Nails Had Turned Blue — Limbs Bloated. Lay in a Stupor From Heart Disease. Dr. Miles' Heart Cure Cur«d Me. The nails tuminf blue is a sign of defective circulation as is the bloating of the arms and lefls. Other common symptoms of heart dis ease are shortness of breath from slight ex eition, pain in or near heart, smothering spells, palpitation or fluttering, weak, tired and hungry spells, dreaming and nightmare, in sleep. In severe cases the lirain, stomach, lungs, etc., may become so disordered as to mislead the physicians as to the nature of the disease. If you suffer from any or all of these symptoms your heart is diseased and treatment should not be post poned a single day. Dr. Miles' Heart Cure is guaranteed to help you as it has helped thousands of others. "I owe my life to Dr. Miles' Heart Cure. After four doctors met in consultation on my case, their verdict was that I had suffered from heart disease so long that they could do nothing for me apd I would surely die. My brother said, 'While there is life there is hope, we will try Dr. Miles' New Heart Cure.' When I began taking it my nails had turned blue and my arms and legs were bloated to twice their natural size, and I lay in a stupor most of the time. After the first few doses the dizziness went away and after three bot tles 1 was able togo around the house and do my work. Both my family and my nurse think I would have been in my grave had it not been for Dr. Miles' Heart Cure."— MßS.' ROBERT MORRIS, Sackets Harbor, N. Y. All druggists sell and guarantee first bottle Dr. Miles' Remedies. Send for free book on Nervous and Heart Diseases. Address Dr. Miles Medical Co., Elkhart, Ind. The grange hns the proud distinction of securing more state and national laws In the Interests of agriculture than all other organizations combined. New York state has been increasing her grange membership very rapidly since Jan. 1. posed reciprocity treaty, and this no doubt has had a strong influence in making the representatives of those states assume the position they are credited with holding. Even with their help, however, there is great danger to the sugar industry, and its friends should be up and doing if they would make their opposition to the treaty ef fective.—Michigan Farmar. Just About Bedtime take a Little Karly Riser—it will cure constipation, billiousness and liver trouble DeWitt's Little Karly IJisers are different from other pills. They do not gripe and break down the mucous membranes of the stomach, liver and bowels, but cures by gently arousing the sections and give strengtli to these organs. Sold by all J >ruggists. AD Ideal Leader. rtorman is an ideal leader for the na tional Democracy, provided the disci ples of Jefferson are not particular as to which direction they take.—Lowell (Mass.) Mall. A Surgical Operation is always dangerous—do not submit to the surgeon's knife until you have tried DeWitt's Witch Hazel Salve. It will cure when every thing else fails—it has done this in thousands of cases. Here is one of them: I suffered from bleeding and protruding piles for twenty years. Was treated by diflerent specialists and used many remedies, but obtained no re lief until I used DeWitt's Witch lla/.le ISalve. Two boxes of this salve cured me eighteen months ago and 1 have not had a touch of the piles since. lf. A.Tis dale,Summerton, N. C. For Blind, Bleed ing, Itching and Protruding Files no remedy equals DeWitt's Witch Hazel Salve. Sold by all Druggists. land intends to mate a tour or the west, but It would not be worth hla while to come west of the Mississippi river. He would, as the Democratic candidate, come nearer carrying Mis souri for Roosevelt than any other matt could possibly do.—Salt Lake Trlbuna The Foundation of Health. Nourishment is the foundation ot health, lite—strength. Kodol Dyspepsia Cure is the one great medicine that enables the stomach and digestive organs to digest, assimilate and transform all foods into the kind ofblood that nourishes the ner ve* and feeds the tissues. Kodol lavs the foundation lor health. Nature does the rest. Indigestion, Dyspepsia and all disorders of the stomach and digestive organs are cured by the use of Kodol. Sold by all Druggists. Rellslon Enriches Life. Religion satisfies because it enriches life. It opens the way Into a new kind of joy. It brings into play a new rai.ge of activity. Thus Jesus suid that he came that we might have life and that we might have it more abun dantly. He came to widen out the cir cle of human appreciation. The pur pose of religion thus considered Is akin • .with the purpose of all progress. It la to teach new truth, to awaken new aspiration, to develop new possibilities, to round out more fully the natural life of man.—Rev. George Hodges, Pitts burg. Catarrh of the Stomach. When the stomach is over loaded; when food is taken into it that tails to digest, it decays and inflames the mucuos mem brane, exposing the nerves, and causing the glands to secrete mucin, instead of the natural juices of digestion. This is called Catarrh of the Stomach. For years I tuffered with Catarrh of the Stom ach, caused by indigestion. Docors and medicines failed to benefit me until I used Kodol Dyspepsia (Jure.—J. R. Khea,Cop pell. Tex. Sold by all Druggists. NERVOUS DYSPEPSIA ITS CAUSE AND CURE. Overwork any organ and it gives out— the stoiptch is no exception. Ask it to digest anything, everpthing, at any time in half the time required, and like any over driven horse, it balks. Nature in tended th* stomash should have regular hours. A time to work, a time to rest — and when you break up this habit, you upset the whole arrangement. The stom ach nervei become exhaueted, the glands refuse to act, the food does not digest— lies heavy, ferments and repeats. I here :s pain, gas forms, bloating occurs, the neart becomes irregular and a nervous, irritable feeling sets in. This is nervous dyspepsia and Dr. A. W. Chase s Nerve Fills its cure. Mrs. J. L. Johnson of 720 N. Main st. Scranton, Pa., says: "Dr. A. W. Chase's Nerve Pills are ex cellent. I was dizy and nervous and the stomach digesting its food badly. This condition induced a feeling of debility and lassitude. Hearing ol the Nerve Pills I got a box and the result has certainly 4>cen ffne. They gave the stomach stren gth to handle the food properly, the ner vousness and dizziness disappeared com pletely and my general strength and vig or returned consequently I am pleased nnd glad to recommend the medicine." MJca box at dealers or Dr. A. W. Chase 7'ledicine Co., Buffalo, N. Y. See that portrate and signature ol' A. W. Chase M. D. are on every pockoge. Kliode iHluud Agricultural College. The recent election of Sir. Kenyon L. Butterfieid of Michigan to the presi dency of the Rhode Island Agricultural college bodes well for that institution. During the past three years he has pursued work in the University of Michigan. His work in the university has been of such a high order that dur ing this year he was appointed lecturer In rural sociology, a new course ottered in the university. He believes in thor ough technical training for the farmer, and it is understood that the Rhode Is land board will give-liim full latitude to carry out his ideas in this direction, lie is withal an enthusiastic worker in the grange. rraelleal Co-operation. Some time ago, when prices for beef were so high as to be almost prohibi tive, the members ol' some of the granges in Berkshire county, Mass., co-operated in defying the high prices of the meat trust and getting their own fresh meat at a low price. Some of tlie farmers raising young stock agreed to gether to kill off stock as it was needed to supply meat, taking turns and dis tributing to each other and to other members of the grange at a lower price than meat was selling for in the mar ket. Two important grange ideas were thereby illustrated—fraternity and co operation. "Watch the IliixUet." Carnegie in his "Empire of Business ' sums up the conditions of success for the farmer as well as the business man. He says:"The man who fails is the man who scatters his capital, which means that he has also scattered his brains. He has investments in this, that and the other tiling. Don't put all your eggs in one basket is all wrong. I tell you, put all your eggs in one bas ket a&d then watch that basket." The secretary of the Pennsylvania state grange, J. T. Ailmau, says that ii: many sections the notion still prevails that the grange is the avowed enemy of the middlemen. This Is not correct. We oppose only a surplus of middle men, endeavoring to shorten as much as possible the route from the pro ducer to the consumer. The advisability of organizing a na tional grange life insurance company Is under consideration by a committee appointed by the national grange to report at its next meeting. The com mittee consists of W. K. Thompson. South Carolina; ti. S. Ladd. Massachu setts; N. J. Bachelder, New Hampshire. There is a possibility that the na tional grange may meet at Niagara Falls next November. The grange adapts Its functions to the everyday work of its members. Keep up the agitation for grange halls to be owned by the grange. The grange tnkes hold of the farmer's very life and essential interests. — 1 - I^^ Capital and Surplus, $450,000.00 Money in Bank gives you a feeling of security, enables you to take advantage of opportunities for making more money lifts you out of the rut, makes you a manly, independent man. We pay 3 per cent, interest on savings. You can Bank by Mail — Write for the booklet telling how. JLA CKA WANNA winingsasrltsiaiiiMKiim COMPANY 404 Lackawanna Avenue SCRANTON, PA. SwT INCIIESTER I"I "NEW RIVAL" FACTORY LOADED SHOTGUN SHELLS Give these shells a thorough trial, and you will find them to be as nearly perfect as experience, ingenuity, brains and equipment can make them. They are made with the Winchester patent corrugated head, which has made Winchester "Leader" and "Repeater" Smokeless Powder Shells so popular and satisfactory. Winchester Factory-Loaded " New Rival " Shells are thoroughly waterproof, and are loaded by exact machinery with the standard brands of powder, shot and wadding which makes them uniform and reliable. Shoot Tbem and You'll Shoot Well ISMTaIKs Cn .Advertising [ By CharlesAustin Bates. ' j t: No. 51. ( Every advertiser should keep close watch of his daily and weekly sales, lie should make a schedule of last year s sales, by days, weeks and months, and enter against it He should put a got)d, strong ad in the Tuesday evening and Wednes- \\ I day morning papers and keep up [I ! jgWk? LltaSiflllfllM —I pay. Don't merely'occupy your "space." Don't say that you will When youeet dicktr with use three inches double for the year, but make up your mind to beat last year's business, if you have to use twenty inches double. Business is as susceptible to good advertising as the human body > is to good medicine. You jfFd ( l° n 1 sa y : "Now, I'll spend m!''' $50 for doctors' bills and more"—not a bit of it. When ' jfiffi* ''''/l ' U on '*^| c ' ter "Dont understand your medicine like a little 'eau 1 unlimited'ami ,lian whhout inquiring the /' miscuous adrer cOSt. It COStS Something, of ' course, but it cannot be helped. It doesn't do any good to grumble about it. The question is whether you want to get well or not. That's the way business and advertising should be considered. Don't understand that I mean to advocate unlimited and promiscuous advertising—l do not, any more than I would advise you to fill yourself up with a lot of medicine when you don't need it. Judicious advertising may mean two inches or two pages. It is bad to use too much space, but it is worse to use too little. Cot>v>~ii'!i!. Charles Austin Bates New York'. FIRST NATIONAL BANK HUGHBSVILLE, CAPITAL STOCK, SSO 000 I DeWITT B0DINE » President. C. WILLIAM WODDROP, Vice Pres. W. C. FRONTZ, Cashier. SURPLUS AND NET PROFITS, _ DIRECTORS: $50,000 ~ DeAVitt Bodine, C. Wm. "Woddrop, Peter Reader, Transacts a General Jeremiah Kelley, "William Frontz, W. C. Frontz, Banking Business. James K. Bonk. John C. Laird, E.P. Brenholtz, Accounts of Individ- Peter Frontz, John P. Bake, Daniel* ll.Poust, uals and Firms Solic-, John Bull. led. YOUR KIDNEYS "UTI Unless they are, good health is impossible. I Every drop of blood in the body passes through and is filtered by healthy kidneys every three minutes. Sound H kidneys strain out the impurities from the blood, diseased kidneys do not, hence you are sick. FOLEY'S KIDNEY ■ CURE makes the kidneys well so they will eliminate the poisons from the blood. It removes the cause of the ■ many'diseases resulting from disordered kidneys which have allowed your whole system to become poisoned. H Rheumatism, Bad Blood, Gout, Gravel, Dropsy, Inflammation of the Bladder, Diabetes and Bright's Disease, H and many others, are all due to disordered Kidneys. A simple test for Kidney disease is to set aside your urine ■ in a bottle or glass for twenty-four hours. If there is a sediment or a cloudy appearance, it indicates that your ■ kidneys are diseased, and unless something is done they become more and more affected until Bright's Disease H or Diabetes develops. H FOLEY'S KIDNEY CURE is the only preparation which will positively cure all forms of Kidney and I Bladder troubles, and cure you permanently. It is a safe remedy and certain in results. H If You are a sufferer, take FOLEY'S KIDNEY CURE at once. It will make you well* I Some Pronounced Incurable Had Lumbago