They Cure HEADACHE and all Kinds of Pain. CHAS. WALTER, Catawlssa, Pa. Tiff* M ' W- CURT,S3 > K,n *> p "I have used Dr. Miles' Pain m "I was troubled very much with Pills for seven years and think there ___ _ headache for many years and had is nothing like them. They never JnMgf fm m tried nearly everything recommended fall to give relief from headache, and mSB BR dffwti iMJfc for that trouble. While in Buffalo, since I have been using them the at- ■|Ka3 N ' Y " two y ears a ?° a friend of mine tacks from that trouble have been gave me some of Dr. Miles' Pain less frequent and less severe, and I Pills and I was relieved almost im feel like my real self once more." JBfc fll mediately. They are a suro cure. MRS. W. SNOKE, Shlppensburg, Pa. U (TMmKM MRS. P. W. DEPPEN, Sh.m.kln, Pa. "I was sick all the time from nerv- mr mm "My husband was troubled a great ous neuralgia; could not sleep at night JHlj| deal with sick headache and stomach and my bones ached so I could hardly ■ lllSl cramps so severe that he frequently endure the pain. When 1 began tak- m had to stay home from the store, ing Dr. Miles' Pain Tills the pains When he tried Dr. Miles' Pain and aches disappeared like magic. I 9C 0n... OS C.nf.m Pills he found relief at once. One could sleep well at night and soon ' pill always prevents an attack. They faChd my health restored." AT ALL DRUGGISTS. are a sure cure every time." MKfttg In order that you may test the merit of Dr. Miles' Pain Pills, we will send upon request, a gjyJ. gjyJ. JBBE sample free. Write today. A postal card will do. Aff Ml *MjM tUP Be sure to mention this paper when you write. DR. Elkhart, Indiana. FREELAND TRIBUNE. Established 1883. PUBLISHED EVERY MONDAY AND THURSDAY BY THE TRIBUNE PRINTING COMPANY, Limited. OFFICE: MAIN STREET ABOVE CENTRE. LONG DISTANCE TELEPHONE. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: One Year $1.50 Six Months 75 j Four Months 90 I Two Months 25 ' The date which the subscription is paid to is : on 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 dutc. Report prompt ly to this office whenever paper is not received. Arrearages must be paid when subscription is discontinued. Make all money orders, checks, etc., payable to the Tribune Printing Company, Limited. FREELAND, PA., APRIL 19, 1900.1 THE MAN WHO DOESN'T. The man who does not advertise be- ' cause he tried it and failed, should I throw away his cigar because the light went out. fT tTUKkM' COMMENfT. Notes and Comments, Political and Otherwise, on Mutter* of Public Interest. By Andrew J. Palm. We must stand with the president, Is the cry of the jingo statesmen who fear the effect that a war of subjuga- i tion will have on the public mind. Those who attempt to do this will be kept hopping about lively to find enough standing plac;*. McKinley has the reputation of being the greatest jumping jack that has ever rattled around In the seat of Washington, Jef ferson, Jackson and Lincoln. He has no principles that he is not willing to trim so as to catch the breeze of public opinion as recognized by Marcus Aure lius Hanna. Bishop Potter, who recently visited the Philippines to learn what he could of the natives and the island, among other things describes a visit he made to a factory in Manila, where nearly 500 Filipino boys and girls were weav ing cloth. The overseer told him they had in six weeks learned to work the looms, while it would have taken Irish and Scotch children as many months to attain the same degree of proficiency. Yet Bishop Potter and his fellow im perialists have the impudence to de clare that the parents of these boys and girls are not fit for self govern ment, the same plea made by the roy alists and tories in 1778 when our fore fathers were struggling for their inde pendence. The American people think, and rightly too, that Spain has been cruel j in the treatment of her colonists; but does her conduct not compare very ; favorably with our own both in Puerto j Rico and the Philippines? Spain laid a duty of 10 per cent on Puerto Rican goods and granted the island repre sentation in the Spanish cortes. The United States imposes a duty of 15 per cent and declares the island to be with out the pale of the constitution, and hence not entitled to representation. Spain made war in the Philippines to compel the inhabitants to recognize | her authority, and we took the job off her hands, paying $20,000,000 for the privilege of getting into a war of con quest and pillage with the Filipinos. Aguinaldo was lauded as a patriot whose efforts deserved encouragement and success when he was battling against tyrannical Spain, but be is now dubbed a traitor and outlaw for bat- i fling with the tryrannical United States. A trick to tap the public treasury j that would do credit to Boss Quay and Bill Andrews is reported from Massa chusetts. It is charged that the em ployes of the state commission for the destructon of the gypsy moth have planted the pest in different localities Instead of exterminating it, their ob ject being to make more work for the commission and secure a larger state tr>nn/\nrLotinn ThJs is on a par with 1 the bills that have been Introcruceu into the Pennsylvania legislature for no other purpose than to be well paid for killing them. Andrews is credited with being the author of several of these "pinch" bills, and the desperate efforts he is making to break into the legislature again makes it look as if he has still more such bills up his sleeve on which he is anxious to real ize. Despairing of being able to secure an election again in his own county he demands a nomination in Allegheny city, where the Quay element is so strong as not to gag at anything, no matter how unreasonable or offensive. The large number of suicides report ed among the American soldiers in the Philippines is evidence that the task undertaken by the imperialistic Mr. McKinlev is anything but pleasant to those who must do the murdering and pillaging necessary to subdue the lib erty loving Filipinos. As many as ! three suicides have been reported in a single week, and it is said that nearly 500 have gone insane. Those who are responsible for the war in the Philip pines. those who agreed to pay Spain $20,000,000 for the privilege of complet : ing the butchery and destruction she j had begun, are the fellows who should be compelled to shoulder arms and ! expose their well fed bodies in the swamps of Luzon. If Mclfcinley and his coterie of imperialists who declare that they and God are doing a noble work were called upon to chase Fili pinos or be chased by Filipdnos, the war would come to a close Instanter. If the time ever comes when men will stand on their rights and refuse to be j come tools to shoot down their fellows at the command of some so-called supe ! rior, war will forever cease, for the men who make wars and profit by them never fight Its battles. The Quay case drags its weary way | through the senate, and will be side tracked if excuses enough can he framed for postponing it from time to time until the end of the session. There are too many senators who lack the moral courage to vote as th/dr judg ment, their conscience, their constit uents and their constitution dictate, if it come to a point where they must de clare either for Quaylsm or against It. They dislike to stultify themselves if they can avoid it, and hence would like to see the case go over without being compelled to take a stand to upset the precedents of a century. There are some Democrats who, acting on the principle that birds of a feather are expected to flock together, will vote to seat Quay, corrupt as he is known to be. Several are suspected of having come under the influence of that potent argument on which Quay has always depended to help him out of his diffi culties, criminal and otherwise. It is refreshing to find a senator who looks at matters from a sensible standpoint and proposes to stand by his Ideas of right. Senator Teller declares it is in decent to vote one day to deny a man a seat and the next give admission to another on the Bame credentials. He thinks that after all the precedents of a century on this question it ought' to be regarded as settled. What respect, he asks, can the country have for a body that has no respect for itself? A year ago lumber was sl2 a 1,000 feet; now it is $lB. The increase in the cost of production is nothing; the increase in profit to the lumber trust la 50 per cent. The increase in cost to the house builder is 50 per cent. Such is the McKinley plan for encour aging people to build and own houses. —Pennsylvania Argus. Why should we treat the Pacific Isl ands, 2,000 miles from our coast, as American territory? Why should we discriminate thus, in defiance of all precedent, practice, promises and the constitution of the United States?— Chicago Inter-Ocean, Rep. The insults and baffling which Mr. McKinley had to suffer in his policy i of "expansion," show in actual prac | tice what was clear In theory from the j beginning—that protection goes with I expansion about as well as strychnine ! goes with beefsteak.—New York Even ing Post. Tf the people of this country wish to get rid of the trusts they must first get rid of Hanna, McKinley and Griggs, who are owned, body, boots and breeches, by the trusts. With a presi dent in the White House who will en force the laws the trust question will quickly be settled.—Chicago Chronicle. PUBLIC; OPINION. Optalonn From Ynrionn Source# on Qncntlon* of Che Day. We are to introduce our wares into Puerto Rico free of charge, and Puerto Rico is to be taxed on everything she produces and sends us. Just how con gress can discuss this with a straight face we do not pretend to say.—Wash- Post, Ind. Rep. That the next presidential battle will be a battle under the same captains who led the opposing forces in '96 there is scarcely room to doubt. On the side | of the common people, under the lead ership of one of the grandest men of the age. will be ranged those who op pose imperialism, the encroachment of the money power, trusts and all special privileges that enable some men to secure more than their just share of the comforts of life by virtue of the law. On the other side will be aristo cratic wealth under the banner of a man who has proved uncertain, vacil lating and truculent. Fighting under this banner will be found those who udvocate the use of sword and cannon to secure commercial advantages, those who believe in special privileges which enable the few to prosper at the ex pense of the many, and those who be lieve in trusts, monopolies and the pri vate control of the currency. Were the people left to decide the case on their sober Judgment there could be no doubt as to the result; but corporate wealth, ready to corrupt the corruptible, with corporations coercing their employes into voting for the interests of the wealthy classes, the contest promises to be a most bitter one. Let every man who loves his country do all he can from now until the battle is over to win a victory for the people. A FEW JINGLEB. Love a la Tandem. 'Mong sylvan groves of sentiment We billed and cooed; You were, sweetheart, moreo'er con tent To be thus wooed. The future then with rapture hung And blisses rare, While birdlings sweetest songs they sung To glad the air. We courted then—we're married now, No more we string Fair pearls upon horizon's brow— I curses fling, j All, all is changed; with rain we soak; We're cast and down— Our tandem's smashed and we are broke Ten miles from town. —H. S. Keller, in Boston Courier. And Again. How dear to my heart are the scenes of my boyhood, \\ hen dreams of old days bring them once more to view! The wood pile the sawbuck (when some other boy would Take hold of the saw to show what he could do); The dingy old smokehouse, the dirt floor within it, The cracks in the weatherboards, fre quent and wide, V. here work must be kept up, when cnce you begin it. In smoking the slabs of fat bacon inside— The long sides of bacon, the rich, juicy bacon, | The old greasy bacon that hung up inside! Two Songs. * "Sing me a song," quoth she! j So he sang how for years and for years and a day He had sighed for a maid that was deaf to the wind i Of his groaning and sighing! "Ah, sir, laek-a-day," : Said the lady that listened as sad as could be! "Ah, me, lack-a-day," answered he! | "Sing me a song," quoth he! So she sang how for years and for i years and a day ; Her head had been full of a poor lov er's sighs, : For nights and for nights with the love In his eyes! I Oh. well might she pause, for that gen tleman gay I Kissed her quick on the lips most joy ous to see! i "Ah. love, thou wert blind," answered she! $1.50 a year is all the TRIBUNE costs. THE TASMANIANS. Futile Efforts by the English to Pre vent Their Extermination. There was an interesting descrip tion of the last days of the Aborigi nal. before he became "Improved away" by the English settlers, In a lecture given by the Agent-General for Tasmania (Sir Philip Fysh) at the Whitehall Rooms last night. For the South Sea Islanders, he said, nature has provided, planting, cultivating, and ripening their food so that "they toil not, neither do they spin nor gather into barns," How different it was in Tasmania! it could not In Its primitive state support a large popu lation. A fungus known as the bread fruit of the natives, and the kan garoo, wallaby, and wombat were there, and fish, all to be had by the spear trap and the practice of amphib ious habits; but the race was poor in physique, neglectful and remorse less of infant female life. Each tribe was in perpetual war with the next, between whom a river or a mountain was the only line of demarcation. They were exposed to the inclemency of the weather, an animal skin being their only, if any, clothing; attacked by catarrh and pneumonia, the mor tality must have been abnormally high, and judging by the paucity of numbers found by us there, they were a doomed race. Great efforts for their protection were put forth. Proclamations of his Majesty were made by rudely-painted pictures fastened upon trees intended to explain that if white shot black the former would be hanged, and if black speared white the black would be hanged. Many were docile, but the villainies of bushrangers drew upon the settlers a vengeance without dis crimination, causing an effort so early as 1830 to collect all the tribes. Gov ernment spent £30,000 and engaged 3,000 persons in a cordon stretched across the island, called the black line or Black War, hut it was a complete failure, one man and one boy being the only captives, and they by acci dent. Among very many settlers who were true friends of the black, one man stands out with a history which is a memorial of good deeds. The black man's friend was G. A, Robin son, a bricklayer by trade, and a noble souled philanthropist; he trusted them, he and his wife lived with them for a time, and by moral suasion he brought them through many a hair breadth escape himself to camp around his home in Hobart. Their counsellor and protector, his ascen dency became complete. Truganini, a native woman, was companion to Rob inson in his journeys among the blacks. She had lived long enough at peace with white people to respect their purposes. Mr. Bonwick writes of her: "Her mind was of no ordinary kind. Fertile In expedient, sagacious in council, courageous in difficulty, she had the wisdom and fascinations of the serpent, the intrepidity and no bility of the royal ruler of the desert." When collected, they were fed, clothed and protected in native quar ters and medically comforted under the care of an Imperial Superintend ent. The remnant of their number in 1835 was but 203 souls. From a mor tality point such paternal care seems to have been a failure, as their num ber in 1847 was reduced to 47. The last male native, called King Billy, be came a whaling hand among sailors, adopted their vices and succumbed to excesses in i 869. Truganini or Tru canini lived to the fairly ripe old age for an aboriginal, of 65. She was a constant visitor to my fruit garden, and delighted in and indulged much in the freedom of many other gar dens until she ended by her death the last chapter of her race in the year 1876.—Pa1l Mall Gazette. FOR COAST DEFENSE. A New Type of Gun Adopted by the United States. The shipment of eighteen 15-pound guns to the Sandy Hook proving grounds from the factories at Derby, Conn., was begun on January 2. These guns are destined for a new scheme of mine, field and harbor defense, and are an addition to the twenty 6-pound ers and two 15-pound coast defense guns, which, with their ammunition, have been delivered on contract dur ing the past two months. Each 15-pound gun weighs 9,780 pounds and costs, $6,000. It is 13 feet long, mounted stationary, and has no carriage. This type of gun has been officially adopted by the United States as the standard for coast defense. According to the new plan of defense, the smaller guns, 6-pounders, are mounted near water level, with the larger guns above them. In this way torpedo boats sent in time of war into a harbor to explode defending mines, could be reached by the smaller guns, mounted on field carriages, attached by a V-shaped anchor to bolts In the masonry. When the ships of war fol lowed, the big 15-pounders above would come Into action. If it becomes necessary to concen trate th.e smaller guns upon a given point, or to remove them to the beach, their anchorage chains could be slip ped. making them practically field pieces, which could be held to any desired position by a spade at the foot of the carriage.—Los Angeles Times. Horse Trade Rules. David Harum was a good horse trader, but a recent transaction in horseflesh which was made by a well known Memphiau shows that there are others who know how to get the long end of a horse trade. Several weeks ago this Memphis man saw a fine buggy horse which he thought he wanted. He located the owner and asked the pirce. "One fifty," was the reply. After looking the animal over closely and trying her speed he con cluded it was a good trade, and with out more ado wrote a check for the amount. The next day he found that the mare was as blind as a hat, but this did not hinder her speed nor de tract from her general appearance. Russia Needs Rolling Stock. Russia has made overtures for the supply of 3,000 freight cars and 200 dining cars for the Trans-Siberian Railway. It is stated that the Russian government contemplates the pur chase of more than 20.000 cars. It is also said that as many as 6,000 freight care of many varieties will be needed in Fiance, owing to the exposition.— Chicago News. How is yot** Wind? If you arc short of breath; if your heart flutters or palpitates; if you have pain in left side or in chest; if your pulse is irregular, or you have choking sensations, weak or hungry spells, fainting or sinking spells, re member, Dr. Miles' New Ilcart Cure is especially adapted to remove just that class of disorders. It is a heart and blood tonic which strengthens the heart, purifies the blood and gives new life to the weak and weary. "Shortness of breath, severe palpi tation and smothering spells disabled me for any labor. After using three hottlos of Dr. Miles' Heart Cure I was entirely relieved of distress and from that time on my recovery was rapid." A. C. PAYNE, Morgan town, Inch Dr. Miles' Heart Cure is sold at all druggists on a positive guarantee, n rite for free advice and booklet to Dr. Miles Medical Co., Elkhart, lad Dry Goods, Groceries and Provisions. lAj S BROTHERHOOD HATS C 0 A celebrated brand of XX flour always in stock. Roll Butter and Eggs a Specialty. AMAHDUS OSWALD, N. W. Cor. Centre and Front Sts., Freeland. P. F. McNULTY, FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND EMBALMER. Umlialminn ~r female corpses performed exclusively by Mrs. P. F. McNulty. Prepared to Attend Calls Day or Night. South Centre street. Freeland. 50 YEARS' t EXPERIENCE DESIGNS ' RN" COPYRIGHTS 4C. Anyone sending a sketch and description may quickly ascertain our opinion free whether an Invention is probably patentable. Communion tionaatrictly confidential. Handbook on Patents sent free. Oldest auency for securing patents. Patents taken through Munn A Co. receive special notice, without chanre, in the Scientific American. A handsomely illustrated weekly. T.nrgest cir culation of any scientific journal. Terms, $3 a yenr; four months. $L Sold by all newsdealers. MUNN & Co. 3618 """ New York Branch Offlee, 626 F St., Washinaton. D. C. LAUBACH'S VIENNA BAKERY, B. C. LAUBACH, Prop. Centre Btroet. Freeland. Choice Broad of All Kinds, Cakes, and Bus try, Dully. Fancy and Novelty LAKES Baked to Order. Confectionery and Ice Cream supplied to balls, parties or picnics, with all necessary adjuncts, at shortest notice and fairest prices. Delivery and supply wagons to all parts oj town and surroundings every 'lay. 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 1 loch ester and Shenan doah Beer and Youngling's Porter on tap. I8 Centre street. DATENTO ™A#S n arks 1 ;rAIC3II O #N0 S 6HIS | \ ADVICE AS TO PATENTABILITY 1 ► liotice in " Inventive Age " £■ Bk ■■ BB i ► Book "How to obtain Patents" | I ibIBIH 1 f Charges moderate. No fee till patent is secured. 1 f Letters strictly confidential. Address, 1 G. SIGGERS, Patent Lawyer, Washington, D. C. J Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use lg| In time. Sold by drugglats. l*f ■gEßHnnßDHiegi MeMen am iii's Gents' Furnishing, Hat and Shoe Store, QS SouLth. Centra Street. SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT. During the past few weeks our store has been stocked with complete lines of Ladies' and Children's Shoes. All the qualities of all the latest styles are now on sale here at the 1 same satisfactory prices which have made "if. our other departments so popular. We in- i vite the ladies of this vicinity to give our shoes a trial. Our assortment is as large as ) that of any dealer in town. . j n Men's and Boys' Hats. The Hawes' Hats have be come the standard hat of Free land. They are stylish, neat and dressy, and the price they sell at, s.'! each, place them within the reach of every man, young or old, who takes just pride in his headgear. Fine Stiff Hats at $1 up. Very latest offerings in Al pines, Fedoras, etc. Large varieties of Men's, Boys' and Children's Caps. Strong, substantial Working Caps sold very low. ( McMenamin's Gents' Furnishing, Hat and Shoe Store, i , i 86 South Centre Street. Ncw y ork . or .„ y m , lrn ;i„ ~s pm, an.l (Mil ploy nearly 2.0 ml people In ran- ,„vi, imlWlni.^WK'K.l'.^mUMM AT iitmt'!! 'wMAKUsl'lllU-nS i7 M .*'* in musical instruments at lowest wholesale prices. Write tor free special organ piano SEAR* ioPRUri c „ n 'fT* H " hmtk * Co - o£AKS, ROEBUCK A. CO. (Inc.), Fulton, Desplaines and Wayman Sta., CHICAGO ILLt l SEND NO MONEY W GRADE DROP CABINET HUBOIU SEWING~ACHINE by freight O. D. subjvrt I ■atlnn. you can examine it at your nearest Height depot and if , W VMt-Sr I . ■ found perfectly satisfactory, exaetly aa represented. J&. ]"KATKSV nViu* UN"Tiir 1 KVKU pn/ Jn!,r S&gi&ifc- . - ® Pe q ia ' ,^, f | f irie f >r / C j e $15.50 • IS. on and U>, all"fiiilyi described ?o Onr V" e* sell '^"('sfaloiru?! is the greatest value evero s&w&eSs? ">* 7s!'r IMPBSI f? ? BEWAHE OF IMITATIONS unkn-i*n concerns | s{{ 3 THE BURPICK I f I n vv., || ggfWJV WWpr*.. HiM lIIK BUST MATEIIIAL i"3 .TV*, *A°b" SOLID QUARTER SAWED OAK °r great i k -- K ® ,, ? il , ,u " l rollon * ,,ow, nwsJiinecloea t (heauUroiA ♦ -7 jws WlfA Iping from tight) to be used as a center trbie, ctnnd or desk, tlis oilier 1 H ,M ' n WUh fuU le,| £ th f al,le ~:" 1 head in plnce for sewing, 4 fane* ? ' ■ 7'ilzjWwi iriM d l iawrr " ~ n lc%! ~ Booi h T , 10 5 fra,ue - carved, paneled, embossed and Z As ■ I Jfowfi H|*Ka decorated cabinet finish. finest nickel drawer pulls, rests on 4 caa - V IP" wyWR\ ?i,!psr i. M .'I IP adjustable treadle, genuine Kmyth iron stand. f * fM.n I i_J o|| WSI r most lary c High Arm head, t*sitlve four motion feed, self threading vihrat- Aa.'J flflNp I ttJflH jng shuttle. automatic bobbin winder, adjustable bearings, patent tension 1 •J.i-Llt 1 H WK& liberator. im prove J loose wheel, adjustable nrcsser foot,improved shuttle . I|| (Km anKnS and KEL JAMMED ,0m " deCOraUsd i IU WiL CUARANTEED .he Hshtes, nolaele., machine 2n £ 2 lift uffr K * k " MWn o,,ochm " l u fnrnlsheil and our Free Instruction Book tells ! £2 t1 Ml i' 1 o t o ho v w ;r n TSUUJI jQ either plain or any kind of fancy work I .T ° GUARANTEE is sent with every machine A A.> a II IT COSTS YOU NOTHING to ," ec 0 "d examine this machine, compare it J -***" o-f-r, on w, . lh those your storekeeper sellsat $40.00 'v !;w rsrs'' h T ',,it-60. R % •.???• Ton-.iii.jo ';.K , I.n.d, ORDEIt TO P,V. UIIVT I.fTAT. ISeor., Iloybpylr ft Co. a™ thoro Uß l,ly reliahlolT.il" ~'r" " "* Address SEARS, ROEBUCK fit CO. dnn.) Chicago, 111. TRUSSES, 65C, $1.25 Awn IIP We ere selling (he lory Bneot Trusses made B I _ 1 at FACTORY PRICKS, lens tlmn one-third V I - the prioo charged by other*, and WE \ / **3 GUARANTEE TO fIT YOU PERFECTLY. Say \S Oi whether you wish our Csr trench Truss or our 1.2& New York Reversible F.laallc Truss, illustrated above cut title ad. out and eend to U8 with OCR SPKHAL ritlCKnarard Htate your Height, Weight, Age, how long you have been ruptured, whether rupture I* large or small, also state number inches around the body on a line with the rupture, say whether rupture Is on light or leftside, and we will send either truss to you with the under Bt f n . f ."??^ ,f " . U BOt * "I equal to trasses that retail at three times our price,you can return it and we I will return your money. WRITE FOB FREE TRUSS CATALOGUE "ii"l I of Ira-aea. Including the New fIO.OO Lea Truss An 7"r that euro* almost any rne. and vthleli we aril fnr J ■ odrr..BEARS, ROEBUCK & Co. CHICAGO Men's Furnishings. We have a selection of Shirts for Spring and Summer wear which are worth miles of travel to view. The stock is so large that even a brief description cannot be given in this space. You should call and see them. Light and Medium Under wear in several qualities is on our counters. Never forget that our store is the Neckwear Headquarters of town. More are sold here every week than some dealers buy in a year. f 11.98 BUYS A $3.50 SUIT r MM) ( KI.MIhA'I KP "KKVKKWKAKOI T" DOl lil.B SKAT AM KM:K. 1111.1 LAII (2. 60 IIOYh'TWO. PIECE k.m;k pams bins at si. go. A NCW SUIT FREE FCR Al.'Y OF THESE SUITS ££'£! SATISFACTORY WEAR. SEND NO MONEY, eat this a,l. oatiu.d send to us, atate axe of bey and say whether large or bniall forage and wo will send yi u the suit by express, C. O. I), subject to ex amination. \ 011 can examine It at your express office and if found perfectly satis factory and wp:ul lo Bulla M)ld In jour town for fa. .10, uny your express agent our bpeclul Oirer I rice, tI.HM, nnd express churues. TNESE KIiEE PANT SUITS ore for boy# A to 15 years, Ot age and arc retailed e,erj where nl #B. AO. Made with Did lILK eKAT and KNRFS, latest IIMIO style ea illii.iraied, made lum a aperinl l,eay weight, wear resisting, nil-wool Kianiwn C.iaslmer*. neat, handsome pat torn, fine Italian lining, genuine (Jrnjda Interlining, | addles, •tajins and reinforcing, allk and llnru sowing, line tailor ninde throng limit, a suit any boy or parent would be proud of. FOR FKKK CLOTH HAH Pi,MS of Hoys' (letl,lag for buy. 4to 111 YKARS, tyrlle for Sample Itook No. 96K. contains fashion plates, tape measure and l ull instructions how toordar. Men's Suit* randi' to order from B&.OO up. Hanv pies sent free on application. Address. SEARS, ROEBUCK & CO. (Inc.), Chicago, 111. (bean, Uuebuek * Co. arc thoroughly reliable. —Bailor, j