Successors to We are now Prepared to Please the Farmers and the Get. ...1 i'ablic 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 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 ! ! ! Orilers left nt tliu Mill for delivery will receive prompt attention. Mori Milford, Pike DO YOU EXPERT TO BROWN and SON. f.1anufii.urers and dealers In all kinds of Lumber, Contractors and Builders. Estimates made ; personal atten tion given and work cuaranteod. OFFICE, Brown's Building, Miiford, Pa. T. Armstrong & Co. Successors to BROWN & ARMSTRONG. Wo offer a line of .UNSURPASSED Oar point 1m tlint you need not go nwny from home to supply iilljyonr needs, or to soon re liarjjiiins. We export to satisfy you in both pnrticulnr.s. DRY GOODS, now nn.l ftylish. GROCERIES, fresh nnd good. HARDWARE, BOOTS, SHOES, AND CLOTH ING. Any tiling in nny lino nt bottom prices. To neeomplish this end wo linve adopted a new system. All our prices nro fixed on a ba.-is of ensh payment . This obviates the nt cossity to allow a maririn for bad debts and interest. To accommodate responsililo parties wo cheer fully opeii monthly accounts, mid expect prompt payment monthly, ns our prices will imt enable us to carry accounts longer. Statements rendered tho first of every month, and if paid within three days from date of bill, a cash discount of 2 is allowed. The same discounts given on all cash pur chases exceeding $!. CO. Goods sent out will be C. O. D. unless otherwise previously arranged. T. ARMSTRONG & CO., Brown's Building, Milford, Pa. vKLkiJylO'y Mock o( good Hi from 10,000 to -JP-jlt iXT4ti.-rll? C I VTf"f- valued ft 26.UU0 Itttcra -iXSSr-sn I Wmik? rm $8s8ffl rPf We own and occupy the tallest mercantile building in the world. We have wV 1 w over a ,000,000 customers. Sixteen hundred clerks are constantly J--i I I fj 1 engaged filling out-of-town orders. ff II OUR GENERAL CATALOGUE is the book of the people it quotes ISrf Lfji ( Wholesale Prices to Everybody, has over 1,000 pages, 16,000 illustrations, and JJ jP I f I 60,000 descriptions of articles with prices. It coitts 7 cents to print and mail 7; fJJ each copy. We want you to have one. BEND FIFTEEN CENTS to show your good faith, and we'll send you a copy FREE, with all charges prepaid. 1 1 HOKT60I2ERY WARD & CO."ichi8ln:rn,,,,j Millinery largest untl finest selection nf Mil linery. Our designs are the latent, ami prices lowest consistent willi ooil work. COMPLETE LINE OF INFANTS WEAR. HAIR SWITCHES AND BANGS IN ALL SHADES. All orders promptly attended to and satisfaction guaranteed -to all our pa trons. SALLEY & ENMS, 70 Pike Street, Jervis Gordon Constantly on Hand. Co., Penna. BUILD? THEN SEE 8 new Spring Goods, AND COMPLETE. Parlors tilling Port Jervis, N. Y. ENGLISH A3 PUS RHYMES. A fnrniPr'a bny, darting to plough, Once hiunessed an ox with a cough) Hut the farmer came out, Wllh a furloui shout, And told hlin he didn't know hough. In a manner exceedingly rough He proeeedrd to bluster and blough; Hp frvililpil nnd Bfnwled. And declared he'd have none of such etuugh. , At lentrlh. with a growl and a cough, lie drn.eeed the poor boy to the trough, nl ducking htm In Till wet to his rhln, Discharged him and ordered him ough. And nnnr mv nhnrt .4nrv la thrniltrh And I will not assert that It's trough. nut u s c-niciiy oesignea What wonders our spelling can dough. And I hope you will grant that al though It nmy not bo the smoothest In flough. It has answered it's end If It only phall fend To prove what I meant It to shough. "St. Nicholas." FATAL EVIDENCE. 1 he smoking compartment of the pnlaco car speeding northward was filled by our own party. Influenced by the result of the trial tor weeks engaging public attention our con versation had for Its subject the weight and value of circumstantial evidence. It was not long before It became an Irregular debate In which as many diverse opinions were ex pressed as there were participants all of our number save one, and ha the only lawyer of our party, a man of sedate manner and conservative habit of mind. An appeal was made to him to set tle the disputed points, and after some hesitation he Bald: "Your discussion has Interested me. Permit me to say without offense that your subject has been discussed as I would have expected laymen would. That Is to say. your logic has been Influenced by your emotions, senti ments and sympathies aroused by this particular case. Your appeal to me Is merely a question, asking whether or not I believe in circum stantial evidence and you expect my miKwer to be a condemnation or con firmation of the verdict in this case. That sort of an answer I decline to nirike, for the reason that I am not sufllciontly acquainted with the evi dence in that case to pass a judgment even to the extent of satisfying my own mind. Let mo make answer In an other way by reciting to you an ex perience of my own when I was a young member of the profession. "I began the practice ot my profes sion in a Western 'county a rural county, since there was within its bor ders no large town or city. It adjoined a county, however, within which there was a large city, the influence of which, for good or evil, was felt la our county. Having struggled for a few years I was appointed assistant district attorney and I entered on my duties with great enthusiasm for the work aud a high respect for tradition pnd tho authorities. In a year's time through the serious and prolonged 111 ress of my chief, the responsibility for the administration of the office de volved on my shoulders. "This was the situation when the office was called on to conisder the case of Henry Crossman, murdered cn the highway, about ten miles from the town of our office, midway be tween the railway depot and the next station next above our town. He had been stabbed to death in a most bru tal manner after, as was evident, a pallant fight for his life. A farmer, passing to the station with produce found the body Just after daylight. A short distance from the body was found a dirk knife of unusual make and In his pocket a letter threatening his life. His money, watch, chain. Jew elry and valuable papers were found undisturbed, putting robbery as a mo tive out of the question. "The dirk knife was quickly recog nized as belonging to the next door neighbor of Crossman, Albert Stet son; the threatening letter was signed by Albert Stetson. You will not be surprised, therefore, to know that suspicion fell on Albert Stetson, "I began an investigation at once and sufficient motive for the deed was found at the outset. Henry Cross man was a real estate dealer and speculator, with his oFce In the near by large city, dealing principally In pi opei ties In our county. He lived In a village three quarters cf a mile from the railroad station next beyond the town of my office and residence. He was a man with few or no friends, widely feared and generally distrust ed as a sharp, cunning, tricky man, hard at a bargain, taking advantage of technicalities, fertile in preparing sharp traps for the unwary, treading closely on the line dividing honesty and dishonesty, overbearing in his manner, indifferent to the good or bad opinion of men and sometimes given to drinking, and when In his cups, most disagreeable. "Albert Stetson lived next door to him and was an unmarried man not of unblemished character. He lived with his mother and furnished her support and that of a sister by con ducting an express business between the large city and the smaller towns on the railroad line for fifteen miles out. He was rough in manner and speech and much given to drink. He was Impulsive, quick to anger, and under its excitement quick to revenge aud prone to deed3 of violence. Con stantly in trouble over his blows and ti;;liU, lie bud earned the reputation of being a turbulent fellow, whom it wus well to avoid, especially when he had beer, drinking. On the other side, he was regarded as an honest can, upright in his dealings, coura geous, with a rough sort of manli ness that prevented hi in from harbor ing malice "Now, as the motive. Stetson and Grossman had quarreled over the for mer's chickens, which the latter claimed had been permitted to roam at large and enter his garden to its Injury and detriment, aud threatened that if it were not stopped he would kill them. One morning SteUon found ou the rear poich of the house ten dead hens, with a sl'p of paper, on Blue Front Stables, Port Jervis, N. V. Adjoining GmnaerV Union House. Itoud, ntrriufro, draft and farm horses fur Bale. Kxclmngos made. A lariie stock from which to make elections. CANAL SI'. Hiram Towner. which was written, "the compliment of Henry Crossman." Stetson flew Into a passion, but a glance at tho chicken yard suddenly nllayed the storm. He went Into the yard and counted his hens, doing Into the house, he wrote a brief note thank ing Crossman for his present and ex pressing fear that In his generosity he had robbed hlmBelf. CrosRman read the note, gasped, went to his own chicken yard, counted his own hens and found ten missing. He bad killed his own hens and presented them to Stetson. "The episode put 8tetson In great good humor and he told the Joke to all who would listen and ended by feeling very kindly to the one whq had given him so much amusement, Crossman said little, and when jibed about the matter merely said the gnme was not yet over. Some days la ter he asked Stetson to lend htm $50 for ton days, offering his note for the amount. Stetson did so unhesitatingly, receiving the note of hand, which he placed In his pocket. The ten days went by and Crossman made no offer to pay the note. After several days the two, Crossman and Stetson, met sne morning at the railroad station, and, In the presence of five bystand ers, Stetson demanded the payment of the note. Crossman denied that It was due. Stetson declared It was. Crossman referred him to the note. Stetson took It from his pocket and read that the note had been made payable "ten days after death." "Crossman laughed and the bystan ders laughed, but Stetson was stunned. The train drew up at the station and Crossman, bound for the city, boarded It with the remark that he 'was square as to those chickens.' Stetson shot after him the assertion that the note would fall due ten days from date. As the train rolled away Stetson let loose his temper, declar ing he would have the heart's blood of Crossman. He displayed a dirk knife the one found near the dead body of Crossman his possession of which was well known, and calling upon bystanders to observe It, de clared that with It he would make the cheating blood of Crossman flow from his body. The bystanders gave little heed to his words then, for they were accustomed to his extravagant utter ances when angry, but one Andrew Mincher, a morose, reserved man, who was known to be a bitter enemy of Crossman, through having been cheated in some transaction, sympath ized with Stetson, denouncing Cross man's trick and thereby fanning Stet son's anger to a greater heat. "After this Stetson went to his of fice, which was In the general store, where also was the post office. Here he wrote a letter to Crossman, which he read aloud to several there, de manding instant payment of the $50, declaring if It were not paid he would take Crossman's 'heart's blood on Bight.' He sealed and deposited the latter In the post office In the pres ence of witnesses. An hour later he took the train for the city and the same train bore Andrew Mincher, who kept alive Stetson's anger by denunciations of Crossman's trick. "The station agent, fearing should Stetson and Crossman meet in the city, the former -under the Impulse of his anger would do Injury to Cross man with his knife, tried to borrow it from Stetson, but unsuccessfully. "That evening at 6 o'clock Stetson stepped from the train and crossed to his office. It was noticed at the gen eral store that he had been drinking heavily, but be was quiet in demean or and seemed to be composed In spir it. After Bitting at his deBk In the transaction of business he found there for half an hour, or until 6:35 P. M., he left and went to the bar of the hotel, where he drank several times, remaining there twenty minutes, when he went out, taking the road to hlB home, three-quarters of a mile distant. "At 7 o'clock Crossman arrived by train at the station, and, as was his Invariable habit, went to the post of fice to get his mail. Those who knew that Stetson's letter was In his box watched him as he opened and read 11. He sneered as he perused it, fold ed it up deliberately and placed It in his wallet and, turning to those stand ing near by, said: " 'Stetson Is a fool. He has put himself absolutely In my power. I can land him In jail, for he has threat ened to kill me, and has put It down In black and white over his own sig nature.' "He went out, taking the same road that Stetson had a few minutes be fore. "The next morning, as I have des cribed, with the knife of Stetson be side him and the threatening letter of Stetson In his pocket, he was found dead, stabbed by the knife, covered with blood. "Now," continued the old lawyer, "I presume no one who has listened to me doubts for a moment that Stet son killed Crossman. No one saw him do it, but the motive was clear and unmistakable, and the intention to do so had been declared In words before witnesses and in the letter to Cross man, and the Instrument by which be was to do the deed displayed, and that instrument, the one by which the deed was done. There was one more point of weight. When Stetson stepped from the train he asked the station agent If Crossman had yet re turned from the city, and being in formed that he had not, he had said, 'Then I'm not too late for the thiev ing rascal.' The case was complete, direct, unmistakable, and yet wholly circumstantial as strong as could be presented. "It was the first murder case I bad ever been engaged in, and I felt the responsibility of It deeply; all the more that my chief was was so 111 as to be Incapacitated, and I could not even consult him as to a single step. Therefore. I went about the prepara tion of the case with great care and caution. Of course, I had had Stetson arretted. He was found at bis home, not having left it on the day the body was found, asserting that he had been taken HI during the night. He stoutly asserted his Innocence, de claring that he had not seen Cross man after he bad boarded the train the previous morning, and that he had lost bis dirk knife the previous day, missing it In the city shortly after noon; and he further asserted that when be had left the hotel bar he had gone directly home. Despite his protestations be was confined without bail and In due time was In dicted. Millions will be spent in politics this year. We can't keep the cam pain n going without money any more Mian we can keep the body vigorous without food. I)y)eptica used to starve theuisolues. Now kodol dy spepsia cure digests what you eat and allows you to eat all the good food you want. It radically cures stomach troubles. 4Advoi tiae iu the i'utod. "When I had prepared my case nnd had convinced myself there was neith er flaw nor break In the chain. 1 sought an eminent Jurist In a remote part of the Btate, to whom I had an approach, and submitted my facts to lilm, asking him to criticise and ad vise me. With patience and careful scrutiny he went over the case, pro nounced it without a flaw, emphatic ally assuring me that there was not the least doubt of Btetson'B guilt, snd congratulated me In saying that I was fortunate In having for my first mur der case one in which the facts and proof were so clear. "The trial came. I proved my charge. The defense was weak, in the nature of things practically no de fense at all. On the stand Stetson ad mitted the threats and the letter, but denied the crime, and again assert ed that he had lost his knife on the day he had displayed it. There was a witness to prove that he had so de clared at 1 o'clock before the mur der and had been seen searching his clothes for It. His mother swore posi tively that he had arrived home be fore the arrival of the 7 o'clock train and had gone directly to bed, being under the Influence of liquor, as she admitted. She testified that it was her habit to observe the whistle ot the train as a check upon her clock, and she knew that train was not In when her son had arrived home. The deduction being, of course, that as he had not gone out again and as that train brought Crossman they could not have met. To strengthen this was the testimony that the train that night was at least five minutes late. This, with the further fact that It was shown that there were no stains of blood on Stetson's clothes, as might naturally be expected, after such an encounter, constituted all the defense. Stetson was convicted and sentenced to be hanged, and In time was duly executed, at each successive step to his death solemnly asserting his In nocence of the crime, such being his last words on the scaffold. "I presume," said the lawyer, look ing about our group hanging our In terest earnestly on his tale, "I pre sume that though all of you have de nounced circumstantial evidence as having too great an element of uncer tainty to be wholly convincing where the point of taking a man's life is concerned, you, none of you, have nny doubt on my statement that the ver dict In this case was a righteous one, and that the hanging of Stetson was Justified." He paused for a reply. All agreed that It was so, and one of us re marked that he thought the evidence was rather direct than circumstantial. "No," replied the lawyer, "It waB wholly circumstantial." "But," persisted the ov who had spoken, "not like that In the case wo were discussing." "Perhaps," replied the lawyer. "But I decline to discuss or speak of that case for the reasons I have given you. My point Is on this case of circum stantial evidence, a Jury of twelve men sworn to do their duty could have brought in no other verdict than it did." All of us agreed that this was so. "Well, gentleman, Albert Stetson was an Innocent man. He had not caused the death of Henry Crossman." A gasp ran over the group as all of us caught our breath. "One night, six months after the execution of Stetson, when I was about retiring for the night, a physi cian with whom I was well acquaint ed hurriedly drove up to my door and asked me to accompany him to the bedside of a dying man, who for a day had been praying and begging that I should be brought to him. 1 en tered the carriage with the doctor, who told me that the case had been under his charge for six months and had completely baffled him, as he could find no real disease, and that he had become convinced that the wasting away was due to a mental trouble that he could not reach. "The man was Andrew Mincher. He was very weak when I reached him, but when I sat beside him the excite ment of my coming gave him the strength to confess in the presence of the physician and myself that he, and not Albert Stetson, had murdered Henry Crossman. His story was brief. He had borne an Implacable hatred ot Crossman and in secret nursed all sorts of ideas of vengeance against the man who had wronged blm. When the chicken-note episode came be- ' tween Crossman and Stetson he saw in Stetson and his anger the Instru ment of his revenge and sought to fan the flames to a pitch when Stetson would Inflict injury on CrOBsman. But when traveling to the city with Stet son he found that bis anger was burn ing out; after the first fierce outburst he conceived the Idea of killing Cross man himself, knowing that all the pre vious circumstances would direct sus picion wholly and inevitably to Stet son. To that end also he had taken the dirk knife from Stetson's pocket, carried as it was loosely in the side pocket of a sack coat, without its own er's knowledge. Arriving home early, be had laid in wait for Crossman and was in waiting when Stetson passed on his way home. When Crossman came he murdered blm deliberately, throwing Stetson's knife beside the body. "I embraced these facts in an affi davit, to which we took oath, with the physician as a subscribing witness. Mincher died the next day." The lawyer ended his tale and we listened for his deduction. But he smoked his cigar in silence. "Then," finally, said one of us, "you do not believe in circumstantial evi dence 7" "I am too much of a lawyer," was the reply, "not to" admit that logically due weight must be given to it. But after my experience I would not send any one to bis death on such evidence alone. Place him where rectification could not be made if error bad been made. The law is wrong on this mat ter. The law has been wrong in previ ous years. There was a time when the penalty of robbery was death. To in flict it now would be considered bar barous. Gentlemen, the time is not far distant when to inflict the penalty of death for murder proven by circum stantial evidence alone will be thought Just as barbarous. It will be imprisonment for life, when if subse quent revelation, as in the case I have recited, is made, life will not be beyond recall. There Is wide spread and unjust prejudice against such evidence, and It Is due to the want, to the lay mind, of the element of absolute certainty." Brooklyn fcagle. It bus been denioiiHtrated by ex perience tbat conttumption enn be pre vented by the early umo of one min ute cnukh. cure. Tina is the favorite remedy for coughs, colds, croup, hs tliuia. grippe and all throat and lung troubles. Cures quickly . For burns, injuries, piles aud skin disenses use DeWitts witch hazel sal ve. It is the original. Counterfeits may be offered. Ub& only iJeYYitt's. (jjffl RAILROAD TIME TABLE. Corrected to Date. Solid Pullman trains to Puffnlo, Niag ara Kails, Chautauqua Lake, Cleveland, ( 'hicniro nnd Cilcinoaf I. Tickets mi sale at. Port .Terv' ...1 points in the West and Southwest r lower rates than via any other first-clnfes line. Trains Now Lkavk Pout Jkiivis as r-'ol.Lovt s. EASTWARD. No. 19, Daily Express 8 24 A.M. " lti, Dally Kx press 6 M " " hi, Dally Kxcept Slimlay . . 11 '!l " " 2M, " " 7 jr. " " '!, Sunday (Inly 7 15 " " 8S, Dailv (except. Sunday. . Hi 07 " " , Dally Way Train lJlftP.M. " 4. Daily Kxcep .uinlav. . . '2 '.'5 " " 3d, Wiiv Kxcc t. Sunday... I) " " S, Dally Kxpri'sa 4.'.'fi " " (ISO, Snndav Only 4 :io " " K, Daily K.xprc'ss 5 Sci ' " 1H, Stintlaynnly B Jfi ' " li-.N. Sund.-iv only i" " " 22. Dailv Except Sunday. . Mi " " 14, Dally '. . . 10 00 " WKSTWAKI). No. 8, Dailv Express 12 80A M. " 17. Dailv Milk Train 8 if) " " 1. Dailv Express 11 Hit " " II, Knr llo'dale K pt Sun.. 13 Ml r. M. " II. Daily Kxrc pt Similar .. lata ' " B. Chicago Limited Dally. B in " " 27. I'allv Excijit Sunday., fi Ml " " 7, Dally Exiucss Ill IB " Trains leave Chambers street, New- York for Port Jervis on week days at 4 (Ml. 7 4B, (1(10, HlB, HI. HO A. M. 1(1(1, II. (HI. 4 8(1, H mi, 7 Wi, (I IB p. m. On Sundiys, t no, i ;i, w uu, 10 a. m.j 12 10. a bo 7 StiiindH IBP, M. II. I. Itl.lMTt, General I'nsm-nger Agent, New York, ' ASQil OF 1900 Souvenir goods made by the INDIANS from BARK and NATURAL WOOD in large varieties Also goods made from skins of Pike County Rattlesnakes Other nice sovenirs are found here in views of Pike county, also in paper weights. The Yazoo is the only store carrying a full line of souvenir ware in addi tion to the large stock of Yankee -:- Motions. Walk In and Look Around- "THE - YAZOO," 94 Pike Htreet, Port Jervis araifasTOiMM-irsriaiEag-taaiEai fS IF YOVJ WANT dv.. KENTUCKY'WniSKY' OPDEP IT PROM KENTUCKY. SEND US $3L AND WE WILL SHIP yOU 4 FULL QUARTS OP THE CELEBRATED OLD ExDnssa$e Paid (To ny point in U.S. tasl of Denver Security packed Without marks indicating contents) IT WAS MADE IN OLD KENTUCKY AUG.COLDEWEY&CO. -Na3l W. MAIN ST. Louisville. Kentucky: EST 1648 - PtPEBtNCE -AMV LOCAL BANK 53BE5tESllggS CHURCH DIRECTORY MILFORD. STlKKT FKKKBYTKKIAN ('HUIK'H, Milford. Suljl'iith HiTvict'H at 10.30 a. m. und 7.:) r M. Sablmth Kc huul immediately niu-r tu monrtiiic service. Prayer me;iiif Wed nertriny ut P. M. A cordial weleoim will he extended to all. Those not ut Inched to other clmreheK tin. Heeially In Vlted. RKV. THu.MAH N ICMOLH, Pastor Chukch of the (ioob SiiKi'iir.uo, Mil ford: Services Sunday at lo.lio A. M. ami 7 HO P. M. Sunday seht ol at UMn M Week day service rndny itt 10 A. M. Holy Communion Sundny at 7Ah A. M. Seats fre. Ali are welcome. HKV.C'IIAS. ll. L'AKI'KNTKIl, Rector M. K. Cllt'lU'H. Sei-vHen at the M K. Church Sunday!: l'r-aeliinr at 1U.:J0 a. m. nnd at 7.30 p. m. Sin day school at l:45p. in." hpworth league nt tt.4 p. in. Weekly prayer meeting oa YedmdayB ti 7.30 p. in. "CluKM me'tii conducted hy Win. Anle on Fridays at 7 .30 p. m. An earnest invitation in extended to auyon wtiu may desire to worship with u. KhV. C K. Sc r DO Lilt, Pastor. MATAMORAS. Kl'woUTH M. K. I'll t' lit H, Matamorau Services every Sahhalh ut 10.30 u. m. und 7 p.m. Sahhath school at .30. C. E. inciting Monday evening at 7 30. Class meeting Tuesday evening at 7.30. Prayer meet in k Wetlnetday , evening at 7.30. Kveryune welcome. Kkv. T G Spknci- u. Hope KvANUKUCAI. CmiicH, Mat a moruw. Pa. S'rvioe next Sunday a follows: Preaching at 10.30 u. in. and 7 p. m. Sun day school at 3 ). m. Junior C. K. 1h fort anil C. K. prayet meeting alter the even lUK service. itl-week pruyer meeting every Wednesday evening at 7.3u. Seat fro. A cordial welcome to all. Come. RhV J A. WlhiiANO, pator. Secret Societies. MlLFOKO LcMiciE, No. 344, F. & A. M.; Lodfe meets Wednesdays on or lefore Full Moon at tht Suwkill House, Milford Pa. N. Knterv, Jr., Secretary, Milford John C.Wehthrook, W. M.. Milford. Pa. Van Iku Mauk I.ouok, No. k:h, I.u. O. F: Mods every Thurwluy evening at 7.30 p. m., Pn-wn'M liuildiug. 1. 11. horuheck, Sr y Jacob McCurty, N. ti PltUOKSCK Kfc-HKKAH bolHiK, 107, I. O (). F. Meets every Mwmd and fourth Fri days In each mouth in Odd Fellows' Hall, Brown's building Mit-s Kat huiine Klein N. G. Hibs Wilucluiinu beck, bev y. C heapest I o x n 1 n & House i n Port Jervis f CANNON & MULLIGAN, B & 7 FRONT STREET. EVERY HOUR Is an effort put forth to deserve, obtain and retain your pationagc. 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. Pout Jkiivis N. Y. Stoves end Ranges. THE Ro.und Oak For Wood and Coal. Best llentor and Fuel Snver in the Country. New Era Radiators, Two Fires In one rIAKOWAHF.. M TLEKV, TIN, AGATE WAKK, ETC, TIN ROOFINO AND PLUMBINO A SPECIALTY. Jobbing promptly attended to T R. Julius Klein. BROAD KTREET MILFORD, PA AGENTS WANTED In Every County -to Supply the great populer demand for AMERICA'S WAR FOR HUMANITY TOLD N PICTURE AND STORY, COMPILED AND WRITTEN BY Senator John J. Ingalls, Of Kne. The moHt brilliantly written, most pro fusely und artistically illustrated, und most intensely popular book on the sub ject of tho war with Spain. Nearly 200 Superb Illustrations from Photographs. taken specially for this great work. Agents are making ;o to tit HI a week helling it. A veritable bonanza for live canvassers. Apply for description, terms aud territory at once to N.B.Thompson Publishing Co. ST. LOUIS. MO OrK.Y. City. Loot for tht Warnings ITeart disease kills luddruly, bat Derer without warning. The warn. ing9 may be faint ana brief, ov maf be gtitrillng and extend over many years, but tliey are none t'ne U.s certain and positive. Too often tni victim la decHived by tbe thought, will pass away." Al.it, it never passes a ay voluntarily. Once In stalled, heart disease never gets bct Ur of Itself. If Dr. Mllea' Heart Cure is used In the early stages re covery la absolutely certain In every case where Its use is persisted In. "i or many years I was a great suf ferer from heart disease twfuye I dually found relief. 1 was sublaeb to fainting and sinking spoils, full ness about, the heart, and was 'Jnable to attend to my household duties. I tried nearly every remedy that wae recommended to ma and doctored with tbe leading physicians of this ssctlon but obtained no help until I began taking Dr. Wiles' Heart Cure. It lias done me mere good than ail tbe medicine 1 ever took." illtS. AMilA HOLIXIWAT, Geneva, Ind. Dr. Miles' Heart Cure It sold at all druggists on a- positive guarantee. Write for free advice and booklet to Dc &U1 Ueditl U, UiUutrtt UO. Liulk-s' shirt waists all styles and prices at T. Aiiuutrong & C'o's.