J)r. David Kennedy's Favorite Remedy frequently cures Severn! members of a family. While it is considered by in any to be a Kidney ami Bladder Medicine, it is just as certain to cure Dyspepsia, Constipation, Rheu matism, Scrofula and Eczema. This Is because it first puts the Kidneys in a healthy condition, so they can sift all impurities from Healthy blood practically means a completely healthy Here is a letter from Mrs. Capt. Petkr Race, of N. V. : " My husband was troubled with his kidneys, fearfully with shooting pains through his back. He David Kennedy's Favorite Remedy, and is now well and strung. Although seventy years of age, he is as hearty as a man many years younger. I was so troubled with Dyspepsia that it was painful for me to walk. My food did me no good, as my stomach could rot digest it. Somebody recommended Favorite Remedyto me.and after taking two bottles of It I was completely cured, and am feeling splendid now. We both attribute our good health to Favorite Remedy." It is prescriled with unfailing success for Nerve Troubles, and for the Liver and Blood it is a specilic. It has cured many that were beyond the aid of other medicine. Ask your druggist for it, and Insist upon getting it Don't take a ubstitute. It will cost you ft.oo for a regular full-sized bottle. Sntnpio Botiio Frco It you want to try Favorite Remedy before buying, send your full post office Address to the D. David Kknneuv Corporation, Rondout, N. Y.. and mention this fnfitr. They will send you a free trial bottle, all charges prepaid. This genuine offer is made to prove to everybody what a wonderful medicine it is. IMPERIAL QUICK TIME RANGE. All Baking Records broken, 278 Loaves of Bread Baked in Seven Hours with but 18 Pounds of SWINTON & CO., T. Armstrong & Co., Successors to BROWN & ARMSTRONG. We offer a line of .UNSURPASSED Our point ia that you need not go away from home to supply all your needs, or to secure bargains. We oxpect to satisfy you in both particulars. DRY GOODS, new and stylish. GROCERIES, fresh and good. HARDWARE, BOOTS, SHOES, AND CLOTH ING. Any thing in any lino at bottom prices. To accomplish this end we have adopted a new eystem. All our prices are fixed on a basis of cah paymont. This obviates the necessity to allow a margin for bad debts and interest. To accommodate responsible parties we cheer fully oien monthly accounts, and expect prompt payment monthly, as our prices will not enable u to carry accounts longer. Statements rendered the first of every month, and if paid within three days from date of bill, a cash discount of 2 is allowed. The same discounts given on all cash pur chases exceeding $1.00. Goods sent out will bo C. O. D. unless otherwise previously arranged. T. ARMSTRONG & CO., Brown's Building, Milford, Pa. The D. & H. Bicycles have many superior points of excellence In advance of any other Bicycle made. Prices from $40.00 to $75.00. Write for particulars. Address, "Zh. BlMJ BrC$. 1M0. CO., Pens TaKs, N. Y. S r. . We hew aa offer. (Our Offer 9 TO the blood body. Hudson, and suffered took Dr. Coal, PORT JERVIS, N. Y. new Spring Goods, AND COMPLETE. mi, -,"-- OL-M,! : " . - X RACES? WElQIITat POUNDS. tto T3t3l tUfwl Tor the Scorcher. A WINNER SURE TO PLEASE! WE are desirous of Intro. " ducing the D. & H. Bicycles throughout the country and oiler special inducements to agents and riders us a matter of Intro duction. Write tor our ;"::..J Special Offer. No. j) lor OCT School Teacher In th Whr-re 1 thr. SimnMi 1'Iim'I? Iiirn.lon of Cnlia Iplnj-fi1. Our I'lRlilM no Fur SntUfttrtory. HmwhII Will hp AntifXfd. Sr-nntr- Itvvrnno Kill Will Not llr- t'nxapil. Fivsiilint Mi'Kiiiley'n prentest Anxiety to-day niises from the fenr th.it the Cape Vnnlo Khi- isli Fleet, now believed to he bended fnr (.'iilm may esenpe the fl.iot of Ad'niral Sampson, which aid sueh good work in desiroyiiiKtliefortifluationa in the harbor of Sun Jnnn, Porto Rico, last week, and flying squadron of Commodore Schley, which is now being given its first opportunity to show what it can do in tho fighting line, and get snfely in the C'nban harbor. It will make no-difference in the end and not a vessel in the Spniiish fleet will escape destruction or capture but it would be much easier to destroy the fleet on tho open sea than it will be after it gets into a fortified Cuban harbor. And besides, that fleet hns supplies for the Spanish in Cubit which it is very desirable to keep away from them. The coming of the Spanish fleet has naturally resulted in holding up all plans for tho invasion of Culm but they lire only postponed until tho fleet can be got at and destroyed, not abandoned. The postponement of tho invasion of Cuba is really very advantageous to us, as it will enable us to make the invasion with a larger nnd better prepared army It has been found that ninny of the volunteers are poorly equipped, and it will take time to gather the new equipments for them. Spending a short while in camp will also be greatly beneficial to the volunteers ; it will get them in a condition to stand a campaign in Cuba. The several fiv'hts which havi takou plnee in Cuban harbors be tween onrblocknding ships and the Spaniards during the last few days have been entirely satisfactory to tho administration. Formidable batteries have been destroyed, two Spanish cables have been cut, many Spaniards have been killed, nnd our losshas' been comparatively small. The crews of the blockading ships have proven themselves bravo nnd fearless in carrying out the most dangerous orders tho men who cut tho two cables in tho harbor of Cienfuegos having done so In open boats, under heavy fire from the batteries nnd from small arms. There are a lot of rumors in cir culation concerning Sjieaker Reed's opposition to tho adoption of the joint resolution tor the annexation of Hawaii, wlnclx was tavoraoly re ported to the House last week, and his intention to prevent its being voted upon. There is no foundation for these rumors, further than the wishes of who started them. Tho resolution will be voted upon, and will be adopted by a largo majority. This statement is made on undoubt ed authority. There is no possibility th t the amended war revenue bill which has been roported to the Senate from its Finance Committee can ever become a law. In fact, there is doubt whether it could pass the Senate in its present condition. In addition to striking out the clause authorizing the issue of bonds the only certain way in which the irov- eminent can at short notice raise all the money that may bo needed to fight tho war to a victorious end the amended bill provides for an additional issue of greenbacks amounting to f 150, 000, 000, a propo sition that the House overwhelm ingly voted down before passing the bill, and the coming of the so called seignorago of the silver bal lion owned by the government. 43, 000, 000, 000 m silver certificates to be issued in advance of the coin age, Representative Steele, of Ind., a prominent membor of the Honso Ways and Means Committee, said, affc'r reading the bill re)orted to the Senate : "The majority of the Sen ate Finance Committee seem to think that thi government can carry on an exensive foreign war on wind." Chairman Dingley said of tho amended bill : "Tho Bryan democracy appears to lift ve abandon ed free silver and gone back to Hat money, pure and simp e. I am now wondering what 'tho republicans who loft their party nnd enlisted under tho Bryan banner in order to secure the free and unlimited coin ago of silver will say to that propo sition. What's the use of going to all the trouble and expense of coin ing SO cent silver dollars when you can print paper dollars in mdimir. ed quantities and amounts at slight trouble and expense." Tho bond clause is certain to be restored to the bill by a vote of tho Semite. Representative Cousins, of Iowa, who hns lieen known as an nnti-an-nexationist, but who voted in favor ufthe resolution providiug for Ha waiian annexation which was re ported from the committee on For eign Affairs, of which he is a mem ber, said s gnilieantly of our possess ion of the Philippine Islands: "No other power or concert of powers can be allowed to have anything to say tis to how long the U. S. shall retain possession of those islands. We are at war with Spain, and the capture of the islands is one of the incidents of that war. . No other power has anything tosay about it. Senator Sewell has positively de clined to accept the commission of Major General in tho volunteer army, preferring to remain in the Senate. f'Hsi'jirets HtimulHte livt-r, kidneys and buwuld Never icktm, wnukt'i) or grijie, 100. BROOKS GOT THE MOOSE. nmiril i Trnll Thrpp Slhll WHhont I'nixl. Prrntk Ilia lllood. RobwpII O. Brooks, of 202 RWlgPWOod Ivenue, MlnnenpnHs, a Rcirintinc ex plorer, who hns been in the forest wlldi of Itasca county after loologloal spec- mens for the University of Minnesota, irrlverl home from Highland, Minn., recently In an enfeebled condition, aft r having been In the timber three dari without food or water. Brooks Is an experienced hunter and a man skilled In woodcraft. He left Highland with one day's provisions Intending to replenish at a camp six teen miles out in the timber country When on the road he strurk a mooet trail that looked fresh and followed It camping on the trail for three days and nights without food or drink after thi first twelve hours. The weather was intensely cold. Th moos ilgzngged over eighty-five mllcl of country and every night Brooks camp ed on the trail of the animal, unablt to build a fire for fear that he might alarm his quarry. On the fourth day. at 4 o'clock In the afternoon, he saw his quarry Btralght ahead passing bunch of tamaracks. Realizing thai the animal must pass an open spaci ahead, and still not sure that the ap pearance was real, he reserved his flr and put two balls from a 30-30 rlll over the heart. The moose died in lti tracks. Brooks crawled on bis hands ant knees to where the moose lay, and, us ing both hands for the effort, managed to cut its throat With the instinct ol self preservation, he glued his Hps U the wound, and, lying by the moost with his arms around its neck, drani the blood of the animal. Brooks ate part of the moose's heart raw, and then tried to get bis bearings He had not the remotest Idea where hi was. Ho decided to strike south In thi direction of Duluth. After going fif teen miles he struck an old tote road which he recognized as one he had traversed, and in half a day reached Highland. The moose was subsequent ly brought In, and it will be set up al the State University. W ill lie llnrlpd In a Boat. Captain Lord Charles Beresford if nothing If not original, and Is deter mined to be so even In death. He hai resolved to be burled, not in an ordina ry coffin, but tu a casket fashioned in the form of a boat, which has Just been constructed for him by Messrs. Wind ram of Liverpool. The build of th boat Is of the style known as "caravel," the materiul being of pine, West Af rican mahogany, oak and elm. It Is seven feet long and looks Ukl a double-ended lifeboat, without, per haps, quite as much sheer as la usually found In such craft. She Is provided with a wooden deck or cover extendlnj fore and aft, and fitted lid fashion tc go over the gunwale. Life lines an fixed round her, and she is supplied with a couple of oars, a rudder and tiller. The inside, upholstered by a leadlni London undertaker. Is very Inviting and altogether the boat Is one of thi most attractive coffins that it Is possi ble to conceive. . Lord Charles does not propose tc follow the example of Sarah Bernhardt and of other notoriety-crazed acton and actresses who carry their coffini about with them, but has resolved to leave it in the care of his undertaker with whom it is to remain until th time comes for the gallant and populai sailor to "slip his cables" and to navi his queer lifeboat moored until the daj of Judgment in the family vault of th noble house of Beresford at Curragh more, in County Waterford, Ireland. How Stanton Defied Lincoln. The application of a man who want ed to be chaplain in the army durlni Mr. Lincoln's Administration was re cently found. Attached to it are a num ber of indorsements which are not onlj Interesting In themselves, but aid It disclosing the characters of the twe men whose Influence largely molded the policy of the government in thosi turbulent times. The Indorsement! read as follows: Dear Stanton Appoint this mar chaplain In the army. A. LINCOLN. Dear Mr. Lincoln He Is not 1 preacher. E. M. STANTON. The following Indorsements art dated a few months later, but comi just below: Dear Stanton He is now. A. L.NCOLN. Dear Mr. Lincoln But there Is n( vacancy. E. IS. STANTON. Dear Mr. Stanton Arpolnt ,hln chaplaln-at-large. A. LINCOLN. Dear Mr. Llncoli There is no war rant of law for that. E. M. STANTON. Dear Mr. Stanton Appoint him any how. A. LINCOLN. Dear Mr. Lincoln I will not. . E. M. STANTON. The appointment was not made, bu the papers were filed In the War Da partrucnt, where they remain as evi tie nee of Lincoln's friendship and Stan ton's obstinate nerve. An Automatic Cafe. In the exhiLitiou .grounds at Brus tel3 there Is a cafe whiih provides bo; and cold lunches entirely by automatit meihod. By placing a franc In the slo a chop or slunk, with putitoes, can la procured, hot and well cooked. Anota er franc will produce a half bottle o; wine, half a franc will bupply a plat) of cold meat, with salad and roll, an a nickel of 10 centimes will extract f piece of bread and butter and cheese 01 t "brioche." Besides all this, a nlcke will draw a glass of hock from one 01 the two large vessels in the center a the cafe. Rule of (be War God. The Chinese have war god which the Government regards aa responsi ble for the aucceases or failures attend ing the army. When he ia either pro moted or degraded, the fact la an nounced In the Pekln Gazette, which also contains similar statements re garding the oth-sr dalties. The only weapons allowed the war god are tom toms and Are crackers, with which to cure the Invader, ONE-MKHiliT CAMP. STRANGE HISTORY OF BRIDGEWATER A DESERTED CANADIAN TOWN. A VnlnnbUl Specimen ef OnM Wan Fonnd There end the Great Ilmh nf rronpertors Wm Something Aatonndln Not An other Speck of Gold lMnceTered. "One salmon multiplies Its species a million fold; the giants of the Western torest spring from a seed no larger than pea; but for gold the magic metal humanity has levelled mountains and bridged seas and oceans," said a well known Oregon civil engineer. "I was assistant engineer on the On tario and Quebec Rnllroad, a branch of the Canadian Pacific Railway, and In running our preliminary lines one of them touched Brldgewater, Ontario, a deserted town, that was the personifi cation of Oliver Goldsmith's 'Deserted Village.' Brldgewater was brought In to existence by one of the strangest gold finds and crazes In the history of this continent, and It goes to show what great results sometimes follow small and unimportant occurrences. I will tell you the story of how a stray cow caused millions of money to be spent In search of gold. "Nearly twenty-five years ago a far mer's wife .was senrchlng the woods surrounding their farm for a cow that had strayed, and, becoming thirsty, stopped to get a drink from a spring. Slipping, she fell against a small, loose rock, which rolled to her feet and which proved to be a twenty-pound nugget of almost pure gold. Bridge water at that time was almost forty miles from the nearest railroad and the present site of the town was noth ing but a wlldernesB, but the effect of that accidental find of the farmer's wife was such that Inside of six months what had been a burned-over, barren wilderness .was converted into a sub stantial city of nearly 6,000 people. "In digging a Bhaft about a mile south of the townslte, on the clnim of the Hon. Blllia Flint, a life Senator of Canada, an Immense quarry of the purest white marble ever found on this continent was discovered, and, at the suggestion of the Senator, the town of Brldgewater was practically built of marble, for It ha3 to-day the only hotel, church, school, courthouse and private dwellings constructed entirely of white marble In the world, nnd a mile north of the town are an abandoned axe fac tory and grist mill, whose foundations are built of the same beautiful mate rial. "During the building of the town thousands of men prospected the entire country, and shafts and tunnels were driven many of them nearly 100 feet deep; but, strange as It may seem, there was never enough gold found to pay the cost of a Blngle 6hnft or tunnel Bunk or run In the entire district. So excited did the farmers around Bridge- water become that Borne of them actu ally hired guards to keep men from going on their land to pick up gold. "Pat Kehoe, an old Irishman, who owned 100 acres of rock-strewn, barren land, was offered $125,000 for his hold ing, but held out for $150,000. To-day you could buy the property for proba bly 150. "One rancher, whose farm adjoined 'Aladdin's Cave, the place where the original nugget was found, sold five acres to an English syndicate for $100, 000, and It is an established fact that the syndicate spent as much more de veloping their claim, as everything was very costly, all material having to be hauled nearly fifty miles, over rough roads, and they did not get a single ounce of free gold out of their pur chase; but 4hey mined some quartz about 100 tons shipped It to the states, and in return got a bill from the smelt ing company for $360 smelting charges over and above the gold In the quartz. This was the first, and I believe the last, shipment of quartz ever made, aa the cost of hauling, shipping and smelt ing was $150 a ton more than the rock produced. "For some reason the marble quar ries of Brldgewater were never worked other than for local building pur poses, Just why I do not know, for, though I have seen many so-called marble palaces In differ ent parts of Europe, I have never seen anything like those to be found In Brldgewater, probably the only entire town built of white marble In the world." Manner off Bxpreeelon. "The secret of eloquence," said the oratorical person, "Is not half so much In what Is said as in the way It Is said." "Correct," vouchsafed the man with the scrubby chin whiskers. "A verbal promise to pay Is nowhere alongside a written oie." Just try a 10c box of Cascaret-s the finest liver and bowel regulator ever made SELF-LOCKING V HAND P jL potato flatters tir-lOCKM5 tOIKW VVKVITtKj TKIlkl JACK. L5 - .y:.KQ pin mo viMtrtl Both Planters have) a record of over Acres 1 9,360 hills) In IO hours. Tbey make the hole, drop th. seed and cover all at On Operation. Tbey poult the freed In noUt aoil at a uniform depth. tsiT 0A71 xnss. tasv st Lit jATi;as. They work In any ol suitable for potato Browing. ro VKiui'inu, I nt'inc no uai imc. I'oiatota thui p.it in vnihsuii dmuLli better. I'outuea oi uuiluriu !:, practically all mcr ctuuiuolc eendfcrrfMpimci'.rtl JUnfJ ly " PcUiiii Bow U !m Tkta." THE GREENVILLE PLANTER CO. GREENVILLE, MICH. WAR WITH ioXt V - T : . . r-Vi -V-w M, J ipv - -to-""'' "V:'-'- ! NEW YORK WEEKLY TRIBUNE R E L I A B L E I will crmtnln nil Innvirtnnt war news of the dnlly edition. Special de-intrlii's up tu this hour of mihllciit Inn. I direful iitti iitliin will Ini irivcn to ' ConvsiMMHlencv, Market licpurts, nnd ixnuou. We furnish the New Yuik Weekly I imper, THE PIKE COUNTY PJIESS, Doth one year for I.6S. Send nil orders to TH F PRESS, Mll.FOIUI, l-A, ANDY ctMcensTiMnon to 23 50 ABSOIiIITF.il Y CIH?! WTrFr1 t0 "'"''"'r'- " con-dpitlon. Cn.curf urn lli Idi-iil Lua ADuUuU ILlil UUdluUl 1 uIjU ,,. B,.v -p erlf-Mial r;,u. rnlf limnrnl ri Mills. r-lranil honVlot tw. ,. STH1UV) if i ,'i.v I'.. Chic i-.-.i. fl,iT.rn,ir. ( an., or. Hon York. to DO YOU EXPERT TO" BUILD? THEN SEE k D. BROra.and SON, ManufGtiirers and doalors In all kinds oi" Lumber, Contractors and Builders. Estimates made ; personal atten tion givon and work guaranteed. OFFICE, Brown's Building, Milford, Pa. W. I G. MITCHELL, Dealers in FANCY AND STAPLE DRY GOODS, GROCERIES, PROVISIONS, Hardware, Crockery, Glassware, BOOTS, SHOES, Etc. Corner Broad and Ann Streets. WANT A UE I Harness? to order to Introduce our fine custom- Q made harness, we have decided to offer , A a limited number of eeta at a price that will Interest you. tUMll! Y HARNESS. FINP5T 3 In. Saddle, i in. trace, 3-4 in. rf; I Q Aft aide su-aps, . . , $IG.UlJ 3 I -a In. saddle, I 1-8 In. trace. i ft pft 7-8 in. side strap, , . U, U J 4 In. saddle, 1 14 in. trace, t in. side straps. . , I J.uU Nickel or Davis Rubber trimmings. BUY TtTltECT FHOM FA f TORY A.X1 RAVE TWO 1'JtOI'ITS, Cew Eetfard Hirn::s Factory, J 02 Newton Street, A NEW BEDFORD, MAjS. D-Il't 'iYLMv-'1 b -.t a'.li i.t; .0 "iocr Li:9 Aw;.y . to n 1 Miuro U: iiii; oui-uli Everybody ua c. Cn- .in Camlv ,ilaii the most won ll iui It,' ut.-.ii vl'v til II f i.JV. p i.ixi, 1 i, a 1 ml i- 'it. l.,iitr to lh v u. iv 1 fctiLij nul pus, ti'- ly k ;iit:r s. li ir in i 1 cj v 's iii iinwiii:.' lliu eitiii'i sis!. 111, til'-ft 1 trids. I'll l ' !'i':ui;ici t i r. ! :i lii-l 1 'it 111 it r ;it'(! hi:icii-iii-s, IV- 1 . ; -v ami leva In-), ol ('.'.,: imttiv; in, Mi 1 nis, i (,,.1 am lfuur;uiit tl 10 j 1 l i-ll tif.i tit 's. favorite Kcmcdy Cliuti All KlUKtV.MOMMH f I AM) LIVLR IKOUOLW. ll' von want 1 I u li 4 ' ik;v 11 1 ' 1 ui id v ini , luuii u-1 tjj;ttj, ; tin) wouiirr-w oiuw, Ilia'- lrutkrf wvuit usun i Won'. M uiy iiiiu tn i4uiil in tcu ti;iv. ; vtr -JiriVHHii-iuvil. H 1 y io- i o-lia of your j ;' i uiui.-r 4,Mi'irnnteo to ure, Tmio or ! -if hi. Uonkk't ainl Maniple iimilfM f re AH. ; Su rw'u' li-'iiie'i v i '., ti n-atf'i -r Now Yni'K. SPAIH Reliable War News IN THE GREAT NATIONAL FAMILY NEWSPAPER FnriiiNhrfl hy Rprc!i.1 rnrrpHpondentti at the Front. w Kiirm anil Family Tuples, Foreign . nil general news of the World Biid( A R N E W S Tribune and your favorite home CATHARTIC ALL DRUGGISTS tr- -' 5 l 5 """" X mahk; p All good 1 f ok r keeper it, Femovei ail dust and dirt from car- 2 pe ts and Kugs. Kemoves all ifrease spots, fruit stalna and coal soot. - K'stores colors and raises tne nap. 1 he work is simple and can be per formed by any person. Warranted to be free from such sub stun ces at Alkali, Acid, Betnine, Resin and Ammonia, which are injurioua to carpets and fabrics. Uttti cuttcuani xo para or carpet. We also manufacture the ELECTRIC WALL PAPER AXD FRESCO CLEANER Best in the market. "TH15 ELECTRIC" Licyele Chain Lubricant speaks for itself. Why not buy the best when It eoeta no more tliau the cheap worthless stuff now ou the market? Send for circulars. FBEPABED ONLY BY Trie ELECTRIC CLEANSER CO., w Canton, Ohio, tjTsLiHro, a-c"!'tSI?i )m T8llt ,V f.0aSMiH. Mamks.- wcopyiiichts. Thlrtv-one ve.n a. tlve rirectice. Opinion a to TKli.liiy ml iu-ntalnlity. rlta lor iik ol lii.trm't. 11-ami r. I,t, ,i. K. EU6UN UkOa DM f tUMl, Wuhliun, 0. C. i