Most Women UXHLUUWRM Can tell a good shoe when they see it. This illustrates one of the styles of the "La France." We have fiveothers. All cost $3.00. If you will look over f the town and compare every other Three Dollar Shoe with this one, you can't help buying the "La France." JOHNSON, o?TS, SOLE AGENT. GF THE AMERICAN PEOPLE can well be claimed of a book 1 Thar hna wnrnTOrl 1 ...-.-.linli Ic fied i n d or sprn p n f. nf tho Executive Departments of the vjovernment, tne u. a. Supreme Court, p.ll the State Supreme Courts, all the State Superintendents of Schools, nearly all of the College Presi dents, and Educators almost universally. The New and Enlarged Edition of Webster's Inter national Dictionary of English, Biography, Geography, Fic tion, etc., has 2364 quarto pages with 5000 illustrations. 25,000 new words and phrases have recently been added under the editorship of V. T. Harris, Ph.D., LL.D., U. S. Commissioner of Education, bringing the work fully up to date. LET US SEND YOU FREE " A Test In Pronunciation " which afford a pleiixaiit anU instructive evening's enter tainment. Illustrated pamphlet also free. G. C. MERRIAM CO., Fobs., Springfield, Hill, Washington Hotels. RIGGS HOUSE. The hotel par excellence of the capital, iootiu?fi within ono t.lxk of the Whitt House and directly oppi. site the Treasury. Kin est table In the city. VVILLARDS HOTEL A famous hotelry, romarkable for It historical associations and long euntnineri popularity. Itecently renovated, repainted and partially refurulbhed. NATIONAL HOTEL A. landmark among the hotels of Wash ington, patron.'.Ked in former years by prenident and hih ofitaiitU. Always a prime favorite. Recently rumndcltil and rendered better than ever. Opp. Pa. H, R dep. WALTKH BUKTON, Kea. Mgr. These hotels are the principal political rendezvous of the capital at all times. They are the best stopping places at rea sonable ratt'A. O. O. STfPLFS. Proprietor, O. DEWITT.Manager. ... 1 - u THE LANE INSTITUTE, THE LAN E INSTITUTE f-O. II3& Broadway, it. Jmtt kiulld Irtg, Now York. rorthvTraatmentand cure of LIQUOR, OPIUM AND MORPHINE HABITS. NO HYPODERMIC INJECTIONS. A Pb.lHlT HUM at TKKATMKNT OK BAM TAKIl'M APVAKTAHPS. Stats Normal School ; East Strcudsburg, Pa S Kr'.ihir State Normal Coursea, and S(m-:iu1 lit'piiri.jniMi!i) of Mniiu:, klo- 4, m cut ion. Art, Prating, StenoLrrnphy, ft and TyimwriMm; -irong. oluo J fc-Yep.-uuiory Department. FREE TUITION ilitarding t ptihi$ i per wt-.-k. m Viipiln H'lmi! i' d at any litnu. nt , t,r 'J m-ru u..'Dd lh-c, .'Ui. Write ti-r cnluWuu. to tl. L. Kemp, A. M.f V Principal. m Ta r:'r:;T t.-A u. j li ,y hi- ntrfitr, (1 hy Out U..1. A' i'H t r. lilt r-Alt.r,T H ' 1 i.ii J. H 7 I 1 1 9 IT HATTERS HOT How Sick You Are or How Many Physicians Have Failed to Help You. Dr. David Kennedy's Favorite Remedy will Care You if a Care ii Possible. Doctors are not infallible and tliTf are many instances where they have decided case was hopeless and then the patient astonished everyone by netting well a''l the sole cause of 'their cure, was Ur. David Kennedy's Favorite Remedy. A case in point is that of James Lettuce of Cnna Joharie, N. Y who writes: "Some years ntri I at'i-.kel with plns tn my bat-k an1 Unt wtre fcirful tn the aTtrorr-e I cnti'i OTt ont-ol mv ki-ln.vs tt eli mi wimtramefrom lli.'.'rl was Tru-'ous and b:nnd. I ws ir. a trnhl s'.a'? and n"'cd tntcniy. A promnftnt p-yvi an of Au.nny. N. Y.. riV-id tliat nn oniri'mn was all that would ave rpe. I d'evl'd thu and com-m-ncd to take Dr. Dtvid K innrdy's Favorite Roinedy. 1 leit baiter almost instancy, wtien I had taV-n about tvo bntties. the finw frotn the bladdar was mur.h cK-anr. the ot" stop ped, and 1 was savad from the tuigcon's knife end am now well." Dr. W. H. Morse, the famous physi cian of West field, N. J., has this to 'say of this great medicine : "! have known It to cure chronic Inlam irafion of the kidnnvs, where the r'trnding physician pronounced the ca1 incurahie." No form of kidney, liver, bladder or blood disease, orthe distressing sickness es so common to women, can loni with stand the great curative power of this famous specific. Its record of cures has made it famous in medical circles every where. It is for sale tv all dnigfrtsts in the New BO Cent'SizO and the regular tl.00 sir.e bottles less than a cent a dose. Sample bnttletnvusrh for trial, fret by mail. Dr. David Kennedy Corporation, ftondout, H. Y. Pr. HM Kennedy's Salt Iternm ( ream rtirei OK Sorea, silo an ScrofuloM liceea. (vo. Crlae-Croaa. Ehe wonid rot show t.er love. ah. rot ThouKh In her eyes 'twns halt teveakd; And he was dull at pui2ies i-o Cine romance sttll la veil concealed. Detroit Free Press. Sit Unite. Kind Lady Certainly, we will give you something to cut, my poor fel low. Come in nml tulte a ieat until the meal is ready. Poor Tramp Ah. bless you, my (laughter! This is Heaven! "Oh, r.o, it Itn't; it is n cooking school. M "A what? Fxeuse me, Aunt .lane, but I ain't got it that bad." Phila delphia bulletin. A Comfortlna; Aaanrnnce. "Do you think that 1 am compe tent to fill this government posi tion?" said the conscientious man. "Don't have a moment's doubt," answered the friend, who is rich in worldly experience. "Anybody who is smart enough to get a political place nowadays is smart enough to fill it." Washington (star. Eneter Than Honaerlean Ins;. Samson had just pulled the temple down on himself. "You see." he gasped, "it will do away with the spring house clean ing." Iienllzing too late what a great mar he was. the people made haste to ao r.im reverence. jN. Y. Tribune. laveatlona That sell. Two inventors want to see you, sir. One has a rapid-firing gun. war ranted to kill 50 men in SO f ecor.ris, and the other has a new patent life saving apparatus. Capitalist Show in the man with the gun. Kick the other fellow out. N. Y. Weekly. More rraetleal. He (ardently) If had you to en courage me, I feel confident that, some day, my nnme would be re corded on the tablet of tame. She (lightly) What'a the matter with the financial register! llrook lyn Life. A Marvel. "What do you think is the most extraordinary invention of the age?" "The phonograph," answered Mr. Meekton, promptly; "the way that machine stands and talks back to Henrietta positively takes my breath away." Washington Star. AbBfylatelr Pat Hope. "She is the inot inconsistent woman I ever knew." "Xcver does what she ought to or what you expect, eh?" "That, is just it. Sometimes she does." She is inconsistently inconsis tent." X. Y. Times. Hat Mia Fault. Itobbie I saw you kitting my sifcler, and 1 want ten cents. C'astleton Hut you are mistaken, Hobble. I wasn't kissing your sit.tr. "Same thing you could if you bad wanted to." Brooklyn Life. Mailer of W ill. Smiles Will power is a great thing. Now 1 have sulbcient will power to either keep on drinking or stop. Giles Yes, I've noticed that every time you see a saloon you slt:p. Chi cago Daily News. atatSattCOfctuMba. 'lealth " For 25 years I have never missed taking Ayer'i Sarssparilla every spring. It cleanses my Mood, makes me feel sironr;, and docs me good in every way." John P. Hudnetle, Brooklyn, N.Y. Pure and rich blood carries new life to every part of the body. You are invigorated, refreshed. You fctl anxious to be sctive. You become strong, steady.cGursous. That's what Aycr's Sarsrparilla will do for you. il COaUula. All dmfit.l. amir"?-? f RAILWAY TRAVELING RISKS. The. Mnen of nclnnil Snld to fie Murh Snfer Thn n 1 hoae of Thla ( fianlry. Ic 1'ifll train acridriils did not rnuse the der.fh of a single pnsenrri.r in the llrfti-di isleu, though this was the fiiv-t year in railway history in which no prnfifyir. a result was ahown, according to th'e l.ondfui Mai'. Against this the statistical report ot the infrstate coitunerce commission of the I'nited States shows that in the yenv ending June M: Knit) the latest figures available IM'J passen- rrers were killed und l.l-S were in jured in rnilwny neeidents in the I'nited States. Ineludinp; deaths mid injuries to employes nml tri'spnssera the fifrures reaeheti a total of 7.q,'5 killed and ,'0,:i''0 injured. Many of the accidents in which these casual ties arose were due to carelessness on the part of railway servants. ihe reports of the ICnlish railway companies in l'.Hit indicated that, by nccidents directly or indirectly con nected with railways the best fig ures that enn be compared with the prered intr proup 1.277 persons were killed and IS. .17.1 injured. Hallway accident insurance rnt-.'s In the states are far burner than tiiose existine; here, which are infin itesimal ns compared with the pre miums charged for general insurance against nccidents. It will be seen how good a risk railway accident in surances are for Knglish companies when it is said that the average num ber of fatal accidents among passen gers is only about one In every 4.0(10, 000 per annum, or ten persons in the whole population. Futhcrmore, most of the Knglish companies offer dou ble payments in case of death by railway accidents. GETTING DRUNK ON BREAD. Chemist Suva II t an He Hone If One Eata F.nonah o' e lrrrali Article. "You could get drunk on fretli bread if you eat enough of it at one time," said a chemist ton woman with a white ribbon in her buttonhole. "1 don't believe it," the woman an swered, reports the l'hiladelphia ltec ord. "And yet it is a fact," the chemist pursued. It used to be thought that the alcohol w hich bread in its ferment ing generated all passed out in the baking, but Thomas Kolas, a distin guished scientist, has proved that bread, after it is ready for eating, st ill contains alcohol. I myself analyzed the other day 12 loaves of fresh bread, and found that they contained on the average alcohol in the proportion of .314 per-cent. When, therefore, you have eaten 100 pounds of bread yon have consumed five ounces of alcohol. That is quite as much alcohol as you get in a pint of whisky. "You, madam, eat, 1 fancy, about 30 pounds of bread a j ear. That is 3,500 pounds in ten years. In those 3,500 pounds there are 175 ouncesof alcohol, which is the same as 17 quarts of w his ky. Think of it! Every len years you consume 17 quarts of whisky with your bread !" "I don't believe it," said the woman with the white ribbon. CAPACITY FOR SILENCE. Rnft'linh Pro pie I-end Those of All Other Xntlnna In Ihe Art of Keenlnir Still. The Anprlo-Knxon race, ncoordinf? to a writer in the Lontlon Queen, hr.s a tremeniloiiH en pari tj- for silence. "Re cently," he says, "I have been traveling: and seeing at close curirtera people of nearly all European rations, as well as Americans. Arabs, negroes and Her bert?, Of these the English and Ameri cans seem to have must closely laid to heart Kosf-.enus doctrine regardinp the vanity of continual chattering. I oficn see Knglish people sitting in sol emn silence at their little table? in the saile-a-manper, reanlinfr, vvith a cer tain frigid purprise, their chattering and lanhing neighbors. Americans may be. as they are often Raid to be. brilliant converwntionnlintB in general society, hut they have apparently lit tle to say in the family circle. French family parties-- make their vtc!Kin ring with their Fallies. (Germans lift the roof with their gnttcrnl uproar. The peculiar, complaining Round of Italian voices seldom ceases even for a mo ment, but I have nern an American coupie sit through dinner in unbroken filtnce, and in the hotel in which I am now (slaving, I (line every evening at the table next to an American father, mother and tm strapping daughters, w ho tekioiii ut ter a win d and never carry on continuous eonverpai ton.' The America it Nile. Tiiifi name, Mr. li. II. Kin bes. of the agi icuit iii al cxpei in.cnt tstation at Tucson. Ariz., myt. is applicable to the river Colorado because of its nosibili tit as a fource of irrigation for the elhiviiil bottom lands tlmt surround it P.etween 400.000 and M0,(MK acres of these lands have been surveyed. The Colorado resembles the Nile in being subject to an annual summer rise suf ficient to overflow ihe extensive areas of its bonier and delta land. Its si It also possess great fertilizing proper ties, sy that lamia irrigated with the Cn him do muddy wa ters rrijui re no additional fen ill at ion. Mr. Korbes vers that when the Colorado is fu!!v uti'iied it will become ''the mot her of an occidental Egypt." A filramrr'i Momentum. Ex peri ii, e n t s show that a large ocean steamer, g"ing at knots an hour. w ill move o i-r a '(! ihta nee of t o niitet after hs engines are Mopped and re veiled, anti no authority jivea lets than a mile or a mile and a iiaif as titer quired spm-e to ttop its progreK. O ANTED Fnithful pirson to trHVt-1 for well etnblishod house in a few counties, calling on retail iiiereliantH rnsil agents Local terri i tory. K.ilary tlO.'J n year and ex penses, 'uyuble J19.T0 a week in cali and expense advanced I'oi ti'in permanent. Bu.Miiess sueefv ful Bud msliing. Standard lluusw, L'taiborn !-t. CliivKS-J. 6 1-3 TKMPTIXCi A MUSTEK nv c. (s. iitivii,i. (Jorpe EfJinri & Co. wcie oipnnid at 11, At tirt U'u.ts to hive hern Eianri" ft H rndTron, tor Hiny Hrndei sn flnsthe junior pnnrrr. Atterwn'd it df-ulp.l th'it it ; i i t I ri hp better to muke Nellie Kinn f'W tlir? nilice boy. nml, in nilr to avoid on plenant comiilicjitioii. sut li aa lit i y . !hpy made liet- a member of thrhim. with the under! :i ml in that s!ie warn to be a dcct.Ieiliy silnnt pmtner. The Hun of Kriiriei & Co. traniirled a job T"'in'ii'S bn-ineN, (Jeorfre had Ihcii presented w i t h a handpreKS that wa too lnrne tn be reir.i riled n men toy. and Harry' father had piven hi )n seveial new fonts of type. Kv pool ing their intere!! thr found tbnt they w onld hnve a enn-ddeiable stork. n t-iry rrtiinl to a c'Tner nml drew up the 1;h t nei -.hip. Mi . Et urn-is le;iH.'d space in his stable to the new mm for 2n ernt a week, with the express uniierstanditiff that they cleaned their tjpe with lye instead of beii.ine. Itolli boys hml firown familiar with type setting thronph Harry's wmaller pre. and noon they not only lmd tht ir printing nflice etabli-lied, but they were in proud ob--to--ion of a tin bufine s'Kti. made for theni by the rcjjular rign painter in return for lt0 huitie" cards. The prtrentu of the headw of the firm wpre mildly kepttenl as to the in! inn powers of the concern, but before the month ton over thov had to admit it was ftrietly bnnes. There were internal dw-rnMom. of course, a when Harry made the ridiculous rate of two cents a dozen for pome caid to Erank Seymour because (Jertio Seynumr wan a pretty pirl. (ieorge retaliated by printing fiertie her self another two dozen cards for nothing at all, anil after that he and not Harry car-, tied ber school books home for her. Eor n week huine-" was MiMcnded. jnd the firm was threatened. Then Nellie told Ham of an order that amounted to a whole lobar and a quarter, and a truce was patch ed up. the leading feature of which was the understanding that prices were to be fixed by the three partners ntjoint see-ion. Nellie canvassed for orders, and they final ly grew so prosperous that they decided to have a letter head and call themselves a "Printery." I hey even latd in a new line of fancy cards. and were considering the idea of getting out comic Valentine, when the town election came and gave them higher ideals. There were no job otlues in the town. for Ha-ting- wa not large enough to sup port a local paper. The day of the election the mail train was wrecked and the ballot. that had been ordered from the county seat were burned in t be express car. Then the town clerk tinned to the printery. The pi-briery promptly turned out the ballots. Later in the afternoon Tlioma Jackson put in an appearance. Mr. Jackson was the richest man in Ha-ding. He was running for ofHie on an independent ticket and the town clerk had conveniently ioigottcn to provide hi ballots. The printery was very tired. From the lenior partner to the silent one they had hurried to get the regular job out, and now here was Mr. Jackson insisting that they print another set. ''Never mind making a price," he said; "Ell make it all right with you; only have the baljots down at the town hall at 8 o clock and see that no one ge'.s them but me." Mr. Jackson had been gone only half an hour and the forms were abuo.-t completed when the town clerk entered. "Has Jack-son been here," lie demanded. The children said that he had. The clerk unfolded a crisp $10 bill. "I paid $o for the other ballots," he said smoothly. "I am willing to pay $10 for t he ones Jackson ordered, and you won't even have to print them. Just upset that type and tell him you couldn't get them ready. Ell leave the money now. 1 can truart to your honor." The three looked at each other. Fifteen dollars for the printery in one day was a terrible temptation. The clerk had ordered two sets of ballots, so that they eouid not very well charge Mr. Jackson more than half that sum for his single set. It was an awful temptation, but George was equal to the situation. He picked up the bill. - "Mr. Stevens, " he called after the re treating figure. "Better take this. The printery of Eraneis & Co. intends to do right by all of its patrons." Stevens turned angrily. "What do you mean?" he demanded. "Don't you want the money?" "We want the money," George retorted quietly, "but we want honest money." With a face red with anger Stevens snatched the bill and at these tne time etruck out at the boy. George swiftly stepped to one side, and instead of hitting him Stevens arm swept over the table and upset the can of lie with which they had been cleaning the type. With a howl he dashed out of the place. for the lye had spilled tftr his leg. Two L 1 . . . , .. t cV,,.' 1. 1 trousers was well circulated about the vil lage. That evening the printery made delivery of the Iwlhits to Mr. Jack-on, ami after the most exciting contest in the history of the town Mr, Jackson was elected. Tne children sent him a bill for $2.50, but beyond a note of thanks they received no reply for more than a month. Then one Saturday afternoon one of the Jackon trucks drove up to the door of the printery and unloaded a brand new press and huge boxes of type. With it was a note from Jackson which read: "My Dear Children I send payment for my bill, which you will ph-a-e receipt. The siorv ot how vou withstood Stevens tempta tion is known to me, and I know that you saved tt:e election lor me. 1 am sending a prcs, which -I hope will be frequently put to my serviie. I need a lot of printing and shall ee that the printery of Eram,i--8M "o gets my work, since it has proved themt lve to he reliable, l.iithltply your, Thomas Jackon. Eor a moment nothing was heard in the ufhve. T!im, even the i-iient partner let out a ell ttiat startled the head of the family ami nrougm mm out to see il another can of Ive had been upset. The printery has a bank account now and the haiuUonie&t printed cheek in tie vdhpe with the hue. ."Orticul Printery ft the VilUge of Hatihg."Ho...ton Globe. Proprietor (who ha been looking over the account) .Mr. awle, no vou ev r take any money out of the culi di a tver 'r' Sa!eman 'T occasionally tnke out a car fa! e." Proprietor "J Km. h'm! Do y.u live in San Ei am ico or itka iIjit.,-4 Transcript. "George ay hit father will cut him eff wiih a ninlling it he iu-itk upon maityih me." "And what did you .?'' "1 r minded in in that papa ut a lawyer and that he'd be glad to lake up the cae again M, hw father' eatme on harea," Cleveland Kiam Dealer. When you want a pleasr.nt pbysie try C'bamlx'iliiiii's Stomiu'h fltn! Liver Tubleta. They a;e easy tn ake and pleasant in effect. For sale) by lioUU & Sun, Matninoras. all general ntnres in Pika county. Dress making in all branches. Will go to tlui hoUHO cr do the work it homo. Address Maky Luowkj, liiuaj btreet, Wdfoi'd, THE ENVY OF OUTSIDERS. 1 1 my W tin ( Rnniil Force n Fnl rftnrl. Into aor(.ty (lpaort to Ahnnr nf It. Tbe nbtie nf surety 1 a fnvorito neenpji I ion u ilb most people w bo rinnot force nn entrnncp into It. It i not even new. Cynics nml satirists, prencbers nm! writers bave wnp-cd war on socinl iimcmsirH nil down the l(s, writes 'A Countess.'- in the London Outlook. We bnow bow I'in Icl denounced the ltab Ionian court nml bow Horace revealed the profli gacy of Anjrnstnn Home. Every lend er of n rcge nerntinp movement, whether It be St. llerimrd exhorting to crusades, St. J'nincis tenchlni; I'topiitn poerty or John Knox preaching reformation, has de nounced the easv tmrnlH nnd the eas ier standard of the toleration of cur rent society. The reformers of every Hte denonncp their own eontcmpoi nries In accents of varying deirrpcs nf violence, ltosseau and Ynltntrc ponred ont tliatribcs from different points of view iifrninst the frtvoloim oeielv which was cut off so nbrnptly by the puillotinp. but their dennncln ttons fell on diaf enrs. "Nobody." said Talleyrand, "could have nay con ception of bow plea -ant society conhl be who had not lii'd before the French revolution." To reform those who will not be reformed is difllcnlt. The prandmother of Ambrosiiip hold ing n scented nochet bnndhercliief to her nose to keep off the odor of the crowd ns hp tripped to the guillotine nnd Marv. Queen of Scots, yawning in the face of Knox, exactly typify the attitude of nil ages toward the Jerptnbihs hammering nt the portnls of societ v. MEN INFERIOR TO CATS. Srvrrnl I'olnta In lYhlch the Frllnc linn the AdvantiKr Ovpr tlie Unman Sppplea. Tlierp are several points in which man is inferior to the cnt. The cat, for ime thing, has no vermiform ap pendix, and consequently never suf fers from nppendieltis. Fnthermore, while man has chosen to be n noc turnal ns well ns n diurnal creature be has only the. diurnal vision; whereas the eat. devoting "its days to eivilizal ion nnd its nigiits to bnrbar ism." can see in tiie dark ns well ns in the light, having n patent adjusta ble eye. says the New York Mail nnd Kxpress. Slip possesses nine lives nnd nil of them have to be taken In order to get rid of the eat. If the red slayer thinks he slays be knows not well the subtle wnvs in which this admir able cert nre passes, turns nnd brings forward ber successive entities for obliteration, llrowned in the pond ehe returns to the woodshed or the kitchen door, requiring to be shot. Shot, she comes back to be n.sph' inted. Smothered by the fumes of chloroform, she revives and calls for prussle ncld. She is n walking, liv ing, breathing, vociferating exempli Mention of the principle of metemp sychosis. Her reincarnations in one brief period outrival those to which man is condemned by the Hindoo theology in hundreds of years and her avatars outnumber liuiUlna s. It Is no wonder tbnt the Kgyptinns worshiped the cat. She has been able to get bold of some principle which man, the boaster, who vaunteth him self almost a god, is denied. PASSING OF OSAGE HEDGE. Blllea of l eneea llnve Dlaannraref glnee the Invention of llnrbed Wire. The osage hedges which border thou sands of Illinois farms nre gradually disappearing. This hedge, int rodueed a half century ago by Prof. J. B. Turner, of Jacksonville, became very popular, and for many years was a favorite fence, not only with farmers, but with lot owners In the smaller towns, and with the railroad companies, says the Chicago Inter Ocean. The high price of fence posts and lumber made the osage an eeononiicnl fence, nlso, nnd in spite of its faults it gradually beenme extensively used. It held its own until wire fencing Ap peared. Then it beenme evident that t lie osnge was doomed. Wire fencing was more effective, was cheaper, tool; up less room and required Jess enre. The rnilronds began grubbing up their hedges nnd substituting wire. The farmers followed their lead, nnd where there used to be miles of hedge there are only rods of it now. Tlie osage is still used for wind breaks, but owing to the fact it is in jurious to vegetation near it is beeoin ing a fixed idea-it w ill probably soon be abandoned entirely. Cuttle In the W eat. "More cattle are being raised in the west than ever before. Punches of thousands of acres have been divided Into fciuall farms, but each fanner raises much more in the aggregnte,- faid Hubert S. Faulkner, of Kansas City. "It Is true the big ranches of 20 years ago have disappeared, but these lands are held in smaller parcels by farmers who nre largely engaged in raising corn and feeding stock. Where there were formerly herds of several thousand cattle there are now nianv small farmers who raise from 20 to -0 head of cat! le annually. Tlie horse and node business has been on the boom fur several yeura. and that time the im pression that the cattle raising had become a side issue. During the Hoer war the llrltish made the raising of horses and mules quite a profitable business for us in the western statea.M Millions Sent Abroad. The money seni to relatives abroad every year by foreigners living in tLis country is at least 10,0O0,0UU. Our ice niuriicii il we luil. Auy one ueuaiug iL-ich ninl dt!(.i-ijiiou of auy invention wi!t promptly receive our cpiuton free cuuccrniug toe palrutal.ilit y ot same. " iluvv to ublaiu a I'd u-nl " (c ut upon ifijiiot. 1'jtcut kvckuicd in i on i.' h us h ive t ti-et lor h.i le at our ex pcitsc. i'.Otulx liikru out thonivih us receive jtciul nsit'-t , Mitlwitcliiti in I iih i'at.n r KUU IIJ, u i) lu( tHU'it Hint M iilrl y ci 1 1. u l.i lt d juui iidl, coiisiilu i )y M.iioif.t. -tint-' and luvcitui &, btud tor iw.iu..e tupy f Hfc t, Aildieaa. VICTOR J. EVANS & CO. latent Attorneys,) (vara Building, WASHINGTOt;, O C xv. few Hello SAW Wo arc now lo cated at the corner of Front and Sussex Streets. KANE, Telephone NEW GOODS I MOST LIBERAL OFFER OF THE YEA . Dry Good, Fancy Waist Patterns, Ginghams, Outings, Flannel and Flannelettes, Denims Drapery, Underwear, Gloves, Hats, Caps, Fancy Crockery, Lamps & Glass Ware, Felts & Rubbers, Etc. etc. LOTS OF GOODS SUITABLE FOR TIIE HOLIDAYS. W. & G. MITCHELL'S, MILFORD, PA. FINE GROCERIES FLOUR BUTTER CHEESE SELECTED TEAS PURE COFFEES TABLE NUTS RAISINS PLUM PUDDING CANDIES ORANGES - LEMONS FIGS DATES GRAPES ETC, ETC TOBACCO AND CIGARS SPORTING GOODS & AMMUNITION , A. 0. WAlLAGjIj Telephone CJI 62. DO YOU EXPERT TO BUILD? THEN SEE A. D. BROWN and SON, Manufacturers and dealers In all kinds of Lumber, Contractors and Builders. Estimates made ; personal atten tion given and work guaranteed OFFICE, Crown's Building, f.liifard, Pa "BEST OF ALL FLOUR, FEED, MEAL, BRAN, OATS, and HAY. When in need of any to No. ')., or come to KILL MILL MILFORD. PA THE 5HOEMAN, Call P J. 184. The Mew York Tribune Farmer Is ".national ill 1 list rot oil agricultural weekly for farmers and their families, and stands nt tho head of the agricul tural press. His u practical paper for practical farmers, helping them to secure the li.rircst. possihle profit from tho farm through practical methods. It Is entertaining, intriictivo and prnotlcnlly useful to tho farmer's w Ife, sons and daughters, whose interests it covers In no attractive iminnnr. Tho regular price is f.1.110 per year, but for a limited time we will re eive your subscription for THK NEW YORK TKliilj.sK KAK.MKK and also for your own favorite local newspaper, THK J'RK.SS, Milford, Pa. Both Papers One Year for $1.65 Fend your o'.ler nml money to THE PRESS. Y'our name and address on a postal card to THE NEW YORK TIUHUME FARMER, Now Yjrk City, will bring you free samplu copy NEW GOODS!! Harford St., Hilford, Pa
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers