FREELAND TRIBUNE. Established 1838. PUBLISHED EVERY MONDAY AND THURSDAY Y THE TRIBUNE PRINTING COMPANY, Limited. OFFICE: MAIN STREET ABOVE CENTRE. LONG DISTANCE TELEPHONE. SUBSCRIPTION KATES: One Year $1.50 i Six Months To Four Months 59 Two Months 25 The date which the subscription is paid to is on the address label of each paper, the change of which to u subsequent date becomes ai receipt lor remittance. Keep the figures In advance of the present date. Report prompt ly to tliis office whenever paper is not received. ( Arrearages must be paid when subscription 1 Is discontinued. Make all money orders, checks, etc., payable to ; the Tribune Printing Company, Limited. FREELAND, PA., APRIL 5, 1900. , WASHINGTON LETTER. Washington, April 3. lffOO. Representative Rhea, of Kentucky, made a rattling good speech at a mass meeting of Washington Democrats, in j which he referred to Chairman Payne. J the Republican house leader as "the i statesman with the one-night-stand j state of mind," and to Representative j Grosvenor, as the "garrulous gabbler j from Ohio, who acts as a mouth-piece j for the White House sphinx." After picturing various phases of udminlstra- ' tion wabbling, which he likened to the j track of a snake, Mr. llhea said: "Oh | manhood, where is* thy shame.? Oh. McKinley, where is thy blush? Oh. j McKinley, you are the saddest spectacle that ever rattled helplessly around in \ the seat filled by Washington, Jefferson and Jackson, and which will be tilled by Bryan. You are the pitiful creature of the trusts, the combines and the mono polies, which have made you, maintain ed you, and still feed you." X X X Are legal opinions made to order b\ United States officials? It is charged that Charles E. Magoon, law officer of the division on insular affairs of the war department, first wrote an opinion that the United States constitution was. by force of the Paris treaty, extended over Porto Rico and the Philippines, which he was compelled to suppress and then to write another taking exactly the opposite stand. This last opinion has been made the foundation for the whole Republican imperialistic program and the senate has just ordered three thousand additional copies of it to be printed. Representative Richardson, the Democratic leader of the house, desiring to get at the truth, has offered a resolution calling for copies of all of the opinions written by Mr. Magoon. t t t It is suspected that a desire to in crease the Republican campaign fund for this year is behind the announce ment that the cabinet is considering tin feasibility of recommending to congress a reduction of the war taxes, which arc piling up a surplus in the treasury, in spite of the fact that the receipts from the Dingley tariff are many millions below the advance estimate of the Re publicans. Without the war taxes there would have been a deficit of more than $50,000,000, instead of a surplus considerably in excess of that amount. It is said that the brewers are being sounded as to their willingness to con tribute a proportionate amount to the Hanna corruption fund, if the adminis tration will recommend a reduction of the beer tax to congress. X X t That the government overpays for low-grade work and under-pay s for high-grade work has been emphasized by the resignation of Hon. A. 1\ Greeley, assistant commissioner of patents, because- of his small salary, to engage in practice in Washington, making a specialty of trademarks and foreign patents. The retirement of Mr. Greeley is a decided loss to the government. He lias been in the patent office for sixteen yea r s. has filled many important positions, including that of commis sioner, besides writing several works recognized as authority of patent law. and not only proved his ability, but exhibited an amount of backbone seldom found in a government official. X X X The senate and all Washington arc still laughing and are likely to be for days to come, at the humorous speech of Senator Pettus, in which ho held Senator Beveridge, a would-be Demos | thenes up to ridicule, for his speech de claring his opposition to the Porto Rico bill and his intention to vote for it. The senate and galleries were in a con tinuous roar of laughter from the be ginning to the end of the remarks of Senator Pettus. The Democrats til the house will antagonize the naval appropriation bill, as reported, on throe grounds—armor plate, construction of ships in govern ment yards and the general extrava gance of the bill, which carries $01,000,- 000, against $35,000,000 for the; current fiscal year. The minority report favors the establishment of a government armor-plate plant. The administration program is to jam the Porto Rican bill, tariff and all, through both senate and house this week. It is certain that tin- senate will pass it tomorrow, and probable that the house will do likewise later, notwith standing the talk of Republican mem bers that they would vote for free trade if given another opportunity. SPOOK FURNITURE. j If Not This, Then What Could It Be? , —A Peculiar Story. A singular story is related by the New Orleans Times-Democrat. It was told by a well-known professional man , at a stag dinner, and the unusual ex- { perience stated in his own words is i well worth repeating: i "In the spring of 1892," he said "I | was living in a house in North Ram- t part street, which I had taken on a ; ? one-year's lease, expecting to build. \ Our family consisted of myself and j 1 wife, our little boy, then only 5 years j 1 old. and my unmaried sister. The house was a two-story brick, which 1 had been built before the war and the I interior arrangement was very sim- i pie. The front door opened on a hall, | which contained the staircase and ran t all the way through on the right-hand i side, while on the left was. first, our j parlor, then the dining-room, and last- j < ly, a small unused apartment not | < much larger than a closet. Upstairs l were bedrooms, and in the rear was a | detached kitchen. We allowed the lit- i i tie room on the first floor to stand 1 > vacant for several reasons. To begin i with it was actually too small for ac tual service, and it was badly lighted ] by only one high, narrow window, be- > sides some of the plastering ha'd fallen ' from the ceiling, and. I was afraid the j rest might come tumbling down on I our heads. That was undoubtedly a source of danger, and prevented us | from using it for storage, so we sim ply left it as we found it —entirely em- ! pty. I suppose the room was con- I structed originally for a pantry. I I have been a little particular in de- i scribing these details because, as you will see, they have a direct bearing on ray story. "We had been living in the house almost a year," continued the speaker, j "when one Sunday in June, as nearly | as I can remember. I went with my wife and child to see some friends j ( near Audubon Park. My sister was visiting at Biloxi at the time, and we I let the servant off for a holiday. Wo | got back at 5 o'clock or thereabouts, for 1 recollect it was still quite light, and as we were walking toward the house I noticed that somebody had left a stepladder standing directly in front of the high window opening into the little disused room on the ground floor. 'That's rather a cordial invita tion to prowlers/ I said half joking. Let's see whether any have availed i themselves of it.' So when we went inside we walked back together to the j last door and I pushed it open. 'Why! what does this mean?' I exclaimed in astonishment. There was nobody j there, but the room, which had always ; been entirely vacant, contained sev- i eral pieces of furniture. A rough- j looking table stood in one corner, with an old-fashioned straight-back chair in front of it and opposite was a small 1 bed cot. There were some papers and other things on the table and a relig- j ious print stuck on one of the walls. ! I started to go in, but my wife held I me back. 'Don't go in,' she pleaded, ' the plaster may fall. Those things | must belong to the cook. It struck me very strange that the cook should ' move in without asking permission, I but I noticed that my wife was very j nervous so I drew the door to and we I went into the parlor. A few minutes later I walked outside to shift the ! ladder, and as I picked it up I glanced j through the window. The room was perfectly empty. "1 am not superstitious, and the proof of it is that I thought immediate ly I was the victim of some practical joke. I re-entered the house quietly from the rear and again I opened the door. The room was as empty as a drum, and it was evident at a glance ■ that no sort of trickery was remotely possible. I won't attempt to describe my feelings. I was so shocked, so be wildered. so frightened to tell you the truth that for a moment or two I was sumply rooted to the spot. Then I pulled myself together somehow and went back to the parlor. My wife saw at once that something was wrong. "It's that room!" I blurted out. | There's nothing in it now—not a stick! "And immediately I had a case of ! hysterics on my hands. That's about all there is to the story. Next morn ing I examined the place carefully by broad daylight, and it was plain from he dust on the floor that no furnish- j ng of any kind had been there for j years. We left the house before the end of the week, paying a month's for feit on the lease, not because we be lieve in spooks, but because we didn't care to stay in a place where unac- j countable things happen. It's bad for the nerves. My wife and 1 have talked the matter over a thousand times. 1 carefully comparing notes, and as far ■ as we know we both saw the same things. My boy must have seen them, j too, for when we went back into the parlor he asked his mother 'whether that wasn't Aunt Hattie's chair.' Aunt flattie is an old relative of ours, who has a favorite straight-back chair, sim ilar to the one we saw in the room. Of course we have never allowed our selves to refer to the occurrence be fore the child, so I am unable to say positively what else he observed. What I saw myself was as plain and as distinct as you are at this moment. [ even noticed that one of the table legs had been mended with a piece of slat, and my wife remarked the same thing. The house is still stand ing. and has since been occupied by several successive tenants. As far as I am aware none of them have ever 1 had any unusual experience." BLACK EYES. Treatment for the Kind That Are Not Given by Nature. When the patient is seen early, be fore discoloration has set in. cold com presses or evaporating lotions are in- j dicat• d; this reduces the swelling and j limits the subsequent discoloration, j But if the patient is seen after he has a fully-developed "black eye," hot ! compresses and massage are required. The affected portion is smeared over with vaseline and rubbed for 10 min utes several time a day. By frequent massage and continuous hot applica tions the discoloration may be almost entirely removed within twenty-four hours. The professional "black eye" j artists use a poultice of the scrapings of a root, which is thought to be bry- j ony root. A single human hair will support £our ounces without breaking. ANYTHING TO PLEASE. She Was Much Obliged to the Tele graph Operator. She sailed into a telegraph office and rapped on the counter. The clerk re membered that she had been there about ten minutes before as he came forward to meet her. He wondered what she wanted this time. "Oh," she said, "let me have that telegram I wrote Just now. I forgot something very important. I wanted to underscore the words 'perfectly love ly' in acknowledging the receipt of that bracelet. Will it cost anything extra?" "No, ma'am," said the clerk, as he handed her the message. The young lady drew two heavy lines beneath the words, and said: "It's awfully good of you to let me do that. It will pleuse Charley so much." Don't mention it," said the clerk. "If you would like it, T will drop a few drops of violet extract on the telegram at the same rates." "Oh, thank you, sir. You don't know 1 how much I would appreciate it. I'm going to send all my telegrams through this office, you are so obliging." And the smile she gave him would have done any one good, with the pos sible exception of Charley.—Collier' J Weekly. Very Embarrassing. Boy—You are going to fight against | the English, aren't you, Captain [ Brown? Captain Brown (indignantly)— Fight the English! What on earth put that I into your head? Boy—Why Daddy said you were a ' horrid Boer! Something Like a Catch. Mrs. Binks (sick of it) —Really, John! How can you bear to spend your time j Whip—whip—whipping at the stream i all day long and never a single fish taking the least notice of you? John—Ah, but think o' the delight, j Maria, when you do get a fish! Lor' bless us, my dear, have you forgotten the day when you hooked me?— From Punch. A Great Trust. "Will you trust me, Fanny?" he cried passionately grasping her hand. "With ; all my heart, Augustus, with all my soul, with all myself," she whispered, nestling on his manly bosom. "Would to goodness you were my tailor," he murmured to himself, and tenderly he ' took her in his arms.—Tit-Bits. Unduly Sensitive. "These biscuits are rather heavy," lie observed. His wife burst into tears. "Then you do not worship me any more'" she sobbed. "Higher criticism is not incompati ble with worship!" protested the man, not unreproachfully.—Detroit Journal. Fate's favoritism. I Each man has a voice. But results, > you'll agree. Depend on the way that he screeches, j ' Some are darlings of fortune while j singing "high C" And some holler "sweet corn' and "peaches." In Old Kentucky. I "Do you believe it possible that the j ' Colonel died of alcoholism?" "Oh, no. It is now openly talked that ] the Colonel mistook carbolic acid for j whisky, and the alcoholism story was | given out to hush up the scandal."—De- I troit Journal. A Wheat Dealer. I Ethel: "He told me he made his mon ; ey In wheat." Edith (triumphantly): "I felt sure I had seen his face before. That's the fel low that leaves us our bread mornings in the city."—Leslie's Weekly. The Fair Maid Again. "Where are you going, my pretty maid?' ' "I am going a-golflng, sir," she said. "May I go with you. my pretty maid?" "I have sticks in plenty, sir," she said. —From the Indianapolis Journal. Wise. The Codger—'"Why. Tommy! You wouldn't hit your little brother, would ! you?" The Kid—"Well, yer don't tink fer a minnit I'd hit. me big one, do yer?"— Kansas City Independent. Financial Estrangement. "What cold glances Wiggins gives ! you, Billy." j "Yes; he owes me $5 and I owe him $4. He's mad because I don't pay him." lndianapolis Journal. Wants an Invitation. i Miss Chicken—Are you going to the Thanksgiving dinner, Mr. Turkey? Mr. Turkey—l don't know. I haven't been axed yet.—Baltimore American. Sore on Everybody. Muggins—That fellow looks as though he were* sore on everybody What's his name? Bugglns—Boyle.—Philadelphia Rec ord. Original Sin. "What is original sin?" "Inventing a new diversion for Lent that will pass as a charity."—Brooklyn Life. BASED ON NOTHING. Most of the Fears That Beset Fair Maids and Matrons. 1 The cause that implants the spirit of fear in the bosom of the gentle sex is a subject that may well puzzle the most devout student of human nature. The mouse is considered one of the harmless of creatures, and yet it has been responsible for more cases of hysteria than any animal many times its size. One woman, who all her life has searched beneath her bed before re tiring, at one time found herself in possession of a folding monstrosity, the intricacies of which she had first to solve before taking her well-earned rest. But such is the force of habit. After pulling down the bed she would carefully look beneath it. for no other reason than that she had done so ever since she was a child. A favorite illusion is that of having one's legs seized, either from behind in going upstairs or on getting into bed. Women have been seen scuttling upstairs in the dark setting at defi ance all the laws of locomotion in a ludicrous attempt to keep their legs some distance ahead of them and be yond the reach of a mysterious clutch. Girls will also make flying leaps into bed to eliminate the same improbabil ity. i Many women search diligently in j closets, bureau drawers and all sorts i of impossible places before resigning ! themselves to sleep. An old house ; keeper whose table silver, in two bas kets, was always placed in her bed j room after the evening meal, was one I night awakened by what she consid- J ered suspicious sounds from the lower regions. Cautiously leaving her room laden with the silver, she pitched both ' baskets into the hall below, calling out as she did so. "Take it all and please go." then fled precipitately and barricaded herself in her room. Need less to add, she found both baskets and scattered contents the following i morning, a little the worse for the rough handling she had given them. WORKERS AMONG COTTONSEED. New Machine Which Is Designed to Monopolized Their Business. I An always interesting sight to New Orleans visitors has been the large gangs of darkies unloading cotton ' seed from the barges at the oil mills, piling the sacks of seed on the heavy , trucks and trundling them down the • wharf into the mill, singing lustily the while. The picturesque side of the old-time method of unloading seed by no means appeals to the owners of the ; mills, however. Such labor is very expensive, and sometimes impossible Ito obtain. Competition in the manu facture of cottonseed products is very keen, and unnecessary handling of the raw material must be done away with wherever practicable. The big grain elevators, built right up to the deep water, have long ago solved the problem, but with the oil mills at Gretna, built back of the levee, with j their wharves stretching a considera ! ble distance into the river, and with these wharves sinking and twisting al) the time from the action of the cur rent and the treacherous river bed, the question how to unload their barge and carry the seed back into the mills at a low cost has been until now a very difficult one to answer, i The Union Mill Company has re cently installed at its large Crescent mill at Gretna a plant for rapidly and economically unloading seed from barges, which seems to meet all the conditions. The main part of the sys tem is a belt conveyor, running on trestle work along the wharf, and j thence under the roof of the mill. ' Along this conveyor the seed is car | ried from the end of the wharf, 250 i feet to a point in the mill, where it is weighed and either stored or distrib ; uted direct to the crushers. From the time it is taken from the barges until it leaves the mill as a finished product the seed is not touched by hand . The present capacity of the plant is about 4,700 bushels (seventy tons) of cottonseed per hour, but this can be largely increased. It is estimated that the construction will pay for itself in wages saved in less than two seasons. Saved From Prison by His Ears. j "I don't often see a thief or a bad man with big ears," said Judge Wof ford from the bench in commenting on the physiognomy of Gilbert Clos ser, a 15-year-old boy charged with as saulting Frederick K. Moses. "I like to see a boy with big ears." The boy scarcely knew whether the Judge was sarcastic or sincere, and he fumbled ' his cap bashfully while his ears turned red. | The spectators tittered, but Judge Wofford continued sternly: "I am in clined to give you a chance, my boy, on the strength of your big mouth and generous ears. You've got a good face. A man with little ears, like a fox's or | a squirrels, won't always do. They need watching." After warning Clos ser never to carry knives or revolvers. Judge Wafford sentenced the boy to the reform school and then paroled him with instructions to report to the court January I.—Kansas City Jour nal. A Youthful Effusion. i Senator Thurston, who has taken good-naturedly the newspaper chaff ing about his poem. "The White Rose," decidedly objects to the un authorized announcement that it was written by his fiancee. Miss Purman. lie says it was a youthful effusion written 30 or more years ago and he , solemnly affirms that he discarded the 1 poetical role more than a quarter of a 1 centry since i ! A Dog Shed. Ida —Maud Beulah is going out to I cut all the fur trimming from her i skirt. | May—ls it moth eaten? Ida—No, indeed! But her French poodle shed all his fur and Maud says she'll have to get rid of hers to har monize the effect when he trots by her ! side.—Chicago News. i A Queer Place for the Bird. The eagle which originally decora ted the stern of the famous schooner yacht America—which first won what is now known as the America Cup—is now the sign of the Royal Eagle Hotel at Ryde, Isle of Wight, overlooking . the scene of the vessel's triumph over | her Fnglish competitors in 1851. —Tit- Bits. Overworked Nerves and wasting vitality make their pros- | erice known through headaches, dizziness, inability to sleep, less of ! appetite and a general run-down con dition of the system. These signs are sometimes accompanied by neu ralgia, hysteria, rheumatism or nerv ous prostration in some other form. To remove these troubles, cure the nerves. They need feeding, strength- | eningand building up, and nothing will do this so quickly and so surely as I)r. Miles' Nervine. This truly remarkable medicine is gaining hun dreds of new friends every dav. Jlere is a surveyor from Decatur, Ind., Mr. G. E. McKean, who writes: "A chronic stomach trouble, which my physician was unable to over come, so wore on my nervous system 1 hat I broke down with nervous pros tration. I could not sleep day or j night except in fitful najs: could ; scarcely eat any kind of food and i wasted away to a mere shadow. ' After spending over $500.00 in a vain searcli for relief, I was prevailed upon to try Dr. Miles' Nervine. Re lief came immediately. I took six bottles and today am a well man." Dr. Miles' Nervine is sold at all , druggists on a positive guarantee. Write for free advice and booklet to Dr Miles Medical Co., Elkhart, Ind. Dry Goods, Groceries and Provisions. tAI S BROTHERHOOD HATS C * 0, A celebrated brand of XX Hour always in stock. Roll Butter and Eggs a Specialty. AMANDUS OSWALD, N. W. Cor. Centre and Front St'm., Free.lanrl P. F. McNULTY, FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND EMBALMER. Ruitmlining of female corpses performed exclusively by Mrs. I'. F. MoNulty. Prepared to Attend Calls Day or Night. South Centre street, Frceland. TRADE MARKS DESIGNS COPYRIGHTS &C. Anvono sendlny a skdeh nnd description niny quickly ascertain our opinion free whether an j invention Is prohnhly patentable. Coiimuinlrn- 1 tlons strictly confidential. Handbook on Patents 1 sent free. Oldest agency for securiiiK patents. 1 Patents taken throuyli Munn St Co. receive 1 tpecial notice, without clinryo, in the Scientific American. A handsomely illustrated weekly. J.aryest dr- j i dilation of any nclentlUc journal. Terms, 93 a year; four months, fl. Bold by all newsdealers. I ■ MUNN & 0Q i 361 Broadway, New York Branch Office. 625 F 8t„ Washington, D. C. j LAUBACH S VIENNA BAKERY, i B. C. LAUBACH, Prop. Centre Street, Freeland. Choice Bread of All Kinds, Cakes, ami Pas- I 1 try. Daily. Fancy and Novelty Cukes Baked i to Order. I Handsome stock of NO VEL TIES for EAST Eli j ; Rabbits. Eggs, Baskets, Etc. Fancy Candy Fury's. Chocolate Eyifs with your name on u specialty. Confectionery, Ice Cream. I Condy 0. Boyle, dealer in Liquor, Wine, Beer, Porter, Etc. The finest brands of Domestic and Imported Whiskey on sale In one of the handsomest sa loons in town. Fresh Rochester and Shenan doah Beer and YcuiigliuK's Porter on tap. 08 Centre street. fIIATEIITQ TRADEMARKS i! ; r A 8 M 8 ®"sr ,s i I ADVICE AS TO PATENTABILITY PUCE < ► notice in " Inventive Af?e " b BK EK BE < ► Hook "How to obtain Patents" ( BBKMBBBI [ Charges moderate. No fee till patent is secured. 1 i Letters strictly confidential. Address, G. SIGGERS. Patent Lawyer, Washington, D. C.J Spring Announcement!! y> The Freeland agency for the >, CELEBRATED HAWES $3 HATS J has been awarded to f UrUffNUKING GENTS ' FURNISHING, f ill' 111 J til ill ll U Hat and Shoe Store, * find a complete line of the reason's stock is now on sale. These hats have earned a world-wide reputation, and „ are everywhere considered the most stylish and correct I headgear. t A FIVE-DOLLAR HAT MAY BE JUST AS GOOD, I But Not One Bit Better. ) Quality, Durability and Style Guaranteed. Cheaper Hats and Caps Also Sold. L SPRING AND SUMMER SHOES,! Fancy Colored Shirts, f Furnishing Goods of Every Kind, [ Underwear, Hosiery, f Beautiful Line of Fine Neckwear. I ■ | MCMENAMINS I Gents' Furnishing, Hat and Shoe Store, l * 85 South Centre Street. ,v --lia.ik, or Corn KxrtmnKr Nat, llat.k. chlcaw"; or Gorman Exchange Bank, New York; or any railroad orexpret. •mnpany in Chicago. We hay> aeapltal of oer 5'00.000.00, occupy entire one of the largest bustneis bloekHia • hi ago. alio eiuplm nearly 2.000 people in our own building. ** h SKI,I, OHGANS AT <-.32.tit) and up; PIANOS, l IS-OS ami up; also everything In musical instruments at lowuut wholesale priee*. Write for free special orgiln plana SEARS: BOEBUOK'XcorK:,, Fulton. D-fiR'SSW.'m.n SU^VomIoS SEND NO MONEYSSBitvi^cii- ORADE DROP CABINET BURDICK SFWHOTSACHIHE ~ D.'u{|',rt°m R ,>J£i! I tfc null.iii. You can examine it at your nearest freight depot and 'f ~ W VjO* B _ V found perfectly at Ui'aetory, exactly as represented. IJL RrL R tIIIKAT>ST lURCAiN VOt KVKR IIK A IIP UK. pa* n rr Our Special Offer Price $15,50 1 jf cj V H R~E HS* T RI A u7n| your own home, ami \| < 12. IN) iinii up, all fully drirrlhed In Our Free 8# win? lta.-l.'.n* ('alalni-tir, B BURDICK $ I f Ifg EEWAftE OK UXVTATIOMS || | TUC E3B Bns PUKUIVIi KVKIIY (JliOl) POlNi OK tVl.llY 111 till UiJ J • PKKKCTS OK MINK. Y1 AIM* BY TilS'lSK* TMAK EMICa'.' -mJD jj i - 1 " OM 111 E B I>T 31 AT Li; 1A la 3 MV urv SOLID QUARTER SAWED OAK pnop Bran 1 WASOI-OLrfBEU: ~ il.usrn.tion shows machine ClAs^Wmuo^ - HsM f r -' 'sMtHiT'f*3i ping from right) to he Used a a erntir tnb.e, ulnnd or disk, il.e n-iier I tfg&i ®"' n with ,|;11 lon ßth tn: ,e u, "l head in place for sewing, 4 fun** .= Mg¥r7.-^ : rrz?t!rZ~ ' - ■ fr B f-. adjusuLhle treadle. genuine HiSvth'^t^ 0 " 11l ft i ■ J till Bit B f."k larar Hk,h Aim k,ad. in,.ltlve r .ur mnti,in fr.-d. naif threading Vlbrat ®. .• II Vi/ M BR Hfl|l Ing shuttle, anromr.tlc bobbin winder, adjustable bearings, patent tension • ■ j| nmwiul literator. kin proved loose wheel, adjustable pressor foot, improved shuttle fTa-3 Jp\ 9 a H AwCTil currlor. patent needle bar. patent dress guard.head Is handsomely decorated is"s BPI E 8 MIL I'lTirttSA It"! I NICKEI. TRIMIVIED. |y<c| 1 ®B|P :SC2|I GUARANTEED die light nil running, inntt duraiifFao.i nearest aola*le* machine = Jfrf n,!l ' u '-, k''"n">s'hm , ni lafuraMipd nnd oor Free Instruction Eook tells H? fc - Ml Just how any nno can ru it and do either plain or any kind of fancy wori Fill A 20-YEAFS' EINDiNO GUAHANTEE is sent with every machine. JI IT COSTS YOU NOTHING t\®ee and examine this machine, compare it M ; with those your storekeeper scllnnt $40.00 . , T*" tn $50,00. ®nil then if convinced you mono in* fj;>.en to C4o.oaT dsv your frr'Bht aaeot the $15.50. WR TO IIKI'I ll\ YOtU 0U.60 If at any lime trlil.ln three munlha TOU iß y via ,ra aot aaiitiiod. OKPhU TO OA Y. uo.VT OKI,AY. (Seiirs. Itoebuck Co. are ftboroaghly reliable. - Editor.) Address, SEARS, ROEBUCK & CO. (Inc.) Chicago, 111. TRUSSES, 65c, $1.25 AND UP BUYS U3.50 SUIT /cjJy 8 '^karl'm!lnkk!'h?larea.Vonufl'Twliu Kn l* 1 /4m/\ UX,K **AMS bins AT si.lo. ' l! J / Yip' A KEW SLIT FREE FOR AHV OF THESE SUITS / ; W65C> Y r \M- • \ MO MONEY, cut tlii. a... vumiJ W# are selling the *ery flnesl Trusaes aiade f 123 I rend to us, aic ape of biy and say whether \\J °!Sd h w£ l I '** cr" ?vWy^l#oui 0 e U 5e P ttmL^ y ourV.A iZ \ i York Kuveraible ElaHle Truss. lUiiHtrated above, cut thin 1I / 1 a°iO^nnv vmn"!in n°Jn ' OBr J OWn | r *f nd. out and eend to us with OIR BPKC IAL PRIIK namrrt, I /l / A. iVJ 1 ° Ur pe, ' lill I state your Height, Weight, A,e. how long you have leen IJU 4> ?V-ri/i', t'r c/uT V" tc , rnT, k J i°^ °T^' ruptured, whether rupture lt large or small, alsosteta QE SB i \ .nT 'T ? " .' number inches around the body on a line with the V a ii> Mndr. with lint IILK swat ria'eaMai rupture, say whether rupture i* ou right or leftside, ■ K'.r! tVnn. i .J j ? E . AEI landing; 1 !} ST£ s [ r* wm 1 re'turn 'vouV'mo'nev' I'™''""™'"''' 1 '™''""™'"''' """" "" n "" Iu " n \SSSS."' Will return your money. -hleli ala.lnxan.t .ciufnrelar, illk anil linen aewlit?, line tailor made WRITE FOR FREE TRUSS CATALOGUE our entire line tkroegbnehaenlt any boynr parent would heproud of. iiiir QCAOQ DnPRIiPK JO Pr PHIPAno ttP'-' nn-amirc and full instructions how toorder. iddreas SEARS, ROEBUCK CL Co. bnlbAUO Men's SutU mndc to order from iAf,.t)o up. nai.e I plen hi-nt free ou apiillcution. Addreaa. SEARS, ROEBUCK & CO. (Inc.), Chicago. HL I i3tar, Uvebuck A to. sr tbvruughly reliabiv. —kdilvr. j
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers