Successors to We are now Prepared to Please the Farmers and the Get, . ,'. i'lblic 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 Bsst Brands of Flour Seal of Minnesota is A No. I. Try it. Washburn's Gold Medal, Arnold's Superlative. Feed, Meal, Mid dlings and Bran. Suck wheat F our in its Season a Spe ialty ! ! ! Orders left nt the Mill for delivery will receive prompt attention. an a s i r. mom rawiing Milford, Pike DO YOU EXPEHT TO BUILD? THEN SEE A. D. BROWN and SON, Manufaotiurers 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. T. Armstrong & Co., 5- Successors to BROWN & ARMSTRONG. Wo offer a lino of g UNSURPASSED Vj Our point Is thnt you need not go away from home to supply iillj.vonr needs, or to secure bargains. We expect to sulisfy you in both particulars. ' DRY GOODS, new an.l stylish. GROCERIES, frosli j and good. HARDWARE, HOOTS, ErHOEH, AND CJ.OTH- 175 ING. Any tiling in any lino at bottom prices. To accomplish this end wo have adopted R now system. All our prices are fixed on a basis of cash payment. This V obviates tho necessity to allow n margin for had debts and interest. To accommodate responsible parties we cheor fully open monthly accounts, and expect prompt payment monthly, as our prices will 11.1t enable us to carry accounts kC longer. Statements rendered tho ilrst of every month, and if V paid within three days from date of bill, a cash discount of 2 is allowed. Tho 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, m Millinery V?'-- ' Wecarrya " A We recmw ia L vn?c- ' of good, '1 iron. 10.0(10 io .i tS4.r5 R $mm n We own and occupy the tallest merer. ntlle building in the world. havo Cj f T1 over 8,000,000 customers, sixteen hundred clerks are constantly lJvi engaged filling out-of-town orders. ttTl OUR GENERAL CATALOGUE is the book of the people it quotes I y -:-T- kj-Jj Wholesale Prices to Everybody, has c-ver 1,000 pages, 16,000 illustrations, and If j ,! oo.ouo descriptions of articles with prices. It cofcts T cents to print and mail X I I rJ each copy. We want you to have one. SEND FIFTEEN CENTS to show (V 11 your good faith, and we'll send you a copy FREE, with all charges prepaid. 1 , MOSITBOKERY WARD & tV'" Largest and finest selection of Mil linery. Onr designs tire the latest, and juices lowest consistent witli good work. COMPLETE LINE OF INFANTS WEAR. HAIR SWITCHES AND BANGS IN ALL SHADES. All orders promptly attended to and natisfact ion guaranteed to all our pa trons. SALLEY & ENfllS, 70 Pike Street, Jervis Gordon Constantly on Hand. - u u - Co., Penna. new Bpring Goods, AND COMPLETE Milford, Pa. Pari nre JL 1 Ul iwl o Port Jervis, N. Y, Co., THE MEN HUNTING GAME. COL. BADEN POWELL HAS WRIT TEN A BOOK ON IT. Ha Declares It a Great Sport, and Tell How to Bag Your Enemy With out Being Bagged Extracts From "Aide to Scouting." Colonel ItiKlpn-rowell declares tlint "limn stiilkiiiR ' Is tl best gnme of which lie knows, and the Colonel hns lind experience enough as a hauler of both two and four footed animals to know. He has written a book culled "Aids to Scouting," and In It he clear ly lays down the rules of the sport. TIip scout's ten commandments, he fuijs. nre pluck and self-reliance, abili ty to find his way In a strange coun try and use his eyes and ears. He must lie aide to keep himself hidden, track the enemy, pet across country, take en re of himself and his horse, and report his Information. The most reliable assistance In find ing your way Is the compass, but In South Africa, where there. Is much Ironstone In the ground, a compass be comes very unreliable. The sun by day gives you the east In his rising, and west In his setting, and north or south at noon, as you happen to be south or north of tho equator. On shifting on a reconnaissance, If you see a mountain to the northward It will serve as a guide. Similarly, when you pass any conspicuous object, like 11 withered tree, broken gate or a strangely shaped rock, keep It In your mind. On passing such landmarks do not omit to look back, and see what their appearance Is from the other side. A moving enemy Is easy to see, hut one who stands still, or who Is the same color as the ground around him, Is very hard to see for the unprac tleed eye. Common sense and a little reflection will often suggest to you the most likely points to look to fluJ him. For instance, you come across three fresh pnths trodden In the grass on the South African veldt, all running parallel to each other, at a few yards distance, liy having studied the habits of your enemy you will know at once thnt this means three companies have paused that way on the march, as gen erally they march In single tile, each company following Its own lender. If the footmarks show thnt the men were wearing sandals It means they were on a long march; If barefooted, they were not going far. It Is often a useful thing, after pass ing a place where you suspect au ene my to he hiding, to turn very suddenly and look for him. You may catch him looking out lens carefully. Iu selecting your lookout place, al ways be careful to see that there Is more than one way out of it, so thnt, if an enemy cuts you off at one you can escape by the other. Thus a tower is a tempting place to look out from, but if an enemy comes and stands guard at the foot of It you cannot get away, whereas the roof of a house will give you an almost equally good view and possibly several different ways of getting to the ground. Trees, for the snme reason as tow ers, must be used with caution. He member that men nre very. apt to for get to look up In trees for yeu unless they see your footmarks ' on the groilud leading to a tree. I have stocd under a tree with an enemy up In it, and never noticed him till he fired down at me. Tracking means following up foot marks. It is called "spooring" iu South Africa. Scouting without track ing Is like bread-and-butter without the bread. The first thing to learn is to distinguish the pace at which a horse or man was moving when he made the track. It will be seen that a horse walking leaves pairs of foot marks, each hiud foot coming close to the impressiou of the fore foot. At a trot each pair of footmarks Is at a greater distance from the next, and the ground is more forcibly struck, the toe more deeply Indented In the ground than at a walk. At a canter there are two single footmarks, and then a pair; at a gallop single foot marks deeply Indented. With a man walking, the whole flat of the foot comes equally on the ground, the feet a little under one yard apart. Kunulng, the toes nre more deeply Indented In the ground, and the feet are more than a yard apart. Native trackers boast that not only can they tell a person's sex and age by their tracks, but also their characters. They Buy that people who turn out their toes much are generally liars. It was a trick with highwaymen oT old, and with borse-stealers more recently, to put their horses' shoes on wrong way round. In order to deceive trackers who might try to follow them up; but a good tracker would not be takeu In. Similarly, thieves often walk backward. Iu tracking where spoor is dltlicult to see such as on hard ground, or In grass note the direction of the last footprint that you can see, and then look on in the snme direc tion, but well ahead of you say, 20 to 30 yards and in the grass you will generally see the blades bent or trod den, and on hard ground possibly stoues displaced or scratched, and so on small signs, which, seen in a line one behind the other, give a kind of truck that otherwise would not be no ticed. I once trucked a bicycle ou a hard macadam road, where it really made no impression at all, but by looking along the surface of the road for a king distance ahead of me, under the rising sun, as It happened, the line It hud taken was quite visible through the almost Invisible coating of dew upon the ground. Standing on the truck, and looking down upon It close to my feet, I could not see the slight est sign of it. Blue Front Stables, Port Jervis, N. Y. Adjoining Gnniner'a Union House. IViail, cnrriupti, draft and farm horses for salo. Exchanges umdo. A large stock from which to make solootiona. CANAL S'V. Hiram Towner. dEAR FALLS THROUGH A ROOF. He Causes Great Excitement In a Pennsylvania Household. 8amuel Jleld, a prosperous Mont' gomery County farmer, has been kept busy telling and retelling how on Bun day he and his family were literally cased In their home by a huge bear, which Anally broke through the roof and fell Into the room where their baby boy was sleeping;. Mr. Reld's pretty little two-story cottage nestles In sn apple orchard three miles north of Willow Grove. Ho comes to Philadelphia on market days, having a stand in the Kensing ton market. 1 nere It was that his friends gathered yesterday to hear him tell of his thrilling experience. It was about 8 o'clock on Sunday afternoon, Reld says, that he and his wife, having put their three-year-old boy to bed, started out to enloy the afternoon air. Jurt at tho end of the orchard a strange sight met their eyes. Two hundred feet from the house, coming directly toward them, was a hurce bear, lumbering along with two Italians In hot pursuit. With a dash the Helds fled Inside and belted the door. After recovering from their first flight they ventured to look out of a window, when, tn their surprise and horror, they spied Bruin seated at the top of an apple tree, one great branch of which overhangs the cottage. The two Italians below danced around, gesticulated and howled in vain. In answer to Reid's question, it did not take the two Italians long to explain to the farmer that the bear was a pet, which they exhibited. They Intended taking him to Reading, but he broke his chain and ran off. A council of war was held, and for the next hour all sort of devices were made use of to Induce the animal to descend, but he would not bulRe. All but the bear were In despair when new actors appeared upon the scene. Three hunters, whose usual Sunday tramp had apparently yielded them nothing so far, came in sight. Seeing the bear they stopped in astonishment. Then, not knowing it was tame, and, anxious to distinguish themselves, they opened fire upon the animal. At the first shot Bruin was percepti bly alarmed. At the second volley he made a mad rush along the bough overhanging the house, lost his foot ing and fell plump upon the frail roof. Right through he went Into thebaby's room, to the Immense fright of Mrs. Reld. The Italians, however, dashed into the house and upstairs. There they found things in confusion. The furniture had been smashed by the In furiated atoimal, but the child was not Injured. The hear had not succeeded In removing his muzzle. Throwing themselves on the animal, the Ital ians, by the use of a whip, brought him into subjection. Then, leading him downstairs, they speedily decamped, leaving a party of foolish hunters to look blank and a Montgomery county farmer to bewail the loss of some $50 worth of house furniture and a dam aged roof. Phil. North American. America at the Paris Exposition. Our cocher has been ordered to turn Into the Avenue de la Tour Mar bourg, and suddenly I find that we have come out upon the Qttat d'Orsay, and are at the entrance of the Pont des Invalideg. Here cabby Is ordered to halt, and looks on in surprse when we descend Into the ankle-deep dust and proceed, by means of our open sesame, to the place where four Amer ican flags at the corners of a large square indicate the enclosure chosen by our Commissioner-General for the American Pavilion. Here, on the rtve gauche, in company with others of the Pavilions des Ktrangeres, will stand the American pavilion, a beautiful and attractive structure whose broad steps lead down to the water. Here Ameri cana may land, and at once receive that welcome and attention which the visitor soon discovers its second na ture to the Commissioner-General and his staff; and here, more than any where else in Paris, will he find him self thoroughly at home. New Lip pincott. Rigid Test for Matrimony. Both the northern and western Isl- ands of Scotland the natives have some peculiar customs unfamiliar to the dwellers of the main land. One of these, known 08 the "marriage test." is practiced in the Island of St. KIda. where the population barely exceeds a hundred. The desire nmnng the is anils to Increase this number does not seem to be exceptionally strong, and every man before he Is deemed suitable for a husband has: to perform an evolution with no little bodily risk. The St. Kil dnns, are, of course, adept rock climbers, and the aspirant fur matri mony Is therefore subjected to the test of balancing himself n one leg on a narrow ledge overhanging a pre cipice bending his body at the snme time In order to hold the foot of his other leg in hla hands. If found lacking in courage the mnlilen withdraws lie:- betrothal, and should the man fall over the ledge It Is presumed that. In his rase, he will be disqualified. Chicago Inter Ocean. A Farmer's Find. Erer since last September Eugene Doolittle. a farmer living at Hock well's mills, In this county, has been driving about In a wagon with $2,000 under the seat cushions. He made the discovery by accident yesterday. The wagon Is a two-seated one, and Mr. Doolittle was giving it a thorough cleaning, preparatory to taking hla family for a drive. As he took up the. cusnion on me uack seat he saw a long wallet undor them. It contained a ten-dollar gold piece and $2,000 in securities. The name of the owner was on a card in the pocketbook, and the honest farmer returned the prop erty immediately. It had probably been stolen at the county fair In Nor wich In September, and bidden un dor the cushions. Norwich (N. Y.) Cor. Philadelphia Record. Salt In the Ocean. It Is estimated that there are In the world's ocean 7.000,000 cubic miles of salt, and the most astonishing thing about It Is that if all thlB salt could be taken out In a moment the level of the water would not drop one single inch. Diet for Thinkers. Raw eggs, milk and plenty of fruit are recommended for bruin workers. This is said to be ta finest diet known for nourishing the "After sull'crmg from nevere dy 8VKiirt over twelve years and using many remedied without permanent good I finally took kodol dyspepsia cure. It did me so much pood I rec ommended it to every one," writes J. E Watkins, Clerk and Register, I'hillteotho, Mo. It digests what you eat. For Lailios', Misses' ami Chilil runs' flue shoes auil ties go to T. Al'Uiuti'untf & Co. HOW TO BREW GOOD TEA. THE CHINESE MINISTER TELLS HOW IT IS DONE. Ha Knows All About It and Yet He Can't Give Many Points to Our Gov ernment How the Brewing la Dona In the Flowery Kingdom. His Excellency, Wu Ting Fang, Min ister from China, who made a witty speech at tho dinner of the tea experts, says the New York World, dictated the following rules the Chinese rules for brewing tea: "To get down to the basic principles of tea brewing and tea drinking as practiced In China you must realize that at home we do not drink tea on stated occasions or only at meals, aa you do here. With us tea Is the nation al beverage. I might nlmost say, speaking to an American, thnt tea is the Ice water of China. Instead of the silver water cooler, which constitutes an almost Invaluable ornnment of your dining, rooms, you will find ev erywhere In China the teapot. When ever we are thirsty we have recourse to the teapot Instead of the cooler. "Let us first consider the teapot It self. It is Invariably of porcelain and varies In style, cost and dimensions In accordance with the taste, wealth nnd size of the family possessing It. It Is, as yon say, constantly 'In commis sion.' In the morning a sufficient quan tity of the dry tea leaves Is placed In It and on this Is poured hot water. Let this Infusion stand for a few minutes say four or five and you have whnt we, I think rightly, regard as a drink fit for the gods.. "It is always ready. Whenever the pot needs replenishing all we have to do Is to add a little more tea and a little more water. There Is no hard and fast rule as to the proportions of ten and wnter or as to the character of the tea Itself. It Is all a matter of Individual taste. We use black or green ten and have It either weak or strong Just as our tastes direct. "We never drink it boiling hot, as Is done In America and England, but nt a moderate degree of warmth. To maintain this desirable temperature It Is customary to cover the teapot with a sort of bag padded with cotton and lined with silk. A similar arrange ment Is often used in Kgland and is there known as a 'cozy.' "Tills Is the usual family manner of preparing nnd drinking tea in China, but when visitors come courtesy de mands that we should be a little more ceremonious. Then we have the tea brewed Iu Individual cups, covered with dainty lids, In order to retain the heat and aroma. As a matter of course tea Is always thus offered to a visitor the moment he enters a house. "The family teapot Is simply emp tied and replenished every morning, and not scoured inside, as that would rob the vessel of its delicate aroma. In this way an old teapot acquires a degree of fragrance that Is analogous to the seasoning of a pipe that has been long In use. "We would regard with horror the suggestion that we should add any thing to the contents of our teapots beyond hot water and tea." said the Minister, with a visible shudder. "Im agine putting rum in tea, as I am told Is sometimes done here, and Is said to be a common practice in Russia! A cultured taste revolts from the thought. The Idea of milk and sugar Is almost as bad. "Just one hint more regnrding tea and I am done," said Minister Wu. "Remember that while there are ex pensive teas and cheap teas, there are no really bad teas except those that have been adulterated with deleteri ous Ingredients, and this very adulter ation Is practiced solely to meet tho taste, or lack of taste, of consumers Who persist (n so spoiling their tea by the addition of such adulterants as rum and milk and sugar. If only they would drink their tea pure, as nature Intended It to be drunk, they would instantly detect any attempt at adul teration, and that would be the end of the importation of Impure teas." Beea Are Strong. Observations made to test this ques tion showed thnt bees can carry with ease twice their weight In honey. Sev eral bees were caught as they re turned to their hives laden with hon ey, and, after Inclosing them In a- lit tle box, they were carefully weighed. When the bees unloaded their honey they were again caught, placed In the same box and weighed a second time. This experiment showed that the bees when laden weighed three times as much as when empty. It was therefore proved that a bee can carry twice Its own weight in honey, and can fly very long distances with that weight. Ex change. Workers Should Breakfast Sparingly. Do not eat a hearty breakfast If you have any mental or physical work to do thereafter. The full Btomach may satisfy your craving, but cannot give you the needed or desired strength under about three or four hours Di gestion, absorption and assimiliation must take place before you can get any good from your breakfast. If these processes are not completed the hearty breakfast simply clogs the vital machinery. Therefore, the hearty six o'clock dinner which will not only build up the waste of the day, but provides a reserve for the morrow, Is to be recommended. April Ladles' Home Journal. The night before Sir ftedvers Buller left London for South Africa he was a viator at the famous "Beefsteak Room" of the Lyceum Theatre, where be predicted his absence from Eng land would not extend over a period Dt 12 months. 'I hail stomach trouble twenty years and gave uphopeof biutjcured till I beuu to use kodol dyspepsia cuie. It has done niesouiuch good I call it the savior of my life," writes W. K. Wilkinson, Albaug, Tenu. It digests what you eat. "De Witt's little early risers are the finest pills I ever used." D. L. Moore, Millbrook, Ala. They quick- ly cure nil liver aud bowel troubles. ftAILROAR TIME TABLE. Correotod to Date. Solid Pullman trains to Buffalo, Ning nr Kails, (.'hniitnuqun Lake, Cleveland, Chicago nnd ( Ircinnati. Tickets on -'ale at Port Jerv' ...1 points In the Wcstnnd Smithwestnr lower Lcutes than via any other flrsb-class lino. TiiAlNS Now I.FAVR 1'OIIT Koixowf . JHKVI8 AS KASTWARI). No. l i, Dally Kx press 8 24 A. M 5 20 " r. an " 7 45 " 7 IS ' 10 07 " UlfiP.M 2 '.' " in, I hilly express 10, Dally Kxrept Sunday 8S, " 6m, Sunday Only Ks, Daily Kxcep't Sunday rt, Dally Way Train 4. Daily Exccp Sunday . an. Way Kxcet.t Sunday. 8 - " 2, Daily Kxpress 4 2! dsn, Sunday Duly 4 SKI " 8. Dally Kxpress 5 M ' IS, Sundayonly 5 45 ' 0',!s, Sunday only 0 n ' Daily Kxcept Sunday. . a Wi " It. Daily 10 00 " WESTWARD. N'o. 3, Daily Express 13 80 A 17, Daily Milk Train S Of. ' " 1. Daily Kxpress 11 !t;i ' " 11, H'or llci'dale K'pt Sun., la In p. " 0. Daily Kxoept Sunday . . LI) ' " 8y, Saturday only 4 40 ' " 5. Chicngo' Limited Daily. 5 15 ' " 27, Daily Except Sunday.. 5 AO ' " 7, Daily Kxpress 10.15 ' Trains leave Chambers street, New V ork for Port Jervis fill week days at 4 4 Ml, 7 4f, WHO. 0 la, 101 A. M . l .mi. am, 4 80. B Ho, 7 8t, 0 .15 p. M. On Sundivs, 4 (IU, 7 8", 0 00, 15 ft. ill.; 13 15, U .80, 7 .80 nnd 9 lfiP. M. . I. f. nnliprtu, f.rncral rnKfngt-r Agnl, New York. "THE - YAZOO" Wo nre licudquartcrs for . oils, Toys and Games, Story Books, Christ mas Tree Trimmings. Our selection is now the best nnd you can tet lust what you want on't Wait, Visit Us Early Do not. !elny but nvoid tho rnsl of the last days. When in Port Jeivis walk in nnd look around "THE - YAZOO," 04 Pike Street, Port Jervis 'Formerly Wells' Bazaar.' 'Ulia, '$" IP VOU WANT riJ-. KEHTUCKY-WtllSKY ORDEO'IT TPOM KENTUCKY. SEND US $3LAN0 WE wTlX SHIP VOU 4 PULL QUARTS OP THE CELEB DAT ED OLD "Syf- J ad ovr xDrtssa0fl Paid v " (To any point in U.S. last of penvtr Stcurtly packed without marks indicating conuniy. IT, WS MAOC IN OLD HLNTUCKV AUG.COLDEWEY&CO. -S N 231 W. MAIN ST. 5 LOUISVILLE, KENTUCKY". EST 1846 - Otf EOCNCt -ANY LOCAL BANK CHURCH DIRECTORY MILFORD. First Phicshytkhian Cm-lien, Milford: Subliat.li wrvu-ea ut 1U.3U A. M. ami 7.;jo r. M. Siililiath srliiHil iimiiediiiti'ly utter the illuming srrvicti. PruytT liH'elilix WihI m'Siluy ut T.liu p. H. A cimliul wi'lcoliit will Iw unltunU'il ui nil. TIiomj nut at tiwhtnl to or her ''liurches are especially ill vitetl. Kkv. Thomas Nichols, Pastor. Ciiukcii of thk fioon Shkpiikhd, Mil ford: Services Stiiuluy at 10.H0 A. M. and T M P. M. Sunday school at ls.im M Week-day service b riday at 10 A. M. Holy Cotiiiiiuniiui Sunday ut 7.45 A. M, Seato free. All are welcome. Kkv. Cham. U. i'ahi-entbh, Rector. M. K. Chukcii. Services ut the H K. Church Sundays: Preaching at lo.ijo a. iu. and at 7. .-to p. m. Surday school ut U:4.'ip. in. Kpworlh league at tf.-lf p. in. Weekly prayer lueeliu oa Wednesdays at 7.;H1 p. iu. Cla-H incetiiitf coiHlucu-d by Win. Auiile on Fridays at 7 :io p. ui. Ail earncht invitation itt extended to uuyour Alio may desire u woi-hhsp with us. HSV. U. K. Sri.'LilJISIf, Pastor. MATAM0RAS. Ei'WouTll M. K. ("until ii, Mutuinonui Services every Sablialh ut lu.:io a. in. and 7 p. in. Sabbath Hcllnol ut 2 :ill. C. K iuectini? Monday evening at 7.0. Clusa miM-iiiiK Tuesday evening ut 7.30. Prayer meeting Wednesday eveuiug at 7.30. Everyone welcome. Hkv. T. Q. Spknckh. Hol'K KVANOELICAL CHTItCH, MutU moras. Pu. Services lit-jtt Sunday a follows: Preaching at lo.ao a. ill. and 7 p. in. Sun day school at 3 p. ui. Junior C. K. befort and C. K. pruyei meeting after the even ing service. Yhl-weck prayer mcctins every Wednesday evening- ut 7.311. Scau free. A cordial welcome to all. Come. Kkv J A. Wikuanu, Pastor. Secret Societies. Mn.K(ilti) Lot, No. 3U, V. & A. M. : Lodtfe meets Wednesdays ou or before Kull Moon at thb Suwkill House, Milford Pa. N. Kmerv, Jr., Secretary, Milford John C Vestbnok, W. M.. Milford. Pa. VAS 11LK MaUK. I.01M..K, No. b-M, I t). O. F: Meets every Thursday evening at 7 30 p. ill., P-i-owii'h liuildlllK- 1). H Hoi uheck, Sit y .liwMib McCarty. N. G PllUl'KNCK KhKKKAH LllOliU, 1W, I. O O. K. Meets every wkmiihI und fourth Frl iliiya ill eucll month in Odd Kellows' Hall, Brown's building Miss Kuthari ne Klein N.U. Miss WilUcliuiuu Ucvk, Suu'y. wvnuwn - C heapest C lot h in er House in Port Jervis ! CANNON & MULLIGAN, 6 & 7 FRONT STREET. ra09'1 EYHIY HOUI Is an effort put forth to deserve, obtain and retain 'our lationagc. GOME with your very best 10 suit thoughts and se cure one of these Men's Winter Suits at $6.98. Broken lois of Men's Winter Ov ercoats reduced to less than cost. GUNNING & FLANAGAN, Cor. Front and Sussex St's. Pom Jervis N. Y. Stoves and Ranges. THE Round Oak For Wood and Coal. Best Heater and Fuel Saver in th Country. New Era Radiators, Two Fire In on ifARDWARK. CVTLKRY, TIN, AGATE WA KG, KTC. TIN ROOFINOAND PLUMBINO A SPECIALTY. Jobbing promptly attended to T R. Julius Klein. RHOAD STREET MILFORD, PA AGENTS WANTED In Every County to Supply the great popular demand for AMERICA'S WAR FOR HUMANITY TOLD N PICTURE AND STORY, COMPILED AND WRITTEN BY Senator John J. Ingalls, Of Kansas. The most brilliantly written, most pro fusely and artistically Illustrated, and most intensely popular book ou the sub ject of the war with Spuiu. Nearly 200 Superb Illustrations from Photographs. taken specially for this great work. Agents urc uiuking 0 to tluo a week selling it. A veritanle uunuu.it for live canvassers. Apply for description, terms aud territory at uuce to N.B. Thompson Publishing Co. ST. LOUIS. MO Orw.Y. City. Look for Che Warning. Heart disease kills suddenly, hut never without warning. The warn ings may be faint and brief, or may ba startling and extend ever many years, but they are nooe t'ae less certain and positive. Too oftea tun victim la deceived by the thought, "it will pass away." Alas, it never passes away voluntarily. One In stalled, heart disease never gets bit ter of Itself. If Dr. lilies' Hsart Cure is used in the early stages re covery is absolutely certain In every case where, its use Is persisted in. "For many years I was a great suf ferer from heart disease tiefoe I dually found relief. I was subject to fainting and sinking spells, full ness about the heart, and was Jnable to attend to my household duties. I tried nearly every remedy that was recommended to ma and doctored with the leading physicians of this section but obtained no bela until I began taking Dr. Miles' Heart Curs. It has done me mora good than all the medicine 1 ever took." Mas. An ji a. Hollo wat, Geneva, lad. Dr. Miles' Heart Cure is sold at all druggists on positive guarantee. Write for free advice and booklet to Dr. Miles Medical Cu, Ukbart, 14. Ladies' shirt waists all styles aud prices ut T. Armstrong & Co'a. i
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers