I For coiirh-, c d ;, bronchitis, l asthma, weak throats, weaK i lungs, cMisuniptton, fake Ayers Clicrry Pectoral. Chcrrv V- 1 Alwnys fceep r bottle of it in 8 the nouse. we nave oeen saying this for CO years, and so have ir-e doctors. Thftro Avpt's rri"rry TVfMrrMin my fn-n';v f r V T' u, li tl t'"iit ni'-'Hr'Tio In t o Au-'.I. J kn w. f .1 U thrud inl lui.tf M i;1-. J. K. JJoReROfft, Wftltlum, Mbm. for I -f. - M.IIITTt .Jw-''-T ,TWW t 'a i ; y act ion of the tjowen is neces1 eary. Aid nature with Aver's f'lils It Wakes a Difference. '. . .. v 'V. ' . Pot I thonpht you your hotel af Jin ! around i lie cciier. Mr. Mrainuan- So ll Is. 1 didn't .y wlii'jh corner, did 1? Without Prejudice. SheYou oopsilnly wouldn't marry '-',ir! for her money, would you? He-1)1 course not. Neither would 1 ,.ave the heart to let her become nn Id maid innruly lieeause she had -:oney. T'nhitky at ranis and luck at love, Tls thua that philosophers view It. f eo, yon can bet I'm a bold male coquette, Hut blest it I ever knew it. Would-be Artitst--Did . you got any ' 'r.g for your Mat poem? nit o Foet -Vea. 1 pot many happy turns.-Harvard Lampoon. ?h8 6- 6SS UI'flCG prepared to do any : 'ad of ordinary Job Printing: 'j?rds, Posters, CooKlets, Envelopes, Hill Heads, Statements, ftots Heads, Letter Heads, Or whatever you may need. THE STOCK is of good quality, THE WORK MANSHIP neat, and the PRICE IS RIGHT. We respectfully solicit a trial order and will then leave y.'-u to jude of cur claims. IF - re; (1,3 proprietor of ft K 'tul or li'-nnliiipr-hou.so y !! i-::i -f liitrrvft is to Fill Your Rooms There is n hiver linKI for pilosis in li.-ooLlyn-Ki'v York than in any other city in America, lliht in the heart of thiit city the Brooklyn Dsiiy Eagle JtiK'.'ttaiua t w o large I : .fv f i. '. J I i J H L) jTCCtUS tli-.t d:s',i"..n.ti; litomlure en t five tieo advi.a .! r.h.iK liot..U, td-o. An ii;!. i:i (ho in iMRiiwtii.ti v.ttu hi-; freo hvttvau r rvh-o will t -uat i:i Fii!i- Yc.r ilc-j- i-'eiul at oio o f ii- iv,t s V ' I o V I ; i 1 r I t ' ' 1 till. l -.v '. i . t :i If 3f ) 7 J .'A I A POLISH HUMAN SUFF EP1N3. Medical Beliefs That Have Been Dl covered for Frightful Maladies. The current year promises to be Tio tnhie, nnrnK other thinirn, for the Im portant additions which it will make to medical science nnd to curative agen cies in ceneral. While the wonderful work accomplished by I'r. I.oren7. may perhaps hardly full within the class thus Indicated, the stimulus which the famous Viennese surgeon has iriven tn undouhledly help to mute the year ad ditionally memoiahle In the diminution of human Buffering. Among the. posi tive announcement!! of the year thus far in the direction of medical dlscov erica may he Included that of scrum cure for liny fever, made by Professor Ihinhnr, American head of the Ham burg Ilyplenic Institute. While hay fever is not to be rei: irded as a fatal disease, It la a most dlstressinn ma lady, and If anything can be devised to cure It a Rrrat boon will be conferred iinon the human race. (if far greater Importance Is the an nouncement that a probable cure has been discovered for blood poisoning, a malady which carries off a lare num ber of people each year, nnd which has hitherto resisted, In many cases, the best medical skill. Hecent experi ments with formalin in hospitals tn New York and elsewhere seem to show that this apency may be relied upon In many cases to arrest the process known as blood poisoning and effect permanent cure. If this proves to be the ca,se It will he, as one high medi cal authority has truly said, ''the most Important contribution to medical sci ence in this (feneration." Still Inter than these comes the news from Home, that Trofessor formalin, of I'avle, has discovered the microbe of hydrophobia. It has been the general impression that this disease was bring success fully treated with the remedy devised by Professor Koeh, but If thlft new discovery leads to something still more elllcaclous the world will have reason to be profoundly grateful. Hydropho bia Is one of the most frightful mala dies known to humanity, ami whatever tends to diminish its ravages or to de prive of its terrors will be of untold benefit. Leslie's Weekly. British Coal Mining. The question of how far the miner's employment In our coal mines is re latively unhealthy is one that has often been discussed by medical men, by coal owners, by the miners them selves and hy the general public. Sta tistics demonstrate that, while the Inbor in our coal mines Is not entitled to take rank as equally healthy with agricultural labor and other outdoor oecupalions. it is very far from being as unhealthy as the general public are disposed to believe. Another general idea is that the work of the-mina not only tends to shorten life, but to dis able men from following their occupa tion at a relatively early age. The Iron and Coal Trades Review has analyzed the figures on the question given in the recent census returns In the United Kingdom, and the result In both instructive and in some respects unexpected. In every district of importance a number of men are still following the laborious occupation of hewing, coal at the age of seventy-tlve years and upward In (Glamorgan seventy nine men of that age were employed under ground In the census year; in Durham, thirty-nine; in Northumberland, twen ty four; in Yorkshire, forty five, and in Lancashire, twenty six. Retween the agos of slxtyfive and seventy-five the numbers were naturally much larger. Of hewers so employed there were 711 in Flamorgan, f:!2 In Dur ham, 2,(8 in Northumberland, 5!W In Yorkshire and 4WI In Lancashire. This is not at all a bad record for an ago that is likely to average about seven ty, which is a period of life when com paratively few men can continue to follow exhausting and continuoug labor. Philadelphia Ledgor. Wonderful Clock Plant Pierre Van I.andlngham, florist at Purdue University, is the proud pos sessor of a plant known as the denriia dlum gyean, or better known to the botanic world as the "clock plant," on account of the peculiar action of the leves of the plant when placed in the sunlight. He obtained the plant several years ago from the national botanical gar dens In Washington. I'rom his oricl nal plant he has developed several others, and all are now in excellent growing condition. The clock plant, as It Is familiarly known, is peculiar in many rexpeeis It is a native of the Jungles of liorneo and iu Its native slate never ex -ecds three feet in height, while those in this country never come anywhere near this height, the ones at Purdue being only three inches talC The bl-Kuii of ihe plant is pea in xhape and lilac in color and is quite fragrant. The name of "clock plant" is de rived from the action of l lie sun on the leaves. The plant has thre leaves, one large one lu the ceuter and two smaller ones at the base of the large one. These when acted upon by the sun oscillate like the pendulum oi a ctocK, tne targe leal making a movement forward and Uu-k and the smaller ones iu the course of their os c,!llat;iig motion moving toward the latere h'tif. The former mak one complete movement to ami fro In 45 .seconds. 1 his time coricMiohd to the hour and minute hands ot tha cU k. 1 hits action ixcm ouly under (he circuiiiritancea luent loued above. Revised Version. It's a wi.,e ruiiroud that knows III a a pw Harvard Lampoon. F'lru tilk.ies fcttuik ti.ko Chuiri l.ei'..i'!i's i-ioiKiii'li ami Liver luh )". tiii'l a quick cure is c.-rt.iin, 1 t Ktlc hy Ji.ileh A; Si . n, Mutaaioras, u- oei;tl tt-rua lit 1'lku county .! !- i!ij Hi n!J 1.1 ,tl, in FORGOT HI9 WEDDING DAY. Bus Wall Street tvan Makes a Dssti for Chicago One Day Late. "We hear a good deal about the husj men of New York," said one of them, "but I have a friend In Wall Street who has broken the record. "I was In his apartment a few nlchtn neo nfler the theatre, and he was chatting with me about the deals of the dav. anil as he chatted ho was run ning over a bundle of memoranda. All at once he stopped as if ho had been shot. "'(Ireat Scott!' he exclaimed, 'I'm to be married to morrow to a woman In Chicago, and I had forgotten the date completely. Say, old man, come with me and help me rack up. Of course, I can'! make It now to save my life, even If I hired a special engine and car, for the wedding Is set for to morrow morning at 10 o'clock.' "While he began 1 chlng his things Into his trunk I wrote out a message to his sweetheart and hurried it to the telegraph office. My friend left on the first train out and afler his arrival In Chicago ho wired back: " 'It 't all right. She has the measles.' " Honors Were Even.. Prookb'n and New Jersey exchanged rlvlllties t a recent dinner of Phllllps Exeter Academy alumni. An anecdote was told by Julius H. Seymour of the man who, having successfully assigned to two men their native States, was Indignantly contradicted when he told a third that he hailed from New Jersey. "I don't; I'm sick today; that's what makes me look so." Following this, Dr. Henry Sanger Snow, of the Brooklyn Polytechnic In stitute, declared that "Brooklyn was not New York, but it bore about the same relation to It that heaven did." M'llson Farrand, headmaster of the Newark Academy, couldn't stand for the aspersion on his own State, so he told this: "Once there was a Brooklyn man who crossed the Jordan. When he ar rived on the further shore he looked around supercilllously, and, after pro longed staring, remarked, "I don't see that heaven is so much better than Brooklyn.' " 'But, my dear man, this is not heaven,' he was told." Nuisances Reported, "About 20,ihiO nuisances a year are reported to us," Bald a clerk in the nuisance bureau of the city hall, "aud some of them are pretty queer. Once there was a young woman reported a man for bathing with the blind up. This careless chap, It seems, would hop into his bath in the morning with out lowering the curtain. A minister once reported a family for playing rag time music aud popular songs on the piano on Sunday, but, of course, that rase was out of our province. A down town man was keeping a rooster for a friend of his, but he hadn't had It three days before it was reported. It made a nuisance of Itself, tit a com plainant said, by crowing at daybreak. Once a spinster had the faco to report a baby as a nuisance. She said It cried all night, so that she could not sleep. The boss got mighty Indignant with her. 'Are we to let the race die out, madam,' he says, 'bo as to keep your rest undisturbed? Do you want us to kill this baby? Itetnember, madam,' he says, 'that you were a baby once yourself.' A Manayunk man was re ported as a nuisance to us last year because he snored loud." Philadelphia Ite.jord. Accent Still with Him. At a dinner that the Transportation Club of New Y"ork gave recently in honor of J. Piorpont Morgan, Charles H. Cramp of the big Philadelphia ship building firm, said in reference to a financial fight that was under discus sion : "The way the first party accuses the second, refusing to take to ItBelf any of the blame that rightfully belongs to it, reminds me of a story of two Scots which one of the teachers at the Phila delphia Hoya' High School told In my boyhood. "These men were Canadians. They had, emigrated from the lank of kale at about the same time. They used to meet once or twice a year, and talk about home. "One day the flrHt asked the second how long he had been in Canada. " 'About sax years,' was the reply. "'Hoot, mon!' exclaimed the first then in a patronizing voice, 'why has ye na lost yer accent, like mysel'?"' Watching for the Clouds to Bump. Two little boys, aged si and eight, named Ernst and Hugh, were standing ou their front lawu, gating intently up to the sky, which was tilled with dark and omiuous-Iooking clouds, the fore runners of a storm. "What are you looking at, boys?" asked their mother. "We are waiting to see the clouds bump together and make thunder," was their reply. New Orleans Picay une. Personal. The Cznr ot Russia is the largest in dividual landowner in the world. The area ot his possessions Is greater than that of the Uepublic of France. i.mile Waldteufel. the wait writer, though au old uian, still composes a laif.e amount of dunce music. Over SOO waltzes polkas, mazurkas, aud other ed by M Waldteufel. dances have been written and publisn- To be exloiled for what one is Out loves, for there's a subtle bllsa in't; Hut there's a rarer joy than this 'Tls. to be praised for what oue itn't. Life. The iii'c.-i.lent has auiiomict'd hin Intention, to appoint juil'e Tuft as stvrt-Ury of war to aiiccec.il Mr. Hoot. l'i'-.-iiniah!y he has cuii-iulu-d with Secretary Irving Win.slow of the Anti-Imperi.uit le.iyuc. Hut had ho (!,oii; lit'.' We lire not sure. !Lis li.ei,- l.eeti llli lue hu-tf in this matter? ' It I " th..t tlif a-li.-iiiii-ti:;lii.ii is .'.i.nlil to ni.ti.e niit.L.'ici' l.-inoie lilis I..Ke in I. Hue,' tlii-, one-. W e ctull v ;re i -i, t y, .y ut un c. 6EARCHINQ THE RIVER BOTTOM 8trnnge Way pf Making a Living Adopted by Two New Yorkers. There aro many peculiar occupa tions followed by those engaged in gaining a livelihood In and around New York. Things whh h the majority of peo ple throw away as rubbish are gnlh rnvd up by Italians nnd oilier foreign ers and sold. A look Into the junk shops along the river front will give one a little Idea of the thousand and one things that have found their way thither after being discarded by their owners. The junkmen do a thriving business and often make fortunes out ot the stuff they handle. Among the many unknown ways by which a Biibslsteni e Is gained is one followed by two men, who. year in and year out, In sunshine or In rain, can be seen rowing on the Last or North Illver. While one keepB the small boat In position the other, with grappling hook and poles, dravs the bottom of the streRin for whatever of value may be pulled from the depths. Pieces of rope or machinery and a variety of stuff, good or bad, Is grist to them. Nothing Is too small to be rejected, and It must indeed be worthless If, after examination, it Is returned to the water. The men have been at the business for many years, and long practice has made them experts at handling the discard ed article that former owners had consigned to the river's depths. The "ilnds are sometimes qulto valuable. Several years ago they came across a water-tight box on talnfng valuable papers and Jewelry which had been "lost overboard in a collision between two steamers. On returning It to the owner they re ceived a handsome reward. The re covery of the papers put a sudden end to a big law suit which the own er would otherwise have lost. At times the men pull up other things than those they seek. "Not In frequently they have brought to the surface the bodies of drowned per sons, who have either committed sui cide or met their deaths through ac cident. In some cases the bodies Indicate that murder has hem committed. N. Y. News. American Nerves. A Oerman physician who once came to this country to practice was soon so bewildered by various nervous ail ments he came In contact with that he bunched them all together, and called Amerlcanltis. It Is commonly said that Americans overwork their brains and bodies, but It would be truer to say they misuse their bodies. If they run to catch a train; If they start out for healthful exercise; even If they lie down to sleep they throw so much wasteful energy into those acts that they actually Ini pede the muscles. This Is pre-einiuent-ly true of American women, aud of American women of leisure, at that. (Jenernlly a working woman learns some economy of energy because she realizes that she cannot go on by waste. In the matter of lying down to rest, how rarely you see a woman who lies supine like a little child, who allows the bed to take the responsibility of holding her up. Instead she holds on to the bed, she grips the pillow, draws up her knees, tightly clenches her teeth. In her busy brain she goes over and over again the little round of her day, or she tastes in anticipa tion the troubles of to-morrow. Rapid Stenography. At a meeting of the Incorporated Phonographic Society the other day it was stated that to write stenograph! cally a the rate of ISO words a min ute involves hearing on an average 75(1 distinct sounds consonants and yowels In the course of every min ute, and managing to represent or In dicate 12 12 of them every second. Writing at 2(H) words per minute means hearing about 1,000 sounds In alxty'seconl and representing or In dleatlng rather more than sixteen of them In every single second. The Goose Hangs High. An old friend says of this: "A girl had an admirer uhe did not like. But he was persistent, and Insisted on sending her a picture of himself handsomely framed, and with It a note saying he would call that evening. When he came she was at the piano. 'How are you this evening?" he said. She replied, still playing, and looking up at his picture, which hud been 'skied'; 'Everything is lovely and the goose hangB high.' She was rid of him In short order after that." Most Costly Warship. The King Edward VII. will be the most costly warship that has ever been constructed. The original estimates were for $ 7,W)0,(m'0, and although they have been cut down, it is authorila tively stated that the total expenditure will amount to well over $7,000,0tKl. This outlay on a fabric which a well directed torpedo might annihilate makes oue realize how costly the game of modern naval war would prove. Koreans In Russia. Ten young Koreans are being sent by the Emperor of Korea to finish tlietr education in Russia, the first of regular parties whose expenses the Emperor will pay. You cannot dream yourself Into a character; you must hammer and forge yourself one. Huruyity is the virtue all preach, none practice, and yet everybody lb Content to hear. Sdlch & Son, Mdlanioras, All General Stores in Pike County Will Buy it Back You assume no risk when you buy t'hamberluin's ('olio. Cholera and (barihoea lUmiiidy. HaloU & Hon, Matamoras, all general stores in t'ika county will refund your money if you aro not sttisdoil after iimh;? it. It Li every whore adnittteJ to be the 'in ot suee.isstul remedy U) nso for Ikiw.iI complaints and the, only one that never taild. It IS Jjieasnut, safe and reUiblo, 10 ij'J (jJ HEALTH HINTS. A bnt strained Infusion of camomile flowers Is useful as a lotion when the eyelids are Inflamed. Cold cream rubbed around tho nails will counteract the tendency to crack and will keep the skin around the nails soft and fresh looking. To cure corns take while pine tur pentine, sprend a plaster, apply to the corn and alow It to stay on until the corn comes off Itself. Itepeat this sev eral times. Chlldien in schools should be care fully watched In order to guard against trouble with the eyes, as shortsightedness Is horonilnir yearly a more t orn mon defect . They should not be allowed to hold the books near er the eyes than fourteen Inches, and must not stoop over their work. A good remody for sleeplessness Is to wet a towel and auply it to the back of the neck, pressing It up toward the base of the brain, and fastening over this a dry cloth to prevent too rapid evaporation. The el'.'ert will he found prompt and pleasant, cooling the brain and Inducing a sweet and peace ful slumber. Warm water Ib better than cold for this purpose. This remedy will prove useful to people suffering from overwork, excitement or anxiety. The "no-sonp on the face" fad would win more adherents If so ninny of Its advocates did not carry on their faces more or less blackheads the very thing that cold waier and "no soap" are supisised to banish. There are without doubt some skins so tender that a smart scrub with a brush, warm water and soap roughens and breaks them. There are also many young women living In the country who have charming complexions not withstanding that cold water nnd hard water at that Is their only cos metic It Is plain, however, that for most women who live in a large town, where dust and grime are rampant, soap In some form Is a necessity if they would keep their faces clean. Plentiful bathing with cold water after tho face bath with complexion brush and soap is a necessity, but taken by Itself, It generally workg mischief. BURDEN OF DRESS. One Woman Who Longs for a Regu lar Uniform. Much as every true woman loves her pretty gowns and becoming hat, she has periods when the question of dress becomes a burden; when the bravery of laces, ribbons and other gewgaws palls upon her spirits, and the choice and necessary work attend ant upon the arrangement of a win ter's or summer's wardrobe becomes a trial utmost too heavy to be borne. "I feol that I shall never be a con tented or capable woman," said a pret ty young matron rocently, "until I adopt a uniform. This never-ending perplexity and worry at the beginning at every season takes altogether too much out of me. "I do not say but that la a way I enjoy It that Is, I like it If every thing goes well; If 1 feel that I get the worth of the money I spend and am well dressed for every occasion. I take a great deal of pleasure, not only In the pretty clothes themselves, but still more in the complimentary re marks which I receive in consequence. But there are times when dress, with all Its coucomitants, seems a vanity of vanities, and the amount of timo and thought expended upon It almost criminal. Then it is I long for a uni form and almost make up oty mind to adopt one for the rest of uay life. If yu ever hear of my becoming a dea coness, you may know It Is not alto gether from religious motives that I have Joined the order, but chiefly that I may wear a uniform without being considered eccentric. "As women grow older the enforced necessity of spending a great deal of tima and money in selecting any buy ing their clothes grows more and more Irksome, and yet If they mix with the world and go out more or lees la society It seems a necessity." Washing Flannels. A rather stiff brush about four and a half Inches long, without counting the length of the handle, and two or three inches wide, Is a convenient article in the laundry outfit. Corsets and flannels are much more easily scrubbed clean with a brush than tub bed clean on a board, tanuols of pure wool which are not rubbel but scrub bed with a brush, using water soft ened with ammonia or borax and a white non-resinous soap, will not shrink and grow hard if they aro dried on a firm wooden frame. Rubbing all wool flannel on a board causes tho ultimate spiral fibres of the wool to become entangled and shrink. This cannot happen wheB a flannel is scrubbed with a brush. The dirt is also more eaally removed from the Interstice of the cloth by using the brush. Hard water and resinous brown soaps cause flannel to be bard. Stockinet garments of wool should al ways be dried on wooden frames of their exact Bhape and size when new, These wooden frames are used at stockinet factories where the goods are wa9bed, and can be obtained at a comparatively low price. If men were as anxious to do right as they are to get their rtghts, the world would soon be righted. Happiness is an art, and we have tr learn how to be happy, Just as w have to learn bo to be good. H. E.Emerson, M. D. Physician and Surgeon. OFFICE in Drug Store on Broad Street. (Ti ) PiTEiiT C:cJ L': j lii. Ik: swn lu- d i-.f l-UI .! I .It'll '-'clB, THE HAtENT Hh uhll, tJb'tMiiure. Md. Z f 7 1 C, .11 - mm I When MOST LIBERAL OFFER OF THE YEAR ( 1 aw DO YOU EXPEHT TO BUILD? THEN SEE A. D. BROWit and $0, Manufacturers and dealers in all kinds of Lumber, Contractors and Builders. Estimates made ; personal atten tion given and work guaranteed OFFICE, Brown's Building, Milford. Pa - Delaware Valley R.R. Corrected to Date i?S?i55225SS''ig: -fcl;t:,-fcfcc-Ut:-,-: ,"5 it; s if f. ic n . 2 2! ?; 01 ; "r' 'C T-:rt -t i 'C ;tf;i?;--i'Tt"trtiS S'4l''$5SSCf5'?!fNJ a ;f ?i 51 a a, . B "cca-ca-sc-1-: 01 22"j2r ' 5 ii 5 .geJ'aSW&fS :: a s :o3 ::::::;: .....: k n S if; 3 Ic 2 '5 h --( -71 It ! ?1 a 3 0. t-i-t-t--r-r.r-iS'as C rtlCiCiJlfio'TiOlO "7 - 3: i- J. t t J. 'O vi X, 3. f 'T. 'C r C. ?iii')ii''M'XW:ihhh ",r. t - - i - -r 7-V VV;" Washington Hotels. RIGGS HOUSE. The hutul pur excellence of tho capital, ocateil wit Ma one block of the White Houbo and diroct-Iy ox,hiuj the Treasury, fr'iutttt table la the city. W I HARD'S HOTEL A famous hoUdry, remarkaMe for lta hititorii:ul twrnKdatloiiH and lmiK -sutatnttl popularity. R.;ct-iitly renovated, rtrputuud uid partially refurnibhtxl. NATIONAL HOTEL A landmark atuontr the hotels of Waeih- uu'ton, pttti on! zed in furmur yearn by uiWdviiU and hiwh oMieMU. Always a prime f'avuriie. Recently remodeled and rendered brtter than ever. Opp. i'a. R. K. dep. WAIVI'Kit bl'KTON, Re. MhT. I heat- h'lteid a ro thu principal pohiu-.u rendezvous uf the cupittU at all times. 1 hey aro the beat stopping pluccs a 6 rea- tonuMe Vitieo O. O. STAPLES. Proprietor. , O. OE.WITT. Manager. KubwriLe for tUe ruia, 'BEST OF ALL FLOUR. ' FEED, MEAL, BRAN. OATS, and HAY. in neod of nnv Hello to jVo. 5., or come to SAWKILL MILL, MILFORD PA. The Ikvj York Tribune Farmer is a national llllustrntcd agricultural weekly for farmers and their families, an t stands at the head of the agricul tural press. It Is a practical paper for practical farmers, helping them to secure tho largest possible profit from the farm through practical methods. It Is entertaining, ltitructlvo nnd practically useful to the farmer's wife, sons and daughters, whose interests It covers In an ntt.rnt:vn manner. The regular price Is 1 () per year, but for n limited time wo will re-elvo your subscription for TUP! NEW Y'ORK TKIHUiNF, K ARM Kit and also for your own favorite looal newspaper, TI1K PRF.SS, Mllford, Pa. Both Papers One Year for $1.65 Bond ynur nnlnr and moin.y to THK PRKSS. Ymir n (ii no and nddroos on n postal card toi THfC NHW YORK TRIBUNE FARM Kit, Now Yjrk City, will bring you frco snniplo copy 9M i Johnson's Shoe Store TheLaFrance Shoes At FIT lieeiuise the pv, last they're made J on woie i!:;n ;i 3;1 by experts. . They keep their shape, because the workmen wlioiuado the a are experts. They wear. le eanse their leather was selected by experts. Our footing as a bhoe man Iia-s made us lit to fit the feet. Bring in yours. We'll fit 'era. 4 0 7?i si' ti T. H P JOHNSON, FITTER OF FEET. Port Jervis, N. Y. Vv0t ''it-" itiiii 6V -'JVS- v. v-- ...it; THE LAKE INSTITUTE, THE LANE INSTITUTE CO. 113 3 Broadwa y. fet. Janie Buitd i n rew York. For th Traatment ind euro of LIQUOR, OPIUM AND IKORPHINE HABITS. NO HYPODERMIC IXJKCTIoNS. k PKUKKOT HOVIK TKKATMKNT OH 8aM- TAUIl'M ADVANTAilKS. State Normal School S East Stroudsburg, Pa i Tvefc'iilar Slate Normal Courses, ami 5 9 Special I )e;trtnier!is of Music, Kio- sfe CliLKill. A l l IllikA'liii Sli'iiiiiri'.LiiLv nod T pew ri iiitf; ain-ittf Cuii'ge l 1 te p.rr. :l-i5'. !X FieparuL'iry UepaMinunt. FREE TUITION t Hoarding exei,ses :) ,V p r week. J 1'upils adniit'ed at any time K:d! 'l'ecni opens rM-pt, 'iih. Writo for ft ft Oiiialugud. ft CI. L. Kemp, A. !Y.., PfincipdI. t$3ftSfte3 J
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers