FREELAND TRIBUNE. Estatliskoi 1898. PUBLISHED EVERY MONDAY AND THURSDAY BY THE TRIBUNE PRINTING COMPANY, Limited. | OFFIC*: MAIN STREET ABOVE CENTRE. I LONG DISTANCE TELEPHONE. SUBSCRIPTION KATES: One Year $1.50. j Six Months 75 I Four Months 50 , Two Mouths 25 ' The date which the subscription is paid to is : ou the address label of each paper, the change 1 of which to a subsequent date becomes a . receipt for remittance. Keep the figures in advance of the present date. Report prompt ly to t liis olUee whenever paper is not received. Arrearages must be paid when subscription te discontinued. Make all money orders, checks, etc., payable to | the Tribune Printinu Company, Limited. FREELAND, PA., MARCH 2<J, I'JOO. i ' WASHINGTON LETTER. Washington, March 20, I'JOO. J The house of representatives has do- , elded to investigate the statements i inado by former Consul Macrum after [ liis return from the South African re- i public. In view of this fact, Secretary Hay refuses to discuss the latest charge brought against the administration both by Herr Wesscls in London and by Mr. Macrum in the United States, who assert positively that a peace con ference was held at Rloemfonteln. be fore the beginning of the war, at which ! the United States representatives were < present as well as representatives of i Presidents Kruger and Steyn. At the i direct request of these last, Consul General Stowe cabled to the state de- j partinent, begging it. in the name of | ' the two presidents, to "intercede" with 1 Great Britain to preveut her making! war against them, and practically offer ing to agree to any terms that President McKinley might think just. Uemem- < her, this was before the war began, 1 when a word from the president might hare prevented the frightful bloodshed ' that has occurred. lint McKinley i . feared too much to offend his ally and | contomptously ignored the request of 1 the two presidents, who did not give up hope of his mediation until forty-eight hours before the war began. X X t Senator Tillman utilized his pitchfork ' < to toss a few aggravating questions to | the almost distracted Republican sen ators, which furnished considerable . amusement to the occupants of the gal- j , leries and to the Democratic senators. 1 Among the questions, which no Repub- I ' lican seriously attempted to answer, 1 were the following: "Has the president \ changed his mind or not? Is the presi- j dent for free trade with Porto Rico j today, or is he not? Is he leading his party or has lis surrendered to the I dictates of special interest, following j the triumphal car like a prisoner of war?*' After waiting in vain for a re ply to his questions, Mr. Tillman said with a sardonic laugh: "A dumbness falls upon us all." Ho then vividly sketched the present troubles of the Republican party,} and predicted that the people would sweep it from power, for not recognizing that the flag, the ; constitution and liberty must travel together, and charged the Republican party with indiscretion, hypocrisy, aud dirty work. X X X Senator Cockrell, speaking for the Democratic senators just before the senate passed a bill authorizing the ap pointment of a commission to go to China and Japan and make a report on commercial conditions in those coun tries. said: "The Republican party is in J absolute control, and we on this side of 1 the chamber are powerless to prevent : the enactment of any legislation coining j ' from the Republican party and deemed | ' necessary by it. I will not antagonize 1 this bill, although I do not agree with it In principle. I want it understood now, and understood distinctly, that hereafter, absolute responsibility must rest upon , the Republican party for the passage i of all the resolutions and bills." X X X Boss lianna, havingjjfailing to con vince all of the Republican senators, by telling them that the passage of the Porto Rico tariff bill was necessary to got certain big campaign contributions, is now vigorously wielding the party whip on the shoulders of the kickers, with able assistance on the quiet from Mr. McKinley. It was to help him that ' Senator Foraker got the senate Porto ! Rico bill sent back to committee. This | leaves the deck clear for the house bill, i which deals exclusively with the Porto ! Rico tariff. Every energy is now to be bent to force that through the senate without amendment. Five or six Re publican senators still threaten to filibuster against a vote. X X X One result of the investigation, now being made by the house military com mittee of the use of Federal troops in Idaho, is the resolution offered in the house by Representative Lentz, of Ohio, and in the senate by Senator Alien, of Nebraska, calling for the withdrawal of Federal troops from the Cn-ur d'Alene district in Idaho; the revocation of the labor permit system, and restoration of j the right of habeas corpus. The reso- j lution declares that the further use of United States troops in aiding and as sisting the maintenance of martial law is improper, unnecessary and unlawful. The cannon presented by the war department to Maj. C. IJ. Coxo Post. G. A. R., is expected to arrive here the latter part of this week. I IK p ill Immortality Will Soon Be An Assured Fact. REV DR. SAVAGE'S BOOK. A Frank Discussion of an Important Subject—He Says There Is No Sort of Question That There Are Such Things as Ghosts. In his book called "Life Beyond Death" Dr. Minot J. Savage announces that he does not believe in spiritualism. This is something of a surprise, con sidering the fact that Dr. Savage has for many years—since 1874. he says been lecturing upon and investigating the subject and making constant ref erences in bis lectures to its phenomena. He treats spiritualism at length in this present volume. The book reviews the beliefs held in the past concerning "life beyond death." He considers primitive ideas, ethnic beliefs and middle-age belief in the other world, compares them with that of Paul and Jesus, and takes up the present conditions of the same be lief. He treats the fervor of belief in the other world and the agnostic reac tion which followed it, and the present spiritualistic reaction against ugnosti cism. In his discussion of the Old Testa ment idea as to immortality, he says: "We see, then, as the summed-up re sult of the brief outline, that althougn there was no teaching apparent and emphasized on the surface of the Oi l Testament in these other worlds, there really was a common belief underneath the surface, growing up in the hearts and imagination of the common peo ple and we see also what we common ly misunderstand, that these other worlds take the shape which they had to take. He sums up thus the teachings of Jesus on the other world: "So Jesus teaches, 1 think, that the eternal life, being a quality of charac ter, exists to-day. It is not something to be waited for. Our friends, for ex ample. if they are alive anywhere, are alive at all, are alive this minute. We are immortal thin moment." Dr. Savage's study of spiritualism has influenced his treatment of immor tality, as in the paragraph after the preceding, in which he says: "This eVery-day, commonplace world of hopes and fears, meetings and part ings. joys and sorrows, this world, ac cording to the Gospel story, is encased in a world of spirit, immersed in it, surrounded by it as by atmosphere, I am not saying that you believe it. Dr. Savage points out the doubts concerning the doctrine of immortality held by the churches and the weakness of the traditional creeds and the loos ening of their hold upon people. He treats the agnostic with tender consid eration. His chapter on the spiritualistic re action is filled with bits like this: "The one wonderful thing about spir itualism, without any reference to its truth or its falsity, is that it does not (Hev. Minot J. ask your blind belief. It says, 'Come and see, and do not believe a word be yond what you can see or hear or feel of reality that carries with it this great conviction.' "I have had what purports to be hundreds of messages from the other side, and 1 have never had one that was soundly orthodox." He says that Dr. Lyman Abbott and Dr. Hillis are believers in all that is es sential in spiritualism, but are anxious to guard themselves against the belief in such vulgar things as a rap on a table. Dr. Savage says: ' Frankly, I can never understand what there is so foolish or degrading in a rap. I tup on the door to announce myself to you in a hotel. Suppose I have a friend in the unseen, close by me, who wishes to communicate some thing to me, and finds he can call my attention by a tap. Is there unything so very silly about it? If there is 1 am too dull to discover it." Dr. Savage is frank about wishing to believe in immortality himself. "If it were possible to prove that be yond this life is another, if we could just know that, would not it be worth while for f he sake of the comfort and happiness it would bring? I do not say it is possible yet to know it. If so, would it not be worth while?" The probabilities and hopes for fu ture life, he says, fall short of demon stration. but he adds: "As -in evolutionist first, last and all the time an evolutionist, I believe with my whole soul that it will not be long before immortality will be as much discovered as America was discoveied by Columbus." A chapter is devoted to the studies >f the Society for Psychical Research, ■>f which Dr. Savage is a member. The appendix is devoted entirely to a dis cussion of spiritualism. In the course of the chapter he says: I "I think there is no sort of question that there are such things as ghosts." His own position in regard to spir lualism Is thus stated: "I have said and published a num ier of times that I am not a Spiritual st. I take the trouble of emphasizing t once more, because I am constantly •(.•presented as being one. I say I am lot a Spiritualist. At the same time I vm perfectly willing to say that I be lieve there in great truth at the heart of the spiritualistic movement." MILLIONS OF DOLLARS Gold and Bullion Sent Through the ' Mails Every Year. Vast quantities of gold pass through ' the New York Postoffice. The post- I office authorities tire naturally reticent about it, for publicity adds to the risk, but the fact is that millions of dollars j in gold coin and bullion are shipped I through the mails by banks and in- I dividuals every year. In two days this i j year $.1,175,000 in gold coin came through the New York Postoffice for local banks. Most of the gold to New York was from the west. Gold is sent through the mail in strong canvas bags, such t as used in the Treasury and bank vaults, secure- | ly fastened and sealed. The bags eon tain from SI,OOO to SIO,OOO each in $5, $lO and S2O pieces. The bags are reg- 1 istered, and the amount of gold con- i tained in each package is marked on the registry receipt. Unless the hags have been broken open in transit, or ! their contents appear to have been ! tampered with, they are checked off when they are received at the post- j J office without being counted. But once j In a while a mail bag comes into the postoffice with loose coins rattling in | | it that have escaped from one of the ! money bags. In that case the gold is counted to make sure that none of it | is missing. The treasure comes in with the or dinary mail matter, and is dumped un ceremoniously into the mail wagons at the railroad stations. No outsider would suspect anything extraordinary in the character of the mail. But, j even if he did know the contents of the bags, he would have a hard time I in getting away with any of them, for the wagons have armed guards in plain clothes inside. When the mail containing the gold bags arrive at the postoffice the mail pouches containing the registered mat ter are carried directly to the registry department. The bank to which the gold is assigned each has a confiden tial clerk at the postoffice ready to re ! celve it and carry it to their vaults. j These clerks are also accompanied bv armed guards. The bank clerks are usually personally known to the super intendent of the registry department, yet they must present their creden tials on each visit, with duplicates of invoice. The mail is piled on a long table around which the postoffice and bank clerks gather. The bags contain ing the gold are separated from the I rest, and the names of the banks to | which the gold bags are addressed are ; I called off. The respective bank clerks 1 [ respond and each bag is checked off 1 as it is handed over to them. Here the 1 responsibility of the postoffice ends ! 1 j and that of the bank begins. The bags ! | are carried to the mail street end of 1 lof the postoffice building If the con- I signui ent to any one bank is large it 1 has n Wagon in wailing there, into ; which the gold is loaded and carried j ! to the bank. Sometimes it is carried | ' in cabs and sometimes in boxes by bank messengers. Almost every bank in New York re- 1 ceives gold in this way. Most of .it : comes from the west; some of it comes from South America and some : from Europe. The amount of mail shipments of gold is constantly in- ! creasing. In 1897 $ Hi,000.000 in gold came through the New York postoffice. | Last year the amount was $42,000,000. ' and this year the figures will be much larger. The reason for shipping gold through the mails is the same as for transferring diamonds in this man ner. namely, cheapness and safety.— N. Y. Post. Novel Rafts. Experiments have just been made in France with a novel raft, designed for the use of soldiers, the inventor of , which is Captain Habert, of the Fif teenth Chasseurs. Fashioned of can- j vas and stuffed with straw, reeds, rushes or leaves, it is shaped some- I thing like a boat. When not in use it can he rolled up like a cloak and can be carried on a saddle or over a man's shoulder. When the time comes to use it it can be unrolled and fitted for Its work on the water in less than fif teen minutes. It is almost impossible to capsize it. Rings are attached to it, 1 and with the help of these those who are about to embark easily place it in proper position on the river bank. Only two openings are visible in the canvas, and these are so tightly laced that water cannot enter. In order to cross a river, the current of which is not swift, it is only neces- ! sary for a man to lie flat on this raft and to use his arms as oars. In the ease of a swift current it is advisable to connect the two banks by a rope, j The Worst Trouble Ever Invented. There is one kind of trouble in the world which God never sends and which never brings a blessing with it. It is the borrowed trouble which peo ! pie get by giving anxious thoughts to i to-morrow instead of being content to | bear the burden of to-day. This is the I one kind of suffering which God bans I and bars out of His kingdom and yet even good people do not ban and bar | it out of their lives. A true Christian ! on his death-bed confesses that the ; greatest worries of his life had been through his anticipation of evils which never arrived. As our Cord tells us, it is quite enough to bear those which do arrive, and we must take a lesson i from the ravens, fthich may suffer from the hunger of to-day, but never from that of to-morrow. —Stinday- I School Times. A Suggestive Prohibition. No one is more injured by wrong doing than the wrong-doer. It is not in the power of a thief to impovish any one so much as he impovishes himself by his thieving. The man who uses vulgar or profane language offends polite and reverend ears and pollutes the social atmosphere, but he is himself the worst sufferer. Jesus said, "Not that which entereth into the mouth defileth the man. but that wrfich proceedeth out of the mouth, this defileth the man." It has been | said, that in a certain high-class stable ; in New York City there is posted this j notice: No man shall use profane 1 I language in the hearing of horses." — I Sunday-School Times. Not the Kind She Knew. "It is my experience," she said thoughtlessly, "that the kissing bug is misnamed." Then some one said, "Why, Ethel!" ' and she blushed. -Chicago Post. am up ion Leona Dare Has Traveled 15,- 000 A\iles to Find Her. A TRAPEZIST'S TROUBLES Long-Lost Brother Discovered as Prosperous Ranchman Near North Platte, Neb.—Story of a Waif Who Became World-Famous. After having been the sensation of this country for years, Leona Dare, the famous trapeze performer, has just concluded a fruitless visit to this coun tiy in search of her mother, who dis appeared years ago. She now seeks the aid of Die press in finding her parent. It is eighteen years since Miss Dare last visited this country, where she was born. She has retired from public life and :s rich. Her life and quest form an extraordinary romance. The story of it was told by Townsend Percy, an old friend, whose aid she sought in unravelling the mystery, which sounds like a novel. He said: "Nearly twenty years ago, when I was holding down an executive position in the Pacific Mail Steamship Company (Leona Dare.) in Panama, there arrived on a South Pacific steamer Leona Dare, the young trapeze artist. Having missed the north-hound steamer, she and her as sistants were compelled to remain tea days on the Isthmus. "She was slender and dark-eyed, of medium height and with JL figure so slight that I was not astonished that South American journalists had fre quently declared that she was a boy. "Years passed, and I heard echoes from European newspapers of her bal loon uscenslons. and now here we were face to face in New York at luncheon. Her beauty was heightened by years, and she told me that from childhood until three years ago she was in con stant training. " 'My father, Andrew Jackson Stuart, was a Scotchman by descent, born in Georgia. He served in the Mexican war and afterward settled at Tuka, Miss. He brought back from that war not on ly the rank of colonel but my mother, who was a Mexican. " 'When the war of the rebellion broke out I was a little girl and the last I saw of my father he rode away to join a cavalry regiment. He never came back, having been killed in bat tle. The Federal army coming to the vicinity of our home, my mother, with my two brothers and myself "refugeed" as wo called it. into Indiana. " 'At the close of the war my moth er went South to see if she could find any remains of our property, and I have never seen her since. She had left us in the care of neighbors, who turned us over to the poormaster, who promptly farmed us out. " 'The people with whom I was placed at eight or ten years of age beat me, starved me and compelled me to do menial work, and my soul and body re volted. One day a circus came to town and I got the ear of one of the perform ers. He happened—such are the acci dents of life—to be a trapeze performer and his daughter, about my age, had recently died. " 'Encouraged by him, I ran away, and began to learn the business of a trapeze performer. He and his wife were kind to me and so began my new life. " 'I took my life into my hands daily. T invented new feats. I went abroad and toured all over Europe. " 'ln Russia I began ascending on A trapeze suspended from the oar of a balloon. The sensation was great, but my sensations and those of the specta tors, were, I imagine, widely differ ent. " 'When T came down in the country districts I was robbed, and my balloon was cut up to be made into wearing ap parel. " 'I appeared before most of the royal families, and have souvenirs from them. Old Emperor William of Ger many invited me to his box, and said to me: "You are a brave woman, and I admire courage." "'A few years ago I retired. T had saved my money and \yas independent. Theft I was seized with a desire to find m.v relatives. I suddenly found the world lonely. I closed my house in Par is and came to America. I travelled fif teen thousand miles searching for some trace of my people without success. " 'I found one plac-o in which my mother had lived four years and she had then married again. She had re turned to Indiana only to find that my brothers, like myself, had run away. " 'I was discouraged and about to re turn to Europe, when T went to see Buffalo Bill's Wild West. I had met Col. Cody in Paris in 18811, and after the afternoon performance he invited me to dine in camp. I told him mv story briefly and he asked: "How would you know your brother if you found him?" ! "'I described a birthmark on the breast which we both bore. I " "Well," said Col. Cody, "your brother lives about fourteen miles from my ranch in Nebraska on the north fork of the Platte." " 'I took a train that night, went there and found him. | " 'You must Imagine the meeting. He , had prospered and had ante? wife and family/ " NEW WAY TO FELL TREES. Saws Fast Taking the Place of Axes in Maine Woods. , The lumbermen are making a decid [ ed departure this season in the method | of cutting down trees, using saws in | stead of axes in felling them. Up to last year the axe alone was , used by the lumbermen in the Maine j woods. Only the most expert men did | this part of the work, and men spent years in the Maine woods before they were considered skillful enough to be ; come part of the crew employed in felling trees. By the time a man be came a chopper he felt like a second lieutenant. On account of the num ber of years spent in learning this j part of the business the choppers in trusted with felling trees made un usual good wages, the best receiving nearly double the amount paid those who were a part of the crew who took care of the timber after it had fallen. That method of felling trees has been found by the lumbering compan ies to be very expensive, both on ac count of the time required to fell each tree and the wages paid. Last year the experiment of cutting down the trees with saws was tried and found so successful that this year only a small share of the men sent into the woods are expert choppers, or if they are expert choppers they are not sent in with the understanding that they arc to use their axes in cutting down trees, but rather in trimming the limbs after the trees have fallen, or j In cutting up the trees Into lengths for j handling in the log drives, j There is another gain, that of time and wages. It is in the amount of tim ber saved on the stump. Formerly it J was a common thing to see all over a lot stripped of tree stumps from | one to three feet above the ground. This part of the tree was the very I best, both because it was free from knots and because it was the largest part of the tree in girth. By using the saw the trees may be cut off near er the ground and a big saving made. The saw used is slightly different from the old cross-cut saw. the teeth being of a pattern fitted to that work. —Maine Special In Boston Herald. Not a Heart Stimulant. The idea that alcohol Is a heart stiin ulaut lias been thoroughly shown to lie a fallacy. Alcohol Is an anesthetic, a narcotic and a depressing agent. It at first seems to increase the heart vigor ' by its paralysing effect upon the vaso i motor centers, resulting in dilatation of the small arteries, so lessening the work of the heart, but its real effect is to lessen sensibility and paralyze. 110 matter what the dose or the condition In which It is given. We do not want substitutes for alcohol, but we want something which will accomplish the effect of heat over the heart, as a flannel cloth wrung out of hot water has a wonderful stimulating effect up on the heart. Shipping the chest, appli cations of heat to the spine, hot and cold sponging to (lie spine, hot fomen tations to the head, rubbing the surface from the extremities toward the heart —these are the most effective of all measures for stimulating a (lagging heart. The writer speaks thus confi dently, after having employed the measures named for the last i"i years, and with a degree of success which has left no desire to return to lit -oliol J and other so-called stmulants.—l)r. .1 j 11. Kellogg. You Taste With Your Eyes. The sense of taste is divided into three sections, each of which has under its charge the distinguishing of a special class of tastes. The fore part is chiefly sensible to pungent and acid tastes, the middle portion to sweets and bitters, and the back part to the flavor of roast meat, butter and rich and fatty substances. Recent ex periments, however go to show that the tongue has less to do with what we call taste than is generally sup posed. Our notions as to flavor are greatly helped by the sense of sight, smell and touch. Rlindfold your eyes and hold your nose, and you will find it very difficult to tell whether you are drinking tea or coffee. Of 'courso your tongue is absolutely helpless in distinguishing between one substance and another if your nose does not do its part, which is about four-fifths of the work. Thus you really taste with your eyes and nose.—Answers. New Champion Globe Trotter. It is. of course, only to be expected that the new championship for globe trotting should belong to an Ohio man. John W. Bookwaltor, a rich manufac turer of Springfield, Ohio, has trav eled all over America. Europe. Africa i and most of Asia. He is now on his way to Thibet, the unknown land to the capital of which a white man has never been permitted to penetrate. In the last two years he has traveled 25.- 000 miles in Central Asia. Mr. Book- I waiter will go to Thibet with an explor ing party sent out by the Russian government He not only expects to I reach the Thibetian capital, but he is 1 planning for an interview with the Grand Llama, the head of the Budd hist religion. Mr. F,ook\yalter believes 1 that Russia is about to take posses sion of Persia and all the other conn , tries bordering 011 India. He also pre dicts that Russia, China and England will form an alliance and divide Asia among them. They Got Around the Will. ! John Wagonmaker and Miss Alice ' Crookston were married at Palmyra, Pa. recently. By consent of the courts the groom Instead of the wife changed his name, and he is now Mr. Crookston. This was effected be cause the bride was bequeathed a fortune by a relative who pro j vij'.'d that no person not bearing the name of Crookston should inherit j the money. Prefer the Old Way. ■ The suggestion made by the Denver | Humane Society that women gave up ; the use of side saddle and sit astride I when riding horseback, is meeting ) with marked opposition. The most powerful, if not the principal objec tion, Is that no dress could lie devised tor the innovation that would bo an | becoming as that now in use. I It has been discovered that the pro : fe-slou of prompter Is more suited to women than to men, as their voices ) carry better across the stage and are less audible in the auditorium. Spring Announcement! The Freeland agency for the " CELEBRATED KAWES S3 HATS has been awarded to i> |jnjni'n GENTS' FURNISHING, 11l l J til ill J U Hat and Shoe Store, j> and n complete line of the season's stock is now on sale. L These hats have earned a world-wide reputation, and ' are everywhere considered the. most stylish and correct headgear. (. A FIVE-DOLLAR HAT MAY BE JUST AS GOOD, 1 L But Not One Bit Better. Quality, Durability and Style Guaranteed. I Cheaper Hats and Caps Also Sold. ■ SPRING AND SUMMER SHOES,: ' Fancy Colored Shirts, (•> Furnishing Goods of Every Kind, t I ? Underwear, Hosiery, b Beautiful Line of Fine Neckwear. \ MCMENAMINS B Gents' Furnishing, Hat and Shoe Store, 8Q South Centre Street. r umtrlrr ...... LLRRFT* """VS l '?'"' l ( ;hlcago. .'ind employ nearly 8,000 people in our own building. WFC HKU.OHOaKS AT •> N PI SAL'I\ 1^ SEARS, ROEBUCK & CO. (Inc.), Fulton, Desplainesand Wayman Sts.. CSUCACO ILL. SEND MONEY hmsamisasj rr GRADE DROP CUSOICK SEWTND MACHINE U R ,L , 12! < I LN? found perfrctly satUruetorj, exactly ns represented!'' " '' 1 a " ' " j T d <J it hAI KM * l!iltl.A.X ' YOr KVr.ll "lIKAItll' ot\' p£j "IrV-waV* ffiT?fifth**' 1 V -,. JJJFVRX| , , OUR **•?*■ ° FFER Frico $15.50 I'fo pounds und tiie freight will average In < i tor <><<h '.* mil..-- ffSIIEjSI flflifflßMßßidilW'ilrill CIVE IT. THREE. | MONTHS TRIAUA ,v oirn."U V.„.," a!„I BEWARE OF IMITATIONS BY- unkniiwn | J{ B ; THEBURPIOIC Jt SIPpIS * f isss>. male v wgßßr'wa WaTO.sg i, n I HUM 1 HE UKST .MAIKUIAI. '■ J VI 4 ?,"FV S0LII) O"FT"TER SAWED OAK GNOPNRIM t IRRF.V|LH' , F,!U'J. ihttti P.'lt.".,V Iwdfl 'in IWJ F RTIFL--| JT - V[ BLLHU I*'"' ,S 'D .LH.ION FR.ID:., carved, inmeknl, ..RED - 'R)|7 + BM™ I VVSSI' ' L " OOT J RR P RT tlnl,h.NNß..t nickel lira-Atr T.'tllß. IE,l(n 4 CM. I ■ X ■ . *' <• nll beating adjustable troadle.geimineSmvth inn, MRIHI f J SB. ft I -1 'm JIIY | AFCJ> KILLL NKULMT.LE.AUTNWATIC bobbin winder, adjustable bearing, PATENT* tension •4I LA J I B SRR3 * ,N PRTVEAL loose wheel, adjustable nresser foot. Improved uliiiitlu - 1 - Z ILLVFL B■ 8 TLVIFII I V.,71 ' P N I "°V'I, LE 'HWNSIRUNRN head IF handsomely decorated !ii ; Fls.i D ®® aflSg'-l GU AP ANTEED the Ital.lc*! rti-iiil!!*, aosl (lurnlilF and rcnrenl nelnflp** ninfhlßA 5- B 5 ILLFJ T " ,A,,R ' known attachment lafurnUhed and our Free Instruction RNNL- LOIIA SSTS Ml WSSTSMTTBI JU SEV H ?^SS'ATFF. , U R A "wauiocliherjlalii sr™ llJSorf.MYSSK* —• I IT COSTS VOLL NO THING' ^S®£H'5S5 dsi-isw ao! aaii.fled. UKOIK TO IIA V. '><LVT LIKI,AR. (SeursMtoebuclc &CA are thoroughly reliable—Editor.) ' '° U "* Address, SEARS. ROEBUCK & CO. (Inc.) Chicago, 111. TRUSSES, 65c, $1.25 AND UP EUYS A $3.50 SUIT F a,OOU I HTHKAI I:I 'NKYKRHKAKOI'T" 1101 HIB GW- 7K _"JT? * YTVVK BHAT ANDEXEK. KKM LAH #*.ONOTB'TWO. L^R RR NBFC FC . Hi? ->A L'lhtK KXKK I-A.MS si Lts AT SI.GB. # /)JP ) A MTW SLIT FREE FOR AMY OF THESE SUITS ' /J-R\' J WHICH lOH T GIVE SATISFACTOKV WEAR We ar* oclllnir the teryflneat Traaata made W I J AMUL to ÜB, alalo ace OF b, Y and ny * hctlicr at KACTOKV I'KH'KH, less than one-third I I - /•JL- qjlnrge or ; mall forage and wo will iiend ytu the price charged by others, and WE \ / M 1 .r.thc eul'. L.Y OXPREW. C. O. D. subject to RRPR^'%-"'^ York ltferlhle Klaalle illuHtiated nliovo, cut tliln I i / FACTORY ni:d rqiißl to ainla AOLJ In jnnr LOWN far ad. out and send to U8 with OL'lt NI'KCIAL L'Rlflt nami-IL, I / F P I >YYOURO*PIEIW agent our pCLL state your lleluht, WVLGHT, how long you lis ve been LJLJ VIIIV 1 -. E *charges, ruptured, whether rupture is large or small; also state [B ■ THTET ILIIT RAHT SbliSerelorboysitu nuinlter Inches around the body on a line with the W W JTFIF*!S *" rupture, say whether rupture Is on right or left side, ■B ' and we will send either truss to you with the under II , " J • F ,"' "lutlraled, ua<le frum A standing. If It LA not a perfect LIT and equal In TRUMPS that speelnl L;raY weight, WRNR-redtllvf, all-nowl retail at three tlmee our prlce.you can return it and we A I U RP . AT * handsome pattern, will return your money. fl ,"", H'l'.lan Imiux, kv.,,,1,,. 0rv,.|... 1.1,.rii.i.,, Y^HI.C. UIDITC cna core TBII rsrai nrnc ""T ll ■rlrc;r.C. ,n ... i.ti.r ..<• WHITE rtlH rHcc IHUBS CATFLLPBUE our rsllre line wnlt un.v boy ,r purcnt would be proud of. of I RUMM. Including the NEW FIO.oo La Truss TO 7K .JY?,!! 1 " i ! . ,4 JSL , A KA,L I , ' , IF 8 2 F HR HE> T thsleurrs almost suy esse, nnd wblehwesell for $/,! D "HIE for SASIPIE l.onk NO. ÜBK. conttdnn fashirti | UDM.SEARS, ROEBUOK & Co. CHICAGO plot sent freu on application. Address. SEARS, ROEBUCK & CO. (Inc.), Chicago. 111. I (iNsn, ltuvtmck U le, art Uturou|kl/ r|LlLE— Kdltor. J
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers