Pike County press. (Milford, Pa.) 1895-1925, August 14, 1903, Image 4

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    Feed your hair; nourish it;
give it something to live on.
Then it will stop falling, and
will grow long and heavy.
Ayer's Hair Vigor is the only
air Vitfor
hair food you can buy. For 60
years it has been doing Just
what vc clatm it will. do. It
will not disappoint you.
" My hr tu1 to M rrry nhnrt. Unt Bftnr
ninj( Ayr.r'ii H:iiT Vlror n nln-rt t.me it hrcan
to Kr(,w.a,,( now 11 i ftmrlfn iik Iipb Imm,
T lilt acorn a jilm1il rMilt to monitor being
lmnl without any htl."
Mas. J. II. Flfc-KH, Co!ordo Rprinptt. '"!.
f 1 00 ft hottlA.
for
Short Hair
A Testimonial.
"Gentlemen My Hair was coming
out in handfuls, but Bince I began
using your Mntchlosa Hair InviRoiator
It has stopped falling out entirely."
An Eskimo Episode.
"You are the light of my llf,"
Bighed the lover, edging a trifle closer
to the hand-carved Ice settee.
"You only say that because yon
know I drink so much train oil," Bhe
blubbered.
"However, it resulted In a match.
Judge.
Clrcumsances Alter" Case.
"This paper says woman's chief at
traction is her hair. Do you think
so?''
"Not on a muddy street." Michigan
Wrinkle. i.
The Press
Offic
Is prepared to do any
kind of ordinary
Job Printing:
Cards,
Posters,
Booklets,
Envelopes,
Bill Heads,
"Statements,
Note Heads,
Letter Heads,
Or whatever you may
need. THE STOCK is of
good quality, THE WORK
MANSHIP neat, and the
PRICE IS RIGHT. We
respectfully solicit a trial
order and will then leave
you to judge of our claims.
IF - Y0H
are the proprietor of a
hotel or boarding-house
your chief interest is to
Fill Your Rooms
There is a larger finM
for guests ia Urooklyu
New York tlmn in any
oMior city in America.
Right iu the heart of
that city the
Brooklyn Daily Eagle
maintains two large
Information Bureaus
that distribute litoritture
and Kivo free advice
regarding liottils, eto,
Au ad. in the
i4
Eairh
iu connection with this
tree liureiiu service will
Jesuit in
Fillir:? Ycur House
Send lit otieo fir ruh-s
Alil'KK-l
Vol K I M lilt l A 1 l.tN IsllIKAt'
liHIIIK.I.W 11)11 V I L
1 i.nm 1 , t v mux
J
J " THE CHEESE FACTORY.
How to Solve the Problem of Drain
age.
To drnln surrwsfuly the Immfl1iiti
) suroumliiiKs of a chfTO factory pita
tins long boon a troublesome problem.
To dcrlxe some means of currying nil
wnte ninllor beyond contnjoinnUnft
diMtance from the btilMInK, and to
1 have tbo meana employed practicable,
convenient and rllicaclons would be a
boon of no small moment to factory
men. The refuse of the manufactured
i milk whey soon becomes fetid In
the soil that it impregnates undor
, and about the cheese building. Sum
mer heat will always do this, nnd no
earth draining that can be devised
will clear from the soil the Injurious
germs loft there by the decaying ani
mal matter. Therefore we must not
let the whey touch the soil, or stand
in a vat near the premises. It should
be conveyed at least ten rods from
where the dally process of cheese
making is going on before It Is stored
in a vat or wooden tub. Wooden
troughs will not serve the purpose of
whey conduits, because they become
leaky in dry weather, and their ab
sorbent nature causea them to b of
fensive. There is, however, a plan of
proceJja which, if adherer! to, will
preclude tne possibility of cf'hnia
arising from tinder the cheese-making
room to taint milk. X'tse no drains
about tho factory that are not open,
for such alone ran be thoroughly
cleansed and kept pweet. Place the
whey tub one hundred and sixty feet
away from the factory, and get that
number of feet of common tin eaves
trotmh from-, the tinner's. Taint it
thoroughly with cheap red paint in
side and out; it will need repainting
only once a season. 1'lace the
troughs on wooden brackets a few feet
above tho ground alowlng for a gentle
fall. An inverted wooden trough
placed over tbo tin one and raised
above it a few inches, being support
ed at the brackets by blocks resting
on the conduit, will roof the little, ca
nal and keep out rain and dirt. At
the factory end nothing Bhould enter
it but whey drawn from the milk Tats.
The whey and milk and slop on the
floor, which should be an impervious
one, must drain off cleanly into an
other painted tin trough similar to the
first described, and never touch
ground till it lias flown a safe dis
tance from tho building. These
troughs must be flushed every day
with hot water on the final cleaning
up. With them in use and a tight
floor undor and about the vats and
presses no offensive moisture can
reach the ground anywhere in the
vicinity of the premises. It is Just as
important to have the atmosphere
about milk pure as it Is to have tha
vessel that holds it clean.
Ripening Cream for Churning.
A proper degree of acidity in the
cream is required to produce the best
quality of butter. It matters not how
this acidity is produced, whether by
time or the mixture of some form of
lactic acid. It may bo produced by
the addition of sour milk to the fresh
cream, in quantity of one pint of tha
milk to ten gallons of cream, and
thorough stirring to diffuse the acid,
which at once begins to act upon the
Bweet cream, and in twenty four hours
brings it into the right condition for
churning. On principle this is pre
cisely the same as mixing the newly
skimmed sweet cream with the older
and sour cream, by which the former
is acidified and the acid of the latter
is neutralized to some extent. The
practice of slowly stirring the cream
in the Jar when the fresh cream is
added, ia therefore not to be neglect
ed, as it not only hastens the ripening
of the fresh cream but it retards that
of the older.
Wire Fence and Gate with Living
Post.
We illustrate herewith a cheap and
durable style of barb wire fence and
gate. Living trees are make to serve
as .posts. Instead of driving the
staples directly into the tree, where
they would soon become overgrown, a
atrip of inch board, four inches wide,
FEXCH WITH LIVING POSTS,
is attached to the tree by interlinking
staples, and the wires are attached to
theao strips. Wherever an opening in
desired, the wires are cut and one
end of each is stapled to a similar
piece of board which, witli the panel
of wire attached, swings freely like a
gate and when closed la fattened in
place by hooks. No hinges are need
ed, a3 the wires bend freely to any
extent needed. In starting the next
panel the wires are secured in the
same manner as at the beginning of
the fence.
The man who waited to begin culti
vation until he could Bee the plants
found that the weeds wore earlier
then he.
Tor cut worms try a mixture of one
part of null to two parts of land
planter, dropping a little at each bill.
With all auimuls that are to be fat
tened the feeding should betn early,
whila the iKutiuruee it btill good.
I When jou want a physio that if
miH and t'ent'o, imay to tuko uud
i ortaiu to lift, always use Chitniber-
lu'.n's bioiiuif'u nnd Liver Tuhlets.
1'i.r sitlo by B.ilch fc .Son, Matiihoorus,
j nil t'cni-ial btore-H iu l'ikc county.
lr-i making in all bnuuln-s
Mak Li'l'Wiu, UruitdSt , Mi'fviJ.l-a.
r . J)
-to 1 .
DI.iiER S!GIALS LI FUCtS
Character as It Is Told in The
Countenance.
THE LATEST AMUSEAENT
Interpretation of the Eyes and Mouth,
a New Amusement Tht Promise!
to Eclipse Palmistry Girls with
Danger 8lgnals In Their Counte
nances. The latest amusement which prom
ises to eclipse palmistry and thought
reading Is character reading by the
features. The color of the eye, for ex
ample, may be the key to the charac
ter. Hero are some of the theories on
whirh this kind of character reason is
based.
A hazel-eyed woman never talks too
much or too little. She Is intellectual
and agreeable; she prefers her hus
band's comfort to her own, and will
ollng to him through weal or woe.
Black eyeB are typical of lire, here-
lain and firmness. Iion't arouse them.
They are capable of taking vengeance,
tliey seldom forget an injury and will
bid" their time.
Blue eyes are amiable, truthful and
affectionate. They win by kindness.
When the lower lid curves down
ward and shows the white below the
pupil, then pause before you trust
your welfare to the owner of that eye.
Eyebrows may be thick or thin, fine
or coarse, arched or straight, regular
or Irregular. Kach form and quality
has its special significance in refer
ence to temperament and character.
When eyebrows are thick and Ir
regular, harshness of character is de
noted. Thin, fine and delicate eye
brows are indicative of a relined na
ture. If eyebrows meet, deceit is in
dicated. "The gate of the soul," the forehead
has been called. Features alter eyes,
nose, mouth may change their aspect
from a thousand causes. Accident
may mar them, pain distort them, old
habits frequently give them some
peculiarity of form or expression.
They are like the hands on the
clock dial, they move and change with
wear or external influences. Hut the
forehead is like the dial itself. It re
mains substantially the same through
out life.
The perfect forehead should be
smooth, clear, white and spacious, and
one-fourth the length of the head In
height. The higher, broader and fuller
It is, all other things being equal, the
greater the capacity and strength of
mind. High foreheads, however, are
not always indicative of brain power.
"Never marry a woman with a
square, prominent chin," says a wise
man, "unless you wish to be ruled."
And don't go off and get n wife with
one of those little sharp-pointed chins,
for she will demand too much of you."
The Ideal domestic chin is neither
square, nor pointed, nor prominent,
nor retreating, but broad ftnd round.
The broad, round chin Is a type by It
self. It denotes constancy or faithful
love. Great anterior development of
the chin is a sign of warm disposition;
great depth an indication of wayward
ness. I'pon the mouth are recorded the
various conditions of the mind wor
ry, doubt, sorrow, peevishness, and an
ger. All the human emotions perch
upon the lips In passing and leave
there the record of their brief tenancy
in Bcrlpt so plain that all who will
may read, flood traitB and bad are
registered alike on the mouth, and as
the years go by, this mobile feature
unconsciously assumes an expression
reflecting the emotions most common
to it.
Lips that curve downward at the
corners are usually the result of Ill
natured thoughts. They are not to be
trusted.
Thin lips show coldness of disposi
tion. It is the girt with the full, red
Hps who smiles pleasantly, to whom
the lovable disposition belongs. She
has a mind free freui petty spites and
Jealousies. If her teeth are rather
square and sparkling like pearls, it Is
another indication that she is the
most loving and lovable of girls.
Evenly growing teeth show a better
disposition and better developed mind
than those that crowd and overlap one
another. Vertical teeth represent an
even temper.
To Darken the Eyebrow.
Oet a dark brown raid Indian pen
cil of your druggist and lightly touch
(he eyebrows once or twice a week.
Another way to darken the eyebrows
is to make a Main by boiling an ounce
of walnut bark in a pint of water, add
afterward to "set" the prepara
tion, a piece of alum the size of the
end of the linger. Apply to the eye
tuos with a small camera hair brush.
lo not gel the liquor on the akin, as
It will Rtain it.
Power and Self-Reliance.
Education has many good results,
but none that are more sure than the
sense of power and self-reliance with
which it invests Ita possessor. We
may not know the exuct use a man
will make of It, but we may rest as
sured that, whatever be tho circum
stances into which ho is thrown, he
will be capable of far more, and enjoy
far more, if he has had Its advantages.
And, although education is a laio
subject and one worthy of all the wis
dom of a nation to deal with, yet every
thoughtful man or woman can do
something to promote It.
It Is one thing to sea that a line l
croaked, and another thing to be able
to draw a straight one.
The postoflice investigation can
hardly jet he called a "c!o-ied hid
den!," theie ii thinner yet for some of
the gentry. It lias hecn rt marked
Shut those postal oliicials who have
pavd through the statute of limita
tion have not clamored fur a vindica
tion iuvi-tiation. They have been
highly content il -.mis to neak ofl'
Willi their talis between their let.
PRETTY HAND9.
How to Care for Nature's AttenJIve
Gift.
There Is a subtle fisclnatlon In
pretty band, Impossible to explain,
but so powerful that It has been able
to command love when there was
nothing else about the possessor to at
tract special attention. A naturally
beautiful band Is a gift to the few; a
graceful, well cared for band Is pos
sible to the woman of humblest sta
tion. No matter what the type of your
hnnd may bo the delicate, artistic
hand; the square hnncl of the orderly
person; the conic hnnd of the emo
tional woman or the philosophic hand,
long ami angular, with knotted
knuckles to all grace of movement
and perfect grooming are posslbl).
Flexibility is the first step toward
beauty of movement. No grace Is pos
sible with stiffened muscles, and in
such a state more nerve force Is wast
ed than In actual physical labor. With
perfect control of the muscles you will
use the hands naturally, and entirely
conceal the art by which you acquired
flexibility.
There are a few rules which materi
ally aid one in the struggle for grace
of movement. Prop every mannerism
In whh h the hands play an Important
part. Po not fuss with the hair, pull
the ears, rub the noRe, finger the face,
play with rings or other adornments,
or fiddle with any part of tho wearing
apparel. Po not drum with the fin
gers, above everything, for that is
the most common habit snd the hard
est to overcome. Hear these things In
mind when alone, and you will soon
find no necessity for roinombei lng
them In company.
White Negroes.
Occasionally it happens that
negroes are white, but for all hat
they are still negroes, since they pos
sess every characteristic, save ono, of
their race. Llnnnaeus long ago re
marked that color was, after all,
merely a secondary character. The
negroes of which we speak are of
pure stock without any admixture of
white blood. A family of the sort has
recently been studied in Mississippi,
where a traveling archaeologist no
ticed a number of albino negro chil
dren at work In a cotton field. In
quiry developed the fact that they
descended from an aibino grand
father who married a black woman
and whose three sons were all normal
nnd black. All the sons married black
women, two of them had children who
were perfectly normal in respect of
color. The third married twice. Py
the first wife he had six children
five black and one albino; by the sec
ond he had nine children six blak
ind three albinos. The alblnolnm,
therefore, skipped an entire genera
tion, appearing only with the grand
children of the original parent, and
then only iu certain cases.
.The Prowess of Mlsa Kellogg.
Miss Emma Kellogg, who Is seek
ing nn appointment as game warden
for Routt and Hlo Itlanco counties, in
Colorado is young, a hunter of big
game and has had many exciting ex
perlences. She lassoed a young bear
once anil took It home alive. She was
hunted mountain lion, deer and elk
and is well versed In woedcrnft.
The young woman's most daring
adventure was a ride on the back of
an elk which had attacked her In the
forest. 1er gun being out of reach,
slm promptly climbed n tree. The
elk butted the tree with Biich force
that she fell, alighting on the ani
mal's back. Hhe grasped the antlors
and held on while the angry brute ran
through the thlrk underbrush. Its
antlers finally became entangled In
tho low hanging branches of a tree,
and while the animal struggled Miss
Kellogg cut its throat with her hunt
in knife. Kansas City Journal.
"The Ould Art."
West Tenn You never heard an
Irish person speak of the "Ould
Part." Possibly your ears have
doubted the "d" when the "ould art'
wa3 named. Your error Is common;
the best Informed writers of English
make It, with the exception of those
who are conversant with Scotch and
Irish dialuts.
"Art," In good Irish, means a car
dinal point; the Scotch form 1b
"alrt." "Of all the alrts the win' does
blow," writes Iturns. This Is only one
of thousands of common errors In re
lation to Irish dialect; cultivated peo
ple who have heard and used it can
not recognize it as usually written.
An Untidy Petticoat.
For a petticoat that has frayed
around the bottom, cut off an Inch nil
roumt, bind with velvet biuding to
match, and Just above put a couple of
rows of narrow ribbon velvet of the
same color, and It will look as good
as new., When making a petticoat, it
iu a good plan to get an extra piece
that can be used for a new frill to put
around the bottom when tho petticoat
Is half worn.
The potato is a native of Chill and
Peru. They were originally carried
to England from Santa Fe, in Ameri
ca, by Sir John Hawkins, iu or about
the year luUU.
The first newspaper, published lu
Hoston, was the "ltoston News-Letter,"
In 17o4, which was continued un
til 1774. and was, up to that period,
the only paper published in the coun
try. Pianofortes' were invented in Pres
den. In 1717. The square piano-forte
was first made by an organ builder of
Saxony, named Kreiderica, sometime
about tho year 17.-.8.
Bilch & Son, Matamoras, All General Stores
in Pike County Will Buy it Back
You assume no rik when yon buy
Chaiohei Iain's Colio, Cholera and
Diarrhoea Remedy. Iialch. & Son.
Mutumoras, all general stores in
1'ike county will refund your money
if you are not sitislied after usin it.
It is everywhere admitted to he tho
most siucensful remedy in uso for
bowel complaints and the only one
that never fulls. It IS pleasant, safe
and feliublo, 10 uU 1)3
QUEER THINGS ABOUT SONGS.
Im Wfll-Kiuin n nnd P!r(-tl Ponr-lar
Row f'nte llnt-lt In Time of
Martin Luther was not the first to ob
ject to "letting the devil have nil the
pood tunes." The bishop of Ossory in
the fourteenth century used Mich tunes
i " Do, po, JNigiitineale, Sing Full
JVIecry," in compiling a book of hymns.
Mr. L. C. F.lson, in the International
Quarterly, ntntes that the Rnng of Pe
bornh nnd Ilarak in the Scriptures,
"nlth Its extcmporinl ion, its clapping
of hands to mark the rhythm, its al
ternation of polo nnd chorus, would not
be unlike the singing ot a camp meet
Inp.on a southern plantation."
'1 lie drum major of a military hnnd
Is a survival of the chnniplon who
ft roil e. t w irling his sword, nt the head
of nn nrmy in the oh days, chnllenging
the champion of the other side to com
bat. "We Won't Go Tfome Till Morning"
has a more Interef-tttnr history thnn
any other song-. It hf first sungin the
Holy Laml in hnnor of a French cru
soder nnmed Mambron. The melody
m caught bv the Pnrncfcs. and I?
St 111 sun In the east. In Frnnre the nnme
"M ambron" wns centuries afterwards
altered to "MnlbrnnUe," der!iT!v op
plied totheduke of Mnrlbnrouch. "Mal
brooke he went to w ar" the words fit
ted well enough.' The furthrr state
ment, true of the old crusader, "he's
dead and buried." was applied In the
pli-it of hope to the victor of Blen
heim. "l)u Mnurler tn "Trilby" makes great
e of ".Valbrnoke," ns he does of "Pen
Holt." Herthoven used the theme In
on orchestral score, "The Hat tie of Vit
torla." In England the snug is often
est fitted to the words, "For He's a
Jolly Oood Fellow."
Scottish folk songs nre most dim cult
to Imitate. Mendelssohn did it so suc
cessfully, however, that most people
who sing "Oh. Wert Thou in the Tnuld
Blast?" fake it for an old native air.
THE OCEAN'S DEEPEST HOLE.
Snot In the Pnclllc AVhlrli Well De-
errrn Hit Knin of "llavf
Junem l,ocker."
The private retreat of Davy Jones
has been at Inst discovered, and this
fact is noted ns a triumph for Amer
ican geographical science, says the
Brooklyn Eagle The deepest hole in.
the ocean's bottom is fount 100 miles
from Guam, a recently acquired
American territorial possession. It is
about five miles deep, 2S.S78 feet,
practically the height of Mount Ever
est. This hole should not be con
founded with Davy Jones' locker gen
erally. The snilormnn recognizes the
entire salt sea expnnse as 1 lie "Lock
er," Davy standing for the evil spirit
presiding over the demons of the
Tastly deep, visible to the eye of
superstitious imagination as a mon
ster of gigantic mein, having an
ftiormmu mouth, three rows of sharp
teeth, huge eyes nnd nostrils emit
ting blue flushes. His particular
headquarters have been unknown un
til the Albatross discovered nnd fath
omed It, amid great professional and
lay excitement. The place where the
sounding was made is called the
Tonga-Kermandic deep of the Moser
basin. Sailormen, supposed to have
the greatest fenr of shallows and
rocks near the surface, will, on the
contrary, very likely feel like giving
this locality a wide berth. If a hu
man body could be lowered to the
bottom of this stupendous hole it
would probably be pressed by the bil
lions of tons of weight inlo the pro
portions of a child's doll, and the
consistency of open hearth steel.
GHOSTS LACK ORIGINALITY.
All Spook Have Fixed Ilnlilt and
Adhere to Time-Worn Tra
ditions. When you rend one of these ato
ries you have read them all. Al
though the behavior of ghosts may
appear eccentric when judged by the
Btundard of conduct prevailing
among the living, their habits are,
in fact, more regular, they seem to
possess little character or original
ity, and probably their ideas are very
limited, says London Truth. Some of
them walk along the passage or up
the stairs; others knock on the walls
or furniture, ring bells, slam doors
or break crockery; now and then
you come across one who shrickes;
and there seem to be a few stray
specimens who appear (and disap
pear). But their faculties do uot go
beyond this. A very remarkable
proof of their limitations, or their
slavish adherence to tradition, is
that, though I have before me at the
present moment a dozen authenti
cated ghosts who have been heard
walking upstairs, there seems to be
no case on record in which a ghost
Las been heard walking down. Why
anybody should think it worth while
to chronicle the movements of such
uninterebling creatures 1 cannot un
derstand. An account of the day'a
lining of a tlock of sheep would be
cry much more exciting.
Cold ia (lalll.
A French explorer, Le itoux, inform
us that the natives of Abyssinia have u
peculiar way of carrying the gold
which they find in the beds of stream
to market. They iiud it in the shape
of dust, and tiny nuggets, which they
put into large quiilu u transparent a
glass ubes. The brokers who buy it
work it up into the form of circles of
the lilt of an ordinary finger ring, but
without closing the circle, for the pur
chaser always insists on twisting it
to tee that it does not contain u ny uil ul
teration. Experienced fingers can tell
at once whether the y ielding metal has
the exact malieabiiity of pure gold.
Mrs. Mollte Allen, of South Fork,
Ky., says hho has prevented attacks
of cholera morbus by taking Cham
berlain's Htomaeh and Liver Tablets
when she felt an attack coming; on.
Such attacks are usually caused by
indigestion and thepe Tablets are
just what is needed to cleanse the
stomach and ward otT tho approach
ing attack. Attack of bilious colio
may lie prevented in the same way.
For sale by Iialch it Son, Matumorus,
tU t'enoiitl tjtoi'es iu 1'ike QUuiity,
mm
mh r?:, I J V-
f7
jj When
Fhe
r.iosi .
LIBERAL
OFFER
OF
THE
YEAR
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. Brown's Building:, Milford, Pa
Delaware Valley R.R.
Corrected to Date
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Washington Hotels.
RIGGS HOUSE.
riie par eicllt iice of tho capital,
.oeated withiu mi IjKhIc of tho White
HotiHtj and directly opposite the Treasury,
b'lutt tiiljle iu the ciLy.
WILLARD'S HOTEL
A famous hoNdry, rtMimrkiiMtJ for ita
hlatnrleal associations aud lung Uf,tuinrd
popularity. KeenMy renovated, repainted
tnd partially refurnish eti,
NATIONAL HOTEL.
A landmark among the hotel of Wash
ington, puuoii't-d iu former yan by
pru.vldi'iit and hitch otlieialri. Alwuya a
nrimo favorite. Ki-ceuliy remtHlehil and
rvudervd (wttt-r thnn evt-r. Dpp Vn. H. i
K d.-u. WALTKlt Bl'KTOX. Ke. Mr. I
These holt)! are the prim ipttl political
rtitdtuvoiitf of tho capital at all tiuu-n.
l'lit-y are the beot btoppiutf plaocM at rea
ttuiialjle rale.
O. O. STAPLES. Proprietor.
O. DtWITT,Mgngr.
BuliBCiibe (or tlie Jpurj.
pqii "BEST OF ALL FLOUR. '
FEED, MEAL,
BRAN. OATS,
and HAY.
in need of any
Hello to No. 5., or como to
SAWKILL MILL, MILFORD, PA.
Mew York
Iribuno Farmer
isnmiiiumd i 1 i 1 usr rntocl agricultural weekly for farmers
nnd their families, and stands nt, tho head of tho agricul
tural press. It Is a practical paper for practical farmers,
helping them to secure the largest possible profit from tho
farm through practical methods.
It Is entertaining, tutructivo and practically useful
to the farmer's wife, suns and daughters, whoso Interests
it covers iu an attractive manner. '
Tho regular price Is l IKI per year, but for n limited
time wo will ni clve ymir siilHcription for TI1K NKW
YORK TKIHU.SE FARM Kit and also for your own
favorite local newspaper, THF, PKKtfri, Milfurd, Pa.
Both Papers One Year for $1.65
Pen (l your oniVr and money to TUB PKKSS.
Your nnmo nnd fiddtvs on n potnt card to THR
NKW YORK TKUJUNK FAHMKM, New Yjrk City,
will brinpf you free sitniplo copy.
Johnson's
Shoe Store
a
4
The LaFrance
bhoes
FIT Localise the lit
lasts they're made
ft
4P.
on were planned
by experts.
Tliey keep tlieir
sliajie, because the
workmen whomade
tliem are cxjierts.
Tliey wear be
cause their leather
was selected 1 y
experts.
Our footing a.s a
shoe man has made
us tit to tit the feet.
Bring in yours.
We'll tit 'em.
Y'Jt
4
4
4
P15
i vA'
hi
JOHUSOfl,
FITTER OF FEET.
Port Jervi, N. T.
t:2
if
it
'i
THE LANE INSTITUTE,
THE LANE INSTITUTE CO.
II3S Broadway, St. Jsmss Build
InK, New Vork.
Forth Tratmntand cur of
LIQUOB. OPIUM AISO MORPHINE HABITS.
NO HVl'ODUKMIO INJKCTION'S.
A PttUKKCT UOUK TltEATMKNT OB BaM
TAHIIIM ADVANTAUUH.
State Normal School
East Stroudsburg, Pa
Rt'Knlar State Normal Courts, and
pftiial Jf parttnenti of Mitsie, Elo
cution. Art, UiawifiK. StcnoKniphy,
and Typewriting; strong Cuiitgo
Preparatory Department.
FREE TUITION
Hoarding expenses pt:r Week,
rupiid aUiiiHt. il at any time. Full
Term opeiiM pt. 7ih. Write fur
catalogue.
L. Kemp, A. M.p
Hrincipal.
.V (..-,. fi I.'. '
-A