and Kidney Trouble I Mr. G. A. Stillson, a merchant of Tampico, 111., writes: "FOLEY'S Edward Huss, a well known business man of Salisbury, Mo., writes: KIDNEY CURE is meeting with wonderful success. It has cured "I wish to say for the benefit of others, that 112 was a sufferer from ■ some cases hcte that physicians pronounced incurable. I myself am lumbago and kidney trouble, and all the rcaudies I took gave me no H able to testify to its merits. My face today is a living picture of health relief. I began to take FOLEY'S KIDNB. CURE, and after the use of H ■ and FOLEY'S KIDNEY CURE has made it such." three bottles lam cured." H I Two Sizes, 60 Gents and SI.OO. I SOLD AND RECOMMENDED BY «UNMIV James McFARLANE, Laporte, Dr. OHAS. D. VOOftHEES, Souestown, £a. THE CENTRAL State Normal^School, LOCK HAVEN,V PA. J. R. FLICKINOEB, Principal. FALL TERM BEGINS, September 7,1903. The school year just completed lias been most successful. Larger numbers, higher standards and more complete equipment, are the hest evidences of prosperity. Free Tuition to Prospective Teachers. I)epartments of Music, Elocution, Business, College Preparatory. Admits to "Wellesley and State in stitutinos on certificate. As a training school for teachers it is unsurpassed. Expenses lower than elsewhere. Address for catalogue, THE PRINCIPAL. State Normal School East Stroudsburg, Pa. This POPULAR StateJ Institution is located,in the most beautiful, picturesque and healthful part of the State. It is in the GREAT SUMMER RESORT RICO ION of the BLUE RIDGE and POCONO MOITNTAINo and within two miles ot the famous Delaware Water (tap resort. Tuition Absolutely Free. The total expensesjfor Boarding, Furn ished rooms and all other expenses only #3.50 per week. In addition to the regu lar Departments in the Normal proper, we have a line COLLEGE PREPARA TORY DEPARTMENT. We can save you one full year in your College Prepara tion. Departments of MUSIC, ELOCU TION, ART-DRAWING. PAINTING IN CHINA and WATER COLORS, taught l>y Specialists. A New Recitation Building. is now in course'Jof erection, whichj'will give a tine Laboratory and fourteen other recitation rooms. A. Fine Gymnasium ! Our own ELECTRIC LIGHT PLANT'! A Superior Faculty ! Backward Pupils COACHED FREE. Nearly FIVE HUN DRED PUPILS ENROLLED this year. FALL TERM|OPENB SEPT. 8,1902. For Catalogue and particulars address GEO. P. BIBLE, A. M. Principal. POLEYSKIDNEYCURE Make* Kidneys and Bladder Right pairp,AN^s CAS or GASOLINE ENGINES. There are many Gas and Gasoline Engines and ONE "FAIRBANKS" Some resemble it in construction, others in name BUT THERE IS ONLY ONE FAIRBANKS ENGINE. Engines that excell in quality and moderate in cost. Vertical from one to ten horse power. Horizontal three horse power up- THE FAIRBANKS COMPANY, 701 Arch St., Philadelphia. CHARLES Li. WING, Agent, Laporte. Summer Normal School. The Sullivan County Summer Normal School will open at Du sliore Monday, .Inly 13, 1903, and continue 111 session four weeks. TUITION. The tuition for the term of four weeks is $5.00. Students not in attendance the entire term will be charged $1.50 per week. INSTRUCTORS. Prof. J. E. K. Hillgore will instruct in English, History, and Civics. Prof. E. F. Hill will instruct in j Mathematics. Supt. M. R. Black will instruct in work designed for prospective teachers. A special instructor for the usual course of lectures is yet to be en gaged. To Teachers and Prospective Teachers: The Summer Normal School will provide a thorough review in the branches of study in which teach ers will be examined for provision al certificates and will aim to be helpful to both experienced and in experienced teachers. Bring with you the text-books you have on the subjects you expect to study. M. R. BLACK, County Superintendent. ONE MINUTE On® Minute Cough Cure does not pass immedi ately Into the stomach, but lingers In the throat, che* and lungs, producing the following results: (0 Relieves the cough. (2) Makes the breathing easy. (3) Cuts out the phlegm. (4) Draws out the Inflammation. (5) Kills the germs (microbes) ofdlseaM. (6) Strengthens the mucous membranes. (7) Clears the head. (6) Relieves the feverish conditions. *.9) Removes every cause of the cough and th» strain on the lungs. (10) Enables the lungs to contribute pure life giving and life-sustaining oxygen to the blood. Cures Croup and all Cough, Lung and Bronchial Affection*. COUGH CURE Praparad by K. O. DaWITT * 00., OHIOAQO
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers