" .'!.. V fhijggSte Copy, INDEPENDENCE IB) ALk TH1NCS.! Subscription Prico,$i00 Per Year in Advancq VOL XV. flDER IS ARRESTED SympstKetlc Strike Will Take Place Saturday. MOBS CONTINUE TO DO VIOLENCE. . Cars Are Stoned, Motormen and Con ductors iisaten, ana the Police Make Many Arests. : Philadelphia, Pa., Special. Action fraught with possible momentous consequences to Philadelphia was. taken by thex Central Labor Union but unlay nightv when that body, iep-' recntni "140 unions with a. member ship el' i-5,0C0, it is claimed, voted to ctgiu a sympathetic strike next 'butumay in aid of the striking street railway employes. . This, action came at1 the end of a secret session of about 700 delegates in labor lyceum hall which lasted more than six hours. There was ap parent ly no question but that the del icate s would yote to strike, the split being on thequestion of whether it would be started immediately. The more conservative element prevailed, however, and the walkout was put off until next Saturday. . Meanwhile there is hope that the street railway strike will be arbitrat ed, despite the repeated declarations of the Transit Company, controlling all the lines in the city, that "there is nothing to arbitrate." - . Following the publication of a statement that was made by John J. to have been made by John J. Murphy, president of the Central Labor union, that ' ' a general strike should be. eallled immediately and there are men in the Northeast who can shoot as straight as -any trooper who ever drew a breath,' ' a warrant was issued Saturday night for the labor leader, charging him with in - citing to riot. Riots in West Philadelphia and in the southern part of the city follow ed the running of cars Saturday. Three cars were held up by an ob struction of the east end of the draw brL'hre oveivthe Schulvlkill river. A crowd of - men -showered .bricks, , stones ai'rd pieces of wood at the mot ormah,' conductors and policemen, who were guarding the cars. - A policeman, with drawn -revolver, forced his way through the crowd and dragged the injured to a power house. At the meeting of the board of directors- of the company Saturday it was decided that any striker whose previous record was good would be taken back, providing he applied for his position before March 1. A reply was sent to the committee' of clergy men politely refusing to submit to the" proposed arbitration. This atti tude of the company caused a re newal of the plans for a general -strike. C. 0. Pratt, the organizer of the carmen, who has been opposing this plan, said: "A general strike will positevely be declared unjess the company comes 1o terms. We are prepared to fignt for weeks of months. We are not whipped anji 'the. company, will have to treat with us. , B. E. Oreenwalt, president of the Pennsylvania Federation of Labor, fc"d :- i- 0 4 -The' street car strike has ceased to be a local issue. It is now a national one. The State and Ameri : can Federation stand by to give whatever support is deemed , neces sary. The strike will be wdn." Augustus Belmont Married. New York, Special Augustus Bel t HHit. sr., the banker and millionaire i ;k chorse owner, and - Miss Eleanor UohMm. who recently left the stage, were unexpectedly married at 5 o'clock Saturday afternoon in ; Miss , ' h'ohson.'s house here. It hadbeen an:i(.un(eel that the marriage . would not take place until some time in ' Collar Button Saves" Life. . ! "Wiiiston-Salem, Special. A cpllai button saved the life of Greer Gray, '-ycar-ohl son of E. E. Gray, Satur day ni-lit in the box office of the au'iitoriiun. Accidentally a 32-calibrer revolver, was discharged n within a i'oot of his face, the bullet striking the collar button squarely and being d'V'ti-d to the right of 'the Adam's i ; :hl imbedded itself in the bac lii-.j i:eck. : ' Militia Withdrawn From. Cairo. t'airo. Ml Q.IoT rPti a Giro, mill- tia (!;!; i nes that have been on duty m si-ice February 17 because oi vhi- f, of race riots were with- vctniaent to Be Responsible., -I; niton. Special. In accord ' 'h ' recommendations by the .commit tee on finance the bill for the issuance of $30,000,, cTtificates of indebtedness for i-' iu'iit of. the irrigation reclaim u.io:i service -will -be-so amended as 0 niake the crovernment directly -i re Jhoiisible for the payment of the cer inicatcs. - v TAR HEEL CHRONICLES News - Notes Gathered From AU Parts of the Old North State. Will Double Track. It is confidently reported in Fay etteville ' that the Atlantic Coast Line will in the near future begin double-tracking its line between Fay ette ville and Parktom The . actual work, it is said, will begin about April 1st. This is in line with the general scheme of improvement" re cently inaugurated by the svstem to provide for which a $200,000,000 loan , was negotiated. Double-tracking is now being done in South Car olina, and as soon as the work is finished in that quarter the same force will ' be transferred to this district in order to relieve by double-tracking the congestion of traffic between Fay etteville and Parkton, an example of which is found in the fact that each night four fast passenger trains pass over these thirteen miles of track within fortlry-six minutes. Greenville Fire Swept. y. Fire, originating from a cause un known, in the roof of frame build ings on the block between the court house square and the hotel Macon, in Greenville Thursday practically swept two blocks of buildings.. The wind was blowing a gale from the northeast sending a hurricane of cinders over the center of the town and the population was almost panic-' stricken. The court house, jail, Masonic tem ple, two livery stables, five dwelllings. onetwo-story office building, one bug gy factory,, several small stores and office buildings were burned, entail ing a loss of more than $150,000, in cluding -damaged stock. J The main cable wires of both the Western Union Telegraph and the Home Telephone & Telegraph Co. were burned, practically putting both companies1 out of commission.. New Charters. The Greensboro Chamber of Com merce has received a charter from the Secretary of State, with $100,000 cap ital authoribed and to be subscribed fof in shares graded from $1 to $100, the' purposes of the corporation be ings declared to be to promote every pi an for the advancement of the com mercial, manufacturing, monetary and-other interests of . Greensboro and tot the mutual aid of the members in every way possible. The incor porators are R. R. King, E. J. Jus tice and A. B. Kimball. Other charters issued are Schloss. Bear & Davis. Company, Wilmington, capital $7,500, for consolidating the Nathan Schloss Company and the S. J. Dayis liveiy and other business interests; incorporators,- Nathan Schloss, J.' R. -Bear and S. J. Davis. The Greensboro Sanatorium Com pany, Greensboro, capital $100,000, bj A. F. Fortune, C. E. Holton and oth ers, and the W. H. Weatherly Com pany, Elizabeth City, capital $20,000. The Lawrence Brothers Company. C iarjotte, changes its name to the Wallace-Lawrence Company and in creases its capital to $100,000. J. W. Mobley is president. Rich Mica Mines. Finding mica mine in acarn field Charles Young and the two Edg brothers, of- Ya.ncy county, sold prop erty to Jason E. Burlison for $3,000 last 'week. A mine, located near Sink Hole Mountain and Burlison, has al ready-, produced, with only five 'days5 work, . $6,000 worth of mica, and $2, 500 worth is in sight and only a few feet beltro the surface. Blocks twenty inches square, have been cut. a .very unusual size. Asheville Spec ial, 21st. : ; Big Bridge Contract. Stewartsville ownship, in which i situated in Laurinburg, has awarded the contract for the erection of eight reinforced concrete bridges, ranging from thirty feet to seventy feet in length, the total cost being thirteen thousand five hundred dollars. 70 - County Commissioners Indicted, iThe -grand jury of Beaufort coun ty having been charged by Judge Ferguson to . bring , in an indictment against the- county commissioners, charging thein with neglect of dutj in not providing a' new courthouse last .week brought in a true bin ol indictment ', against them. It is tm derstood that a motion will be made, to have the case removed. to anothei county for trial. ' ; Placed on Track to he Balled. ' Declaring that he had been club bed into unconsciousness and placed on a railroad track,, near- Speneei Thursday- Thomas Whalen, : created considerable ' excitement tnere.. ne asserts that while engaged an . a.'f am- y braw his wife knocked him down! with a , chair, and tnat py unKnown parties he was placed on' the railwaj . i : i. . .1 i,:. iic ' T- tracK m orcter 10 euu m f vp- gaining consciousness before a train passed lie crawled off the roadway and saved biinself.. r ' .. - ' , 4 COLUMBUb, POLK COUNTY, N. WED 1H0 BUNK TO CL08I Geo. W; Colsman, $12 a Week , Book keeper Cannot Be Located. ! Boston, Special. High living at i a Back Bay hotel, where he appeared in eompany with a beautiful woman and registered for the past twe months as ' ' George W. Coleman and svife, of New : York," wit,h weekly bills that ranged from $100 to $150, it was learned Saturday was one of the causes of the downfall of George W. Coleman, the $12-a-week book keeper of the closed National City Bank of Cambridge, who is now in police custody. . ; . s Former Governor John Ll P.ites j is in charge of the bank as receiver. It was learned that the loss may total $200,000, instead of the ; $144,000 of ficially given out. The ' continent lis being searched by tho police from pcean to ocean for Coleman. , The name, of the young woman svith whom he appeared has not yet been mentioned in connection with ;he case. Her identity is' a mystery. She is not known in Cambridge, nor jas she lived there. Negro Mak3s Confejsion. Pittsburg, Kan., Special. Gus Thomas, alias Ed Y'oung, a negrc iged twenty-six years, confessed at Girard, near here, Saturday night, to the murder ot William Bork, : a white farmer, the latter's wife and ihild, and another negro. Mrs. Bork was maltreated before being killed. Thomas was arraigned secretly, pleaded guilty, and was sentenced tc imprisonment for life, and was taken to the penitentiary at Lansing, Kari. Thomas implicated Ed. Chailes, an other negro, who was arrested wit! him. Chailes was hurried away tc the jail at Fort Scott, for safe keep ing. Besides the four murders, Thomas confessed that he and Chailes hac commit ted numerous highway rob beries, i. ; Laymen Elect Oflicers For Year. Dallas, Tex., Special. At the con cluding session of the laymen's con ference of the Methodist church, south, the following officers wert selected to serve during the ensuing two years." :.?..'.': j President, John p. Pepper, Mem phis. i- First vice president, C. H. Ire land, North Carolina. Second vice president, W. G. M. Thomas, Virginia. Third vice president, D. B. Aber aathv, Pittsburg, Tex. TreasurJr, F. M. Daniel, Little Rock, Ark. Secretary, W. R. Stubbs, Georgia., with headquarters at Nashville, Tenn. Executive committee, C. A. San ford, Sherman, Tex.; J. S. Carr. North Carolina; T. S. Southgate, Yir- ginia. . The executive committee will an nounce later as to the place of the meeting of the conference in 1912.: Give Yotmg Men Better Shot?. ; Washington, Special. ' -! President Taft Saturday sent a special message to congress urging legislation for th completion of the personnel of the navy. v ' ' The message outlines a bill prepar ed by Secretary Meyer which would reduce the ages of the senior, officers and reorganize "the regulars. -The effect of the measure would bf to promote officers to the grade oi captain at the average age of 47 years and to the grade of rear-admiral at the age of 54 to 55 and mak( the average of all rear-admirals about 58. i The personnel of the navy woulo be increased to 47,500 men, about 5,000 more than at present. " .'. Found "Not Guilty. ; Boise, Idaho, Specials William F. K-ttenbach, George H. Kester and William .Dwyer, whose trial onJ s charge of conspiracy to, defraud th government of finable timber lands was concluded Saturday afternoon and found not guilty by the jury. ! To Make United States Naval Power : Washington, Special. The building of a world record-breaking battle ship, of .no less than 32,000 tons dis placement at a cost of approximately $18,000,000,. and the making of the United States the leading naval powei bf the world are planned by Secre tary of the Navy Meyer. j - . , .... .'. Secures Control of N. & W, Philadelphia, Pa., Special It was reported in financial circles Satur day", that the Pennylvania Railroad Company had acquired sufficient oi the stocks of the .Norfolk & Westerr Railway. Company to give it absolute control of the road. The Pennylvanu has ma'ae no official announcement tc that eifect. .v;yV.4'.-"V: ; v 1 The' repcrVit is said is. not ;i i Surprise" as it-was thotiglit- when the Ppnnvlvania Railroad Company toot oVer the- holdings of the .Norfolk S, Western '.stock- which had lbeen vfieic bvl Kuhn; Loeb K& Co., ot New Yori tat some such "plan was contemplat ed - . 7, 7 ? 7 CJTIiUSSDAY, MARCH 3, 1910. MEAT Rer Packers Indicted j in New JBrsey. Sf " ,i- W wful and Immoral riot to Limit Supply and Raise Prices Alleged - Names of the Finns. f . . i , , Jcrsey City, N. J. The expected in dlctmnt of the; directors 6f the Na tiOjl Packing Company by the Hud son County Grand Jurywas filed here, andHhe directors stand indicted for wh$ they did, an the words o the presentment, "with force jand arms . il . for their own unjust, ex cessive, unlawful and immoral pro5t andgain, to injure, defraud . - . . cheat, impoverish and oppress the public . . J by cornering and limiting the 4ecesasry supply of meats and poultry for consumption by the -public . . j . unlawfully, im morally, extortionately . . . and corrnptedly combine . . i and con spire . . .. for their . j . . im moral gain and profit . . . by the power of their s number and wealth and - their greed and cunning, and their divers subtle, immoral, dishon est7;;. - . . and unlawful contriv ance, . . , and compactsr . v '. '. to acquire . . L a monopoly of the meat and poultry supply of the pub lic.' -. f-: - : For these and other offenses, de scribed and specified in a presentment of some 3000 words, J. Ogden Ar mou Arthur Meeker, Edward Mor ris, ouis F. Swift, Edward F. Swift, Ira N. Morris, A. Carton, A. Wat son Armour, Edward Tilton, Thomas E. WHson, F. A, Fowler, Charles H. Swift, Thomas J. Connors, L. H. Hey man JameB E. Bathgate, Jr., George H. Edwards, F. V, Cooper, D. E. Hart well Henry P. Darlington, L. B. Pat terson and A. A. Fuller were indicted, as well aa the National Packing Com pany Armour & Co., Swift & -Co., Morris & Co., the Hammond Packing Company and the G. H. Hammond Company. I . AU the corporations . indicted are Incorporated in the State of New Jer sey, and the individuals mentioned are tuelr directors. The Indictment first describes the business conducted by the defendant corporations, and gives the names of the individual di rectors, relating, also, that certain of the directors of the National Packing ComsnyCarealso directors and con- stttute a majority of thT'-dtrecterSH Armour & Co., Swift & Co. N Morris & Co. and $300,000,000 A YEAR WASTE. Aldrich Tells Senate He Coald Run Government W Business Basis. Washington, ID. C. In the Senate the Taft Administration was attacked from an entirely new quarter. This time extravagance was the cry raised by the insurgents against tne Admin istration and its "regular" support in Congress. i One result of jthe attack, which was led by Senator Ipolliver, of ilowa, and Senator Bristol , of Kansas, was the declaration by Senator Aldrich that if he were allowed to run the Govern ment on p. business basis he could save the. Nation $300,000,000 a. year. Another was a practical j admission that the Senate Committee on Public Expenditures, which was appointed for the sole purpose of reducing dis bursements, and from which Mr. Taft had hoped great things, had failed in its task. The discussion arose when Senator Aldrich, -of Rhode Island, jacting for the committee in question!, f reported favorably a resolution authorizing the, appointment of a commission of nine members to investigate and report on the business: methods of the Gov ernment, making recommendations as to improvements and thq elimination of duplicated posts. ALLDS RESIGNS AS LEADER Will Not AHow, Office to j Appear as Factor; In His Favor. Albany, N. Yij Senator Ijotham P. Allds rdsigaed as temporary president of the Senate; : The first announce ment of this was made by his chief counsel,' Martin W. Littleton, when outlining the . Allds defense to the bribery chargesof Senator jBenn Con ger. i : f ! - ' I It was Mr. Allds' f election to the temporary presidency of the Senate that brought on jthe bribery investiga tion, Conger having declared he would not vote for Allds because he '"per sonally knew" Allds had accepted a bribe. ! "Mr. Allds has! resigned," explained Mr. Littleton In his opening, "be cause he believes it is proper at this time so that no intimation can be made that he may 2c Influencing the result of this inquiry in' the minds of his fellow Senators." ' AIJENS SEND $275,000,000. ' . . -r- . -.- $175,000,000 of This Handled An nually by Unregulated Bankers. Washinston,, D.. C- More than 2300 persons, in! he United i States are doing unregulated banking business and are sending abroad annually $175,000,000 fpr aliens. The total sent abroad each year by immigrants is about $275,0:00,000. " f These facts. aVe cQntained-in a re 'riort s.ent to 'the i Senate by Senator Dillingham, chairman of the Immigra tion Commission. . I v Massachusetts and New Jersey, the report, says, are ithe only States that give adequate regulation to ihls jusi ness. . - . ' -i ;:;.;:.. CQNSPIHAOY CHARGED NEWSY GLEANINGS. The British bankers have formally, withdrawn from co-operation. In' the4 Hankow line's construction: - Many members of the British Par liament dread another election this year, owing to the lack of money. Mayor Gaynor, of New York Cityi recommended that the cost of Cats-; kill land condemnation proceedings be reduced to a minimum. , ' - The Public Service Commission is sued an order to the Interborough, New York City, t6 run trains so as to provide a seat for every passenger. A severe earth shock occurred in Crete, j Many buildings in Canea were damaged, and six persons were buried In the ruins of a house at Varipetro." - Governor Hughes was proposed for tempprary chairman of the State Con vention and Mr. Roosevelt for perma nent chairman by New -York Republi cans. j- ' . ., The j consular body stationed at Managua, Nicaragua, offered i its serv ices to bring about peace between General Estrada, of the insurgents, and President Madriz. Leaders of the Liberal party in England gave little need to the mani festo to the Labor party's chief, and predicted that they will remain in power for eighteen months. Charles Atherton, a boss, at the Cherry; (111.) mine, was fatally wounded by a dismissed employe as the bodies of eleven of the buried miners iwere being recovered. The Senate, at Lima, Peru, adopted a resolution requesting the Finance Minister to annul th-e decree ordering the immediate disposal of goods held in the Peruvian Custom House. ' France sent an ultimatum to the Sultan of Morocco, saying that unless the financial arrangements are carried t)ut the French Consul will be with drawn from Fez anji the Moroccan customs will be seized. Saw Cut the Workman Dead. Durham, N. C, Special. At . Ct G. Hare's wood yard in Hayti, suburban colored section, late Saturday even ing, Haywood Cozart and . Alexander' Ljou, both colored, were instantly killed while operating the saw. , A piece of it struck Lyon across the head, killing him instantly. The broken i saw flew to pieces and one of the teeth struck Cozart, going nl- most through his 'head, though he To Lift Vessel With $273,000 in Gold. Seattle, Special. An expedition has been organized by an expert diver to raise the steamer Islander, sunk? ten years ago in 320 fathoms of waier near Juneau, Alaska, while bound for Seattle, with .$273,000 of Klondike gold in her strong box. The situation of the steamer is known but the depth of water has previously forbidden salvage attempts The plan proposed is to life the ves sel with a huge metal seine. Probably Lost in Sand Storm. . Los Angeles, Cal., Special. A res cue party left here .Saturday to searcj the desert about Mecca, Cal., foi Mr. and Mrs. Walter Manson, f ol New Orleans and George Drake ol Los Angeles, who are believed t have been lest 4b a furious sarid storm that raged Saturday in tin desert. 4 ' cm BEI.OW any other or oa any kind 'of terms, lognea mustrating arid Dicycies, old patterns ana 1 PRICES and wonderful new offers made possible by selling from factory direct to rider, with no middlemen's profits. ' - - ' ' - 1- ; MfE SHIP OH APPROVAL -without a cent debosii Pay the Fretcrht and . f-allow IO Days Freo Trial IMWVSS I V7l rwiVB l-?! BlVTM house m tne worm wiu ao. - you win learn every mixi aad get much, yaiu able infprmatioa by siiuply writing ua la postal. , ' -. . ' We need a Rjdir ' Aennt in evervvtown -and can offer ao tyDortiinitr wm 0 PUWOTORE Regular Prhso CQmSO per -pair. To IntroeSuco Wo Will Soli You a Samgtlo Pali for Only 80 NAILS. TACKS 08-GLASS WONT LET OUT THE AIR (CASH WITH ORDER $4.55) NO MORE TROUBLE FROM PUNCTURES. Result of is years exuerience in tire making. No danger from THORNS TUS. PINS. NAILS. TACKS or Serious punctures,; like intentional knife be vulcanized like any other tire. Two Hundred Thousand pairs now In actual Swenty-five Thousand pairs sold last year. with without DESCMPTtBM t Made in all sizes. It is lively and easy riding, very durable and lined um.su . a special quality of rubber, which never becomes .porous and whicacloses up small DonctuT allowing the air to escape. .We have hundreds of letters fiom satisfied customer faHn: that their tires have only been pumped op once ot twice iar whole season. They weigh no more than an ordinary tire, the puncture resisting qualities being jiven by leeveral layers of thin, spedalb' prepared laonc on tne treaa. i nat "uotoing tx.es.' or soft roads is overcome by uie pntent '"Basket We will allow a squeezed out hetween tne tire ana tne roaa tnus overcoming all suction. The regular price of tires is $8.50 per pair, uai fcr advertising purposes. wt are making a specif factory price to of only f4.8o per pair. All orders shippea same aay letter 1 received. We'saip COJD. do. Yon do not Dav a cent until vou have examined ana found therafitiictlvs represented.-. 1 ish diconnt of sper cent (thereby making the price 4.fi5'pcr pair) If voti send' vv- FULL CASH W iiiu unLfaii ana enclose plated brass hrnd pump and two Sampson metal - puncture closers to be used an case 01 intentional at UUK expense xr lor any reason tney are not thatwhettycro want fa bicv-cleAou wjll gsv as -order at onoe. hence thiffiemArkE.ble tire offer? we are perieqtiy reliable and money sent to xigrw sis saic as jr, a banX Banker, Express or Freight Agefet or. the Xjjtor of ' this papet1 about - 'vs. . these t.ires, yo wm ruia taat tney wiiij nae epsiar,Tua xastar,-pear-rette.r, last finer than any. lire voahavvei- used or seen aVunv orice. V'ku6w that vou will Mn jut wrke us a txjstal todav. DO HOT THINK. Otf bicycle or a-pa:rof TOnderful oners ar$.maiang. It-only costly posia learn eryttLflg.c vnteitW. i k ,-r. a.-3 5-H-44'v4i.t t; . ,v vyi-r, l 4 v NO. 42. PROMINENT "PEOPLE. v Elihu Root. . Senator, from New York, is sixty-five. Charles B. Lewis .("M, Quad"), au-,-thor, humorist, is : sixty-eight 1 years old." . ,'.. ' v !" .. ' - Joss Santos Zelaya, former Presi-' dent of Nicaragua, ;arrived at Vigo, Spain. - ' ':-,' At Santiago,- Chile7, William Jen nings Bryan, his wife and daughter visited for four days. John E. Redmond - predicted that the present British ! Parliament can scarcely last, a month under existing conditions. u 1; j. A memorial of Phillips Erooks, de signed by the late Augustus Saint Gaiidens, was unveiled at Trinity Church; Boston. .v '-' l Marquis Campobsllo, Spanisb mill-, .tary attache in Paris, was wounded -In z sword duel in the French capital by a local merchant. - Kenybn Cox's picture, "The Girl With the Red Hair," was slashed to ribbons in the Art Students League- house, New , York City. . U . Wade Ellis was elected chairman of the State Republican Committee of Ohio and retired from the Federal Department of . Justice. - American 'Ambassador. Rockhill, Mrs. Rockhill .and their daughter were presented to the Dowager Em press at Anichkoff Palace St. Peters burg. " "' - . " President Butler, of Columbia Col lege, said at a meeting, held in mem ory of Richard Watson Gilder that a memorial is to be erected to the poet. ' : . . ; " ..':! Because a Committeo failed te wel come him at.a'banQUet, at the Astor, Mayor Gaynor departed abruptly, say ing .the Mayoralty dignity had suN' fered. -' . - Sales of $30,000,000 worth of au tomobiles in New York City in a year make a remarkable showing for an industry, still in its infancy, thinks the New York World. They inci dentally throw light on the increased perils 6r street traffic, the expansion of the volume of city noises and oth er results of motor-car prosperity. TELEPNOCiES Are a Necessity in the Country Home. The farther you are removed from town to railroat station, the more the telephone will . save In time and horse flesh. No man has a ripht to compel one of the family to he in agony for hours while he drives to town for the doetor. Tel ephone and save half the suffering.- uur iree Hook tells how-to or ganize, build and operate . tele phone lines and systems. " ! Instruments sold on thirty days' trial to responsible parties. j THE CADIZ ELECTRIC CO., 201 CCC Building, Cadiz, Ohio. olS ALL IT UILL COST YQ0 la iKiMni to write for oar big FliKE DIOFCLC catalogue showing the most complete line of high-grade BICYCLES. TIRES and SUNDRIES at PHICKfl manufacturer or dealer ia the world. O until vou have received our complete Free describing every kind of high-grade and low-grad latest moacis, and learn 01 oupremarkable LOW and make other liberal terms which no other , - PnOOFTIRES 2 0 lo vr sensation commonly telt, when riding on asphalt weave" tread which prevents all air from brine tkesc the ridet approval- mis fe-.vej-usitiet. We will also, send, one nickel puncture c&&ers on -f Tli pSid orders (these metal !. Icafe cut$ or aeavy ga3h?3).- Tires to be returned 9 cac m:ju... GLASS. B1 Z!1 f Cuts- un IK and D," also rim strip W . . , JL - to praveht rim cutting. -. Thin wic-jt flwf lp wlW ontlast may other . ue. VifW Wv naakeoFTi KULSTIC d0 eatisjaccory v?t cxannnalioa. . . , . l. Az& -ycur Postmaste . li yos order a pair. '; longer nd loos . be so weH pleased '" out; brdeii- We went cu to-send us a small trial - . ";. ir H.tv'-.-"i...SL.'.'Jui zirsj and the tistia; . tiresfrom anyxriejnntillyouknow4he new am a 'X C,' ' r