- X) SicI; !!cadachc? Food e'ecsn't digest well? Appetite poor? i'owels constipate !? Trr.f,ie coated? It's your liver! Aycr's Pills are liver pill?; they cure dys pepsia, biliousness. ffll "BEST OF ALL FLOUR." FEED, MEAL, BRAN. OATS, and ILAX .c. All dr;:rCIMS. I a btraiiltful UUUIM 1 ..J II-. 1. 1 O UiLl .Whiskers When in need of any 6 JOHNSON "Fitter of Feet," Agent, Port Jerrii, H. T. Application for Incorporation Notice la hiTcliv (jlvi-n tltntnn npplien tlim will lie inmle to tlie (pivdrnnr of the riiiiMiimw-iilili of IViinsvlvniiln mi Tne diiv, the mli diiy of July. l,v tl,B Plkl' Wnter Power 'miipnny imiiIit 'he. net. of the iri'iii'riil nsiMiihl.v of Pennsylvania ntv proved thtt Mth tl:iy of June, A. 1 . IH-vt, mnenillmr Hie (mieml corpomtion net of April Lit. 1H74, providing for tlie Improve ment, nine iiilnicnt nod nlriTiitlon of IliP clmrterR of corporations of tlie second cliisi, for tlin improvement, ninelidnent nod iilti-riition of its ehurier, nnd tlint the cluinieler nod ohjerts of the sold desired Improvement, rtmendnient, nnd ulterrttlnii of lis ehHrtor nre thestrtkirifr, oor. from Ho purpose of iIih said corporation, as px prcssid In Its fold chatter, tin; words "alonir Wnllenpnnpiick cree'; nnd triho-tnrlt-s, which Is IhB boundary between Pike nnd Wayne counties, Pennsylvania," so as to make tlifl purpose, of the corpora tion read ns fidlirws " The supply, stornRe nnd transniisio-i of water nnd water pow er to the public for coninterrlHl nnd uianu faetni'lIlM: purposes; flu- said corporation will operate In the boroiurh of Hawley." P. V. KOl'HEKMKI,, fi-2;. bolleltor. SHERIFF'S SALE Tiv vlrtiid nf n writ of Levari Fmrlas iff ptifd (int. of the Court, of t'onnnoii F1"r of Pike Cuiinty, to mo (Knu'tetl, I will t xposc to suli' hy public vcndiip or outcry fit Hit Shfiitl's otlice in the boroiiKli of Mil foul on MONDAY, THK , 7tl; DAY OF JULY, A. D , nt 2 o'clock In th nfternoon of sniil duT, All llmr trnct or pnrcel of laud sittiHtR in the vill.-tR-p fT Mutntnoran. C iunty of Piktv nnd Stato of Pminnylviuila, dcscrlhod ns follows: ConstHtiiiflr of one. villaore lot of IjiiuI known nnd d. itfuatod aw lot nuniltpr pd one hundred ntid fifty-four on flhnrlei' Ht. .lohn'B map of mi addition to tho village of Matiiniornn, Hnid lot bftnn llfty feel wide in front and rear and one hundred feet In depth, said lot being fdtunte on the east side of Main tnt, baw(eti Fourth nnd Kifth Btreets nnd is bounded by lots 1-Vi l.Vi nrd an laid out on said map be i one of mm dry lots conveyed to John I!. Wallace by John Clark, Jease M. Con ner nnd wife by tUni datd 17 day of Ft-b-nmrv, 1M87. reconled in the Recorder's Of fice in nnd for tho County of Piko, Book Bo, page 42, etc. IMPROYKMENT3. Gonct dwelling house, two and a half Btoriert, nearly new. Sel.'d nnd taken in executiou ns the property of Jacob H. Hnub and will be sold by me for cnh. OKOHGE GREGORY, HhmifT. Pheriff'8 OHlce, Milford, Ph., ( Juno 10, liufcj. ( 6-27 Washington Hotels. RIGGS HOUSE. The hotel par excellence of tho cnpltnl, lotrated willitn one block of tho While lmt nnd directly opiK.sito tlie Treftsury. Finest table In the city. WILLARD'S HOTEL. A famoiiH hotelryj nmtnrkable for its historical nssociarions nnd ltuig-smttnined popularity. Ricently renovated, repainted aud partially rcfuruiHhed; NATIONAL HOTEL. A landmark nmong the hotcln nt Wash ington, patroii.ed lu former years by presidents nnd hiuh oftlcials. Always a prime favorito.- Heceiitly rttmodeled and rendered Itoitor than ever. Opp. l'a. H. K. dtp. WALTER BUHTON, Hoa. Mgr. These hotels are the principal political rendezvous of the capital at all times. Tlivy are the best stopping places at rea sonable rates O. O. STAPLES. Proprietor. O. DEWITT.Mansgsr. ID!!Y DISEASES are the most fatal of all dis eases. FOLEY'S of money refunded CDntalns remedies recognized by emi nent physicians as the best for KLidney and Bladder troubles. PRICE 50c aad $1.00. Blue Front Stables, Port Jervfs. N. Y. Adjoining Gutuner'u Union House Rom, cturiiigf, draft Btul farm ll;)1.1(-8 for ri.llo. ExollHtigcS Ulrtdo. A large dtoi-k from wliich to miike tloctioim. CANAL ti'V. Hiram Toner. il UC IfUII l sve- i ill. Ant out- eta-iiiiJ ll u 1-J (I'.nlijl'H) (d it !i v UnC'iU'.ll V. 1 i. I: t ' I i'.ntm h.'it : i n T ; it- t . I1. h-a.itJ '.. ti U? ,1 i I i - Hi t-l n.' - C 4l U.I! t ' i- -i n.i l.u.- il Hi. .in. tl IrirliC , tti f . , V It .. ..L i ii t! Ill i 1 1 1 ' I ' I j 1 , v M. I, f:I li iiM' V I'll- -U-i ),u:Ual, L.-i.-s.. ; . . i , - .a i ct li , .m,, , k ii r t., 1 1 c VICTOR J. tVANS 4 CO, i.i uJCJjf .-lt( i..t ( In ilic Painted W oods ((P7risht, ItOl, bT AaUiorv STDdlcfttv.l YOUNG MASON, who lay oil the couch In the portico, prdund bin teeth, it was about the only tb.ln.ff that he could do, and cursed the road, the horse, the accident that held him a prisoner In this dense wilderm-Ks a prisoner bandaged and ahoto of his strength. As the days passed Jiis evil slar rose slowly to the zenith. The per fume of the vanished summer was in the fern-bed that grew knee-deep be yond the porch; the maple branches glowed red as rubies; the beech trees illumined the woods, and from behind a fallen log near by a Hob White sent his clear, exultant call. lie clinched bis hands and groaned. To be free onoe morel To walk through the sweet-scented fern, gun cocked, eyes alert since the time of the Pharaohs, It seemed, he bad been chained to the cot. His evil star, that had reached the zenith, dropped suddenly below the horizon and the atmosphere was flood ed with light of a celestial, rosy hue. She was his sister's friend, she told him, as she stood on the porch, a tall, distinguished girl; she had heard of his accident, they were camped only a half-mile away; she had come hop ing she might, If ever so slightly, re lieve the tedium of his days. He had heard of her social triumphs her beauty; ba had heard that men raved over her, although they said she had no soul, and In this sweet, friend ly way she had come to him In his hour of need. ' After that afternoon there was al ways a look of expectancy In young Mason's eyes turned toward the bril liant forest. He blessed the accident that held him a willing prisoner. The cushions on which ..he was propped were hers, the books were hers. She came each afternoon. She laughed with him, talked to him, read to him, sang sweet old-fashioned songs while the sun, blood red, dropped behind the mountain side, and his boy heart swelled. ' From the camp below half a dozen men came ostensibly to inquire of his health, but In reality to accompany her home, and It pleased him to see her haughty and indifferent to them to him she was all tenderness, aU friendliness and womanly gentleness. Whimsrically, as la the privilege of a sick man, it pleased him to think her a princess who rame through the sun lit, "painted woods, to ham, an exile in pain.' There were other fancies too beautiful fancies. One afternoon he watched for her. his brows knotted with a puzzled frown, ne held an unopened letter addressed to her; a servant had found It In a lot of old rubbish. He rememhered that she had been one of the gay party that camped in the old farmhouse two summers be fore It was there she had known his sister, and Boyd bad been of the party. Boyd was some ten years the senior of young Mason, and he was gratified and honored by the older man's friend ship. There was a letter In his pocket that todl him Boyd was coming to share the tedium of hi convalescence would be there. that very night, In fact, and the bold, firm handwriting was the same as that on the girl's letter. When the princess came up the steps young Mason put the letter under his pillow, and a sudden sense of pending calamity possessed him. For a little w hile he would listen to her voice, have her smile on him, and watch the ges tures of her hands with their odd, foreign-looking rings. The night would bring Boyd. And afterwards? His mind didn't go any further. They touched on many subjects and he brought the conversation around to the mountain-party that had met under tlie shadow of the great hills two summers before. "Have you seen Boyd since his re turn from the west?' he asked, ab ruptly. "No." said the princess. "He has found other Interests since he went west and has dropped the oid friends but I cau scarcely claim so much." There was au odd little chill in her voice, "Oh," with a breath of relief, "1 thought I thought " The princess threw back her head defiantly and looked a't him through half-closed lids. "One's friends are so good," she ssid. "They think for them ood thus simplify life." Sue laughed a laugh that held no heart, or much. . "I was r-eht, then." His Hps trem bled in a way that would hate none to her heart if she had loved him. I!e drew tue lrtier from under the pillow and handed It to her silently. He seemed Aut to see the coior, a worm, iovous wave, that swept her lac and left ft ;ii! fc!,d wlii'.e. When she hud read the letter she 1 ...ked lmt. at him, but at the m.iuu l.in ia f.ont of ti, -in purple with the lllir t Ii:lst. - "f'nrr'nne," he .said, softly. She turned, a st range l-ch t. perl.n ps the reflection of the dying day. on her face. "Princess." he said, brokenly. She stooped and kissed his brow. "Jack, you dear boy," she said, "1 thank you." She had not qoe'.tinivd his possession of the letter. "rY.olith boy," her voice was low and fender, "he trusted our happiness to a letter. Tie loved me! Tt can't help things now but to know!" She bent nnd looked into the boy's eves with eves that held no thought of him. "Jack, dear." she said. "I've got to speak! I've stifled it so long I've so skillfully got up my smile to meet the world! .Tack, dear, when your time comes, it isn't the woman that you will be happy with, remem ber, it Is the woman without whom you will be unhappy. In all the world there's only one for each of us only one who understands. You'll know her." A sudden radiance, as of a happy memory, Ut her eyes. "You may realize with a shock, after your first meeting with her. tlrat you have outraged the conventions nnd bared your soul to a womnn that you never heard of before, but there's a splendid shamelessness about it." In her smile there was the sweetness that had been his Waterloo. Her hand closed over BHIS WAS ALL IT E N D K K N li S 3 . his. There was a sudden wist fulness in hpr face, ns she said: "And if you never find her, Jack, life must git on and on without her." In a (lash she was gone. You off Mason lay quite still. His eyes were fixed on the wood for, down its painted aisle lighted hy beech trees like jrifrantic lanterns, with sweet, wet eyes downcast, and lips a-quiver, his princess, all unconscious of the happi ness that was so soon to overtake her, walked slowly. The hush of twilight fell on the world. The prent spaces above were filled with colorless clouds that sud denly, wave on wave, blushed pink as the heart of a seaslirll. Young Mason, awaiting a man's delayed greeting, choked back the sob in his throat he was only a boy, remember, and with brave eyes smiled down into the- wood, now enchanted, BRING3 SUMMER B0A1XDER?. V Large M tropolitan Newspaper Which Is Helping the Summer Resort 0, The Brooklyn E;igle sevon.l years figo established n Barnnu of Infor mation In Brooklyn, where tho pub lic ooulil, free of charge, secure de tails of hotels and boarding houscfi for the summer. The idea nt once became popular, nnd brunch burofiust were opened in Manhattan and other cities. Country hoi els nnd botuding houses by sending to this Bureau can secure a listing blank, till it out and return it and then be represented free of cnt, and send their circulars and cards for free distribution Tho Brooklyn Ivigle baa also been considered for years tho best me dium for summer boarders in New York city. The Rock Point Inn, in tho Adir ondacks, &niJ : 'We are giving the Eiglo a larger share of advertising than most other papers, ns experi ence bas demonstrated its value to us in past seasons.' Chaaneey li. Newkirk of Wurts boro, Sullivan county, said; "Last season one small adv. brought me five guests." La iiue Bros., proprietors of the American Hotel of Miaron Springs, N. Y , wrote: "Oir house is full and mostly by Brooklyn people. Daily we receive Hppl (cations for rooms, and alt on nceount oi our btsnding id in the g!e." Fur Ll--tint? Blanks, Adv. Bate. Cards and other information, ad-drv-s FAULK IM OWMATION i FRF AC, Biooklyn, N Y. X OVHRZEAL OF YOUTH. Rflinkr of I-ord Lynn In ! rF rt irnrtl 1 nlrt for Tlin HnMfr In Urll Inff it Drnft. The self-contldence of youth in busi ness matter often recHvesa necessary clock. Sir Kdvwird Ata.et Relates in "Shifting Sceues" nn incident wherein he was very properly rebuked by his chief in the diplomatic service, Lord Lyons. While we were at Wnhington, says Sir Fdward. the bend of t he cha ncer gave me a letter to winch au answer had to be writ ten, and told me to draft it. I dashed off whnt I thought would do, trying to make it as short as pos sible, and it went down for approval. In due time the box came back, the head of the chancery unlocked it, took out the bundle of drafts, and presently stalked angrily to my desk, holding my luckless effusion between his finger and thumb. My writing was stroked through from end to end, and under neath was written: "Brevity is the soul of wit, but I object to absolute nonsense. L." .1 was deeply hurt, hut the le.on sank in, and I never again "dashSotT" a draft. At a not her time the cock-sureness of youth cn me under Lord Lyon's displeas ure. Allusion was made one day to the assault on Marshal Raynau, the. Aus trian general who was reputed to have flogged women during the Hungarian rebellion. He was brutally attacked in is:,0 in London by brewers' draymea and cruelly beaten. The subject whs talked about at din ner, and one of the young secretaries took the jxart of the draymen on the plea of "served him right." LomI Lyons strut k in quietly. "Do not attempt." he said, "to find an ex cuse for an act which was a national disgrace." Defend It nit time Manic. "They should never suppress rag time wusfc. said Mine, hinmu Ne vada, the singer, when she returned from Kurope the other day. 'Ii;ig time music is all right. Rome of the songs are pretty nnd deserve to be let live, besides ragtime is popular and the people want it. Mine. Xe vadu has been away two years and has sung In nearly every large city in Kngland and on the continent since Jast she appeared before an American audience. MY TRUST. A sonjar was born In my heart one day; But warm and swept on my lips there lay A baby mouth, po dear, so dear, I could not wi?h It away; And tlie mink whs lost In the void again. The s'ing t ha t h;id st irreti the souls of men, In tho dee of their despair. A thoaqht us sweet ns the summer rain, li. est fur the weary heart's ease for. pain, Fi om God's own heart sought out my own. And fain would I share its gain. Hut little hands clue.K to mo all day long; At nijiht, though its blessing had made me strong. The white-winged dove had flown. And what was the lop, and what the gain? Long years parsed in a nobler strain My sons was sung the listening world Was hu-htd at Its glad refrain. And into a matehlps word was wrought The baJm and blessing of my lost thought My dove with Its pinions furlt-d. The dear Ood knoweth Ills own time best; H is deep love ware he th the world's un rest ; He chooseth aright the seed Is nown, And safe In its own piace presd. J ty whom, what matter? Full well I know, My baby's touch and the sweet lips' glow (iod gave to my irust alone. Itebecc-a Llnley Tripp, in Youth's Com par. ion. CANDY CATHARTIC Hit. Km '"v-i Genuine stamped C.CC Never told In bulk. Bcwjrt oi me dealer who tries to sell "swnethin g just u goou." To PITEHT Ecoi Idea nitty be sec'ired by our uitt. Address, THE PA It NT HECOHD, I tie Fiient Record tl u it ttnuuil1 ::(" t V h, Cholc Cof.yr1 ii.put liuna by L.it tiiuat pupil;.! uli r;;;s ti PsiiD P!tiSls IT 5 ' .!, I 1 I. -..Humeri! '! si C.:.i'!d3 Fls:cs far Pl:sj3 Mi! 1 22 l';7tfq ol Musical Literature -c") ii " . f !i for 2 b Cents. y SuDicrijUion, $2.00. Six Months, $1.00. -r , --v, r -f ,u, (ry Hl)u i'..tl)ll Vr-ic, .1 ' i ' i i'tvi e t.'f tlie 1'i.mi. u ' ' i .i ; r; f e h t one i U "it." i ' t : i ; v ii v 1 1 1 m'u t ui : In' in me 1 - ! f i - iii. riuer on Itie iuj Jr . v. j ,i i; -, .i I uu t;Jip i-ftipv f r, j. l. Par?, Publisher, . i L.w.t St j., P(iiialht, Pft. r SnOTT Flrriillirps. Sivly ih-L' i r It. low ri-ift is (hr triL:1il ''dil;. ' ltl n 'insplu're it. w li icli A T:i - k:i li ('fill! liimlirs imt, often worl;. Tin y luiikf in-i'liu-rs of snow In Oinl (li-volnip rf'i;iru. Tho-Miow is jircKcd ii'lo Mocks like oi-irl-.s nnd n flrppliifi; two or (iirvi? fee t squnre Is built Willi ;l,!in. W'hi-ii Uie fire Is liMoil llip hkiw. of course, melts on (lie siirleee; but v hen trie fire out thu fi'P"ti M ':i ill i !; t the next fire causes it In V.ecomo only damp. A M.ow t5replnce used trly for eookiiiK niii(;tes will lust for m entire win- I iiterpsting To Asthma Sufferers. Banii'l B.'intH of Otlcrvil'o, Iown, writes, "I hnvo hnil aslluna for tlircH or four yenrs mid. Iinvn tried nhout nil the cough nnd nstlnnn etirou in the ninrket find linvo ro roivnd trontmpnt from iiliysicinns in New York nnd other cities tint cot very little lienefit. until I tried Fo ley's Honey nnd Tnr which gnve me iininediiito relief nnd I will never be without in tny house. I wincerely recommend it to nil." Bold Hi Artnsf rong'n drug store. TJnclriiied Lnttwre. Liist of nnclnimed letters romnin inir in tho post rilflee nt Milford foT the week priding Jun 28, 1902: Mr. mid Mrs. F. M. Dnvenport, Mrs. N. Abhio Ilnlley, Miss Elln Bnlhiser. Persons cLiiniing the nbovo will plenso sny "Advertised" nnd give late of this list. Chaki.fs Lattimore, P. M. Was Wasting Away. The following letter from Robert ft. Watts of Siilom, Mo., is instruct ive. "I Imve been troubled with 'Sidney disease for tho lust five s'enrs. I lost flesh nnd never felt well nnd loi-tored with lending phy. iciiins nnd tried till remedies sua jested, .without relief. Firmlly tried Foley's Kidney Cure nnd less thnn two bottles completely cured me nnd I nm now sound nnd well." Sold nt Armstrong's drug store. Kurt Rudolph Sternberg, ganornl manager of the D.jerimrk Brewing company of Port Jervis, was in town this week. Ho states that tlie business of tho company is satisfac tory nnd that the goods are winning their way to popularity strictly on their merits. The increase in sales is marked and for a now plant only in its second year of operation the product is deservedly received with marked favor by tho public. Ten Years in Bud. R. A. Gray. J. P., Oakville, Ind., writes, "For ten years I was con. fined to my bod with diseise of the kidneys. It wns so severe that I could, not move part of the time. 1 consulted tho very best medienl kill available but could got no elief until Foley's Kidney Cure was recommended to me. It has been a Godsend to me." Sold nt Armstrong's drug store. An nnti corset decree has boon is sued by the minister of education in Saxony, who believes tight lacing to be fatal to intellectual development, and no girl wenring a corset mny nt. tend 'the public educational institu tions. Am. Med. Warning. If you h.ive kidney or bladder trouble nnd do not us Foley's Kid ney Cure you will have only your self to blame for results as it posi tively cures nil forms of kidney and bladder diseases. Sold nt Arm strong's drug storo. Lister's fertilisers nt W. & G. Mitchell's. During tho summer kidney irreu ularities are often caused by excess, ive drinking for being overheated. Attend to tlie kidneys at once by using Foley's Kidney Cure. Sola at Armstrong' drug store. Congressman Howard Mutcblercf this district was au ardent Kerr man at tho democratic convention. Chronic bronchial troubles and summer roughs can be quickly re lieved and cured by Foley's Honey and Tar. Hold Mt Armstrong's drug store. Both the l'unnsylvaniii and New York Central now have- 20-bour trains between New York aud Chicago. No good health unless the kidneys are sound. Foley's Kidney Cure makes the kidneys right. Sold at Armstrong's drug store. Tlieio were 147 graduates at the Ki.it K; roud.sburg normal this year. On the tUst indication of kidney trouble stop it by taking Foley's Kidney Curo. bold ut A i lustrotig'u drug stole. We are now lo cated at the corner of Front and Sussex Streets. KANE, Telephone Now For Every Member Of The Farmer's Family. A SEASONAEiLE REMEDY Emulsion of Puro Norwegian COD LIVER OIL With Hypophosphites of Lime and Soda A 12-oz. bottle for SOc. Pr se rlpt I on Carefully Compounded H. E. Emerson & Co., :: gjF Next Door FINE GROCERIES, FLOUJ1, PURE COFFEES AND SPICES, SELECTED TEAS, BUTTER AND CHEESE FROM BEST CREAMERIES, FRUITS AND CANDIES, CANNED GOODS IN VARIETY, SPORTING. GOODS, . TOBACCO AND CIGARS. A Complete Assortment of the Delicacies Us ually Kept in First Class Stores. Goods Delivered Promptly Free of Expense. For Sale By A Telephone CI I 62. DO YOU EXPEPJ TO A. D. BROWN and Manufacturers kinds of Lumber, Contractors and Builders. Estimates made ; personal atten tion given and work guaranteed. OFFICE, Brown's Budding, Milford, Pa. Foley's Honey and Tar fur ihUJren, safe, sure. A'o opiates, Hello to No. ')., or eome to SAWidLL MILL, MILFORD, PA THE SHOEMAN. Call P. J. 184. York i rililyill4 KstalillJT! rl In 1(l. tor over sixt venra It a tlie XKW YOf K WKKKbY TKIHL NE.'knowii Hint rend in every St; te in the Union On Novel iber 7, l'.Kil, It wns changed to tho New York Tribune Farmer, i htfh clns' , up t date, Ulnttrnted Agricultural weekly for tho iHn.i'r ami hiw family PRICE $I.OO 1 vnir. hut n run buy It for U sh. How? Hy Kiils ihiiw tlirnuirli your own favor! to homft now-fmppr, I'nK Pi-Kss, Milfortl. Ph. H ith pup -h (m yi'nr ftr only VI V. jSomi you order and money Ut THB PliRnfl. Sample copy free. Send your ad dress to NEW YORK TRIBUNE FAR ME 3, New York. BroAd Street. Mllforci. nntylvanla to Hotel Faucliore. Harford St., Milford, Pa BUILD? THEN SEE and dealers Foley's Kidney Cure makes kidneys and bladder riht. w ALL ACE son. In all
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers