Heart From Attach of LaGrippe. Palpitation, Smother ing, Short Breath. Dr. Miles' Heart Cure Cured Me. The terrible after effects of I.a Grippe are most dangerous when they attack the heart, t!.,: engine of life. Weak hearts are as com mon as weak stomachs and when an attack is made upon the weak heart, that organ soon 1 omes a diseased heart and the patient will u . ess promptly treated, suffer long and ,■ ntuaUy die of he.irt disease, the dread of mi ions. Dr. Miles' Heart Cure strengthens ;u: I regulates the heart's action, enriches the ulood and improves the circulation. "Some years ago I had an attack of the gf-ip, and it left i-k- with a very weak heart. Palpitation, shortness of breath and smother ing spells that made me sit up in bed to lio ithc, robbing me of sleep, made me most miserable. 1 would become fatigued and e\! a listed from the least exertion and was i i Mich a critical condition that 1 could not attend to my business. My phvsician seemed unable to control mv case, and instead of gluing better 112 was gradually growing v :.er every day. Then 1 began taking I)r. ? s' Heart Cure and af erf had used two ii !-s I was greatly improved. I continued with the remedy until I had taken in all six b ties when 1 was able to attend to busi ti- s without inconvenience. 1 was com -1 .ly and permanently cured of heart t: ,1c by Dr. Mi cm* He .it Cure and cheer fit i j recommend it t>> all sufferers from that t r ilile affliction."—ll. 11. KIII.R, Glovers vilie, N. V. All druggists sell and guarantee first bot t!.; . >r. Miles' Remedies. Send for free book on Nervous and Heart Diseases. Address Dr. Miles Medical Co., Elkhart, lud. m The Best place to buy goods i otten asked by the pru pei-t housewife. \onv.y saving advantages :i r ilways being searched for Lose no time in making a thorough examination of the New Line of Merchandise Now on * u. u/ a/ -x-«!' »v • V,, •-A.- W/. «y. iEXHIBITIONI vL< -V ■!. «X» \L>-if 'l» •If 'V *if -vU /I* *V> *• N »N *r ?????? ? ? ? STEP IN AND ASK ABOUT THEM. All answered at Large Store. JEiillserove. Pa. JiulKi' Parker's llettccnce. On the other hand. .Judge I'arker's friends think his reticence tiiity be jus tiii.'d by the fact that the nomocracy Ii for eight years past had n candi date who talked enough for the next eight years to come.—Pittsburg Dis pitvli. Hearst's $2,000,000 !li«l. Hearst's success in getting delegates l.: ; ; created some dismay among the i. Tvativo elements of his party. It is s: id that he will give the Democratic i. ; tional committee $2,fJ00,00() to nomi ii '>» him.— Chestevtown (Mil.) Enter p: lie. "lie I'atpons' Fire Insurance associa tion of St. Lawrence county, N. Y., carries Insurance on fart.'ors" property I ;' "j amount of about $7,000,000. It l.i ■ been In existence twenty-five yea;'.-:, "'be average cost of insurance has been • ;tit J?1 per thousand per year. (iormaii E-'iiiitu an Issue. i.iirniaii has fiuml what he thinks Is i i issue. He calls Hoosevelt a czi.i', ::; m 1 til" slogan he suggests is. "Dow i with one man power." Well, the Do; : oi'.-its must have some kind of an i - and the less it means the met— -1 litig i; will provide. Jersey Ci. mM WHISKEY FREE jtU9'- " < We know the meaning of word, and will do uwe gay. We t«I he the. lowe.t.priced Wkl.kry Ime Bad th« ° r ?*r Wblakejr Geneera In the South. All the NertblaraUna NertblaraUna Whl.kcy we aril la rood-there'e bo bad. A k M W 111111 flfl'r 112 r i'llWil Ibi'i Ih * cople hero wouldn'tadulterate If they know how—they are too Most whiskey sellers are noted for mixing, blending and 3 watering. We sell mora genuine old whiskey andTess water than r ' '-i IV, k, "J7? competitor. T'Oaaper'a 11 Year Old" Whlakey la £\ -2&I ft Wqalajoyl It's made by honest people in the mountains of I'#i OR North Carolina, in old-style copper stills, Just as It was made by -■;V« our grandfathers. First-rate whiskey is sold at $5.00 to ftfi.OO .[ must please or we will buy It back. We hare a capital of 1500,000. j and the Copies' National Bank and the Hedmont Savings Bank W ? r 'his city w ill tell you our word is good. Tolutroduce this old, f' § „m im,l' ■ h nonest whigkey, we offer four FmU Quarts af "Caaper* 11 t Hf Year Old"—two sample bottles, one 1», one IS year old- a cork- II *"1 S?I?T nI ? l J w dri ? kln « glass-all for **.»&. If *6.90 is sent wa 112 % i3E>: double the above and put In free One Fall Qoari Extra. «"" wS»' -iF ? n fop J** ? r wjl * Ornish twenty full quart bottles on re &. HI sygdpS c®lpt of 111 Mil give free corkscrews, drinking glasses and sam ' 1 It™ llv s '" 1 . ak J n ff t, his whiskey cost less than 12.20 per gallon delivered. I m e p .F 1 ™" * H>XPB w,th no marks to indtoate contents, and ;•' i i ™ Jll I I'fP*? Ex P p s""« Buyers West of Texas, Kimm, Nebraska WBS 1 » dl" s:— J •*»<* Dakou must add 20 cents per quart extra. \#l|l-< Made Br HoNESTesfc THE CAPPED rn n__ \ th. ifn?tlTr?i! l Lt| 8 ,r?7w' _ l B ' for<l Ju' ,rrn h tli ? S if he "' ,i,ke * *! l,< ' rnH ' n " nt <" appear In our column*. » Inveitlfittd n t ® ebMtltti)/ widono them, aud lii.ad, lu ntud ol |.unj wlmkiw for m.dicai uw need 'THE GR.AWGE 1 Conducted by W. DARROW, Chatham. N. Y„ Press Correspondent yew York State Orange COUNTY DEPUTY'S WORK. its Importance Should lie Am»re«'lut <•<l mill Provision Mmle for It. At tlio bottom of all success in in creasing grunge membership lies tin work ot' the deputy. Lecturers ami newspapers may attract the attention and in a way prepare ft* organization of granges, but it is the organizer- 1. e„ the deputy- who must do the actuai work of organizing. There is a gen era! l'eeling all over the United States that the work of organization should be pushed, within just limits, of course, until not a sintrle town or neighbor hood outside the cities but shall have lieurd of the grange work and Its ad vantage to the farmer. While we have in the United States approximately MX),000 members, there Is no £ood rea son why that number should not be in creased to 1,000,000 by the active agen cy of thoroughly interested deputies, county and state officials. We must not allow the work of ex tension to drift, and we owe it both to ourselves find our posterity that the effort lie made, and the more aggres sive and progressive it is the nearer we shall approach the fullest measure of duty and opportunity. Ample funds should be appropriated from the state granges to carry on this work. This is already being done in some ot the more progressive grange states, but there are other states where the work is lagging and where new life should be Instilled. An Eilncntimifil \«fnoy. It is not so much what one knows as what he can use that makes hint strong and practical. The peculiar value of grange education lii« In the fact tl.'sit the member can use his knowledge in the discussions and de liberations of the grange hall, and, on going out, he can practically apply it on the farm and in the business of life generally. Farmers who fail to get their children into the grange are neg lecting one of the best educational agencies that these children will ever have within their read* -J. T. Ailtnan Snperflnotiß. The National Association of Import ers has been organized in New York "to aid in securing equitable tariff legislation consonant with a proper consideration of the interest of the im porters of the country." When the Democratic party is so devoted to the tariff interests of the importers as to favor the abolition of the tariff it l« difficult U) see why the importers should orgiuiize separately for that purpose. Rut all importers are not in terested in this organization.—Phila delphia Press. Firiu Footing. If Republicans can't Hud Hrni footing on that platform they will be hard to Huit. Anybody who doesn't like it will do well to com pa-re It with the Demo cratic platform.—New Haven Journal. Trn.l. ~..,1 <l,n Turin What is Scott's Emulsion? It is a strengthening food and ionic, remarkable in its flesh-form ing; properties. It contains Cod- Liver Oil emulsified or partially Jigested, combined with the well- Icnown and highly prized Hypo phosphites of Lime and Soda, so ihat their potency is materially increased. What WIN M 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 j will stop the cough, heal the irrita tion of the throat and lungs, and cure incipient consumption. We make this statement because the expertence of twenty-five y«ars has proven it in tens of thousands of CcISCS* He sure ynu pet SCOTT'S Emulsion, soc. and si.oo, all druggists. SCOTT & BOWNH, Chemists. New York. _ Short Talks on . [ Adverti&ihd * N». 8. One man succeeds and another man fails and people woadar how it happens. It seems sometimes t® people who don't think deeply that the weuJter, duller man goes ahead, unci that his more brilliant brother sticks in the rut at the bottom of the hill. Slight differencab in men seem to make all till fcide 4iffer«n*es -gs. between success and failure. ufljtlfe. tIS In games of chance (?) the " bank" has only a slight JmJ percentage, but the bank always wins. '* JHL <* Kf Back of every result is a reason. Badk of business success are earnestness, energy, ■». persistence, conoentratitfc these * and achievement is ag ifiH No man ever yet made a success of busi- , 112 lif'^l/ ness without advertising of some sort. Maybe wmiSiSv he didn't call it advertising, but it was adver- H H P tising just the same. M V Advertising primarily W B consists in letting a lot of A m P people know you are in . K. existence and what excute vou may have for it. ... . , ... «. „ , , , l» V thanct thj ' tank asuart iJS». The nucleus of adver tising is a sign over the door. If nobody had ever put up a sign, one baking powder company w»uld not now be paying out SBOO,OOO a year placing signs in 4 the newspapers of Auiarica. When a man goes into business he has some cards printed, and when he meets an acquaintance thereafter he pokes out a card and says: "When you arc down my way, drop in." That's advertising. * «"•" The trouble is that you can't repeat tho operation often enough—puisoiiifcy What yeu can do is to put the card and tho remark, I \,l 1 more or less elaborately expressed, into such a paper I \\ liNllWl\/f I as t^le on " y ou are rea(^'n Jf now and have it hafiried \ vi\\\VuAi^al#4! iL *° a K reat number of peoplo all ln one day. J difference in men that makos «u« do this flKj/.y | another refuse is small. That is, it looks iwiiaJl •CjHti" l5» ' ttt t^le start - * l ' 3 most all little things. When you sl°P to analyzo it s*d figuro it out to its nlti " ' mate result, you find that It grows into proportions - 1 ~ _ hi of great magnitude. An advertisemaat tn the newspaper is a little 't* thing, but it goes tato thousands of homos and tells - vs. -teIT thousands of people just what you most wish their. - to hear, If the ad. is an honest ad. it will always pay. %% \Vhtn ytu'rt my tvay, drefi fn." CefyngTki, Charla Austin Pa/ts, Nm< York. fH-Weekly N. V. TriHne and News Item I.SO • Tribune Farmer and News Item, Thirty pages a week 52 times, $ 1. Our Great Offer to New and ~ Old Subscribers. I ■ Tri-Weekly Williamsport Gazette and SvUetin, c Y|g 112 50 Republican News Hem LOO 112 Together, $2.50 $2.50 Ct Pays for One Year. Pays for Four Papers Each Week. M The above price will be accepted for new or renewed subscriptions. All arrearages must be paid in full before this liberal offer will be extended(todelinquent 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 Business man Cured orp-ans This fffci* flif* msnv HifFprpnf* Foley & Co., Chicago, Gentlemen:—About A year ago my health began ° ims i accouius ior me many amerent tQ j », ost flesh and neV er felt well. The doctonhought i had stomach SVmDtomS of Kidnev Disease. and liver trouble, but I became Convinced that my kidnevs were the cause . of mv ill health and commenced taking FOLEY'S KIDNfiY CURE. It in- You begin to feel better at onte when taking creased my appetite and made rne feel stronger, and the annoying symptoms disappeared. lam now sound and well.—J. K. Horn, 1354 Diversey Blvd., PTOI OMriniiSFY PIIDC Chicago. June 11,1902. Guf . ad K jo Wife B Wfcit I I E. C. Watkins, sexton of the Methodist Church, Springfield, Pa., writes: m _ # "My v ifc has been verv bad \vi:h Kidney trouble and tried several doctors as it stimulates the heart, increases) the circulation without benefit. After taking on. bWttie of FOLEY'S KIDNEY CURE was ... , . , , . , _ much better, and was completely cured after taking four bottles." and invigorates the whole system. It strengthens the one Sottlo CureU Hlm Urinary organs and gives you new lite and vigor. A. H. Davis, Alt. Sterling, la., whites: "I was troubled with kidney complaint for about two years, but a bottle of FOLEY'S KIDNEY TWO S IZES 50c and $1,190 CURI: effected a permanent cure." \ 1 Laporte, TTr, VoorKees bonest&wn, Pa. MAGAZ I FOR. TEB t?t: ?002-O3 THE management of?'•: ' ' ;it i -..ranged a series of combination. oiTti's ' ' 1 .\.ao£ the day, tkat will afford its the! r » A 'j THE BEST CO AC.' ' 'iC ■ • 'J POSSIBLY Theprlcos named a-e fori ; - • , :an< Indudo this paper paid in advance for oi-«-;. e.t »J . " rt for papers lol lowe<l by "n" wtikli mi : -cat addresses. Caah mast invariably accci pa , e CLASS A. [ i'LAJ-V. n. 00 Art Amateur "v -j-iv ~w . ! c.» w Breedor's Ga -400 American Field j , ~. r .. , sotto 4W) Atlantic MW ? i .' ' \ U ° J™** QoU ' 4 OOFpwitsStr'm v'i t 'i 1 . ! IHi Current History 4 00 Harper's Mn . and Modern On£ "*T~" , tur« <n) " • , 7, • i 1 r.f) I tudo (n) |3 00 The Horseman \ <)•>.•, <•„, r ! ' / '"i Kxnansion aSO Lippinoott's i . , , .■, I r; Oil i!u'i:iori«t „ „ M" 1 !' . ' ' ' \ 1 0.1 Little Chronicle 800 Kunkel s Musi- i cal Review " " ~~—"■ 300 Town and * " ■ > ; . Country -.*• ** / ;'i American Boy ~ ' i <"• ''oliemi.iii ' \ 1; > !''" e t,oll Coottlng $3 00 Book TJOV« :• 1 'I • . • is! }«azino 800 Critic ' " ~0 V {.ampbell's 11-800 800 Groat Round , j . it oil Journal World i < ■ r ' ■ / ' ' ; oostiliold 200 Popular M.:- , . i ;"I Patiuaidor clianirs i ' 1 1 •' \ii) 200 Toilette s .* - . ' I . Bat This Paper } j This Paper TVlth one A and on." n \ itv. j . v n C and one T) (3 S5 and one' •' j 1 and ono K 4 R and one ' • ; 'Villi two It 112, ud one A 085 and one 1 . nn ' w:« 11 5 With and Band one !5 4 «.vr ami one O 4T5 and I' ;,iel one E 375 undone •• > ' ■' :. tw«; !•' ml one A. 550 With one C and one • ■ • aud one B 4uo and one .;t ■ 1 j, •i . (.n (: ;t V"» With ono I) and ono E 2 . andi .ieJJ 3 :i"i SUCC "J V And Thi-- 1'..'.;. ' ' " o 112 *^*l, _ » 4 ■ MO > Com^anlan 1 , . ' 1 -per This Paper With / > , r SUCCESS I ~ ' ' and any . One ' 52.C3 i 1( 1 - L ... { , • ■ " ; • orrp.NAL Two o 2.-U i ' "" ■ . -ri *.<: post owssß. aoawnbs 1 $• ..1 p •'• vr of '■ •*•••• J This Paper Wi Pi j ■ i3 a r success \ . : prio«.oiven and any 1 One - 53.00 - m-> ,o- Tv/o * *l. i ■ ' . 1 . nt!. ■■■'.• Tlircc / 6.00 '.is \ " .:!e • : ; si -l Culture Tlds Paper will: at'i'l' '■ ;i" ' . magazine of Cl:i>s \ 1 . , —publishora'cost froml ).7 Ihr llic h>wcst cvinblii'U I ?'■'** ' i."ctilum lUU iMXI'Ct tVl'l tult' ■'h ' *i,l,.*e ! ,' ■ , Tri=Weekly Gazette and ONE WHOLE YEAR FOR 1.50. "FAIFV I)A R 53 GAS or GASOLINE 1 ED NG I N S. '1 here are many Gas end Gasoline Engines and OWE "FAIRBANKS" Some resemble it in construction, others in name BUT THERE IS ONLY ONE J " 1 I i'l Li** Engines that excell in quality and moderate in cost. Vertical from one to ten horse power. Horizontal three horse power up- THE FAIRBANKS COMPANY, 70S Arch St., Philadelphia. CHARLES L. WING, Agent, Laporte.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers