HOUSE FURNISHING GOODS. Let us name a f w: Fine; solid oak b 3 d room suite, $17.50, Parlor suite, $20.00 Rogers, best, triple plated knives and forks, $3.49 doz., All vool ingrain carpets, 49c yd., Tapestry brussels carpet 49c yd., Full size bed blanksts 47c a pr., Wall pap:r, any Ur.d ,2c a roll. EVER'fTIIiG to furnish a house about 25 per cent, less than you can buy it elsewhere. N. Y. FURNITURE CO., 92 Pike St., We have the Largest and Best Line of ubbar, Leather & Felt Boots You wi.sli to select fron. This "ad" and $1; will buy a pair of men's good Arties lefore Tuesday. I a t taw a P LE' ATIONAL M 1 I .v, W irf.-l.v ... i - flllV. - til M'llltl 11 lliii1 f fell i'V wy - hi hrr tiny Dull y ts in lie l.tt ttl i.r mi, if m v nf Ui.c 11 11 l i'iivci in(f ihmv r h i,. it thifi' It nn-mill- nil lut: or NEW YORK TRIWEEKLY TRiBUNE rani f'uvitfn m foil' lieu . . htrh t WUY ' id H I NK nl hti.ni'K it- iumi k- 1 Ian h 1 Sin !'. Klrjfni 1 1 ( . nutfu 'um ii-in-- i Km l..n I- t- II' 1 ! H . M . f .. Mn ir Ii.-1.i-t li.r.-i ri- ill . .,1 1 .1 1 . r- ..nil .tni . )i n i 111 I i luilili Kiii.it i-L.I ,,hI Wtt U t ivp .it- I'tf tl't-l'i i,i liiM r Id . ? .V) .1 cur 1 .v lui h 1 ii Ii I I! FRM-iS for. Sen J all oriari to ?IE COUNTY PRESS, Milford, Pa. Everything Springy Everything Bright A Iwautiful -display of New Spring Goods fills our Store from top to bottom. A very nice all wool top coat at t.i0, the le..t value on earth. A Nobby Maifo Suit at $4 50. Worth bo0. Hoy's Nobby Suit $3.00 to $10.00 Three Piece Suits 2.50 to G.00 Children Suit 1.25 10 4.60 Have ycu seen the nobby styles of Mens and Bys Shoes we are offering this spring. They arc- the real thing without a doubt The prices are from $1.25 to $3.50. H 15 Front Street, .;. Drcs ii rtkinu in h)1 rrimclie M'llI to to tli linUhH or ilo tin' work t li"U.. Alilri'ii MakV l.l'Dwm, vj'jJ"Mte hrt Wi!l Mill, Miifui J, I'u. Port Jervis. t I i IUIII W It , Port Jervis. FAMILY NEWSPAPER PuMIkIhh, mi 'I'l. 1 1 mi. . iind U tin- 11 for unit" ly sixty yriiih h t VI" pi, Mf flit United Ktntt j.- . A. ih-ttll K utitlt Ni w p 11 p 0 r o f the llltfhl'Kr (J I HUH, f. r lill IIIITh mul vIUmith IliMin l. n. nil the .mint tinpnrtMiii (fflH'llll lll'WH nl NEW YORK WEEKLY TRIBUNE THE DAILY Till BUNK u to ihr limn nl g'llhtf ti pit', 1111 Aji' iiuli uinl lVptirl nti'iit nf the hlliiMt onliT, lm (tittiTiMi: littf ri'Mdliifr for i-vcry mi'tnhcr of the fniii My. old mid uunn Market K ports, whlcli in r rtcii pled nt mithoiity hy fnrinciH mid count y mum oliiintK, and Im clean, up-to-dnt' Inti' t;Mlhj and hiKti uciivu K' trtilar Htib-i riptioii prtiv. 11.00 H yeai We fuinlh it with THE l'KKSri f... $1 lift per yt'Hr. Everything New " 5.00, ' 7.50, " 0.50, " 10.00, "12.00, 7.5.; 10.00 12 50 13.50 13.50 Port Jervis, N. Y. DcWiit'w IiiiIh early ris.erH me fl ti 1 11 1 v litllc jiilU, but lwv neverfiii' to cIi'iiiim the liver, rciiiDVeiilixIriK'- tiuus uuJ luviyumlo the uj-htuiii. HORTICULTURE EXHI3IT. Will III- Oiip of Prli.f lpnl Fm- Inrc of Hie l-'tptinhlnn. HortlciilMiti', vltlrnltiin- nit'l Ihirleiil tine nip linki-d ttisrct her In one c:int iiis. In (lie nihlsl nf n rcinnlt'.v of on hnids nnd vlncynnls dip I'nn-Anier-hnn Kxpi!ti!i will have iihiiinliint innieiinl cliiHf nt hniiil nml nf the finest ipmllty from wlil h to make nn exhlhlt worthy of the (trent eent. The exten sive llovnl ileenrnthnis of the gronndH constitute n rich dlsplfiy In fliii ienltnre, and Hevernl acres. InelndltiK hnnilreds of heds, ore devoted to the exhlhlta Iimde hy lending florists of the country. I'lowers In profusion will welcome I lie eniliest visitors mid hrenthe out their finRiiince nnd diKplcy their Inconipnrn hie hcniity the seiison thnniRli. Thou snnds of trees and slirnhs llonrh-h thronlioiit the proninls. Iionhle rows of thrifty trees siirroiind the prluelpnl hnlldlntrs. Kollnne Bud flowers there will he In great iirofnslon. In the hor tlcultiunl emhellishnieiit of the grounds the riin-Amerhnii will f:ir surpnss the elTorts of nil former expositions. In the handsome and commodious Horticultural Kulldlnjj all the popular fruits of the different rouutrles repre sented la the 1'iin-American exposi tion w 111 he displayed. With a suiiahle refrljt't:ii!nu room upon the prouuds. It will he posslhle for the maniip'iuent to make a daily fresh display of fruit. Throuu'liout the term of the Exposi tion, when certain fruits are at their hest. special displays will he made of certain varieties. The exhlhlt from southern Ci'lifoinln will he particularly liirjre. and New York nnd other stales v!il he represented heflttlii(,'ly. Iiotthd productions will also hnve n place here, the wine growers of the ('hnutaii(u:i. central New York nnd Hudson river re gions having applied for space for ex tensive exhliiits. The opportunity for A timely display of choice native fruits will he Improved. Dried and preserved fruits will he exhibited here. Articles nnd appliances used In horticulture will also hi- showu 111 this division. The exhibits of nursery stock. Includ ing orchard nnd ornamental trees, shrubs and evergreens, will be uniiues tlonnhly ntnoni; the finest. If not t lie finest, ever made. The most prominent uurserymcn in the country hnve Inter ested themselves nnd will aim to outdo nny former show of the kind. No less Interest Is taken by the lending florists, who are arranging exceptionally fine displays. Many large beds of (lowers were plauted some months ago. aid they will aid In henutir.vlng the scene from the early days or the Imposition. MAtIK liKNNITT The Itlnlne tlnllillnv. The resources of the Suite of Maine will be exhibited nt the I'nn-Ainerlcnn Exposition next summer In n bulldliu nt once unique nnd appropriate. It M A ! N h STATE UUILDINQ. will be circular in form, with project lug entrances, and the decorations will lie typical of things la the I'lne Tree Stale. The bnlhllug will challenge the attention nnd win the ndiniratlon of every visitor to the L'xposlUoU. ELECTRIC SCIENCE. Frmtwr at Rrent Imporlnnee nt the Pno-A merlrnn. Electricity nml electrical nppllnuees are to receive such intention ns to make this one feature of the Pan American Exposition of the greatest 1 111 porta lice In the history of electrical development, la nddlllon to the spec tacular uses of electricity In Illuminat ing buildings, towers, courts nnd foun tains there will be very Important dem onstrations of the application of the force to ninny new purposes. Anioi:g them will he wireless telegraphy, the X rnys, the electromohlle. telegraphy to nnd from moving trains by induc tion, the improvements In the electric light and telephone. The wonderful labor savins iiualltles of electricity have revolutionized the production of many article of merchandise within the past decade. This phase of em ployment of the electric fluid will form a most pleasant study for those who are Interested lo the newest of the elenoog. and nidi a study ns will only be possible at the Exposition. The de veloping! t of electric power will be II nstinted In a comprehensive manner. Mineral at the Pan-Amprleaa. Minerals will be fully represented, comprising every production, both use fill and ornninental. mined from I lie earth. All parts of the United States and every country of South nnd Cen tral Amerlcn. Canada. Mexico and the Islands of the sea will contribute spec imens for the exhibit. All kluds of machinery used In manipulating ores will he exhibited. The great advan tages that the Americas have over the rest of the world In the wealth of their mineral! In connection with climatic cond'tlons. accessibility, etc.. will be clearly Illustrated. While the exhibits will be under the nusplces of the vari ous Oovernments. many Individuals nnd mining companies will be repre sented by individual displays, repre senting their speciul Interests. Mevleaa Appointment. The Mexican nilulstry of fomento (encouragement) has appointed as Mex lean representative of the Pan-American Exposition Engineer Albino It. Nineln. who was until his appointment "hlef of the second section lo the afore said mlnUtry. CANDY CATHARTIC Genuine stamped C C C. Never told In bulk, beware of the dealer hho triu to sell "ftoawtlung Ju.t Ai goou. Advertise iu thb Pkemj. tllfeOill SMALLEST OF THEIR KIND. Tb Dwarf Cattle of Olrhes Are ! I,rcr r Than Orrtlaar? Fall Orowa Rhrep. Celebes had the distinction of being? the home of the smallest living repre sentative of the wild cattle, or. Indeed, of the wild cattle of any period of the arth's history, for no equally diminu tive fossil member of the group ap pears to be known to science. An Idea of the extremely diminutive pro portions of the niioa, or sapi-utnn, as the animal in question is respectively called by (he inhabitants nf Celebes nnd the Malays, may be gnined when it Is slated that its height at the shoulder ia only about three feet three inches, whereas that of the great Indian wild ox, or guar, Is at least six feet four inches, and may, according to some writers, reach as much as seven feet. In fact, the anoo Is really not much, if at all. larger than a well-grown South Down sheep and scare. ly exceeds in this respect the little domesticated Uramini cat tle shown a few years ago at the In dian exhibition held at Earl's Court, snys Knowledge. The anon has many of the charac ters of the large Indian buffalo, hut Its horns are relatively shorter. less curved and more upright. In this, ns well as In certain other respects, it is more like the young thsn the adult of the last-named species, and as young animals frequently show ancestral features which are gradually lost as maturity Is approached it would be a natural supposition thnt the anoa is a primitive type of buffalo. TELEPHONE NUMBERS. Itrarr Mlleaste Hates Are Sometime raid to Retain an Old "Hello" Address. "Telephone numbers have an actual money value,", said an officer of the American Koll Telephone company reports the New York Mail and Ex press. "The assertion has a strange sound, but if you think for a mo ment of the advantage a business house derives from having Its location well known, the thing seems onlv nnt ural. "In the course of time people's minds begin to associate a firm with Its telephone number, and If, when they start to call up nn old friend, they find him masquerading under a new number. It la as much nt .l,,.v- as if they had called at a house with whom they were In the habit of doing business and found it had moved away. It all comes under the legal head of 'good will,' a very elusive com modify, but one which has its market value. "So much Is this fact appreclnted by some of our old patrons thnt they are willing to pay heavy mileage if they move away from the neighbor hood of their exchange In order to retain their old telephone address. Many Important noutes have followed the northward trend of business In the last few years, and there are sev ernl cases of a Arm's ofRce address being In the up-town district, while its telephone number remains So and so, Cortlnndt or Broad. The firm's line to the exchange may be several miles long." COULD NOT KILL THE BIRD. After Brtna Fourteen Dy In an leebo the Albatroaa Still Lived. A writer aays Sir William Corry told him some time ago that on one of his steamships coming from New Zealand an albatross, supposed to have been choked dead, kept In an ice box at a temperature which was always much below freezing point, was found to be alive at the end of 14 days. Cnpt. Reed, In command of the vessel in question, says Nature, supplemented the story with the statement that the bird was supposed to be killed by being strangled with twine tied ns tiqhtly as possible nround the neck. This twine was not removed. The beak was closed and tied and the legs crossed behind the tail and tied. It was then wrapped in an old meat cloth and put with three other birds In the return box at the end of the port snow trunk. It remained there for certainly not less than ten days. On the snow boy complaining that the bird "grunted" when he went near it the albatross was taken out, when It was found that it could move Its neck about and open Its beak and the eyes were open and lifelike. The lower half of the bodv and the legs were frozen hard. The fastening on the beak had come off. It was alive for two hours after being taken out and was then strangled and put in the snow box. Not a Beehive. The following Is told at the expense -if an American gentleman who was re enily stopping with his wife at the Hotel Cecil. On their first evening there he happened to retire somewhat later than his spouse. Arriving at the door of what he Imagined to be hit room, and finding it locked, he tapped and called: "Honey!" No answer came, and he called again and more loudly: "Honey!" Still he got no re ply, and, becoming somewhat uneasy, he shouted the endearing term with his full lung-power. This time a reply ?ame. and in a male voice. "Go away, you blithering idiot! This is a batu oom, not a blooming bee-hive!' American Cowpanchers In Afrlea. It is stated that boo "cowpunchers" .f Nebraska, Wyoming and Colorado rere included in Canada's volunteer for the front in South Africa. Snrfaea Prriaart f a Hnrrleaaa, lu a hurricane blowing at KU mi!f u hour the pressure on each square not of surface is 31 pounds. Blue Front Stab! Fort Jervla. N. V. Ad joining Ouniiier'H Union House Road, ciirriiige, draft and farm Uorsi'8 for sale. Exchanges made. A larife stock from which to make elections. CANAL HT. Hirtm Towner. Oefttea' Alfisff, "I'm petting alonir," said Mr. Cum. rox. "I'm prcgressing slowly but surely." "In what?" "Culture. I've been travelins? around with Mrs. " and the pirls until I'm petting right refined. I!ut there's one thing 1 don't think I'll achieve. I don't believe I'll ever be able to go Into nn antique store and tell the difference between bric-a-brao and junk." Washington Star. Her Fare Shewed It. "Good night, papa," said the sweet young girl. "Huh!" grunted the old man. "that young fellow's pone, eh? I wouldn't have anything to do with him, dear. He's a conceited diiile." "Why, pa, yon never even saw him. Why do j on say that?" "Because If he wasn't he wouldn't use black cosmetic on the thing he calls a mustache." Philadelphia Press. The Reason Wli?. "So you're going to he married again? To whom?" "To my late wife's sister.". "Is she handsome or rich?" "Neither." "Then why do you ninny hi r?" "To tell the truth. It's beenuse T want only one mother-in-law!" Heitre Welt. To net It Otr Hla Hnniti. "Ilere's five cents," said the shnrp featured woman. "You'll go and spend it for whisky. Ynn know you will." "Madam." responded TufTold Knutt, lifting his weather-beaten remains of a hat with impressive dignity, "I arsk you not to believe nothin' of the kind. I'm Groin' to Sl.'eml it fur havln' me hands manicured." Chicago Tribune. The Sohjrrt Aronard Hrr. "Up to Jim Itlorigett's, eh? They say Jim'a wife isn't much of a talker." 'She Isn't? She kept me until after 12 o'clock and never gave ine n chance to get In a word edgeways." "What was she talking about?" "About the chances she had to get married before she met dim." Cleve land Plain Denier. Waalna; of the Honeymoon. "What did you ever see iu me to in duce you to marry me?" she asked. "Nothing," he replied. "What!" she cried, indignantly. "Oh, it isn't your fault." he replied soothingly. "I evidently had visions. and I ought to hnve consulted nn ocu list at the time." Chicago Post. Dear Little Thing-. Misa Pepprey Still dreaming of Misa Iluddilipz, eh? Cholly Aw. yes. That wosy month of hers! It fills my mind to the ex elusion of all else. Miss 'Pepprey-What a delicate eompliment: Hut is It really so smull as that? Philadelphia Press. Know All About It. "He claims to be very systematic says he's as regular as a clock." "He ia." "You know him, then?" "Yes, I know him, and I also know iomethlng about clocks. He's as reg ular aa one of those 90-eent alarm clocks." Chicago Post. The Kext Iav. Jack Who is that line-looking girl that just bowed to you? Tom (gloomily) Oh, she's my sis ter. Jack Why, old chap, I wasn't aware that you had a sister. Tom I didn't know It myself until last night. Chicago Daily News. Relieved In the Theory. Mra. Bacon Do you believe the moon shining on a person will make him silly? Mr. Bacon I guess so; you know 1 proposed to you In the moonlight, dear. Yonkers Statesman. Accomplished Hla Wish, To be a Ms; run Was what ho desired, So first he ftnt loaded And then he was fired Judge. WANTED TO HRAR THE LATEST. Lady (to applicant for place) Mrs. Flighty doesn't give you a very good character; in fact, she says you lis ten at keyholes. Well, I'm willing to overlook that, and engage you on one condition. Applicant What is that, 'm? Lady That you tell me every single thing you overheard ut Mrs. Flighty's, Ally Sloper. New Dettnltlon. "What's overconfldence?" asked the Pert Clerk. "It's getting married." piped up the Henpecked Boarder. Syracuse Her ald. Tha Chlrf Moarncr. "She may have a temper, but she is interesting. Did she ever get over the death of her husband?" "Yea; but her second husband ia in consolable." Harlem Life. Keeps th Houae Warm. She Dues your wife ever boil wltb. gas? He No; she generally boils with rage. Yonkers btatesman. DON'T TOBACCO SPIT ana SMOKE Your Liteawav! You can b cured of any form of tobacco usiug; e.ily, Us niaiJe well, Mrmi, ui:Kiirtic, fiillof new life aud vifror by taking ItO-IO-BAO. thai uilkea weak uieu e..ung. M.my t',!i tea IKiutiJa in leu days. Over BOO.OUO cured. All diugxt-'. Curs Huaruuu.a. Ii..ua let and iJun 1-KtK. Add teas hlKtU.INli to, tlucago ur licw Yoik. 4JJ For Cliane & KniilMirn'a teas and cxittc-wa go to Armstrong & Co, mm silk PRAIRIE DOGS ALL GOING. The letrnctle Rodents Have Hai Their Hay on the IMalna nf i the Far Weal. ' I Passengers who hnve ridden the bet ter part of a day through western Ne-' braska and enstern Colorado w ill re- ; member the prairie dnp. He is numer-1 ous In that section of the country. He lives In villages nnd the villngei are as close together as the villages of certain parts of Europe. But the prairie dog nns had his day. The agricultural department snvs he must go. Mr. Wi'.son has decided that the dogs kill the grass and ruin pood grazing land. "Tama Jim" has little of the love of picturesqucness in his make-up. Ho Is eminently practical and his philanthropy is of the type which seeks to make two blades of grass grow instead of one. Therefore he proposes to relepnte the prairie dog to the picture bonks and to the stuffed specimens of the museum along with the buffalo, says the De? Moines News. Mr. Wilson's chemists hnve discov ered a mixture which will make whole villages fight for the first i te, but which at the last biteth like a serpen) and stingeth like an adder. I'nder It? Influence the hole that knows tin prairie dog will know it no more for ever. The frisky, nervous, barking :it tie beast will join the innumerable caravan of prairie dogs who have gone before. There will be more grass when th prnirie dog is gone, and therefort more cattle. There will be less brenl ing of the legs of cowboys ponies are1 the rattlesnake will live alone In th' hole until the summons comes to hir also. THROUGH THE HOLY LAND. The Train Movrj Slowly, aa If Loth f Disturb Its Ha nn tlnst Shades and Phantoms. Tnere is no rush in the orient; tl train moves slowly through Holy P'p as if loth to disturb the shafr phantoms haunting the Land of I ; ise, writes Mrs. lew Wallace of "J salem as We See It To-Day." in La Home Journal. Deep emotion Besses us. The Jaffa gate is the trance from the west, a market w! there is much trafiic carried on r rious languages. We hear nan es i start far-reaching associatiens in remote past. We see costumes sin ' Absalom, the beautiful, the b; r wore; men in soft raiment, fl. robes, beggars, lepers.' Chief an the motley swsrm is the unconmic Arab, stately as Saul, silent in fc's turesque garments, as though the ness of the desert had passed intc soul, unmoved at sight of the fori machine come to break his civi'iz-' Job was such a one sheik of the r'c with lordly bearing, as heean-e. lender of horsemen with spears a the owner of camels, greatest of men of the east. Does this sound reverent? Wait, we sre rearing ' hill where David 6ct his throne: slow wheels turn slower, a shriel jerk, stop. The turbnned braker calmly calls "Mount Zion" a ruh feeling, a thrill that can come but or we lift our eyes to the city of onr Lei whether in the body or out of the bet I cannot tell. LONELY LIVES OF HERDERS Australian Tattle Tenders Pasa Monotonous Existence In the flush. Not even its greatest admirer cou! call the Australian bush beautiful. It i a somber, sage-colored wild of eucalyi tus forest, interspersed with ar: tracks of thorn and spinnifex. There no shade and the silence is inters says the Nowcastle Chronicle. At f. Intervals you come across a squattc hearings, with Its little community human beings. Deeper still in the solitudes, aloof and almost lost. Ii the shepherds nnd bushinen. each : Alexander Selkirk marooned in a gre waste of grass or forest. Once a men they are. viited and their rations cs ried to them, but for the rest they !! In solitary exile, the only conipnnio their sheep, cattle and dogs. Cut r from human intercourse, they almo; lose their faculty of speech, and becor as witless as their sheep or cattle. Ar when they return tocivilization for tl short holiday that is allowed them. Is too probable that they hand in the "cheque" for the half-year's wages the proprietor of the shanty known the "Bush hotel," and stay there . drink it out. POOR L0 TURNED TO STONE Petriaed Body of an Indian Voua la a Mound on an Ohio Farm. In an old Indian mound near Gin uersville, O., relic hunters have four an Indian's body that had turned t solid stone. The mound is located i the farm of Thomas Jemes, and bone arrowheads and other relics are pleni fill there, and some time ago thrt skeletons which were found thei crumbled to dust on exposure to th air. The last find of the petrified It diun was made about six feet beneati the surface of the mound. Their shov struck something hard and imniovabl and investigation showed it to be It the form of a man's face. The entirt form of the Indian was soon broughi to view, but aid had to be secured be fore it could be removed. It was a fini specimen of an Indian, over six fee" tail. His features arc comely and hit lands small and shapely. The musclef of his arms and legs stand out in bold relief, as though carved by the hand of man, and even the wriqklra in thf wrist are discernible. The relic is now at the home of Mr. Jemes uud arrange ments have beta made fur fiiMing U b a Uiustum. D0YS Hera's your clianeu to make money alter sc-lioel, alllna Wll Paper CleMUer Keltelllea. Coat you LKs.H than U; you sell theiu for lOv, a vlear frt01. 'r of over 7e ou each one. Yen can malt. to 3 every evening-. CilKI.S alMi wunteil, I'rieeH: Sample Kt'clpe loe; 14, AO; o, ?.Vc; or HA for aUOO. Atldreaa, J. J. IHILA.M, No. 6o I n euty-orat street, fittakurg, fa. Oil clotb and liuokuuis at V. & U. MUcheUd.- tf RAILROAD TIME TABLE. Corrected to Date. Solid Pnllmnn trains to Buffalo, Nlng- . ara Kails. Chautauqua Lake, Cleveland, 1 .... ..p.. x i-iiinin i. Tickets on sale at Port Jervis to nil I points In the West and Southwest ni lower rules ti via any other first-claw, line TliAINP NOW l.F.AVK PoilT .TltltVIS At Follows. EASTWARD. No. 12, Dully y.xpress .. in. Dully Express !! W. Daily Except Sunday. " 6on PundHy Only " 8s, Daily r.xeepi Sunday. ) Daily Way Train " :te. Wo K.M-e t Sundtiv . " 2, Dally Express " li, uiitiio only '' 8, Daily EjiprchN ' IN. Siimtnv only " S2 Daily Kxccpi Sundav . " 14. Daily '.. 8 84 A M. 5 20 - . H - 7 40 7 4ft " in ) " 12 IhP.M. 8 ti 4 SB " 4 .. ft ill " 5 40 ' r. III l " W ESTWAKD. 8, Dally Express 17, Dully jVIII, 'I nun 1, Daily Express II. h. i ii. .,,. e. , i,i ft lli.ily a". Daily r in pt ,-m,dav 7, Daily hi if-... No 12 W I oh 11 88 5 l:i 5 50 ii if I . 1 , i Ii i 1 iCtll: i : i. i... 4 .i . ii.;.. 4.7 :.. H t 9 Itip il lit. fl.l, il-.bo. : i . II. I. II ro. General rnw.nt.r4 .-nt. New Vork. Washington Hotels. RIGGS HOUSE. Tin- hoU'l pur e.iit Hi i.t-t f J UKttU'ii within t.tir i. jiil ; ' I H tlii'M lltblt in I M fi, j, . VvllLARD'S hCUl. fi ll U. I.i . . i . ' H ... II. II l" It j t , pultu h hrr. I li h. m.i. . ( , i I (I ( III I Itltl) : . 1 1 1 1 1 1 -1 I i.A 1 iOI AL KCUL. .l.l.l II. H k III I it I... . 1. ... , , , lit.'li, pttlltili,..-o lh 1 . in . . y.j : . -it I 111 r net! tllftli . I. I i.u .' . It'. .e" I II. Ii.lt; i I ' ' ' I 1 1.1 . I tl. I Vt AL'I J- . I I I 'i ( '. . . . 1 hi I hi.ii'l. an :h. 1, ,l,tl(i, i , lil. ii l i.OMHI- lit lh.' II, ll,l , ,;i, bt h.- i In- lint rtl ('I It'K III III -otuthii- rates . O.O.S1SPLI6, Prcpilttot o. nm m,ti, F IVE TWO-CENT STAMPS will put you next the VANDAL... an Interesting; rnag. lineof orltlolsm. Send for -ne to day. No Free Copies THE VAHDALL, 226 Butler St., Pittsburg, Pa. KOAGLAND'S 3ij China Store PORT JERVli", N. Y. Largest Stock. HEADQUARTERS ."or Sets of Dislies, Lamps and Glansware. ccupying the entire floor of Building. Ve buy Butter, Eggs and Grain. a ( Hccgland'o, PORT JERVIS, N. Y. LUP TOWN. Dyspepsia Cure Digests what you eat. It artificially diResU the food and aids feature ia BtreiiKthetiinK and recon- tructing the exhausted digestive or gans It is the lateht discovered dlifest iut and tonic. No other preparation ?au approach it in elllciency. It in stantly relieves and permanently cures Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Heartburn, Hatmence, isour Siouiach, Nausea, sick Headache,OaRtral(fia,Crijnp8 and al. other resu 1 ts of Imperfect tl iestion. Prspir.d by E. C Dwtt. aCo.. Cbieaio. " - - - - " -i - - - - - - -T Our lee leturucd it we lull. Aiiv out icudina 17 n ikeith and diMcriviicn of uny m vent ion will promptly receive our opinion ftee concern. tig the pJleuUlnlity of ume. "How to otlm Pateut cnt upon teues(. fiiieuta evuic4 (tnounh u ttdveuia-cc .or rule at our eucu. Fitieuts tit Leu out thiouKti u receive ttcial noiu ti, williutil cliMige, in 1 mk Hai kni Kiu-O.'.d, au illustrated and widely cniuluud ouimL couvulicd ijv Muiiulaciuif ra and m r ma, bcuti lot Biiiupic copy t Hfc ft. AUdice, VICTOR J. EVANS A CO. . -WMssut AttttrmcyJ w tara Building, Washington S