Is like Haying with a loaded Gun. If you have Kid ney Trouble attend to it at once. It Is essy tn Ml whether ymir Kidney orlila'Mer'arccliseawrt. Take a bottle or glass tutnliler and till It with urine. If there is a sediment a powder-like sub. stance afterstandinn a day and night, if it is pale or discolored, ropy or stringy, there Is something wrong with the Kid revs. Other sure signs of disease ere a deiire to tinn.ue often, jiain in the back, or if your urine stains linen. There Is no question that Dr. Da'id Kennedy's Favorite Remedy. i the best and sure-it medicine In the world for dis eases of the Kidneys, Liver, Rlndderand Blood. Rheumatism, Dyspepsia, Chronio Constipation, and the sicknesses peculiar to women. It quickly relieves and cures Inability to hold urine and the necesnity of getting up a number of times during the night, and puts an end to the scalding pain when passing urine. The Rev. Henry P. Miller, pastor Pap. tist Church, Spartenburg, 8. C, writes: " For years I suffered with Kidney, liver and heart troubles, swimming in the head, dull headache and numb ness of the limbs. Physicians pre scrilwd for me and I took different medicines, but none of them did me any good. But Dr. David Ken nedy's Favorite Remedy cured me in about two weeks." It Is for sale by all druggists In the Nov BO Oent SiiO and the regular fl.OOshe bottles less than a cent a dose. Santfilt bvttU tnenrh for trial, free by mail. Dr. David KennBdy CorporBtlon, Rondout, N. Y. Dr. SivW NMiMSVt War fyras, molt effncHvs ncUicinof ibe kind known. We. Druggists. Hie Iovvn stute convention, without ;!VMrin to reunl the numerous l" ip it ! iiiiMtH niitsiiio of the state enlh wimticMlly endorrfps Governor Cii n iiIih for re-election nnd Hiloptsu ihtfnn on which any niun who b 'lieven In protection can consistently Btirvl, put or otherwise. Of course this Is a serious disappointment to til.' I n icr itic liop-ful. It is not thought that ltussia'a st ni illV'ial hint that she can (ret a! i M'ilh nit this country's advice, will Ci mi so any stupendous niodifieit tion of Secret ry ll-iy's manuscript on fie iCMilnef affair. Oi t!nii'e so:ne of our friends continue to maintain that while President II iiisevelt is doing fairly well for a republican he Is not serv iii the country as would certain democrats wiio could be named. Do your Children ASK QUESTIONS? Of course they do. It is their way of learning and it is your duty lo answer, ion may need a dic tionary to aid you. it won't an swer every question, but tbore are thousands lo which it will give you Iriio, clear and detlnile answers, not about words only, hut about things, Hie sun, machinery, men, places, sloi-jes and the like. Then, loo, the children can find tbeir own answers. Some of our greatest men hava ascribed their power to study of the dictionary. Of course you want the host dic tionary. The most critical prefer the .New and Enlurged Edition of webster's International Dictionary. If VH hnv6 any questions (mFBNmmiAjQ. Bi C. MERRIAM CO.. ta'fti,'. ies 1 PUBLttHKnS, PRINQFISLO, MASS.' IF - YOU are the proprietor of a hotel or hoarding-bouse your chief interoft is to Fill Your Rooms There is n larirer fi-ll for guests in Hrooklyn New York than in any other city in America. Right in the heart of that city the Brooklyn Daily Eagle maintains two largo Information Bureaus that distribute literature nod pive free advice regarding hotels, etc. An aJ. in the "Eacde in connection with his free Bureau soivioo will result in Filling Your House Send at onco for rates Albltl8 IVU.t IStlllDIAII.IS III Kftl' 1H11MIHV.V 1MIIV Kfttil.K JlKoOh LVN-M-.W 1III1K M : -' ::,'' '.'. J 1 l!t ffliLSI h i.i'J, L. tv 1 ..v tl lUl 1,1 via i. A t RELICS OF THE PAST. Oua'nt Customs and Ceremonies Which Endure In England. When the king at the recent privy council selected new sheriffs for the counties of Knu'lnnd and Wales by pricking a hoi" with a rdlver bodkin opposite to each of the favored names on the lint, his mnjnsly was carrying out one of quite a score of Interesting customs that still survive to link the England of Wit with the England of the middle apes. There Is hardly nn important coun ty In the land that does not cherish some noteworthy custom haillnj? from early days In English history. I'roba bly the most Interesting feudal cere mony in existence Is planting the horngnrth, an net of penance which is new In Its ninth century of com memoration, and which has been car ried out every year at Withby without a single break. The penance la for the death cf hermit who sought to protect a wound ed boar but who was slain by Its ferocious pursuer. The horngarth, or penny hedge, Itself Is formed by plant ing a hedge of stakes In the tideway, In the upper part of Whitby harbor, In the presence of the lord of the manor. When the penny hedge is complete, three blasts are blown on an antiquated time-worn horn, which Is in accordance with the prescribed stipulations. This horn is a good five hundred years old, so it has seen con siderable service. A very long way back in the history of England was a time when the high festival of Ceres was exceedingly popular. To this day we have a rem nant of the mystic rites of the Tem ple of Eleusls of the Greeks surviving in the form of the kern-baby. In vari ous parts of the country kern suppers are held to celebrate the conclusion of the harvest gathering, and the kern baby Is carried on blgh by the reapers. The baby Is a straw Image, made from the last sheaf of the harvest, adorned with flowers and with ears of grain. Iteally the kern-baby appears at har vest festivals of to-day as the repre sentative of the ancient Ceres. The most ancient of customs Is still observed in Ireland on June 21. and in the Highlands of Scotland on May 1, according to the old reckoning. This Is belteln, the iestlval in con nection with sun worship; fires ' are kindled on the summit of the hills, and a variety of ceremonies are gone through. Burning the clnvle Is another unique ceremony, whose origin goes back far Into the mists of antiquity. Trobably the rites still observed at Burghead, on the Moray Elrth, have been per formed since the days of the Druids. A tar barrel Is sawn in halves, one half Is filed with tar-covered fuel giv en by the townsfolk, and Is lighted with a piece of glowing peat. The fiery clavle Is borne shoulder-high around the town limits In grand pro cession and Is placed finally on an ancient freestone altar to burn high over the waters of the Elrth. There are various minor weird ceremonies observed as the clavle burns away. Perhaps even more singular are the domestic fires of certain old fashioned farm houses on the Yorkshire dales. These peat fires are vertiable links with the past, as they never go out. Rome have been kept alight for hun dreds of years and have warmed gen eration after generation of dwellers. The Whitby district Is rich In these, and there Is one at Osinotherley which. It Is claimed, has been burn ing 50 years. A handsome quintain is to be seen on the village green at Ofl'ham, in Kent. The local custom is to hoist married men who are not fathers to its top and then to set the quintain revolving rapidly. Throwing the dart Is a picturesque custom which is observed In Cork. Every third year the chief magistrate proceeds to the mouth of Cork Har bor In full state. Eollowiug immemo rial custom, be throws a dart Into the sea a dart with a head of gold and a shaft of mahogany saying: "I cast this Javelin into the sea, and declare that so far seaward as it falls extends the right and dominion of the Cor poration of Cork to and over the har bor as well as the rivers, creeks and bays within the same. London Daily Mail. Married a Century Ago. At Ilanjaluka, In Bosnia, live a man born so long ago that his birth day lias been forgotten, but In the year 1HI2 he was married and was, as his certificate proves, over twenty years of his age. He Is supposed to be at least 1-2 years old. His father, he says, died at eigiity and his mother at 125. The old man is still active, pos sesses an unimpaired set of teeth and has smoked for the last hundred years, but only a dillbouque. Cigar ettes he considers harmful and refuses to accept them. Advertise in the Pkkhs. Your Hair "To years igo my hair til falling out badly. I purchased a bottle of Ayer's Hair Vigor, and socto my hair stopped coming out." Mlas Minnie Hoover, Paris, 111. Perhaps your mother had thin hair, but that is no reason why you must go through life with half starved hair. If you want long, thick hair, feed it with Ayer's Hair Vigor, and make it rich, dark, end heavy. SI OC IMlle. All d..;1ll. j . A V i u I I , I SETTING THE CLOCKS. How Time la Marie Uniform and Cor rected. Ptrauge as It may seem, fncla Fam does not make use of the sun for reo konlng time, but turns his attention to Rome of the regular steady going stars, or "fixed stars," os they lire called. Every clear night an astronomer with a big telescope looks at certain of thee stars and makes his calculations, from which ho can tell Just when the sun would cross the seventy-fifth meridian. Dm of the great clocks In the observa tory Is called the transmitter, because It transmits pr sends out the signal that keeps standard time. This clock Is set and regulated by the star-time, and then every day at three mlnutrs and fifteen seconds before twelve a switch Is turned on and the beats of the pendulum of this clock are sent by electricity over the wires to the tele graph otllces In Washington and New York. When the telegraph opeialors hear this sound on their instruments they know t lint the noon signal is about to be Bent out, and they at once bej-ln to connect the telegraph wires with other towns and cities, until In a minute or two the "tick, tick" of the clock at Washington is heard in hun dreds of telegraph ollices. The beats stop at ten seconds before 12 as a notic e that the next "tick" will be the noon signal, and so as to give the operators time to connect their wires with the standard time balls and clocks. There are time balls in a great many cities usually on top of some prominent building, where they can easily bo seen The one at Washington Is on the roof of the Mate, War arid Navy Department Building, at the top of a high pole, ready to drop the In stant the signal comes over the wire. In the government oltices at Washing ton and in many places In other cities there are large clocks connected with the observatory by electricity. These are so arranged that when the 12 o'clock signal Is flashed over the wires the hands of each one of these clocks spring to 12, no matter what time the clock may show: In this way hundreds of clocks are set to the correct time each day. AVell. the moment the sun Is sup posed to cross the seventy-fifth meri dian the telegraph Instruments give a single tick, the time balls drop, the clocks begin to strike, and everybody In the dlstrlrt knows it Is twelve o'clock. St. Nicholas. A Big Oil Carrier. By far the largest steamship ever built for the transportation of petro leum In bulk has Just been launched at Greenock, near Glasgow. Her name is the Narragansett, and she is to carry oil from the Tutted States to Europe. She Is designed to hold 11, 000 tons of oil, and 1.ron tons more of fuel, liquid or solid. When fully loaded her displacement will be 21, OHO tons. There are bigger ships for other kinds of service, but nothing comparable to the Nnrragansett for canylng oil. Two novel features of the new vessel are placing her engines amidships, Instead of aft, as In other "tankers," and providing means for cleaning her up in a few hours for a cargo of any other kind. In fact, she can take miscellaneous freight In her side tanks, while the central ones are filled with petroleum, if that course be deemed desirable. Marrowfat Peas. These or similar dried green peas are excellent and, the last two or three years, have come greatly to the fore. Usually Instructions are put on each packet how to cook them, and If they are carefully followed, the result Is very successful. Soaking is essential, of course, then afterward they can be cooked by any recipe given for fresh green peas. Should there be any yellowish or greyish pens amongst them after soaking, they ought to be removed, as they take longer to boil than the younger ones. You will find they make the most tempting green pea soup, especially if you boil a ham or bacon bone with theni, or use pot liquor in which fresh or salt meat has been boiled. How Sea Bird Drink. The means by which sea birds quench their thirst when far out at sea is described by an old skipper, who tells how he has seen birds at sea, far from any land that could fur nish them water, hovering around and nnder a storm cloud, clattering like ducks on a hot day at a pond, and drinking In the drops of rain as they fell. They will smell a rain Bquall a hundred mlle3 distant, or even fur ther off, and b ud for It with almost Inconceivable swiftness. The most ancient manuscripts are written without accents, stops, or separation between the words, nor I.ombard street. Iondon, where many was it until after the ninth century that copyists began to leave apace between words. Pawnbrokers first established them selves In Italy, as regular traders, taking pledges aud advancing money on the same, in the year l-4."8, and soon after many came and let op la England. Stamped paper, for walls, or papr hangings, was first made In Holland, about the year 1.V..Y A sort of velvet, or foss, for hangings, was manufac tured In the year Itijo, aluo In Iloh land. Bowling Is an old English game, snd was very common as early as the thirteenth century. Charles I. played at it. and It was a daily sport ot Charles II., at Tunbrldga. Cholera InUntum This has loiii Leon regarded as one. of the most ilunuernus ami fut;il di.M'iiM-s to which infants are subject . It. oin he ruied, however, when : jiroperly tri iitcl. All that 1-1 iiccva. ! iii'V Is til pivo niaiiilicr'n-.n's (.'.hc, i ( liuU'rn and lint rim. a Kcinouy ami jea.xlor oil, II directed with each lU'tti.', H lid a euro li certain. Jr'nr sale by l.ijiii vV S.iii, M.it.'iiiioruH, nil -'i nei nl hi oi es iu i'lko county, II 1 GI !!!'! Br BARRY PAIN. I. "Well." said the ynuug man, Irrita bly, "what's your explanation'" The pretty girl shrugged her shoul ders slightly and looked out of the window. This was another way of saying that she had a perfect explana tion, but that he had no right to de mand It and had not a fine enough no il to understand It. ' For a week you put up with me willingly enough; I thought we were friends: now you tell me I bore you. Why'.'" "Why?" she echoed; "perhaps be cause I've put up with you for a week. Why do you ask questions and bother? You say that you see that I don't want you any more I don't deny it. Tncn there's only one decent course for you to take." She tumid hack to her window again, as If the scene wore finished. But it was not finished. The young man rose and his face darkencned. "This being of Importance," he said, slowly, "I don't care much about the decencies and conventionalities. I'm not going to leave you. I shall not let you go until you are once more as kind to me as you were a few weeks ago yes, and kinder rtlll." At this point she lost her temper and enid things that were not clever nor suited to her purpose. "Very well," he said. "When a man wants one tiling and only one thing In the world, be gets Its. I want you, and you alone. I may have to wait long, but I slia'n't let go. Try me, and yon will find It so." That was the man to whom, a week later, she became engaged. The en gagement was broken off by mutual consent some six months afterward. II. "Yes," said tho placid old gentleman, "I think you were quite right to give him up, my dear." "O, thank you!" said the pretty gill, impulsively. "I was so afraid you would think badly of me. I tried to act for the best. Our temperaments were not suited to each other; mar riage would have meant a lifelong misery. My own conscience acquits me, but I wondered what others would think, especially you." "Your Impulsive and Impetuous na ture should be linked to lis opposite to gentleness and experience." "1 am quite sure of itl' she raid. "Qualities In which be was alto gether lacking." "Totally," she agreed. "Ah, me!" sighed the old man. Pressed to give the reason for that sigh, he confessed that he waj think ing about himself. His was a lonely life; wealth did not make happiness he had found that. Ou whom could he spend his money and to whom could he leave It at his death? He could never hope to win the love of a wom an, old as he was. "You are nat to call yourself old." she cried: "I never think of you as an old man." There was a long pause, and when be spoke again It was to some considera ble purpose. That was the man whom In the course of that year she married; and the more worldly ot her friends were in the habit of remarking to one another that, all things considered, she had done extremely well for herself; so, from that point of view, she had. III. After dinner the white-haired old gentleman dropped asleep in the drnw- Ingroom. These little infirmities should be forgiven to old age. But the girl who had grown prettier tliftn ever looked at her husband with frank disgust. She turned to (lie handsome young man at the piano apologetically. "He's always like that, you know. I can understand It when we are alone no doubt I bore him but I don't un derstand how he can sleep through such music as that. It will take away my sleep for all the night." "No," said the player, briefly. "List en; I will give your sleep back again. As be played, his dark eyes sought hers and found strange things lu them Each knew what was in the other's heart. His eyes looked down again at the keys. His face wore the look of endurance. Suddenly he stopped, and went across the room to the corner where she was sitting. "Why are you crying? What is the matter?" he asked. "It is too beautiful . . . and I am so unhappy. If you knew what my life was!" The white-haired old gentleman was still sleeping peacefully, but both had lowered their voices. "I know," said the musician, "and you know now that I love you." She bowed her head. "Yes, you were sure to know. I must say good bye to you, dear. It was all right until you knew, but now" He held out Ms hands, aud she took it. She was really annoyed with her husband that was the extent of her sorrow. As for tiie musician, he was merely one more scalp for her walst );:t He played divinely, ami he loved oer; It was something of a trlump, and ..he an id good-bye to him very sweetly. And that was the man whom she ..il'ud iuiie indirectly, of course. Slin -cut a twenty live shilling wreath to he funeral; she had wou as much at .none the night before. Erom Black oid White. May snd December. Cur jrrea; grandfathers had a way jf announcing marriage ceremonies viieih would hardly find favor nowa laj. The following caea la point ave been unearthed: EUlth I Son, Matamorai, All Ceaeral Stores in P.k County Will Buy it Back You assume no risk when you hu Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera nnd liiari liotii Remedy. Baleh tfc Son. Mu ta morns, all general bforea in Pike county will refund your money if you are uiif satisfied after Usinr it. It uiL'.i,ulau,liiL;lll t.- lA fix. moot Hiuxv&Mul reineiiv in use lor bowel complaints and tbo only one that lievnr fail. It IS Jjleasiint, safe uuU rcUtiUo. lj no I i DEAF AND BLIND. Yet This .Girl Has Made a Fine Bonk. State Printer P. rn ird Murphy has piaeed on exhibit at Superlntennent Barrett's office a volume showing the educational progress that Is being made by Einnlo llngnewood, the (l-af-blind ward of Iowa, now at the South Dakota school for the blind at Oary. It consists of a book embodying the "Story of Ee Fever," by Laurence Sterne. The work was s'erentyped, printed snd bound by Miss Hague wood, and Is a production showing the greatest skill and intelligence. Tho printing Is on the Braille system, which is based on tho position of six dots, which are made on brn.'ts plates by the six keys of a machine specially constructed for this work. After the plntcs have been made they are proof read. The plates are read with the fingers, and any dots that have been misplaced are hauimer-ed down. In a letter to Mr. Murphy, Miss Hague wood's teacher says Linnie has no diiliculty whatever In correcting any mistakes that may occur. After the brass plates are proofread, the print ing is done on moistened sheets of plain white paper. These sheets are placed over brass nlntes and tlin ho tween rubber sheets, and the whole run through a common roller press. After being dried the sheets are bound in book form. Tho entire work is done by Mi.s Haguewood with great skill and accuracy. lies Moines Register, Genuine Baked Beans. Wash a quart of small white bears and put them into a kettle of cold wa ter; the water should cover the beans Tut In a heaping tcaspuonftil of salt to keep the beans from "mushing." Bring the water somewhat slowly to a boil, but do not boil them over five minutes. Then pour the water off and put the beans Into an earthen or Iron pot. Put In half or three-quarters of a pound of fresh fat pork no lean; salt fat pork, If there Is no suspicion of taint, Is just as good. If fresh fat pork Is used salt must be added to the taste. Kill the pot with water to the top of the beans and pork, and add, If fancied, a balf-teaspoonful each of soda and mustard, and a teaspoon ful of molasses. Bake slowly from six to twelve hours; a brick oven Is pre ferred. A Prize tor Housewives. Particulars of a novel prize for the encouragement of housewives at Parlo are announced. It Is stipulated that claimants must be Parisians by birth, have been married six years, and that their husbands, who must bo in the service of the city or employed in a government office, do not receive a higher salary than $700 a year. The prize of $1,250 in cash Is intended tc reward tho personal merit of spouses, and goes to the one who by her own labor best, supplements the earnings of her husband. Curiously enough, the wives of police officials are excluded. The fund to secure the annual reward has been bequeathed by M. Christine Couronne, a former chief clerk in the office of the minister of agriculture, and the only obligation subsequently resting on the winner Is to place a wreath on the grave of the donor. Calendulas. Plants raised from seed sown in a hot-bed in February have been In bloom all summer, and will continue to flower until the snow hides their faces, and after that If we are favored with Indian summer. These are among the few flowers we must have: we like their colors, even though old fashioned; we like their generosity; they are ever in bloom and enjoy rather than resent cutting; they are bold, showing plainly they occupy a prominent place In the garden and mean to fill It well. The double varie ties are a great Improvement over the original 'single ones. Lack of Skill Criminal. A strange verdict has been given by the criminal court at Lucerne. A lo cal medical man named Dr. Rehfeld was eondemed to three months' penal servitude and $1,(!00 damages for caus ing the death of Mme. B of Kriens, near Lucerne, by his want of skill and negligence. The relations of the de ceased, who died shortly after the operation, brought the action by legal advice. Dr. Rehfeld was also prohibit ed by court to practice in the canton of Lucerne. The prisoner was a fully qualified doctor. The Latest Superstition. In reporting a marriage at Empor ia, the "(ia.otte" tells of a curious su perstition held by the bride. She felt that if it should rata or be cloudy on her wedding day her marriage would end unhappily. So she refused to set the day, saying she would notify her affiance when she regarded the ele ments as propitious, and thus it came about that the young man was hastily summoned by telephone from a place ten miles away last week when the sua was shining gloriously. Kansas City Journal. Negro Children Born White. In a contribution to the Itevue Ency cloj.edlque, a German physician who bad spent severaf years at Klein Pono, In the African Togoland, says that the stages of color through which negro baties pass in the equatorial regions are as follows: At birth they are the sime color as European Infants. Af ter two or three months the skin turns a lilac color. T n days later it is a llht chestnut shade; and it Is only at tho end of three or four rnontlm Lnat the skin becomes completely black. An uncomplaining burgher Is a beaat of burden. Vou Twiller. No man or woman in tha slate will hesitate to speak well of Chaiu Htomiieh and LiverTablotsafteronce trying tl.em. They Always produce n pleasant movement of tha bowels, improve tha appetite and strengthen the ilicestinn. I'or salo by Bnleli Son, Matamoras, all general mores iu 1'iUti county. A'3vvrtic$ iu the Pj(K. i v,,-. i rr c j i f.lOST LIBERAL OFr lR OF THE A Fhe New York DO YOU EXPEPJ 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 iven and work guaranteed OFFICE. Brown's Building, Milford. Pa D Lwart Valley R.R. rcrmr" d to Date 'ft C3 in ST5 fs'ftss'jtiif,?; sun ciSn?l3.SiSic8; in 3 i ZD CO 1- is) ;i..;i o -.f"SS-Sf1 i: I i n o I ' ' . a - 9 Tl "?! Tl ? I V -M " Z ti. Y f 1 T 7- 7. T 31 ? I- i - i- I'-1 - r- i - r- - ( - r- t ic . m to ic i" us c ,i us a '" I .UO .Vupj.nit; : " puj a .ii.in,i : t ?i v ?i ".i -w -n 1 - - s : s s ra . - !:: ,,11 I -t ir. Washington Hotels. RIGGS HOUSE. iTe hotel pur excel loncw of tho capital, fluted within on lhx-k of tho Whiii Hut fus ami tliiwtly opix.site the Treatait y H ii est tuote iu the cuy. WILLARD'S HOTEL A famous hotolry, reinurknlo for l historical usniH-itit ioiiH aixl lohir sumnimT pt)tilitrHv. KhimilIv renovated, rvpuinit Hi 10 pnriuiny rtuuruiisnuu. NATIONAL HOTEL A laiuUiinrkHinoiitf the hutalu of Whhh iiikii n, ptition'eil in fiTinor yimw u rti iiiH ii ml Inch utlicialrt. Always a oiin'o fttvnrito. lucfiuiy rMno(U-itil nnd rvmVrt'tt Iwtirr than ewr. i'j. fn. H. K ihp. WALTKU BLKTON. hW M-r Tlift9 huLcitt urt) tho pi incipul unlit keriJ rvtiitevuiiti of (lit oapiuU at all tiiia. l iu-y lire tin1 boat stopping nhw;n at rvu niullu rnu a O. O. STAPLES. Proprietor. Q. DCWITT.Managar. Bubbcribe tVr tb PKKbf, "BEST OF ALL FLOUR. ' FEED, MEAL, BRAN, OATS, and HAY. When in need of tiny Hello to No. .I., or come to SAWKILL MILL, MILFORD PA. Tribune Farmer is a national II liusl rated agricultural weekly for farmers and their families, and stands nt tho bead of tho agricul tural press. It is n practical paper for practical farmers, helping them to secure the lhwest possible iiroflt from tho farm through practical methods. It is entertaining, Intructivo nnd practically useful to tho farmer's wife, sons and daughters, whoso interests it cover In an attractive manner. The regular price is l.0t) per year, but for n limited time wo will twelve your subscription for THK NEW YORK TRIBU.SK FARMER and also for your own fnvorito local newspaper, THK PRKSd, Milford, Pa. Both Papers One Year for $1.65 Send your oler nnd money to THR PRESS. Your name and nddre-s on n po.tal card to THK NEW YORK TRIBUNE KARMKK, Now Yjrk City, will bring you free sample copy. Most Women Can tell a good shoe when they see it. This 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?TS, SOLE AGENT. THE LANE INSTITUTE, THtLANE INSTITUTE CO. II3S Broadway, tt. Jamas blulld Ing, Now York. For thu Trsntmsnt nd oura of LIQUOR, OPIUM ktiO MORPHINE HABITS. NO II YPODKKMIC INJKCTIOXS. PSIIKKCT HOMg TUKATMKNT OU 8aNI TAUIUM ADVANTAUK8. I State Norms. School t East Stroudsturg, Pa J Kotfulur State Normal ('ourst-a, anil TMH'J-llll IM'pni I Illl'IMH OT IItl-)( fAO- cutlnn. Art, Drawing, SU'iui raphy , niu) TvtMiwrinntf : Mron CoUco Preparatory J J'iJrtmtiit-. FREE TUITION m 0 Hoard injr expcnwn 3 ij per week. 0 Pupili mlniilt. il ti any liimv hull A 'IVrni (tpi-ittt ti pt. 7iU. rlto fur 9 calali'gito. C L. Kemp, A. M., Principal. ff I f 0
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers