Pike County press. (Milford, Pa.) 1895-1925, October 28, 1898, Image 2

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    PIKE COUNTY PRESS.
Friday, October 28, 1898.
PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY.
OrriCE, BROWB'g BUILDIKO, BROAD ST,
Entered (it the post otlloe of
Milford, Pike county, Pennsylvania,
as pecond-clafw matter, November
twenty-first, 1895.
Advertising Rates.
One uniinrKfllffht Unesl.one Insertion -$1
V 1. 1 ....... InuMlnn
rwn nnnriT'iii .n.. ...... -
Reduced rats will be furnished on ap
plication, will do aiioweu yvariy w.n
Users.
Advertising.
Conrt Pri
Inn. Jurr and Trial
I.lut for t
1 courts per term, wm.w
Administrator
and Executors
notices - -
Auditor notices
IHvoree notices
8.00
4.00
s.oo
Sheriff's sales,
Orphans' court sains.
r. ....... Treasurer's sales. Count T state
ment and election proclamation charged
by the square.
J. B. Yaa Etten, PuBLIflRBR,
Milford. Pike County, Pa.
REPUBLICAN TICKET.
State
For Governor,
WILLIAM A. STONE,
of Allegheny County.
For Lieutenant Governor,
J. P. 8. GOBIN,
of Lebanon County.
Secretary of Internal Affairs,
JAMES W. LATTA,
of Philadslphift.
Judge of Superior Court,
. WILLIAM W. PORTER,
of Philadelphia.
Congressmen-at-Large,
GALUSHA A. GROW,
of Susquehanna County.
8 AMUEL A. DAVENPORT,
of Erie County.
County Ticket.
For Congress,
WILLIAM 8. KIRKPATRICK,
of Northampton.
For State Senator,
WILLIAM R. STROH,
of Carbon.
For Representative.
WILLIAM B. KENWORTHEY,
of Milford.
For Sheriff,
JOSEPH D. BROOKS,
of Delaware.
For Coroner,
ALFRED T. SEELEY,
of Milford.
C0L0WKL STORK'S PLA.TF0B1C
It will be my purpose when elect
ed to so conduct myself as to win
the respect and good will of those
who have opposed me as well as
those who have given mo their sup
port. I shall be governor of the
whole people of the state. Abuses
have undoubtedly grown up in the
Legislature which are neither the
fault of one party nor the other, but
rather the growth of custom. Un
necessary investigations have been
authorized by committees, resulting
in unnecessary expense to the State.
It will be my care and purpose to
correct those and other evils in so
far as I have the power. It will be
my purpose while Governor of
Pennsylvania, as it has been my
Furpose in the public positions that
have held, with God's help, to
discharge my whole duty. The
people are greater than the parties
to which they belong. I am only
Jealous of their favor. I shall only
attempt to win their approval and
my experience has tanght me that
that can best be done by an honest,
modest, daily discharge of public
duty.
EDITORIAL.
TP HAT ohromo is all ready ;send in
the name of the leading Repub
lican, Mr. I. B.
TTI ! THERE, Sickles, wake up and
. : give na a chapter of "A School
mas tar's Logic.'
Q.O OUT thia (Friday) evening, and
- hear Congressman Klrkpatrlck
at the Court House. The Judge
makes an excellent speech, and it
will be worth while bearing him.
THE Mcnroe Democrat last week,
knowing that Mr. Lauer was
off the ticket, still did not hoist that
of Lauer at its head. That paper is
not the kind that sneezes every time
somebody takes snuff.
QOME HOW Carbon County Dom-
orats do not enthuse over D. S
Lpe, thair candidate for State Sen.
ator. W . R. Stron will mako a
good enough Senator for them. See
that your mark is opposite his
name. -
WE HAVE engaged a good sign
painter, in the emergency that
Vrff,?, of Monroe, comet op
' .i ti. !
here to make a wiit to alter - 0116
we have on hand lo "Remember
the Barber,'1 and post tn mmn on
sptcnou8 place, where Mr. S. can
see it and so be reminded of his
mtsHton.
MR.KESSLER must have an exalt-
r ed Idea of the intelligence of
his Democratic constituents, if he
thinks such stuff na is printed in
hisTbehnlf in the Gazette satisfies
their minds, or explains his course
It is simply an insult to any one
with sense enough to go in a wood
shed when it rains.
"JJARDLY anybody rend that
. paper," meaning the Press,
but there is one chap in Matamoras
who "borrows, begs or steals'! a
copy every week for that purpose
and we'll bet ducats on it, and if he
gains some sense in that way part
of its mission in this world will be
fulfilled, and it will not have lived
in vain.
rOME over here, Mr. Barber , Mr.
Hart want to kill a fatted calf
for you. He has theknife all ready
sharpened ; only let us give you a
hint, to look a leedle oudt when he
strikes, for if be should by any
chance miss the animal, the weapon
might, accidentally of oourse, land
in ' the vicinity of your "solar
plexus" and hurt you.
WE HAVE one deep, dark, sinis
ter motive in having a Repub
lican representative from this
county, and if it can be kept a pro
found secret we dont mind saying
to you that it is so we may obtain
a Smalls hand book of our own free
gratis for nothing. An editor can
hardly keep house without one, and
now we have to "borrow, beg or
steal."
QUR next door neighbor wields a
trenchent pen in defense and
commendation of its candidate for
the Legislature, Mr. Kesslor. The
only trouble' is the office cat, which
voracious feline somehow intercepts
all the bright and glittering para
graphs in " his favor before they
reach the editorial page. Can't
Kessler manage to have the oat
chloroformed? It may spoil his
hash.
OT ONE word has been or can be
said against Dr. Kenworthey.
His Integrity is undoubted, his abili
ty conceded ; he is a bright wide
awake young man, with the intelli
gence to comprehend the business
of the House and understand the
duties of the position. We don't
ask you to take our word for this ;
ask any Democrat who knows him.
Why, not,then,vote for Dr.Kenwor-
they.
MR. BARBER, when on his trip to
J1 Pike in 1896, stated to a lead
ing politician of this oounty that all
was harmony in Carbon, and tht
Mr. Cassidy would start next morn
ing on a tour of that county for
him." Was Mr. Barber asserting
what he really knew or believed, or
was he attempting to deceive the
voters of Pike? The harmony was
about as thick over there then as it
appears to be now.
IF THE record made by Mr. Kess
, ; l. 1. j l. i .
ivr is una wiiu "wuiuu ua la mb-
isflod, and his constituents are also
satisfied, our time and labor in
showing his record have been ex
pended in vain. If this is the state
of his mind, why does he not say so
and assert the correctness of his
oourse? The people are entitled to
an expression from him. Or per
haps relying on the indifference of
Democrats, he teels assured of their
support without explanation, or it
may be that be is so self assured
that he can say the people be d d.
pAN the plummet of party fealty
sound the depths of the love
and affoction for Candidate Barber
which our sparkling contemporary
displayed last week in hauling down
the name of Lauer and hoisting that
of Mr. Barber? That the gem may
sparkle before our readers, we ap
pend it; "Reoognlzing the author
ity of the court, and falling into
line', as all good Democrats should
and will do, submitting . f'. the de
cision, we place t".K name of Laird
H. Barber in, the proper column, as
the regular nominee of the party
so found by the Court." Ah I
JT SEEMS as if to add to our woes,
occasioned by Democratic, rule
in this County, we must besides
have inflicted such canards as the
following, which is now going the
rounds of neighboring papers:
"Four deaths from diphtheria have
occurred within two weeks in the
family of Ira Seely, at Mount Hope,
near Milford, Pike County." There
is no such town in the County, and
no Ira Seuly, nor have there been
any such deaths, either near Mil
ford, or in the oounty to our knowl
edge. The person who originates
such lies ought to be snot to death
with hot mush, and dead-shot
Kttewiubs Sickles is a good man to
do the job.
JICKLFA I.cicles, Pickles, hns
hysteria, not the usual kind
which attacks weak people, but the
driveling epileptic tumble in a hole
sort which is Incurable. Had
PythftRoras lived in those days and
read I. ciclos puerile traBh he wonld
have Instantaneously denounced his
doctrine of the transmigration of
souls, because it would have been
too apparent that when I. doles was
born nothing had died not even a
jackass rabbit.
POOL SELLING AT FAIRS.
THE National Stockman thinks
that too many of the fairs are
degenerating, and that most of them
have ceased to be agricultural, and
cater wholly to the tastes of the
sporting community. It says in
too many instances "fair" hog be-
oome svnonomous with . the same
word with "k" inserted in the
middle, and the farmer is compelled
to stand around with his interests
under his arm and watch the hon
ors and profits of the occasion being
divided between the jockey and the
fellow with the game of chance.
Farmers, Representative Kessler
voted for a bill to legalize pool sell
ing at Agricultural fairs. Was he
consulting moral interests or those of
the gamblers condemned by the
Stockman.
POOL SELLING.
THE Wayne Independent, con
demning Senator Hardenberg
for his votes on several bills, men
tions among them the pool selling
bill, which would allow the gam
blers to carry on their traffic openly
under the guise of rnoing track as
sociations on the payment of a li
cense foe to the State. Hie bill
liassed the Senate but so great was
the moral sense of the State aroused
that when the bill came up in the
House it was defeated. Notwith
standing r11 that was said against
it, nud its general condemnation by
the moral people throughout the
Commonwealth, Kessler voted for
it. See Legislative Record, p. 3708.
f'Freddie, you're a dandy." '
IT IS a common joke among law
yers that when one has a poor
CR9e, if he is weak on evidence, to
go strong on the law, and it he has
no law, then to abuse the witnesses.
It now appears that wheu clients
have neither law or evidence on
their side, their oourse is to abuse
their lawyers. The following illus
trates this point. The Dispatch
says editorially : "Our view In the
first instance was that Mr. Lauer
was entitled to a decision in his
favor ana such would probably
have been sustained had the proper
question been fairly and squarely
submitted to the Court, hut outside
and unimportant issues were, how
ever, raised, and the main one in
the opinion of those informed on
the subject overlooked or passed
by." The Monroe Democrat says :
"The witnesses mentioned attended
but on their return home the gentle
men from this County expressed
themselves as dissatisfied with the
manner in which their case wns
managed by Mr. Lauer 's counsel."
Swear harder next time gentlemen ;
swear harder, but don't swear so
loud. Possibly, too, the Court may
have thought it know the Lauer
swearers, and would not, as the
Lansford Record iutimated, believe
some of them under oath.
THE NEXT HOUSE.
pOSSIBLY some Democrats may
be influenced by the fear that
in electing a Republican to the Leg
islature from this oounty it might
affect the chances of electing a
Democrat to the U. S. Senate To
disabuse the minds of any such
look at the figures. Iu the last Leg
islature there wera 6 Democratic
and 44 Republican Senators, and 82
Democratic and 172 Republican
members of the House. On j"int
ballot the Republican majority was
176. To overoome this majority
the Democrats must gain 90 in the
next House. This is impossible.
Twenty-five Senators hold over, of
whom but one is a Democrat. Of
the twenty-five to be elected, twenty
at least are in certain Republican
districts. It is not possible that the
Republican majority in the next
House Till fall below 30. There
are 201 members to be elected to
the lower" House, and in the lost
one the Republican majority was
140, so that to overcome this ma
jority, and also to wipe ont that in
the Senate would make it necessary
to defeat at least 100 Republican
candidates. Does any sane man
think for a moment this can be
done? Philadelphia and Allegheny
alone will send over 60 Republicans
(iu the lost House there wera but
three Democrats from those cities,
and if, excluding these, the Demo
crats should elect half the members
from every oounty in the State,
they would still be short of a ma
jority, llonoe there is no shadow
of doubt bat that the successor of
Mr. Quay will be a Republican.
Therefore Democrats jeopardize
nothing in voting for Dr. Keu-worthey.
GENERAL ELECTION
o o o o
sheriff's proclamation.
WHEMC A3, by nn Act of; General As
semlilyof the Commonwealth) of Penn
sylvania, entitled, ,-Au net to regulate the
nomination ami election of ptibllo offloers.
requiring oertalii expenses Incident there
to to foe paid by the several counties nml
punishing certain offence in regard to
such elections," approved tho aith dny of
June. A. I)., two. It Is made the duty of
the Sheriff:
First To enumerate tho officers to be
elected, and give a list of all the nomina
tions, eta.
Second To designate the places at
which the election Is to lie held, and
THI. d To publish notice of the quali
fications of election olcers In the man-.
ner and form prescribed by the third para
graph of Section 10 of said Act, and the
Amendments nud supplements thereto.
Now. therefore, 1, H. 1. CoURTRtoHT,
High Sheriff of the County of Pike, do
make known by this Proclamation to the
Rlectors of said Comity, that ou
Tuesday, November 8,1898,
being th day of the General Election,
the following persons are to be voted for
by the freemen of the County of Pike, be
tween the hours of 7 o'clock In the fore
noon and 7 o'clock In the afternoon of
said day, to wit:
One person for Governor for the Com
monwealth of Pennsylvania.
One person for Tilentenant Governor
for the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.
One person for Secretn-v of Internal Af
fairs for the Commonwealth of Peunsyl
vntiln. ,
Two persons for Judge of the Superior
Conrt for the Coiuiuosweath of Pennsyl
vania. Two persons for Representatlve-at-Large
In Congress.
One person for Representatlre-In-Con-gress.
One person for Senator In the General
Assembly, for the Commonwealth of Penn
sylvania. 1
One person for Representative in the
General Assembly, for the Commonwealth
of Pennsylvania.
One person for Sheriff, for the County
of Pike.
One person for Coroner, for the County
of Pike
One person for County Surveyor, for
the County of Pike.
I also hereby make known and give no
tice that the following Is a list of all the
nominations oertllled to mi by tho Secre
tary of this Mammon wealth and the Com
missioners of this Cojiity, to wit:
Republican.
GOVERNOR.
I Murk One
William A. Stone.
LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR.
Mark One.
John P. 8. Gobln.
SECY OF INTERNAL AFFAIRS
Mark One.
Jame, W. Lntta.
JUDGE OF SUPERIOR COURT.
Mark Two.
Will nun vV. Porter.
William II. Porter.
REPRESENTATIVE AT LARGE IN
CONGRESS.
Mark Two
Galusha A. Grow.
Samuel A. Davenport.
REPRESENTATIVE IN CONGRESS.
Mark One.
William S. Klrkpatrlck.
SENATOR IN GENERAL ASSEMBLY.
Mark Ono.l
William R. Stroh
REPRESENTATIVE IN GENERAL
ASSEMBLY.
Mnrk One
William U. Kenworthey.
SHERIFF.
Mark One
Joseph I). Ilrooks.
CORONER.
Mark One
Alfred T. Seeley.
Democratic.
GOVERNOR.
Mark One
George A. Jenks.
LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR.
(Mark One
William H. tiowdon.
tSECY OF INTERNAL AFFAIRS.
IMark One.
Patrick Ujlaoy.
JUDGE OF SUPERIOR COURT.
I Mark Two
William Trlckett.
C. M. Bower.
RKP.tmESTATVE-AT-LAR(lE I! COW-GRK-H.
Mark Two
Fran kllii P tains.
Jerry N. Weller.
BEPRESENTATrVE-IH-OONORESS.
Mark One
Laird !(. Barber.
SKifATOH IN THE GENERAL ASSENBLY.
IMark One
David S. Lee.
REPRESENTATIVE IN THE GENERAL
ASSEMBLY.
J.Mark One.
isrick A. Kessler.
SHERIFF.
Mark One
E. Vauderiiiat'k.
CORONER.
Mark One
C. M Kelloy. M D.
COUNTY SURVEYOR.
Mark One
Juhu C Weaturouk, Jr.
Prohibition.
GOVERNOR
Mark One
Silas C. Swallow.
LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR.
(Mark One
Kuimett D. NlohoU
SECY of INTERNAL AFFAIRS.
Mark One
Sterling V. Dickson.
JUDGE OF THE SUPERIOR COURT.
Mark Two.)
LewU 1) Vail
William Trlukett.
REPRESENTATIVE AT LARGE IN
CONGRESS.
Mark Two
George 1. Uarher.
Fttuuowk . bUaruluM.
REPRESENTATIVE IN CONGRESS.
Mark One
Wlllllam S. Klrkpatrlck.
SENATOR IN THE GENERAL
ASSK.MHLY.
Mark One. I
James F. Kressly.
HE PRESENT ATI VP. IN THE GEN
ERAL ASSEMBLY.
Mark One.)
Kdwlu S. Wolfe.
SHERIFF.
Mark One
Cornelius Wands.
CORONER.
IMark One
David S. Mapes.
People's.
GOVERNOR.
Mark One
Silas C. Swallow.
LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR.
IMark One.
Justus Watklns.
SECY OF INTERNAL AFFAIRS.
IMark One.)
David Logan.
JUDGE OF THE SUPERIOR COURT.
Murk Two.
WllllamlTrlckett.
J. Newton Huston.
REPRESENT ATI VB AT-LARGE IN
CONGRESS.
IMark Two.
Dennis E. Johnson.
Jerry N. Wollur.
Socialist Labor.
GOVERNOR.
Mark One
J. Mali lun Barnes.
LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR.
Mark One.
W. H. Thomas.
SECY of INTERNAL AFFAIRS.
IMark One.
Henry Peters.
REPRESENTATIVE-AT-LA ROE IN CON
GRESS. IMark Two
John R. R nit.
D maid fi M inro.
Liberty.
GOVERNOR.
Silas C. Swallow.
LIEU TENANT GOVERNOR.
IMark One.
Justus Watkius.
SECY of INTERNAL AFFAIRS.
Mark One
Adolphus P. Hutuhlnson.
JUDGE OF THE SUPERIOR COURT.
Mark Two
J. Newman Huston.
William Trlckett.
REPRESENTATIVE-AT-LARGE IN CON
GRESS. Mark Two
J. Acker Guss
Charles P. Shaw.
Honest Government.
GOVERNOR.
Mark One
Silas O. Swallow.
Jacksonian.
REPRESENTATIVE IN- CONGRESS.
Mark One
John E. Lauer.
Places of Voting.
I also herot'y make known and give no
tice that the places of holding the afore
said general election In the several districts
within the County of Pike are as follows,
to wit:
Tho electors of the township of Blooming
Grovo to meet at the house of Moses C.
Woslbrook In said township.
Tho electors of the township of Dela
ware to meet at the election house la said
township.
Tho electors of tha township of Dlng
m in to m let at. tli, i h'umi of O. E. Boil
lotat In said township.
The electors of the township of Greene
to meet at tho house of Theodore Currell
in said township.
Tho electors of the township of Lacka
waxen to meet at tho house of George H.
Rowland, doo'd, In said town hip.
The electors of the townshlb of Lehman
------ ; .......... ... .num ll.TWJ
and George Nyce, doo'd, in said town-
The electors of the Borough of Milford
to meet at the now court house In said bor
otigh .
The electors of tho township of Milford
to meet at the house of John McCarty in
said township.
The electors of the township of Pal my r
to meet at tho house of Cornelius Dliuou.
dee d, in said township.
Tho eleotors of the township of Porter to
meet at the house of Chas W. Courtrlght
in said township.
Tho electors of the township of Shohola
to meet at the hotel latjly owned by John
F. Kllgourlu mid township.
The eleotors of tho township of Westfall
to meet at the house of John F- Englchart
in suid township.
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
That It Is provided by an Act of Assembly
approved J uuo 19, 18U1, and the ainoud
uents and supplements thereto. "That
every person, excepting Justices of the
Peaoe, who shall hold any olUoe or ap
pointment of profit or trust under the
Government of the United States, or of
this State, or of any city or Incorporated
distrlot, whether a commissioned officer or
otherwise, a subordinate olU r or ageut
who Is or shall be employed uuder the
Legislative, Executive, or Judiciary De
partment of this State, or of the United
States, or of any city or Incorporated dis
trict, and also that every member of Con
gress and of the State Legislature, and of
the select or ooiumou oouuoil of any city
or commissioners of auy incorporated dis
trict, Is, by law Incapable of holding or
exercising at the same time the office or
appointment of jude, Inspector or elerk
of auy election of this Commonwealth, and
that no Inspector, judge or other officer of
any such election shall be eligible to any
office to be then Toted for except that of an
election, officer."-
God save the Commonwealth.
H. I. COUR TKIGHT, Sheriff.
Sheriff's. Office, Milford, P., Qel. IT, 'l.
TIME AND SIGHT.
Vatchos,
Diamonds,
and Solid
Silvorwaro.
WATCH REPAIRING
A SPECIALTY,
0
Eyes examined free by a skilled
Optician.
Glasses Filled in Gold or Any
Other Kind of Frames.
We are pleased to show Goods.
E.Van Sickle,
72 Pike Street, Port Jervts, N. Y-
"50 YEARS
IMPROVEMENTS
IN FARMING,"
Published by the Now York Tribune.
SECOND EDITION.
32 rages, 18 by 12 1-2 Inches.
A general rovlow of the advances and
improvements made in the leading branch
es of farm industry during the last half
oentury.
Speolal articles by tho best agricultural
writers, on topics which they have made
their life study.
Illustrations of the old-fashioned Imple
ment). A vast amount of practical Information.
A valuable aid to farmers who desire to
stimulate production nnd profit.
Extremely Interesting and Instructive.
Only 15 cents a copy, by mail.
SEND YOUR ORDER TO
THE PIKE COUNTY PRESS,
Milford, Pa.
Buiding-Loan Trust Fund.
OX)
REALTY. CORPORATION
of
NEW JERSEY, -:-
GENERAL AGENT
800 Broad Street, Newark, N. J.
What it will do for you
for n monthly payment of tt per tl.Ouo s
if which applies on principal, 1 is inn'
est.
First It will buy for you any house di
sired or build you a house according t'
you own plans, for a payment of not le
than lll'o down.
Second' It will assume any moi-tgag
ou your property, and advance you iiioi.
money, If desired, not to exited oU'r of ll
valuation. At above ratei you would owi
your property free and clour in just Urn
months; you can pay as much jnoie as yon
wish, and reduce the time iu pr portion
or the full amount will bo received at am
time,
The first proposition' enables you to con
vert your rent money Into the ownership
of n home.
Tho second proposition enables you to
reduce the Interest rate on jour mortgage
and at the same time be paying off the
principal each month.
For further information call or address
J. H. Van Etten, Attorney,
Milford, Pa.
WAHTED :
FARM
4V
PRODUCTS
IN EXCHANGE FOR
BICYCLES
OR
HARNESS.
Mone not necenolty. You produce what
we cuu uh. We umke what you want.
Mrlo" nifTfle 5o. 1, onvvpl-ce crank,
luiist nioslt f. t(H equal of the beat Bu'vcle
mail, your own specifications. $&0.
lirlo" Bit yrle So. t, three-piece crank,
your own tipecificaiionii, $46.
M Mario"- Bacar, a very Hue machine, $60.
We eell Bicycles for cash or on the
mom lily payment plan, aiiywhere In the
lTniUd Slate or Caitatta. We make very
litwral alio wane for old wheel. We also
rwli necoml-band wheels at from $3 to $J0.
IXjn't (ail to write ua if you want a wheel
or harness on the bext terms ever offered.
We allow ruling Buffalo prices for all
kinds of farm product that can be shipped
economically to Buffalo. Tell us what you
havtrUi exchange and we will quote prices
wecannilVr. KncU'se stamps for further
In formation or for price lint of our H&nd
ii.aUt) iiai uesa and Horwa Collars.
MARLO CYCLE CO.,
CI Terracet BufTato, N. Y.
YEARS'
Designs
Copyrights Ac.
Anrone sending a sketch and description may
qutt'kly ajKwUtin our opinion fre whether an
tiiTtintloii i probably taUinltsble. 'omuiunlra
UouftiLricllyooiitldttiituii. Hsuidbookon t'atuuta
aunt (rue OMtl luttni' for seourihg patunls.
F&umia uu.m throuifh Uuun A Cu. mgvlv
apeciot' twite, w it bout chnrua, Ui the
Scientific American.
A handsomely tllUBtratttd weekly. Largest etr-
euitiiiu'i or any sctuiatoo journal, 'i rnn, a
fi
uktr ; lour ntonias, si. aoia Djrail nwawajera
WK $ Co New York
BUSINESS CARDS.
F. W. DEST, M. D..
IS Ball Street,
PORT JERVIS, N. Y
DISEASES OF THE EYE AND EAR.
8 to II A. M.
2 to 4 P. M.
y to s p. m.
Offloe Hours
WILLIAM B. KENWORTHY, M.D.
Physician and Surgeon.
Office nI resldnnce Mnrfnrri itnl In
homo Intely occupied by Dr. K. D. Wen
uer. MILFORfl. PA.
Dr. von der Heydo,
DENTIST, ,
Bn-.rn's Ilnlldinn, corner Tlrond nnd
i iitiinrino streets, Milford, Vi.
OKKICK HOL'HS: 8 to IS a. m.: 1 to S
p. in.
H. E.Emerson, M. D.
Physician and Surgeon.
OFFICE in Drug Store on Broad
Street.
J. H. VAN ETTEN,
Attorney- at- Law,
OFFICE, Brown's Building,
Milford, Pikr Co., Pa.
John A. Kipp,
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,
OFFICE, opposite Court House
Milford, Pikic Co., Pa.
CHURCH DIRECTORY
MILFORD.
j i M . ' r-""1" I mura n, raiiroM:
...... ....... ...,,. ,.,, m . una .nop.
M. Snhhntn school Immediately nftr the
nesday t 7.80 p. m. A cordial welcomt
will lw extended to all. Those not at
tache! to other churches are especially In.
vited. Rkv. Thomas Nn:HoiiT p..:.-
Church or thk Rood Shrphkro, Mil
7 uii u -"'.'" """. n'.oo a. m. and
vi' i i Sunday school at 11.45 p. n.
VVoek-day services, Frldnr, 4 w p u-
welcome.' . A.i are
RKV. B. S. Lassitbr, RecUir.
M If r-nr:i.i. 13 ..
Church Sundays: Preaching t 10 80 a
in. and at 7.80 p. in. Sur day school at
p. in. Kpworth leaarue at 6.4A i. ...
;V e. kly prayer ineetiii(r o.i Wednesdays a
'M p. in. Class meeting conducted br
vVm Angle on Fridays at 7.80 p.m. An
am st invitation is extended to anyone
vho may desire to worshsp with us
Kkv. W. K. Nekf. Pastor.
MATAMORAS.
Ki-worth M. E. Church, Matamoras
Services every Kahlmth at 10.80a. m. and
. p. m. Hahlmth school at 2.80. C K
Jieellng Monday evening at 7.80. Class
neoUng Tuesday evening at 7.80. Prayer
mealing Wednesday evening at 7 80
e.veryouo welcome. ' '
Rev. T. G Spencer.
H.ii-B Evangelical Church, Mara
inoras.Pa. hervi. next .Sunday as follows:
'reH. htiig at 10.30 a. m. and 7 p. in. Sun-
i LV ' "' ""'"or j. a. nciore
and C. fc. prayoi meeting after the even
ing svrvlcw. M.l-WHek prayer meeting
.ivery Wednesday evening at 7.30. Keats
free. A ennliMl ... ii "
.... . .,u,IMDp(llli voine.
Rev J A. Wikgand, Pastor.
Secret Societies.
Milford Lodph, No. 844, F. & A M
Ljo.Iko moots Wednesdays on or before
ull Moon at tht .Sawkill House, Milford,
Pa. N. Emery, Jr., Secretary, Milford
V. F. Heck, W. M.. .Milford, Pa.
Van I)bk Mark Lodob, No. 828, I. o.
0. : Meets every Thursday evening at
7.30 p. m.. Brown's Building. D. H.
Hornlieck, Sec'y. Jacob McCarty, N. G.
Prudence Rerkkah Lodge. 107, I O
O. F . Meets every second and fourth Frl
(lays in each month in Odd Fellows' Hall
Bi- ivrn's building. Miss Katie IXuuis
N. (J. Miss Katie Klein, Sec'y.
JUST RECEIVED
A NEW STOCK OF
PIANOS,
HARDMAN & STERLING.
Also a fine Line of
SEWING MACHINES:
Domestic, New Home
Wheeler & Wilson, etc.
B. S. MARSH, v
U 7 Pike St.,
Port Jervis, - - N. Y.
"Lut ua send you a catalogue.
LIVERY STABLES.
If you want a stylish sin
gle or double rig, safe
horses, good harness
and clean, comfortable
carriages at reasona
ble prices call on
J. B. Van Tassel,.
Corner Ann and Fourth streets.
4 MTTFOPTi PA