. I Successors to JEE.VIS We are now Prepared to Please the Farmers and the Get . .. ?iblic by being ready at all times to Accom modate them. Plenty of Water to run the Mill Day and Night if Necessary. A Full stock of the Best Brands of Flour Constantly on Hand. Seal of Minnesota is A No. I. Try it. Washburn's Gold Medal, Arnold's Superlative. Feed, Meal, Mid dlings and Bran. Buck wheat F our in its Season a Spe ialty ! ! ! Orders left: at tlin Mill for delivery will receivo prompt attention. Mi ford Milford, Pike T. Armstrong & Co., Successors to BROWN We offer a line of .UNSURPASSED Our point is that you need not fro n'wny from home to' supply all your needs, or to secure hargains. We expect to satisfy you in both particulars. ' ' DRY GOODS, new an. I stylish. GROCERIES, fresh and frond. HARDWARE, HOOTS, SHOES, AND CLOTH IXG. Any thinir in any line at ho'tom prices. To accomplish this end we have adopted n new system. . All our prices are fixed on a ha -is of cah payment... This obviates the v oessity to allow a margin for hnd debts nnd interest. To accommodate responsible parties we cheer fully open monthly accounts, nnd expect prompt, payment monthly, as our prices will not enable us to carry accounts lotiirer. ' (' Statements rendered the first of every month, nnd if paid within three days from date of bill, a cash discount of 'i is allowed. The same discounts given on nil cash pur chases exceeding 1.00. Goods sent out will he C. O. D. unless otherwise previously arranged. T. ARMSTRONG & CO., Brown's Building, 'vv!1) ' -i- Wccarrya A We receive 2Sf iVjlL' iiO - io.-k o( good 1 from tu.000 to ...sr. rLi7854- H V''''"e'' "' H We own and occupy the tallest mercantile building in the world. We have lTi over a, 000,000 customers. Sixteen hundred clerks arr constantly J-?-il l Vj 1 engaged filling out-of-town orders. lM?lJ 0UR GENERAL CATALOGUE iathe book of the people It quotes llTS -Ji Wholesale Prices to Everybody, has over 1,000 pages, 16,000 illustrations, and U T, I J Xi 60,000 descriptions of articles with prices. It costs 73 cents to print and mail I each copy. We want you to have one. SEND FIFTEEN CENTS to show rill ' - your good faith, and we'll send you a copy FREE, with all charges prepaid. 1 JX DO YOU EXPEP.T TO BUILD? THEN SEE A. D. BROWN and SON, Manufacturers and dealers in all kinds of Lumber, Contractors and Builders. Estimates made ; personal atten tion given and work guaranteed. OFFICE, Brown's Building, Milford, Pa. Table Dainties Fresh groceries. Canned goods. Meats in every form. Turkeys and chickens. Oysters and vegetables. Everything ' for" aii elegant dinner at ' ' ' " -' GUMBLE BROS. Harford St. Milford Pa. G0S.D OH lining Co., Co., Penna. & ARMSTRONG. s3 new SpriiiR Goods, AND COMPLETE. Milford, Pa. T. Armstrong & Co. Sccessors to BROWN & ARMSTRONG, , Dealers in GENERAL MERCHANDISE, Milford,' . .': . ; Pa. to Car Cou.ttps.tlos) rorsvsv. Take OuseuieU Cuddy Cullmrtlc I'Jo or ft li I '. C Iitil lo vuru. drugging rctuua uivimm. A GREAT 6UBPRISE. A great yellow mmllowor (trpw bo tall It looked rlfrht ovrr tlip trnrilen wall, "Bless me." cried he, "whnt a mnrvel- OVtR fllRllt! Wonilerfnl nieailows to left and rlftlitl Anil a bill tlint rent lies up to the sky, Ami ti loiiR, straight rond where the folks co by. 'Tw ns luc ky for me that I grew go tnll As to see the land' that He over the wall. I hadn't the faintest Idea," snld he, "liow nmcli of a place the world nilRht be!" Truth's Companion. DR. DAWSON'S WARD. Dr. Arthur Dawson rose from his eay chair, and welcomed to his com fortably furnished consulting room the wcll clicsscd youmr man whose card his servant had Just handed him. "Always glad to see you, Ueorjro. I think 1 can irucss what your visit means. You wish to ask me to con sent to your enpijrpmeut to Laura?" Ooorise Abbot felt far more nervous than on the well-remembered occasion of tuakiUK his tlrst speech to a Jury; and stammered out, "Ye-es, sir. But how did you know? Has Laura " "Laura has said nothing to me. But It Is said, you know, that 'lookers-on tuf must of the game,' and your atten tions were such as no honorable man would oiler without serious Inten tions." "The you consent !" the young man broke In. "If, alter you limp heard the story I am about to relate to you, you still per sist in your request for my ward's hand" "Your ward!" "Yes, Laura Is net my own child. She Is my adopted daughter, and I love her as dearly as, twenty-five years ago. 1 loved her poor, Ill-fated mother. But listen to her father's history. "After passing through Ouy's, and being duly licensed to kill," said the doctor. "I proceeded to India, having obtaiued a (iovefjinent appointment In the land of cholera nnd chutnee. I was there fifteen years and was resi dent surgeon at Berri-Beni Barracks, In the Nellgherry Hills, when 1 first met ('apt. Kerr. Iff was n tall, unde niably handsome man, probably about thirty years of age. " The colonel of his regiment was Walter White, whose fag I had been at Winchester. I was a frequent vis itor at his bungalow, and one of the many victims to the charms of his lovely" daughter. Kven now I recall her willowy figure, her merry laugh, her flaxen ringlets, and trustful, vio let eyes. But I needn't enter upon a description of her; her daughter Is her living Inuiiie. "Laura her child bears her name -had many suitors, nnd among them was Itupctt Kerr. The Captain was generally looked upon as the lucky man: and. by degrees, most of the young holy's admirers withdrew from the unequal contest. "One day a startling rumor passed round the camp. I heard of It as I made my morning round, and, though I pooh-poohed It. It still gained curren cy. Men said that Capt. Kerr had been secretly married, more than a year ago, to a half-caste woman at Bombay, nnd that she had appeared In camp to claim her rights as his wife. "After the mess, at which Col. White and the Captain were both absent, I was summoned to the Colonel's bunga low. I went across at once, and found that poor Laura was In a high fever. Her father and mother were endeav oring to calm her, but In vain, and ever and anon she would shriek: 'My 'd-ocri. mv llupert no. you're not mine! N'ot mine, oh dear!' and then would follow a burst of tenrs. I then learnt that the sinister rumor was no cantonment gossip, but the plain, un varnished truth. "On returning to my qunrters I was astonished at finding Capt. Kerr awaiting me. 'Tin! Doctor,' he ex claimed, as he saw me, 'I want you to come over nnd see my my my wife,' with a curiously hard intonation of the last word. "I resumed my hat, which I had laid aside, and followed him to his bunga low. On my wny I asked, 'What are the symptoms?' "Well, she Is sleeping, and has been sleeping since noon, and I can't awak en her,' was the answer. "On a couch In the verandar was stretched an exceedingly fat mulatto woman, with brown features nnd a curiously puckered skin. Shl was lylne on her back and was snoring like a Stentor. "I grasped her arm and reft her pulse. It bent fast and Irrergnlnrly. The Captain stood at the head of the sofa and leant over her. Almost at that Instant the womnn awoke, and jioured forth such n voluble string of the most awful language (English and Hindustani) that even I shrank back appalled. "The Captain motioned me to the door. 'She's come around. Doctor, so there's no necessity for your kind Bet" vices. I will only ask you not to de scribe Mrs. Kerr to the mess.' I gave the required pledge and left him. "For some weeks I attended Mrs. Kerr In her apparently cataleptic trances. They came at Irregular In tervals, and were always marked by similar symptoms. "My other patient, Laura White, had by this time recovered, but was hartlly more than the shndow of her old sunny self. Naturally, Kerr was cut by the regiment, and I, for one, felt sincerely glad when It was announced that he hnd exchanged into a home regiment and would shortly sail for Kncland. "My affection for Laura was only strengthened , and one day, after pav ing my morning visit. I asked her, in bt-r father's presence to become my wife. "She burst Into tears, and when she had recovered her composure, she an swered: 'I feel that I am honored by the affection of a good and noble man, and, though I cannot give you the love I outrht, I will try to make you a good and faithful wife. "On the day that our engagement was published, Kerr's wife died. 1 was present when she passed away li a cataleptic fit, and gave my certificate to that effect. As Is usual In hot ell mates, she was barfed within twenty four hours. "Forty-eight hours later my brlei cup of happiness vu dashed to tht ground. Capt. Kerr hud left for Eng UTAlLIJHtO. ,.4--CAWf ATI. 184. !s LABELS. Trade w j ocsigns. MARKS. irr,'CoYBlGMTS. Thirty-one ye ;i srtivt pimcttee. Orrfnlon u tn validity and iwu-nutbllity. Writ lr liouk of liiMru.-l ntand Ktmucta. BOSON BKOtt-921 f HrHt, Wuhlagtoa, O. C land, and Laura White had fled with him. They hnd bean mnrrled In Bom bay, and had sailed for Kngland before the Colonel and I leached that port. "I returned to Kngland a few months later, to find thnt Kerr hnd never entered upon his duties In his Pew regiment, but had sent In his papers Immediately after his nf-lvnl. I sought for news of them, but could learn nothing. "About three years later I read in the papers the announcement of Lnnra Kerr's death. It had tnken plnce nt Cheltenham, to which town I nt once proceeded. Here my Inquiries led to my ascertaining that the had died In lodgings In the High Street, and that her husband hnd taken his departure Immedlntelv nfter the funeral, nceom-! panied by his little daughter. The landlady of the lodgings gave me the 1 address of the medical man who hnd Httenuen tier, nnn on mm i nt once railed. He roueonsly answered my Inquiries, nnd lltTntied me thnt the cause of death was catalepsy. "Catalepsy ngnlnt Thnt was Indeed singular. But my suspicions were not as yet nwakened. There war. no trace of Kerr or his child, nd I could do nothing. "Another period of three years passed, nnd I had set up my brass plate here In Birmingham, nnd had built tip a prosperous nnd remunera tive practice. One lovely summer af ternoou I received a telegraphic call to an accident case Rt Dudley. The carriage came nnd I started. But we had not passed through Handsworth when It became evident thnt one of the horses was dead lntne. I accord ingly dismissed the carriage, and de cided to complete the Journey by cab. This was done, and It was nearly nine o'clock wheu. after partaking of some food, I left my patient's house. "There Is nlways a scarcity of cabs In the outlying parka of the Black Country, and I had perforce to make my return by tram. At Handsworth I changed on to a cable tram, and mounted to the top of the vehicle to enjoy a cigar In the pleasant night air. "My nearest neighbor on the train whs n tnll, thin man, close-shaven nnd with short Iron-gray hair, nnd appar ently fifty years of age. though he might be younger. He hnd mounted the vehicle nt Its first stopping plnce, bearing in his-Tm.a little girl a wee winsome maiden of four or five sum mers, with long silken blonde hair nnd lovely violet eyes. Surely I had seen those eyes before! I could not see the ninu's face; It wnv too dark a night. "Suddenly, from some failure of the brake, our car collided roughly with the preceding one. nnd was thrown off the lines. The child was Jerked violently from her father's knee on to the back of the so-called garden seat In front of us. anil her face was badly cut, the blood streaming down. "I hnd never seen such horror and dismny as blazed forth In nn Instant; the silent, self-contained mnn snatched up his child's senseless form, sprang to his feet and almost screamed: '.My child Is hurt! Run for a doctor; don't lose a moment.' I put my hand on his shoulder, anil said quietly, 'I am a mtdlcal man,' nnd as 1 snw those steely gray eyes, I added. 'Capt. Ru pert Kerr.' "He turned angrily upon me, nnd I thought he wns about to strike me. Then he remembered his little one, and Mid: 'Dr. Dawson, I did you a great wrong once. But be merciful, and save lur child!' "The child wns carried downstairs and Into a shop close by. I took out my li stiuinent case, lint, etc., and v. ashed, stitched nnd bandaged the wound In the baby's -forehead. Then I asked, 'Where do you live? I will free her safely to bed.' Thank you,' was the sullen response, 'my address Is my own business;' and he carried his child out, got Into a cab with her, and said, 'Birmingham' to the driver. There was no means of stopping him, but I had presence of mind enough to Jot down that driver's number on my shirt-cuff. "The next day I employed a secret Inquiry agent to find Rupert Kerr. He hud driven, to New Street, taken a fresh cab, and doubled back to Hands worth, where he directed the cabman to take him to IT Roman road. The second cabby had been found through the help of the police at New street station. "I now did whnt should have been done before. While the first agent wns Instructed to find out Kerr's pres ent manner of life, n second detective was sent to Clendennin to Inquire Into his earlier proceedings. "Kerr was. as I had nlways known, an inveterate gnmbler. It wns ascer tained that he had brought to Kngland with him the greater portion of his first wife's property, nnd had almost dissipated this, when poor Laura's death put him In possession of her father's savings for poor Col. White had died soon after his daughter's elopement, aniiUuui bequeathed his possessions to her. Moreover, both wives had been heavily Insured. From the other detective I learnt that he followed no occupation, but frequented betting clubs and hotel-bars, and seemed to be rather deeply Involved. Moreover, It was popularly believed Unit he would soon many a lady of supposed wealth, whose acquaintance he had made at a local garden party. Fagg, the Inquiry agent, hnd also as certained that his daughter Laura haii recently been insured fur 5(10 pounds., She had hitherto enjoyed absolutely good health, but since the assurance had been completed she had suffered from cataleptic fits. I "When this last development of the situation reached me, my smouldering suspicions of the mnn blazed Into flame at once. Remembering that l'ercival, who had been statioued with the cavalry brigade at the canton-: lnent, was then In command at Lich field, I wired to him to come over at once 'on a matter of life and death' as I really feared It was. "Gen. l'ercival arrived that night. and we sat up till dawn discussing the stute of affairs. He had remained in India some years later than I had, and was able to give me a clew. It seems that previous to h.s marriage with the half-caste wouun who was hit first wife, Kerr ha J been on terms ol friendship with several Brahmin! magnates. ' "His most usual associate was a mat named Sana Niinl and this same fel low had afterwaraj been convicted ol poisoning his brother and hud beet hanged for the crime. "We nt Inst resolved to seek the ad vice and assistuuc of the.Jocui police Mat Tobacco Spit u Sawk Voir lift Away. To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag Belio. lull at lile, nerve and vigor, take No-To-Bac, &?e wonder-worker, that makes weak met atrong. All druggists, Sue or tl. Cureguarun teed Booklet sua autupls free. Aduresi Sterling Itemed Co. uiitcago or New York, kDr. David Kennedys favorite Remedy Cumes all Kidney. Stomach 1 -ASP liVttl TROUBLE. that little Laura's life might at tautt, De preserved. A consultation with the chief constable followed, and the doc tor w ho attended little Laura Jrrnnged to telephone the news of her next at tack. His summons enme within a week, and Kerr, nllns Wren, was ar rested nt his daughter's bedside. He made a most frantic resistance, crying out that he, and he nlone, could re store the child to consciousness, but was at Inst removed to the stntlon and Benrched. A hypodermic syringe, filled, with a dnrk, blood-colored fluid, of unknown properties, and a curious ly pungent odor, wns found upon him; and n slmllnr syringe was found in the room where Lnnrn's apparently dead body lay. This contained n sort of viscid green matter, quite unknown to Knrnpenn medicine, and smelling like rotten bananas. Two peculiarly shnped phials, marked 'one' and 'two' In Sanscrit characters, and containing decoctions that corresponded to the two syringes, were found In Kerr's bedroom, concealed in nn old hnt-onse. "Laura remained unconscious, and nt Inst even my hopes of her recovery faded away, nnd the corpse of the lit tle one wns lnld out to await a post mortem cxamlnntlon. "Swnnston, the locnl prncfltloner, noticed thnt there were seven punc tures mnde by the syringe on her left arm and six on her rlgth. On this slender bnsls, nnd on Kerr's excited declaration thnt he could save her, Swnnston built up a curious theory. It was that, as the Insurance hnd not been In force six months, nud, there fore, had not matured, the mnn had no present Intention of slaying his daugh ter, but was only preparing the woy, and he pointed out that this was her seventh nttnek. He, therefore, argued that an Injection of the blood-colored fluid would restore her to lilt- and hen lth. "Accordingly. Swnnston and I, nc Jompnnled by the police doctor nnd the Inspector, returned to the chnmber of dentil. The Injection wns mnde. For n moment there was absolute quies cence, then, by little and little, the signs of returning animation were per ceived. Gradunlly life and wnrmth of color returned to the wan nnd pallid corpse: fnlut pulsation became appar ent; the eyelids quivered, nnd a deep sigh told us thnt for once the Angel of Death had yielded up his prey. "As the police could not prove that Kerr hnd caused the cntalepsy the prosecution broke down and he wns discharged. He was Immediately re arrested, charged with murdering his second wife, and remanded. "An order from the home Secretary having been obtained, Mrs. Kerr's body wns exhifmed. A most awful spectacle wns revealed: the unhappy girl she was only In her 21st year had been buried alive! or, ratlier, the Influence of this horrible Invention, this fiend-wrought catalepsy, hnd been ex hnusted nfter burial, and no, no, I can't dwell upon any more of it. "Kerr slew himself In prison while awnltlng his trial. How he procured the drug I know not, but he took ar senic and saved the country the hangman's expenses. He left a sort of confession, scrawled on the fly leaves of the Bible In his cell. He averred thnt he Intended to tnke little Laura's supposed body to Cheltenham for burial as soon as the Insurance came in force, and he would have re suscitated her on the way. This I be lieve, for his love for the little mnld marked the one soft spot In the de mon's heart. "Laura came to my house and has been brought up as my daughter. The brain fever that followed that awful trance swept nil memory of her reni father, nnd I never intend her to be enlightened about him. "Now. George." concluded the doc tor, "that you know the stock that Laura Kerr has sprung from, do yon still desire to mnke her your wife?" George Abbot rose. "I sny whnt I said before. Doctor. A parent's crimes rnnnot possibly affect a girl's charac ter. I love Laura: Laura loves me: jnd I would make her my wife if her father hnd committed every crime In the Newgate calendar." The doctor opened the study door and called "Lnura!" In a moment or two a young lady In evening dress, nnd looking bewilderlngly pretty In her confusion, tripped Into the room. She hnd been awniting the result of George's Interview with pnpa In con siderable trepidation of mind. "George has something to tell you." snld the Doctor, escaping Into the hall nnd shutting them In. What George said may be surmised from the fact that an unusually "smart" wedding took plnce from the Doctor's house some six month's later uujnor emoH ,sipwi aU, asutp 8no B Jaijs lqSniD Xiao sbm pus Seq U nopaeuoD 8Jiua m go psXJS3 ou. J8m sqj Suijnjdaa U ssusdx iBdja o) nd PJBMJ81JB 88 pas 18 8UUBIU3J em aoi oi 9DBid iqtfiis Suipug jo lqnoj; asqunj eq) usaS rs.n cubs BP -Ufl 8U. M3)BM BSOJ 8U.) pUB '8Bq8 eto 'sasaoq eqj Su3B jo siqnoj) em 0 nd sba juapisajj eq) aaqi pus :paid3DDB iIBUU sj3M nuassjd BUi)8jqo ,nBiing eqi noHB88a pus 'XdBOIOdp 'OdBl p3J 'S3U3pa0dS3JJ03 fo sqiaoui 33jqj jsjjb pas 'esajajuoQ o) psjjsjsj Xug bb jsviBai aqx emooino sqj 8B uoi)B3idcu03 8u -iSBjjBqma ub 'sSuiJijjo s.jsjbbui siq 8u)uasajd inoqiM Xjunoo 9qj 3ab3 )oa pno ssasiing q) jo jspuBin -U10D aqt paw JfJOA mk n pdA(JJB psq 8) j il s.UBJing q) b pus UaMod JO eimS ni(8joj Xub uioj; Buosjad anpdaoaB moa; pa)qiqoJd s )uap -jsajj aqi 'uonmiisuo;) aqi Japan 'spaouiBip pus BjE8d psxica jo xoq eno pas 'sauois Bnopajd qil pappms Xoq jjnua po8 aao 'spaomnip jo einoq uo '8iBd po3 aao 's'jsad OQI J 8uu)s 'siB8d eSJBi 01 pjos pianoni -pioS sao 'sBqs JiBq s.iamsa jnoj 'las -SB) Jt8 qu laauiBUJO poS aao )ad -JB3 UBisjaj aao 'jais asoj jo saqof -aiap e.itf 'pioS jo eaaaid oi 'sasoj jo jbub jo anioq auo 'oioojS Jsqj pas sasjoq UBiqsjy oj jo paiijsuoD B9UIJJ asa qx '8uiaaj pooSi pas dqs -puaiJj jo naqo) s is sauj) aj s aauB) -JiiS dqa )sXoj aqj Xq uiiq luas psq aq jsqi juapiBajj aq) pacojojai aq qiq U ,,'Batjaaiv q)J0N jo urns paJIn.l eq) jo )uapB8Jcl 'najng as. udjbw 'XDaaiiaaa IH o) je-8i snopsja a pasBajppB 'pauiqy uig'n)ng ug 'pooss PlXA'es sb acred asoq ubuio jo UBiing q) 6281 'QZ "aa SurjjJ jo Xb UBiqBJV sqi ! qoiq sjja -H m J 93t JB9 911 "I 'IBsqog jo qinoui eq) jo XBp q)U3Aas aq; uo urng aiau,- o) sjjio uwtng eqx Mreatv.M. yon whether yon eonllooe the. outnarvuu.Ul.treM. expel! Hue, ll.r.uoi ... uiuuu, I tori.1 Ut mtuboid. . tia. sou.uut cuietf Uuv S O Tt- B A C rrun r ova drueinat s uph (ur dl Takt It Witi L nhtlt-ntlr. oenl.lentlv Oni er&ntil to ct-.r. or we refuod m.tnry 1 M Ko-Te-Rae ' Fltty Cents, Guaranteed tobacco bat It cure, uionos weak eaen suoua, Olood Dure, biic, l. All drusni.tr WWMW W I W ' . Tfl . B V I 4rT.U - all a. w a--r. auawsus&ii RAILROAD TIME TABLE. Corrected to Dat Si, llil Pntl,.,nn ....I... ... n. .a-..,.. ...... . jfuiiMiii, fiiiiir- nrrt hn Is. f 'hniii.iiin.in T...i,n f,i t htciigo and Uli clnniitl. 1 icKets on sale at Port. .Tnrvls to nil notMTR In tin, U',..r C....1.... . ... 1 rntoB than via nny other first-class lino. TltAINB NOW IRAVK POUT .lgltVIS AS t OLLOWS. EASTWARD. No. 13, Dally Express 8 24 A.M. " 10, Daily Kxpress 6 SO " " 1(1, Dally Kxcept Sunday.. 0 29 " " 28. 7 45 " " mm, Sundny Only 7 45 " " 8H, Daily Kxcept I Sunday. . 10 07 " " t), Daily Way Train 13 15 P.M. " 30, Wmv Kxcept Sunday... 8 27 " " 2, Dally Kxpress 4 25 ' " 621), Sunday Only 4 ho " " 8. Daily KxprcsB 5.2U " " 18, Sunday only 6 45 " " 22. Dally Kxcept Sunday. . l ' " 14. Dailr 10 00 ' WESTWARD. No. 8, Dally Express 12 80A.M. ' 17, Dally Milk Train 8 115 " ' 1, Dally Kxpress : 11 88 " 1 11, ForHo'dnle E'pt Sun . 12 10 P. M. ' 9. Local Kxcept Sunday 12 20 " ' 27, Daily Except. Sunday . . 5 50 " ' 7, Daily Kxpress 10 16 " Trains leavo Chambers street. New York for Port .lervls on week davs nt 4 on. 7 45, 9 00, H 15, 10 80 A. M. 1 .00, 8 (Kl, 4 80, B 80. 7 80, It. 15 P. M. On Sundtys, 4 01), 7 80, fl 00, tt.16 a. m.: 12 80. 2 uo. 7 80 and 9 15 p. M. t). I. Roberta, General fannenirer Agent, New York. TIME TABLE of the P. J., M. & N. Y. R. R. Trains leave Erie Ry., 23d St., N. Y. as follows: No. 8 Dally Kxpress 9.10 A. M " 8 Dally Except Sunday 2.55 P.M. Leave Chambers St. as follows: No. fl Dally Express, 9.15 A.M. ' 8 IMlly except Mill. 8 00 P.M. Leave Jersey City as follows: No. 0 Dally Express, 9 80 A M 8 Uaily Kxcept Sunday, 8.15 P. M TRAINS I.RAVR POKTJKKVIS, ElilB DKI'OT FOR MONTICEM.O AS FOLLOWS : No. 10 Dally Except Sun. fl 00 A M. " 0 uaiiy express, 12.15 P.M. " 8 Daily Kxcept. Sun. 5.20 '' Train H Sunday Only, 7 15 " Trains arrive in Montlccllo as follows: No 10 Daily Kxsept Sunday, 10 40 A. M " fl Daily Express. 1 15 P. M. ' 8 Dally Kxcept Sunday, fl 50 Train H Sunday Only, 8 17 " TRAINS I.EAVK MONTICELLO AS FOLLOWS: No. 1 Daily Except Sunday, (185 A. M. " 5 Dully Except. Sunday. 13 20 P. M. " 8 Daily Kxcept. Sunday. 8 15 Train. U Sunday Only, 10 45 A. M. " A Sunday Only, (Kl p. M. Trains arrive at Port Jervla, Erie Depot ns follows: No. 1 Dally Except Sunday, 7 85 A. M. " li Unity Kxcept Sunday, 2 03 P. M. " 8 Daily Except Sunday, 4 15 " Train (i Sunday Only, 11 45 A. M. A Sunday Only, 7 00 P. M. Arrive at Jersey City ns follows: No. 1 Dally Except Sunday, 10 25 A. M " 6 Daily Excedt Sunday, 4 48 P. M ' 8 " " ... Af .. Train G Sunday Only, 8 24 " " A " ' 9 47 " Arrive at Chambers St., N. Y. as follows: No 1 Dally Except Sunday, 10 57 A. M " 5 ' " " 4 57 P. M. ' 8 " " " fl 57 Train G Sunday Only, 8 115 A. M. "A " 10 07 P. M. Arrive nt Erie Ry., 23d St., ns follows: No. 1 Dally Except Sunday, 10 45 A. M. " 6 " " 5 15 P M. " 8 " ' " 11 7 (15 .' " Train G Sunday Only, 8 45 " " A " " 10 15 For Poultry Gat the Hens In shape for winter eggs. In Cannot be Done in a Week. It must be done by proper and careful feeding, this will help you by using in moderate quantities anil regularly Meat and Bone Meal Ground fine, Dry and Sweet, 5olb. Bag $1.25. Granulated Oyster Shells 1001 b. Bag 60c. Every size in Flower Pots large or small. Nuts Grain and Pota toes wanted. HOAGLANDS ON HILL, Port Jervis, N. Y. Life Insurance - The JETNA offers special induce. ments both on Life and Endowment policies. Stable, cheap and prompt payment of all claims. For information apply to Leroy E. Kipp, Agent, Milford, fm. PETERS' NEW RESTAURANT AND CAFE No. 9 Front St., P. J. Everything to Eat & ririnl Oysters and clams UMIIK' a Specialty. PETERS. EVERY HOUR Is an effort put forth to deserve, obtain and retain 3-our pationage. . GOME with your very best $10 suit thoughts and se cure one of these Men's Winter Suits at $6.98. Broken lots of Men's Winter Ov ercoats reduced to less than cost. GUNNING & FLANAGAN, Cor. Front and Sussex Sfs. Port Jervis N. Y. as c b as erf'S'H 1 a 1 a For estimates call on or address. -J. C. PRESCOTT. Matamorai Pa. Stoves and Ranges. THE Round Oak For Wood and Coal. Best Heater and Fnel Saver in the Country. New Era Radiators, Two Flrost In on HARDWARE. CUTLERY, TIN, AGATE WARE, ETC. TIN ROOFINO AND PLUMBINO A SPECIALTY. Jobbing promptly attended to T. R. Julius Klein BROAD STREET MILFORD, PA 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 MILFORD PA. BeRBty I Blood Deep. Clean blood m?nna a clean skin. No beauty without it. LaacaretB, Candy Cathar tic clean your blood and keep it clean, by tirring up the luzy liver and driving ail im puritie from thj body, iiegtn to-day tt oaniah piinplea, boiU, ulotclit-H, blaeklitada, and that sickly bilioua complexion by taking CaHcarctH, beauty lor ten centu. All druj (UU tuttif''Uou uuraiiteed, iUc, 2, 50ti, ?8aS-?:". I g - 8 3 a W 11 " . ml vL. Ill E i; B 2 y&ijj