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The Allentown Leader from Allentown, Pennsylvania • Page 4

Location:
Allentown, Pennsylvania
Issue Date:
Page:
4
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THE ALLENTOWN DAILY LEADER. Published Every Day but Sunday by The Leader Publishing COn ALLENTOWN, PA. Leader Served by carriers in Allentown, Bethlehem, Catasauqua, West Bethlehem, Northampton, South Bethlehem, Siegfried's, Treichler's, Fountain Hill, Weissport, Fullerton, Hokendanqua, Coplay, Whitehall, Laury's, Slatington, Lehighton, Emaus, Macungie, Albartis, Topton, Trexlertown, Zions. ville, East Greenville and Rittersville, and every town in Lehigh and East Penn. Valleys for Six Cents a Week.

Sent by mail to any address in the United States or Canada for $3.50 a Year. If paid in advance $3.00. Remittances should be made to THE LEADER PUBLISHING COMPANY. For sale every day after 4 p. m.

at the Lehigh Valley and Jersey Central Stations, at Reimer's, Heller'sand Rehrig's news agencies, Allentown, and on the street by newsboys. Entered at the post office at Allentown, AS second-class mail matter. MONDAY. SEPTEMBER 30, 1895. THERE ARE OTHERS! But THE LEADER con.

tains more square inches of FRESH NEWS than any paper in the Lehigh Valley. Get Your Yard Stick and measure for yourself. The Leader accepts advertising on the distinct and irrefutable basis that it: bona fide paid circulation is greater than that of any other daily in the Lehigh Valley. Itis the only daily paper in Lehigh County printed from stereotyped plates on Goss web perfecting press, with a capacity for printing and folding 12,000 papers an hour. In writing up a brilliant author, bearing the peculiar surname of Dam, a contemporary says "he made his name well known in San Francisco." His name is, unhappily, quite too well known in Allentown.

All of Lehigh County's country schools are now open, or will be within a few days, but it is a lamentable fact that the very explicit law in regard to out houses passed by the act of June 6, 1893, is treated with silent contempt and utter disregard. A supplement to this the state appropriation from any district failing to comply with its requirements, but even "this doesn't make their horses shy," as the phrase goes. Very few districts are making any effort to comply. The careless ones may open their eyes when they come for their next year's state appropriation and find it withheld. They evidently agree with a well known character who once upon a time expressed his contempt for the law by saying, "The law is an ass, sir." The date for the Vanderbilt-Marl borough wedding is Nov.

14. The exact date for the subsequent divorce has not been fully determined. One of Yale's most famous foot ball captains, erstwhile known as Charlie Gill, is soon to go to China as a missionary. His friends bade him farewell in a big New York church yesterday. The ex-captain smiled grimly when asked if he wasn't afraid of the Chinese.

But the Chinese won't smile when they see the new missionary and read his foot ball pedigree. We have more than half an idea that there'll be a marked falling off in missionary persecutions among the almond-eyed celestials when Charlie Gill dons his foot ball jacket and sallies forth to conquest. A Greater Than All. The novelist of the future has bloomed forth in California. His name is as yet unknown and his fame unsung, but we are sure of his powers and his coming celebrity is unquestionable.

The first production of his fertile brain is strange and startling, and though it appears in a newspaper and is palmed off as a piece of actual truth, it is really as fair and rare a bit of fiction as a student of imaginative lore could find in a dog's age. The heroine is a fair Californian whom fate endowed with a bicycle madness and a stern papa. The heroine wasn't happy because papa wouldn't buy her a bloomer, or a couple of them. She had no money to buy, and her education had been so neglected that she didn't know how to manufacture. Accordingly she resolved on desperate deeds.

She resolved to be a highwayman, or a highwaywoman, earn bloomers by holding up late wayfarers on lonely thoroughfares. Here fair young features--rosebud lips, peachy cheeks, sylph-like nose and all the rest -should be hidden behind a mask. And none of the belated, sacked and pillaged pilgrims would ever guess her identity. InS She the carried absence out of her red plan plush beautifully. bloomers and green satin waistecoat and bird's egg blue peruque, such as her fond fancy pictured and such as the ideal highwaywoman of the future will undoubtedly wear, she simply slipped on a pair of pa's breeches, and in this ungraceful and grotesque garb wandered out by the wayside.

The moon was hidden and the stars were veiled. The night winds whispered softly and the trees tossed their limbs about with the wild abandon of a skirt dancer, and groaned and shivered as if they had an acute attack of chills ed and fever and couldn't afford to buy any quinine. Naught but the hoarse cries of the katy-did inquiring "Does your mother know you're out?" broke the solemn stillness. And there by the lonely roadside, her lily fingers convulsively clutching a toy pistol and occasionally hitching up her trailing "pants," stood the fragile maid waiting to "touch" the peripatetic millionaire for price of of lovely bloomers. She waited long and wearily.

"He cometh not," she said. It was evidently a poor night for highway robbery. The hours wore on and must have been nearly nine o'clock, or at least half past eight, when the distant sound of horse's hoofs beat upon her eager ear. They came nearer and nearer, Her hour was come. She took a new reef in her breeches, hurriedly straightened her mask, chased the vagrant hairs from her eyes, fastened her cap with an Astrich hat pin, and sailed forth meet the enemy.

The hoof beats came nearer. They to, were almost upon her. She could discern the rider's grim outline amid the dewy dusk of the bosky brake. She leaped into the middle of the road. "Yer money or yer life!" she shrieked.

And then she held the toy pistol aloft and, with a maddened fury, shot off a paper cap. Now for the denouement. The grim rider alighted. He drew a gun-no toy pistol business this time--from his boot I leg and rushed forward upon the bandit. The highwaywoman quailed and retreated.

But pa's pants were too much for her. She could neither retreat gracefully nor fleetly. She stumbled and fell with a cry of anguish. Then pa recognized his pants. For it was pa.

He pulled aside the mask and recognition was mutual. The heroine screamed and all good heroines do at the critical moment. And then the curtain fell. This is the story, simply outlined. It does not begin to partake of the author's florid rhetoric nor imitate his dashing style.

It simply indicates, in a faint way, the huge possibilities, of his perfervid imagination. A man who could invent such a wierd plot as that and hurl it at the public's heads as a bit of plain, unvarnished fact, must have transcendant capabilities. He is beyond doubt the literary genius of the century. Stevenson, Caine, Kipling, Crockett, gentlemen all, stand back. A greater than the whole lot of you is here.

ANOTHER REBUKE. For the Browni: Combine, Coatained in a Letter Received From Camden, N. J. The following letter has been received by me: CAMDEN, N. September 28, 1895.

A. M. GROSS, Allentown, Dear Sir: We are just in aeceipt of the new scheme of the "Brownie Combine," as you ill them; also, your letter in reference thereto. We are glad to hear you acted so promptly in placing plain Col lion finished picture at the dis; of the people at a less price than that of the Combine, These pictures can not affect the sale of Crystaltypes, as they are a far inferior picture, being, as you well know, liable to crack and break, and possessing neither the smooth, beautiful gloss of our Crystaltypes, nor any of their durability or permanency. The plain Collodion gloss is a rough one, compared to the Crystaltype.

But we are more determined than ever to prove this to the people of Allentown, and, with this object in view, we would suggest, that you engage, immediately, eight or ten responsible and competent agents, and continue to issue the special contracts at half price until vou hear turther from us. Your psesence in Boston is needed very much, as that city and its surrounding territory are ready to be opened with Crystaltypes. So you will please hasten matters as much as possible. You understand that we do not require, or even request, a personal canvass 011 your part. We know you are neither too proud nor too lazy to take out a box of samples and work yourself when this becomes necessary, but we do not desire it, as your services are more valuable in other directions.

You should be able to secure good agents in Allentown; if not, we request you to get some of your men from other cities. At any rate, tickets will be issued and redeemed until the people of Allentown become thoroughly convinced of the wrongful allegations of the "Brownie Combine." Yours truly, CRYSTALTYPE PHOTO per E. F. SHERMAN, Pres't. In accordance with the above, advertise in regular columns for a few young men of intelligence.

Such can secure a good position, by calling upon me, at Mr. Lindenmuth's gallery, any morning this week between 8.30 and 9 o'clock. ARTHUR M. GROSS, General Agent for the Crystaltype Photo Camden, N. J.

They Want the Stitzel Murderer Caught. Many people have an idea that a reward might induce some sharp and able detective to spend his time, money and skill in working up the Stitzel murder case and ferreting out the perpetrator of the crime. A petition urging the county commissioners to take such a step is now being circulated in Kutztown and vicinity and is receiving many signatures. Another Victim of Diphtheria. Mamie daughter of Wallace and Mary Wertz, died on Saturday evening at her home, No.

136 North Penn Street, of diphtheria. She was 4 years, 1 month and 9 days of age. The funeral was held this morning privately at 10 o'clock from the residence of the parents. Services took place at the house, Rev. J.

D. Woodring officiating. Interment was made in West End Cemetery. A Splinter Caused Death. Ezra Brey, aged 80 years, father-in-law of Oliver Beck, landlord at Gerysville, died last week at his son-in-law's residence of blood poisoning, induced by a splinter entering a finger recently.

The funeral will take place Thursday at Schultz's Church. Tired and Worn Out Feeling. "I have taken Hood's Sarsaparilla and Hood's Pills with satisfactory results and recommend them to others who are suffering with that tired and worn out feeling." Mrs. J. B.

Griffith, Catasanqua, Pa. Hood's Pilis cure all liver ills. 23-6 A Sale of Real Estate. The real estate of the late Ed. Jacoby, of Walbert's Station, was sold on Saturday as follows: Hotel and 53 acres good farming land to Edwin Grammes, of Upper Macungie, for $2450; 25 acres of land at $20 per acre to William Guth, and a frame house and 3 acres of land to Levi Ziegler for $100.

A Lad Falls From a Tree. Walter, the nine-year-old son of Simon Zettlemoyer, fell from a tree at his father's home. 415 North Seventh Street, last evening. He sustained a fracture of the right arm near the wrist. The fracture was reduced by Dr.

Eugene M. Kistler, A Fire Alarm Test. There was a test of the Gamewell auxiliary fire alarm from the Adelaide Mill at 2 o'clock this afternoon. The test was made by Lionel Emden, the agent, and Chief Cohn. The test struck box 27, at Third and Linden Streets.

The engines did not respond. Mangled By a Machine. On Friday Ephraim Leb, employed in the dyeing department at Chambers' hosiery mill, Nazareth, was caught in a belt and horribly injured by the cog gearing of one of the machines. The flesh was torn from his thighs and abdomnen. There are many good reasons why you should use One Minute Cough Cure.

There are no reasons why you should not, if in need of help. The only harmless remedy that produces immediate results A. Weber, 617 Hamilton Street. A Church Dedicated Anew. Ebenezer Evangelical Church, at Weissport, which has been greatly improved during the past three months, will be rededicated on Sunday.

Rev. Jas. Bowman, of Wilkes-Barre, will preach in the morning and Rev. F. D.

Geary, of Hazleton, in the evening. THE OTHER FELLOW He Does a Little Talking Just to Keep Himself In Trim. INCIDENTALLY HE MAY PROVE READABLE Some of Those Bucks County Chaps Don't Know a Good Thing When They See It--How a Poor Boy Rose to Be a Famous Man. The average school director in our township schools is not a director who directs. As a rule he just allows things to run along.

When the people of his district kick more than ordinary, he sometimes gets a move on and does a little something to allay public clamor. Especially so if he is figuring on 8 reelection at the expiration of his term. That the directors in our towns are not in the same boat goes without saying, but they take a little more pride in the welfare of the schools and hence the schools fare a little better. In spite of the large appropriation each district 1 receives from the state, many of the country districts keep the pay of the teachers down to the lowest notch and the school term at the same point. This keeps the school tax down.

It also keeps everything else down, including intelligence and morality and general culture. But that's of no consequence apparently. A Bucks County hayseed who took in our big show last week evidently doesn't know how to enjoy himself. He poured out his woes to a Doylestown Intelligencer man in this way: "Well, sit! Talk about Dutch! Why, before our train got to Allentown we could smell the sauer kraut over on the fair grounds. Once inside the fence there was not much to be seen but a crowd of fat women and their beaux.

Each couple held hands as they walked along and munched hot sausages and pretzels, while the perspiration trickled down their faces like a summer shower. They said there were 60,000 of them and I believe it. "The dust was so thick that a man could write his name on his clothes with a finger half an hour after he started. Some patent medicine firm gave away yard sticks and the people used them to poke up the exhibition cattle and jab other folks in the back. I never saw so many fakirs in all my life, and every other one had a Punch and Judy show.

When dinner time came the crowd made a rush for the sauer kraut, but six Doylestown men managed to line up on a narrow board built for half that number, and called for chicken. The chicken up there. don't have any parts but wings, and every fellow in our gang got a skinny one. Just as I began to nibble around the bone I saw a fat woman across the way slobbering in her soup and it killed my appetite, so I quit hungry." The Rev. H.

A. Keyser, pastor of St. Paul's Reformed Church at Mahanoy City, has had a quite notable career. He celebrated his silver jubilee as pastor ol St. Paul's on Sept.

15. Dr. Keyser is Pennsylvania German boy, and was born in Longswamp, Berks County, Feb. 1, 1844. He worked on the farm and in the mines in his early years and had to make his own way to attain an education.

He worked for George Desch, 01 Macungie, for $4 per month, for ven months and the remainder of the year for board. During the winter months he went to the public school. In tour years he had saved 850, with which he went to the Bucks County Normal and Classical School at Quakertown, Rev. A. R.

Horne principal. He atterwards taught a public school for four terms in Lower Macungie Township and one in Longswamp. He then entered Prof. D. B.

Brunner's school in studied Latin and Greek. In the fall of 1368 he went to Heidelberg College, and graduated from the Theological Seminary in 1869. In 1870 he took charge of St. Paul's Church, of Mahanoy City, and has held the position ever since. He has charge of the largest Protestant church of that city, counting a membership of over 800.

THE OTHER FELLOW. Thieves at Slot Machines. At Island Park two weighing machines, belonging to Samuel Adams, and a candy machine, the property of Folk Falvey, were broken open by thieves and robbed of the money they contained. It is thought the machines contained about $10 all told. Just a Moment.

Where can more enjoyment during the long winter a pleasant and comfortable piano or organ. We can good and low in price and if you desire it. G. C. Hamilton Street.

Of Interest 1o La lies. be found evenings than in home with a furnish you this on easy terms Aschbach, 539 We offer an apology in placing before you "'The Ladies' Safe Protector," as it is absolutely reliable, easily adjusted, does not become misplaced and insures protection. Can be worn when desired without observation or knowledge of another and prevents disagreeannoyance under certain conditions. use it once you will never be without it. It is a faithful, safe and reliable friend whenever needed by special circumstances requiring its use.

It is an article every woman should keep ready for immediate use. It is simple to use, and inspires confidence to the woman using it. It is reliable and scientifically made, insures protection without injury to health, as any good physician would say. We are of the opinion that no article has ever been made which will' give as much satisfaction to the woman of to-day as "'The Ladies' Safe Protector." The immense sales of this article is a substantial indorsement of our claim. Do not therefore experiment with any of the numerous unreliable articles, as it is both dangerous to health and' expensive to do so.

Such experimenting can only result in loss of time, disappointment and dismal failure. Ladies should remember this before ordering other goods and not waste their time and money on inferior articles. The best is always the cheapest. "The Ladies' Safe Protector" is sold under a positive guarantee for use for one year, with full directions, and is sent sealed in plainwrapper upon receipt of express money order for $2.00., three for $5.00. Do not wait but order at once.

Address The La Crosse Specialty, La Crosse, Wis -THE. BAZAAR, 729 Hamilton Allentown, Pa. GREAT DRESS GOODS EXPOSITION. Our large array of new Fall Dress Goods had the desired effect. Busy counters, happy buyers throng our store for the past three weeks, deeply interested in the beautiful dress materials.

France, Germany, England and our home markets have contributed to our splendid display of fall goods. DRESS GOODS. Brocaded brilliantines, serges, cashmeres, flannel suitings, two-toned novelties, handsome plaids, dark medium and light colorings, 36 inches wide, every piece worth 39c a yard, opening price 25c. Don't fail to see these specials. REMNANTS.

A good opportunity to secure school dresses for your girls. Piles of stylish and serviceable short ends, 2 to 5 yard lengths marked away under cost to close them out at once. Ask for remnants and buy double value for your money. DRESS PATTERNS. The sale on dress patterns is larger than ever.

They are beautiful and only one of a kind. There can be no copying. First come has the largest selection. BLACK GOODS-Great activity prevails at this counter. From early morning till closing time.

Never did we show such elegant goods, henriettas, serges, brilliantines, brocaded fancies, sublime cloth, foyetta, storin serges, drap de alma and silk warp henriettas. All the season's novelties, and our prices will be found the very lowest in the market. Our silk sales are far in advance of our expectations. Figured taffetas in iridescent shadings at 35c a yard, a pronounced bargain. Figured taffetas 56c worth 75c, at 65c formerly 85c.

Our $1.00 taffetas are the recent production of the season. Lovely and rare blendings, stylish and becoming. CAPES, JACKETS-. We are showing an elegant and very attractive line of ladies' light weight capes, suitable for now. Black military capes $1.00.

Black military capes, neatly trimmed, free sweeps and heavy material $2.50, worth $5.00. 100 capes, diagonal, ladies' cloth, cherjots, lace trimmed, brocaded and braided, satin lined, perforated, worth $6.00 to $18.00, will be sold regardless of cost. It and money. you stein need of a cape, see our prices 100 ladies jackets' in navy, black, tan and mixtures, full line of sizes and first class materials and superior workmanship, kind at $5.00 $4.75. kind The at $1.98, goods are $7.50 and slaughtered $10 ONE to make room for other goods.

CALICO WRAPPERS.Our fifty cent dark wrapper is the boss. Superior cloth and more elaborately trimmed at 75c $1.00. Danish down wrappers $1.25. These are beauties, look them over. M.

F. Morrissey. A newalt Bros. Our store is crowded with hats that are the Correct Fall Styles. THE WILCOX is still our leader.

-Other makes such asStetson, Tichnor and Tenney are also in our line. It will be of interest to you to look at them. ANEWALT BROS. 615 HAMILTON STREET, SIGN OF WHITE BEAR. FALLOPENING -OFHats Caps at the Hat Store of A.

J. TRUMP, 632 Hamilton Street, Allentown, Pa. ACADEMY OF MUSIC. -ALL NEXT WEEKCommencing Monday, 30. Milton Aborn Ope a Coming, in the following repertoire: "Said Pasha" "Baccaccio" Wednesday of Penzance" Wednesday Evening.

"Tar and Perichole" "Maritana" Saturday Bohemian Girl" Saturday "Mascot" Special Prices--Gallery, 15c; Entire Balcony, reserved, 25c; Orchestra Circle, reserved, 25e; Orchestra, reserved, 35c; Parlor Chairs, ate reserved, 50c. Diagram for the eignt operas opens Kramer's music store, Friday, 8 a. m. KAUFMAN RENINGER, ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW. 3rd Floor--B.

B. Building, FIRST on the Road, in the Race, BATT A GREAT BIG PIECE FOR 10 CENTS PLUG Pictorial Whist, A SHORT SUIT. -Lifo. In the Country. I am gradually becoming acquainted with country life.

I have been here in Hayville little more than a week, but time works wonders. On my arrival I wanted my trunk carried about a block to my new home. "Come hither, my good man," I said in lightest vein to a worthy looking fellow dressed in pair of worn jeans, rawhide boots and a dirty flannel shirt. "I would a a word with thee. Shoulder this trunk and take it to yonder house, and I'll give you more money for chewing tobacco and popcorn than you've had in a year." The worthy fellow toted my trunk over all right, and I gave him a quarter.

The next day I saw him buying bank stock at an auction sale of the effects, real and personal, of a deceased millionaire. He cleaned out about a dozen other bidders by raising it up to 157. I made some inquiries and learned that he was worth over $500,000 himself. I concluded to to the postoffice via our cow lot and crawl through the barbed wire fences except when assured that he was far I went to what they call a "sidewalk social" last night. It is function that has for its object the improvement of the sidea walks in the town.

Every one pays a quarter to attend and quarter to eat. You bring along your own food and eat that unless you swap jam and marmalade with some neighbor. I tried to get my wife to swap off some of her bread (it was very good for first attempt), but she didn't succeed. After the social a committeo of women called the "sidewalk committee" takes charge of the money, and the members fight over it for the rest of the year. By the time they are through fighting and have put couple of new boards in front of the minister's house there is no money left, so it seems to be a sort of local Tammany.

There was an awfully pretty woman at the social. She was dressed in a gown that would have been a credit to the lamented Mr. Worth, who died, poor fellow, just before I wanted to order a couple of dozen dresses from him for my wife. She was a graduate of Vassar and knew everything. There wasn't anything she couldn't talk about, and she could play the piano with both hands.

We got a-going on altruism, which is one of my hobbies. I used the horny handed village blacksmith for an object lesson. I explained at length what the world ought to do for poor devils like him. I showed her that life was nothing to such as he; that he was in his present social condition a mere unthinking machine, slaving for the benefit of a few, who, like myself, were brain workers. After we got home my wife told me that the Vassar graduate was the wife of the blacksmith.

His shop fronts our cow lot, so I am not going to the postoffice by that route any more. I am going to send my -Truth. Only to Shop. "Will you be my wife?" She was very beautiful. Some estimated her beauty as high as $10,000,000.

"No," she answered. "I came abroad merely to shop and with no idea of making any purchases. Not today, thank you." The titled aristocrat ground his teeth in rage. He had ground his teeth in nothing else since the previous day at luncheon. -Detroit Tribune.

Selfish Man. Selfish Man. Hortense-What would you call well off in life, Mr. Van Jay? Van Jay- when a man has of money and is single. plenty -Brooklyn Eagle.

FIRST in the hearts of the Wheelmen! The Lovell Diamond, No Better Bicycle Made. ALL SIZES, STYLES AND PRICESLight Roadster, weight 103. We have a large stock of Second-hand Wheels that we are selling at Low Prices. Send for List. P.

Lovell Arms Manufacturers, BOSTON, MASS. For sale by G. Willis Hershy agents for Lehigh County. AN OLD CEREMONY. The Time FIonored Custom of Presenting the Keys Is Still Observed.

Annually as the lord high commissioner goes to Holyrood, Edinburgh, to attend, in the name of the queen, the general assembly of the Church of Scotland, the lord provost, accompanied by some of the magistrates, repairs to the palace and goes through the ancient, time honored ceremony of presenting to him the keys of the city, and he at once returns them to the chief magistrate as the one best fitted to retain them in custody. But one trembles to think of what might happen if the lord high commissioner, suddenly developing a love of keys such as to the undoing of poor Fatima, should retain those which the lord provost presents and ask to be taken forthwith to the gates of the city that he might satisfy himself as to its security. He would learn, to his horror, that there are no city gates, no locks or bolts or bars or moats or drawbridges, and that the invader may march right on to the castle without any such form of impediment. Much that is old and interesting there is in Edinburgh, but the city gates are no more. Few of the fathers and brethren at the assembly time give heed to the archgeological survivals which are passed as one goes down to Holyrood by way of High street and Canongate, beginning with John Knox's house, its quaint stone caryings, its still quainter admonition, "Lvee God abee al, and yi nychtbour as yi self." Farther down, and in the Canongate, is the Tolbooth police station, and still nearer Holyrood is the Bakehouse close, entered through a tenement of dwelling houses bearing date 1570.

At distances varying from half a dozen to 20 or 30 yards, High street and Canongate are pierced by closes bearing family names entering into the past history of the city--such names as Gibb, Pirrie, Rae, etc. Nice distinctions, too, are made, Little in Big Jack's close, Playhouse close its Jack's close having its larger counterpart repetition in Old Playhouse close and Lochend close diminishing to Little Lochend close. Some of these closes are exceedingly picturesque; others, I am bound to say, smell as badly as the leading street in Naples. They are, however, quite worth exploring, and sometimes you come on glimpses of sunny slopes in the Calton hill direction which gladden the eye. Jeffrey street may be said to frame the Calton jail, as one' looks across the narrow gorge through which the North British railway is carried.

This abode of sighs runs to highly artistic lines. Based on the everlasting and situated at a considerable height, it almost recalls one of the castel. lated peaks of And yet it is only a prison. -Scottish American. A Bully Good Timo.

"Yes, indeed, very gay here. I've been on the jump all the time." Truth. Valuable. Mrs. Cumso (reading)-A butcher in Indiana killed 8 cow and found in her stomach several hairpins, a thimble, five screws and a $20 goldpiece.

Mr. Cumso--That bears out exactly what my Uncle Jim used to say. "What was that?" "He always contended that there was money in cows. -Life. Modern Education.

Old -What do you learn at school, little girl? Little Girl (bewildered)-What do We learn at school? What don't we Journal. VIGOR OF MEN Easily, Quickly, Permanently Restored. Weakness, Nervousness, Debility, and all the train of evils from early errors or later excesses, the results of overwork, sick ness, worry, etc. Full strength, development tand tone given to nevery organ and portion of the body. Simple, natural methods.

Immediate improvement seen. Failure impossible. 2,000 references. Book, explanation and proofs mailed (sealed) free. ERIE MEDICAL Buffalo, N.Y.

Not one special only, but all the Popular Makes -ANDCorrect Styles -OFFALLHATS. See our variety and it will be an easy matter to select your Fall Hat. KLINE 605 Hamilton St. Sign of Spotted Tiger. M.

S. WEIDNER'S Real Estate Insurance Agency FOR SALE: No. 512 Linden cheap and easy terms. No. 40 Tenth in exchange for smaller house.

No. 46 North Jefferson all improvements, brand new and cheap. No. 526 North Law on easy terms. No.

520 Lawrence in exchange. No. 518 Lawrence in exchange. No. 1330 Linden in exchange for vacant ground.

Cor. Sixth and Chew exchange for smaller property. No. 515 Walnut for sale cheap. No.

438 North for $1000, 5 rooms. No. 440 North $1200 corner property. No. North Fifth 11 rooms, all improvements for $2400.

For sale a $1400 mortgage, an $1500 mortgage, a $500 school bond. 50 shares Second National Stock and all manner of securities generally hand. Call on or address, M. S. WEIDNER, Nos.

11 and 13 N. 7th Allentown National Bank Building A lies. Easily Done. CA POSTAL mailed to the address below will bring to your address a solicitor prepared to insure your property or household furniture against loss or damage by fire. First class companies at reasonable rates.

Surpluslines promptly placed. Insurance and N. L. C. Troxell, Real Estate Agt.

Room 21, B. B. Allentown. RE OLD DR. THEEL 1317 PHILADELPHIA, PA.

ARCH ST The oldest and only Genuine Specialist in Philadelphia, notwithstanding what others advertise. Nervous Debility, low spirits, loss of power and the results of Indiscretion positively cured. Special Diseases and Obstructions Permanently Cured in 4 to 10 Days. Relief at once. Primary or Secondary, BLOOD POISON known cured by to entirely myself.

new and harmless methods, only Errors Youth and Loss of Power. Small Undeveloped Organs Fully Restored. Hours: 9-3. Ev'gs. Wed.

and Sat. Ev'gs, 9-12 Send five 2c. stamps for Book "Truth (in English and German print), best of all for young and old, single or married. Treatment by mail. Secrecy guaranteed to all.

B. F. Schantz, Freight and Local Delivery. Street, or by Can be consulted 10 English and German. tended to.

Orders left at No. 807 Hamilton telephone promptly at-.

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About The Allentown Leader Archive

Pages Available:
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Years Available:
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