Saved from the Surgeon's Knife No organs are of frreoter importance to the human body than ths Kidney. Their duty is to sift and strain the poisonous and waste matter from the blood, and if they fail to do this, the trouble shows In the nervous system, and even in the brain. Your life is at stake when there are pains in the small of your back when yon are compelled to get tip at night to urinate when the passing of water causes scalding pain when there Is a sediment in the urine In the vessel, or when it appears white or milky. When so afflicted, you can conquer the trouble with Dr. David Kennedy's Favorite Remedy, the greatest medicine that civilization has ever known for curing Kidney, Bladder, Blood and Liver Diseases. James Lettice, of Canajoharie, N. Y., tells of his wonderful cure: " Some years ago I was attacked with pains in my back ana sides tnni were zrs-gi TUt tvtm fearful. I could not con- "s>f&SgsB trol my kidneys, and V"gft-flgHA what came from me was p-Jv-i.-i ' filled with mucus and blood. V An Albany doctor was to vS-si -A perform an operation upon me, and said my home doctor could take care of me after. I saw an advertisement of Dr. David Kennedy's Favorite Remedy, which seemed to fit my case, so I decided to try that before I . . v. ... it,- , : r i ... Its use. When I had taken about two bottles the flow from the bladder grew cleaner, and the pain stopped, and In o short time I was saved from the surgeon's knife, and am now well." Favorite Remedy also cures Eczema, Scrofula, Rheumatism, Dyspepsia and Constipation. For Female Troubles it is unequaled. It is sold for (i.oo a battle at alt drug stores. fljPSflf ROff?!" fT'tf'f In order that sufferers may be convinced of OUinj i, UUitii, 1 1 VV I the curative virtues of Favorite Remedy, a free sample bottle will bo sent, prepaid, to those who send their full postoftico address to the D. David Kennedy Corporation, Rondout, N. Y. It is necessary to say that you saw the advertisement in this paper if you wish to take advantage of this genuine and liberal offer. Send today. k'YA'M emjuM'ui'i'iU'-"""" '.!'C'j Skm IMPERIAL QUICK TIME RANGE All Baking Records broken, 278 Loaves of Bread Baked in Seven Hours with but 18 Pounds of Coal. SWINTON & CO., Successors to BROWN Wo offer n line of .UNSURPASSED Our point is thnt you need not go nwny from homo to supply all your needs, or to secure bargains. Wo expect to satisfy you in both particulars. DRY GOODS, new an.t stylish. GROCERIES, fresh and good. HARDWARE, BOOTS, SHOES, AND CLOTH ING. Any tiling in any lino at bottom prices. To accomplish this end we have adopted a new system. All our prices are fixed on a basis of cash payment. This obviates the necessity to allow a margin for bod debts and interest. To accommodate responsible parties we cheer fully open monthly accounts, and expect prompt payment monthly, as our prices will not enable us to carry accounts longer. Statements rendered the first of every month, and if paid within three days from date of bill, a cash discount of 2 is allowed. Tho same discounts givon on all cash pur chases exceeding f 1.00. Goods sent out will bo C. O. D. unless otherwise previously arranged. T. ARMSTRONG & CO., Brown's Building, BL0 "CllLARETI o nil clnl fur tliea and lire a truly wutidurful lueilitniu. Ihaveuficu wiblititl lor it medicine jjlu&tuui u take mid at la.t b-ve found il in Cu.nca.rwl. biuce Utklnp llit-io. tuf blood bua bctu purlUrd and wy cniiinlex luii bat liu liruved wonderfully und I ii;el mud. btMWr tt uvorj Nk." Mao. tiALLlk, I. baLLAiitf. i. Jllrtii, Tttuu. CANDY CATHARTIC 1 ii- wV- eVfi t ft ninu Pltant. Palatable. Potnt. Tat Good. Do Good, ,i'ver bic.un. Weakun. ir Gni. 10c, 3m:. tlUc. ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... SUrlies Mm.t Vmpm,. .leN. lrl. S.w lt. UK nTfl P 1 f Hold and k:h; anlPHd br Bit drng- I V'bAW gi.u w ( lili iuUsuco iisl-H. -: - rrfo:. m 1 - l VA-5sj.iV- - ap- PORT JERVIS, N. Y. & ARMSTRONG. Jiew Spring Goods, AND COMPLETE. Milford, Pa. Stoves and Ranges. THE Round Oak For Wood and Coal. Best Heater and Fuel Baver iu the Country. New Era Radiators, Two Fira In One. HAKUWAKE. C.TLEKY, TIN, AGATE TIN ROOFINOANO PLUMBING A SPECIALTY. Jobbing promptly attended to. T. R. Julius Klein, BHOAD KTIiEKT, MIUTOKU, I'A lie Opens the State Campaign In Chester County. REPLIES TO MR. WANAMAKER. The Chairman Thoroughly Refutes the Charges Macta BAYS THE P4.BTT IS ALL EIGHT. Declare! That the Millionaire Ex-Postmaster General Is Betraying the Party Which Made Him Rich, and la Introducing or Attempting to Introduce Systematic Cor ruption in Politics to an Extent Never Before Beard of in Pennsylvania. (Special Correspondence.) West Chester, Oct. 3. Before one of the most representative and attentive audiences ever gathered anywhere State Chairman John I". Elkin opened the Republican campaign In Chester county In a manner which will not Boon be forgotten and which met with the most anient reception. He had pre viously accepted an Invitation to meet Mr. Wanamaker In Joint public debate, which the millionaire orator dndgnd. and naturally devoted much of his at tention to the letter's latest public ut terance. In the course of his speech Chairman Elkln said: Last week I received an invitation from the Republican executive com mittee of your neighboring county of Delaware to meet Mr. Wanamaker In Joint discussion and refute before his face and in the presence of an intelli gent assemblage the slanders he has been casting on our party and people. I promptly accepted this invitation. It was my earnest hope that Mr. Wana maker would have the courage of his so-called convictions and meet me on the same platform to dlscuHs these Questions. For purposes of his own, however, and In my opinion, because he dared not have tho fallacies and falseness of his statements exposed in public, he refused to accept that Invi tation. For this reason, If for no other, I de sire here and now to reply to Mr. Wanamaker In tone and language about which It will not be possible to have any misunderstanding. The po litical disappointments suffered by Mr. Wanamaker have preyed upon his sen sitive mind to such an extent that he has gone politically mad. John Wana maker Is the Agulnaldo of Pennsyl vania politics. The Republicans of our state stand In the position of Dew ey at Manila. They have sailed over mines of falsehood am? torpedoes of misrepresentation. They have con fronted and put to silence the most formidable batteries of their declared enemies who openly display a hostile flag, and rfiey will not hesitate now to make a submarine fleet of the little fili bustering squadron, led by Mr. Wana maker in the rear, and seeking to dis guise its purposes under Republican colors. COMPARED WITH AGUINALDO. As in the case of the Insurgent leader of the Filipinos, the Republican party has made Mr. Wanamaker all that he is politically and most of what he is commercially. It has furnished his arsenal. ItB policy has been the means of equipping him with the vast wealth which he is now lavishly using to dis rupt the party because the sovereign will of the people decided adversely to his ambitions for holding ofTlce. Up until that event, onlv a few months ago, if he was not satisfied with th conduct of the party he made no sign of dissent. During all his last term of office, holding one of the most in fluential In the gift of the president, he willingly, eagerly, followed the ad vice and guidance of the very same Re publican leadership which he now de nounces as unspeakably bad and so dangerous to the welfare of the com monwealth that the party must bo broken down and the Btate handed over to the Democrats rather than it should be continued. He goes further even than Agulnaldo, The latter onlv threatena to betray those who have made him powerful in order that he shall have absolute ln dependence for himself and his follow era. Mr. Wanamaker demands not only Independence, but domination. After being fairly and decisively defeated in open convention, with every contested question generously decided in his fa vor, after free and open primaries, he challenges the verdict of the majority and offers his alliance and the final weapons with which the Republican party has equipped him to the Demo crats, the Swailowites. to any and ev ery political organization which prom ises him a chance to prove his ingratl tude and take revenge for his disap pointed ambition to rule the party councils and have his choice of Its of' flees. Listen to what Mr. Wanamaker says: "Almost two generations of our people have grown up in the atmosphere of corrupt public life and they have be come accustomed to believe that It la not worth while to try to change It. Strange as It may seem, colleges, clergymen, teachers, doctors and rail road presidents, all Interested in places, privileges or appropriations, have be come mixed up In It." That Is to say, according to his ideas, tfee colleges, churches, clergymen teachers, doctors and railroad presi dents have become mixed up in a cor rupted public life. A more outrageous, unjust, untruthful assertion has never been printed aa coming from the lips of any Pennsyivanian. What a dark and dismal hope there la fur our people If, aa Mr. Wanamaker says, two gener atlons of the citizens of this great com monwealth have grown up In a corrupt public life. CORRUPT PUBLIC LIFE. It Is an Insult to the Intelligence and moral standing of more than six mil lions of aa high minded and honorable citizens as ever lived on the face of the earth to say that they have been mixed up in a corrupt public life. He charges In express terms that the colleges, churches, clergymen, teachera, doctors and railroad presidents have become mixed up In what he alleges to be corrupt public life. This a fair aampl of the charges he is making against the Republican party. I challenge him te name a college in Pennsylvania that la mixed up in corruption of any kind What must the University of IVnnsyl ania. old Lafayette, Lehigh university, Bucknell, Btate College, Washington aud Jcfterjva. Drove City. Gettysburg, Franklin and Marshall and hosts fti other Institutions of learning, which are he proud boast of our people, think when they rend thnt the cnllegeR of Pennsylvania are chnrged with being jnlxed up In public corruption? Thnt statement is too mnllclous to need re futation. What will the youth and young men of this state think when they read that the colleges in which they are recelv- ng their education are charged with being mixed up with public corruption. It is a reflection on every college, presi dent and college professor and college student in the state. He also charges that the churches have become mixed up in public corruption. I defy him to name a church from the New Jersey boundary to the Ohio line that has be come mixed up In a corrupted public Ife. He cannot and dare not name a single instnnce that will be a Justifica tion of this charge. He also makes the same chnrge against the clergymen of the state. Will he name a single clergy man who has become so mixed up? Of course he cannot name a single In stance of this character. He makes the same charge against the teachers, the doctors and the railroad presidents of Pennsylvania. I ask him to name a teacher, a doctor or a railroad president that has become Implicated In any pub lic corruption. Unless he names one his assertion should arouse the Indigna tion of every citizen of the common wealth. MR. WANAMAKER'S VOTE. What was Mr. Wanamaker doing during the past two generations when he alleges this corruption was growing up In our public life? A generation of man Is said to be about 32 years, and two generations would almost measure the life of Mr. Wanamaker. Where was his vote during all this time? If this public corruption has been growing for so great a length of time, Is It not re markable that Mr. Wanamaker only discovered It after he wns defeated In his aspirations to be elected United Slates senator? Is It not a peculiar fact that the light only begnn to dawn In his mind after he had suffered two de feats at the bands of the Republican party? The man who would quietly sit In his olMce surrounded by the goods, wares and merchandise of a great store, building up a princely fortune, knowing hat such practices were obtaining and falling to raise his voice against the nlqulty, is as guilty of outraging pub lic confidence as the man who is en gaged In such practices. Mr. Elkln took up the act of assem bly providing for the payment of Inter est by banks having state money on deposit, and proved by the dates and pages of the official records that, while he himself hnd drawn the bill, and the Wanamaker faction deFerved no credit for Its passage other than that a ma jority of every party and faction of a party voted for It, not a single vote. Democratic or Republican, was cast against it. He also paid attention to the dis puted question of who was responsible for the defeat of Colonel Stahle for con gress In the York, Adams and Cumber land district, and scored probably the most dramatic point of the evening by producing the affidavit of one of the candidates for the legislature In Cum berland county that Stahle was taken out of the flght in pursuance of a di rect and explicit dicker, whereby the two candidates from Cumberland coun ty were required to pledge themselves in writing to vote for Wanamnker for United States senator.He brought down the house by producing the maker of the affidavit on the stage to substan tiate his statement personally. Contin uing he said: A NEWSPAPER CONTROVERSY. Mr. Wanamaker has been preaching the doctrine of purity in politics throughout the state during the past year. He desires to Impress on the minds of our people that he is mak ing an attempt to lift politics onto higher plane. I have no doubt that ha has been able to fool some very con scientious and deserving people with his suggestions, but those of us who are familiar with the methods of hi campaign managers are fully convinced that his entrance Into the political arena has done more to commercialize the politics of Pennsylvania than all the other influences combined. As an Instance of the higher plane to which Mr. Wanamaker is going to elevate the politics of our state, It will be In teresting to note the controversy be tween the Galeton Dispatch and the Potter Enterprise, two papers which bowed to the peculiar Influence with which Its managers conduct a cam paign, and Is a pretty good evidence of the high plane to which Mr. Wana maker Is going to elevate the politics of this great commonweath. Here is the story as told by the papers above referred to: 'ine uaieion uispntcn cans up a "po litical acrobat." Let s see. Huyden. it Is not so very long ago that you took, in our office and In our presence, a nice roll of antl-tjuay money and promised upon your word and honor to be faithful to the cause aernist boss rule and corruption, You took the money, you young Sunday school hypocrite, and how much you value your "word of honor" the columns of your paper show. You sweet scented bird, to talk about "acrobats." Until Sullivan lifted you out you wined like sick cat for money money from any source, for which you were willing to promise anything. Hotter Knterprise. The editor of The Enterprise, who seems familiar with the above case, forgot to Btate all the fncta of the contract, which he claims is broken, ranking the editor of The Dispatch an Ignoble iiur. First and foremoHt, we supported Wnnamaker and a few of his followers who were candi dates for Humiliations, several Issues be fore we were approached - by AVana maker's lieutenants in this county, who proffered us financial assistance, with the understanding that we were to support Wanamaker and els candidates until the nominations, which we did to the best of our ability. This wui consistent with our own views of the political situation at that time. At the primaries the whole Wanamaker force waa honorably defeat ed. 1 lie candidates numlnated are m of unimpeachable characters, capable and loyal workers In the party three potent factors In their receiving toe nominations. How well the coterie of Wanumuker fol lowers performed their part of the eon tract in the case they well know. Wt fully performed our contruct, which la mure than the defeated faction can say, The "roll" of anti-Quay money that Ttie Enterprise claims that we received In bis office was a widow's mite as compared with the fabulous sum The Enterprise editor said that he was to receive. We are ready at any time to accept the bal ance due on the contract. Office hours from 7 a. m. to 10 p. m. Guluton L la- patch. The above furnishes a glimpse of the purer politics" Introduced Into Potter county by the man who boasted he would "rather have $1U0 In money to carry Pot ter county thun all the newspapers In It." Of course. Wanamaker never was guilty of "subsidizing the press." Potter County Journal. FLAGS AND PATRIOTISM. Mr. Wanamaker. for some reason not entirely apparent, aaya "the Quay ma chine la cunningly campaigning with books wrapped up In flags and plcturea ot our honored president. A man might carry a thousand Hags and not be a pa- CONTINUED 0 ON 4th PAUE. A LE980N FROM THE I OSS. Wlmtuvnr (lse inny lo wild (if tlio Sjnnlnrtls tliorn Is omi distinction whirli tlioy srtmi untitled, tlmt of VHii!! instinctively above such ex hibitions of olwctMiity nnd irof:inity s nro too froqnontly displayed by ninny Ainericiins. Uro- Kennnii, the cidobrntcd Russiitn traveler, ro- itos in a Into number ol tlio Out ookhowlio visited nnd inspected Morro Cnsllis at Snting'). In one of tlio rooms which had been iilas- ored lie found many sketches ilirases and caricatures on tin; whitewashed ",'iills and so cleverly was some of the work done that ho was deceived, in reachinp to tnko down b newspaper apparently linur- ns on n nail, by finding tlmt it was only n skeloh drawn on tho plaster with n lead pencil. Ho nowhero ound in all this work of tho rude Spanish soldiers any traco or evi- denco sf any prolanity, or obscene or indecent allusions. Could we foul safe in asserting that similar places in America would bo free from any such disgusting efforts, when we too frequently find evi dences of n debasement of mind in this 1 particular in public places, marked on buildings and oven chalk ed on tho sidewalks? Truly, in thi;'. respect our boys and young men may learn fronijlho Dons a lesson in lnoralily and decency. HIGH SORT OF ANNOYANCE?. A strong protest was made by the Free-Traders when the Dingloy Tar- ff imposed a duty on the wearing np parel of returning tourists purchas ed in foreign countries. They said t wns potty and annoying and the revenue that would he derived from fc would not amount to enough to pay for the collection. Tho record shows that dunug tho hint year un der that head if:ii;i, 518 was paid, as against $S7,425 the previous year. It might have het;u annoying to the wealthy tourists who paid this snug sum, hut Uncle S.un is that much richer, and none of H came out of tho pockets of tho laboring people. Let us have more such nnnoytiiiccs. Komo (N. Y.) "Citizen." -LET IT GO Otf. It has been the Free-Trade conten tion that other countries will not buy from us, or at least will buy less, if our Protective Tariff reduces tho amount wo buy from them Free-Traders claimed that the Din- gley Tariff is that kind of a measure and must have that kind of nn effect. But wo are selling more to foreign countries to-day than ve ate purchasing trom tnein lint what tho Republicans promised in 18il(i. Let tho good work go on, keep tho Republicans in power and en largo our foreign trade, and lot the nation t row rich by reason of th prosperity that comes to us though economic politics. ANOTHER CHEAP EXCURSION TO CAKBONDALE FA. On Wednesday, Oct. 12, the Erie will Kivo tho iou)lt) of Milford and vii inity another o)frtunity totuke a rido over the fittnous Delnwnre & Hudson 'iruvity Road and to visit Carh'indalo, P.t., nt tho low r.ifco of 1. for the round trip. Train will leave Port Jorvis at 9.15 a.m. "You should live near heaven," said the preacher to tho editor. "I know it," replied the editor; "hut those mountain lots como too high," PBI0E3 AT MILFORD. Flour 5.23. to S.r.Opor 1)1,1. 15utter 1H .22 " lb. Ekjjs 18 .23 " do,. Feed 95 " cwt. Oats 35 " hu. Corn 50 " " Ikloal 90 " " A FAMOUS SCHOOL IN A FAMOUS LOCATION, The East STiiouisnuii(i, Pa , Nor. mal offers sufuuior educational ad vantages. Hkaltiiful and Pictukksquk Lo cation in the resort region of tho fctato. liciLDlNiiS new and modern. Ktudknt's Room furnished with Bul'skls Oari'ETS. No other school provides Buch luxurions homo com forts. Tub Bkst Boaiumno. The Most reasonable rates. The First Nor mal in the State to introduce Plain and fancy sewing. CoI.LKUE PltKl'AKATOUY, MUSIC and Elocution Any Dkpaktmksts. Writeat onoo fora catalogue, froo. Winter term opens Jan'y 2, 1899. Address, Uko. P. Bidi.k, A.M., Principal. NOTICE All luiutliiR, fislilns or other trvKiu,gintr ou tho pri-tniat- uf thu undcr-uiKni-d, in Dinniau Township, on Kay niDiiiUkill and Dwarfkill L'ru-ka, 1 for biuili'U undi-r penalty nf the law. l;H.S J. lilllLEAU, Dinirmnn Twp., N. HoiLKAii, May 17, laus. Ju.itrn F llolLKAU . Doa't Tubwra SU aud Sinok You Lift Ar. To quit tobacco easily od forever, be niaff neiio, lull o( life, Derve ud viuur, tuke No-To-U.LC. lue wontler-wurker, tbut mukus weak aiun blra-ig. All drut-'isld, 50c or II. Cure tfuurua teed ltooklct uud Biunijie freu. Address Sterling itciueuy Co, Ckicuo or New Yoi'lfc NEW YORK WEEKLY TRIBUNE THE PJIESS, v,uo, I'A., THE N" V "WEEK LY TIMIllTTSTF, h,,s"" Agricultural Department llll-in. 1. MLLMJl Ihll'llMi oftho highest merit, nil Impor tant news of the Nation nnd World, comprehensive and reliable mnrket reports, able editorials, Interest lug short stories, scientific nnd 1111 chnnlcal information, Illustrated fashion articles, humorous pictures, and is entertaining and instructive to every meiu- T1IE JMJESS P'v1" yon all the lornl .1 II lj .7 close touch With vour tlio village, informs you as to local prices and prospects for Hie year, and Is a bright visitor at your home and fireside. Send nil DO YOU EXPEPJ TO A. D. BROWN and SON, Manufacturers and dealers in all kinds of Contractors Estimates made tion given and work guaranteed. OFFICE, Brown's Building, Milford, Pa. COR i ee e TH s W & G. MITCH MILFORD, PA. It is not a CURE-ALL, but it is One hundred and Cored J 00 cases of TIKO fa a medicine taken lM hll.AU,Y, the only method by which A RHEUMATISM can be successfully treated. It cures the CAUSE, and therein lies Its remarkable success. Its price is $1,00 per bottle, or three bottles for $2.50, f and it your Druggist bas not got it, ALL CHARCES PAID, Address,. SlAlinOAO TIME TABLE. Corrected to Date. Sullil Pullman tniins to BufTiil.i, NiuR aril KalL-4, t'hautnuquii L,uku, Clvi-luml, ChicH'i and (.'iiu-iniiftti. Tn-ki'ts fn s.ilc! at I'ni't Jervis to nil puintH in the West and Soul hwi'Bt lit lnwnr ruU-s than via any other lii'strulasd linu. T HA INS NOW Leavk Pout Fou-own. JKIIVIS AS E AS TWA UI. No. 12, Daily xpri'MS " 10, Daily Kxprt;srt " ll, Daily K-M'i'pt ;?unluy. " as, " ' ' " tiini, Sunday Only " UN, Daily Kxi-ept Sunday. ' i, Daily Way Train " 3t, Daily Kx vpt Sunday . " 2, Daily 10s i t isa 14 (V.'u, Sunday Only u 8, Daily Kx,m-ss " H, Sunday only ' Daily 1Cxi:i'jC Sunday - " 14, Dally WEST W AUD 11 24 A M. r .'it " it :io " 7 45 " 7 45 " lu II" " I S 15 P M. ;t :m " 4 25 ' 4 ;in " 5 2d " 5 45 " II .VI ' 10. 1 " No. 8, Dally Kxpn-sg 12 :) A.M. " 17, Daily Milk Train M l5 " " 1, Daily Kxprvss II M " " 11, Daily Kxr. pt Sunday . 12 In P. M. ' 5. Daily Kxpn-HS bw " " 27, Daily Kxui-pt Sunday . . 5 oil " " 7, Daily Express 10.15 " Trains leave Clmnilx'rs street, New York for Port Jervis on week days at 4 no. 7 15. ii no. 15. H 3D A M . loo, Son, 4 an, ii a i, 4 on, 7 ao, 7 at) aud W an, u 15 V. II tin, u la jr. a. On Suud lys, a. in 12 ao, 2 no, I. 1. Huberts, Cietierul liissriiKi.r Aeot, New Vurk, Ktlurate Your ItoweU With Cuscareta. (Jiiu.ly l 'at ii -it Lie, cure coiiHUimllnn forever, toe. ic. 1' ii. C- C. lull, drUiK1t,t: refund ujuuey. THE GREAT NATIONAL FAMILY NEWSPAPER. FOR FAKMKKS AND VILLAGERS, AMI VOI R FAVOH1TK IIOMK PArF.H. Both One Year For $1.05. news, political mid social, keeps yon In nciirhllors and friclwls. nn the farm nnd In 'or farm products, the condition of crops, newsy, wclcomo and indlspeusnblo weekly orders to Til E PK FSS, MI I. FORI), PA. BUILD? THEN SEE Lumber, and Builders. : personal atten TIRADE. New Dress and Fancy Goods, Cot ton and Outing and Ail-Wool Flannels, Ladies, Gents, Misses and Children's Underwear. Agents for the celebrated Gold Seal Overshoes; Floor and Table Oil Cloths, Fall Line of Boots and Shoes; Also Ladies and Misses' Shoes; Staple and Fancy Groceries, Hard ware, Paints, Oils, &c. THE WONDERFUL REMEDY FOR heumatism a Specific for RHEUMATISM. forty-four fcottles RHEUMATISM. it wui be sent to you, by rjepress, on receipt of price. miniuTAU iirniniitr nnnniuu n.i. l runiRiun mcuiui.ir. uumraru, uiuruu, mien, k fJew Harness Whips, Robes, Blankets Anil everything which portaina to to nn outfit for HORSES and CARRIAGES REPAIRING PROMPTLY DONE. Sue my .stock before iwchns' ig, Price is Right. F. HAFNER, The L. UarforilSt., Milford, Pr. ISM.- 'W- 3a - LABEL?. - Marks." wCqm rights. Thirty-one ye. active prctir. Opinion u to Taliiiity ftixi iaU'nUitility. Write for took ol Inhtnu-Vionsand referem. EDSON BKO& 91$ t 6trst. WaADlntftoo, D. C HI. itktlt-ntlT. oerMitflentlv. I na ot. CI, Uituallv ouren; 3 buici, St i4. ifurr.nlceii U ru rt. or we ruf uud nionrr, .Dr. David Kennedys Favorite Remedy Cunts all Kidney, Stomach t- ., AND LIVtK remuvt'i tin; Utniri' fur uj1jc u, -'t 'M 1 U M on l i.ervMiUii'iro8. ei ueiijuico -, J .1 1 1 & . tlmi, puritlcfc I to bluod, rt rf R.1 iti.ri'i li-'t m:uhoyd. -tfTkl U - '' i liiiki; . 1 iircUK -y-Tfl I fesJfc--'- UU. Ji J In h. iillfi. nurr 2 ti 1 incneurt-d Bujr Uk. j7il,v'ii'" WI (ifinttfut. who rZ i? I I C :wHitltourh foruitTuke tt Willi (
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers