TUX: Smart & CONTINUING THE Great Suit Success Our purchase and the announcement of their sale at almost half price brought a rcspouse such as bargains ot this kind war rant. It is no exaggeration to say that never were such suit bargains offered so early in the season, and it is a pleasure to announce that there are as many good bargains left as have been sold. Make your purchases now. Fashion dictates the advance tailor-made models for fall will be Etons and three-quarter sleeves and 24-inch box effect, just such styles as are now rep resented in this purchase sale. Ladies' Tailored Suits Lot 1-815 Suits for ?8 25. Wonieu's Suits in cli .ice of fash ionable fabrics in plain am) figured effects, styles from the oatty Eton to the nobby Box effects; the greatest value of the season. Ladies' Tailored Suits Lot 3-S20 Suits for 12.50. Women's Suits of fine Panamas an'd choice mixed materials, natty Eton effect, short sleeve, trimmel with Sou tache Braid to match suit; also in cluded in this lot some nobby mix tures, Box effect. Women's Top Coats That are Reg ular $7.50 Values, $5.00. One hundred and twenty-three of these coats, the entire unsold balance ot a manufacturer who wanted to empty stock rooms. The materials are mannish mixtures, made just like a man's top coat, side seams, cut with a Hare and heavily pressed, with a vent center ol back. SMART & SILBERBERG, OIL CITY, PA. Oil City Trust Company. President, JOSEPH SEEP. Vice President, GEORGE LEWIS. REPORT MADE TO THE COMMISSIONER OF BANKING (Condensed) At Close of Business, May 26, 190C. Time Loans $1,210,737 8-') Real Estate, Furniture and Fixtures 00,381 52 Stocks and Bonds. ) 57,(17(1 00 Demand Loans 553,W'S 84 Overdrafts 34,417 83 Due from Batiks... 20!l.0O8 2(1 Cash on baud 7!",2S1 D'J $ 934,370 02 $2,23f),4!H 2J Trust Fuuds jiuti.xa) 72 ALLMALLOW eve. ft Olixrrviitirr In Clearly h llrllc of Old I'll n u Time". The olisi'i'viui'c of Aliliallow eve, x- 1Tnll.... ...... t.. . 1.. .. .. jrun times, for. there is minims in the church observance of the ensuing day of All Snliits to have originated such extraordinary notions, as are connected with this M'lclinitpil festival or such re markable practices ns those Iiy which it Is distinguished. The leading Idea respecting Halloween is that It Is the time of all others when supernatural influences prevail. It Is the night Ret Apart for the walking nliiuuil of spirits, both of the visible and invisible world. One of the special characteristics at tributed to this mystic evening Is the faculty conferred on the Immaterial principle of man to detach Itself from the body and wander abroad through the realms of space. Divination, or second sight, Is believed then to attain its highest power, and the gift asserted by (Jlendower of calling spirits from "the vasty deep" becomes then at the command of ail who choose to avail themselves of the privileges of the oc casion. Tln-re Is n remarkable uni formity In the llreside customs of this night in all parts of tjreat Britain. Nuts ami apples are everywhere In requisition and are consumed In Im mense quantities. Indeed, the name Nutcrack night, by which Halloween Is known in the mirth of Kngland, Indi cates the predominance of nuts u the entertain ids of the evening. They ore not only cracked and eaten, but are made the means of divining and proph esying in love affairs. Apples are also used in mi'.ir of t!e evening games for the same purpose. lie llnil Keen Tlirrp. The clergyman was holding a chil dren's service at a continental resort. Inning the lesson lie had occasion to cutecliise his hearers on the parable of the unjust steward. "What is a Ptoward?" he asked. A little boy, who liud arrived from Kngland a few days before, held up bis hand. "Ifo is the man. fr," he replied, with a reminis cent look on Ills face, "who brings you u bjisln." London lllu!t Silberbers: Ladies' Tailored Suits Lot 3 823 Suits for Slli 50. Women's Suits in mixtures and Panamas, some Eton effect, some in Box effect; veiy suitable for travel ing; an ideal vacation Suit. Ladies' Tailored Suits Lot 4-835 Suits for 822.50. This consists nf a range of nobby Eton effects,. Taffeta lined Jackets, with deiui sleeve, skirt pleated, full flare; also included in this lot a num ber of stylish suits in choice fabrics; all to go at your choice. Treasurer, II. R. MEURITT. Capital $ 300,000 00 Surplus and I'roiils 381.126 70 Reserve for Taxes, 5ro 1,018 78 Deposits 1,553,353.81 $2,235,496 29 SYMPATHETIC LISTENERS The Help Tliey Mar Afford to Sinn unit in different Talkers. At no time more than when a thought Is struggling toward expression should n friend bear with n friend's Infirmi ties. A deep sympathy should be pour ed out with lavish affection about thf one who Is seriously striving to saj some real thing. In this ntmosphere ol patient, sympathetic Intelligence tho Inept word, the crude phrase, the whol ly Inadequate expression will be en abled to do their work, and the thought transference will be effected; the thought will be safely lodged In the mind of the other, slightly bruised III transit, but intact and Intelligible. With an "I know what you mean," "Exactly," or "Go on; I understand," much help may be rendered, and at last when tho thinker of tho though! has placed his friend In possession and by reason of this effort has entered In to fuller possession of It himself, the conversation Is In n way to begin. Then lavish upon the elaboration of the thought all the beauties that can be woven out of words precision, bal ance, music hut. let us, dear lovers of language, remember to lie discreetly gentle and listen with averted glance while the thought Is still in negligee Atlantic. ('airillllllty. Cordiality is the least expensive and farthest going of all commodities, and Its practitioners, represent our best suc cesses. It Is the key which unlocks the social and business doors, brlnglug men closer together, helping them to bettor work together, lightening their bur dens and changing the twilight of trou ble Into the sunlight of happiness. "Gumption," by N. C. Fowler, Jr. To Do IhhmI. ' It Is an eternal and inevitable condi tion that to do good we must be good. When any one Is a truly good man, then even If he takes no part whatever In holy wars against tho sin of the world his mere unconscious Influenco becomes n blessing to others. Wom en's Life. The Memorial Sermon. A patriotic service was held in the M. E. church, Tionests, Sabbath morning, May 27th. The W. R.C. and the G. A. R. were present In a body to fuar the memorial address given by llio pastor of theTionesla Presbyterian church, Unv. Paul J. Slonaker, l'h. D. By request the address is given lor publication. Dr. SInuakor took for his text Hob, 11:4 "Being dead, yet speaketli," and spoke as follows: We are afsemblfid today to pay our tribute of re-pect, honor and love to the heroes who served this country, who gave us this glorious present and hope of a still more glorious iniure. me memory ot the men who really made us free, who secured the blessings of liberty, not only to us, but to millions yet nuboru, lingers witli us like a sweet perfume. Next Wednesday is mommy's day. In sorrow profoundly sincere our villsgn and com muniiy will lorn wiln one acoi rd to the named spot where lies the gentle soldier. .Next Wednesday silence will tall upon Ihis land with all its thunder of Industry, lu reverent silueee the nation will roll call the soldier dead and go torth to cover tlieir graves with sweet and s'leot tokens of our love and griel. Full forty years have passed since lliese loved and loving lathers, sons, brothers, friends did march away, soon to return again, they said, when we nave ireed nod a children and made our country one. But their good Faiher, God, plauntd better forlhttin limn they knew. Theirs the martyr's death; theirs the patriot's crown. Mocking to inxke their country one. God brought llieni to His eternal city, for they fought a liitlit good and true. Though lost to siht, I hoy still to memory are dear. To day the magic wand ol memory hatii brought their names and laces back to us. Not.one has bteu lorgotten, though no man knows where some ol them do lie. Under scorching skies, overcome by heat, some fell: naked and starving, siuno died in prisons damp ami deadly; hut under smoking, suipnuroua skies, that rained upon llieir devoted heads the hiss ing i-hot and aliell, most lull on bloody battle fields, now billowy with their grave-; and some their final resting place we know not of. But who shall say that He who clothes the liliesdotb not wreathe His soldiers' graves. In God's doep glnns and forest shinies they lie. Each Memorial Day sees their n raves fresh strewn with grasses green; His seasons scatter (lower gray; each purpling sum mer day the clinging vines tall over them. And when the frost halU splashed the leaves with blood and sunset gold the forest trees then drop their wreaths of softest leives upon their billowy uraves; while to the music ol Uod s winds the weeping vines, the sobbing pines, the iiioiirniul elms pour forth their solemn funeral hymn. There let them lie till that last trump shall sound. How vast is this cemetery of the dead. It readies all over the Republic. Each country churchyard has ita corner sacred to the dead soldier. Each large town, each city has its multitude of little white stones in the grass and its monuments to hold aloft the names of the fallen and the tlelds where they fell. This land whore so U'any living citizens walk bo heartless ly, disgracing the nation that surpasses all in goodness, is all over doited with grassy hillocks of those who died in the name ot a bettor Humanity. At last those tombs will in it in till. The men who In tie and sin over them are full of weakness, while the graves are lull or power. How vast ia this cemetery of the soldiers. There are six burying grounds within sight of the National Capitol. Any Con gressman who is now trying to soli his nation for gam might by a short walk or ride come to some holy spot where the silence and pathos of the scene would tell him to think more deeply and act more wisely. What a voice would come from the military asylum, with its six thousand graves. 'What a voice from Arlington, with its 16,000 dead. What a voice from that oue spot where lie the bones of 2,000 men whose names were not known. Aiound the Capital of our conn. try lie twenty-live thousand who for their country s welfaro ottered up all the weets or this lite. But while we thus meditate and stand with our hands full of memorial wreaths, tho scene expands, the holy ground widens from slate to state, from mountain to prairie, and from ocean to lake and river, until at last the heart bows down in grief over the silent forms of 300,000 men. They gave up life that we might live more nobly. Of this number not many fell in instant death. Nearly all went out by i lie gateway of long agony. asking help that could not come, and thinking ol loved ones tney could never see again. But I need not tell you tl.e story of the suffering of the heroes of the war. It has been told you many times. It is koown to every intelligent man and woman in the world. Everybody knows how blood was shed. Everybody knows the story of the great, the heroic struggle, and everybody knows that at last victory came to our side and how the last sword of the rebellion was handod to General Grant. There is no need to tell that story again. But I want to tell you thatall this suffering aud all this dying was for us who today are speaking the language and taking the footsteps and seeing all the scenes and joys in the sunshine of life. Memorial Day ought to come back as long as our mind can study political princi ples, and as long as our heart can appre ciate tho sell-denial of a soldier. By obJ serving it we are inacie netter men and better citizens and our great government made stronger and more enduring. Especially should the pulpit and tho church scatter tlowers op the graves of the Union dead, for thoso awful battles and the awful carnage were planned by the blindness and weakness of religion. Christians in England opened a trafllo in human bodies and souls. The pulpit was too weak or too Ignorant to oppose slavery in the beginning. This false lead of England and Europe and the church fol lowed and gave us the spectacle of a great crime reposing upon the form of Christ wonderful picture painted by the church Christ as slavo driver. But su.-li was the picture, ami the church sat down and admired it until our nation saw fourteen states deeply injured by slavery and the whole republic dishonored. ' Hut the church should bless tho soldiers lor hav ing by their blood atoned for the coward ice of the sanctuary. The pulpit should adorn tl o battle fields that brought to them the unsullied Christ of Nazareth and Cavalry. In the procession of next Wednesday tiie church should march as a penitent full of regiets, that wearing the name of Jesiissl made such a poor esti mate of the rights of man. Had the church done its moral duty in the seven teen lb ami eighteemh centuries the nine teenth would have escaped the awful war of brother auaiusl brother, Mouth against North. When a religion espouses a great wrong, then the sword and battle-lield must come. Violence must come when love has tailed. Our Memorial Day does not conie with the shout that once shook the Roman Colosseum because some one had triumphed and someone had died: but it comes with a gladness that in all parts of tins great republic raise principles per ished and new love and new rigid came for millions of persons end lor a long vista of years. We celebrate a war in which men fought and died for right principles. The soldiers of Wellington and Napoleon did not kirow for what thev wero bleeding and dying. They were simply swept along by' a blind passion. But the soldiers i f 'iH-Tm knew what they were bleeding, fighting and dying for: and because they know the -vorlil has one great nation. Bat citizens and patriots, let us not for get that the blood of the soldiers did not Insure the Nation against mistakes. The blood of tho Christian Martyrs did not in sure the church against mistakes. After all the noble disciples and apostles around Jesus bad died for the simple gospolof tlieir Master the church went into a long course of folly and crime, but yet long al ter tlis martyr's blood became the rich soil of new flowers. Those Christian martyrs died to establish principles, and as the sun oonms hack afler storms so after each crime ami folly of the church back came the tombs of the apostles and the memory of Christ. Thus the beroio lives of our soldiers did not make future folly Impossible but they nude the Nation so thoughtful and great that it cannot easily sink under the mis fortune of a few crimes and vices. Uuder the vice, crime and incapacity that now hold sway in the cities ami the Nation there Is lying a sublime example of patriot ism which asks fur lilies from full hands. Patriotism in the tomb has often fought against a living vice and Ignorance. When the present loses all great speech the dead often become elequeot. Nor do we bring otir (towers simply to celebrate a deed in which a Grant triumphed and a Lee fell but we come to bless the soldiers that help ed liberty to touch all doorsllls, the soldier that helped Georgia and Mississippi to In come the loving friends of New York and Pennsylvania: we come to baptize the scattered 8tates Into one freedom and one love. I'his May day comes with pity for all the dead and living soldiers but with an inexpressible joy that from these battle fields came thedlvinest principals for which men can live their years in this world. Tho words "friend" and "foe" "North" and "South" lilua and Gray are drowned out by the voice of the millions welcoming a full liberty and justice. Time has furled the Hags forty years have silenced the guns and have silenced the passions that once flamed in all hearts; thirty years have tak en away all boasting over fal leu foes; but the same (light of time makes only the more glorious the country that has no dividing line and the nation that baa no slaves. When the battle opened men were slaves; when the battle closed they were free. The South has reach a state of civili zation, which they could never have reach ed Uuder human slavery. Thus next Wed nesday (lowers will be scattered notouly in memory of the dead but iu the name of a new greatness. Memory and hope will go baud lu hand to those sacred placea of silence. Tears and gladness will mingle, tears because the soldiers sleeps, gladuess because anew moral greatness lives. When our political conventions and General As semblies are held in the East aud North, the South is represented with new mental enthusiasm aud new mental beauty. The Intellectual power of Old and New Eug laud is spreading southward and the laud once adorned with orange blossoms and fair skies is to receive from this day on ward the blessed decorations of the intel lect and the soul. The new law, the new principles, tho new privileges are slowly creating a greater civilization. Lot us re member the dead heroes. Tbey belong to us. To-day we remember tne heroic dead, those whose blood reddens all the paths and highways of honor; those who died upon the field, in the charge, in prisou pens, or iu Famine's clutches; those who gave their lives that liberty should not perish from the earth. And today we remember the great leaders; Sherman, the reckless, the dariig, the prudent, and the victorious; Sheridan, a soldier tit to have stood by Julias Caesar, and to have uttered the words ot command; and Graut, the silent, the invincible, the unconqnered, and rising over them all, Lincoln, the honest, the wise, the patient, the merciful; we remember them all today, aud hundreds of thousands of privates, deserving of equal honor with the plumed leaders ol the host. No eulogies can enhance their glory: no laurels can make brighter their deeds. They are be. yond bumau speech or human embellish ments. The war is over and we have a new civilization. Let us hope for a still greater; let us hope for a new era. but re member when we speak of a new era we must use the words make and create A new era does not grow like a tree nor rise like a tide. Man can watch a tree from year to year, or he can sit down aud watch the rising tide, but a new era he must create. He must watch only so far as ha works. This strange tide rolls in only at mail's bidding. As a song will not sing itself, as a statue will net bew itself out of uwble, so a new age will not come of its own will out of the places where our sol diers fell. This high tide will roll in from the human hearts that are here in life. Let us hope for a high tide of morals. New leaders; new armies; new (lags. The sol diers of literature, the heroes of a high and noble politics, the regiments in the pursuit of beauty, the volunteers of Nnzaretb, the soldiers of the infinite God, the vast army of the highest happiness and the highest right, must come aud march aud remarch, not with gnus and with garments dyed in blood, but arrayed in all the jeweled drap eries of peace. These must be eloquent to atone for those who are silent; these must advance with bosom full of all high pur pose, and must step with living foot aud inspired heart among the three hundred thousand gravea of the dead. "I will not cease from mental fight Nor shall the sword Bleep in my band, Till I have built Jerusalem, In this fair aud pleasant land." When all other needs haa been mentioned there remains our chiefest need, a return of obedience to the life and teachings of Jesus Christ, loyalty to the Captain of our salvation. Veterans let me commend you to Christ. Von saved the country. Are yon saved yourselves? It Is a sad thought that the carpenters who built Noah's ark did not themselves get in. It is a sadder thought that any who fought to save this country from a great sin, should himself be destroyed by sin. I have stood by death beds, and have learned that it Is hard to die without Christ. I have often thought bow hard it must be to die upon the battle field, uo baud to caress, no voice to com fort, no pillow upon which to rest; but I tell you in sincerity, I would rather die alone upon the field, cold and drear; my pillow a stone, my bed of ice, my covering the drifting snow, the only voice the shriek of the wintry blast; I wonid rather die thus with Christ than in a home of luxury without Him. Veterans let me commend yon to a .Savior who, when life's battles aio over will give you the palm of victory aud the crown of life. Many a weary, lonely, tired, tramp, tramp, tramp, have you bad upon the the field of battle. But over yonder yon shall not be tired, or lonely or hungry; for Christ Is rest to the weary a friend to the friendless, bread to the hungry; Christ Is love, home hap, pineBS, heaven. Thompson's Barnsma cures Nervous ness and is acceptable to the moat delicate stomach. flOc and fl.n0. All druggists. A til AHANTKl:l K KK KOK I'll.K. Itching, Blind, Bleeding or Protruding Piles. Druggists are authorized to refund money il Pazo Ointment fails to cure in t) to 14 days. 50c. A.C.UREY, LIVERY Feed & Sale STABLE. Fine Turnouts at All Times at Reasonable Hates. tear of Hotel Weaver TIOITEST-A.. IP.A.. Telephone Io. 20. OFTIOIAU. Offic e ) li National Bank Building, OIL CITY, PA. Eyes exauiiaed free. Exclusively optical. DR. CREWER MEDICAL AND SLKG1CAL HSTITl'TE, NOLAND BLOCK. Entrance No. 20fl Co nt re street and 20d Sycamore atreet, Booms 5 and 6. OH City, lNMiiiHylvunln. Dr. Daniel Shannon, the well known Philadelphia speclalls', Is the physician and sugeon-ln-chief of the Institute. He is permanently located at tho nbovo ad dress, where ho treats all chronic diseases ofnieu, women and childien. He makes a specialty of all forma of (Nervous Diseases, Blood Poison, (Secret Diseases, Kpileptio Fits, Convulsions, Hysteria, St. Vitus Dance, Wakefulness. Cured under guarantee. Lost Manhood restored Weakness of Young Men cured and all Privatediseases. Varicocele, Hydrocele and Huplure promptly cured without pain and no de tention from business. Ho cures the worst cases of Nervous Prostration, Kbeiimatism, Scrofula, Old Sores, Blood Poison, and all diseases nf the Skin, Fur, Nose, Throat, Heart, Lungs, Stomach, Liver, Kidneys and Bladder. Itching Piles, Fistula, Stricture, Tu mors, Cancer and Goiters cured without cutting. Special attention paid lo the treatment of Nasal Catarrh. HE WILL FORFEIT THE SIX OF $5,000 for auy case of Fits or Kpileptio Convul sions that he cannot cure. Consultation free in Kuglish and Ger man and strictly confidential. Write if you cannot call. Ollice hours: From i) a. ui. to 8::I0 p. m. On Sundays, from i to i p. m. only. WHITE PINE Flooring, Siding, and material for Window Casings and Inside Work. A good supply to select from always iu stuck. Call ou or address. JAS. J. LANDERS, TIONESTA, PA. or F. l AMSLER. HAILWAY. TIME TABLE To Take Effect July 1st, 1905. NORTH Eastern Time SOUTH 1 ! Stations I 2 I 4 p. ma. in Leave Arrive p.m. p.m Nebraska 6 30 Ross Run 6 05 Lamentation 16 00 7 O0 7 20 7 !i 7 so: Newtown Mills 5 65 Kellettville l2 00 5 45 Buck Mills ill 60 5 35 May burg ill 405 25 Porkey jll 20 5 15 Minister 11 155 10 Wellers jll 05,5 05 Hastings 10 55;4 65 Blue Jav lit) 45 4 45 Henry's Mill 10 30 4 35 Barnes 1 10 10 4 20 Shellleld 10 00 4 15 Arrive Leave a. m.lp.ra 1 00 7 45! 1 10 7 65 1 2o 8 00 1 45 8 10 1 60 6 15 1 55 8 20 2 10 8 30 2 25 8 40 !i 40 8 60 3 05 9 05 8 15 9 20 p.m a. m T. D. COLLINS, Pbesidknt. lennsylvania U,VlLltO,Vr. Schedule in Effect May 27, 190(5. Trains leave Tionesta as follows : For OIL CITY, PITTSBURGH, and principal intermediate stations, 11:01 a. m. week days, Oil City only, 8:21 p. in. daily, 6:28 p. m. Sundays. For BRADFORD, OLEAN, and prin cipal intermediate stations, 7:5:1 a. in. daily, 4:18 p. m. week days. For Warren and Intermediate stations, 2:43 p. m, Sun days. W. VV. ATTERBURY, Gen. Mgr. J. R. WOOD, P. T. M. (iEO. W. BOYD, G. P. A. DR. KENNEDY'S "FAVORITE j Remedy Breaks no Hearts, Excuses no Crimes. Dr. David Kennedy's FAVORITE REM F.I.) Vis not a disguised enemy of the human rice; where it cannot help, it does not lmrm. It is composed of vegetable ingre. dients and docs not heat or inflame, the blood but cools and purifies it. In all cases of Kidney troubles Liver complaints, Con. stipatiou of the Bowels, aud tho delicate derangements which nlllict women, the ac tion of Dr. Kennedy's FAVORITE REM EDY is beyond praio. Thousands of grateful people voluntarily testify to this, iu letters to Dr. Kennedy; and with a warmth and fullness of words which mere business certificates never possess. It makes no drunkards excuses uo crimes breaks no hearts. In its coming there is hope, and in its wim;s there is healing. We challenge n trial and are confident of the result. Your druggist has it. ONE DOLLAR a Bottle. Bear in mindtho name and address: Dr. JJuviU KENNEDY, Rondout. Now York. THE OLD RELIABLE LIVERY STABLE, -OF- TIONESTA, - PENN. S.S.CANFIEIU PROPRIETOR. JOB TZElA-IiVLTILTQ- lH&TI0lD 'rr Tl-nTrrSTfrr Vfmvr Linen, iiuvn, Itatistc or thiunbray. That's what this Store has to oiler iu the way of Tub Suits. Neat, stylishly made Suits of Rood material at bo small h cash outlay we anticipate little trouble convincing you of the econo my of buying thorn ready-made, to say nothing of the bother and worry of making them. At $3.50 A Suit of White Lawn, good quality, lace trimmed, aud skirt neatly tucked and mnde with a flounce. Waist of suit hat short sleeves. At $3.75 A Chambray Suit, iu most every color. Waist is neatly embroidered aud mudo with short alcoves, buttoned in back. Circular skirt, trimmed in straps. At $5.00 A dainty Suit of Lawn iu auy color, luce trimmed waist, with full vertically tucked skirt. At $6.50 White Persian Lawu Suit. Waist laco trimmed aud embroidered. Full skirt, with two-inch tucks, edged with German Val. lace. Suits at (10 you couldn't hope to duplictto having them made to order, andwo'll promise to have tlieni fit you hs well as though they wero inado to your order. FOREST COUNTY TIONESTA, CAPITAL STOCK, SURPLUS, Time Deposits Solicited. A. Watnr Cook, President. A. Wayne C ok, A. n. N. P. Wheeler, T. F. Ultohev. Collections remitted for on day of pnymeut at low rates. We promise our custom era all the benefits consistent with conservative banking. Interest paid on time deposit. Tour patronage respectfully solicited. Seasonable HARDWARE A look at our stock will suffice tn show that we aro com pletely stocked ip on everything in hardware for the season, Our large store room was Dover so crowded as now with all things needful for the Farmer, tho Mechanic, the Contractor, the Builder, or the Householder. .'O iilSSfcll i lows, fel Syracuse Plows. n ii tii ... W Lawn Mowers, fi Hand Cultivators, M Garden Tools, ,W Farm Implements, SEE OTTiR, NEW Ball Bearing Clothes Wringer Turns so easily a child can run it, and does the work perfectly Nice Stock of Buggies Al ways on Hand The It est for the I,cuwt Money. y J. C. Scowdon, w . r ii . " -ti, r:ii i vitiate uume is not only made bright and attractive, but its value is increased when painted with Lucas T52 Paints The lumber wears longer, fights storms better and doesn't decay, because Lucas Au'ns cover so thoroughly and last so long. They look better, too. Their rich gloss and enduring colors hold their beauty longer than any other paint. John Lucas & Co Philadelphia Therf aremomlHrnrnll PailrrnMr1 nth Unlifd State than nf any othr make nt iaitrrnv '1 bit In on account of their ntyla, accuracy atitl implutty, MVCnlJ rIagxinfi(TheOin,fnof Fashion)! mote aubaenbera thn any other Latlirs' Marline. One far'a aubscripiion (11 numbers) cottn ,"50 crniw. Lalrit number, ft ccota. It wry ftubacriber lch a MiCall i t Icrn Fr0 Subacribe today. l.aiilv Icmia Waitad. I liberal cash cutnmtaaton. Pattern Catalo'df f 600 de. lent) and Premium teialoru (showing jq premiums) cut tre Addraaa THK McCALt CO., New York! Pennyroyal pills Br lllllirviKK'S ENGLISH im KFI MI4 U.ld eenul. boi... lih Uu.rlbbo. Tk....tk.r. H,r Hnb.lltatl... anJ Iran.. !!. Iluj- Jf .ur Uiu,,i,i, at Mud . la "T '"' rtll.r TaUalfeU . . ' 'unooinn. npi nw MH- Madlus Mo.au,' PM11.A, fK KaunlkU ml From an assortment com- i- prising upwards of 100 Suits. In a price range running from $3.50 to $2'2.M. In Culors or a 1 White, ml 1 v7l fc1 ''i'i B4 ?2 NATIONAL BANK, PENNSYLVANIA. S50.000. $55,000. Will pay Four l'er Cent, per Annum Kkllt. Cashier. Wm. Smkarbauoh', Vice Presidont DIBKOTORH O. W. Robinson, Wm. MuiearbauKh, J. T. Dale. yA. U. Kollv. Sensible Building Papers, Chicken Wire, S3reeu Wire, Screen Doors, Kitchen Ware, Paiuts aud Oils. - Tionesta, Pa. u Learn More About Poultry We will furnish ymi each month for five' years the best readine mutter published about poultry for $1.00 and cive you one setting of llarrecl Plymouth Rock Ek from Bradley Urns.', Thompsons', or Hawkins strains, or one setting of Hln. Kl onib White l ecliorn Kj-m from Knaiip llros.'., Kices'.AVyckollV or Van Iiri-sers strainsasapremium, Wealso furnish eires from other varieties and valuable premiums with subscriptions to Poultry Hevlow.apaper which con tains euch month the best articles pub lished on all branches of the poultry business. One five-year subscription ?ndc?!lV' scAtlnK of thoroughbred eKCs for $1.00. One. year ZS cents. Sample copy and rjremmm list 5 cents in stamps. Poultry Kvvlew. Jlox 87, Slilem. N. Y. N. Y. n.lNKINO norsr omrlne primeWTEA.U ICAII.Ko.tlt UoXDWwili t-niittKo tho KorvireK o f nl(i w)lo can cml. triilinviiHtmciitbiialnoKBwilliln thilr m-ik-h-buruoud. A.ldrusn WkUoxiW.NcwyorkOity ChamberlainY Cough Remedy Cures Colds, Croup and Whooping Cough. i if U "'1 - i