ITALIAN CHEAP LIVING. Railroad Laborers Al)le to Get Along on Less than 910 a Month. That Italian laborers save mors fnonay at the same wages than any Other European Immigrants Is a . statement made in a report of the department of comrrerre and labor. The reason Is easily found, says the New York Sun. A great majority of the unskilled laborers In this country are employ ed in railroad construction and simi carried on where there pre no ac commodations for boarding and lodging the men. boarding camp thus becomes essential to the contracting company. In the case of men of all nationali ties except the Italians a fixed charge Is made for the boarding and lodging of each man. The Italians; however, Insist on buying and cooking their own food. Investigation of fhe records of a contracting company employing many laborers of various nationali ties in railroad construction showed that the actual cost to the company of groceries, provisions and payment for cooks, waiters, fuel, light, etc., at Its "boarding camps was 19 cents a meal, or $3.99 a week for each man.-- The men were charged $18 a month for board -and lodging. The Italians at the camps of the same company lived mostly on maca roni, sausage, cheese, sardineB and bread being the staples and the others used very sparingly. The average monthly expense of each lab orer was as follows: Twenty-five one and one-half pound loaves of bread at 8 cents, $2-, thirty pounds of macaroni at 7 cents, $2.10; sau sage, sardines and cheese, $1.50; lard, 90 cents. Most of the Italians In addition to that amount spent air average of- $3 a month for beer, cheap cigars and tobacco, which with the expense of $1 a month for shanty rent brought the total cost of living up to about $10 a month. I " A Woman's Heroism. History has presented few exam ples of greater heroism than that of Mrs. S. J. Rooke, the telephone operator of Folsom, N. M., who-wtren warned by a resident of the hills to flee for her life from the flood speed ing to engulf the valey, rejected the opportunity It save herself and em ployed the hourthat Intervened be tween tho warning received and her own death by drowning In calling up subscribers by telephone and ac quainting them of their danger. More than 40 families have already" ac knowledged their lives saved through the magnificent courage of one frail woman, whose lifeless body, with the telephone headpiece still adjusted to ber ears, was found 12 miles down the canyon. Decries the "Midnight OH." "People talk about the midnight oil as if it had some virtue attached to It," writes Dr. Hale in Woman's Home Companion. "In truth, four times out of Ave the midnight oil means overwork, or It means that you have neglected some duty which should have been attended to before the sun went down. "Unless each night recovers the ground lost in the exertion of the day befote, you are committing sui cide by inches; and you have no right to commit suicide at all." Old People Make Merry. . In recently published reports of the fair which took place at the Home of the Daughters of Jacob, New York, mention was made of the chief usher, a "lad" age 105 years, and of the "girlB" who sold candy and lemonade, although they were only 108 and 107 years old. Some doubt was expressed aa to the ages of these Inmates of the home. Al bert Kruger, the superintendent, aaid that there was no exaggeration. A Successful Housekeeper. A woman to be a successful house keeper needs to be devoid of inten alve "nerves." tihe must be neat and ystematic, but not too neat, lest she destroy the comfort she endea vors to create. She must be affectionate, sympa thetic and patient, and Xully appre ciative of the worth ana dignity of ber sphere. Now, If a woman cannot broil a beef steak, nor boil the coffee when It Is necessary, if she cannot mend the linen, nor patch a coat; If she cannot make a bed, nor ventilate the house, nor do anything practical In the way of making a home ac tually a home, how can she expect to be a successful housekeeper. She needs to ejucate herself In the art of domestic virtues, to make a real "Home, Sweet Home." She Bhould have a place for every thing and keep everything in its place. Remember and put In prac tice the motto, "Never put off 'till to-morrow that which you can do to-day." Thus the poorest dwelling presid ed over by a virtuous, thrifty, cheer ful and cleanly woman, may be the abode of comfort, virtue and hap piness; It may be endeared to man by many delightful associations, fur nishing a sweet resting place after labor, a consolation In misfortune, a pride In prosperity and a joy at all times. . A Drlli ii us Iclnjr. Put on a cup of granulated sugar with half a cup of water let It boll without stirring until it spins a heavy thread. Beat very stiff the white ot one egg and into It pour slowly the hot sugar. Let the syrup cool a little before putting it In the egg or it will cook it. Beat steadily until the Icing Is cool and creamy. Just before It Is too cold to stir longer add one ounce each of can died cherries, chopped citron, can died pineapple and blancbei at jnonds. THtt tJlUCKFVL filRt. Has en Air r.f Superiority That Forces Her I'pon Our Notice. Have you ever noticed the great' amount tf admiring attention which the graceful girl attracts? Even al moderately good-looking, and not prettily or smartly dressed, there is an air of natural superiority about her which forces her upon our no tice. This superiority lies In the factthat the graceful girl knows how to poise her body correctly, how to . walk and sit becomingly. Con sequently no matter what she wears or what her fentures may be like, she always appearB to the best ad vantage. A plain girl who knows how to stand, move, and sit with ease Is far more admlrei than the beauty who Is clumsy and awkward. Some girls are naturally graceful. But there Is no reason why those who are lacking In this respect Bhould not add to their charms by care fully cultivating the art. An erect carriage, a graceful walk, a graceful manper of sitting and rising are necessary if a girl .wishes to be reaily charming. And it is quite within her own power to acquire these virtues. In the first place ahe must study her own defects and the faults of other plrls In order that she may avoid them. Do not try to copy the graceful girl off hand, so to speak, by forcing yourself Into what, to you would be unnatural poses and attitudes. That Is not the way to cultivate graceful ness. In fact by doing so you will probably only make yourself more awkward and clumsy.. By always trying to avoid the little faults which present a girl from becoming graceful, you will as time goes on find yourself drifting quite natural ly Into the ways and manners of the graceful girl. SMOKKLESS GRIDDLE. Odors as Weil, Are Carried Directly l'p lie Chimney. A smokeless and odorlest. griddle and broiler, which has been lately pntented. has advantages which will be readily recognized at a glnnce of the accompanying cut. The front plates of the stove -being removed, 'be new griddle sets In and at the samo time falls below the stove top. In this manner the heating surface is brought nearer to the fire and all smoke, vapors and odors are car- SMOKELESS GRIDDLE, rled up the chimney. The griddle Is open at the top but -for. the purpose of broiling it is desirable that a greater heat should be secured, and this is brought about by making a lid over the top. When the latter Is lowered, the meat being cooked gets the full benefit of the heat, but when It is raised every opportunity is offered for Its examination. Washington Star. Cruel Fussy Mothers'. Across the aisle from me sat one of the "fussy" kind of mothers with her little girl, evidently about five years old. The mother didn't leave the child in peace for one minute. She took off her hat; smoothed her hair; she replnned her collar; she wiped ber face with her pocket handkerchief; she took ber from her scat and stood her on the floor to straighten her frock; then she sat her back again. She took off her hair ribbon and reUed It; she looked In her eye to see If there was a cinder In It; then she began at the beginning and did all these things over again. The child grimly endured. Evi dently she had been accustomed to It all her short life. The world to her was a queer, tiresome place in which mothers exhausted their ener gies and got their nerves on edge by paying useless attention to little girls. ' A physician who sat behind me watched the scene. "Has the woman no senBe?" he said to me In an undertone. "Every touch pushes that child nearer the sanitarium that will one day open Its doors to take her in aa sure as fate." "Poor little one!" I said. "Is there no hope for her?" "Not with that mother," grimly replied the doctor. (jitrabaldi'a (runddaitghter. Italia Garabaldi, a granddaughter of the great Italian patriot. Is at the head of the Methodist Girl's Home School at Rome. Miss Garibaldi Is a Methodist, a graduate from a Meth odist school in Rome. Ekxi for Invalids. Cover frying pan with cream. When hot beat as many eggs aa wanted, season with a little salt and keep stlrrlnt until light. Keep Food Hot. An ingenious housekeeper, who often has to keep food hot for be lated members of the family, has found that by placing the food be tween two hot plates and setting them over a saucepan tit hot water In the oven it can be kept from be coming dry and taste, ?ss for as long as r"ay be setcssary. If the oven U very hot the tiuor Is left opeu. Tin. middle aged ma. Why He Thinks It Is Rheumatism That Bctliei-i Mini and Not Goat. "Cap anybod) tell me," said the middle tared tuan, "the . difference between rheumatism and goutT Now, not being very well versed In medical science, knowing very little In fact about osteology or therapeu tics or anatomy, materia medlca or pharmacopoea, I wouldn't undertake, myself, offhand to say; but in a gen eral way I would say that gout Is an ailment that attacks the rich and rheumatism the poor; and, being not what you would call a rich man, I suppose what I've got Is rheuma tism. "I -have read In novels and seev pictures of portly gentlemen of mid dle age or rather more who sat In great easy chairs and with one foot ail swathed up In bandages stretched out In front of them supported on a feot rest. This is the old gentleman, living In a fine old manor house or In a splendid mansion in town, who Is described in the novel as being testy and chc.erlc choleric, as' I un derstand It, meaning not that he has cholera or anything of that sort but an uneven temper; and this old gen tleman with foot thus done up In bandages and supported on a foot rest has gout. "But several of my symptoms are different. I don't live In an old manor house, nor In a mansion In town; and however disposed I might be to be testy and choleric. I have to keep my temper, and I don't Bwath my foot in bandages and re eline It on a foot ret. I have to keep more or less on the mure. "So I suppose that In the absence of the familiar gout symptoms we might safely diagnose my case as one of Just plain rheumatism; but t guess my rheumatism hurts me about as much as the gout of our testy and choleric old friend hurts him." One Rook Authors. Robert Burton, the author of "The Anatomy of Melancholy," may claim this honor: His book has stood the test of time as few books have. Pro fessor balntsbury writes that "all fit readers of English literature have loved him." Lamb praises "the fan tastic great old man" and. Indeed, borrowed from him many a choice phrase. Among other remarkable "one book authors" may be mention ed Sir Thomas Malory, whose fa mous collection of Arthurian ro mances Ib one of the Imperishable treasures of the English, tongue; Richard Hooker, whose "Laws of Ec clesiastical .Polity" Is still a stand ard book on the constitution of the Church of England, and Gilbert White, whose immortal "Natural History of Selbourne" Is still read with pleasure and profit. Business Philosophy. Play Is work that you don't have to do. Never hide a traveling man wbose waistcoat Is more insistent than bis personality. Don't rise so high In your calling that you see only one side of your fellows. ' It's true that a marble statue has no faults, but then It has no friends, either. There are plenty of doors labelled "Pull," but the majority, after all. bear the legend "Push." " There are self-made men In this world who ought to be suffering from remorse. Warwick James Price In Lippincott's. Microbes. "Speaking of the ark," he Bald, "I saw a little boy at play with his Noah's ark the other day. I watched him put aboard all the people, all the painted animals, and then I saw him place carefully In a sheltered spot two tiny splinters of wood. " 'What are they, my son?' I asked. " 'Them's microbes,' said he. "It had never occurred to me be fore, but there must, of course, have been a pair of microbes in the ark." Harper'g Weekly. Thorwaldsen. Tborwaldsen was a Dane, born In Copenhagen, Denmark. It Is bard to answer your question about his greatest work. He worked along various Hues that of the classic mythology, that of religion and that of history, and the question you raise would be answered differently by dif ferent people. One might say that his "chief work" was the "Mars," another "The Twelve Apostles," and till another the "Lion of Lucerne.." Pretty nearly everything that Thor waldsen did was great. An Echo, Not a Voice, He who floats with the current, who does not guide himse'f accord ing to higher principles, who has no Idea, no convictions such a man is a mere article of the world's furni ture an echo, not voice. Henri Pxednrlclc A-nilel. An Indian Alphabet. The Cherokees probably rank the highest In the Indian tribes. They were originally one of the five na tions on the Atlantic coast but were transferred to the west of the Mis sissippi. A full-blooded member of that tribe, Sequol, Invented an al phabet for his people In 1824. Popularity of Some Men. There are some men who are so popular that they act as if a man ought to regard It aa a privilege to have one of them regularly borrow bla tobacco of him. When You Varnish Stairs. To stain or varnish stairs that are In use stain every other step the first day. When dry stain the other steps, placing a block of wood on the dry steps as a reminder to use them. Teacher Makes the Man. No greater Bervlce can , be ren dered the youth of a country than to train good teachers and professors fir its benefit. WEAK NECKED Mow the Clerk Knew What 8Ih Col- lar waa Wanted. Miss Mary Colerxn la tbe New York lawyer whose, wit and elo quence turned a suffragette meeting In Wall Street from failure to suc cesa. "A man doesn't need to be hen pecked to support our movement," Miss Coleman said afterward. "It la wronging men to say our male sup porters are like like " Miss Coleman smiled. "Like this," she said. "A tall, stout woman seated herself before the haberdashery counter of a de partment store and said: " 'I want to get some collars and neckties for my husband.' " 'Yes, madam,' said the clerk. 'What size collars?' "The woman frowned and bit her Hp. " 'Sugar!' she said. To save my life I can't remember!' "'Thirteen? Twelve and a half?' the clerk suggested. " 'Why, yes tweTVe and a half,' said the woman. 'How did you guesa It?' "The clerk smiled. " 'Gentlemen who let their wives select their ties anl collars take that slie,' he said." SHRINKAGE. "3he swore that she would love met forever and a day." That was her phrase." , "And dldh'f she keep her prom ise?" "Only partly. She loved me for a day." Horns of the Dilemma. It was the meeting of the baseball team In a New England village, and the business before It was the elec tion of a captain for tbe coming sea son. Of the dozen youngsters present, more than half were candidates for tbe post. First one and then an other rose and stated the claims and qualifications of his particular fav orite. The matter waa still uqdedded when the son of tbe owner ot the ball field stood up. He was a small, snub-nosed lad, with a plentiful sup ply of freckles, but he looked about him with a decided show of dignity and confidence. "I'm going to be captain this year," he Bald convincingly, "or else father's old bull la going to be turned Into the field." He was elected unanimously. Youth's Companion. To the Odor Born, i A Chicago man who waa a mem ber of the committee on reception on the occasion ot the visit of the Prince Albert ot Belgium a year or two ago, tells of his Hlghness's Inspection of the stockyarda. The Prince received every possible attention and was much Interested In the magnitude of the Industry and the various processes for disposing of the thousands of cattle and bogs Slaughtered every day. Just before be left he turned to the Intelligent young man who had been told to act as his guide and asked: "Do yoj never suffer any Incon venience from the odor here." "What odor your Highness?" waa the naive response of the young man. Found the Proper Head. A bright girl In a large school applied to her teacher for leave to be absent half a day, on a plea that feer mother had received a telegram which .stated that company waa on the way. "It's my father'a half sister and ner three boys," said tbe pupil, anxi ously, "and mother doesn't see how she can do without me, because those boys always act so dreadfully," The teacher referred her to the printed list of reasons which Justified absence, and asked if her case came ander any of them. "I think It might come under this nead. Miss Rules," said the girl, pointing, as she spoke to the words 'Domestic affliction." Th,Tables Turned. The amenities of political cam paigning are amusingly Illustrated by a story told by a Southern Con gressman. It appears that during the course of a atump speech delivered aome years ago by John Sharp Williams In Mississippi be was Interrupted by a sudden yell from a man In the audi ence : "I have been robbed by pick pockets!" "I did not know that there were any republicans present," promptly suggested Mr. Williams, la order to get a laugh. "Oh, there ain't, there ain't!" roared the unhappy man. "I'm tbe only one!" Costly Byeteeth. "I guess pa must have passed a lot of time at the dentist's when he was in New York," said Johnny Green. "Why do you think so?" queried his ma. " Cause I beard him tell a man to day that It cost him nearly $300 to get his eyeteetb cut," replied Johnny. THE SALESWOMEN'S REVENGE Worm Will Tarn Even In Patient "Bargain Counter Land." Tbe mendacity of the saleswoman seems sometimes not only Justifiable, but delightful to the observers. On Monday, which every one In thU Christian land knows Is bargain day and therefore bwsy day, an kugular and "choppy" female walked Into one of our shops and forced her way with her elbows to a point of vant age right in front of a weary looking clerk who was presiding over some remnants and trying to serve ten im patient customers at once. "Walt on me Immediately," ahe commanded. "I'm In a hurry, and besides, I know the proprietor of this store very well and he wouldn't care to have me detained when I have an engagement. How much Is this percale?" . "Ten cents a yard. You must wait your turn, madam." "This Is my turn. Will It wash? "Yes, beautifully. Ill wait on yon In one mln " began the sales woman, but the other waved her loftily aside. "I'll take the piece. Have It wrapped at once," she said. Then the choppy woman sailed away and the abashed customers whom she had deposed took heart and came to the front again. "That blue percale fades terribly,' one woman remarked to the clerk softly. "I bad some experience with It last year." The ghost of a smile flitted over the tired face of the saleswoman. "I didn't say It wouldn't fade, she answered, also softly. "I said It would wash, and so It will." , Candor. The colonel had remonstrated vig orously with kkacle Eph about the old darky's excursions into the state of Inebriation. Uncle Eph, though he promised faithfully to refrain from frequent dtps Into tbe flowing bowl, failed to live up to the colonel's expectations. Oh numeros occasions the colonel saw Eph under the Influence of liquor, but the darky when taken to task denied the accusation, affirm ing emphatically that he did not drink. One evening the colonel met Un ele Eph In a condition which made It plainly evident that the darky waa caught "with the goods on." "Eph," began the colonel, seri ously, "I thought you told me that you had given up drink?" "Ah sho' did, Massa Kern'l; ah sho' did," replied Eph. "But lately ah dun look up drinkin' an' gib up lyin'." Harper's Weekly. The Famine Saved Him. A remark made nearly twenty years ago, says a writer in the Lon don Telegraph, Is still numbered among the gems In the king's collec tion ot Irish bulls. It was a time of famine, and Miss Balfour, the sister of the former premier of England, Arthur Balfour, then Chief Secretary for Ireland, was one of the noble-hearted band of men and women who were .helping with food and clothes the victims of those black days. As she sat In a cabin one morning, an old man called down blessings on the head of her distinguished broth er, and on the beads of all those who had ministered to the wants of the poor. "And sure, me sweet leddy," he said, "If, It hadn't ben for the famine, It's starving we'd be this day." The Heavenly Bate. Mrs. Ardsely Van Twlller, hearing a great commotion In her drawing room, hastened In and found two maids brandishing dust-cloths and shouting shrill contradictions at each other In front of a little -Copy of Raphael's cherubs. "Katie! Katie!" ahe cried. "What Is the matter?" "Oh, ma'am, excuse me," Katie apologized, though there was a gleam of triumph In her eye. " T!a only Rosle, ma'am. You know she's only In the country this two weeks, and she's so green 'tis provoking. She ays thlm two In the picture Is bats, tnd I'm correcting her; they're wins." Tender Tribute. The author ot the following gem Is now being assiduously hunted for by all the Kaifsas newspapers: "Tenderly she laid the silent white form beside those that bad gone be fore. She made no outcry, she did not weep. Such a moment was too precious to be spent In Idle tears. But soon there came a time when It seemed as If nature must give way. 8 be lifted' ber voice and cried loud and long. Her cries were taken up by others who were near and It echoed and re-echoed over the grounds. Then suddenly all. was still. What was the use of It all? She would lay another egg to-morrow." Ncktn( Out a oo. "Work," observed the reflective dead beat "work is all right If you can get the sort to suit your Indivi dual needs. I, for Instance, wouldn't object to calling out the stations on an Atlantic, liner." to YEARS' EXPEItlENCK C04VMUaMT1a afttS. Antrmm sending s ktrtrb mn4 dMerlpClon mmf sin 1 oily utMiruirj our oi'iutou fro whether u tkiiu itrtctlT oiiiDdBiii iMU. lift cut frk. OMett aitenor fur ci-urui( uatietii. (nVewtai iMtUcaV without uiiaru. lu thai Scientific JlRiericatt. 1 huiasomclr Hlnift rated weekly. Ijuvtwt otr cUluUun ot aVijr tt-tenUflo tnuniail. Turin. J ;oin , ftmr month, $L Nd bjrtUl newedoalanv MMo mi-- New Yort i' Trade Marks re. . O Dcsions iThe is the inost thor oughly practical, helpful, useful and entertaining, national illustrat ed agricultural & family weekly in the United States. New I York Tribune Farmer itiICE, ONE DOLLAR A YEAR Send your name for free sample copy to New York Tribune Farmor TRIBUNE nUILO O New York . ty, N. Y. PIKE COUNTY PRESS ,$l,50 A T JOB PRINTING. Letter Heads, Cards Posters, Statements Bill Hsads, Envelopes Circulars, Etc., Etc. NEATLY TRADE w Marks. "WvCOPVR I0MTS. Thirty-one ye .n active practice. Opinion m to rtlMlty ann patcntahtlitv. w rite hit hook ol ntni-; ns and n-ferem-cd. EPSON BkO&,2 t Uraat. Waahlnstoa. O. C Time Tabls fi r PORT JERViS Solid Pullman critius Co ButTiilo, Nlag ira Falls, Chaut.iHim Laltu, Cleveland Ihicago and Cincinnati. Tickets on suta nt Furt .lervU to nil joints in the West and Souihjvet tic lowei ratei! than via any other flrxtliu.K line. In effect June 21th, 1U08. 1'ra.ins Now Liavi Port 'rrvib tt Follows. EASTWARD " 48, Dally 4 10 " " 6 Dally Kipress ft 40 " " 86, LooalKxuept Sunday.. 6.10 " 44 Holidays only 8 80 ,, S'o. 8, Duliy Express o 01 a, h. " 708, Way Sunday Only 7.21 " " 43, Local eioept .Sun Hoi 7.8i " 1 80. Looal Except Suuday. . 10. 80 " " 4. Dally Expiess 1.84 P.M ' 704, Sunday Only 8 HO " ' IM.Wny dully exo'CSund'y 8 80 ' ' a, Daily Express 4.6ft " 5, Way dally exo'tSund'y 8 86 ' " 708, LocM Sunday Only 7.16 " WESTWARD. Ho 7, Dally Express Is 28 A.. U. ' 47, Dally , 8.; ' 17, Dally Milk Train....!. 8.10 A" ' 1. Dally Express 1184 " " lift. For Ho'dnleE'pt Sun.. 12.1AF.H. " , ExpressChlcaKolhiidal ft 83 " 89, Daily Except Sunday . 6 00 " ". 6, Limited Dally Express. 10.06 " Trains leave Chambers screet, Now York, for Port Jervls'on week days at 1.80, 7 15, B is, 10 30 A. M., l.'JO 8 JO, 4 80, 0 16, 7.16, g ift 13.46 T. U. On Sundtys, 7 90, A. u 12 10. 1.16T 80.fl.16 P. u. H. L. SLAUSON. Ticket Agt, Pc.Jurvls. s H.W.Hawley, Div'n Passgr. Agent. Chambers St. Slatlun New York William B. Kenwo.they M. D Physician and Sureon. OlHon and residunoe Broad Street jext Court House. WILKOL1D. For Sale or Rent 160 acre farm knownas Wamr farm two miles hi i.v I .fi.'l Vm John C. Warner Milford Pa The Milford Livery Stable HORSES AND CARRIAGES to hi re with or without driv ers. HARFORD 8TRKKT Opposite HomesttHd Library. SOBIAS HBLSON Proprietor. Both these papers one ' year' .for only 1.85 if you send your order and money to Tho , PRESS Milford, Pike ; County, Penn. 3 YEAR DONE THADE-MARK8 promptly obUUicd In iiilcoumrl.', orno ice. W obtain PATCNTM THAT PAY. aWTrrUa them UKWigblr, axjH'QraB, anil help yon to "irmi. Bend model photo or sketch (or FftCC report n patentability. M years' practlo SUR PASSING RCFCflCNCCS. For frw Quid Boole on Profltnule Patvnr write to fe03-sos Saventh Btraat, Caveats, ana TradtvMarca obtained and all Jra4- cntbiuintMcinductedfor MopcRATt rifS. - O'lB OFFICE la OPPOBITX U. 8. PATCNT OFFICE? iou w e can mtu. -e Dnimtia leaa liua ihavn f (remote from Whinetoo . X J Send model, drawiur or phottk, with t)Mcrlp- j.iuh. no auvus, u pierUaWf Of OC, lr J (charge. Our fee not due till natent te iccurtrd. S f A Pamphlet. " How to Obtain Ptit." wth cost ot aaoio in the U. S. and torclyn cW0Ui sent 1-ea. Addrcn, . . J C.A.SNOW&CO. O... Patent Orricc. VfASHiMaToN. D. C- T Physicians have long bertn looking for a harmless headache care. It hns been produced by an eminent chemist of tbe National Japital. It is kno-n as Bhomo-PiipI!.- Beaibea curiam every form of heai!s,olie Instantly, Brorj.o Pepsin ia equally and aa promptly efficacious in cbronio and acute indignation and tbe nervous disorders Incident there o. It la efferescent and pleasant,' to take and may be bad of all up to dare drnggieta nt ten cents a bottle. ' It oomea as a boon to mankind and womankind, , For sale at C. O.'. Armstrong, DraKgiat. .. , f NOTICE. - : The Coiiiiiiiaionera Of Pike Countv will hereafter hold Hetrular Meeting the first Monday of each mo. between too hours of 9 a. lis . and i p. in. except ins 1 the months when Court may be in session, and then during Court THKO. II. BAK'RR Commissi ner Cleric Absolutely Harmless. Curst sa b Spot BROMO-PEPSIN 'Note th. Word Pp4laH ' f!liDFQHEADACNE- SLECPUSSNESS w w II Sh w i INDIGESTION (NERVOUSNESS All Drugjl.t., ioo, llottOa. For sale by C. O. AKUSTUoxu, Drugxiit WA NTS SUPPLIED 1 1 If mil Wntlt. Iinfu li.. , l Kt II ( i. a.. " . mil UtNMiH, lette rntr.(ti. Hrtttj'tiionr.w ui.,.,u .... ... . . ... , .......... I., v. itiiiip, prt'Knk Il lamo pontile, sale bllla. dwlavr. envelope s tni. huHinrsa oarus ur job nrlutiiig every de!riptiou. done up in the bcttvl foi you In au up to-dnte and artistic luau ner oall and see us. Priocsr VHK PRESS PTJINT. J. C. CHAMBERLAIN Real Estate Agent. Houses and Lots and Iocs without Houses Dewier in all kinds of Property. Notary Public ALL BUSINESS GIVEN PROMPT ATTENTION Office at Residence' on Water Street. Wilfori. Pn. . mm . ' J i 4 X " 'K' ' - . 0 . , I (