JUDGEJSLMIGy Of Hornellsville,N.Y., Hands Down an Important Decision Jurlgw Tame H. Clancy of Hornelln ville, N. Y., and one of the most prom Inent members of the, bnr in that historic town, docidrd recently thnt as agsinst Htood and Liver trouble, Dr. David Ken nedy's Favorite Remedy was worthy of the hijfhest praise. He sayi : "I have used Dr. David Kennedy' Favorite Romedy and ltronjrly rec ommend it for its sood effect in my case for liver trouble and blood dis order. It built me ritrht up and I improved frreatly In health." Geo. H. Tifft of 878 River street, Troy, N. Y., suffered from liver trouble and hi blood was all out of order and after usinf 'Favorite Remedy," hcs this to say : "For anyone suffering: from that run down or tired out feeling, caused by blood or liver trouble, Dr. David Kennedy's Favorite Remedy is the best medicine you can buy. I hava used it and t know." The one sure cure for diseases of the kidneys, liver, bladder and blood, rheu matism, dysprpsia and chronic constipa tion, is Dr. David Kennedy' Favorite Remedy. It matters not how sick you are, how long you have suffered, or how many physicians have failed to help you, Dr. David Kennedy's Favorite Remedy will cure von if a cure is possible. It is for sale by all druggists in the Nw BO Oftnt Sim and the regular 1 1.1)0 sine bottles less than a cent a dose. Sample bottle enough for trial, free by mail. Dr. David Kennedy Corporation, Rondout, H. Y. Hr. Parti InnMr's (lolfifa Plnfre atrenirth B Kaaolee, remove pain anywhere. l&ceeck. The new spal for the department of commerce and labor la now being made, representing a ship of com inerce, an anvil and hammer symbol of Industry and labor and an Ameri can eagle and arms denoting the national scope of the department. Washington is enjoying a carnival of disclosures. In addition to Post offlce officials under arrest for bribery a shortage of $75,000 has been found in the accounts of the auditor for the District of Columbia due to the peculations of a "trusted clerk." The complacency with which the Servian people kill their king and queen and celebrate, the event with fire-works would Indicate that they are about on a par with some of the immigrants who have been coming to this country. AUTHORITY CF THE AMERICAN PEOPLE can well be claimed of a book 1 .l.-L t i 1 Jl - ! H mat iias receivea tne unquali fied indorsement of the Executive Departments of the Government, the U. S. Supreme Court, all 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 2:?G4 quarto pages with 5000 illustrations. 25,000 new words and phrases have recently been added under the editorship of W. T. Harris, Ph.D., LL.D., U. S. Commissioner of Education, bringing the work fully up to date. LET US SEND YOU FREE " A Teat in Pronunciation which affords a pl-HHHnt and iuaUucuve eveniuf's enters taiumout. Illustrated pamphlet also free. O. A C. MERMAM CO., Pub.. SprtncMeld. Mitt, IF - Y0H are the proprietor of a hotel or boarding-house yonr chief interest Is to Fill Your Rooms There is a larcer firtlii for guests in Brooklyn New York than in any other city in America. Right in the heart of that city the Brooklyn Daily Eagle maintains two large Information Bureaus that distribute literature end give frne advice regarding bote's, eto. An ad. in the "Eagle" in conuectioa with thin tree Bureau Btsrvioo will result in Fillinz Your 0 w J f (cud at- once fur rates ALl)Hl".SS i.Al,LK 1SKMIMAT1KS Bl KI.H' I ' illvOOhltK 1)111 1 tit.it: I i DKllDiaiS-SlW llllllt i :rr. j r. i .m T :i r The Man Who f Pound Himself. tmmt:m:::mtit!Htttmm!:sirimt By R. Henry Malner. J OSIAH JAMIESON was a aelf mud mnn, and it whs the bonst nf hin old ape. Twenty years had einpned since he lisd rnter'd the limits of the little, hamlrt, where lny buried the golden fm of his future smoeaa es, Slid which as time passed some railroad ofllcial bad deaignated as Black Rock. In making himself Jostah Jamlesnn had fathered the upbringing of the town, and with the instinct of a far seeing speculator had possessed him self of the lion's share of It. He had also founded the business which had set him above the ordinary eares of living and comfort. His stores were very cosmopolitan In their lines of merchandise, com prising mill supplies, mining outfits, groceries, and articles of wear for the Inhabitants. He also dabbled somewhat In lumber and the solitary saw-mill on the neighboring liver bank was embodied in his deeds of ownership. As his age crept upon him he real ized th.it his interests needed the hand of one more skilled in the mat ter of books and figures. So it was that one bright morning found a stranger poring over the dusty ledg ers, and Josiah standing Idly by, puffing his pipe with the self-consciousness of a man who has known prosperity. Besides this goodly share of world ly possessions, Josiah had an only child, a daughter, and his intentions regarding her were in accordance with what he considered his heir should require. To this end her home trnlning was all that a doting parent could devise. When she had turned 17 he sent her east, where, under the strict eye of a maiden aunt, she was to be schooled in the accomplishments necessary to a lady of culture. r The new bookkeeper had spent a half-year of work within the pre cincts of the little back office, and certainly he had brought remark able order and system out of the chaos into which the affairs of the firm had drifted. This gave Josiah much satisfaction, and he had i marked to" a friend in a burst of confidence, that "The fellow Is a rare one at figures and very obliging to boot for an ordinary colleger. A letter arrived at this time from his daughter, bringing the announce ment that she had completed her term of education, and also a trip across to the seats of fashion in the old world, and that she was return ing home for a well-earned holiday and rest. As usual, the proud father made his morning call at his office and with forced calmness proceeded to inspect the work of his secretary, adding a few words of condemnation or praise as the case demanded. Then he shifted to the main object of his visit. "I want Tou to take the eart and go to the station to meet my daugh ter Jean, whom I am expecting on the ten o'clock train. I think the drive would do you good, and I will keep the desk until you return. So it came about that Torn Bur rows met Jean Jamieson. Months later Tom Barrows re viewed his past with no small amount of displeasure as he sat in his room smoking his pipe of reflection. In some inexplicable manner the whole course of his life had gone wrong lie had already passed the age of 25, when, according to his opinion, every man should have the channel, into which his talents might be directed well grooved to the accomplishment Hi early days had been spent in thoughtlessness and ease; these in cluded three years at college where he had intended to graduate a full- fledged M. D. However, circumstances often ruin plans for the future. When he suddenly discovered that it was cramping his father's waning income and also seriously hindering the chancea of his younger brothers and sisters, of which he had a goodly number, he determined to utilize his abilities in a more practical and less expensive sphere. His decision had come as a severe blow to his mother. who held him, her oldest boy, a cherished Ideal, who should be a trifle better than the ordinary, no mat ter what the sacrifice, but se it was r No Hair? "My hair i falling out very fist and I was greatly alarmed. 1 then tried Ayer'i Hair Vigor and my hair stopped falling at one. " Mrs. G. A. McVay, Alexandria, O. The trouble is your hair does not have life enough. Act promptly. Save your hair. Feed it with Ayer's Hair Vigor. If the gray hairs are beginning to show, Ayer's Hair Vigor will restore color every time. SI N a Mile All inwliu. If yftur dritf!'i,it cai-not n"'ly you, aaiitl utt U' -,.r and e etprera y-iM a biKlift. lit: tl!C ttil'l '!V U'V Ii.Ui i JUUI lirdrfsi t: it,', i.!,:. Aanw,, H. E.Em erson, M. D. Physician and Surgeon. OFFICE in Drug Stcre on Bread 1 :- lMitliii"? J.! itY Ll I -w 1 Lit t.:i t., j l.rtuirlft 3. M'vi'dji'ii. thai he accepted the position under the worthy iniienale of Itlark ltook. Thfn to think that this sprig of girl hnri well-n'gli upset his whole career. Full wcil tits memory pic tured thnt morning four months be fore when he had driven the homely amily cart to the depot to meet this daughter of his employer, and how he had treated him with striking hsuteur. She had even mistakrn him for her father's coachman, and yet her very prudishness seemed but to lend a glamour of romance to her, which had caught him in a veritable web! How often she hud entered her father's store, accompanied by some of the youthful pr,fesionals of the place, and seemed to delight In siring her superiority to this common office man! True, her pet tishncss end affectations sat well upon her dainty figure, and a certain Indefinable odor of perfume seemed to pervade the dinginess of the office when she entered. At times he seemed to see beyond her outward nature, and at these rare Intervals he caught a momentary glance of a character which, if ailowed to as sert itself, might have endcRred her to the coarsest mortal. He often noted how old Josioh watched her every move, and how the staid, old fashioned home of the Jamlesons be came the center of the fashionable house parties and afternoon teas. Then as a crowning tribute to the witcheries, young r. Ames, voted by all the mothers of marriageable daughters as the swellest match in the district, had quite lost his heart to this coquettish little heiress. Bince the day of their first meeting Tom had fought down his feelings by applying himself to his desk with redoubled vigor, endeavoring to con vince himself that his opinion of her was much the reverse of favorable. On this night In question he had ceased to wrestle, and upon the eve of resignation to the hand of fate he had summed tha whole matter up and voted himself one of the great est fools thnt ever lived. A square pink envelope lay unopened upon his dresser, and after, arriving at this fairly satisfactory conclusion he tore off the head and scanned the con tents, although he could hove guessed what it contained. It was an invita tion which the youthful mistress of the Jamieson household had sent him, to spend the evening, no doubt prompted by the advice of her father. The weather had developed Into one of those January blizzards which pe riodically sweep across the" North west prairie, almost overwhelming the town which lay within its circle, and Tom was loath to brave its fury for such a cause, and yet uncon sciously he began to dress, and in time he had reached the home of his employer. To his surprise he found that but one guest besides himself had been bidden, none other than Dr. Ames, who of late had been almost a constant visitor. Supper had been served. While Jean and the doctor conversed in low tones at one end of the long drawing-room, Tom sat at the other with Mr. Ja mieson and exchanged mutual con ft dencea on the business aspect of tha coming season. Yet he was not whol ly indifferent to the scene before him. The little lady looked peculiar ly bewitching and altogether dis dainful, and to his eye she was play ing her cards with the young medical with a tact and grace which appar ently absorbed his entire attention. The hour was wearing slowly along, to Tom especially, and then a hur ried summons at the door brought Mrs. Jamieson from the regions of the dining-room in answer. A sudden noise, as of people scurrying past, followed, and Tom realized that tha call of fire had been raised. Mrs Jamieson cried out in a frightened voice that it was the mill, and then Tom had passed her in the hallway, and was out on the street. Already the flames, caught by tha storm that howled without, were lighting up the town like a new sun The scene of indescribable con fusion which ensued could never be forgotten by those mora intimately concerned. The crude fire-fighting apparatus frozen solid, refused to work, and as the red streamers wrapt about the mill and swept across the roofs of the warehouse and stores adjoining, the people knew that Jo siah Jamieson'a worldly possessions were doomed. Tom, looming out in the released mettle of a college athlete, made her culean effort to stay the ruin. Fol lowed by a number of men he thawed the hose, directed the streams of wa ter, helped to throw out the goods from the store, cleared the office of its precious books and papers. In fact, storm or hent mattered little to him then, for a cowering female, wrapped in a mighty fur-lined cloak, had looked up into his grimy fuce through a mist of tears and had said something. He never tarried to hear what it was, but leapt again into tha battle roynl. In the early morning a smoulder ing heap of ashes and half-burnt woodwork alone marked the spot where Jamlecon s store and mill had stood, and around it in a jumbled-up mass was the merchuntlibe which hud been suved. Only one small building which had been used as an office had missed the fury of the flames, and that was only through the gi guntic efforts of the men and a for tunate veering of the wind. Jotiiuh Juinieson had been seized with a paralytic strike during the dcttrut-tiou of his property and lay at his home with two doctors in con stant attendance, and to Tom fell the tittik of managing this almost inex tricable condition of affairs. Sud denly from a quiet oltice-uiun he had assumed ua air of general manager ami gave his order and went about Cuts, Bruiies and Burns QaSckiy Htalas Chamberlain a t'uin li tlm is an antiseptic liniment, and whoa ap plied to cnta, bruses and burns cftum-K tlieu to heal without tniitu ratiuii mid much more quickly than by tha o-.ual tivatnimit. For aula by batch &: f-i:r., Miitatnot'tiH, all general st-jit-b in I'ike county. M work as If It was Ms own. And! how he strove. Two, three and four weeks passed and the insurance hsd been settled, a warehouse hnstlly erected, new goods bought, and plans for a much more pretentious store of brlek considered and selected. As soon as possible business hud been commenced and everything that could be done wns done, and all this time Josiah Jamieson could not more hand or foot, but lay In his home and thanked heaven thnt such a mnn as Tom Burrows lived. In the ofllce a new bookkeeper sat dlligenlly fath oming the mysteries of the files of statements and sheets of figures, and when Tom came in after his day's work and examined the efforts of his junior, and oftentimes with studied severity corrected this or dis entangled that, Jean Jamieson blushed and held her face closer to the books. Thus they spent night after night. Then a letter came to Tom from home, and It contained news of much Import to him. His father, by some lucky disposal of property, hari tided over the depression and was again in financial position to assist his son, and even dictated what that son should at once do. All day he mood ily pondered over the contents which, strange to say, had brought no joy to him, but In the evening he threw his whole mind Into the office work with such fervor that Miss Jean had to stand idly by in wonder. At last the task was completed and he turned about and looked his helper squarely In the face. With a woman's per ception she read trouble in his gaze and her cheeks blanched to a whiter hue. The deep traces of the unaccus tomed worry and toil were painfully apparent. Miss Jean," he began, looking away into space, "I have news from home to-da3-, and perhaps it Is bad news for somebody, too. You can get Johnson from the store to take my place as he 'knows the affairs more clearly than any of the rest. and then as spring comes on and your father gains in strength, you can va cate this hovel and enjoy a well earned vacation." Burrows could not repress a feeling of humiliation almost akin to shame, as he repeated this lost sentence, ond also discerned a tear slowly gather ing in those saucy blue eyes out of which the fire had well-nigh burnt Itself. 'Perhaps we can get along without you, lorn or Mr. Burrows I should say," Bhe repented nbsenth-. Then, with a sudden return of her old spir it, she stamped her pretty foot. "If I were only a man just for one yar; but I can't master those horrid books and my head aches and I'm aick, too." A sob had broken in upon her speech and she laid her golden head upon her arm. Tom felt as if he would appreciate a sound kicking. Instinctively lie placed his hand upon her hair and in a fatherly way ha atroked it sooth ingly- A few minutes of silence passed and then she was herself again, and as she regained her composure her angry eyes shot dangerous glances. You may go away if you like, and we can live without you. We did so be fore you came and we will do so again as long as I can see to write." A smile crept into Tom's face at the defiance and ha almost whis pered, "Do you want me to stay, Jean?" "No, you horrid beast of a man, a thousand times no." The words were strongly put, but the face belied the meaning, and Tom caught her in his strong arms and there alter a mo mentary struggle, she allowed herself to stay, while he asked her to re peat that again if she dared. "Then you'll stay, Tom?" she asked In well-feigned surprise. "Yes," he answered, and she kissed him then and there and that settled the bargain. And so Tom Burrows had found himself. Canadian Magaziua. Extra Baaarloai, "I don't believe we can accept that application for life insurance," said the inspector who had been out to in ve.stiga.t. "Why not?" asked the manager. "Because I have Just discovered that the applicant is such a reckless fool that he has made his ten-year-old son a present of a revolver. I should say that there is a practical certainty of a death in that family soon, and it's just as likely to be the father as th son." Chicago Post, The Clrowlcr. Nothln's food enough for Mm; Wealhti bright, he wants li dim; Winter cornea, with troaly rime, Bwears he'll freeze 'fore aunnntr time! Hummer comte Ua htat la fell Swtare thai he'e a-soln' to melt! Can't half pleoae him. If you try, 8u, don't mind him pais him byl Atlanta Conatltutlon. D1DVT t SE Air, "They've formed the 'soap trust.'" "Well, it won't hurt us." Chicago Chronicle. . 1 1 - - -. - . The Best Ccugh Medicine I sell more of Chaniberlain'a Cough Rfniiidy than of all ainiiliar prepar tios put together and it gives thr bent aatiufaotinn of any medicine I ever sold. I guarantee every bottle of it. F. O JiKiuitli, Inland, Mich. This remedy fur aal by bulch & Son, Klatimioru3, ail goneial Dtoie iu Pllse vouijty, IUTS OF CORNIIUSKS. Die of Rentlaritr Thnt Will Rival the Cotfltlr lennn the Com In; Soinmer. Corn busks during the prernt tea son have been bought up for the pur pose of utilizing them In the manufac ture of a new sU le of hat which may become bolh fnshionnhle and popular next summer, says the Philadelphia Saturday Kvening Post. The material 1h rhenp. Id fact, It Is usually wasted. Properly cured corn husks nre toujrh and may he folded without cracking. Iiampened, they may be made to assume any desired shape. The process of working corn husks into hats is novel, Gomewhat Intricate, and iR protected by patent. It Is shld that, samples already turned out are artistic as well as light and strong. An element which enters Mgnificimt ly into the construction of the hnt is the naturnl shape of the husks, which tuprrin width from base to lip. When split the parts muintaiii this config uration, as they parallel the fiber. - This tnperlng of all the pails has been nn important feature in the man ufacture of the hat. The brim arid top of the hnt ure formed by a series of layers of corn htiks. To impart a novel appearance, the outer end of some of these layersare pointed. Con siderable iiigenuily has been displayed In the entire cnnsti uctloii of the hat even the blind is made of corn husks and It Is asserted that the result, is graceful nnri attractive, and that, though it may be constructed econom ically to be sold nt populnr prices. more expensive brands, requiring ex ceptional skill in the manufacture, will be turned out to meet the demand for hats at fancy prices. 0K1GIN OF " GHKENHORN." Term l.-srd by llunlera MKnf Yaara Aa o UrNlaaalt -Hr with Alllna aailera. The democratic clonkronm of the senate held a congenial company, of whom Mr. Vest,. of Missouri, wns the center. There were scintilla! ions and pithy reminiscences, (he. conversation eventually turning to former Senator Tuiple, of Indiana- All agreed that. he was a man of erudition, and some one ventured that Mr. Turpie, now re siding among his own people In the Iloosier 'slate, is one of the best in formed in belles lellres of any mnn who ever cume to the senate, says the Washington Post. "1 recall, " Interposed Senator Vest an incident along that, line, which demonstrates what a marvel Mr. Tur pie is in his fund of information. I was once in a company wlirro a ques tion arose as to the origin of the term greenhorn.' The question went around until It leached Mr. Tnrple. "'Oh, yes,' observer! Mr. Turpie readily. 'It Is a term that was used many years ago in bunting. The wordi was used of deer which a I certain sea sons of the year have soft and green bonis, and resort to muddy depressions in ttie landscape, where they can plunge those hornii Into the mud and water to cool them. "'There Hie deer become easy prey for the hunteis. and accordingly, be carne known S3 'greenhorns.' From that, we have the use of the word as it Is applied to men." HEIRS OF JOHN HANCOCK. faeentanta ef ihm Americas- Patriot . fm ln-r.taltn for franca Bliollallna Moaer. It looks as if the '"line of descent" from John Hancock of revolutionary fame might, have to be ruu down for the purpose of determining at this late day who are his heirs-at-law, soys the Boston Herald. Though the governor died about 1783, and all his estate then ' apparent was adminis tered upon by Dorothy Hancock, his widow, it has- recently come to pass that Ms estate is entitled to some thing by virtue of a French spoils tlon claim, and In order to receive payment of It supplemental admin istratinn has to be taken out on his estate. A few months ago Mr. George A King, an attorney, upon the request of Mrs. Elizabeth L. H. Wood, upon the supposition that she was tha only heir at law of the patriot, filed a petition In the Probate court for Suffolk county, asking that he be ap pointed administrator of the unad- ministered estate. it now appears that Mary S. Sarford. of Westches ter, say that she is nhe of John Hancock's heirs, and Albert F. Con verse, her counsel, has trad an ap pearance in the case in opposlt on to the petition. The matler is pending in court, no day for the considera lion of the matter having been fixed Little I.oea la Poet Offlre. The post oflice money order depart ment handles obont $300,000,000 a year The loss by the dishonesty and care lessness of clerks has been only $351 In the last two years, but this is part ly explained by the fact that the clerks are made responsible for the money they handle, and any loss is considered theirs. Exaailaatloa af Park. The quantity of pork examined mi croscopically which was exported last year amouuted to 33,881,229 pounds The cost of this work per pound was one-third of a cent. Na Veal la Traaavaal. For two years the slaughter of cows, heifers and calves for sale aa meat is prohibited in the Transvaal, under pen alty of 50 fine or six months' impris onment. Dlaaslera from Voleaaaea. The five volcanoes axtive, last year destroyed, 80,000 iiies. Cliambor!niii' Stomach and Liver Tablets are jnt what you need when you have no apjiotite, feel dull after eating and wake on with a hud tHHte In your uioulh. They will Improve your appetite, cluuwe and invigorate yonr atoiohch and give you a relish for your food. For sale by Biilch & Son, Mfttiirnoias, all general stores iu Pike county, WW Li.J .. t'li When 1 J r.iosT LIBERAL OFFER OF THE YEAR 1 fe .'i-l The Hew York DO YOU EXPEHT TO A. D. BROWN and SON, Manufacturers kinds of Contractors Estimates made ; personal atten tion given and work guaranteed OFFICE, Brown's Building, Milford, Pa D ! 'ware Valley R.R. Corrected to Date S3SS2S5S383: r-1 L- " t C t: : 5a 3b 31 31 r. g a 2 5 3 ; &S33'Si22 83: 3 0. a CO 5 : Mi a . o t 9 1 ?5 1 en (it U J - 2.3 i'Ss tf M 3 J O g3 j? 5. -WHai : 3 jc :o3 SjS ::::::::: : 3 : H fa tf -m ri r " 3d U Si ?i li 3 cc ri 5 '-r 5 E 3 s i a iS. "a, - 5 - ;- ; Z O . to o o to sc art -a o o o 1 si - 71 t ? '. 5 1 I I 1- t- r. t- i je-io; Washington Hotels. RICCS HOUSE. The hotel par excellence of the cnpltal, iocnteil within one bltx-k of the White Houe and thntctly opix.aiie the Treaaury. 1) lueBt table In the oily. V.'ILLARD'S HOTEL. A famous hotolry, remarkable for Its historical asBociarloua and lon-xmbtnined popularity. Keceutly rtnovaUs-1, repainted and partially ref uruUuvd. NATIONAL HOTEL A landmark among the hotela of Wash ington, ucroned iu former yare by prufttdt-ntK and hili oiftciuls. Always a prime fitvurite. kiweutly sviuodvled and ivudortxl Ihht thun evr. Upp. iJa. K. U d.p. V ALT Kit B LUTON, Hea. Mj(r. Tht-tte hotels are the principal politiual ivndt-gvou of the cai'itul at all lliufe. They are ihe beat stopping place at rea sonable ruie. O. O STAPLES. Proprietor. O. DCWITT.Maneger. f ubrtcribe tor the Pkk. "BEST OF ALL FLOUR. ' FEED, MEAL, BRAN, OATS, , and HAY. in need of any Hello to No. 5.. or come to SAWKILL Mill, MILFORD, PA. Tribune farmer is a national llllustrAtcd agricultural weekly for farmers and their families, mid stand nt, the head of the- airrlcul titrnl press. It Is a prnctienl paper for practical farmers, helping theiii to secure the Irtrorest possible profit from the farm through practical methods. It is entertaining, intructlvo nnd practically nscful to the fanner's wife, sons and daiightors, whose interests it covers In an nttrnctlve mnnncr. The rcirulur price is $1.(10 per year, but for a limited time we will ro-.'elvo your suhacriptlon for THK NV YORK TUIBUtNK FARMER and also for your own favorite local newspaper, THE PRKSS, Mllfurd, Pa. Both Papers One Year for $1.65 Send your c-dcr and money to THK PRESS. Your name and nddress on a postal card to THE NEW YORK TRIBUNE FARMER, New Yjrk City, will bring you free sample copy. BUILD? THEN SEE and dealers In all Lumber, and Builders. Most Women Can tell a good shoe when they see it. Tnis illustrates one of the styles of the "La France." We have five others. All cost $3.00. If you will look over the town and compare every other Three Dollar Shoe with this one, you can't help buying the "La France." JOHNSON, o?tf1 SOLE AGENT. -Mb! THE LANE INSTITUTE, THE LAN C INSTITUTE CO. 113 S Broadway. &. Jamas Build I n g, Nsw York. Forthe Treatment and oure of LIQUOR, OPIUM HHP MORPHINE HABITS. NO HYPODEKMIO INJKCTIONS. A FSIlFKCT BOMB THKATMKNT OH BaNI TAHIUM ADVANTAGES. 1 State Normal School ; S East Stroudsburg, Pa S 0 Titular State Normal Court, nnd J 2 SptMiiil pepitrtmtMi'tt of M tmiu, Kin- oution, Art, Drawing, Stenorttphy, ft mid Tyiwwritmtr; Ntnmg College J Pre part) lory Iptirtiutju(. FREE TUITION m A X Bonrtiing ex pen tied $ii M ptr whV. J S Ptipklt mlniiLU-d Mt nuy tiinu. Kitil A IVnti o)vu be 06. VtU. W rlto tut 01 J Citluloguti. A E. L.. Kemp, A. M Pnncipa.1. w I gLjL- ....--w.uy