Heart From Attack of LaGrippe. Palpitation, Smother ing, Short Breath. Dr. Miles* Heart Cure Cured Me. The terrible after effects of LaGrippe are no ; dangerors when they attack the heart, the engine of life. Weak hearts are as com- | mon is weak stomachs and when an attack is ir. ' . upon the weak heart, that orjjan soon I nes a diseased heart and the patient will i:;;! promptly treated, suffer long and 0. ually die ot heart disease, the dread of ini! i .us. Dr. Miles' Heart Cure strengthens : nd regulates the heart's action, enriches the L!(h; 1 and improves the circulation. "S.'me years ago I had an attack of the grip, iind it lcit me with a very weak heart. ! - . i ition, shortness of breath and smother ing ells that made me sit up in bed to Ir. . robbing me of sleep, made me most miser ble. I would become fatigued and < \! .usted from the l<*;ist exertion and was in :i a critical condition that 1 could not at mi •to my business. My physician seemed ir ' • to control my case, and instead of gett ■ r better 1 was gradually growing v every day. Then I began taking l)r. M Heart Cure and af'er L had used two !> >• I was greatly improved. I continued wr ;':e remedy until I had taken in all six b - when I was able to attend to busi i» ithout inconvenience. I was com* I and permanently cured of heart ti by Dr. Mi • Heart Cure and cheer fu i » commend it t ► all sufferers from that t i • affliction." —11. 11. Kiile, Glovers vill . N\ V. A'l .'ruggists sell and guarantee first bot tle I Miles' Remedies. Send for free book en .\ rvous and Heart Diseases. Addrens Di. Miles Medical Co., Elkhart, Ind. M S 99 ~ m The Best place to buy goods )!ten asked by the pru pe 1 housewife. >rr y saving advantages ilvvays being searched for i.osenotime in making a Hi > examina f ion of The Ne\ • Line of Merchandise N ovv on |EXHTBITION| ;•- Ou|tilf si/ *1 ( yjg -I'. -It «'• -v "Jf ?????? ? ? ? STEP IN AND ASK ABOUT THEM. Ail answered at Large Store. fJall&erov©, Pa. •Tntl&e i . .er'» lletioc-ace. On tlio other U.iii(l, .Judge Parker's 1- ' -MM.-' think his reticence may ho jus- j iif,. : l:v tin' fact ttiat tlu> nomocracy ha Cor eight yours past had n eandl il : slio talked enough for the next oiL'ii! vicars to come. Pittsburg Dis patch. ' I Slenrnl".* $2,000,000 llld. r-t's success in getting delegates ! li: \ited some dismay among the <•" native elements of iiis party. It I.* ,1 ih.it he will give the Democratic i.l committee .$2,000,000 to iiorni i! him.—Chest ertown (Md.) Enter- ; pi ,% '!Patrons' Fire Insurance associa-j t : ,;i nf St. Lawrence county, N. V., cm - insurance on tenders' property ti imov.iit of about $7,000.00:1. It 1 'ii in i xisteiice twenlj -live year T . -era;.:' coat of insurance lias been a .1 per thousand per year. (<oi'in:in I' ittilx nn Ihmiic*. i;• : inn h: I' >::n. Iv. hat lie thinks Is : Me. lie calls Koo.ievelt a czar, : !!.•> slogi'ii lie is is. "Down v ■ :ie man power." Well, the Dem < ' must have some kind of an is i . and 1 lie less it means the more i, '.. 111 provide. Jersey Citv - 1 ' _ _ I - * sjp s ON?FULrQUAS!nSF 8,811 * liM WHISKEY FREE We know the meaning of words and will do as we say. We 5 ■ !. l i®. lo ?S! t,pplce<l WkUkfjr llouse and tke Largest Mail Order Whiskey Concern in the Noutk. All the ' North Carolina Whlßkej we sell U good—there's BO bad. / - -/'■ m«°°P l ° ,iero wouldn't adulterate If they know how—thej are too K > \t3BllLilUrii hone»t! Mom whiskey sellers are noted for mixing, blending and M> watering. We sell more genuine old whiskey and less water than r ■ v « ' I 1 any known competitor. "Casper's 11 Year Old" Whiskey Is X. dC fP> < S J *Jt It's made by honest people in the mountains of 6 112 rrSyt A North Carolina, in old-Btylo eonper stills, iusi as It was made by , , our grandfathers. First-rate whiskey Is sold at Oft.OO to 96.00 •' II YEAR' . OI D ** r gallon, but it's not any better than "Casper's II Year Old.'* It rf'-. - KKV» must please or we will buy it back. We have a capital off 1500,000, J > < 't ft ? d the I>eo P ,e »' National Bank and the Piedmont Savings Hank lifo r!i le off this city will tell you our word Is good. To Introduce this old, ™ •; - r- |>. honest whiskey, we offer' f*oar Full Quarts «r "Ca*per*s 11 j. L Year Old"-* wo sample bottles, one 15, one 18 year old--a oork- I A BCWW and a drinking glass-all for It $6.90 Is sent we 'SB- will double the above and putin free One Full Quart Extra. 53gWk . 4 ®y« frM f1 eelpt of til and give free corkscrews, drinking glasses and sam- J 111 ph'B, making this whiskey cost less than t2.20 per gallon delivered. > £ Cvi " i We nhlp In plain boxes with no marks to indicate contents, and [■ | r-- J&j&r I Prepay all Express, lluyers West of Texas. Kansas, Nebraska 112 fl L.—-Tii ** p and bakotr must udd 20 cents per quart extra. Ouper Bid 112 ' NOTE]—Before permitti a g ths above whiskey advertisement to appear in oormhimnß. we invo* tinted o iirm through tboir liankors. Wv cheerfully cudoffo tLciu, aud friend* in uevd vf I'urv whUkies for medical utv uetsd *. »t 'ivmtate to urdwr saujj'k lwt. FREE: FROM DUST. ' , lllKli«a)n Rendered Uunlleni In Kpiibcc I>> IHe of Tap. A recent otilctal report of the depart ! meat of bridges and roads in France j shows the continuance of the good re sults obtained in rendering roads free from dust by coating the surface with ! tar. The engineer for the Seine and Marne departments reports that after an un successful trial of a mixture of oil and petroleum a coating of tar was In the summer of 1902 laid down on seven different lengths of road. After care fully observing these during a period of twelve months he finds that dust and mud have wholly disappeared, and the cost of maintenance of the roads has been considerably reduced. Further comparing the previous out lay on the roads with that of those with tarreil surface, he says:"lt ap pears that the tarring method requires no greater outlay and at the same time very considerably improves the condi tion of the roadway. In La Cher two lengths of the Chausee National® were coated with tar in June and August of 1002. "I'.otli these experiments have been entirely successful, the road now being covered with an elastic skin, while the sound of foot passengers' trend is muf fled, and horses and draft oxen require only one-half the effort they put forth before. The noise and vibration caused by vehicular tratlic are much reduced, and neither dust nor mud is formed on the tarred surface." A I'll rm«»l*'N I,ONN. An illustration of the cost of bad roads to the agricultural portion of tlie country may be had in an example re cently witnessed in Texas. A crop of onions raised by irrigation at Careso Springs was being hauled forty miles to the nearest station on the Interna tional and (Jreat Northern railroad, where it was delivered at 1 1 \> cents per pound. As the yield was 2.">.iiiih pounds to the acre this crop was worth $375 at the station, but to place it there the charge was 50 cents per 100 pounds, or •SHI per ton, or per acre's yield .$125. causing a net loss to the farmer of 33 per cent. It is estimated by the postmaster general that postal receipts this fiscal year will approximate .$144,000,0011, which is nearly double the ligure of less than ten years ago. This great expansion of the revenue and the post al expense as well, which is even greater- is largely due, of course, to the extension of the rural free delivery service. The appropriation for the rural free delivery service for the coming year is .$20,773,700, but this sum will not enable the department to create -as many new routes as were possible last year. The reason for this is that !I7 per cent of the appropriation will be used to pay salaries of carriers under the increased rate of pay. It is expected that with the new order of things it will be possible to establish routes at the rate of about I GOO a month. At this rate Hie entire I appropriation will be expended by the I time congress meets in December. | Miss Ruth Lane, nineteen years old. of New Bedford, Mass., has been ap pointed a rural mail carrier on a route that has been given up by two men because of the rigors of the position. What is Scott's Emulsion? It is a strengthening food and tonic, remarkable in its flesh-form ! ing properties. It contains Cod i.iver Oil emulsified or partially digested, combined with the well known and highly prized Hypo phosphites of Lime and Soda, so I that their potency is materially i increased. What Will II 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; will stop the cough, heal the irrita tion of the throat and lungs, and cure incipient consumption. We make this statement because the experience of twenty-five years has proven it in tens of thousands of C<XSCS* fir \urf ynu pet SCOTT'S Emulsion. tfCC. anil si.oo, all druggists. 1 SCOT I & BOVVNK, Chemists. New York. 112 Short Tjlks on . • ' Advertising No*. I One man succeeds and another man tils and people wonder how it happens. . Tt seems sometimes to people who don't t|ink deeply that the weaker, duller man roes ahead, and that his more brilliant pother sticks in the nit at the bottom of -lie hill. Slight differences in men seem to rr»ke all the wide differences b3tween success and failure. / £/* In games of chance (?) the " bank " hfi only a slight __ percentage, but the bank always wins. wflw Back of every result is a reason. Back t \S) of business success are earnestness, enirgy, ff-r persistence, concentration. Between laese * and achievement is advertising. No man ever yet made a success of busi r.ess without advertising o( some sort. Maybe he didn't call it advertising, but it wai alver- H PTP tising just the same. ifer M V Advertising primarily W fly consists in letting a lot of I§lj r 'Vp-jm S people know you are in 9 W existence and what excuse vou may have for it. . .. , , Jnramts of chanct tk« % bank always wins, .The nucleus of adver tising is a sign over the door. If nobody had ever put up a sign, oni baking powder company would not now be paying out SBOO,OOO a year placing signs in all the newspapers of America. When a man goes into business hi has some cards printed, and when he meets an acquaintance thereafter he pokis out a card and says : " When you arc down my way, drop in." That's advertising. The trouble is that you can't repeat the operation often enough—personally. | What you ran do is to put the card and the remark, J . \.l / more or less elaborately expressed, into such a paper 112 °\\ lAiiWll/l i as one y° u are r ® a ding now and have it handed , ftl l/ to a K reat lumber of people all iu one day. j The difference in men that makes one do this j and another refuse is small. That is, it looks small " at the start. It's like most all little things. When | W you stop to analyze it and figure it out to its ulti • mate resul:, you find that it grows into proportions '■■g _ m— of great magnitude. An advertisement in the newspaper is a little j thing, but :t goes into thousands of homes aud tells —thousands of people just what you most wish them | If ti le at j_ i s aD honest ad. it will always pay. M When you're dmvn my way, dro} in" C+fyrig'hi % Char Its Austin Bates, Netv York. Tri=Weekly N. Y. Tribune and News Item 1.50 j Tribune Farmer and News Item, Thirty pages a week 52 times, $ I. | ; Our Great Reduction Offer to New - Old Subscribers. Tri-Weekly Williamspori our * Price Gazette and Bulletin, $ £ Republican News Item 1.00 In Valve ) Together, $2,50 $2.50 Si.zo Pa y s f° r ne Year. v Pays for Four Papers Each Week. * The above price will be accepted for new or renewed subscriptions. All arrearages must be paid in full before this iiberal offer will be extended tc delinquent subscrib ers. , : 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 kidneys allow the impurities to stay in the system and attack the other Chicago EusSncss man Cured nriyflfiQ 'rjiic for fHf l TTIrHIV Foley & Co., Chicago, Gentlemen: About a year ago my health began organs. inis accounts ior cne many uinerem tofaiU , y lost fle 4 h and 6 n ; V er feitweii. The doctor thought i had stomach symptoms of Kidney Disease. and livrr trouble, but 1 became convinced that my'kidnevs were,the cause r J of my ill health and commenced t.uing I-OLEY S KIDNEY CuRE. It in- You begin to feel better at once when taking creased my appetite and made me feel stronger, and the annoying symptoms ... disappeared. lam now sound and well.— J. K. Horn, 1354 Divcrsey Blvd., PAI pyil» IfiriME'V Chicago. June 11, 1902. Cures! Hia Wife rULLI I%IURB 1 VUHIEI E. C. V 'atkins, sexton of the.'W. thodistChurch, Springfield, Pa., writes: " My wife lias been very bad with kidney trouble and tried several doctors as it stimulates the heart, increases the circulation WITHOUT'HE..EFLT. After taking ONE BOTTLE of FOLEY'S KIDNEY CURE was . . . 112 , 4 , s Ti. i a. v. j_ t much better, and was completely cured after taking four bottles. i and invigorates the whole system. It strengthens the onß Bott!o Cured Hlm urinary organs and gives you new life and vigor. A. H. Davis, Mt. Sterling, I a., writes: "I was troubled with kidney complaint for about two vears, but a one-dollar bottle of FOLEY'S KIDNEY TWO SIZES 50c and SI.OO CUKE effected a permanent cure." JAMES Met'AKL.ANE Lj.iporte, Ur. Voorrheess Sonestown, Pa. MAG&C FOR. TStE i. L A >: C■ " i;;.O2>C3 THE management of r'P" ■: r, t ■ ■ vrf»(T a series of * edmbination oflv-s iur»n« • > • ' i . tlio (lay, uiut Will afford its frloudu tueir rhc: • . '' : . • t THE BEST COML: /, 7 It , • " CJL'J POSSIBLY Hi-. J-'Ji if. 1. Theprices named are forer /* i * • : •» i• c Iru'ndo this paper paid in advance* for one yer«r. r\\ , f.i-i »v .» ,1. f.,r papora fol lowed by "n M \> bi« h menus n; v; <>•:. P» < • " ' - L<i *. .•'/addresses. Cash must invariably »u < >i.< ,»-u... < :• . CLASS A. $4 (10 Art Amateur \ VM-* V.n :• a j 4 UOAmerican Held I ~ • 401 Atlantic M'thly Y SI 4 (*) Forest &Str'm('i I 4■ ■ A' ' 4mi Harper's Mi.c. ) tJ'S L _ ' CL..VKH Is. no The Horseman \ ViN " : t! uO Lippincott's I . .Mair. ' 800 Kunkel's Musi- ' ( . : cal Review 300 Town aud \ *■ " v ; J Country / •' ''Ij.'VSS v.. 00Book Lover ) "...d . «t a.. j a HO Critic / vii) i 200 Great Hon a 1 ' World } <". r O" 200 Pojuilar Jlc- 1 v .j a chanies ) g 00 TollettKS I This Paper "With one A and one T' ; and one O and o:u' !> S ' ' J and one 1C 4 7 » « With and Band i.no (' 4 r.' and one I) 4 and oiiO M 1 j With one C and one I) • , and on.' lil • j With one 1) an I one li U V> ( . i SUCCESS Ami This i'.ipor Ql.£ J CI.ASH A. Thir. Paper Wll'i [ ;• BUCCK3S t j <i ; ar,il a::y C'ic > S2.CO j ' Two , 2.Z0 ( 1; j; T'. / uw si r : ! oh* Pnprr V, . a / . » SIV( I L il . I ) 5.3 ■ One > 53.00 < - i „. , I **» " 4-50 / ■ ; ' Three - 6.00 I \ . ® ifw'aaulo 1 Tills Pa:v r v.lMi ' n? m Mziue of <-las.-\ A with • vs —;•*;ljirv* cost ln#m .. ! lu, ;i.cWw -tcomhimHinnr : ->m • ■ I'.. : <■' imVirfiwi laetUhm this ' ~ W,I, JV. ». jT ri-Weekly Gazette and | Bulletin and News Item, ONE WHOLE YEAR FOR 1.50. "FA IR I) ANF, 5 CAS or GASOLINE 15 N G 1 N E S. There are many Gas and Gasoline Engines and 01\E "FAIRBANKS" Some resemble it in construction, others in name | BUI 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. t 7. ■ ~ ' C . I I $- U) Breeder's Ga -7;. , t * .> • •i ] • zct.to \ l " t onntry Gon • \ tleman 1 Curi entHistory 1 , and Modern Cul % (n) i• '' ? / 1 • ' I'-tudo (n) • ■■' ; '.Kpannion j ' .• ' ~fn Humorist • " > Little Chronicle i • „ , ( v> American Bor t . i iX) Hoheminn \ ! HiHnatnn Cooking v School Magazine J . :r. ) 1 ,J ° Il lustrated Journal i 1 -o 1 fousehold ? «»" hfinder ; •'<» Recreation Cn> ! •) What To Eat " his Paper > ) \ '■ i'a o C and ono T> 25 and ono 10 4 75 .1 two D and ono A «> 25 j and one H 5 25 :;i. ! ono C \ 75 .•••id ono E 8 75 V ; . tvo E and ono A 550 and one !» 4 50 and one. (1 ;i 7"> and one D \) 25 7 * J" i /- j Witi. WO - . •• ! f. • ' I 'i S. , ; t - • iv ,«*k Home Companion ....I 1 i'a per I'D!* LA: • -I'tJIK JOURNAL I' KVKNINH POST ' iJOCfcUHJPS .'•! ACIA/.INK ADD 112 a dollar .1 11;;; I '!-i<-i fiivon i _ _ ( \■ ' : '■ v . Magazine . i Culture C "5 4*^ Anil This Taper
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