, m ' Johnson's Shoo Store TlioLaFrancc Shoes FIT because llic lasts they're made on were planned by experts. They keep tlicir bliapc, because the workmen who made them are experts. They wear be cause their leather was selected by experts. - Our looting as a bIioc man has made us lit to lit the feet. Bring in yours. Well fit 'em. p 'Op ? fins Hr.sfl of Avor's Cherrv Pectoral at bedtime prevents . . . i i 1 1 mgni cougns vi cnnuixn. No. croup. No bronchitis. A Cherry Pectoral doctor's medicine for fill affections of the throat, bron chial tubes, and lungs. Sold for over 60 years. Htlia ATr's Vhrrv Tor (oral ,tt mt family ffr 'cht y '-. 1 hPrtM n-'lliim: pvi;i to it f"i cn'ufn siirt coM, Pr,,'lni,I' ,,,r f,,i- dren." Mrs. W Ji. lUYiirR. Shelby, Al. AM '1m !':. 3. V, ATKP ff.. Niftht Coughs'; Hpp the bowels cnerv with ono c" Ayer's PHI at bedtime, Just one. jotinson, FITTER OF FEET. Port Jervis, N. Y. Washington Hotels. R1GGS HOUSE. I'he hot'! par excellence of tho capital .oo.atcd within one blm'k of tho Whin House unit directly oppLSite the Treasury Klnest table In tho city. WILLARD'S HOTEL A famous hotelry, remarkable for Iti historical associations and Iohr sustnlnet popularity. Recently renovated, repttlnter' mid partially refurnished. NATIONAL HOTEL. A landmark among the hotels of Wa3h inprton, patronized in former years bj presidents and hi(h officials. Always i prime favorite. Recently remodeled and rendered better than ever. Opp. Pa. H. R dep. WALTKR BURTON, Res. Mftj. - These hotels are the principal political rendezvous of the capital at all times. They are t ho best stopping places at rea sonable rates . O. O. STAPLES. Proprietor. O. DEWITT.Mansisr. THE LANE INSTITUTE, THE LANE INSTITUTE CO. II3S Broadway, St. Jamas Build. Ing, Now York. Fortha Trutmsntsnd euro of LIQUOR, OPIUM AND MORPHINE HABITS NO HYPODERMIC INJECTIONS. A PSRFECT HOMK TKKATMENT OH SANI TAUIUM ADVANTA0K8. H. E.Emerson, M. D. Physician and Surgeon. OFFICE: In Drug Store on Broad Street, Nothing has ever equalled it. Nothing can ever surpass it. Dr. ins'o Igv; Discovery ForC HOTELS AND BOARDINO HOUSE A Matter of Advertising Propose- by the Erie Which ia of General Interest to People Here The fleneral Passennor Department of the Krie Railroad ha liceu lororiued tlito the aceonimodiition fur Summer Ronrdor at various points nlnnff Its line are inade quate to meet the demands It l propoven to inor.' rnoronifiiiy adver tise this business next season than evei be 'ore, and to iwiconiitiiiilate all whodesire to locate in tliis most picturesque country. thr iurIi which the Kilo Railroad runs, t'cy request all who aro interested in summer lioardinar business to increase their facilities and to improve their aecotn mod.ttions especially In the lineof sauitr conditions. Where it is possible running water and bath room facilities should tie installed in order to promote more health ful conditions, thereby making the loca tions more desirable. Those who Intend making Improvements or building new hotels or Itoardlng houses. will please notily IV M. Itiirto, 'I raveling Passenger Airclit ol f.rle Kallroatl, (Jlmm hers Street Station, No York City, vh his charge of tlie Summer Home business Application blanks for space in next seasons Summer Home Hook will iiercuili in ample time, and can be obtained from there uca&t Krie Railroad agent. Ia3 10 Ho PRETTY HANDS. Hv to Cure for Nature's Atlanltva Gift. Triers lg a nubile fascination In a. pretty hnnrt, lmpoRaihln to PiplnUi, but so pewerfttl that. It hnn been able to command love when there was nothing else about the possosnor to at tract special attention. A naturally beautiful hand la a gift to the few; prsreful, well cared for hand Is pos sible to the woman of humblest sta tion. io matter what the type of your hand may be the delicate, artistic hand; the square hand of the orderly person; the conic hand of tho emo tional woman or the philosophic hand, long and angular, with knotted knuckles tn all pra'-n of movement and perfect grooming are poBalbl). Flexibility is the llrst 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 entiroly 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. Drop every mannerism In which the hands play an Important part. Do not fuss with the hair, pull the ears, rub the nose, linger the face, play with rings or other adornments. or fiddle with any part of the wearing apparel. Do not drum with the fin gers, above everything, for that Is the most common habit and the hard est to overcome. Bear these things in mind when alone, and you will soon tlnd no necessity for remembering them In company. SHERIFF'S SALE By virtue of ft writ of Flnrl Fneliw leaned out of the Court of Common Pirns of Hi ki County, to me directed, 1 will expose t Qnle by public vendue or outcry at tlu Sheriff's OIHco la the Borough of Milford, u SATURDAY. DECEMBER Kith, Km nt 2 o'cliMik in the afternoon of snid day. All that certain piece, parcel or truer of land, situate, lyinr mid being in the town- hip or 1-iacknwrtxeii, county of Pike and state of Pennsylvania, containing about two hiiutmxl and fleventT-nva ueres, he tin game inor.j or lesH, flur.ey(?d In the warrau tee names of Ami hhee and John Laruner, and about two miles from Ijaekawaxeu depot and fronting on the Delaware and Hudson canal, It being the ame property noon which John A. Tintunan, late ol Lnckawaxen township aforesaid, resided at the time of his death, and the title to which became vested m Bertha Klehter, a by reference had to the deed made and executed by Carl Hiehter to Bald Bertha Richer, dated October 1, A. D. 18H. recorded In office for recording deeds in and for Pike county in Deed Book No 41 at Page HH. etc., will more fully appear. IMPROVEMENTS Upon said land are erected a (rood two 'tory frame dwelling houe, one largi barn, one small barn and other out-build- in trs, k lunn! or of acres are improved excellent garden with large and Binall fruits and the land in timber is valuable. This properly is desirably located being rtiMMit mid-way between Lackawaxen ami ivmmim sinuoEiH uu nit rjrio iaurotu. Seized and taken to execution a thr property of Bertha Klehter and will br sold by me for cash. GKORGE GREGORY, Sheriff. Sheriff's Office, Mitford, Pa., ) November 17, j DIVORCE NOTICE nvl MPTIOSI A Terfect For All Throat and Cure: Lung Tioutjlca. Monay back If it fail. Trial Bottle free. MATTHKW McConnkll vs. KUZAHKTH MrCoSNRLL ,. , Bfl YEARS' ' EXPEKltNCE : 1 u HtilJMvi , i 0 Tftsot Marks t t'i 5i'ort 'rtM CoPVHfc.Hii Ac. A nwnp Mml'f ti tMrtr'h ttnt! i-hi-. mi i..n umT I! ..-tMoii i in-l-ii v r,i, t Hi. , t a- (,,.,- ,i, i i. .& ,., r.-i.u 'Tf.i,t(t Th,l Ts-r.it:; n Muni! A w r-A.-;i rm v ; r : "f t i.ih .( 21- e - 1 S - A , ..i ; -a: it... u o--u Us Tic-i eio u I if t"3 36!8iOani. IN PIKE COUNTY COMMON PLEAS I COURT. No. 8. June Term, lwn3. In IMvorce. Suinof)A and alias HnhiMPrtn return ea. rte- divDixlt'iit; n o ( t o n r d In the county of Pike, To Kl.lZAUETH McHONNKI U Respondent. You are hereby notified to le and ap war at our Court of Common Pleas to Lh1 held at Milfot-d on the third Monday ol Decern Iter next (it being the return day of our next term cf court) and aowwer the complaint of the .LiitwiUmt UUl In the above cao. GKORGE GREGOUY, Sheriff Sheriff's OfTlee, MiUont, Pa., Noveiiilter , li AUDITOR'S NOTICE st.ite 1 Iti thetlrphsns t ourc of riKc In the matter of tl l'k I Kil A li. Ol l K ((.cnsisl. County, Pcnn The unil'TMLrn.'d httvltii !sn aoooiiocd hy 1 he court, ' to omke ilist rilult loll of the unit ill liafuls of tlie aci:oiuitiiut ulul i'S;cul rl.t. il! lite aliove est.'ttt? a.s shown by iicr bitid first, and partial account, etc will meet all p:otica inno-cnl.'tl for the purpose of hit, uppoilitnieul, at hie law uilKelu Itoroliyll or .! 1 1 foot . en ftlon- .Imv, (h i4th ilr tt ireuibr, A. II, iuo;! Mt te cVI(-k s. ui , at whi. il liloeHll pio-tl"). iiaviog a t Lou upon tt;e funds or interest to the dis! rloull.,11 thereof must nl and prove their cbiilli or Iwt dLiiU'l-wl floiil CAUUUig in upon s;ud fuotls. V.. W. l.i 1,1., Auditor. Milfonl. ., Nov U, ltH. White Negroes. Occnslonnlly It happens that negroes are white, but for all that Ihoy are still negroes, since they pos sess every characteristic, save one, of their race. Llnnnaens 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 albino grand father who married a black woman and whose three sons were all normal and black. All the sons married black women, two of them had children who were perfectly normal In respect of color. The third married twice. By the first wife he had six children Ave black and one albino; by the sec ond he had nine children six black and three albinos. The alblnolnm, therefore, skipped an entire genera tion, appearing only with the grand children of the original parent, and then only In certain cases. .The Proweet of Miss Kellogg. Miss Emma Kellogg, who is seek- lug an appointment as game warden for Routt and Itlo Hlanco counties, In Colorado Is young, a hunter of big game and has had many exciting ex periences. She lassoed a young bear once and took It home alive. She was hunted mountain lion, deer and elk and Is well versed in woodcraft. The young woman's most daring adventure was a ride on tho back of an elk which had attacked ber in the forest. Her gun being out of reach, she promptly climbed a tree. The elk butted the tree with such force that she fell, alighting on the ani mal's back. She grasped the antlers and held on while the angry brute ran through the thick underbrush. Its nntlers flnnlly became entangled in the low hanging branches of a tree, and while the animal struggled Miss Kellogg cut its throat with her bunt- In knife. Kansas City Journal. FORGOT HIS WEDD1NQ DAY. Busy Wall Stret Man Make a Dash for Chicago One Day Late. '"We hear a good iIcrI about the busy men of New York." said on5 of them, "but I have a friend In Wall Street who has broken the record. 'I was In his apartment a few nlghfs ago after the theatre, and he was chatting with me about the deals of the day, and as he chatted he was run ning over a bundle of memoranda. All at once he stopped as if he had been shot. "Great Beott!' he exclaimed, 'I'm to he married to morrow to a woman In Chicago, and I had forgotten the dale completely. Bay, old man, come with me and help me pack tip. Of course, I can't make it now to save my Hf' even if I hired a special engine and car, for the wedding Is set for to morrow morning at 10 o'clock.' ''While he began pitching his things into his trunk I wrote out a message to his sweetheart and hurried it to the telegraph office. My friend left on tho first train out and after his arrival tn Chicago he wired back: 'It't ail right. She has the measlea.' " Honors Were Even. Fntoklyn and New Jersey exchangee! civilities at a recent dinner of Phillips Exeter Academy alumni. An anecdote was told by Julius H. Seymour of the man who, having successfully assigned to two men their native States, was indignantly contradicted when he told a third that he balled from New Jersey. I don't; I'm sick to-day; that's what makes me look so." Following this, Dr. Henry Sanger Snow, of the Brooklyn Polytechnic In stitute, declared that "Brooklyn was not New York, but it bore about the same relation to it that heaven did." Wilson Farrand, headmaster of the Newark Academy, couldn't stand for the aspersion oa his own State, so he told this: "Once there was a Brooklyn man who crossed tho Jordan. When he ar rived on the further shore he looked around superciliously, and, after pro longed staring, remarked, "I don't see that heaven is so much better than Brooklyn.' " 'But, my dar man, this ia not heaven,' he was told." Nuisances Reported. "About ao.fmfl nuisances a year are reported to us,'' said a clerk in the nuisance bureau of the city hall, "and some of them me pretty queer. Once there was a young woman reported a man for bathing with the blind up. This careless chap. It seems, would hop into his bath in the morning with out lowering the curtain. A mln'Eter once reported a family for playing rag time music and popular songs on the piano on Sunday, but, of course, that case was out of ur rrovince. A down town man was keeping a rooster for a friend of his, but he hadn't had It three-days befori it was reported. It made a nuisance; of itself, tlia com plainant said, by crowing at daybreak. Once a spinster bad the facj to report a baby as a nitlp.ai.ee. She said it cried all night, so that she could not sleep, The boss got mlithty indignant- with ber. 'Are we to let the raco die out, madam,' he says, 'so as to keep your rest undisturbed? Do you want us to kill this baby? Kemember, madam,' be says, 'that you were a baby once yourself.' A Mansyunk man was re ported as a nuisance to us last year because he Biiored loud. Philadelphia Record. "The Ould Art." West Penn You never heard an Irish person speak of the "Ould Dart." Possibly your cars have doubted the'"d" when the "ould art' was 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 dialets. "Art," in good Irish, means a car dinal point; the Scotch form la "alrt." "Of all the airts the win' does blow." writes Burns. This is only ono of thousands of common errors in re lation to Irish dialect; cultivated peo ple who have beard and used it can not recognize it as usually written. An Untidy Petticoat. For a petticoat that has frayed around thu bottom, cut off Mn Inch till round, bind with velvet binding to match, and just above put a couple of rows of narrow ribbon volvet of the same color, and It will look as good as new. When making a petticoat, it Is a good plan to got an extra piece that can be used for a new frill to put around the bottom when the petticoat Is half worn. The potato Ir a native of Chill and Peru. They were originally carried to England from Santa Fe, lu Ameri ca, by Sir John Hawkins, in or about the year lot;,!. J Of. f'-r. -I Q.Url J UUIU 1 w I I ' - ' Uttivul w li-l wiUui. ,,.., is. Ji !;..-'. 'nr M.U.- Noruutl ( .-ur-.-s. .".rid r s, , .i !. , OHO, I, In f 1- lO s C'l'i.-o Art tO-HWO'p M'(,fn.'.!iv, w e 1MI-1 1 v o-'. i il Oik ; M'oog i.oi,.,i' l',.-p;..i..ry n..n..-... J FHCE TUITION & I' '.I: j c-;o;'n- ; :o pt-f ' k. "J i 1.-, I,,,.''. -1 III :,. I! i'.ol I.'iin i i iib ; . ,t ,iU. v rUu I r n. L. K.-mp, a. r.i., 5 i, - . i . . .. i , :. piUO hi l ttriiwl.iiii.li I The fi-Unv. iot iii!pr:t;.M'niint s.-t jip.irt to wuiow hns in. n t.Utt won tlu! K lister llOil W HI il,' Jll , tl t l-ll tO t tiO t -OU It oil t 111: loiui Momi.tv ot ln-t-i-nibiT uvxl. for cu.i lirioatioii itiui ai'ori.--, ;! : I r Ma'.u of liriiii u.-r V oo.l, d.'cwisod. A p 1 prnl-'-oi, lit i.t ji.'i. .on! pio.Mii'tv M-l. ilLJUit ' to W liioV. b ' ' J:i 1 't lt ui I .! !!. C. 'A r..- I iKtHK. J (-. I Nov. i'i. 1'.' ilrknlrt CrttiiT p -- r. i n tic ! UUol ii.vtiLlo.innUil Suite of !' i K- i-rsioii, ill iy of I'ikw ( ! N'Hl.C In i, 1 ov iv,-n to el bntlli.i l. tw.il, uu.) or oi tii-rw I,.,, In '(.Mn.ir, t io,(, tlm l.t '-ioim-i- trim l 1 i, li.i-s.'V ''li C'-l.rM ot 1 ': iv'.' C'li n i V v r i it,- I- I'I el toe ( "OH lii.H-1' !'l t no ni:,0 ol .l !' "'il Otl t.iu tl. isi ''0',0'l.iV C-'-jII i.t '4 u- K p. ill- fimi V.OI bo COULill i d tuii . iv If !U' .i ,&.'.! V : t , j o lit ,i;!:i,ii!ir 1 !-ii. iirt. : :: ,i', s i.i,-ii r;. i.- : The Brot newspaer, pulilished in Hosfor., was the "Moslon News-I.et-ter," In ITo-t. which was continued un til 1714, itnii as, up Ui that period, tlie only paper published in the country. Piano fortes were Invented in Dres den, in 1717. Tlie square pianoforte was first made by an organ builder of Saxony, naiticil Freijt?ricf souaotilua about the jenr 1768. ltettt?r l!iii 1'la.ter A jiiot-e of fiiititicl iliimix'tit'd with Chauiljnr'min'ii Pain iiiim inl InrunU uu the a'Tcctfil jiarlu, i& hcttor than a i.hist.-r for a lame, back and tor inttiia iu tho siild or cliuat. l'uiu iu.lin kwi no hoiKuior Ha n liuiuieut for the relief of deep .efltt'il, imiscu !nr aiiil i heu tiiiitsc jiaina. For on'a by i.olih & Kim, Mutamotas, ail i- -in ml fctmoa la 1'iUo county. Accent Still with Him. At a dinner that the Transportation Club of New York itave recently in honor of J. Pierpont Morgan, Charles H. Cramp of the big Philadelphia ship building firm, said in reference to a financial tight that was under discus sion : "The way the first party accuses the second, refusing to take to itself any of the blame that rightfully belongs to It, reminds me of a story of two Scots which one of the teachers at the Phila delphia Boys' High School told In my boyhood. "These men were Canadians, They bad emigrated from the lank of kale at about the same time. They used to meet once or twice a year, and talk about lo mi e. "One day the first asked the second how long be had been In Canada. " 'About sax years,' was the reply, "'Hoot, moo!' exclainted the first then In a patronizing voice, 'why ha ye na lost yer accent, liko mysel'?'" Watching for the Cloud to Bump. Two little boys, aged six and eight. named Ernst and Hugh, were standing on their front lawn, gazing lnteiuly up fo the sky, which was tilled with dark and ominous looking clouds, the fore runners of a storm. "What are you looking at, boys?1 asked their mother. "We are waiting to s the clouds bump together and mako thunder, was their reply. -New Orleans Picay une. Personal. The Crar of Itussia is the largest in dividual landowner in the world. The area of his possessions is greater than that of the ltepubllc of France. Eml!e Waldleu'el, the wlls writer, thouU an old man, still compos,,- a large amount of dance niuiilc. Over &K) wuitzes, poikas, mazurka, and other ed by St. WaliUsufel. dances have been written and publish To be extolled for bat one ia Cue loves, for there's a subtle bliss ln't; But theres a rarer Joy than thls Tia to be praised fur what ona lm't. -Ufa. Balch A; Huo, Siatamoras, and al general t tores in Pike county guar siitca every bottle of Chamberlain. ' Cough H.puody anil will refund the nu ney to anyofia who la not satis ti.l after using two-thirds of tin cutt'tita. This is the best retnetU in tlio worhi for la prl'ipe, coughs olil.H, c.ioup a uil whooping couj.'l ami is l,U-a.i!it ami stito to thke. It prevct.fi any tendency of a coiil to result in lmeuuioulti. 2 'i'i t'l IF Y0UM.E SICK And need medicine for your Kidneys, Liver, Bladder or Blood, get the Best. Dr. David Kennedy' t Favosita Remedy. If von are gufTeilnjf from kidney or bladder disease, the doctor ssks: "Do you desire to urinate often, and are you compelled to get up frequently durint; the night? Does your back pain you ? Doe:, your urine stain linen is there a scald ing pain in passing it, and is it diilicult to hold the urine back ? If so, your kidneys or bladder are diseased. " Trv putting some of vonr urine in a glass tumbler, let it stand twenty-four hours, it thre is a sediment, or a cloudy, milky appearance, your kidneys are sick. Dr. David Kennedy s l avorite Remedy will surely relieve and cure the most dis tressing cases of these dread diseases. and no physician can prescribe a niedici no that equals it for kidney, liver, bladder and blood diseases, rheumatism, dyspep sia and chronic constipation. Walter l. Miller, ot Delhi, N. ., writes : "I suffered for years with kidney trouble and severe pains In my back, at time it was so bad I could hardly walk. My stomach also troubled me and I frequently had twinges of rheu matism. I suffered a great deal and received no benefit until I berran the use of Dr. David Kennedy's Favorite Remedy. After taking it a short while It cured me." It is for sale bv all druggists In the Vow fiil ffent Sir and the regular f 1.00 size bottles less than a cent a dose. Sitmfff fetttetneufrn frr trial, frit ry mmi. Dr. Duvltf Kvnnedy Corporation, Rondout JN. Y. Dr. SvM KmrnsiVt mtm BraM inatnnt rrllal Mswaif u, atwuutlMS ImisMt tun. I&c, 5W. Colonel Uryan says he- ahull fight for the democrat!? pnrty for tlie next twenty-five years but the Kansas City Journal remarks tlmtlf he fights In the future as effectively as he has thus fur tlie democratic party will hot last twenly-flve years. New York's new mayor, Mr. Mc- Clellan, announces that there will be no "graft" or "red lights" in his atlniltiiMlrntion. Yet Tammany has been taking a very rosy view of tlie recent election results. The cable reports announce that the juramentado is very active in the Sulu Islands. This Is probably an other one of those insect pests whicli causes the farmers the loss of millions ot dollars annually. The Hon. Webster Davis In his championship of Colombia will prob ably find the people less financially able than were his Uoer friends. Since Colonel Ilrynn did not fret his $fi0,0()0 from the Bennett estate he will have to cut out great deal In tlie banqueting and entertainment line on his European trip. llepresentative Watson of Indiana in the House tlie other day asked his democratic colleagues a few unan swerable qutstions wlten he wanted to know what the democrats had done in the last twenty-five years in the way of progress. Mr. Watson shows for his theme a rather hack neyed subject since it !s generally conceded that the sole stock in trade of the democracy in opposition. There la no hope longer that eminent statesmen will bo able to dust up and redeliver their old speeches on "Our 8ister Republic of Colombia." The quick action of the Washing ton government, In the Panama mat ter prevented fighting and' bloodshed yet the administration's course pro voked Immediate and vigorous dem ocratic criticism. Had the action of the government been slow and stately the criticism would have been tho same. . "The time-honored principles of democracy," a phrase which Is being rolled around with apparent relloh in the mouths of some of our eminent statesmen, are things which the coun try wots not ot. Time has been occupied otherwise and while she has been marching on these so-called principles have one by one exploded with loud crashes. The cost of living is sliown to have considerably Increased in the last few years. It comes high but we must tiave it, Mr. Cleveland expresses indigna tion at liis continued mention for the democratic nomination on the claim that it Is humiliating to be spoken of as the only available man for carry ing the democratic standard. - Mr. Bryan, on the other hand, would like very much to be considered the big gest toad In the puddle, even if most of the water has evaporated. A glass or two of water taken half in hour before breakfast will usual 'y keep tho bowala regular. Harsh oathar'.ies should be avoided. When a purgative W needed, take Cham berlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets They are mild and gentle iu their action. For Bale by Balch & Son. Matumoras, al! general - stores iu Pike County. REGISTER'S NOTICE The following account hs been liU-d with the K.-;tor mat w til be piejiti'tl to I ho ( liiitt lr coiJiirimai'tu uu the iuud Mw'uluy uf Dift'MiUT Kii.iiV of I'liiiio b 'u liner, decea.-irtl. Klint ami Jin ul mcount of fc-lla li. u tutor and Philip K r uhner. exeeuinrn. .!uPN V. hiimoolC, J il.. WANTED A KKW MOIIli; WANTED o 0I3 AGJ2V EVSItlWIIIiUR to sfLi, ci it toniii, uu r;ivit orn 7 Alil'MTS A rilCFIT THAT 1ft PA 1 IM1 Till '.11 Mill,, eol for JMcillcnl Hlnnd, lliitl n Itingnouls of Voor ne Slay Ite Minnie, l'r'e f linrgc, ly Our Mtdl.nl Director. S. A. RICHMOND'S N W R A D I C A L -63- Jim f I I t 1 , I l,i V HtV i,e"",'" l!'. I R E G N E R A T O R WILL CURE YOU. Is a sovereign remedy for all diseases of the stomache, liver, bowels, kidneys and bladder, also a wonderful Vitalizer and Cleanser of the system, and is a powerful stimulant to the sexual organs. It has no equal for constipation, and restores natural digestion. It is a valuable adjunct with our Nerve Tonics in the treatment of Epi lepsy. Prico, S1.2LB per Bottlo. SK.Nl) FOR CIRCULARS CONCERNING OUR RF.MEDIE.t, Drt. 8. A. Richmond Co., 942 W. Van Uuren St. , Cliionqo. TjABORATOrtY, TfHOOtA, If.I,. "BEST OF ALL FLOUR FEED, MEAL, BRAN, OATS, and HAY. When in need of any Hello to No. 5., or come to SAWKILL MILL, MILFORD, PA. twin ICOST i OWE to buy n postal card and send to Tho New York Tribune Farmer, New York City, for a free spool men copy. The New York Tribune Fanner is a National Illustrated Agricultural Week ly for farmers and their families, and EVKUY Issue contains matter instruc tive and entertaining to EVERY mem ber of the family. The price is $1.00 per year, but if you like it you can secure It with your own favorite local newspaper, Thk Prims, Milfonl. IV, nt a bargain, iloth uarxtrs one year only $1.65. Scud your order and money to the Pikb County Pukss, at Milfonl, 1 Pa. 1 Delaware -: Valley -:- Railroad Time Table in Effect October I, 1303 p in p m i STATIONS 10 00 1 40 Lv i (mi 12 40 Ar P M I 13 H.Y 5 00 ? oo Lv fl:i HT, fa it! 11 W " fl'J l! f") IH fi Ol " fu -7 , f vj n ' lj 11 5 it 7 11" fl j 51 fr 111 f7 US' " fl'J &' tfi 1I f7 I'H ' -i iiTi . it 7 2-i " fi: so' rs 2-i' n ar " tl Ui fi IT "v " 1 (fl 5 So 7 ffr " 1 W & to 7 id Ar . . New York I). L. & W. H K .. . Phihitlclphi.-v Hioad.-trcet Station p in p. in sw .... 7 :ir 10 25 East Strolldsburf? Ar! S So 4 'Mi I.t .Delaware Viillcv Junction "! fs ; ft -in, M s.i Kvvle Valley " i fH HI ft ai fit :!l CrniR S Mrsdimi " fS Si ti V.l fll l:t Mnrihall's Creek " H 4 11 Mil Oak lirovo "j fs I'i- fl (Kli fli W FruielicvH ' I fs Hi U in frt o Coolb.uiKh " : li 13 4 0 rt u:t Echo Lake " j ft 11 f t'l' f tit Turn Villa " j fs uw r. otl- f,i f Busiiklil L. 8 00 3 5oi 5 40 p. m p m.'p in f Stops only on not ice to conductor or on bIk""I P m p m Ip m Trains arriving at Flusliklll at 1.10 p. in connects with Btuga for Diiigman's Kerry, Milfonl and fort Jervia. I. SELDON CASE, Supterintendent, East Stroudsburg, Penna. i i.j ni 'I.Mi J2M . Our let oiliitDca it uc Unl. AiiV one rudiun i I;. ' Will ' STAStltMtB &Ltch huJ liciiiilmu ot auv luvculmu pioiuotly tco-ive cur opiuion fie c.jii'.crnuin t'ue vii.cm.,l.ility oi hi.ine. "ll'i, to o0t.iu a l-ateitl " .tut uH.a ititic-t. l'ao.-:il iijutcil tliu,i.K'h ua .,t-.i:iiii. :.r iwl at our enixriino. k-dlcitH UktQ out tlioiuli u tvene iiruil aulo , wioiout chrtigi?, iu iiiH Cat hi. r Htcu.m, IU ill .itnm-,l a i,1 v, Me-!y ci r i u t ., u tl jiuiuul, Cki..uo, l by M.i uiiidi tui t-r d uil luvolois, bcuj lor oiy IKt I, AJilieaA, VlCfOd J. EVAN3 CO. tMjtcul AiCorncs.) .art Building, WA5HIGTJr. - C ' ' , CAVtST. . '4 I A OF t ? , Mark J. 'CorvaicHrs. Ttnrtv-one ve.i a, rive practiow. Optntoii m to yttihiuy Bn,i teiiuil,i illy. nte fi.i i-o.,M "I iiomi '-i tmanil i'i'i rt.'ii. ia. Et'huM boit4
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers