Crippled by Rheumatism.! TboM who hava Rheumatism find tkemaalves crowing steadily worse all i U6 wnue. une reason of this is tnat the remedies prescribed by the doc ton - contain, mercury and potash, which ul timately intensify the disease by caus ing the Joints to swell and stiffen, S reducing a severe aching of the bones. . S. 6. has been curing Rheumatism for twenty years even the worst cases which seemed almost incurable. - rnn with Uueuuauaiu wbicb convinced bin i thit there 1 nulr one cur for that painful dls- wm. fl aajrn: "I waii a grxat sufferer from iiius- cr.iar Rheumatism for two ywars. I oould I JK pfiol . no p i'r tn a n " n t re from any medicine pre crtbod f)jr my physician. I ik atutaduPB Ixit , tin of your 8. 8. 8.. and iiuw I am 04 well a I oer-ws inmy life. lam rar that your medicine ujrd me, and 1 would recommend It toanvone u String from any blood disease." Everybody knows that Rheumatism is a ainen.-oM state 01 the Diooa, ana J MM' V . onlca. hl.rl romodr lthonlTi.ronriB'ln. plausible, potent, pestllerou. naa treatment, hut a remedy containing potash and mercury enly aggravates ; the trouble. i S.S.S.fTheBloodl ."being Purely Vegetable, goes direct to the vt'ry cause of the disease and a per- 1 niai.mik uu.o innj ''. " me 1 only blood rpmody guarunteed to con tain no potush, mercury or other dan gerous minerals. Books mniled free by Swift Specific Company, Atlanta, Georgia. P!iWLV!M KAILR04!). ...San bury & Lowistowu Division. In effect June 20, 18i)8. ll'f XAUD 014. STaTlON. 1 K-iSTWASD ntif ' li m A. Is am . pm ; 2t U."t Lewittuwn J. ; T :i'i ' 3.U5 tai '".i.t ! Main Street ; T..U i l.us IH U.'i Lewlriowo 3.i I t.6! Maltlauil M3 a.l KM .u.4.1 14 fainter 1 7.4 :i I ry 11. to U StilmlU 7.61 8.:i: i I.Vi l..'H IB Wairner ?.! M in 11.3 1J MctHuie US I.ISi .I.N . J'.lfc Jn Kauli'e iMilll .13 !J..1t , i ," i :t Adaai-iufn .! l -.l i:.t t.t Hxavertowo ' "'' "1 .lit 'ist A Mentor . i.M ; 1.14 1 in. vj-'m -J Ml-l.tlefcui-Kti s.4'i i 42'i i (i . l '.o u 'i ouor s 4ii i iV- I.) la .'f Krsaroer S.l I 4.W J.M l'l.'t.'i ill) PawllOX K.W ! .!W i i i.t vim a ' ssliajr..v i"1'1 I ' J :iT M.iT 41 sellnastrov J. .i"! I ' j .' So i "I M Saniiurv i 1 I" i rmin Ibuvkh Suubury fi 25 p m, ar- ri-vf-H nt Sfdiiisgrove 5 45 p m Trains li-iive LewUtuwu Junction : 1 14 n in. 1 l:i n iu. j:i" n in.il 'it ni.7 117 11 68 pm AU-iiim, Pitl irn tuiil the West, r. t IMii!.i in-l Wnsliim-tim 3.1 a m 1 04. '.1 I l . I ui . tn Vnr I'liilii lolchlii ami Now ork H XI u B"i ;i m, 1 1 1 3 4 :i ami 11 1 V m Kol li.rrihi iiri; lun in u:nl s ti m Philatlolpiiia & Eric P. R Division. mi a-ii::i;N' fii.vniAi. kailway Trilus li-iwt! snuliury -lully cxoeiit Sumlay : i ;i t in f..r I'rli! n.." I :iiiinn!:iluru:i fi n. .. ir. if.r itj.i.M iiit.i Krlo uiiil iiinuiiiliilitua i-.si'. in inrl. icn 4 ivon. '! v roni'iinililie Weal. . li; . m lur H.ll. I .nlo liatK' .v fiiiiiiLilulicua .1 . ni nr 1.1'n.ivn :in... Iniiri ' v . I. i.i ir 'A I'll iii I Min.:,.yN i:i i m I ir Knc iiiiil.rii!i'iiiiliii"it i. iiii f"i l.... i Uavcsi an ! '.' '."j l' lu lur ..ii. i ' ..rt .i i u: lurt'.tl.i. i.) i in, '. Vi .1 ' ' ' .'..! y.nrrl' Kl . n.. !.' ".II v I ' Sil .111.1 Il.l7.ult .1,11.1)1 Ti 4.1(1 u lor Wllken- i rl 1 1 .". i rinol i in lur Sli.uu.i- j.i i. i ymiMi ' " run-; i .o Solin-jjrui f .luin'tlon ; 1 1. . .hi. iiB... ; ! in irrivlinf at i'lill.ullilila , -it i . Now Y. rk'.l V! p in H iltlmuro S 11 i m '.V il i: iton 4 1) p 'a '. .i ! m-taily irrivlim ut riilliiili'lpUla ,ii JO r ii. Now YoiK 3 .vi a iu, lialtlnioru ! 45 1 m ,V H-lilm t'in M "1 i III. .1" j in wri'k liy urrlvh.K at l'!illuilolilila .i. 4 i.i No hi it 7 'i ) a ui TniVis ili I nvn Sitnluiry: d a in dully iirrlvlnmil I'hlLtilolillilii 0 6S a m 4VriemreS-J.l :i in V.islitntt"li " 111 11 ,n NuW . otU i'..,t ill W 'okiy, in: u in Sunday, a 111 wi-uK .l;ivn iimviliv' ill I'lilliiut'ipnia l . n in, New lurk J i:i p m, llnltlmtro 11 s : p in, wook diiyi. arr'ivlnir at HIiMnrtoIphla i . . H ii . ,ew York u ki i in, llaliiiiiure 6 Oi) p ui j Tr mis ivitu l.;:u'.; Sunliury tit '.i.lOainand S2.1 in I s a p in, lur Harrlidiurir, Philadelphia and j . Nl 1 1 1 won) I. It. i.inriiiNsoN W'MM, fien'l (Vi Auent lion'l .Ma:i.uter. mLLCR RQOE 3IIE20S3 MILES IN 132 HOURS Die Eldredge $80.00 The Belvidere $40.00 superior to all others Irrespective of price. Catalogue tells you why. Write for one. ?.?.3NAIOTG MACHINE CO, a0ADWAY. Naw York. Factory, BELVIDERE. II cuhis mm. all fixf (msr touttn orrup. TaataaOuud. VM in lima. s.Hd by d --uaiitvii,,-4'y, i. vy 54 u j i ruiKliU. I EVIL OP BRIBERY. I la this sermon Dr. Taimags at tacks one of the greatest una to countered in all ages Text, I Tim othy, !,, "They that will be rich fall into a tempta tion and a snare and Into many foolish and hurtful lusts, which drown men In destructloa and perdition." That la th Niagara Falls over which multitude of souls-name, the determination to have the money any- I how, right or wronjt. Tell me how a ! man gets his money and what he does with It and I will tell you his charac ter and what will be his destiny In this world and the next. I propose to speak to-day about the ruinous modes of get ting; money. In all our city, state and national elections large sums of money are used In bribery. Politics, from being the sci ence of good government, has often been bedraggled Into the synonym for trumlencv and turpitude. A monster gone forth to do Its dreadful work In all ages. Its two hands are rotten with u.nrosv. It keens Its right hand hld- i dun In a deep pocket The left hand Is clinched, and with Us Ichorous knuckle I It taps at the door of the court room, the legislative hall, the congress and the parliament. The door BWlnits open and tne monster enters and glides thrilllh the aiau Qf the council cnam- ber as softly as a slippered page, ana then it takes Its right hand from its deep pocket antl otters It In salutation to Judge or legislator. If that hand be taken and the palm of th intruder j cross the palm of the official, the lep I rosy crosses from palm to palm In a round blotch, round hs a gold eaglo, ' and the virus spreads, and the doom Is 1 fixed, and the victim perishes. Let bri bery, accursed of God and man, stanJ up for trlul. The Bible arraigns It again and again. Bamuel says of his two sons, who be came Judges, "They took bribes and pervert-'d Judgment." David says of some of his pursuers, "Their right hand is full of bribes." Amos eays of some nun In his day, "They take a. bribe and turn nsldu the poor In the gute." Kllphnz foretells the crushing blows of Ood's Indignation, declaring, "Fire shall consume the tabernacles of bribery." The president of the American Con gress during the AmciVan revolution, I General Keed, was oflcted ten thous and guineas by foreign commissioners ! If he would biytray this country. He j replied, "Gentlemen, I am a very poor j man, but tell your king he Is not rich ; enough to buy me." Hut why go so far : when you and I, If we move In honora I ble society, know men and women wha by all forces of earth and hell could not j be bribed. They would no more be bribed than you would think of tempt ing tin angel of light to exchange heav en for the pit. To offer a bribe is vll I lainy, but it Is a very poor compliment I to the man to whom it Is offered. Tin-re are men at Albany and at Har i rixlnirg and at Washington who would I no more be approached by a bribe than I a pirate bout with n few cutlussuJ I would dare to attack a British mttn ! of-war with two banks of guns on each ! nlde loaded to the muzzle. They i art- Incorruptible men, nnd they are ; the few men who are to save the city un 1 save the land. My advice Is keep out of politics un less you are invulnerable to this styld of temptation. Indeed if even you are naturally strong you need religious buttressing. Nothing but the grace of God can sustain our public men and make them what we wish. I wish that there might come an nrd fashioned revival of religion, that 1t might break out In congress an-! the legislature and bring many of the leading Republicans und K(.at UemiKTats down on the anxious ,f repentance. That day will come, or somthlng better, for the Bible declares that kings and queens shall become nursing fathers and mothers to the church, and If the grenter in au thority then certainly the lees. My charge also to parents is, remem ber that thiB evil of bribery often begins In the home circle and In the nursery. Do not bribe your children. Teach them to do which Is right, and not because of the ten cents or the orange which you will give them. There is a great difference between rewarding vir tue and making the p milts thereof the Impelling motive. That man who Is honest merely because honesty Is th beat policy, is already a moral bank rupt My charge is to you In all depart ments of life, steer clear of bribery, all of you. Every man and woman will at some time be tempted to do wrong fur compensation. The bribe may not be offered In money. It may be offered in social position. Let us remember that there Is a day coming when the most secret transaction of private life and of public life will come up for pub lic reprehension. . , Another wrong use of money Is seen In the abuse of trust funds. Nearly every man during the course of his life, on a larger or smaller scale, has the property of others committed to his keeping. He Is so far a safety deposit, he Is an administrator and holds in his hand the Interest of the family of a de ceased friend, or he Is an attorney, and through his custody goes the payment from debtor to creditor, or he Is the collector for a business house, which compensates him for the responsibility, or he Is treasurer for charitable In stitution, and he holds alma contribu ted for the suffering, or he Is an official of the city or the state or the nation, and taxes and aubatdle and salaries and supplies are In his keeping. It Is as solemn a trust as God can make tt It Is concentered and multi plied coofldtooee. On that man dv&ls the rapport of a toreft household, sr the morals of dependants, or the right movement of a thousand wheels of so cial mechanism. A snavai may do what h will with his own, but he who abus es trust funds In that one act commits theft, falsehood, perjury, and becomes la all the intensity of the word a mis creant. How many widows and orphans there are wHh nothing between them and starvation but a sewing machine, or held out of the vortex of destruc tion simply by the thread of a needle, red with their own heart's blood, who a little while ago had by father and husband left them a competency. Whai Is the matter? The administrators ur the executors have sacrifice! it run ning risks with It that they would not have dared to encounter in their own private affairs. How often It is that a man will earn a livelihood by the sweat of his brow and then die, and within a few months all the estate goes Into the stock gam bling rapids of Wall street! How often It is that you have known the man li whom trust funds were commit tel tak ing them out of the savings bank and from trust companies and 'administra tors, turning old homesteads into hard cash, and then putting the entire es tate Into the vortex of speculation. Em bezzlement Is an easy word to pro nounce, but It has ten thousand ramifi cations. There is not a city that has not suffered from the abuse of trujt funds. Where Is the court house or the city hall or the Jail or the postoffici or the hospital that in the building of it has not had a political Job? Long be fore the new court house In New York city was completed It cost over $12, 000,000. Five million six hundred and sixty-three thousand dollars for furni ture! For plastering and repairs, 12, 370,000: for plumbing and gas works, $1,231,817; for awnings, J25.553; the bills for three months coming to the nice lit tle sum of JU,151,KiS.3'J. There w as not an honest brick or etone, or lathe or nail or foot of plumbing or Inch of plastering or Inkstand or door knob in the whole establishment That bad example was followed In many of the cities, which did not steal quite so much because there was not so much to steal. There ought to be a closer insiectlon and there ought to be less opportunity for embezzlement. Lest a man nhall take a five cent piece that does not belong to lilm, the conductor on the cltv horse car must 60und his bell at every payment, and we aro, vory cautious dAuiut nnia'1 offenses, but give plenty of opportunities for; sinners or a large scale to escape fiHr a boy who steals a loaf of bread from a corner grocer to ki-'t-p his mother from starv ing to death, a prisou; but for defraud ers who abscond with $500,000, a castle on the Khlne, or waiting utH the of fense Is forgotten, a castle on the Hud son. Another remark needs to be made. and thut is that people ought not to go Into places, into business or Into posi tions where the temptation Is mightier than their character. If there be large sums of mom y to be handled and the mnn is not surw of bis own Integrity, you have not right to run an unseawor thy craft In a hurricane. A man can tell by the sense of weakness or strength inthe presence of a bad op portunity whether h- is in u safe place. Mow many parents make an awful mis take wit, it tin y put their boys In bann ing houses and stores uml simps and factories and places of solemn trust without once dist-iirslng whether they can endure the temptation. You give the buy plenty of money and have no account of It and make the way d nvn become very easy and you may put upon him a pressure that he cannot stand. There are men who go Into positions full of temptation, considering only that they are lucrative positions. An abbot wanted to buy a piece of ground, und the owner would not sell It, but the owner finally consented to let It to him until he could raise one crop, and the ablxit sowed acorns a crop of 200 years. And I tell you, young man, that the dishonesties which you plant In your hart and life will seem to be very Insignificant, but they will grow up until they will overshadow you with horrible durknwss, overshadow all time and all eternity. It will not be a crop for 200 years, but a crop for ever lasting ages. I address many who have trust funds. It Is a compliment to you thut you have been so Intrusted, but I charge you In the presence of Ood and the world be careful be as careful of the property of others as you are careful of your own. Above all, keep your own private account at the bank separate from your account as trustee of on es tate or trustee of an Institute. That Is the point at which thousands of peo ple make shipwreck. They get the property of others mixed up with their own property, they put It Into Invest ment and away it all goes, and they cannot return that which they borrow ed. Then comes the explosion and the money market is shaken and the press denounces and the church thunders ex pulsion. You have no right to use the prop erty of others except for their advan tage, nor without consent, unless they are minors. It with their consent you Invest their property as well as you can, and K is all lost, you are not to blame. You did the best you could, but do not come Into the delusion, which has ruined so many men, of thinking that because .a thing Is In their posses sion therefor It is theirs. You have a solemn trust that Ood has given you. In any community there may be some who have misappropriated trust funds. Put them back, or, if you lhavs so hopelessly Involved them that you can not put them back, confess the whole thing to those whom you have wronged and you wilt sleep better nights, and you will have the better chance for your soul. What sad thing it would be If, after you are dead, your administrator should find out from the account books, or from the lack of vouchers, that you were not cnly bankrupt la estate, bat that you lost yoi soul! A blustering young man arrived at a hotel in th West, and he saw a snaa on the sidewalk whom he supposed to be a laborer, acl la a rOirsh way. as na man has a right to address a laborer, aald to him: "Carry this trunk up stairs." The maa carried the trunk up stairs and cams down, and then the young man gave him a quarter of a dol lar which was clipped, and Instead if being worth twenty-five cents tt was worth only twenty cents. Then the young man gave his card to the labor er snd said: "You take thie up to Governor Crimes. I went to see him." "Ah, aid the laborer, I am Governor Grime." "Oh," said the voung mau. "you--I excuse m-.'." Then the gover nor said: "I was much Impressed with the letter you wrote ma trnklng for a certain office in my gift, and I had made ui my mind you should have tt, out a young man who would cheat a laborer out cf five cents would swin dle the government of the state If he got 'his hands on it I don't want you. Good morning, sir." Oh, is It not high time that we preach the morals of tiie gospel right beside the faith cf the gospel? Mr. Froude, the celebrated English historian, has written of his own country these re markable words: "From the great house in the city of London to the vil lage grocer, the commercial lite of Eng land has been saturated with fraud. So deep has it gon that a strictly hon est tradesman cun hardly hold his ground against competition. You can no longer trust thut any article you t'ly Is the thing w.'ilh it pretends to be. We have false Welch is, false meas ures, cheating and shoddy everywhere. And yet the clergy have seen all this grow up in absolute indifference, Many hundreds of sermons have I 'heard in England on the divine mission of the clergy, on bishops and on Justification, and the theory of good works, snd ver bal Inspiration, and the efficacy of thn sacraments, but during all these thirty wonderful yeurs never one that I can recollect on common honesty." Now. that may be an exaggerated statemfiat of things In England, but I am very certain that in all parts of the earth we need to preach the morali ties of the gospel right .along beside the faith of the gospel. My hearer, what are you doing with that fraudulent document In your pocket? My other hearer, how are you getting along with that wicked scheme you have now on font? Is that a "pool ticket" you have in your jiocket? Why, O, young man, were you last nlgh, practicing In copying your employer's signature? Where were you last night? Arc your habits us good as when you bft your father's house? You had a Christian ancesor;', cerhapa, and you have had too many prayers spent over you to go ovrbourd. Dr. Livingstone, the famous explorer, was descended from the hlghlanders, and he said thut one of his ancestors, one of the high landers, one day called his family around him. The hlghlandcr was dy ing. He hud his children around his d -ath bed. He said: "Now, my lads, I have looked all through our history, as far buck as I ran find It, and I have never found a dishonest man in all the line, and I want you to understand you inherit good liliiotl. 'You havo no ex cuse for doing wrong. My lads, be hon est." Ah, my friends, be honest before God, b- honest before your fellow men, be honest before your soul. If there be thiso who have wandered away, come back, come home, come now, one and all, come Into the kingdom of God. I um glad some one has set to music that scene in August, 1881, when young girl saved from death a whole railroad train of passengers. Some of you remember that out west In that year on a stormy night a hurricane blew down part of a railroad bridge. A freight train came along and it crashed into the ruin, nnd ;the engineer and conductor perished. There Was a girl living in her father's cabin, near the disaster, und phe heard the crash of the freight train and she knew that In a few minutes an express was due. She lighted a lantern and clambered up on the one beam of the wrecked bridge on Ui the main bridge, which was tres tle work, and started to cross amid the thunder and the lightning of the tempest and the raging of the torrent beneath. Une misstep and It would have been death. Amid all that horror the lantern went out. Crawling sometimes, und sometime walking over the slip pery rails, and over the trestlework, she came to the other side ut the river. She wanted to get to the telegraph sta tion where the express train did not stop, so that the danger might be tele graphed to the station where the train did stop. The train -was due In a few minutes. She was one mile off from the telegraph station, but fortunately the train was lute. With cut and bruised feet she flew like the wind. Coming up to the telegraph station, panting with almost deadly exhaustlou, she had only strength to shout: "The bridge Is down!" when she dropped un conscious and could hardly be resusci tated. The message was sent from (hat station to the next station, and the train halted, and that night that brave girl saved the lives of hundreds of passengers and saved many homes from desolation. But every street Is a track, and every style of business Is a track, and every day Is a track, and every night a track, and multitudes un der the power of temptation come sweeping on and sweeping down toward perils raging and terrific God help us to go out and stop the train. Let us throw some signal. Let us give some warning. By the throne of God let us flash some Influence to stop the down ward progress. Bewarel Beware! The bridge is down, the chasm is deep, and the Ughtnlngs of God set all the night of sin on lire with this wornlng: "He that being often reproved, hardeneth his neck, shall suddenly be destroyed, nd that without remedy." t n Ydup Doctor Knows Tour doctor knows all about foods and medicine. The next time you see him. I just ask him what he thinks or of Cod-Ll-ver Oil with Hypo- phospbitee. We are willing ' to trust In his answer. For twenty iflve years doo-1 tors have prescribed our Emulsion for paleness, weak i ness, nervous eathaustion, and i for all aiseases tnat cause i loss In flesh. Its creamy color and Its ' pleasant taste make tt es pecially useful for thin and i delicate children. No other preparation of cod- , liver oil Is like it Don't lose time and risk your health by 1 taking; somethlns; unknown and untried. Keep In mind i that BGOTTB EMULSION i has stood the test for a , quarter of a oentury. toe and It oo: all dniurlMi. SCOTT A BOWNE, ChMnUuTNaw York. AiffliribUrg - Aarble Works. R. H-LANGE, .Bi'.r MARLE AND SCOTCH GRANITE UUUUUI Cemetery Lot) Enclosures. Old Stones Cleaned and Repaired. Prices as Low as the Lowest. SATISFACTION GUARANTEED. J. A. JENKINS, Ag't., 0ro8!Sgrove, Pa. OjLQQD pjISOn a BPtciAUYisrast "JUT liLOOU l'OJSON MrmanaaU I- ... J lUUCftDUVUVDUUil home for mine prim norter aam Raarao- Iraollopair railroad raioaDdbolalblllajiDd i. If wa fail to mm. If tnnli..ai..b, totaah, and aUU bars acaaa and we arnariiiiteA 4i num. w. .-! i.A i Date cases and challeneo the wurld for a battled the aklll of the most eminent phy" 1 elana. 500,000 capital bobitm our u'i"m" U Uonnl imarmuir. . Abaolnte proof Kent lealcil on ftppltciitlnn. AddreM COOK ItKMKOY eoH EMKE PERFECT DO NOT DESPAIR I De Not MuOfer lxnt-r! Tne joys and ambitions of life can lie restored to yon. Tho very worst eases of Neifims Debili ty are absolutely cured by PMtrECTO TABLETS, tilve prompt relief to tnsouiuia. falling memory aud the waste and drain of vital powers.lticur' red by Indiscretions or excesses of early years. Imparl vlttor and potency to every function RriLRA un the BTatem. Uive uioum ui tuo eyes of yon its .vital enemy; chucks and lustre to tho or old. One Mo box renews, boiea at WS.O0 a oooi teed cure or niuney refund-1 carried Id tiwi pocket. Sold piete Kuarau- od. Can he everywhere or mulled In plain wrapperon receiptor price by TlltC PKUKUCTU CO., Caslon Bldg., Chicaiio.lU- For h:iK' in Miililloburgli, Pa., !y Miil(lU'l)iir )rug Co., inMt. Pleas ant Mills by Hi'iiryllnrilinnntl in lViin s Ciwk ly J. W . cainjisi'll. WHY? "l'.iiilinri'rl hiilcl rlMnbf nn lT'in 4'JiinIi biiM mho, Imr iiitrlclM ftliore ruirl we nt it rJuiiM illrt isiii"rNiiwl It'll- M'lllNllrMN." THERE YOU HAVE it Clear as Mud. Tttf original of the above, written with a pen, wiien deciphered was seen to bo only as order for a type-writer. It reads: "Kudosed find draft, on New York forSSO for whloli pleas seud uie hi once olio oi your luiest improved type writer." He Is piirrhaslnjr s machlnn nonotoo soon, you say, HOW AliO I T VOI HNKM T You limy not writs so pooriy as lie does, ana your letters may not be Ulcirlble, but a type-wilttnn communication bas s huhlness-llke appearance which a pen-wnuen one uns not. That's Why , YOl' should use a type-writer. That it does Uie name work as tbe so-called "Htandurtt,, machines, costs but t&oo. and Is giving satis taullou to !13,ih0 users Is Why YOU SHCULD USE THE "ODELL" Bond tor a catalogue and sample of Its work. ODELL TYPE-WRITER CO. S3H-36 Dearborn Ht CIIICAUO. I I.I. 4-lB-Vuio. REVIVO RESTORES ViTAUTr. Made a ell Mar. '""WW of Me. aLatv r -. THB QREAT " 80th protluoes the above results ln'30 days. It act powerf nlly and quickly. Cures when all othsra fall Youtuj man will ratals their lost maaaood, and old men win neovar their yoatbful vuror by salat It KV1TO. It qtuokl and surely restore! Nrvou bsm. Lost Vitality, Irapoteacr. Nightly Kmlaalons, Lost Power, Failitut Memory, Want tea Diseases, and all effects of self -aims or aicemaad Indlsanttoo. which nnSta ens for study, business or msrils. It not only curse by startlM at tna seal of disease, but It s treat nerva toots sod blood boUder, brljr Itif back the pink (low to pals esxeks ana rs Morlnc th fire of yonthu It wards off Insanity and Consumption. Insist oa halnt M VIVO, ho other. It can be carried In vest pocket. Dy mall. 14 pot pact are, or sis for Va.OO, with a poal tto writtsa R-raatto to euro or ra food ioosnoM. Ctroalartne. Address UT1L lEDICIK CO.. 271 f ifiaU All, CHICAGO. HI rw sale tt Middleburgr. br VT. Hi BPAHQiEl, mmm. fTTrr nrn:i , ... o saRovE M. L. MILLER, Pro I ke p eonsUntly on i,-tl , -faoture to order ill kin A . xuaroie and c: Monuments Ami a OldStosKClea 3 LOWPRCE! ow5 lr. iu tbeSUt. au.) le turuouttcood work. Uhet'ii Aavyrvii,iA ten. i a... . ThrThr r:v..; or. a. pectfullv ask a tinntin,.1!.1 " . - . --oiie- y . JU. U Ml New War Songs and SiW. Tan nf tlio mn-t i have just been issued by t!W Mu.i Co.. Indianapolis! InlH Our HeroeB Horn J' M Heroes of the U.S. Bait S'i 18 one of the finest n.ij5 ever writteo. The music i and tbo words rintr wii.l.M...?N "Dkwey'b Batrlfi of Aio" ? Ll,,SN piece and will live forever . l enir of the greatest naval the wni-M'u l.iut.- lv. eUl 1 tDAKAnioniil ami . , U." J fOlltam ne 1H t..u , ""'CKol 7 fu" iuu Hliect Un., Sntlt Otl ran onf OR . ' WQlll iKiresB jtopdlab Aicnn: Co IndianapoliR, Io,i, Is used for Plastering lhm It Is a new discverv . Guaranteed to last lo,,J man auy otncr plaster. is preferred to Adamant, bur liarticulars call on ..m.u... wiun D. A. KERN MMEEUBGH.Il alustice of the Peace AND (30N V" Y ANGER- Middicbur.il, pal '...JH'WKIt. R. K. ! I JoU WEK & PAWLING, Attorneye-at-Luw - - --- ss.tna Onices In Kank llulldlup;. JAa O. CROUSE, ATTORNKT AT LAW, Oil, hit l. All LtiKinet-K mtrusted to,in.,r,l win receive firoiupt attt iiritm CM A tl VJCTTllTirnni, rtoiii ur. via, Collections. Loans and Investments ! Ifl'lkl fi'lutfjllA ISsastl lls.l....a . Williuuihpoi t, Lycoming' Co., 1'J IIL'LHJHIIH Itl'.CJ Ill.wt unl.l..t t . 1. t. ram nny piu i oi the rvoria. K. H.-Pottiege VETEHlNAHY'SUfiCLOH. SELINfiRDAUC B All nrofORSlfinnl hnal nnna nnl sunt ,t tn m UB. " oo Willi il.1i t:t tJ Uli voir i ..... .t.A,mv ijiuiiijil nuu curuiui micniiuQ. Newly Established. WEST PERRY HOTEL, Oiie-fiturlli iniln V.nnt oritii-lilielil. Teams free for traveling men to drive A i I is to town, oeiore or alter uieaiit. Kates 75 cents per Day. T. 23. Ross, ZTl0. PATENTS ' IVknaillt rw Aammnnli OBTAINED'' TEBUS EAST. Consult or communicate witu tbo Mm I of tills paper, who will glva all ctx'dcil lnlar-1 tnatlon. Coniradm, Aatlentloii. I ssrvnd from 'til tn 'HI. uml wis wntititltHl !.' 10. 1H64. In tlio DattlH of Uie Wlltlimrt II would like to linvn mv cnmrnilra knowvWl t'uliiry King bas done for me. In Wt my I coinplulut, rln onlc dlamtlioea. on mo lunn. Tf I doctors could not stun It. but ccli rv K Itiir bas 1 nurpfl mt. mill I am mnA litVirA niitnvtliir life' Y. V. I.), oclory King for Uie Noru'H, LIhthK I nnd Kidneys 1b sold lu tuo. and i!.V. luukaps v I W. 1L Herman, Troxelellltii M Idtllebwarlti 1 1 FRANK UUKMI.KR. IIWOKSO. ailPll. ftXl. f . tSlDf I Utah. McOlure; II. A. Kbrlgnt, A line. . Oeastv la Blood Deep. f?1rnn lilfioil mmnfl a tlo!tn ukilt. l beauty without it. Cascarets, Candy CttuV tio clean your blood and keep it clean, stirring up tho lasy liver and driving all s purities from the body. UcKin to-day lj banish pimples, boils, Llotcltes. blacklwa and that sickly bilious complexion by takiw Cascarets, beauty for ten cents. All drat gists, saiiuacuon guaranteed, loe.sjc.twc- Union Steam Laundri Adarts & YoUtz, Prop's., Aifflirburg, Pa. FAULTLESS LLNEN is & crowning feature of evening tin The UNION FINISH for wliid this laundry is fatuous sjieaks plauuj of painstaking care iu every tlt-'taiL Collars and cuffs ironed with sniootl Ivory-like Edges. Prices the Lwest We lead j others follow. Lace Curtains Specialty. G. A. Gutelius, Ag't, Middleburg, P- ( "