rrayed To Be Released From Life. Almost Insane From Nervousness. Dr. Miles' Nervine My Salvation. Do you enjoy life, or do you sleep so poorly thnt you are more tired when you get up tii.i.i when you goto bed ? Is your appetite failing, are you getting thin; does your head ache,back aclie, eyes tire easily ? These are sviuptoms of a nervous disorder, which should he promptly tieated or laintinp spells, mental and physical nervousness, morbid fears and loss of control will lead to insanity or mental irresponsibility. Strengthen the nerves with Dr. Miles' Nervine. It quickly supplies nerve-force ar.d vitalityto the weak ened system, bringing sleep, appetite and health. "I was almost insane with nervous trouble. Could not eat or sleet). Could see no pleas lire in life; indeed, life was a burden to me, and I even prayed God to release nie from it. Three doctors did all they could for nie, all to no purpose. 1 was in despair of ever getting better when I saw the advertisement of Dr. Miles' Restorative Nervine. 1 Rot a bottle, commenced taking it and wrote you for ? Ivice. I followed it carefully, taking your Nervine, Restorative Tonic, and Nerve and l.iver Pills. Those remedies were my sal vation. It is some months since I stopped taking the Tonic but I keep the Nervine in the house ail the time, as it is a friend that I do not feel safe w thout. If any sufferer should doubt the truth of this sta.ement, let them write to me and I will do my best to drive all doubt from their mind."— Mrs. Ma ski. Reddkn, La Jose, Pa. AH druggists sell and guarantee first bot tle Dr. Miles' Remedies. Send for free book on Nervous and Heart Diseases. Address I)r. Miles Medical Co., Elkhart, lud. | THE GRANGE jj Conducted by J. W. DARROW, I Press Correspondent Kcw York State I Grange WOMEN'S INSTITUTES. A I'osnllile f'ifld «>f I.nlior For Women oC the Grange. We have our farmers' institutes, and they are notably successful. We have not yet had our women's institutes, which might be equally as successful. In this we are behind our Canadian neighbors. They have developed this farm women's institute Idea into a very practical form of work. No less than 300 of these meetings of farmers' wives have been held In Ontario the past season under the auspices of the board of agriculture. They have their own corps of women speakers, and a good attendance Is reported. The objects of women's institutes, as stated in the rules and regulations, are dissemination of knowledge re lating to domestic economy, including household architecture, with special attention to home sanitation; a better understanding of the economic and hygienic value of foods with a view to raising the general standard of morals and health of our people." In practical working the speakers seem to have placed most emphasis on Instruction In better methods of housekeeping and improvement of household conditions on the farm. While it is true that our farmers' institute programmes already give considerable attention to subjects of household Interest, perhaps a sepa rate series of meetings conducted for farmers' wives especially and largely by them would b£ desirable. More first class women speakers at Institutes might at least be reasonably provided to discuss topics of peculiar interest to them. Our Gruml Work. The grange's aggressive conserva tion, Its broad views of "equality to all and special privileges to none," "justly distributed burdens and justly distrib uted power," its elevation of the great producing class in the scale of general intelligence, the refinement and culture ill our country homes resulting from its irsthetic teachings, all taken togeth er. have given it a standing among the institutions of men surpassed by none other and equaled by few.—National Stock men. ¥hat is Scott's Emulsion? It is a strengthening food and t nie, remarkable in its flesh-form v. <r properties. It contains Cod ;.>er Oil emulsified or partially c' jested, combined with the well ;own and highly prized Hypo phosphites of Lime and Soda, so that their potency is materially increased. , -fhat Will It Do? It will arrest loss of flesh and restore to a normal condition the infant, the child and the adult. It will enrich the blood of the anemic; v til stop the cough, heal the irrita tion of the throat and lungs, and cure incipient ' consumption. We make this statement because the er.pztttncc of twenty-five years has proven it in tens of thousands of cases. Be sure you get SCOTT'S Emulsion. 50c. and SI.OO, all druggists. SCOTT & BOWNE, Chemists, New York, : T r r.-E FRFI'T. 1 WHAT COBDENISM HAS CONE i : Oh TH 2 BRITISH POOR. !IJ Km Ureutlr Kni-K-lit-rf TJinnc WJav.- ! lict Their Incomes: roiii inveMtines.l*, tu l!:o Juaci'i' a:iU \ lifKiuiiutiDii 01 YV.-S..V It often happens that the universal be lief of one aye if mankind—a b.-uci from which no one wt-s nor, without an ex traordinary effort of ijoniii:i and courage, could at that time be fie.:--becomes to a subsequent ago so palpable an absurdity that the only difficulty then is to Imagine how such a thing can ever have appeared credible. —John Stuart Mill. Persons who In the past could not be free from reverence for"the great truths" anil "inexorable laws" asserted by the Manchester persuasion of polit ical economists are now, with great unanimity, asserting that, while there seems no doubt of the theoretical basis of free trade, the experience of the last twenty years easts grave doubts on its practicability in adding to national wealth or its advantages to any except possibly the comparatively few who are living on fixed incomes. The theory of free trade is following such ideas as the Phlogiston theory, for instance, and"in the future people will wonder liow earnest and honest men could have thought they were reasoning w hen they claimed fin advantage to the world through one country having the only market in which raw material could be sold, with all the machinery by which it could be converted to use, and hence command of the prices of both raw and finished materials, or that world wealth could be increased by .placing as much cost for transporta tion as possible between producers and consumers. 'the practice of free trade, however, has been very valuable to British man ufacturers and to British carriers of the raw and manufactured products, and they, as far as possible, incite that stato of mental servitude to which Mi'l referred. As has been remarked, "ev ery little helps," and we find the Eu gene Journal, published on the Pacific coast, doing its anile best to help by publishing a story that on the death of John Bright'* wife Cobden went to him and said: "There are thousands of houses in England at this moment where wives, mothers and children are dying of hunger. Now, when the first paroxysm of your grief is past 1 would advise you to come with me, and we will nev er r;st until we bave seen the corn law repealed." And.it is added, "the offer was ac cepted and the work was done," with out any reference to the £BO,OOO which Cobden got for the Job. It is hoped by this tale to convey the Impression to those who have not tak en time to study the question that the repeal of the corn laws, the great triumph of British free trade princi ples, was in the interest of the British poor. Cobden, with his backers, the "cotton lords," and his followers used two arguments. One was an honest lmte of the landed proprietors, and the other was a hypocritical love for the poor. All will remember that in Cleve land's last campaign we were called onto hate all rich men, except brew ers, and commiserate the wage earner, end wo remember that the dinner pails went out of use. Any free trade cam pel.ni must be one of hate and false pretenses, with sniveling and menda cious assertions of regard for the mass they wish to ruin. The British free traders repealed the duty on "corn." They repealed it that the poor man might have his loaf un taxed. The poor man voted for an un taxed loaf. He voted for it, not know ins that the measure was intended to destroy confidence in British agricul ture and send him to the door of the mill, so that its "cotton lord" might lmve two men looking for one job. At first It did not work as Cobden and his employers thought. Mill, In "Princi ples of Political Economy," Book I, chapter xili, section 2, says: "I Hiring the twenty or thirty years last elasped so rapid has been the ex tension of Improved processes of agri culture that even the land yields a greater produce in proportion to the la bor employed. The average price of corn had become decidedly lower, even before the repeal of the corn laws had so materially lightened for the time lielns the pressure of population upon production." "For the time being" is well ex pressed. "The extension of improved processes- of agriculture" stopped on the withdrawal of commercial confi dence, though It was afterward re sumed for a time. Much land was turned from wheat to pasture. The natural increase of demand was great er than the ability of foreign growers to produce, and the average price of wheat In England did not materially fall for some eleren years. Isut the fort.;, n supply grew, and the home supply decreased. In the crop year 1834-55 the wheat crop in the United Kingdom, less seed, was 10/127,000 quarters of eight bushels, and in the crop year 1.000-01 the crop was. less seed, 0,000,000 quarters, or 4.7.': bushels per capita In the first period and 1.10 bushels In the second. Now Dorn busch's Grain and Seed I,lst says the I'lilted Kingdom (leuends on foreign sources for tliree-qu crs of its whole food supply and five-sixths of its bread stuffs. No one can tell how many people have been driven off the land to for eign countries, to mill doors and to the London docks, whence "the bitter cry of the Loudon poor" comes to our ears by this repeal of the corn laws, and British statisticians are now In doubt whether it is 25 or 3.'! per cent of their population ll.ut is In serious want. At the same Hi le Brltish.milit-ry authori ties are complaining that the recruits e.Terlui' nre through lack of proper MAGAZINE CLUBBI OFFERS FOR. THE SEASON OF 1902-03 THE management of this paper Is ploased to nnnounco that it has arranged a series of •* combination offers, including a lartfo number of tiro leading periodicals of the day, that will afford its friends their choice of newspapers and magazines at THE BEST COMBINATION PRICES THAT CAN POSSIBLY BE MADE THIS SEASON. Theprices named are foroneyoar's subscriptions, and in each instanco Include this paper paid in advance for one year. Subscriptions may be now or runewal except for papers fol lowed by "n" which means now only. Periodicals may bo sont to different addresses. Cash must invariably accompany each order. CLASS A. CLASS D. -Amateur This Paper and / 00 Breeder's Ga -400 American Field An ' y Thla an( , / zctto 400 At^ntleM;thly Y Any ( 1 50 ® 6a " CLASS B. Two « TOO 1 180 Etuio\n) $3 00 The Horseman V This Paper and ,wu / 200 Expansion aSO Lippincott's / . Three* . 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Y. |IIieNEWS ITEM IS 75c ?. Ye&z. I Only 50c If : A nVANCE. j PA IR ANR 5l GAS or GASOLINE KNGI NK S. ; 'fhere are many Gas and Gasoline Engines and ONE I "FAIRBANKS" ! Some reseir:bie it in construction, others in name BUT THERE IS ONLY ONE Engines that excell in quality and moderate in cost. Vertical from one to ten horse power. Horizontal three I horse power up- THE FAIRBANKS COMPANY, 70! Arch St., Philadelphia. CHARLES L,. WING, Agent, Laporte. I WII3 positively cure assy ess® of Sidney I I OP Bladdep disease not foeyossd the peach H I of medicine. No medisine can do mope. 1 H FOLEY'S KiDMFY RilSlF Passed Stone and Gravel With Excruciating Pains H WIMIiIb I UUllli H. Thurnes, Mgr. Wills Creek Coal Co., Buffalo, 0., writes: M |s) . . . "I have been afflicted with kidney and bladder trouble for years, pass- j£|9| m Strengthens the Uf*in?lt"V in 8 gravel or stones with excruciating pains. Other medicines only R|| •« .. . j_i_ i*i - . . ' gave relief. After taking FOLEY'S KIDNEY CURE the result was Ej| DUIIUS HO the kldnevs H.nd invifir- surprising. A few doses started the brick dust, like fine stones, etc., H 63 . . I . & and now I have no pain across my kidneys and I feel like a new man. Km 58 orates the whole system. FOLEY'S KIDNEY CURE has done me SI,OOO worth of good." M S If ic ciiAssiftlwrFFrs Remedy Can Comp&ra With It jiS rajs uufvnfini I CCO Thos. W. Carter, of Ashboro, N. C., had Kidney Trouble and £lB Jr en. nn one bottle of FOLEY'S KIDNEY CURE effected a perfect cure, and L.'i •*-». tEO vUG ana «pIiUU he says there is no remedy that will compare with it. JM SOLD MO RECOMMENDED BY -iffifflfiriHW^ JAMES PARLANE, b.ioofta, Di\ (MAS D. VOORHEES, Sonestown, Pa. jSltffflls teSSSii I By Chirks Austin Bates. "j No. 1(5, Softie way or other, it always happens that the judicious advertiser succeeds. Judicious nicar. • many tilings. So:nc men better never advertise. Some things better never be advertised. Men who are not honest—who do not keep their promises—whose advertisements mis -—, | • . lead, arid whose stores disappoint—they NU j j - 1 /y'3-— ~fj ha<l better let advertising alone, iiiljil 1 '/A/ Vim There is a man in New York—a 8 /|g=i| jV- '•! "'?t j II Mil furniture dealer—who says that he never x P ec t s to sell to the same man twice, gir-.-i- ><?t $ fferfjM He uses all means to get the best of P* the deal the first time. Makes all the I—v W profit he can on the one sale, because he 112 ~ r ''si that the buyer will never come r fe ' : ' J , back—that he will'discover the cheat. I a il M: "He never expects to sell to thi same man twice" that man to advertise, /""v y \ and he knows it, and he doesn t advertise. \ \ t. But a fairly honest business, conducted by a man jjfltjf \y" J who keeps pretty close to the letter of truth, it will \ always pay to advertise. i- 7 • V ft Most business men are careless in their state r.ients. They have become so used to writinjr "bie- . . . . . ~ ~ . ~ ~ L ~ ... . ~ ~ . .: ° 'Failure ts the price of carelessness, gjst, "grandest, "greatest, "best, that they can only think in superlatives. They mean to be honest—probably are. They are merely careless, and failure is the price of carelessness in advertising. Maybe not absolute failure, but something very short of success. Every advertisement should have careful consideration. All the discrepancies should be eliminated. No careless statements — should be allowed. If you can't take time to attend to your advertising carefully, better cut <E hJpJir)EST ifc (iown - Cut off tho parasites. Cut off novelties CHPffrST —programmes. Cutoif the paper to whom JU Ired, t ;;;; t,sf $ , g—VT~r cheap to fi I be ;;ood, . , L-S.--kr;^--1 I I A good v» | TT i\ v-jr>'A_i|lji advertise- * I ''• x a \ : ' ment m tho best paper will do more good—more ■ ■ |-- 'n proportion to price—than anything else you ~ cal) do. There is always a best paper in town, s ~ - 7T" A good advertisement of goods in a good - paper will always pay. Always. "They can only think in superlatives." Copyright, Charles Austin Bates, New York. ' \ ' Pj I and Trade-Marks obtained anil all I\it Centbusin* icot cted for Moocratp Fees. 5 JOUR OfFJCE ISOPPOSITZ U PATr.\T OFFICE J #a:t(J v;e can Bc<-tire paicntia less time :hua those J ercmote from Washington# < « S Send rrod' l, drawing or photo., with Jtion. We advise, if patentable or not, tree of 5 scharge.scharge. Our fee not due tiil patent is secured. ? 112 A PAMPH'.HT, 41 How to Obtain Patents," with# scost of same in the U. S. and foreign jsent free. Address, * C.A.SNOW&CO.I \ OPI». INTENT Crric£. WAaniNOTON o. J. 5 iSveiyljody Says So. i'lis mrots (,'andv Cathiirtic. the most v. or. ■o: i'is', me :ic.il tii.-:. oven of the afro, pleas . Nt ninl r -'l -jh;r.!f ?■> tho tasr.e, tu-l. (jo iu; : sm; iiouitivrly on kidneys, iivc-r and lion-e1.4 the eutira '-.vstrni, dispel cold-: CUI-.J hentlache, fevi r, liabltoiil r-on; tiimt'OL ■ i:d l-:i|'>-,isuc.».s. j'loast" boy and ir. .1 c.i' of C. O. C. to-day; i ! J. 60cents, tsoidan** -sai-anteed to cure by all dru^ist FIRST NATIONAL BANK SZTJO-HTJES-VILLEL, JPJL. CAPITAL STOCK,: 50 QQQ ScWiTT BODINE, President. C. WILLIAM WODDPQP, Vice Pres. W. C. FPGNTZ, Cashier. SURPLUS AND NCT PROFITS, $350,000 DIRECTORS: _ . _ . Do Witt Bodine, C. Wm. Woddrop, Peter Boeder, Transacts a G:ncral ' ' „ _ . Jeremiah Kelley, William Frontz, W. C. Frontz, Banking Business. , J ' ' ~ James K. Boak, John C. Laird, E.P. Brenholtz, Accounts cf Individ-, ' ' , c . c iPeter Frontz, John P. Lake. Daniel H.Poust, uuls and Firms Solic- ' ' ' John Bull. icd. Cbtppewa Utrne ftflnd* Lime furnished in car load lots, delivered at Right Prices. Your orders solicited. Kilns near Hughesville Penn'a. M. E. Reeder, HUGHESVILLE, PA,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers