Successors to We are now Prepared to Please the Farmers and the GeL 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 four in its Season a Spe "alty ! I I Orders left nt the Mill for delivery will receive, prtnnpt nttentioii. Gilford liiling Milford, Piko Co., Penna. DO YOU EXPERT TO BUILD? THEN SEE A. D. BROWSE and SON, Manuf-vturers and dealers In all kinds of Lumber, Contractors and Builders. Estimates made ; personal atten tion given and work guaranteed. OFFICE, Brown'sJJuilding, Milford, Pa. T Armcrnnry I P.ri 5 r i i i j v i Successors to BROWN We offor a line of now Spring Goods, UNSURPASSED AND COMPLETE Our point la Mint you need not ro nwny from homo to supply all Jyour needs, or to secure bargains. We expect to satisfy you in both particulars. DRY GOODS, new anj stylish . GROCERIES, fresh and good. HARDWARE, BOOTS, SHOES, AND CLOTH ING. Any tiling in any linn at bottom prices. To accomplish this end we have adopted a new system. All our prices are fixed on a bans of cash payment. This obviates the necessity to allow a margin for bad debts and interest. To accommodate resixmsiblo parties we cheer fully open monthly accounts, and expect prompt paynient monthly, as our prices will not enable us to carry accounts longer. Statements rendered the first of every month, and if paid within three days from date of bill, a cash discount of i is allowed. The same discounts given on all cash pur chases exceeding $1.(10. Good sent out will be C. O. D. unless otherwise previously arranged. TARMSTRONG & CO., Brown's Building, V Vi XA. . , Wc carry s ,lfftr'"y-- V" "tors ot goods -I- v. ; mm We own and occupy the tulleet mercantile building in the world. We have over a.two.ouo customer. Sixteen hundred clerka are constantly engaged filling out-of-town orders. OUR GENERAL CATALOGUE ia the book of the people it quotes Wholesale Prices to Everybody, has over 1 ,000 pages, 16,000 illustrations, and 60,000 descriptions of articles with prices. It costs 73 cents to print and mail each copy. We want you to have one. SEND FIFTEEN CENTS to show your good faith, and we'll send you a copy FKEE, with all charges prepaid. .OTCO.YIRYYiARD&CO. r.ll.l..Ulw,ini liAi.JCl,U. - CHICAGO j??lf-J illincry L'li'frest and ii nest selection if Mil linery. Oiir designs are the latent, and trices lowest consistent with good work. COMPLETE LINE OF INFANTS WEAR. HAIIt SWITCHES AND BANGS IN ALL SHADES. All orders promptly attended to ami satisfaction guaranteed -to all our pa- trtiiis. SALLEY u EtUJIS, 70 Piko Gtroot, Port Jorvia, N. Y. Jervis Gordon v 1 j3 j EL' & ARMSTRONG. Milford, Pa. CV;J Michigan Ave. and Madison Street CHICAGO Parlors a We receive - . 6 1 V y I men i m i-scer - a:-ic r-t. I l.iAI.UUO.0O ... M everyday -r-i.il VV X J 1 1 MOW WILMOT KLPT i?; MIS APPOINTMENT " T SH ALL court t hf minutes imli! I jlu rome," timni Mr. Yil- lli. m to his luM rot hnl. "You will iimi me at ten o'eku k hrt o ,t our car Mop, in a (cv( r of imp. it icuce. Try not to be a in o men t laic, won't on. ik'nrps-t Y" "I ilon't know." tiii'-wem! the frirl. "Something tuilit linppcn. A diRj rtiit'lit (jut in front of tlie cur and iii -Ihv it a minute or two or Knmchody miiht utep on my i!n-s ami liold tne buck. If you're goinr to 1 c iinpntirrit I'm not lining to come til nil. 1 dou't like fc i i 1- li people." "I don't mean Impatient in that PPtise," lit'i'lured ilmut, "I couki wtiit hours fof you, buoyed by the hope ot srring you at Inst. 1 lime known men kick because their wm s kept them five or ten minute!) or mi beyond Kn ap pointed time, but 1 don't think yon will ever titlil me -nuip!:iiniii. ,lu.-t as long as you come at last, I don't care." "Hut the train doesn't Mart until 11 o'clocl.. and II won't t-ike u more than li minutes to walk over to the Mntion. You don't want to )-;e to linger around for t h rce-(inrt ers of an hour before the train Marls." "With yen!" c!aimed Wilnint, en thusiastically . "It won't seem like five minutes. No, I can't say all I've got to say to you between ( hii'iiiro and Lenient, mid that three-quarters of a hour will help out unite a little." 'IV1.. 'l ..... uliui l nil'vp iroi I to say now? it will be at least three quarters of an hour before anybody fcets home." "AU right, I will," said Wiltnot, and he whispered in her ear. Hie drew back mid laughed and said that she didn't believe it. and besides, he had told her that lief ore, to that it w as Male news. "Is that all you have to sny?" she continued. "That comprehends It, but there's a lot of detail and circumstance in con nection that you tnijrlit like to hear just in order to iret an idea of the con flit ion I'm in." "But you will get over it after we are married. Truly, Hertie, don't you think y ou w ill?" "Never; 1 shall love you 40 yearf from now just as much as I do this minute." "Well," said the girl, presently, "this doesn't particularly interest me. any way. Let's talk about to-morrow. Don't you think it would be better to lay 1U: .10?" "Most decidedly, I don't; I'll com promise on 9:30. if you like." "Well, then, you may (jo over to the WOULD WAIT HOURS FOH VOU." Station and meet me there utid then you wnn't miss me in tne crowd. It tee nib absurd to meet me on the it reet." "I shall you befom jou feet off jour car." "Shall I tell j" 011 I am jroinp' to wear, &o thut you will know it' iuv" "If you put on n gray wig' and u blark reil and blua glasses I thould kuow JOU." '13ut I'm not going- to do anything of t lie kind. If you can't idmtify me without that you would better what are you doing-now?" "Trying1 to imprefck. youf feai ui es on my memory. I hope j ou don't mind. No, let me tell you. I would know you a mile olf and among; a thousand. I would feel you coming een if 1 couldn't gee you. "Well, then," said the girl. In a bitM nesike manner, "1 gutts it will be all right. You can wear a white rose in your buttonhole and carry j our handkerchief carelessly in your left hand, and 1 guess there won't be any trou hie." Wilmot packed hi suit cae that night aud saw to his razors, to that he could eat his breakfast and ru-h out in the morning without any unneces sary delay. lie prides hitiibclf on be iiig able to wake up at any n.inute that he likes, and he set his n ental alarm ckrk lor ix, but for fear of ac cidents he aiio borrowed one of the everyday nickt-led variety from hi landlady and .et that at six o'clock, after carefully testing it and regulat ing it Ly hii Match. In the morning he sprang out of bed with a horrible fear that he had overslept, and. looking at the nickeled timepiece, euund that it was 4: 45. . For a few moment he stood, with heavy eyelid, drowsily coiihidering' the advisability of tuuS' hack to bed and trusting to the alarm. Then lie dis mi&scd thf weak thcught and f-'litg-gei ed to his bat h. That wi:ke hi in tip and he haed and dressed in a lei surely manner and went back to hi" rooui and loi;Ked nt the c.'oek. It wa 0:15. He hud thought it u:ut have been six at least. liaising trie window Uiadc he looked Into t he it l reel , hoping to see l he j el io vv K'ure of the gu& iau:p enntend i ng with the liht of dawn, but as far us ap pearance went it miht h::ve luen mid night, io he pul!e dvii the iaie ajiaatid tried toruud. The bo.-k, how- When you lied a soot 1 1 i 11 lt and iH'nlinpfuitiM'pticnpTdii'ution for nu v purpose, us Hjh original loVitt's witch lini'l kmIvo, it well known cure for pilt'H iimi skin d'.KcnscM. It lien Is. noivh without leaving a scar, llowaro of t'oimtn 'frits. full lino i;f Indies, Misrs timl (-lnhlien rubbers, bots and tohocn tit T Armstrong & Co. mi. m&mw "I frrr, wan Ti'T. sp1 presently dnyerl I in his chair. rle nwohe with a start, to InnU at his watch, and fnutid thnt he hnd not v ct put it on. ,M(-ood Ihlnrj 1 didn't put my faith tn thnt alarm. " he fuid. "it's ntiKved fire rr e!s it wasn't loud enough to wake rn." he 1avtd for the brdronm the cluck went ofT with n crash and a bang and a jingle that made him jit it p. He rennveiod from the fhock and ran in to look at the erratic thing. The hand Indicated six o'ci.tck. Stiil uncon vinced, he took his watch from under the pillow and looked at it. Six o'clock. That meant nn hour and a half until hi eak fa1 , and Wilmot wh already con Hcious of a feeling cf emptiness, Ilf roniemln'red that he had some cr;ickcrr and chceo in hin cupboard, and he brought tI'CM nut and devoured them, but t hey did not wet 11 to have the right kind .-f taste, and the cold water that he drank chilled his Mstem o as tn destroy his desires to smoke. Never-thele- he smoked und listened fr sounds cf breakfast preparation and repacked his suit case and bathed hi: face "attain to fie-hcn himself up, anci In course of time KI!a. the second girl, knfjckcd nt his dour und told him that breakfast was rendy. Hut the cheese and cra'd.ers and th pipe had I'cst roved his a ppet ite and the hrenk f m t , f nr some rcas-nn. did rot t a Me good, any w ay , m he rmtld tod l id himself of his incipient headache, lior the feeling that he had been u all night and had slept in his clnthps. It took him half an hour in ridedcur town, and he had now two hour, but he decided that he would get out and see what the fre-h air wculd do fot him. He could walk up ami down the Bt reet until she came, and it would be a good thing to tell her that he had been waiting- an hour and a half for the glory of her coming. The air was more than fresh. Tt was ra vv and 1 he wind w as cutting. y t he time Wilmot got to town he was al ready pretty thoroughly chilled, and he began to tramp up and down his ap pointed beat nt once with vigorous strides, hoping that the exercise would warm him up. Hut his feet continued cold and hii hand? numb and stiff, walk as he w ould. and even t he glow of devo tion left him after 1ihI f mi hour. He went over to a hoehlaek stand, and, seating himself, told the boy to apply plenty of friction, This instruc tion was carried out and Wilmot got up and resumed his tramp in better spirit, but 15 minutes more of the cold wind sent them down again, and he went into a cigar store and bough! a cigar. He lingered there a little while, for it was comfortably warm inside but he grew uneasy and went out again and walked. As for the girl, she slept very soundly and comfortably, was awak ened by her mother flt fl,30 o'clock and had time to eat her breakfast com fort ably and arrive nt the tryst five minutes ahead of time. She was properly indignant, to find that her be trothed was not on hand and walked up and down the block twice; then, feeling chilly and observing that, a confectioner's shop window command ed the street corner, slip went In and ordered chocolate and ut down to watch und wait, Wilmot got up aud went out for the first time at ten o'clock exactly, but at that time the chocolate was just being served and the girl did not see him as he passed. The second time she may have been looking at the clock. Wilmot was anxious, but not entirely discouraged, for he had made up his mind to allow ten minutes for accidents. When tltat time expired he began to think that perhaps the time of meeting had not been definitely un derstood and that it might have been til : 30. after all. At 10:.'i(l he went out and telegraphed to the lionse, and while he was doing this the girl came out, walked twice more up and down the block, stamped her little foot and went back and ordered eclairs, Wilmot returned, bought a cigar and sat down to wutch the disembarking street car passengers with straining eyes. Once more Wilmot made a sally; this time to t lie telephone ofdee to call up the railroad people and be seech them to search the wai ting room und the Lemont platform for a young lady. "Can you describe her?" asked the man at the other end. WHmot thought that he could, but on attempting It was incoherent and Rtnmmerinfr. The railroad man grew pleasantly sarcas tic and Wilmot hung up the receiver In a rage. It then lacked 15 minutes of 11 o'clock. Half frantic, he ran out of the drug store and buck to the car. There, uh he stood wondering what he could do next, he felt a slight touch on his arm, and, turning, found the girl. She was looking pretty, but not nmluble, and Wilmot looked neither pretty nor umiablc. "I suppose you hae h good ex cuse," she said, with deadly calmness, "I hope so, I'm sure." "I was hoping that there mipht be a good reason for your lack of punc tuality," he returned, in frigid tones. "It isn't that I object to waiting, but It it. natural to think that only a cal lous indifference could have kept me waiting here in the cold for two hours and a quarter and indifference from the woman one ha loved" "I like thut," the interrupted. 'I was here at 9:55 and have been here ever since." Wilmot looked at her steadily, but klie. met his look without rlinching. It was impossible to doubt her. "Here," said Wilmot, suddenly. "We've just ten minute to make that train. Jump into this cab. I think 1 cun explain to your sat is fact ion." "1 only hope I can," he udded, to himself, us he followed her into the velrcle, "but I've got to do tome quick thinking."- Chicago Daily liec ord. Iftdp is needed atoiuro when a pcr hou'm life) in in danger. A neglected eouli or cold nuiv Hoon Imvoiho er ious and should 1 stopped at once), t ne minute couH cure quickly cures coughs and eoldn and the worst cart es of croup, broiw hitirt, grippe and other throat and lung trouules. Nhw Jot cf )lllt4 & (J. MitcliulU. ami ciqia nt W. t( UNDERGROUND CHAMPAGNE. flnlMrrrninrnn ( lit- Wlif re Vtiiikrrn In Wine t.nltiir 1 ene In ntnl Year n . Vbutors to l'rnnrc may go out of tlieir way to gae n pon the oun in t architecture and crumbling houses tif Kpernny, or the lioinn n a nt iipti 1 Irs and gra ml old cut hedi al of li hei m. but the real towns of Champagne are to be looked for umlerround. These are the bust ling, busy places where the business of Champagne Is car tied on. They arc of vast extent. American and l!ritih workmen would probably not t rotibln themselves to obtain employ incut in underground Champagne. Day after day the work people leave the outer world for 11 and 12 hours a I a I itnc to discharge duties which, if not particularly ardu ous, must be wearisome by reason if their monotony. An intelligent Frenchman nssurcd a writer in the Koyul Magazine that he had worked below ground for nearly 45 years. His duties consisted in shaking bottles to dislodge the sediment. He said that he had shaken 5.1 bottles a minute each working dny of 12 hours for these 45 years, and hen asked the writer how many bot tles he had shaken. It is no great wonder that after a moment's coi-id-rrntion the visitor took 1o his heels. Cndergrnund Chnmpngne has a rep nlntion for producing ';ood wines, but according to the wr-yer the hindues tends to sour the dispositions of the workers. He found most of them taci turn, not to say misanthropical. In one cellar at Kpernny he came across an old man who assured him that the place was tilled with ghosts and gob lins. Tt is hard to realize that under nenth the primitive villages where the vineyard grow there are springing up subterranean cities of great im portance, but this is the case. Men must search below . and not above, ground If they would understand the life of the people of Champagne. SHOT DEAD BY A CORPSE, flow n Htflp tn the llnniL ot n Pi-ml Fnfilljth Srrenn t Kit led it liner .Nlller. A 43oep rommnndu retook those lines where those who died for us were lying, ami as they inn rdied among our dead they saw a sergeant lying nt full limgth, shot through the brain, yet even in death the man looked like some fighting machine suddenly gone out of order, says the Tendon News. His rifle was pressed against bin shoulder, his left hand grasped the barrel on the under side, the forefingers of the right hand pressed the trigger tightly, the barrel rested out upon a rock and his denth dullcd eye glared along the sights, for dissolution had come to him just as he bent hia head to fire at tiiose who shot him. and now bis hnnds hnd stiffened in ihe unbendnble stiffness of eternal sleep. A Itoei soldier saw the serg-eant as he lay, nnd with rude hands grasped t lie rllle by the barrel and tried to jerk it from the dead man's grip, but as he pulled he brought the rifle in line with his own breast, and the unyielding linger on the trigger did the rest. The rifle spoke from the dead man's hand, and the bullet, passing through the liner's heart, laid him beside the TVlton, Sounds like n journalistic lie, docs It not? Itend it in a novel, and you would laugh, would you not? Hut it is the elernul truth, all the same, for the comrade of the Hoer who died that day, killed bv n dead man, told me the tale himself, and he was one of those who planted the dead Dutch man on the- slope of Splon kop. LAST OF THE MODOCS. Thnft Formerly Warlike Trtht Mv t nilleil to ritlfiil HevetiJ Vcvrn Me in lie rn. Another gocd Indian has been made by the death of a Modoc brave, and now the bucks of the tribe have been re duced to the fatal 13 in number. Thus have dwindled the fighters of the most Warlike tribe of men that ever ar rayed themselves agulnt an enenn. Tiny have been the fshmaelites of the Pacific slope, and therefore they were called "Modocb" by the other tribes, for "nioddc" means "enemy," The entire tribe has dwindled to 77 members, all wretched beincs, with no thirst for war. but an ambitionl. in dolent and dull set of beings thnt have cast -aside every virtue that they ver possessed and have taken on every vice that civilization has offered them. This remnant, mostly women aud diseased children, that has dwindled fn-m a fighting power worthy of I'nlted States opposition to the very verge of extinc tion, is now quaricred on a stiia! res ervation In the Quapaw country south of Kansas City. These last of the Modocfrnre prison ers of war. held by the government, but allowed great freedom. f;;r they are not likely to wander from the supplies they are provided with, for if ihey should they would starve to death. Only one among them shows an, of the spirit that once actuated the tribe. He is Sam I toll, about mo ea rs i Id, and he is willing to take the warpath again. Not Applicable t the Wumrn. The NorthweNicru railroad ofliciais have deculed that hereafter tiny will hire no more nun who are put the age of oj. They do not apply tlijs rule to women, says the Chicago Times Htrald, probably because all wuTnen are under that age, anyway. An Ouilirenk at Muu KIiik. Typhoid fever has broken out at King Sing. . Y. Luckily, however, fauyb the Chicago Times-Keruld, the fever is all that lias managed to break out there, and it can be caught with out much trouble. Ion 't uso any nf tlio cimiiti'i fdits nf lnS'ilt' wiu h lm.cl s:ilvi). Most of tlii-i nro wort lilies or liiihlo to ciiuso in j li iv . The orit-'in;il 1 it Witt's svitih liiizcl naive is a ccrlain euro fur Jules, cci'tiiH, cuts, sctiUis, burn.s, miri-ii una nkiti ilirfcasi'M. Tlio inosr ift.'otive lit tin liver pills iiimlu nit: lh- ill's htlln early risers. They never gripe. i)p nAILUDAD TIME TABLE. Corrected to Date. Sullil Pullman trnlns to HillTnln, Nina am I'mIK 'liiiutitliiMil J.nkt', (JlrvHumi, liii ML" mill ( iri'iMimll. TlrUi-! nil k;(1i lit i'nrt .TiM Vin tn nil I'ulnin In tin' WYmi mill Sinn h i-Bt ,.i inwor rail's I linn via nny nt lii'r fli hl-i'liisB lini Thainr Nn I.F.WK I'liHT 1' HU (HVS. .lKKVIR AS KAS TWA HI). Nn. I". Daily y.,i-i's H 24 A 5 -" " ii an " 7 10 " 7 4S " in en " 1-.' la I'. it " 4 in " 4 Jill 6 L'll ' ft 411 ' ti Till " ui mi " in. ually Kxiri': Hi. Daily K.M-i'iit Sumlnv oM i. llii. Sunday Only .Is. I lull v Kyi i-i'i Similar . . Daily Way Tnin ' , 3d. Way Kxi'i'i t Sunday.. '2, Daily hxpri'KH . . . (iii, Snndav tWiiy ... . N. Daily kxpri'ss 1H. Siinilaynnly ii. I 'ii ' ly Kxci'i'it Sunday . 14. Dally WKSTWAHI). '1, Daily Kxiiri's 17. Daily .Milk Tiain . . . 1, Dail. lvxpri's. II. I i a liodal,' K jit Sun r. D-.ii. Ii7. Daily Kxri'pt Sunday. 7, Daily Kxpivss IS A M. ti llfi " 11 iiil " !; in p. m. Ii la " 5 Ml " hi ir. " Trains Ifavi (TmhiiIhts stri'i't, New I'.nk fur I'm I .Ti'i ris nn week days at 4 IHt, 7 tin, li (hi, i r., pi mi a m . i im H in. 1 :l'i, (I tin, I mi. 7 II", and la p. ii in 111 Slllill IV. II ( II, M. H. 111. ia tin, a mi, 7 mi I. I. Iliiliprts, fif'III'Mll I'llAAfllKt-r Afrtit, N,'W Vork. tiOAGLAHD'S Cig China Store PORT JERVIS, N. Y. Largest Stock. For Scls of Dislies, Li;nis iiiid (ilnsswiM'O. Occupying the entire floor of Building. We buy J'litter, Eji'gs and Ci rain. Hoagland's, PORT JERVIS, N Y. UP TOWN. ssS IF VOU WANT r&J- KENTUCKY-WHISKY' OBDEP IT rROM KENTUCKY. SEND US $31? AND WE: WILL SHIP YOU 4 PULL QUARTS OP THE CELEBRATED OLD I.V ' IISS'HH.t' I ItilllllR?- BOUBBOK k,pil.aeyg ram (To my point in U.S. tasl of Oenvar) Securely packed without marks indicating conlsnlt. IT WAS MA DC IN OLO KtNTUCKV AUG.COLDEWLY&CO. t N9 231 W. MAIN ST. LOUISVILLE, KENTUCKY. EST 1848 REFEBCNCt -ANV LOCAL BANK CHURCH DIRECTORY MfLFORO. FlT PliKriliYTKHlAN CflLUCH, Milfortl. Sjihlf.it h Kt rvii cn nt lu.mi a. M. Hint 7.JW) H. M. Salih.it li school IniiiHHliah'ly afii-r ;., morning n'rvit v. I'ia it in-f( in Wtsl m silay at T.o) V. II. A cordl.tl vh'Kjhh will hi' t'xti-ndiil to nil. Thost in it nt liu hcd to ot her chiirt'hi'ri act" t'.-.(H'cially hi viuil. Ukv. TnnMAt Nit noi-n, Pastor ('III UCII op THE (4imjI SlIKI'HKill), -Milfortl: N'l-vii-fH Stimlay at 1u,;m a. m. and 7 ;J 1. St. Suiulay scliool at l-Mm M wk-day srrvkv h'riilay nt 10 A hi. llol 'oinin utiiii Siiiithiy hl 7 4o A M. Srtln fief. Al. an wt'li-oiiit. HKV.t'HAv 11. CAill'ENTKIt, Rt Ctor M. K. Cm M H. StMic'fl at the M K ( him li Sundays: I'lvm-Mn dt li).;it' ii in. ami at l.-vi p. nt. Mil Jay hclmti) al ll:-).'.o. in. Kporih h-aiii' at .-.." p. in W'tvkly prayr inrrt inir o.i 'ttntttaVH ai 7 p. in. Cla-. iiiiftiu coiHlia'tc(.l h Wm. A iiltIh on Kritlays ai 7.;io p. in. Ai irnt.-i in itai ion U rxtriiitco! ttj aiiyou v tjo may d-'-ire to worh.-p w itd us. Htv. C K. St i ihku, lahtor. MATAW0RAS. . Krw4iitTH M. K. Cm it li , Mat anions STirt'S i-v ry Sahhaih at 10 :to u. in. anu 7 p. in. Sahhatii rti hnol at J C'. K niri'ttntf Monday rvi-nin at 7 :). Claw nii't-liiiK Tii''-da t-vt'iiintr at 7 bo, lr'iy i i iit-c i in W tt in nilay u filing at 7.iiu Kvt'fj tiju Wficoitn. KtiV. T fi Sl'KNi KK. IIoI'K KVANt.hl ItAL Cmii( H, Mat a moras. 1'a. Scrvirt nrxt Sunday a folliws: iJi-i'achin at in ;io a. in. and 7 p. m. Sun '.lay bt howl at a i. in. Junior C. K. U-fon aiul C. K. prayt'i imt-t'nyr attr the evtu im wni-v. .i.lwttU prayer nutting ft-ry W'ttliH'Stlay rvi-niiiR at 7.:jn. StaU trt t'. A cordial mue to all. Count. HK. C U. l.ii.LV, 1'a-un-. Secret Societies. MtiFoun 1,oim-k, Net. HU, K. tt- A. M.: I .otli;' n iit-t Wril iifMla i nil or hef off Kuli .Moon at tin. Saw kill llmisu. Mill'onl Ha. N. Khmtv, .lr,. ccn tai-v. Milford John C Wfr.t'iM.ok, W. M .. Milford. 1'a. Van lii.is Mauk I.uih.,k. Nu. h:s, 1 u. :) V : M-'fts --iy 'lhtn-Mlay vt-ninal 7 ;in p. in., l'tv.n'K biii;dm. 1). H II r r . I - U. . Si i y Jin-oh NK'Cui ty. N. ii l'liflir- St K li K H K h A li LniHiK, 1 I. ,) (. r-'. .lccis twiy ew-'Miid and fouii h KH hiys in i-nt li month in OilH t-i-iuivsn' Mall, lirow n's tniihUi' Mi Kaihaiihe KK-iu U. Mhj S ilhclinintt UxW, SWy. C heapes t C I o t h i n ouse i Port Jervis ! E n CANNON & MULLIGAN, 6 & 7 FRONT HTHEKT. BYEIY HOUI Is an effort put forth to deserve, obtain and retain your pationagc. GOMB 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. PoiiT Jkrvis N. Y. Stoves and Ranges. THE Round Oak For Wood and Coal. Best Mentor nnd Fuol Saver in the Country. New Era Radiators, Two Flrott In one ilAltUWAIlK, CI "TI.KKV, TIN, AGATE WAKt, ETC. rtN ROOFING AND PLUMBING A SPECIALTY. Jobbing promptly attended to T R. Julius Klein. BUOAD STREET MILFORD, PA AGENTS WANTED In Every County to Supply trie great popular demand for AMERICA'S WAR FOR HUMANITY TOLD n picture and story, COMPILED AND WRITTEN BV Senator John J. Ingalls, Of Kintss. The most brilliantly writ teu, niont pro fllKuly and artiriricnlly illubtruted, and ni'ist lntenNely popular hiKik on the sub ject ot the war with fpuiu. Nearly 200 Superb Illustrations from Photographs. taken spot' ally for this great, work. Agent are making )M tu f HMJ a wwk boiling it. A Vfiiiahlt tioiniiixH lor live canvahMira. Apply tor dt-BcripLion, teuiiii aud territory at once to N.B.Thompson Publishing Co. ST. LOUIS. MO Oriu.Y.CIty. Look for tie Warning Heart disease kills sudd'tilr, hat never witliouo warulnjj. The wara Ingi may be faiot. and brief, oy may bo tlarti'.nj. and extend over many years, but Ihty arc none t'ue Usa certain and positive. Too often thr, victim Is deeMved by the thought, "il will pa-ss away." Ala, it never passes away voluntarily. One i i naned, heart disease never gew b.t ter of Itself. J( Tr. Miles' Heart Cure Is used In the eariy stages re covery is absolutely certain In ery case hers its use is persisted in. "i or many years I was a (rat suf ferer f rom heart disease btfoie I finally found relief. 1 was subject to fainting and sinking spells, full ness ar.sut the heart, and was ible to attend to my hooseUold duties. I tried nearly every remedy that WM recommended tu ma and d-x-tored with the leading physlciana of this sectiea but obtainrd n beip until I began tiikiDg 1,'r. Allies' Heart Cure. It has dun me more gootl tnau ail the uiedloine i ever tooit." iliS. JkliS A iloI.UOWAY, Gmera, lad. rr. Miles' Heart Cure la sold at all druggist on rsive guarantee. Write for 1re advice aa.1boi!t ta Ladies' bh irt waists all styles and p lin e tit , Armstrong & Co's.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers