Weak Heart From Attach of LaGrippe. Palpitation, Smother ing, Short Breath. Dr. Miles' Heart Cuie Cured Me. The terrible after effects of LaGrippe re most dangerous when they attack the he rt, the engine of life. Weak hearts are as c( n mon as weak stomachs and whenanattac is made upon the weak heart, that organ s< in becomes a diseased heart and the patient > ,11 unless promptly treated, suffer long sid eventually die of heart disease, the dread )f millions. Dr. Miles' Heart Cure strength is and regulates the heart's action, enriches ie blood and improves the circulation. "Some years ago I had an attack of ,e grip, and it left me with a very weak heft. Palpitation, shortness of breath andsmothr ing spells that made me sit up in bedto breathe, robbing me of sleep, made me mist miserable. I would become fatigued ad exhausted from the least exertion and MIS in such a critical condition that I could pt attend to mybusiness. My physician seenjd unable to control my case, and insteadof petting better I was gradually growig weaker every day. Then I began taking lr. Miles' Heart Cure and after Ihad used*o bottles I was greatly improved. I contintd with the remedy until I had taken in allix bottles, when I was able to attend to bsi ness without inconvenience. 1 was cjn pletely and permanently cured of h»rt trouble by Dr. Miles' Heart Cure and cher fuilv recommend it to all sufferers from iat terrible affliction." —11. 11. KHLE, Glows ville, N. Y. All druggists sell and guarantee first jot t!e I'r. Miles' Remedies. Send for free bok on Nervous and Heart Diseases. Adoens Dr. Miles Medical Co., Elkhart, Ind. Supplies Utmost Need. Christ supplies our utmost spittual need. In him alone there is satisfaction. In him we have the inheritance, leor ruptible, undetilcd and that fudet not away. If Christ be ours, if our jaitli be rooted and grounded in bin all things are ours and we are Clirl's.— ltev. S. G. Neil, Baptist, Philadelhla. Ministering Unto Others. If a man would believe in his ellow men, if he would believe in socief and the possibilities of human naturt if he would believe in God, he mut ap proach his duties in the spirit >f the Master when he said, "I comenot to be ministered unto, but to nil niter."— Itev. Dr. George L. I'erin, Univfsulist Boston. A Serious Mistake. E, <DeWitt it Co., is the nam* ol the firm who make the genuine Will Hazel Salve. DeWitt's is the Witn Hazel Salve that heals 'without leavig a scar. It is a serious mistake to useiny other. DeWitt's Witch Hazel Saivejures blind bleeding, itching and protrtjing piles, burns, bruises, eczema ami all tin diseas es. Sold by all I'ruggests. Follow Where Christ kails. If we go astray, it shall nt be for lack of a bath, but for not ollowing where Christ leads. We are .mply to go forward to Christlikents.—Rev. Mr. Helms, Methodist, \\>rcester, Mass. Ladies and Children Invitd. All ladies and children who canot stand the shocking strain of laxativ. syrups, cathartics, etc., are invited to rv the famous Little Marly lfisers. 'ley are dillerent from all other pills. The do not purge the system. Even a" dome dose will not gripe, weaken or sicken many people call them the Easy Pill. 7. 11. Howell, Houston, Texas, says ithing better can be used lor constipatioi sick headaches, etc. Hob Moore, Lak*ette, Ind., says all other gripe and sickemdiile DeWitt's Little Early Risers do theilvork well and easy. Sold by all Druggest Education Without Hellnior Experience tenches that you can ave educated villains; that education with out sanctities of religion or restricts of morality increases the power 'or evil. Rev. Dr. Dana, Presbyterm, Philadelphia. Kodol Gives Strength. bv enabling the digestive organs to digit, assimilate and transform all of the whefc some food that may be eaten into te kind ol blood that nourishes the nervi, feeds the tissues, hardens the muscles ail recuperates the organs of the entire bod. Kodol Dyspepsia Cure cures Indigestioi Dyspepsia, C'atarrah of the Stomach,am fill stomach disorders. Sold by all Drug gi.-ts. Dream of Rlehteonmieia. There is the dream of righteousness This is the dream of moral sentiment and. pursuing it, man becomes a Chris tian. So long as this hunger for some thing better further on is a passior and the days are full of zest and frest feeling, so long manhood is safe and the life waxes In strength, but whet these ideals nre dimmed, when theii outlines lose clearness, then peril draws near. Oftentimes this deterioration le unconscious. The soul lives by the divine mamia thnt falls from heaven.— Rev. Dr. N. D. Hillis, Congregational !st, Brooklyn. Do You Enjoy What You Eat. If yon don't your food does not do yoi much good. Kodol Dyspepsia Cure is tin remedy that every one should take whet there is anything wrong with thestomacli There is no way to maintain the health and strength of mind and body except by nourishment. There is no way to nourish except through the stomach. The stoni acli must be kept healthy, pure and sweet or the strength will let down anil disease will set up. No appetite, loss of strength, nervousness, headaches, constipation, bad breath, sour rising, rifting, indigestion, dyspepsia and all stomach troubles arc iptickly cured by the use of Kodol dyspep sia Cure. Sold by all Druggists. FOLEYSHONEiPHCAK for childrent tafm, lurm, A'o 9platm* THE GRANGE Conducted by J. W. DARROW, Pnm Correspondent Ncui York Slate. Orange CITY AND COUNTRY. Their Mutant Dependence unit Mu tual Interexts. Lately we have heard much about the dominance of the country iu ur ban affairs, especially in Greater New York. The contempt with which the New Yorker refers to that indefinite somewhere known as "up the state" can only be equaled by his abject de pendence on the products of that same country "up the state"for his daily bread. Fence off the city of New York at the Ilarlem river and cut off sup plies, and how long could she exist? If the country is dependent on the city for its markets, the city is doubly de pendent on the country, for its very lifeblood is drawn from it. After all, the only thing which God gave toman was the earth. From it comes all wealth. It litis been placed nowhere else. It must bo dug out of the soil in agriculture or wrought out of mines. All things spring from the soil, and all things must return to it. Whatever else happens, whether pan ics come or national convulsions occur, though syndicates and trusts may cor ner production, yet the soil remains, and from it everything necessary to man's sustenance can be gained. Condition depends upon character far more than character upon condi tion, and the usefulness of the resi dent of the country, like that of the city, is dependent upon faithfulness to duty. Let us make it our aim, then, whether we be residents of the country or the city— To love some one more dearly every day, To help a wandering child to find its way, To ponder o'er a noble thought and pray And smile when evening falls; To follow truth as blind men long for light, To do our best from dawn of day till night, To keep our hearts fit for his holy sight And answer when he calls. —George A. Fuller. KEYSTONE PATRONS. Granite Work In Pennitylvnnia Out lined by State Muator Hill. State Master 11111 at the thirtieth an nual session of the Pennsylvania state grange made a strong plea for co-oper ation of granges with the agricultural colleges and experiment stations and urged a general display of the products of the state ut the world's fair, St. Lou- Is, in 1004. Referring to the vexed taxation ques tion, State Master Hill stated that the personal property of his state Is valued at $3,850,500,000 and pays taxes aggre gating $12,132,500, making a mileage rate of 3V4 mills. Real estate has a val uation of $2,770,800,000 and for the same period pays taxes amounting to $48,783,500, or an average mileage rate of a little over 17 mills. The contrast is striking. Everything the farmer has In sight is taxed as real estate. Patrons feel that better roads cannot come too soon provided that the burden of building and maintaining is not, as In the past thrown upon farmers. We have for vears stood ready to join forces on a fair basis with the other in terests of tie state in securing them. Fatrons vere urged to make more general use of banks for the deposit of their monej and to use checks as a me dium for nuking payments. A bank account giv-s farmers standing. It is a great insjiration to keep it good and to make it ltrger. It develops business acumen andoften saves money. A lar ger use of cieclts would save farmers thousands ot dollars in the one item of sending inoivy by mall.—American Ag riculturist. Tlie Grinice a Peacemaker. The mastel of a subordinate grange writes: "Wetwe more to the grange in our commun|y than we can estimate. Two years agi we llrst organized. Be fore this our community was divided into two factiins, caused by the lead ership of twe rival neighbors. They all joined the grange and are now on good terms an peaceable. At first the meetings wen a little cold, but the more frequeny they met the more friendly they rew till now no discord can be found. I attribute it to the teaching and satlment of the grange." This is only one of the many in stances of the ind that have come un der my own obervation, says a writer in the Nationalstoekinan. The grange in affording oportunitles for associa tion and culturtgives these individuals something to d and thus their ener gies can be exptded in good work, and (heir desire fotcoutention with their leighbors ceasei The 1,000 ton arge canal bill passed te New York itate legislature, but \as earnestly fcght at every stage by tie state grangtlegislative committee ajd other otlicia and members of the Oder. Now forhe popular vote on it, on rather, again it. V live granger. rites: "If I belonged top dying or tad grange, I would hiit the death icrobe and kill him. D(ftli, save of sterstition. error, lgno raiie, is very unjpular these days." t lie northern Iw York granges are to lake "grang day" at Thousand Isltad park, on :e St. Lnwrence, an occilon of tiunsil interest this year. T» grnnge hathe proud distinction of acuriug mor state and national laws in the lntests of agriculture than|ll other orgilzations combined. Ne<| York stathas been increasing her (tange meo&rship very rapidly ■tncelao. I. x , * . .MMs On Advertising I By Charles Austin Bates. ' No. 32. It isn't so much what you say as where you say it. Put a preacher 011 a desert island and what he says will not have much effect. If he is in the pulpit, talking to 500 intelligent people, his words will have weight. They will do some good. 112 >.l. sp — What you say in an advertise a ment, and h6\v you say it, doesn't matter nearly so much as where it You might have the-most at- J 112 y tractive advertisement that was ever designed, offering the biggest bar ....» JV cl-a ■ gains that ever were offered, and if - y ou P u * c ' own cellar under the coal it would never sell a cent's worth of A poorly written advertisement, poorly displayed, in a good news tpaper will do some good. Of course, a better advertisement would do " -p . more good, but the style of the ad " Put a preacher on a desert jsland." vertisement must be thought of after the medium has been selected. When you put your ad in the best newspaper in your community you are addressing the wideawake, progressive part of the community. You are skimming the cream, it MMpamaaHMi is safe to say that nobody whose trade is worth much will fail to be Infill a subscriber to a daily newspaper. e ; Generally speaking, the best news- Do not preach on a desert M TT/frMM island. If you should climb into you Could address a congregation " You are skimming the cream." of the best people in your community every day. Copyright, Charles Austin Bates, New York. FIRST NATIONAL BANK HUGHESVILLE, CAPITAL STOCK, SSO 000 DeWITT BODINE, President. C. WILLIAM WODDPOP, Vice Pres. W. C. FPONTZ, Cashier. SURPLUS AND NET PROFITS, $50,000 DIRECTORS: , DeWitt Bodine, C. Win. Woddrop, Peter Reeder, Transacts a General Jeremiah Kellev, William Front/., W. C. Frontz, Banking Business. . , , James K. Boak, John 0. Laird, E.P. Brenlioltz, Accounts 01 Indiwd , _ _ Peter Froll tz, John P. Lake, Daniel H.Poust, uals and Firms Solic- John Bull. ited. fill fNCriESTEK " "NEW RIVAL" L—Jl 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 Them and You'll Shoot Well (YOUR KIDNEYS *W I I Unless they 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 H ■ 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 H s°d many others, are all due to disordered Kidneys. A simple test for Kidney disease is to set aside your urine H Jfl in a bottle or glass for twenty-four hours. If there is a sediment or a cloudy appearance, it indicates that your I B kidneys are diseased, and unless something is done they become more and more affected until Bright's Disease H ■ or Diabetes develops. ■ ■ 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 I If You are a sufferer, take FOLEY'S KIDNEY CURE at once. It will make you well. I M 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: Hj KIDNEY CURE is meeting with wonderful success. It has cured 4< l wish to say for the benefit of others, that I was a sufferer from some cases here that physicians pronounced incurable. I myself am lumbago and kidney trouble, and all the r*?-£dies I took gave me no H able ,0 testif y fs merits. My face today is a living picture of health relief. I began to take FOLEY'S KIDNE. CURE, and after the use of ■ H FOLEY'S KIDNEY CURE has made it such.'* three bottles 1 am cured." B Two Sizes, 60 Cents and SI.OO. I SOLD AND RECOMMENDED RY J AMUJfcJ McFARLANE, Laporte, Dr. OH AS. D. VOORHEES, Sonestown, Pa. PAII\P>Art ro GAS 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 L. WING, Agent, Laporte. CONDENSED REPORT of tlie condition of th FIRST NATIONAL BANK of Dushore, I'u. At close of business, Nov, '25 1902 RESOURCES: Loans ami Discounts 8259,187 .si! I!. S. Bonds to secure circulation 5.000 00 Premium on U. S. Bonds 3,400 00 Furniture 1,000 00 Due from Hanks Approved reserve Agt 13,754 0] Specie and Legal Tender Notes 20,139 is Redemption fund IT. S. Treasury 25.000 00 8 385,981 65 LIABILITIES. Capital 9 50,000 00 Surplus and Undivided Profits 23,453 22 Circulation 50.00000 Deposits 202,524 43 Dividens unpaid 400 8 385,981 C 5 State of Pennsylvania, County of Sullivan ss: I, M. D. Swarts, Cashier of the above named bank, do solemnly sweu: «hat the above state ment is true to the best of my knowledge and be lief. M. D. SWARTS, Cashier. Subscribed and sworn to before me this 13tli day of Apr. 1903. ALBERT F. HEESS Notary Public. Correct—Attest: A.WALSH. ) JNO. I). REESER [-Directors W.J.LAWRENCE. J FAN NII-; TYLER YS FIfED N. TY LER. In the Court of Common Pleas No. 4, February Term, 1903. To Fred N. Tyler, Respondent:— You are hereby notified that the Sherill of Sullivan County nas returned the subpoena and alias subpoena issued in the above stated case tion est inventus and that (he Court has ordered service U|IOII you by publication. You are here by notified to be and appear, at the next term of Common I'leas beginning Sep tember 21. 1903, to answer the complaint ol said libellant. •T. G. C'l ITT, Sheriff. F. W. MEYLERT, Attorney for Libellant. Sheriff's office, .I line 5, 1903. ONE MINUTE One Minute Cough Cure does not pass Immedi ately Into the stomach, but lingers In the throat, chest and lungs, producing the following results: (1) Relieves the cough. (2) Makes the breathing easy. (3) Cuts out the phlegm. (4) Draws out the Inflammation. (5) Kills the germs (microbes) of disease. (6) Strengthens the mucous membranes. (7) Clears the head. (8) Relieves the feverish conditions. '9l 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 Affections. COUGH CURE Prepared by K. O. OaWnT * 00.. OHIOAQO FOIEYSKIDNIYCURE Make* Kidneys and Bladder Right DYSPEPTICIDE The greatest aid to DIGESTION 4 I At, one ' |,l HALF THE COST 1/ Lion Coffee has better strength and f v flavor than many so-call fi| ed "fancy" brands. fLa Bulk coffee at the same price is not to be com- I m pared with Lion in quality. I / In i lb. air tight, if sealed packages. IMm IN ■I m 1 We desire to announce to the pub lic that our coal mine near Bernice is now open and we are prepared to furnish mine run eoal to the local trade at very reasonable rates This coal is free burning anhtra cite of line quality. We give a good load at ton rates. A large supply constantly on hand. RANDALL, & MKYLKKT $6,000,000 Security. Capital, surplus and profits of this amount secure tlie depositors of the Pitts burg Trust Company, 323 Fourth Ave., Pittsburg Pa, 4 per cent interest on sav ings and 2 per cent, on checking accounts. Hank by mail. State Normal School East Stroudsburg, Pa. This POPULAR State' Institution is located|in tlie most beautiful, picturesque and healthful part ot the State. It is in the GREAT SUMMER RESORT REG ION of the BLUE RllKiEand POCONO MOUNTA INo and within two miles of the famous Delaware Water Gap resort. Tuition Absolutely Free. The total for Boarding, Furn ished rooms and all other expenses only $3.50 per week. In addition to the regu lar Departments inj the Normal proper, we have a tine COLLEGE PREPARA TORY DEPARTMENT. We can save you one full year iirvourCollege Prepara tion. Departments'of MUSIC, ELOCU TION, ART-DRAWING. PAINTING IN CHINA and WATER COLORS, taught by Specialists. A New Recitation* Building. is now in course £of erection, which "will give a fine Laboratory and fourteen other recitation rooms. A. Fine Gymnasium ! Our own ELECTRIC LIGIITjPLANT ! A Superior Faculty ! Backward Pupils COACHED FREE. J Nearly FIVE HUN DRED PUPILS,ENROLLED this year. FALL TERM. OPENS SEPT. 8, 1902. For Catalogue andjparticulars address GEO. P. BIBLE, A. M. Principal.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers