Successors to We are now Prepared to Please the Farmers and the Get . jpjblic'by being ready at all times to Accom modate them. Plenty of Water to , run the Mill Day and NiLt if Necessary. A Full stock of the Best Brands of Flour Constantly on Hand. Seal of Minnesoti is A No. I. Try it. ' Washburn's Gold Medal, Arnold's Superlative. Feed, Meal, Mid dlings and Bran. Buck wheat Flour in its Season a Spe ialty Ml Orders left nt the Mill for delivery will receive prompt nttontion. Milford lilling Co., Milford, Pike Co., Penna. DO YOU EXPERT TO BUILD? THEN SEE A. D. BROWN and SON, Manufacttirers 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. I . h I I IS LI vJI lg Of Successors to BROWN & ARMSTRONG. Wo offer a line of .UNSURPASSED Our point Is Mint you need not o away from home to supply nil your needs, or to secure Imrnins. We expect to sntisfy you in bolh particulars. DRY OOODH. new nu t stylish. GROCERIES, fresh ' and good. HARDWARE, ROOTS, SHOES, AND CLOTH ING. Any thing in nny lino nt bottom prices. To accomplish this end wo hnvo ndopted a new system. All our prices nre fixed on a hmis of cash payment. This obvintes the nc cossiry to nllow a inargin for Imd debts nnd interest. To accommodate, rosponsiblo parties we cheer fully open monthly accounts, and expect prompt payment monthly, ns our prices will not enable us to enrry accounts longer. Stntements rendered the first of every month, nnd if paid within three days from date of bill, a rash discount of 2 is allowed. The same discounts givenon all cash pur- chases exceeding $1. 00. Goods sent out .will be O. O. D. SJ unless otherwise previously arranged. (Jj T. ARMSTRONG & CO., g Brown's Building, Milford, Pa. jo -JT Millinery . Largest and finest selection of Mil linery. Onr ilcsigns are tl;e latest, . and prices lowest consistent with good work. COMPLETE LINE OF INFANTS WEAR. HAIR SW.i CUES AND BANGS IN ALL SHADES. AH orders promptly attended to and satisfaction guaranteed to all our pa trons. SALLEY & EMUS, 79 Pike Street, Port Jervis, N. Y. C' ' ' t '- Wecarrya A W receive v'mV t 'vo We own and occupy the tallest mercantile building in the world. We over a,ouo,ouu customers. Sixteen hundred clerks are- constantly engaged filling out-of-town orders. OUR GENERAL. CATALOGUE is the book of the people It quotes Wholesale Prices to Everybody, has over 1,000 pages, i6,ueo illustrations, and fio,ooo descriptions of articles with prices. It costs 71 cents to print and mail each copy. Wa want you to have one. SEND FIFTEEN CENTS to show your good faith, and we'll send you a copy FREE, with all charges prepaid. I1 V'TP'TOY WAPI 9, ItiWil I O vlfiL.ll I unuu u Jervis Gordon new Spring Goods, AND COMPLETE. Par n re fe- V I w w PI Kichiove.nd Msdlsoattraat UUI CHIVASO l.aW.UW.0O , . everyday W -J LTCX 1 smsei rail Mr. Richard Dnvls a married man Willi a family, had lately retired from business upon a substantial oompe tenry. Office life had Riven him no opportunity of developing his muscles. He looked a frail figure as, steadying his boat under the shade ot a tree, Jie once more summed up the points upon his flnpers. "Shall I settle, here, In Salsey?" he reflected. "The town seems pleasant enough. The house! It Is somewhat small; but the garden borders upon the river ex actly as I want It. The schools! Everybody says that I could not do better for the children. There re mains the river to be considered. And that " Mr. Davis looked round with a peculiarly critical glance. " That ought to do. There is not too much current for what I shall want. Yes. Til settle in Salsey." Mr. Davis had a fixed Intention to' devote himself to a certain aquatic hobby. It would keep him In the open air, while filling up his tlmo and pro viding him with amusement. "Aye! and it won't be half such hard work as handling these sculls," he reflected to himself, whilst rowing on. The pleasures of anticipation kept Mr. Davis company till he stepped from the boot upon the wharf of Bonsor's boatyard. "I have had it out for an hour and a half?" said he, interrogatively. The waterman referred to a memo randum book. "Nlnepence, sir," he replied. "There you are," said the stranger, taking the money from a purse. When Bonsor's , la not busy It gossips. Mr. Davis yelded himself to the atmosphere of the place, sitting himself down upon a wooden trestle to watch and listen. Five minutes passed "Ere they come!" said the water man, admiringly. "Now, mister, you'll see 'im 'e's coachln' 'em to-day ready for the regatta." The sharp nose of a racing boat had Just appeared under the central arch of the gray bridge. Scarcely a sec ond elapsed before an eight-oar came Into full view with a splendid vigor of back and blade. Steering by the boundary walls and gardens of the reached, the "Town eight traveled rap idly toward the boat yard with a rhythmic rise and tall of Its green and white jerseys. "Easy all!" the coxswain shouted. His voice was manly nnd authoritative In an instant the powerful "clock, clock" of the oars ceased, their blades floated flatly upon the surface of the dark green water; and the boat, steadying of Its throbs, hissed slowly into rest alongside the yard. Edward Foster, the coxswain, who now stepped ashore, was an old "Blue" and president of the Salsey Rowing Club. The Londoner eyed the local cele brity all over, taking in the green cap, the green blazer and the short flannel breeches reaching Just above the knee. "I wouldn't especially care to fall foul of him," he remarked, after a pause. "I shouldn't think you would," the waterman replied, glancing with a scarcely concealed disdain at the whippety figure of the Londoner. Bonsor's. is approached by a lane running, first, through an open space, where Salsey's outdoor entertain ments such as circuses are held, and afterward between high brick walls to the gate of the boatyard. Some weeks after the conversation re corded above, a bathchair was being drawn along this lane by a boy in buttons. Its occupant was a young lady a cripple for life. Her ap proach was not noticed till she enter ed the gate of the Ik at yard. Then there was an immediate stir among the watermen, and one ran forward. "Yes," said the young lady; "tell njy brother that I am here, please.' If Edward Foster, with his physical Btrength and popularity, was occasion ally dictatorial with people, he was never so with his sister. Pulling on his blazer, he descended the ladder. A few seconds later Edward Foster had gathered his sister tenderly up In his arms and was carrying her to the boat. It was a feat of strength that the yard liked to see. The environB of Salsey were soon left behind, and the brother and sister found themselves meandering with the river through some fiat green meadows. The Invalid did not talk much. Lazy rowing, warmth and the occa sional pauses here and there for a flower, made the president of Balsey Rowing Club grow drowBy. His eye began to watch the smooth, oily flow of the current, his ear to listen to the water rippling under the keel. Fringes of feathery reeds appeared on either bank. Soon the meadows were hid den, and the river was twisting and turning with the short reaches to ward the green-gray bulk of a distant wood. Suddenly there was a noise strange mixture of rattle and splash; and a man seated upon an object like a cumbersome tricycle came swiftly round a curve of the river. There was Just time for Edward Foster to unship his left scull. "Sorry! Sorry!" said the stranger, 'spasmodically. The president of the Salsey Rowing Club had no sympathy with the muscle-saving machines. They appear ed unmanly to him. For a moment he was dumb with Indignation at the peril to which his sister had been ex posed. Then he blazed out; "Sorry are you? You ought to be. I have head complaints of you before, sir. You're a nuisance upon the river." The stranger seered taken aback. He stared, making no reply. "Take my advice!" the president added, grimly. "Learn how to row like a man Instead ot treading away like an old woman at a sewing machine. You'll save yourself from getting into trouble with the law. If you hud run us down I should " "But " the stranger interrupted, flushing warmly. "But what, sir?" the president ask ed, roughly. "You were upon the wrong side of the river," the stranger said, simply. The president started and looked round. An expression of chagrin swept over his face. "The pace at which you were travelling gave me no time to cross over, he replied, after a pause. To secure th oriuinnl witel' hnzel salve, Hsk for DeWitt's witch hazel salve, well known as a cortiim cure for piles and skin diseases. Bownie of worthlo-g counterfeits. They lire dangerous. Horse nniy.be kept fri from Colio if Oriuiga Kloctrio Foo 1 is Oe casioiitilly g ven to thorn. For rii1 at T. Armstrong's. The stranger stnllfd snrrnstlrnlty. Wllh a bow tn MIfs Foster, he touch ed a lever to his machine and moved away. The Incident left a strongly un pleasant impression upon Edward Foster's mind. The president's author ity over all aquntlc matters connected with the Slowe hnd ro long been un questioned thst the Btranger's asser tion of Independence came as a shock. He felt that he had been "set down" and called to order over an element ary law regulating the traffic of the river actually told by Implication to keep on the right side. For a while Edward Foster lot things drift, fervently hoping that the tricycle might come to a smash and the river be freed of a nuisance thnt he could not see h!s way to check. Then people began to make a griev ance of the president's inaction. Tin finest regatta that they had had for years was rapidly drawing nigh. Everybody knew tnat tne attendance would be exceptional owing to an un usually valuable pr.ze list and the country crowd that would be attracted for the menagerie and circus adver tised to arrive In Salsey upon the Same date. It would be Intolerable If the man. Davis, were allowed to tri cycle here, there, and everywhere over the river, as he affirmed that ho Intended to do. There would be an nortdont. There must be an accident. Mr. Foster should really move In the matter. "All very fine! But how! What can I do?" the president grumbled. "The man does not care a tinker's curse for you, or me, or anybody." People, being Irresponsible, were not satisfied. The president, being president, ought to move somehow in the matter. At length Edward Foster determined to send an official letter to the delinquent. An answer came back by return of post. . Mr. Davis was of the opinion that people were envious of his novelty, end that they exaggerated. If Mr. Foster was not aware of the fact, as his letter would seem to imply, and would refer to the Regatta Subscrip tion List, he would find that Mr. Davis was a subscriber, and so had a moral right to be present at the regatta. The president of the Salsey Rowing Club brooded over this reply for two days. Then he went to Bonsor's and called one of the watermen aside. "Bill," he said, "I am hiring the Jane for regatta day. I shall want you just before the Salsey's Schools' race comes off to row Miss Foster In her away from this part of the river down to the first lock." The Schools' race is, for local reasons, always the great event of a Salsey Regatta It attracts the atten tion of the crowd more than any other detail of the programme. At the ex citing moment when the course op posite to Bonsor's was about to be cleared for the great race the presi dent Intended to foul Mr Davis's tri cycle with a dinghy, so Bkillfully that the cockney would be covered with public obloquy as a careless, reckless fool who has at last received what he deserved a well-merited upset and ducking. A gray stone bridge, wlta several archeB.crosses the river a hundred yards below Bonsor's boatyard. The stream widens beyond the bridge, run- nig by a fine promenade upon the left , to a terminal lock. Half-way between ' the bridge and the latter another side lock on the right gives access to a lower river. It was toward this side lock that Bill, according to his orders, began to row Miss Foster upon the day of the regatta. Just before the course was cleared for the Salsey Schools' race. The river was crowd ed with pleasure boats. Their pro gress was slow as Edward Foster watched them from the midst of a gayly-dressed crowd at Bonsor's. At length they disappeared out of sight under an arch of the bridge and, Ed ward Foster immediately stepped into a dinghy that was being held ready for. htm at the wharf by a waterman. I "Shall I shove yer off, sir?" the man asked. The brass band of a circus and me nagerie was playing noisily and In a field behind Bonsor's yaru. "What? No, not yet. Hold on a bit," the pres ident replied. A minute passed. Suddenly, Mr. Davis's motor-trlcycle rolled forth from an arch of the distant bridge, trumpeting discordant staccato warn ings to the crowd of boats and began to dodge Its way in and out of them toward Bonsor's. "All right. Shove i out!" said the president, sharply, ! catching sight of it. The waterman obeyed, pressing hard npon the outrigger, and after ward hand over hand along the length of a scull. The light craft yielded steadily outward till there was water enorlgh for the president to take a stroke. A glance over his shoulder told him that the tricycle was ad vancing rapidly. He must be quick. He began to head the boat hastily round into a position that would en able him, after taking a few strokes, to deliver a slanting blow Into the wheel ot the tricycle as It passed. Presently another glance behind told htm that the revolut on was satisfac torily completed. A weak man would now have dashed forward. But the president's nerves were of steel! He saw that he must wait five seconds or more for the advance of a heavy family boat The blow, delivered from behind this, would make the tn cyclist appear more plausibly in the wrong. One, two, three seconds had passed. The president leaned for ward. His blue eyes gleamed But the stroke was never taken that would have launched him at the tricycllst. The president's purpose was suddenly distracted by an outburst of terrific bellowing. It seemed to be approaching the river by the lane leading to Bronsor's, growing louder and louder. There was scarcely time to speculate what it might be when the gayly-dressed crowd in Bonsor a scattered in all directions like a flock ot scattered bens. With a powerful ' action of the wrists, the president reversed the blades of his sculls to back water so that he could come into 'view of the yard gate. Suddenly he looked past the angle of tarred plank shed. A half of the flimsy gate of the yard was open; and, bellowing, blundering, trampling toward it, he saw the dark brown body of an enormous animal shaped like a rhinoceros. Quick as lightning, a thouglit of the menagerie made the presUU'it glance up at the white canvas, s ' in-: over Bunsor's I usi-il Uncial ilyspepsiii corn in niv I family with woniiiUn-fi.il results. It Riven iiiinu'iliiite relief, i pleasant take mill is truly the dyspeptic's liest frienil,"ays K Ilurtteiink.Overisel, Mieli. Digests, whut you eat. Cannot f lil to fiire. M. 11. Smith, Butternut, Mith., "nvs, "lHiWitt's little eiirlv risers uruf the very best pills I ever used for cost ivenoes, liver and bowel trouble." roofs, tmmedlntely afterward the carcass entered tne fiarrow aperture before It. There was a splintering crash. The gate buckled up like matchwood. And upsetting the table of a ticket collector, dispersing the bowls of coins In a clinking shower, the animal entered the yard. For a brief second It seemed that the thick lipped brutal head would run Itself In lis mad fury against a red brick wall, but the four feet came together like a pivot. The enormous body swung round. There followed a moment's frightful expectation when the pig-like eyes examined the shadow of the sheds where women were crouching. Afterward s dreadful, many-voiced cry arose from the boats upon the river, as. with one tremendous curvet a veritable caricature of animal mo tion the hippopotamus made straight for the river, entering it with a tre mendous splash. The brute sank deeply unrler. As It reappeared with dripping tusks, the crowd of pleasure boats began to flee, nnnie up, some down the river, with frantic strokes of their oars. "S-shush!" Edward Foster hissed, holding his position amid the panic with a superb bravery, and splashing wildly with his sculls In an endeavor to drive the beast back to land. The chase very soon began to t"!l upon the crowded, Jostling boats. The Interval between them and the power- 1 tuny swimming unite diminished and diminished. Presently the peril of a noat, containing women and children. was becoming fearfully evident It was falling behind the rest. It was yawning undecidedly from a strnU;iit course, giving the pursuing animal greater and greater advantage. A man was watching the terrible sight from where he had halted after the first panic. Suddenly he touched a lever. There was a whirring, rattling splash. And putting on full oil power, Davis began to steer his tricycle after the hippopotamus. It was an Impulse of gallantry, taking him to do he scar cely knew what. The tricycle gained up to a few yards astern of the hippopotamus before the celar Idea came to Mr. Davis that he was going to try and divert the furious animal In pursuit of himself. He began to hlsh and halloa, at first faintly, but soon with the growing passion of desperate man entering his whole energy and heart into a splendid attempt to save life. The monstrous, wallowing, barrel like bulk was not to be diverted from the boat! The curved white tusks traveled closer and closer to its frail stern. A catastrophe seemed Immi nent. Suddenly Mr. Davis removed his hat, casting it cuttingly downward with his whole force. The "ragged edge of the straw caught the brute's eye painfully. The hippopotamus swerved and turned. In a second the tricycle was following round on ft wide curve, gashing up the surface of the river Into treble lines of foam. "Come on, you beast!" the man shouted tauntingly to the brute passion glaring at h.m. "Come on!" The challenge seemed understood. The small pointed ears cocked them selves cunningly. With a surging leap that exposed its shoulders, the hippopotamus began to chase Mr. Davis down the river toward the bridge. The tricycllst gaining palpably npon the savage brute In Its wake, approached the town bridge at full speed. A dense crowd was standing upon the latter their faces peering red and white through the stone balus trades. It was no sooner evident that Mr. Dnvls Intended to shoot the cen tral arch than there was an agitation amid this mass of people. They began to shout. The confused bable of shrill cries appeared to be a warning. But of what? Mr. Davis looked affright edly over his shoulder. No, it was not that! He was still gaining. Im mediately afterward, wiui a glance up, he swept unenlightened undei the up roar of the crowd. As Mr. Davis again flashed out into the sunshine beyond the arch a sight met his laze which explained . Straining along the foot of a prome nade was the crowd of pleasuie boats that had fled down the river from Bronsor's when the hippopotamus had first appeared. They were some two hundred and fifty ye-ds away. It was a necessity, of Mr. Davis were to save them, that he should keep the hippo potamus In play till they could reach and land upon a low bank some hundreds of yards beyond a lock on the right. A few seconds passed amlo the agony of Indecision. Then Mr. Davis's hand went resolutely to the machine's brake. He began to press it harder and harder, looking over his shoulder. Suddenly the aw fully critical moment, that he had an ticipated, came. The hippopotamus was almost upon him when,, with a clever touch of the steering rod, Mr. Davis deflected the machine aside. It was the commencement of a second duel between man and brute. The crowd watched the conflict gradually withdraw in the wake ot the fleeing boats. A score of times Mr. Davis endeavored to escape past the hippopotamus into the open water up the river. A score of times the cun ning of the mad urute foiled him. Presently they were opposite the side lock, and It seemed that the cyclist must be driven back and followed among the boats. The crowds upon the bridge and the promenade grew breathlessly silent. There was a moment when the tricycle was sta tionary. Then the brute made a rush And women shut tnelr eyes. But the ringing, vociferating cheer! The cyclist had escaped into the open gate of the lock. But again the horror of It! The lower gates of the lock were closed were Arm and fast as Iron. The hip popotamus was following in after him. The rescue took place just In the nick ot time. A tall figure, landing from a dinghy, rushed across a meadow to the lower end of the lock. The crowd saw It kneel and stoop over, and pull up the cyclist by main force. Then the man who was saved and the man who had saved him ran back together to close tie lock gate. The hippopotamus was trappeu. "But your tricycle is smashed up!" said Edward Foster, glancing down upon the event of the day. Mr.Davls held out hi3 hand. "You'd have saved It too, If you could," he said. The president of the Salsey Rowing Club did not deny hi assertion. 'iu Strand Magazine. Wm. Orr, Newark, O. , Kiiyst, "We never fuel nafo (vitliour. one minute tolooiiBit cure in the house. It suvei' my little buys life when be luul pneu n'ini;i. We think it is the best med icine made " It cures conabs mill all lung diseases. Pleasant totake, harm less and uives immediate results. For comfortables, woo'en t,lankei ami counterpanes go to Armstrong & Co s. if " y;ll! RAILROAD TIME TABLE. Corrected to Date. Hnlitl Pullman trains to Buffaln, Nlag-M-n Fall!, (.'hfiiltaiiitiia Lake. Cli'vcltiliu. CliM-iiu nnd 'ir"inmiii. Iickds on sale ni 1'orl .JervU to all pnlntp lu tin' W'i'sl and S, ml liwi-st at lower rates than via any other first-class Hue. TlttlNB Now I.favk Pout Follows. J Kims as EASTWARD. No. 13. Dailv Express : 21 A U " 10. Dailv Express fi 80 " ' ' Hi, Dully Except Sunday.. l " ss .. .. 7 4fi " (Km, Sunday Only 7 4 " " ;is. Dully kxi'pi Sunday., in 117 " ' fi, Dailv Way Traill ...... 13 15 P. M " :i. Wav Kxrc t Siindav... :) a.' " 9. Daily Kxpress 4 SR " " (till, Sunday Onlv 4 ttl " " s. Daily K.xpii-ss 5 !!n " '' 18. Sunday only ft 45 " " 2-J Daily Except Sunday.. (I fill ' " 14. Daily '. . . 10 UU " WESTWARD. No. 11, Dailv Express 17, Daily Milk Train 1. Dailv Express II. Fit liu dnlc E'pt Sun f. t'hieagi, l.iinili-d Daily. J7. Daiiy Except Sunday.. 7. Dailv Express 13 an A 8 " 11. S3 " !- III p. ft 15 ' 5 Ml " 10 18 " Trains leave Chambers street. New York for Pert .lervis on week (lavs at 4 no. ? J.V i iki. 11 15, 111 :tn a m i 111, 8 on 4 :m, I! :tn. 7 ;m, si I,-. p. m. On Sundivs, 1 cm. 7 :),- !l mi. 15 a. 111.; 12 30. H 00, 7 Sound 9 15 p. M. II. I. Roberts, fleneriil I'ttsHrmriT Arpnt, New Vork. Holid ft THE - YAZOO" Wo Mi' liciiilqniirtcrs fi r Dolls, Toys and Games, Story Books, Christ mas Tree Trimmings. Oiir soli Ttii 11 is now the 1 est 111 1 "U f.ni yet just wluil vim ni t. cn't Wait, Visit Us Early Do not tidily lint nvniil the nisi f t.lie l ist days. When in Port Jci vis walk 111 mill look around "THE - YAZOO," 94 Pike SI reef, Tort Jervis Formerly Wells' Bazaar." ?KiiGS3EmiEra aaiCaSiBsama-gziiEgi M3i IF VOW WANT "iyj- KENTUCKY-WHISKY- OBDfrP IT rOOM KENTUCKY. SEND US $3 AND WE WILL SHIP YOU 4 FULL QUARTS Of- THC CELEBRATED OLD nn a a mi ci roiwr i-Hp I isaavi rai (To any point in U.S. East of Danvar) Securely packed without marks indicating contents. IT WAS MAOC IN OUO HCNTUCKV AUG.COLDEWEY&CO. - N 231 W. MAIN ST. LOUISVILLE, KENTUCKY. EST 1848 - CtPeetNCt-ANVLOOLBAnS Automobiles. The hornelew yehW'lea 1 srtiially here. Burh lute nuts anrt i vnul tmt're-t has not beun Bltoun In anytln -k inve Hell TV.eii.iui.e. fcveryone wnninio beuniMntrtlie tirmtoown aa automobile; evrvnne wants to share in the eiiorinuiiM pmiHtj uf the butj.utti.fl. By Mtjudiug ft slump to the Strathmore Automobile Co. 1 Beacon Street Boston Tou can And out all nuotit it. They will tell yon how vou ran flia it) Id thu profit. A limited amount of their treasury ntot-k in offered for sale. TlMfe who wi-h't-i Mi are In the ffrent diviilemlri am e to he (mid flimtjd write at om e a the price of the toi k will tn udvam-d tap Idly. Kvbi v HUM'Lholder will be given a per ml terms tr the purchase of an autuiuobiie tut bis own uue. The Strathmore Id one of the very fit t in the Urld, la the beat vehicle iitade, ami U barked by lueu of Uie iiiguest Uuuactur and. ability. i r ii 1 1 "! ITT3 a t3 i3 3 a s a x , p. a c " a W m tf rr a 9. , 3 "S. 5' 3 3 sSb""1 g-J-. 3 q S &s Pv . to 3 IIS 3 m gcrSSSg 2 o w b i a 1 a a et o 5 "3 f 7 a For estimates call on or address. -J. C. PRESCOTT Matamoraa Pa. BYEIY HOUr? Is an effort put forth to deserve, obtain and retain your pationage. GOME with your very ltt $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, Cov. Front and Sussex St's. Port Jervis N. Y. Stoves and Ranges. THE Round Oak For Wood and Coal. Best Heater and Fuel Snver in tb Country. New Era Radiators, Two Fires In en IAKDWARE. CI1TI.KRY, TIN, AOATB WAKE, ETC. -IN ROODNO AND PLUMBINO A SPECIALTY. Jobbing promptly attended to T. R. Julius Klein 'l)Ar STREET MILFOBD, PA age ntwte cT In Every County to Supply the great popular demand for AMERICA'S WAR FOR HUMANITY OLD IN PICTURE AND STORY, COMPILED AND WRITTEN BY Senator John J. Ingalls, Of Ksnsss. The nioKt brillliintly wriltnn, moat pro fusely and artistically illustrated, and most intKiimily popular book on the sub ject of the war with Spain. Nearly 200 Superb Illustrations from Photographs. taken specially fur this great work. A (routs are niakiutf toll to $1011 week selliliK it. A veritable bonntr,a for live canvassers. Apply fur description, terms and territory at ouce to N. B. Thompson Publishing Co. ST. LOUIS, MO OrM.V.City. 5 CTYLLSIi. KbLUBLt-l 1 Amii-ric $ Btcwmcndd t Leatttftg Drttairtskrrs lltt; Aifi Pttitr a MS CALL srm- a. -w j km l Patterns $ NONE til Ilk AT ANV PKtLfs j 1 ... ........ ... i in tit, ltd 5 s:.T'e o" Adj.... vur ... t-t t re p Itxtfta . THE McCALL COMPANY, j 130 le lib. I4in I. net. Tat BR&N.'n Drpl. ri ; J 1(9 Filth A v . Chl.se, 3 lOfii Market 5t-. fiaol-rt M CALL'S j MAGAZIMEV Mi ttrlgalul MiftKoi Publish 5 Coo'.sins e.K ji Cslorel plaits. JtifttrA'. LsN'f! PsU.CI&S, FtUiV ln. Fac v Wik, d feV lt a fur . stb .r. ttk tat In lit J- mti fee !( aW.el aikji ! ml 11. u;i-l fi !? 3 Oc pJ rftf( 'AUeUftt; I PRfcB rtmia C- 4uu THE McCALL. CO.. h it ta 140 W. i4ts) St.. Htm Vk
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers