1 ■ Fainting Spells Always indicate a weak heart. They usually follow palpitation or fluttering, shortness of breath, irregular or inter mittent pulse. When the heart mus cles are ovrworked or exhausted theye relax, the flow of blood to the brain is interrupted, and unconsciousness follows. Should relaxation continue completely for two or three minutes, sudden death is the result. The surest and best remedy for overworked and debilitated hearts is DR. MILES' Heart Cure, "My heart trouble began several years ago with palpitation, shortness of Dreath and smothering. Then I began to have fainting spells and would tall over on the street or wherever 1 hap pened to be. I was unable to attend to my business and dare not venture away from home. The doctors failed to help me, and seeing an advertise ment of Dr. Miles' Heart Cure I bought a bottle. The first few doses stopped the fainting spells and in a few weeks my heart was working all right" ESEK COWN, Middleburg, N. Y. Dr. Miles' Heart Cure is sold at all druggists on a positive guaran tee. Write for free advice to Of. Miles Medical Co., Elkhart, Ind. ► DePIERRO - BROS -CAFE.- Corner of Centre and Front Streets, Freeland, Pa. Finest Whiskies in Stock. Gibson, Dougherty, Kaufer Club, Koseubluth's Velvet, of which we hive EXCLUSIVE SALE IN TOWN. Mumm's 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. Batha, Hot or Cold, 25 Cents. T. CAMPBELL, dealer in Dry Goods, Groceries, Boots and Shoes. Also PURE WINES | LIQUORS FOR FAMILY AND MEDICINAL PURPOSES. Centre and Main streets. Freeland. P. F. McNULTY, FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND EMBALMER. Embalming of female corpses performed exclusively by Mrs. P. F. McNulty. Prepared to Attend Calls Day or Night. South Centre street, Freeland. LUML.' "* 50 YEARS'® TRADE MARKS' rmmmmr DESIGNS ■ R RRWII COPYRIGHTS AC. Anyone sending n nketrh and description may quickly ascertain our opinion free whether an Invention is probably patentable. Communica tions strictly confidential. Handbook on Patents sent free. Oldest agency for Hccuring patents. Patents taken through Munn A Co. receive special notice, without charge, iu the Scientific American. A handsomely Illustrated weekly. Largest cir culation of any scientific journal. Terms. 93 a rear ; four months. |L Bold by all newsdealers. MUNN & Co. 36,8,0i,d " ay New York Branch Office. G26 F 3t„ Washington. D. C. [ QATEhi TC TRADEMARKS 1 rA I tN I o # "sri F ADVICE AS TO PATENTABILITY CD EE 1 ► Hotice in " Inventive Age " Bi K ■■ ■■ < ► Book "How to obtain Patents" | IINBAB 1 T Charges moderate. No fee till patent is secured. 1 r Letters strictly confidential. Address, 1 B. G. SIGGERS. Patent Lawyer. Washington, 0. C. J Boat Cough Byrup. Tastes Good. Use in time. Bold by druggists. W Read - the - Tribune. i FREELAND TRIBUNE. Establiahsl 1883. PUBLISHED EVERY MONDAY AND THURSDAY BY THE TRIBUNE PRINTING COMPANY, Limited. OFFICE: MAIN STHEET ABOVE CKNTHK. LONG DISTANCE TELEPHONE. SUBSCRIPTION KATES: One Year $1.50 Six Months 7ft Four Months 5U Two Months 25 The date which the subscription is paid to is uu the address label 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 bo paid when subscription is discontinued. Make all money orders, checks, etc., payable to the Tribune Printing Company, Limited. FREELAND, PA., MARCH 8. 1900. WASHINGTON LETTER. Washington, D. C., March 6, 1900. There stems to be trouble ahead for the administration bill providing that the adjutant general of the army shall have the rank of major general. The senate has adopted a resolution, offered by Senator Pettigrew, directing the secretary of war to send the senate the record of the court martial of General Corbiu who was then a lieutenant colonel, during the civil war, and a copy of the report made about the same time by Colonel Thomas J. Morgan, relating to the first colored brigade, and Lieuten ant Colonel Corbin's relations therewith. Corbin was court-martialed upon the charge of cowardice, one of the speci lications being made that while under (ire he got off his horse and hid behind a tree. lie was acquitted, but the re cord as well as the report of Colonel Morgan, is said to contain matter which will cause senators and representatives to do some hard thinking before they vote to make such a man a major general. X X X It is very hard to forecast the fate of the Porto Rican bill in the senate. There is a Republican faction there which regards the action of the house, in cutting down the duties and limiting the life of the bill, as nothing more nor less than pure politics. Its members desire to restore the rates to 25 per cent or perhaps higher and to remove the limit, with the idea that when the bill goes to conference, the house lead ers, already primed, will readily yield and that the house will accept the con ference report without debating it. On the other hand, there is another Re publican faction lod by Mr. Aldrich, of Rhode Island, which rocognizos the fact that the proposed taxation is unconsti tutional and bad politics besides. The situation has not yet clarified sufficient ly to enable the strength of these fac tions to be properly estimated. X X X The clique of real estate speculators who arc after a big wad of Uncle Sam's money In exchange for the south side of Pennsylvania avenue, which, notwith standing its being a quagmire in which no solid foundation for a large building can be had without driving piles through thirty or forty feel of mud, they have been talking up as just the place to locate future public buildings, received an unexpected check when the Wash ington centennial committee caine out strong for the projected Federal avenue, from the capitol to the proposed Memo rial bridge to Arlington, over the Mall, upon which all future federal buildings shall be located. The Mall is owned by the government and there would be no pickings in the erection of buildings by the government upon its own ground. t t t Representative Rfdgely, of Kansas, has introduced the bill prepared by several able lawyers for the American Federation of Labor, for the abolition of government by injunction. The bill it purely negative In character, declaring that no agreement to do or not to do anything in a labor dispute or strike shall be deemed criminal if the same action would not be criminal if done by an Individual. This provi sion is so entirely in accord with justice and right that It is hard to see how any congress, freo from trust monoply In fluence, can vote against It. Rut, nat urally, it will be opposed by the corpo rations and will have a hard time in being enacted, If indeed it ever is. t t t Senator Jones, of Arkansas, said of the attitude of the Democratic senators towards tho Porto Rlcan bill: "The Democrats accept tho Issue tendered by the Republicans. Porto Rico has been annexed to tho United States. It is an integral part of the country. The Hag proclaims our sovereignty there, and the constitution follows the flag. The Republican proposition that we can enact discriminating legislation against the Porto Ricans and Porto Rican pro ducts Is monstrous. We we fight It In the senate to the limit of oureextent' t and we will fight it before the peop'e from now until the ballots are caet In November." X X X Senator Stowart, who has been counted as a countenancer if not an actual sup porter of Imperialism, said In a speech against the Porto Rico tarrifl: "I don't want any torrltory in which the consti tution does not follow the flag. We cannot discriminate against any section of our own country. If our principles of free government are not broad enough to cover the territory under the flag, then we would better bring hack the flag." FISH IN SAMOA. They Are Migratory, But Always Re turn Home. Due strange feature of this sea life of the tropics Is the regular recurrence of migratory swarms of fish of very small size that return In huge num bers year after year with such abso lute regularity that the natives calcu late on the event on a certain date in each year, and even within an hour or two of the day. One such swarm of fish forms the occasion of an annual holiday and feast at Samoa. The fish is not unlike the whitebait for which the English Thames has so long been celebrated, and each year it arrives in Snmoa on the same day in the month of October, remains for a day, or at tho most two days, and then dis appears entirely until the same day the following year. Why It comes, or whence, no curious naturalist liaß yet discovered, nor has anybody traced its onward course when it leaves the Santoan group, but the fact is unques tionable that suddenly, without notice, the still waters of the lagoon which surround each island within the fring ing reef becomes alive with millions of fishes, passing through them for a single day and night and then disap pearing for a year as though they hud never come. A visit to Snmoa enabled me to see this strange phenomenon for myself, and to witness the native fenst by which it is celebrated year by year. I had been in Samoa for a month and in that month I had enjoyed almost a surfeit of beauty. I had coasted the shores of its Islands. I bad bathed iu the warm, still waters of its lagoons, fringed seaward by the white reef, on which tile ocean broke iu a golden spray, and to landward by the silver bench of coral sand, flecked with the tremulous shadows of the swaying palms. I had climbed with my native guide the abrupt hills, covered with dense forests of tropical luxuriance, through the arcades of which 1 caught glimpses of the flash aud lus ter of the ocean's myriad smiles, and again we had plunged into deep val leys among tile hills whore little head long streams murmur under the shade of the widespreadlng bread-fruit trees ami wave the broad leaves of the great water lillles of the Pacific coast isl ands. -I.ippiucott'g Magazine. The Home of the Peon. !jj ' (A country residence, Torto Rico.) A NATIONAL DISH. It is Cheap, Fattening and Tempting, But to Hawaiians Only. Poi is the national dish of Hawaii, and has the great advantage of being cheap and fattening; formerly the na tive took as much pride In Ids particu lar brew of poi as some good house wives do in their biscuits, but now. alas! ills pride has departed and this industry too lias fallen into the hands of ever-watchful John Chinaman. And the makiug of poi is no easy task—perhaps that explains the na tives' retirement from the work. Taro Is a tough, fleshy root, aud In the firsc pel-making stage it must he ground to a flour. This could, of course, he done by machinery hut that would not be Hawaiian—therefore, in the old days, the tough root is brought to the desired condition by a stone pestle and a wooden—sometimes stone trough. After its reduction to flour it is then worked Into a thinnish paste, and if the best article of poi is desired it is permitted to ferment before be ing served in the calabash as the wooden bowl—the only dish of the na tives is called. Usually one calabash answers for a family, which, squat ting aound the common dish, feeds by skillfully gathering a quantity of poi on the fingers, and then with equal dexterity, transferring the mess to tho inoutli. According to its consistency, it may be "one finger," "two lingers," or "three finger" poi, the index finger being equal to the task of feeding if he poi is quite thick, and three fingers required when it is at its thinnest. It Is an acquired taste to the foreign ers. hut many of them appear to ac quire it reudlly enough—the white Hawaiians take their poi and squill (as the dried tentacles of the octopus are railed) with apparently as much relish as the natives. It was tasteless to my palate, unless perhaps It sug gested starch.—Caspar Whitney In Harper's Weekly. City of Johannesburg. Johannesburg is a boom town, but. unlike most cities of like character, it Is solidly and permanently built, many of the residences being verita ble palaces of granite nuil marble, that would do credit la any of our Ameri can cities. Retail stores in Cuba conflne them lelves strictly to one class of goods, and returning travelers say there is a iiileudld chance for a department store. SCHOOLS OF MANILA WORK ACCOMPLISHED BY REV. FATHER M'KINNON. At the Start Teaching the Filipinos Was Slow Work—The Simplest Rud iments Are Taught, But the Average Filipino Is Anxious to Learn. Almost at the beginning of tile American occupation of Manila, Padre McKinnon was put in charge of the public schools. The system under the Spaniards was not very extensive nor was the work very thorough, and there was a lot of hard work for the padre in getting things to running uguin In anything like proper shape. Before he had fairly got started at It, the leper hospital was put In his charge also, and there was a lot more work Then he was mnde superintendent of the cemeteries, all of those in Manila being under his direction, and that did make his hands full. All this work the padre has looked after steadily since he took hold of it last fall, and, besides, he has found time somehow to go with his boys under lire In their fighting about Manila. It was in tiie schools that Father Mc Klunon was most interested. At the start It was slow work. There were comparatively few pupils and only two schoolliouses. Both of these were conducted by the Jesuits, one in the walled city and the other In Malnte. The school in the walled city was the only regulur municipal school in Manila; that In Malate was a nor mal school for the training of teach ers, conducted much on the lines of similar institutions in the States. There had been several district schools of littlewhetter than primary standing, and these Father McKinnon reorganized and set at work as soon as possible. He was able to employ most of the old teachers, and where these could not be had he found oth ers. This was not a matter of great difficulty, although it required time. The Filipino ns a rule is extremely ambitious for his children. Especially Is this so in the matter of education. There was no great lack of pupils when it became known that the new schools were free and that care would be taken of all the children who came. It soon became necessary to provide more room, and Father McKinnon be gan to spread ouL Buildings were rented in various parts of the city, and new schools were opened as fast as was required. Teachers were not difficult to get, although the pay was very small, in very few cases amount ing to S2O (Mexican) a month. The system was In a flourishing con dition last fall when Father McKin non met his first Indication of the force of the insurrectionary move ment. It catne in the sha|>e of a pro hibition by Agulnaldo of one of his pet plans. He had arranged for a formal raising of the Stars and Stripes over the Normal school building In Ma late. All the native teachers and some of the pupils were to take part in the ceremonies, and an elaborate pro gramme was prepared. Agulnaldo simply forbade any Filipino to have anything to do with the raising of the American flag, and all obeyed him. Nevertheless the flag was raised on the day and at the time appointed. After that the feeling between the Ameri cans and the Filipinos kept growing steadily more and more strained, nut! its effect was shown In a diminishing attendance at the schools. There were some pupils, however, who were faith ful. ami even in the most trying times of the first fighting the schools were not shut down altogether. Sometime ago Father McKinnon de cided to begin giving instruction In English. There were a few of his reg ular teachers who were competent to give the children n start in the new official language and a few Spaniards were fonnd who could and would help them. Then some of the American women here took hold and the English department was pretty well equipped. An astonishing increase in the num ber of pupils was the iinmediate re sult. Men and women applied as well ns the children. The Filipinos are eag er to learn English and they display an astonishing aptitude for It. They came in such numbers that it was necessary to establish an age limit, and now only children between 0 and 14 nre admitted to the schools. There art* more than 5,00(1 pupils, and there is hardly room for them all in the thirty-two schools which have been established since Father McKinnon took hold of the system. In general the curriculum of the Mnnila schools Is not extended or ad vanced. The simplest rudiments are taught for the most part but on the whole the work under Father McKin non has been very successful, and it Is almost entirely due to his untiring energy and Interest in the work that this is so. The schools have closed now for the long summer vacation, and there will be no effort to select a new superintendent until it is cer tain that Father McKlnuon is not coming back. Naturally he desires to go home with his regiment and be mustered out with the boys with whom he started from San Francisco last summer. But lie has become so much interested In his work out here and in the people with whom that work has thrown him in contact that he is more than willing to come back, and go on with the work. The Arch bishop of Mnnila Is very anxious to have him return, and will have him appointed his own coadjutor if the pa dre does come bnek. Father McKin non certainly has done very excellent work here, and a lot of it, and it will be extremely difficult to find n man to take his place. Also, but that is of no consequence, It will be extreme ly difficult for the man, whoever he Is. -N. Y. Stm. RMNEST COMMENT. Notes unit Comments, I'olltlcnl anil Otherwise, on Mutters of Public Interest. It is claimed that Marcus Aurelius Hannn is of Quaker descent. If true, the fact goes a long way toward prov ing that hereditary tendencies do not count for much, for Quakers as a rule are modest, honest, peaceable and truthful. W. J. Bynum still insists that he is a Democrat in spite of the fact that McKinley appointed him to a $7,500 po sition as a reward for his services in aiding to disrupt the Democratic party in 1896. Bynum has about as good a claim to being called a Democrat as Judas Iscariot had to being classed as a Christian. The people will never submit to the "brutal domination of the gentleman from Ohio," or his master, Mark Han na. Hanna had sold the Republican party, body and soul, to Wall street, and had forced the passage of the gold hill in order to repay campaign obli gations to the national banks, whose money had carried the country in 1896. —Hon. William Sulzer. No firm was more emphatic in de claring that Bryan's election would bring ruin than was that of Harper Brothers, who were sure that general prosperity would follow the choice of McKinley. McKinley was elected, or at least seated, and yet long before the close of his administration the Har pers were forced to the financial wail to the tune of over a million dollars. Strange as it may seem, Spain Is hav ing a wave of prosperity, but the most ardent Imperialist will not ctalm that It can be attributed to expansion. Per haps It is due to the loss of her colo nial possessions and to our taking the Filipino war off her hands for $20,000,- 000. Colonial possessions proved to he Spain's curse, as they will prove to he the curse of the United States. Talmage declares that the last thing Mr. Moody said to him was, "Never he tempted, under any circumstances, to give up your publication of weekly ser mons throughout the world," and Mr. Talmage says he will heed the solemn charge as long as he has the strength to furnish the sermonß and the news paper types desire to take them. He should have added, "at a good round price per type." The good Democrats of Pennsylvania must see to it that none but men of character and ability are chosen as candidates for the next legislature. Quay emissaries are at work In differ ent sections of the state trying to se cure the nomination of Democrats who will be easily defeated or who, If elect ed. may be manipulated In the Inter ests of the Quay machine. Every Dem ocrat who has any respect for his party or any love for his state should see that none but those worthy of trust are to be put on guard. Governor Stone a few days ago ad vised a vigorous prosecution of those engaged in the manufacture and sale of oleomargarine. He has. however, not opened his head as to the prose cution of the ballot box stutters in Philadelphia, whose criminal opera tions Btrlke at the very foundation principles of republican government. In fact, his course in vetoing the meas ures looking toward a more honest ballot indicate that his sympathies are with the villains who are doing time behind the bars for their crimes against our election laws. If salvation is free, as proclaimed, the Bible can hardly be classed as among the necessary means of securing it, for the Bible, along with almost everything else, has gone into the hands of a trust. Four of the strong est Bible publishers have pooled their business and propose to raise the price of the word of God 25 per cent to start with. It Is fortunate for good people that Heaven is so far beyond the reach of the trust magnates as to preclude their forming a trust on the seats in the celestial kingdom. That is about the only place now free from their blighting influence. Mr. MeKlnlev has changed his mind so frequently that It has become the worse of the wear. He turned a som ersault on the silver question; he de liberately abandoned his position against imperialism, and he stabbed civil service reform after pledging himself to uphold it. No wonder that Hanna is a "biger" man than McKin ley, because the man who either has no convictions on any subject of general public interest or who has them and lacks the courage to carry them out Isn't entitled to such respect, even if he does rattle around in the ehair once filled by Washington, Adams, Jackson and Lincoln. The national Republican convention will doubtless flaunt some new He to the public breeze to catch the voter, who, when the campaign opeuß. lets his thinking out to be one by the po litical boss. Bimetallism has long served the purpose of catching suck ers. but now after passing a gold standard law and subsidizing nearly all the leading papers of both political parties in sounding the praises of mon ometallism it Is hardly likely that the g. o. p. will consider It necessary to parade the same old lie about favoring bimetallism, though the leaders are very much concerned as to what the effect will be when they throw off the mask and declare to the country what infernal liars they have been all these years in pretending to favor the double standard. The platform in 1892 de clared "The United States from tradi tion and Interest" favor bimetallism. This statement is true, but it should have been followed with the explana tion that while the United States fa vors bimetallism. Wall street and the money trust are opposed to it. and as between the two the United States must take a back seat as long as Hanna bears rule. The Kansas farmer is getting about 45 cents for his wheat, and he is pay ing three times as much for his nails as he was before McKinley came into office. But he gets good dollars for his wheat. Strange, isn't it, that those dollars do not buy more nails?— Clev eland Recorder. Spring Goods Are Here I -^itsriD- Spring Weather Is Coming. We are ready for the change of the seasons. Our [f store is well-filled with the go >ds you will need in a few " weeks. Our aim always has been to keep ahead of the f times, that is why we call your attention to the necessities [ of spring before winter has departed. It's only a few weeks, however, until you will need something in our line, * and in the meantime you may view the large assortment of ( articles which we have on sale. Those who are prepared to £ purchase will have their choice of at MOST ELEGANT LINE OF MEN'S AND BOYS' FURNISHINGS. We say it, not as a boast, but because it is true, that ( our store today contains the largest, most, varied and best ( stock of N Spring and Summer Shirts and Neckwear, [ Underwear, Hosiery, Working Jackets and Overalls, I Spring Hats and Caps of the Latest Styles, I and a line of Men's and Boys' Dress and Working Shoes f that is not equalled in Freeland. i One PRICE and Same SERVICE to ALL. \ MCMENAMIN'S I Gents' Furnishing, Hat and Shoe Store, 5 86 South Centre Street. J. BEARS, ROEBUCK & CO. (Inc.). Fulton. Des^in.',"d W,m.nSi?^Yoioolliill SEND NO MONEY s:aa BRADE DRPP CABINET BUK3ICK SEWINQ M/lCHIIi) ' i gp&|jjjSvD I |§ Ratio.. You ran examine it at your nearest freight depot and if ftl WW I ,7b found prrfoetly i.tUf*rtory, exactly reprcsentou. SsSSf® 150 pounds and the freight will average 75 cents for each r00 mil • RKjkL i.w 1 gJViji IT u T H REE ,MONTHS' TMALJn your oin ' "*'•" fc fcrtnl makes aofl K rnii... of Hen In* JlAfhhirs at' | l.tH), Jf/f. 1 ?:'3H££H?KS m$ g k o §sH ?ri BEWARE Or IMITATIONS by 3nkti'*n concrrna 8 18 | " THE BURPICK Ktf&bWJßSnSSi?' Dincnor Ulit MA5EiifT - g , gg T sl-3 i """ < HI: BUST MATERIAL -1 ?A\jifvi SOUP QUARTER SAWED OAK ?r.op rrwt J plug frnro'n* ht') tote'uaedasa "nl° V i ne c lotted. i head dropl S oirn v\-itlx full length table and bead In hnr - MBCit&S drawer*, Ulcst IHOO (krlrton frame, curved, paneled embon.ed and tVS f Zmn TTft"ffiHfß. decorated cabinet finish. fluent nickel driwerpuU S5 ■ V R tors baa bcoibig adjustable treadle. genuine Bmyth Iron stand. ■- iH I 1 50111511 '* Ar ?,l"f d ; motion feed, self threading vfbrat- XI /A I' yl Hik ILPra R>C shuttle, automatic bobbin winder, adjustable bearings, patent tension ■_ 3 f I □ Bwroul llberatoi. tin proved loose wheel. Adjustable pressor foot. Improved sliuttle ! ! i | I bJ'M? ~lSSH:3il2SSil?Hioira -! t- A ||o CyARANTEED,ISM..i"i^,MtT„Sti;a!w2;t..IMU.. ...hi.. i ! 5 It k ""*" r..m1.!.r,l .nd nor Froo Instruction Book toll, fst: [I 1 "MrtiloHthnrnlaiiioratiy l.nulof Isncy work ... aet AAil.floU. OBDBBTO DAY. DON'T Dlf LAY. (Rears. Roebuck * Co. are thoroughly clhtor!) Address, SEARS, ROEBUCK fit CO. (Inc.) Chicago, 111. TRUSSES, 65c, $1.25 ANn UP : at FACTORY PRICKS, less than one-third 1 I ~ the price charged by others, and WE I # K3 sttteiu'iite E York Reversible *>">• Truss, illustrated above, cut this ad. out and send to ua with OUR SPKCIAL price nnmrd. state your Height, Weight, Afa, how long you have been ruptured, whether rupture is large or email. also state number inches around the body on a line with the rupture, say whether rupture is on right or leftside and we will send either truss to you with the under #t fl? l 'Mi." 11 J* uot * •<> •A"'" • im.se. thai r* ~,' - r * ie tlmc * OBr price,youoan return It and we will return your money. WRITE FOR FREE TRUSS CATALOGUE ;£**{£ V' arira.sM. including the New SIO.OO Lea Truss Aft *|"r that core* a I via* I any ease, and which we sell fer OA ■ lU tddreisSEAßS, ROEBUCK & CO. CHICAGO .1 f 18.98 IYSAiMO SUIT 100 t KM UKA'I Eli ".SKVfiIIWFAROIT" IKItSIJI SKAT AMIKM.E. IIKM LA It f8.60 fIOYS' l'W0 PItCR UNIvE PANTS SHIS AT SI. US. A NEW StIT FREE FUR ANY OF THESE SUITS WHICH CON'T GIVE SATISFACTORY WE/.8, SEND NO MONEY, cat 11d.a.1, euteJ.4 send to us, atntu see of boy ni.d say n hcthcr large or t.iiiall for ago and wc n ill send y. a auiination. Tou ecu cxcmiiiMt atyour express officeand if found jtcrfectly satla fuctory and equal to suits sold in your lawn fer $8.50, i>ny yourcxpreea agent our Hpeoial Offer 1 idee. and express cliargof. THESE KIiEE PANT SUITS re for Un a? to 1•' :' ■: <>t "• < r"l nrr rr'sllrri eTrrywksre at $3. SO. Made w itli lint HI,K 6KAT sod KKIK4, latest slyla as 11 lu.tr. led, n.de freai Stanton CasUmers, neat, handsome'pattern, Ann Italian lining, genuine tlrnjdoa Inl.rUnlag, padSlsg, staying ami relr.forclun, silk and Hum sawing, line taller mr4m throughout, it milt snr boy or parent would be praud mC. FOR FItKK U LOT 11 SAHPLKB of Buy*' (I.,thing for hays 4ta 10 YEARS, wrlie for fnr.pl. Itook No. 06K. contains faahluW plates, tape measure and full instructions how to order. Men's Hulls made to order from sft.OO op. sau>- pie* sent free on application. Address. ! SEARS, ROEBUCK & CO. (Inc.), Chicago, Hi I (Stars. Uocbttck * Co. are Utsreugbiy rsllabls.—Kditer.)