered are so busy with politics that their women folks are compelled to get out and hustle for grub money. When Clark goes back to his copper mines he will know more than he did when ho left them. There are a few honest men in the country yet, although Montana and Pennsylvania have not supplied their quota. If the newspaper reports of the ju hi Nations throughout Queen Victoria's possessions over Cronje's defeat and the relief of Ladysmith are true, there is a stupendous job ahead for Great Brit ain's fool-killer. PORTO RICO AS IT IS RANDOM JOTTINGS OF AN AMERI CAN TRAVELER. Chances for Settlers or Investors— Sugar Cane, Coffee Fruit and To bacco—A Study of the Inhabitants— The Spanish Language. I have seen nothing prettier on the whole island than the rood from Rio Pledras to San Juan. It is lined with a wide variety of handsome tropical trees, fronting picturesque cottages. Flower gardens are plentiful, and oc casionally one is laid out with some skill and taste. These evidences of cul ture are indeed rare and no American can visit the island without a feeling of disappointment at the lack of out ward as well as inward home attract ions. San Juan, Ponce, Mayaguez, Agua dilla aud Arecibo are all seaports and are really the only places of much con sequence ou the isluud. Arecibo is some fifty miles west from San Juan. The journey may be made by rail, nl though it is about as bad a railroad as I ever saw. The train conductors, however, were always considerate enough to delay the cars four or five minutes at the various stations, in or der to give me such time as 1 needed to explore them, or to buy a drink of cocoauut milk from the peripatetic vender. Arecibo lias some extremely picturesque environs. Five or six miles east of the town is a vertical rock that rises some 850 feet. About half way to its summit is an entrance which leads into a grotto that lias a number of caverns, arches, stalactites aud other curiosities. It may be added that this with the hot sulphur spriugs about five miles from Coamo on the military roud in the southern part of the isl and, are really worth a visit from ev ery American tourist. The hotel ac commodations at the springs are the best that cuu be found on the island, Aguadillu. at the extreme northwest ern portion of the island, is extremely picturesque, and Mayaguez lias to my mind better opportunities for invest ment than either San Juan or Ponce. Chance for Investment. But what chance does Porto Rico offer to settlers or investors? The an swering of this question is beset with difficulties because facts there are elu sive as will-o'-wisps and as slippery a eels. This may account for the fine imagination and deft diction shown in so much that has been written about the island. To depend upon the native for information is to become bewil dered by elaborate contradiction. The trutliseeker will be told, for instance, that tiie rainy season begins and ends at periods varying acording to the number of natives he consults. Super ficial candor will assure him that so cial life is a stream of unpolluted in nocence and that its bestiality can be parallelled only by the worst days of imperial Rome; that life and property are fairly secure, and that villainy and outlawry stalk broadcast over tbe land. It is reported that before the Spaniards evacuated San Juan they released several hundreds of the worst types of criminals—murderers and brigands—from the island prison, send ing them out broadcast through the country to resume their vocations of murder aud rapine. Whilst this report is confirmed by our own soldiers. I have traveled all over the island alone, night and day, without molestation, of witnessing any crime flagrant or otherwise. Thus when I turn to the prospects for labor and for capital, to the chanc es for the incoming investor and the worker, I soon learn to be guided only by facts acquired by observation, though not until it had cost me some thing in time and Spanish pesos. For illustration, it has been reported with a good deal of sincerity that there are good placer gold mines up intheinoun ains back of Rio Grande; that the wo men make six or seven dollars a week panning it out from the beds of tlie streams. Soldiers at Caguas told me they had seen the dust in possession of their comrades at Fajardo, but when I arrived at that town the gold hud somehow flown back to Caguas. But yet the claim was still that there was plenty of gold in the mountains. "Mucho oro," said the native; "plenty of gold dust," said the American sol dier. A twenty mile journey, however, a careful sifting of the story, and a much more exhaustive sifting of the sand in the beds of the creeks, dem onstrated to my mind that there is only here and there a gold color in the locality. Possibly we may yet hear of rich Porto Rican gold mine com panies, however, cash capital one unit and ciphers ad lib. Coffee Culture. But let us take less speculative en terprises—coffee raising, for example. Undeveloped coffee land can be pur chased for twenty dollars per acre, provided a native does the buying. Americans will be charged twice that sum. Four years of hard work are re quired before any return whatever can lie secured. Unless already wood ed, trees must be planted to shade the coffee shrub, and the curcoa tree, which brings a profit in itself, is best for this purpose, although the quickly maturing banana will answer, it is claimed that coffee can be grown without sliade, but I am unable to find any thus produced under the hot Por to Rican sun. After the fourth year some berries may be picked, and the year when it is at its zenith. Eight production increases until the tenth hundred pounds of coffee is a goeil yield for an acre of ground, twenty cents Spanish money, per pound, Is au average price, and sixteen dollars io the acre a fair estimate of the cost of cultivation and harvest The coffee bloom is white, of a pleasant perfume, and tbe berry is attacked closely to and encircling the branch. The berry is first green, then red. and lastly white. Like most tropical production.- It ripens at such varying periods that several pickings are required. The best col Tee shrubs are about six feet high, and the branches spread widely. Sugar-cane plantations can be start ed in far less time, but while coffee is largely grown on the hillsides and clear to their tops, bottom lands are the best for cane, and these are not so easy to secure in Porto Rico. Cane requires but little cultivation, and it grows ten years in this country with out replanting. The cost of extracting the sugar from the stalk is about twenty dollars on the gross product of over three bundled dollars per acre It may be added that in Louisiana, sugar cane must be replanted every three years. The cost of machinery for extraction—the engines, the boil ers, the vats and the crushers —is heavy, but the grower of small means can take his cane to the mill vtrv much as the farmer in the States used to take his corn, the miller returning the llnislied product after deducting toll. Good sugar cane laud is easily worth one hundred dollars an acre and is usually held at a far higher value. Tobacco land Is worth quite as much as cane laud, aud uo better tobacco can be grown on earth than on tlie ial and. For the man of small means fruit raising offers far greater attrac tion than anything else he can engage in. Fine oranges grow abundantly without cultivation, aud the experi enced grower who introduces the Cal ifornia navel fruit on the island will make a fortune. Laud suitable for fruit can be had at a comparatively low figure, and with low freight rates and a line of steamers making the dis tance from San .Juan to New York in three days, there can be no competi tion from other sources of supply. Native Stores. The general merchant will do well to keep away from the island at pres ent. Almost every other house ou the military road from Pouce to Sail Juau is a general store, .and while the prin cipal article of traffic is rum, they all carry a supply of such goods as are of common use aud the consumptive capacity of the average native is at present woefully limited. It Is notice able that the average native buys ids sugar, coffee, rice, aud indeed, most of liia groceries, by the single penny's worth. The country needs a railway system to assist in its development and fu ture prosperity, but it will require a Jim Ilill or a Vanderbilt, with the pa tience of Job, to wait for its success ful operation. A good deal bus been said about u railroad around the isl and. The present status of Porto Ri cau ruilwuys is this: In 1878 a report was presented to the minister of the colonies embodying a study made by the engineer and head of public works, with the view of constructing a rail road which should start from the capi tal, and passing through all the chief towns near or on the const, return to the point of departure, thus encircling the island. The provincial authorities finally let out the contract and gave the exclusive franchise to a French company for ninety-nine years and the guaranteed interest of eight per cent on the cost of construction. The company promised to complete the line in six years, but it did not carry out its contract, nor has the island treasurer paid its promised eight per cent interest. At present there are one hundred and twenty-seven miles of completed railroad under this con tract aud considerably more partly constructed. The roadbed is fairly good, but the running stock is of ex tremely inferior quality, and the rails in many places are well consumed or made badly defective by the damp cli mate. Coal for fuel is imported from the United States. The speed of trains is twelve or fourteen miles per hour. There are first, second and third class cars, and the fare is five, three, and two cents respectively, Spanish mon ey, per kilometer. A fleet of light draft fast steamers around the island would prove far more remunerative at pres ent than the railroad but the time is coming when the latter, with spurs to the smaller towns and in the bauds of American operators, will pay hand somely. Military Road and the People. The construction of a railroad across the island from Ponce to San Juan would be an engineering feat quite as difficult as that of crossing the Alps or the Rockies. Twenty miles buck from the eoast on either side are suc cessions or networks of sierras and hills of varying height, some of them rising almost perpendicularly. The mil itary road switches back and forth for miles at angles so sharp that the pedestrian can often save time and ef fort as well as distance, by climbing on ids hands and knees from one turn to the other, a distance of not more than fifty feet. After careful observation and study I am unable to see anything to ad mire mental, moral or physical, in the average Porto Rican native. It must not be forgotten that he is either a product of darkest Africa or of Spain or a mixture of both, and it lias been inj' experience that the better citizen is the one of Spanish blood. Although the island is of marvelous fertility, prodigally watered, and warmed by such an ardent sun that vegetation is of wonderful luxuriance, yet the average native is too lazy to cultivate it. Ilenee poverty is on ev ery hand. All this may be changed by educating the rising generation. An American school system, with teaching entirely in English—the Spanish lan guage is of no use except it be to read Don Quixote—will accomplish won ders. As for the adult—ignorant, low, cunning—his blood often tainted with foul disease, there Is no hope for him. X X u. I-I in.rr urniox. Oplalwitn Krem VnrluHn Sonreen on QnmtloMn of the I>ay. The Democrats of this state need a firmer discipline and a more assertive leadership and the sincere, honest, de termined, unpurchasable element of the party are ready for euch a policy and will support it to the death—Ro chester Commoner. MrKinley complains that the attache on Secretary Gage for his subserviency to the Standard Oil company's bank are aimed at him. He is mistaken. Everybodj' knows Marcus Aurolius Itanna is responsible for the acts of both Gage and McKlnley. They are s'mply Mr. Hanna's spokesmen, and sometimes he even does the talking. Governor Taylor should at least make an effort to bring about the ar rest of Senator Goebel's assassin. The country finds it difficult to understand his failure for ten days to offer a re ward for the author of such a das tardly crime. Clearing his own skirts of complicity seemed to demand at least as much.—Titusville Advance- Guard. That the Philadelphia leaders are guilty or treachery to the Democratic party and its principles Colonel Guffey needs no investigation to inform him. Every citizen of the state who has given any attention to the matter and who Is not deaf, dumb, blind and par alyzed. knows that the organization in Philadelphia is but a band of po litical cut throats and assassins who barter away tha life and honor of the Democratic party to the Quay gang of that city for whatever reward they can get. An investigation can only de termine the degree of their treachery and reveal the methods of their bri gandage. We. to a great extent, depend on America and Europe for our foort ■tuffs. It will be criminal on the part of the great powers to suffer this little nation to perish by famine since the sword has failed. Since in 1870, the president of the United States ac knowledged our republic as a sover eign state Americans have flocked here in great numbers and in every Instance the hand of fallowehlp has been ex tended to them. Not a single case of disagreement is on record, but with the flret war note of the oppressor, we are informed that America is acting in league with the enemy. If our sis ter republic has no sympathy with us, if the boasted condenscension of the British is to be preferred to sincerity and truth w# will no longer believe in the Justice and integrity of the American nation and her profession of Christianity we will consider empty sound. —Secretary Reitz, of the Boer Rapublie. The three great Republican counties of Pennsylvania are Philadelphia, I,an caster and Allegheny. Bardsley. a Re publican officeholder, inflicted on Phil adelphia losses by defalcation and em bezzlement aggregating more than a million dollars. He was sent to the penitentiary and pardoned out. More land and House, Republican officehold ers, put Pittsburg, In Allegheny coun ty, through the squeezing process to the extent of several thousand dollars. One of them has been pardoned, and the other is likely to he. Now comes the last, in the embezzlement by Her shey, the Republican treasurer of Lan caster county, of $65,000 of the public funds. He has every encouragement to expect that his little peccadillo will be forgiven. The greater the crime the less punishment. "Bill" Kerable set the fashion, by the aid of the Quay machine, over 20 years ago, when he set out at Harrisburg to bribe a whole legislature, and being convicted was pardoned before the prison doors had a chance to close on him. The quality of mercy is not strained in Pennsylva nia when it applies to big operations. As to a loaf of bread it is different. — Norristown Register. It may not be a matter of great Im portance. even to the people Porto Rico, whether their products are ad mitted into our markets free or re quired to pay a duty of twenty-flve per cent, but it is of vital importance that they shall be admitted at some rate and a market opened for them. In the present state of things we have simply released the Porto Ricans from Span ish rule and destroyed their market re lations with Spain without furnishing any substitute at all. We govern thera by military force and maintain our tar iff restrictions against their products. Congress should do something about this important matter and do it quick ly. Already the people of Porto Rico are complaining that they are worse off than under Spanish rule, had as that was, and further delay will sim ply breed more discontent and possi bly rebellion. Having acquired Porto Rico, we must provide it with a government under which its people can live in greater freedom and com fort, rather than with less than be fore. This we are bound to do in sim ple Justice to all concerned, and fur ther dallying with this important sub ject is simply inexcusable. This game of military hide and seek has been played for about a year at a cost to the people of thousands of val uable American lives and over SIOO,- 000.000 in hard cash. The mothers and fathers of the country who are called upon to sacrifice their sons, the over burdened taxpayers who foot the bills, are beginning to exclaim. "How long, O Lord, how long?" The Spanish war —the wa* authorized by congress—add ed to our renown by the splendid vic tories of our forces by land and sea and gave us at least two new naval heroes of the first rank—George Dew ey and Winfleld Scott Schley. But no man who has any reputation for verac ity to lose will assert that the Philip pine war has added to either our glory as a people or to the strength of the republic. When the Spanish war closed we could have occupied the most enviable position ever held by any na tion since creation's dawn, and all we had to do was to do that which we owed it to ourselves to do, and that was to say to both the Cubans and the Filipinos: "The Spaniards are beaten. Your chains are broken. You helped us to do this thing. Now set up any sort of government you want, and we will make the other nations of the earth keep their hands off you, or we will shoot them off."—Hon. Champ Clark. [s nut hrii bs r?tj-i bb gs rFtLT^I I Tit Unify of flir Goods 1 raU Si ® Has given our store a reputa- @ |g| tion which we propose to pro- C R£ tect. We are noted for selling [jS || none but reliable goods in all }fy ® our departments. If you have [§j| ||n not yet purchased any of our S H stock of P 1 Hats, Caps, Boots, Shoes, Rubber I 1 Goods, Underwear, Furnishings 1 | or Men's and Boys' General § I Supplies, 1 We cordially invite you to exam- [®] pJ ine our present stock, make P your selections, give the ar- M [S tides bought a fair test, and P Hj we assure you that the money M fp invested will be considered P 5 the most profitably spent you [®| pS have ever parted with. P I McMENAMIN'S j pl Gents' Furnishing, jf |] Hat and Shoe Store. Jp 111 [il pj 86 South Centre Street. P m 'tl DOLLAR M1'.75 IS OUR°SPECIAL9O DAYS' PRICE jr k .£K "hfSSi ill .1 .VmXv nlfXrlv aOM Si .... i < "" lre iMWMt bllilno, blo,£. M uu uiHaU'Al Instrument catalogue. Address, , N| ,,„ <•„ 1- JL J-v.1 eciai 1 " r t a, Ji P lan * • CARS, ROEBUCK & CO. (Inc.), Fulton, Dcsplainemnd wayman 3ts.,°'cHl'cAcb ILL, SEND MO MOMEY Jf|' rut tHs jffMlj miMMm, eiMt!} ! L and * ijF j SVriTKST' nAEUI"N Tot k'Vr VkaKP OF,' pay %?*?*? nStdifnn wti*!? $15.50 180 pound* and the freight will average 7S cents for each "V) milt * CIVE IT THREE. MONTHS' TRIALIn jour imi I " i w* wni return your 815../) ay day you are not catißfied. W t ,e'l d.r &*&/ frrxmt mnkct and pradrs uf Sewing Jlrhin. ct Sft.fcO. (110.00. #ll GO „ M , |/&i jiyGELT&'VI ,O,IT d rerll*d '■ Frre f)o„l„ c Has Mm* I atalomte! V p| I[7awi S'^54? M Ki l SJu?^?r F X B ,Sf,SA , | I „SS.' r BUKDICK I |MR| BEWARE OF IMITATIONS T. Ml E*" BHtTEB rtru A m,*'aViTwuo'are'hot. ' r '* nJ in ® "" d , " rn 8,, ° aro fej IJ? THE BURDICK .JflmMM ?[ OIHCIIOFKOSI ' """ h'EßHstmatekiai. ' *ax ufv[ SCUD Ot'AHTEfI SAWED OAK BOPDr* 1 pitiff frcm ilKht) to be UM-an,. c,.,ilrr 1 [:nJ .kf'lh, 'l'hir • MnCL. oprn with full length ta'. le arid Lead in place for sowing, 4 r*ut ' drawer*. I.lent 1830 •Ulcton frame, curved. |noled. emborscd • RHIPw /♦ ■ nllif 3S| decorated cawHet /JnMh. ilnert nickel drawer pu lis, rents on 4 (M - I RoW® X j 'jf /■ Y I Ujra lUff Shuttle, automatic bobbin winder, adjuat&ble bcarl.iKs, patent tenainß ;,31 LI B ® s®Ba m>erator.lmproTe l looßewbeol.a-.!Jußtblopreßeer foot. Improved ahuttla IF I ■ 1 iMmi carrier, patent needle bar, pate-it tlreastrnard. beiftl Is handaomcW decorafd ! i fc Bra B B K wJSHm and emainrnted oad bcantlfull< NICICET. T"RTP.T'fbTVTW Ifi? K ' asa CUARANTEED lb. llm™i nin..!.,, ...h m fits IST C.,'.W.SvW riJi'hii*?, r f , f l ' , "" 1 l "il ' Free Ir.Btructlon Book Mil. £-' - M •-n iur !Jy.?• y>^--ni -rrrf ? la!n or 1,1,1 J" kind of fancy work. fViylW n>A(il£usiiOTTAllANxitSlli Is 6ent with c*ery machine. 1 I IT COSTS YOU NOTHING toaee and examine this machine, compare It "•■ i llfc . r? , w lth thoso youratorckeciwr eellaat $40.00 "r sa* Touiiii'.r.'oSrts'jtarszz'stsL 0TO D.f. OfIVT DIbAT. jSo.r,, Tto.buek AT Co. oro tllorouEblv rclifiblo.—Edl'oiv* ' ' Address, SEARS, ROEBUCK fit CO. (Inc.) Chicago, 111. TRUSSES, 65c, sl-25 AND UP Weareaelliag the very flneet at FACTORY PRICES, less than one-third I I ~ the price charged by others, and Wl 1 # **3 Mr Ktw Yerh Reversible Klastle True*, illustrated above, rut this ad. out and send to U n with Ol'R SPRUAL PRICK named state your Height, Weight, Age, how long you have been ruptured, whether rupture Is large orSmall; also state number inches around the body on a lino with the InS 1 -?* m y ."hether rupture is on right or lertslde. and we will send either truss to you with the under standing. If It la not a perfect At and equal to Iraeaea thai retail at three times our price,you can return it and we will return your money. WRITE FOR FREE TRUSS CATALOGUE of trusses, including the New fIO.OO Loa Truaa d>n l"r thateore. almaat any eaae, end which we sell for OZ.ID tddm. SEARS, ROEBUCK & Co. CHICAGO 1 SsSI.9B BUYS ft $3.50 SUIT Is 7 a "" :iiay ni ~n'kvrnv,raiuht" not r.i.t bhAT AND SOKE. UK I I Alv &3.60 ROYS' 1 WO. / J A KIWSIiT FREE TOR AMY CF THESE JCiTS AAi tf? WHICH COH'T GIVE SATISFACTORY WEAK, rrpjo . j OENO NO MONEY, tMoad. cwi,.i A ' iO I• • Q jlnrge or . malt forage and we will send y u , L I j.tho tult Uj express, C. O.!>. subject to ei- T | Wamlnation. \ou enn examine it at your I I Wespress office and it found perfectly uatl*- I I / factory ni'.d equal In auita Mild In ynarlonn for I /I I (8. C.O, pay yourcxprcfc agent pur eprelul I /1 / tlifer l^iire, * I.PH, nnd express charges. H H ,TKEfE K|.tE I'AfiT SUITS "ro for boys 4to Mf QB l' ? ear, or nge Hill are retailed everywhere at B jB 98.i0. > ade with liul'l'.l E MvAT and KXEka, F1 AY" latnl 1000 atyle as lllnitriifrd, made from a ape rial heavy weight, wear retail, g, all-wcol Staiiios Caaaimero, neat, handsome pattern, fine Italian lininir, genuine f>.oo up. k&u , pie- sent free on application. Address. SEARS, ROEBUCK & CO. (Inc.), Chicago, 111 I (bears, Roebuck k Co. are thoroughly reliable.— Editor.)