Grip Shattered My Nerv ous System. Stomach Deranged, Liver Dormant. Dr. Miles* Nervine Cured Me Completely. A slight cold in the winter with fever, head ache, backache; when the nose runs and the eyes water and a soreness seems to permeate the marrow of the bones; this is the begin ning of Grip's deadly grasp. The danger follows in the sttattered nervous system and the derangement of the heart or the digestive organs as in the following case: "The last weak in January I contracted LaGrippe and Was confined to my bed for five weeks. My nervous system was com pletely shattered, stomach badly deranged and liver in an almost dormant condition. I took treatment daily from my family phy sician, but could gpt no relief. My condition continued to grow worse and as I had often heard of Dr. Miles' medicines I decided to trv them. I purchased a bottle of Dr. Miles' Restorative Nervine and Nerve and 1 Liver Pills. When I began taking the medicine I had no appetite, couldn't sleep and was scarcely able to get around. My weight at this time was one hundred and twenty-four pounds. At the end of the second week I was a changed man, my appetite was beyond control, my sleep was refreshing, my strength renewed and my weight was one hundred and forty-two pounds. I never felt better in my life than I do at this writing. I take preat pleasure in recommending Dr. Miles' Remedies to the afflicted. If anyone doubts the above statement. I am ready to confirm it."—D. C. WALKER, U. S. Treasury Dep't., Washington, D. C. All druggists sell and guarantee first bot tle Dr. Miles' Remedies. Send for free book on Nervous and Heart Diseases. Address Dr. Miles Medical Co<, Elkhart, Ind. The grange has the proud distinction of securing more state and national laws In the Interests of agriculture than all other organizations combined. New York state has been increasing her grange membership very rapidly since Jan. 1. posed reciprocity treaty, and this no doubt has had a strong influence in making the representatives of those states assume the position they are credited with holding. Even with their help, however, there is great danger to the sugar industry, and its friends should be up and doing if they would make their opposition to the treaty ef fective.—Michigan Farmar. Just About Bedtime take a Little Early Riser—it will cure constipation, billiousness and liver trouble DfiWitt's Little Early Risers are diflerent from other pills. They do not gripe and break down the mucous membranes of the stomach, liver and bowels, but cures by gently arousing the secretions and give strength to these organs. by all Druggists. An Ideal Leader. Gorman is an ideal leader for the na tional Democracy, provided the disci ples of Jefferson are not particular as to which direction they take.—Lowell (Mass.) Mail. A Surgical Operation is always dangerous—do not submit to the surgeon's knife until you have tried DeWitt's Witch Hazel Salve. It will cure when every thing else fails—it has done this in thousands of cases. Here is one of them: I suffered from bleeding and protruding piles for twenty years. Was treated by diflerent specialists and used many remedies, but obtained no re lief until I used DeWitt's Witch Ilazle ISalve. Two boxes of this salve cured me eighteen months ago and 1 have not had a touch of the piles since.— H. A.Tis dale,Summerton, N. C. For Blind, Bleed ing. Itching and Protruding Piles no remedy equals DeWitt's Witch Hazel Salve. Sold by all Druggists. '• land intends to make a tour of the west, but it would not be worth his while to come west of the Mississippi river. He would, as the Democratic candidate, come nearer carrying Mis souri for Roosevelt than any other man could possibly do.—Salt Lake Tribune. The Foundation of Health. Nourishment is the foundation of health, life—strength. Kodol Dyspepsia Cure is the one great medicine that enables the stomach and digestive organs to digest, assimilate and transform all foods into the kind of blood that nourishes the ner ve* and feeds the tissues. Kodol lays the foundation for health. Nature does the rest. Indigestion, Dyspepsia and all disorders of the stomach and digestive organs are cured by the use of Kodol. Sold by all Druggists. Religion Enriches Life. Religion satisfies because it enriches life. It opens the way into a new kind of joy. It brings into play a new ra'.ge of activity. Thus Jesus said that he came that we might have life nnd that we might have it more abun dantly. He came to widen out the cir cle of human appreciation. The pur pose of religion thus considered is akin ;witli the purpose of all progress. It la to teach new truth, to awaken new aspiration, to develop new possibilities, to round out more fully the natural life of man.—ltev. George Hodges, Pltt*- bure. Catarrh of the Btomaoh. When the stomach is over loaded; when food is taken into it that tails to digest, it decays and inflames the mucuos mem brane, exposing the nerves, and causing the glands to secrete mucin, instead of the natural juices of digestion. This is called Catarrh of the Stomach. For years I tutf'ered with Catarrh of the Stom ach, caused by indigestion. Doc'ors and medicines failed to benefit me until I used Kodol Dyspepsia Cure.—J. R. Rhea,Cop pell. Tex. Hold by all Druggists. THE GRANGE Conducted by J. W. DARROW, Prut Corrtapondent New York fit Me Orange IN NE\V ENGLAND. Strong Tent I mun y Front a Hamp shire Paper. The great success of the grange has been primarily due to the strong edu cational policy that has prevailed. Those In charge of its affairs have re garded the educational feature as the feature of the greatest value and have strengthened the Order by adding to the Intelligence of its members. Wheth er this has been attempted through well arranged literary exercises, through the rendition of ritual work or through a course of study and reading at home under grange auspices, the re sult lias been the same and noticeable in the people connected with any live grange. In 110 less than four of the New Eng land states the grange has organized nnd conducts mutual fire insurance companies, by which large saving in cost of insurance is mude by reason of the inexpensive methods of operation and the superior class of risks upon Which policies are written. While it is true that farm risks as a whole are extra hazardous, the property owned by members of the grange is less haz ardous and can be carried at lower rates than farm property in general, as the experience of these companies has shown. The benefit of the grange to New England is not confined to its educa tional and financial features. The bene fits derived from its social features are beyond estimate and not only affect the 100,000 members, but as many more people with whom they come in contact The grange is fitting its mem bers to enter good society with credit to themselves and their calling. Scat tered all over New England we find the church, the school and the grange hall standing side by side and each an Important factor in any community. They are often referred to as the trin ity of New England. Probably the grange in New England will in the future exert its greatest in fluence upon public affairs not by the men and women it will tit and place in public positions, but by the quiet work performed in the discussion of public questions in the 1,000 grunge halls, where more than 25,000 meetings are held annually.—Mirror and Farmer. KEYSTONETPATRONS. Grange Work In Pennsylvania Out lined by State Master 11111. State Master Hill at the 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 at the world's fair, St. Lou is, in 1904. Referring to the vexed taxation ques tion, State Master Hill stated that the personal property of his state is valued at $3,809,500,000 and pays taxes aggre gating $12,132,500, making a mileage rate of 3Vi 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. Pa'rons feel that better roads cannot com*.too soou provided that the burden of building and maintaining is not, as In the past, thrown upon farmers. We have for years stood ready to join forces on a fair basis with the other in terests of the state in securing them. Patrons were urged to make more general use of banks for the deposit of their money and to use checks as a me dium for making payments. A bank account gives farmers standing. It is a great inspiration to keep it good and to make it larger. It develops business acumen and often saves money. A lar ger use of checks would save farmers thousands of dollars in the one item of sending money by mall.—American Ag riculturist. The Granite a Peacemaker. The master of a subordinate grange writes: "We owe more to the grange In our community than we can estimate. Two years ago we first organized. Be fore this our community was divided into two factions, caused by the lead ership of two rival neighbors. They all Joined the grange and are uow on good terms and peaceable. At llrst the meetings were a little cold, but the more frequently they met the more friendly they grew till how no discord cun be found. I attribute it to the teaching and sentiment of the grange." This is only one ol the many in stances of the kind that have come uu der my own observation, says a writer in the National Stockmun. The grange in affording opportunities for associa tion and culture gives these individuals something to do, nnd thus their ener gies can be expended in good work, and their desire for contention with their neighbors ceases. The 1,000 ton barge canal bill passed the New York state legislature, but was eurnestly fought at every stage by the state grange legislative eommitteo and other officials and members of the Order. Now for the popular vote on it or, rather, against it. A live granger writes: "If I belonged to a dying or dead grange, I would hunt the death microbe and kill him. Death, save of superstition, error, Igno rance, is very unpopular these days." The northern New York granges are to make "grange day" at Thousand Island park, on the St. Lawrence, an occasion of unusual interest this year. fwl INCHESTER ™ "NEW RIVAL" k__—J factory loaded shotgun shells Give these shells a thorough trial, and you will find them to be as nearly perfect as experience, ingenuity, brains and equipment can make them. They are made with the Winchester patent corrugated head, which has made Winchester "Leader" and "Repeater" Smokeless Powder Shells so popular and satisfactory. Winchester Factory-Loaded " New Rival" Shells are thoroughly waterproof, and are loaded by exact machinery with the standard brands of powder, shot and wadding which makes them uniform and reliable. Shoot Tbem and You'll Shoot Well Short Talks 1 Advertising j ByCharles Austin Bates No. 52. No one ad can make or break the advertising of your store. A single ad, no matter how good, will not keep your store busy for a year. A single ad, no matter how bad, will not keep people away forever. It is the from day today story which counts. Every store ought to have regular readers. Make your announcements so interesting that they will be looked for every day as one of • _ _ ~ ~n the regular departments in the paper. i>ee that they reflect a certain atmospliere, the sort of atmosphere people like to find in a store. Then get right 1 behind your ad and sec that your store has that atmosphere. Any one who has lived for some time in a town can vll r >' uu offhand who are the best, the most enterprising iirsvi and the most successful storekeepers in their lines. These '— are always men who advertise; and they are not only men -jy - ' who advertise, but they are men who give to their business •„ announcements a little touch which leads people to read B them each day and every day, until the name of that store A; ■ means something to them. An advertised name, a name which suggests to many people a certain business, is a valuable asset. .... ... .. , One of the most interesting developments of modern "Public ofinton is like a glactcr % . . . .■ . . . sliding down a mountain slur advertising is the recognition of the fact that an advertised name or trademark has a value. Your store by persistent, consistent, and insistent advertising will in the end come to have a name in your city and the country around your city, which will be one of the most valuable adjuncts of your business. It makes no difference whether your store is known as Smith, Jones & White's or whether you call it The Ilub, The Spoke, or The Felloe, or what that name is; but it docs matter that the name has been advertised in such a way that people connect certain methods of treatment with your store. Advertising alone will not do this. Advertising will not make a store a desirable place to trade. First make your store desirable. Then make that desirability known, not in any one page ad one time, but by little detailed talks, each one as sincere, honest and faithful as you know how to make it. It is harder to make an impression on people's S3£l&S minds than it is to keep up that impression. The first advertisement of anything has to overcome a j/f|fi g •&$! 1 /Mr certain amount of inertia—the natural sluggishness |^i A of people think more slowly than :iny Watch an audience in a theatre and you will 'V / sec the truth of this. L \irfc \ however, a smaller amount of advertising will keep \ Public opinion is like a glacier, sliding down J^ a mountain side. It moves very slowly but with QMI v irresistible force. It would require a great amount of energy to turn that glacier even a little aside from its course. Once turned, however, it would con tinue down the new incline just as ponderously as , before. Such is the effect of advertising. The articles \ our ads should rcHtct your store." that you know of and are familiar with from long continued advertising have been pounded into the public mind until a new fashion in thinking has been set—a new set of ideas has been associated. A new vocabulary is given to the people, so that every additional advertisement is made doubly effective by a predisposition on the part of the public to think what you want them to think. Copyright, Charles Austin Bates, New York. FIRST NATIONAL BANK ZHZTTGZKDES^TIILiILIE], CAPITAL STOCK, a... DcWITT BODINE, President $50,000 C. WILLIAM WODDROP, Vice Pres. W. C. FRONTZ, Cashier. SURPLUS AND NET PROFITS, DIRECTORS: $50,000 ~ DeWitt Bodinc, C. Wm, Woddrop, Peter Reeder, Transacts a General „ _ ! Jeremiah Kelley, William Frontz, W. C. Frontz, Banking Business. „ , James K. Boak, John C. Laird, E.P. Brenholtz, Accounts oi Individ- Peter Frontz, John P."Lake, Daniel H.Poust, u;ils and Firms Solic-, John Bull. ted. This is the fate of sufferers from Kidney trouble, as the disease is so insiduous that often people have serious Kidney trouble without knowing the real cause of their illness, as diseased allow the impurities to stay in the system and attack the other Chicago Business Man Cured nreranc TVije arrounts for the manv different Foley & Co., Chicago, Gentlemen: About a year ago my health began Organs. 1 nis accounib iui LUC many Uincreni to fail, I lost flesh and never felt well. The doctor thought I had stomach «svmnfnmQ of Kidnev Disease. and liver trouble, but I became convinced that my kidneys were the cause symptoms OI iS.ianey of my ill health and commenced taking FOLEY'S KIDNEY CURE. It in- You begin to feel better at once when taking creased my appetite and made mel feel.stronger and the «nnoying symptoms & ® disappeared. lam now sound and well.— J.KfHorn, 1354 Diversey Blvd., PAI pmg> IfIVIAIFV Olinc Chicago. June 11,1902. cured His Wlffc rULbI HBKIIIt I VUIIC E.c.watkins, sexton of the MethodistChnrch, Springfield, Pa., writes: «My wife has been very bad with kidnertrouble and tried several doctors as it stimulates the heart, increases the circulation without benefit. After taking ONE bottle of FOLEY'S KIDNEY CURE was ...... . , . ... much better, and was comptetely cured after taking four bottles." and invigorates the whole system. It strengthens the one Cup#d Hlm Urinary OreanS and gives yOU new life and Vigor. A. H. Dtvis, Mt. Sterling, la., writes: was troubled with kidney * complaint for about two years, but a one-dolladbottle of FOLEY'S KIDNEY TWO SIZES 50c and SI.OO CURE effected a permanent cure." James McFARLANE, Laporte, X~Dr. OHAS. D. VOORHEES, Soneatown, Pa. 1 y >*• . . ** J THE CENTRAL State L Normal, School, LOCK HAVEN, i PA. J. R. Flickinger, Principal. FALL TERM BEGINS, September 7,1903. The school year just completed has been most successful. Larger numbers, higher standards and more complete equipment, are the best evidences of prosperity. Free Tuition to Prospective Teachers. Departments of Music, Elocution, Business, College Preparatory. Admits to Wellesley and State in stitutinos on certificate. As a training school for teachers it is unsurpassed. Expenses lower than elsewhere. Address for catalogue, THE PRINCIPAL. State Normal School East Stroudsburg, Pa. This POPULAR State! Institution is located,in the most beautiful, picturesque and healthlul part of the State. It is in the GREAT SUMMER RESORT REG ION of the BLUE RII)GE and POCONO MOUNTAINo and within two miles ol the famous Delaware Water Gap resort. Tuition Absolutely Free. The total expenses'for Boarding, Furn ished rooms and all other expenses only $:{.")• per week. In addition to the regu lar Departments in the Normal proper, we have a fine COLLEGE PREPARA TORY DEPARTMENT. We can save you one full year in your College Prepara tion. Departments of MUSIC, ELOCU TION, ART-DRAWING. PAINTING IN CHINA and WATER COLORS, taught by Specialists. A New Recitation Building. is now in course erection, whichjjwill give a fine Laboratory and fourteen other recitation rooms. A. Fine Gymnasium I Our own ELECTRIC LIGHT PLANT I A Superior Faculty ! Backward Pupils COACHED FREE. Nearly FIVE HUN DRED PUPILS ENROLLED this year. FALL TERM.OPENS SEPT. 8, 1902. For Catalogue and particulars address GEO. P. BIBLE, A. M. Principal. POLEYSKIDNEYCDRE Makes Kidneys and Bladder Right pairban^s 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. Summer Normal School. The Sullivan County Summer Normal School will open at Du shore Monday, July 13, 1903, and continue in session four weeks. TUITION. The tuition for the term of four weeks is $5.00. Students not in attendance the entire term will be charged $1.50 per week. INSTRUCTORS. Prof. J. E. R. Ilillgore will instruct in English, History, and Civics. Prof. E. F. Hill will instruct in j Mathematics. I Supt. M. R. Black will instruct in work designed for prospective teachers. A special instructor for the usual course of lectures is yet to be en gaged. To Teachers and Prospective Teachers: The Summer Normal School will provide a thorough review in the branches of study in which teach ers will be examined for provision al certificates and will aim to be helpful to both experienced and in experienced teachers. Bring with you the text-books you have on the subjects you expect to study. M. R. BLACK, County Superintendent. ONE: MINUTE Ona 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. (9) Removes every cause of the cough and tha ■train 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 byLO. DeWIVT * 00.. OHIOAQO