fCRET 8ERVICE6ECnETIVSNE88 Pta On Ever Heard of Ceteetlv Being Killed. "Tunny thing, but can you remem kef ever having hennl or read of a Oecret Service operator havlrs b- en nurdredT" It was an old New York tctlve speaking. "Of course you feaven't, and yet they are In a line of work In which men are killed now and then. In spite of the fine way In which II the Secret Service men stand by each other. The fnt Is that the Secret Service fceops the murder of one of Its agents Just as secret as some Important mat ter of State It has discovered. TUe Secret Service man when he Joins knows that If he dies In the discharge ef his duty he simply disappears and becomes as one who never lived. Ills relatives never know. "They are told he has gono on some far distant mission. In which he finally disappears and they begin o receive bis pension. Yet, while the murderer of a Secret Service man la never arrested or punished for fie crime, never even accused, he la pun ished Just the same. "I remember the case of a Secret Service man who was stabbed to death after midnight by an infuriated Italian counterfeiter in Mulberry street, not half a mile from Police Headquarters. A Secret Service man drove up swift ly In a cab Intended for the capture:! counterfeiter. The dying man was put In before he had left much blood on the pavement to tell of the murder. He died next day. No one ever beard of it nor of any punishment for this murderer. But the counterfeiter was shortly after brought up for counter feiting and got a sentence long enough to keep him In State prison for the rest of his life." The White Death. One of the n:ort curious of the nat ural phenomena peculiar to the Rocliy mountains Is tho r.:ystcrIo:i3 ttoi'.n known to the Indians as "the white eeath." Not many years ago a party of three women and two men were crowing a part of Colorado in a wagon during tl:e month of February. It was a de lightful morning, very frorty, but with brilliant sunshine, and tho atmosphere as clear as crystal. Suddenly one of tho women put her Land to her face and said tlir.t she hud been stung; then other members of toe party did the same thing, but ro Insect could possibly live In that tem perature. A moment later they noticed that the distant mountains were disappear ing behind a cloud of mist, a most un usual thing for that time of year. They drove on and In a few minutes a gen tle wind began to blow and the air became filled with fine particles of something that scintillated like dia mond dust In the sunshine. Still they drove on un,ul they came to a cabin, where a man signalled them to stop. With his head a!l muf fled up be rushed out and banded the driver a piece of paper on which was written: "Come Into the house quickly or the storm will kill all of you. Don't tali outside here." No time was lost In getting inside and putting the horses under cover, but in less than an hour the whole party was seized with violent counts and fever, and before the next morn ing one of the women had died with ail the symptoms of pneumonia. The others managed to pull through after long Illnesses, Scientists call this phenomena froz en tog, but whence It comes has not at present been traced. They Worked on Benches. The dignified dame was not really English, but she had mastered the dia lect to some extent. "My nevvew 'Erbert," she said, "wants tq marry a school teacher! Fawncy! A person who works for a living! To be sure, now thut I thin'; of It, that is not always a d.'Egrace. You, my dear, write for the press now and then, I am told, but you don't 'avc to. you know. That Is different." "Yes," replied the young person to whom she was speaking, "but I may be said to have Inherited a tendency to work, My father and grandfather both worked for a living, and they were not -allowed even the luxury of chair to lit on. They worked on benches.' "Dear me!" exclaimed the dignified dame, greatly shocked. "What did they ah work at?" "Well, my father was a Judge of the superior court, and my grandfather was one of the Justices of the United Btates supreme court." Directions for Amateurs. A writer in the Munich Juesd baa published Ave signs which shiLld be helpful to all wno have to criticise pictures. 1. If the artist paints the Bky gray and the grass black, be belongs to the good old classical school. 2. If be paints the sky blue and the grass green, he Is a re a! 1st. S. If be paints the sky green, and the grass blue, be is an lir.iirer.sioniat. 4. If he paints the sky yellow aud the grass purple, he is a coiorist. I. If he paints the sky black and the grass red, he shows possession of great decorative talent. Japan's Railroad Extensions. The Japanese government Intends W spend $75,000,000 during the next five years on railway construction aud equipment Among other Items, im propriations are made for doubl'.- 830 miles of track, and for construct ing 900 locomotives, 1,000 passenger cars, and 19,000 freight oars. A Substitute for Wotk. "Physical culture, father, is per. fectly lovely!" exclaimed an enthuc! astlc young miss Just noma from en! lege. "Look! To develop the arms I grafi too rod by one end and move it slowly from right to left." "Well, well!" exclaimed her father: "what won't science discover! If tiu:i rod had straw at the other e:id yoj'C be sweeping." THE POWER OP WATER. A Stream from a Fireman's Hose Vi'.'l Knock a Man Down. When a man go?9 in swimming nt tfcii cecisliore and slaps the water fo.' ciij'.y with ills hr.nd, or takes a back dive fro.u a pier sud lands snuarc'y ou his back, ho realize.! that the un stable )i(iiid olfeis not a little resist ance. Yet, says a writer in the New York Tribune, it would surprise almost anybody to se what water will do uu d"r certain CTilitloriS. A stream from a fireman's hoie will knock a mnn down. The Jet from a no.Voto used in plnccr-minlng in the West cats away a large piece of land In a day, toys with great boulders ns If they were p?bbles, and would shoot a man over the country as though he were a projectile fio;n a cannon. "luere is a story of an Eastern blacksmith who went West and made a bit l-.r.t he could knock a hole through the J t of one of these noz y."3 v. ltli a Bic'U.e-hnmmer. He lifted his ormi;, swung t".,e sledge, and came down cn tho ten-inch stveau with a force that would have dented au anvil. Hut the Jot, never penetrated, whlsUed the massive hammer out of the black smith's htinds, and togsed It several hundred feet away into the debris of gold-bearing gravel beneath a crum bling cliff. After this the blacksmith left out iron when he spoke of hard aulruitnc!. There is also a power plant near Durango, Colorndo, where a United Stales cavalryman one day thought he had an easy Job in cutting a two-Inch ureain with his sword, lie made a valiant attack. The result was that lis sword was shivered in two and lis wrist broken. A little thinner Jot of water descend ng sixteen hundred feet to a manu factory at Grenoble, Spain, and travel ng at the moderate speed of ono htm lred yards n second, fractures the best Jlades of Toledo. Of courrc ; on o people will not be leve such stories v;itliout having sccu Uio tlihis. a:id one may think it a iroof of the hcienlfilc Imagination to say that on Inch-thai: sheet of water, provided It had Bitilli-icnt velocity, r.Ouid ward olf bombshells as well as tee! plate. NpvcrtlieleF3, many persons, while traveling, have seen a bvakcmnu put i an.-' 11 hydraulic jack under one end )L a Pullman car and lift twenty tons r so by a few leisurely strokes of tho .lump handle; and the experience of -Itliug every day in a hydraulic elova 'or tenda to remove doubts of the magic power possessed by water hitch ed to a machine. Children's Sayings. Wordsworth's lino3 of the child at play, "as if his whole vocation were endless imitation," were recently re called by a conversation overheard In tho children's ward at the John Hop kins Hospital. A little girl of mine, whoe role wns that of nurre, rang an imaginary tele phone on tlie wall to talk to her com panion at the farther end of the room, who played the part of doctor. "Helio!" said the nurse. "Ia this the doctor?" "Yes," answered a deep voice; "this is tiie doctor." "This lady Is very sick," he was in Taxied. "Well, what seemB to be the trou ble?" a bit gruffly. "Ehe has swallowed a whole bottlv ol Ink!" said the nurse. The doctor, not flurried, InquircJ what had been dono for the patient: but the nurse, too, was ready in eme r gencies. She answered, "I cavo her two largo pads of blot ting parer!" lien, aped 5, was Inclined last au tumn to dispute the fact, as taught him by his father, that God gave him all he had. After an incredulous "Even those peanuts from the store?" be yielded to an older mind, and. screw lug his eyes tight shut, continued Ilia evening prayer. After asking a blessing for each member of the family, he said, "Thank God for the peanuts and my express wagon," adding after a slight pause, "but, oh, Lord, you certainly did Bend baby some wormy chestnuts." Cost of Railroad Tics. The railroads of this country are each year calling for more crosstles, jnd they are rapidly shrinking In number and Increasing in cost. The total number of ties purchased In 1907 was 153,609,620, an Increase ol 50,855, DT8 over I'jOu. The tela cost of the crossties purchased In 1M7 was JTS.t'oS, 81)5. an average of til cents a tie. The Increaso in total cost Wan therefore. ?i.13'i.5Tl, or (.1.7 r-.r cent tor Hui7 the h';;liest at eras cost, 5: cents, wao reported for red .rood ties -Many experiments have !.cn n;.idt with nie'al tie?, with a. view of llinlitit a sibMitule for wood, but noi!;in;. satisfactory lus yet. beeu produced Several of the leading roads have large tracts of trees gran-lug. and ma', in a dozen years oi more ir.ay be ah'., to surply their own wants. (irowis; trees on railroad lamia teems to hi the most practical way to provide 'o--the future. Conservation. The resources of the earth are th basis of our national wealth. Bj means of theti alone, in material thing?, conies leadership among the nations. The conservation movement now fully under wav tjibraces the for est movement ss ono of its source ar.d great divisions. Thus the canst of foiejt reservation throughout tin coumiy hrs won a powerful ally an' a mere effective support for the mrl th-.t lies Just hrfii'e us. Clifford Hi. chot In New Knclrnrt M.itrar.lne. Grass Raincoats. The summers In Mexico are too i:r for the wearing of rubber giraio to shed rain, and closeiv woven res of grass are a fair substitute. g,-, of these have a hood attached. Fainting. Of the l.'jOl young women fainted last year 9S7 fell lul0 tt , af o,cn. two fell on the floor and t Into water batu Ufo. THE EXPECTANT HAND. No Chtrge Made, Gut a Present cf Money Not Refuted. tn locorilir.g nn lllnes of his grand father, Uen. John Watts Db Pejvjtor Icl.s an r.iiiusing story In connection with !uJ!a: he. up. It la printed In l.ii bioKi :;ph.v by Mr. Frank Allnben. Indian hemp was reef-, 'mended ns ft remedy durinr; ray grv.ic..'ather's Ill ness, but whore to get It was tho question. Finally so...e one said it wits crown in the garden of old Jlf. Henry Brevoort, who cvned a lare plot ou the eat side of Lroadway, ex tending through to the linwery above Tertli street. Grace Church stands on part of tills Eroiuid. Doctor Kiliby pave me rim morey, to!d me tn jump into Ms f, g. drive up to Itrevoort's old low-sto.ied coltag.j house on tho flowery, and tell tho or.-nrr that I wanted some Indian keinp for ray grandfather, John Watts. I was to use diplomacy If necessary, but not to return without IL I trotted nlor.g briskly, roused -Mr. r.revc.irt from a nap. stated my ca--e, found no demur, and got the Indian hemp, which be dug up with his own hands. "How much am I to pay?" I ques tioned. "I never sells It," Mr. I'.reroc:! ro plied, "hecauhe If I I ,i;.?s raoricy for Indian hemp. It weakens the vartoo." I stated that I was o:iered to p:,y. r.nd we discussed the matter, walking across the gnrden toward the E!3.' which I had left on IJror. Iway. I had made up my i.itr.J that I ha I met with a di-lnte cftci! Christian. 1.ua replaced the mo. v !n n'.y j'ec':ct, as'l had my foot on the l - f .cp, vi-.ea t felt n brawny, sunburnt, freckled hand restraining me. ami heard these .vords wi.tcpered In my ear: "I raver -eiis TciVan hemp, for t'.iat weakens Jio vartoo but if I gives it, I never rc.'t:. e3 a ,r.;vnt." I cM-lcul. J tho rroney confided to n e. piaee.I !t In the i:;piclant hand, hurried hor.ir and related my story, and I have heard it laughed over many times. Newsboys. It Is good to hear that measures are on foot to help the poor little New York uev.sljoys, writes N. N. Moore In N. Y. Home .lotinial. I don't mean ue'.v 'boys as a class, for trey are gen erally nn independent and self-respect ing ret. I man the tired little fellows who beseech ouo to buy an evening paper nt about the hour when the morning paper Is coming off the press. There is said to be In this city bo municipal regulation as to tho of the children who are permitted or re C'lired to do this sort of work. There rcrli-iuly ought to be. Boston lirenses :d I believe uniforms its news'jo; md New York cught to hivo followed Boston's cxamp!'! long njto. Some of 'hose hoys are too hri?ht to be left to srov.- up on th streets rt night. Tho other day a lady stopped to talk with ona of these walfi niter her escort had bought a paper. "How many pa yers have you left?" "Six, ma'im." "And how much have you rrado to day?" "l'ifly-two cents since two o'clock." "And do you s.ell papers In the morn. Ing?" "Yes'm." "When do you sleep?" "Oh, I gels a snoor.o now and then. I don't sleep much." "Hut dup't you know that you must sleep if you want to grow up to be a b.g. strong man?" The little mite looked keenly at the lady did he size her tip for a Sunday-school teacher? and then said, Does Goa sleep?" That boy might bo n Charles O'Con nor if he had a chau e. A Man's Life Saved After Choklnf on Tough Beef. How a man's life was saved by a common seldtitz powder is described by a German physician, Dr. Frauck. who was called to treat a man who had swallowed a large piece of toug'a meat, which stuck in lis gullet. As it was impossible to dis'.odgo the meat by natural means, and as the patient's condltioa was critical, th". doctor tried the efficacy of the gas vliich is generated when the constitu ents of a seldlitz powder are mixed He directed the man to swallow the two halves of oae of the ponders separately, and the resulting pneuma tic pressure, aided by the man, who shut his mouth and c'o ed the naa'. passages, was su'licleut to drive the piece of meat out of the gullet into the stomach. A Lazy Boy's Invention. The lor.g-handled shove! has made over three hundred thousand dollars for Its iuventor, and the Invcnyor was a lazy, shiftless boy of seventeen named Iteuben Davis, whose father lived In Vermont at the time. He set Reuben to digging dirt and loading (1 on a wugun. und the short-hauuled shovel uiude the boy's back uche. One afternoon when his father was away, he tonk out the short handle aud fib stituted a long one, and found the work much easier. When Mr. Davis reached homo Reu ben got a whipping; but ifter the old gentleman had used the shovel him self, he saw that It was a scod thins and had it patented. They are now manufactured almust by the nilll'.uu. The Goo's of India. India is a laud of Idols. It Is e-.tl-mated that Uwie are throe hundi'C'l aud Uilrly-thtve million gods In llin dustan. The throo groat und special ly venerated deitk-s ate li,.-.!ima, Vl. h nu, aud Sua the HiiiJu Triuiurtl o; trinity, tlrahma stamls Crst. unap pioachablo. There are cm.y thrci temples in nil India erected lu 1.!. houor; he Is merely Invoked as tho chief of the Ti'i.nurii, but is nut made the object of actual worship, as he Is not supposed to takif any Interest in mundane n.Viirs. He Is the cre ator, the giver ol all g:fis and of all bleimys and covie.s t'te d. stines o! men, yet at V: j a ::e clmo Is co.i: plc'.cly tadli-'ercut to 'J., n. a wgeo eatinu cRiBPHw. i It Protects the Rubber Plant from the Lalang. It i-.p.iea.s that nt last an antidote i.:. j bven found to tho noxious weeds wl.iiii Co f.ci,ueutly the death ol (citaiu fin ns of plant and vegetable life In ti e Ka.it. Specimens of this wonderful "find" have been forwarded to the authorities at Kew Gardens. Ttiis pbr.t is a b'uo flowering creeper botnnicnuy known ns the Commellna, dudiflora iina?;i, but called "rumpu gremnli" by the natives of Malaysia, and "ge-wtir an" by Vke Javanese. Al though the report nbde at Kew goes to show that this creeper Is common throughout the middle East, It would seam that the managers of estates and plantations have not known of its pe culiarly welcome properties until Terr recently and accidentally. The prolific weed known as "lalang" Is the great eneuny to rubber growth. It was the accident of observing that where tho bltm (lowered creeper came in contact with the lalang the latter became much less Injurious that In duced a planter to send specimens to Kew. It seems thnt at first one be gins to notice that the weeds are be coming less proline where the creeper Is growing among them. This Im provement st.-,uily Increases as time goes on and it has been found that under the Influence of this antidote lalang which was formerly four or five feet in height hns been reduced to only cne or two feet when it starts to flower. But the Joyful discovery bavlng been made that here was an undoubt ed setback to tho weedy growth that chokes young rubber and is the bane of the planter's life, the question arose.: Would the antidote Itself exer cise a prejudicial effect on the rub ber? Therefore the specimens were duly submitted to Kew, and, as stated to our representative, the new creeper is unlikely to have any harmful effect c:i young rubber trees." Planters all over the East may therefore take heart of grace and also tnke this new "medicine." ' In npper.rance the blue flowered Commellna nudlflora Is rather pretty, and like the weeds which It first checks and then kills It rrovs with as tonishing rapidity. The particular es tate whose ninar?r made the discov ery and acted uron it so promptly and satisfactory Is the Iingkon estate, In British North Borneo. The amount of rubber produced annually in the Straits Settlements Is of course ery large, and the results of the discovery and Its successful application are like ly to ba far reaching. A True Pigeon Story, A gentleman had two pairs ef plgeoi s living In dovecots placed aide by side. In each pigeon family tsere '.vus a father and a mother bird and two little ones. On a certain day the rarcins in one dovecot went away to :;ot food, and while they were gone one of their little birds fell out of the 'ovecot and down to the ground. The oor baby bird wns not much hurt, strancc to nay, but It could not get back, for It was too young to lly. Now, the parents In thcther dove iot were at home when this hnppened, r.nd it seemed ns if they said to tbom selves: "One of our babies might fall out In Just that way. We must do f onieliilng to make the dovecot safer." And then this wise, careful father nnd mother went to work. They flew ubcut until they found some small sticks. These they carried to their own dovecot, aud there in the door way they built a cunning little fence of sticks, not so high but that the lit tle pigeons could look over It, but high enough to keep them from ever falling out of the dovecot as their lit tle neighbor had done. The owner of the pigeons, who had seen the bird ling fall and had put It back into its dovecot, watched the birds the whole time as they gathered the sticks and built the fence across the doorway. This Is a true story, and It is often told to some children In Boston by a lady who knows the owner of these very pigeons. A Man Who Never Speaks. Because he was reprimanded for talking too much when ho was a boy. John S. Smith, of Kansas City, has not spoken for twenty-seven yearn. Ho Is not a recluse, and he does not re fraln from conversation with those around him, but he "talks" with a pen cil and pad only. . Smith is a contractor and builder mi frequently has orders to give to his employees. These he always gives in writing. When questions axe asked lie replies In writing, and he and hh workmen get on amazingly well to gether, better, he asserts, than If hi spoke to them. St. Louis Globe-Demo crat. What They All Bay. How we label the man whose opln 'ons don't coincide with ours whea inr opinions are based on money: Yes, he's an able fellow, but of course everyone knows that he's a lit lie bit off on Here mention: Politics. Ke.iglon, Medicine. Literature, Etc. . Whatever the particular thing Bay happen to be. Early Conditions Important. Artlsu say that the lurround'.afls of the child determine whether er not ke may become an artUt. Hideous sur roundings warp and twist the percep tion of the beautiful so that In later life the child cannot compete with those who have enjoyed a more artis tic environment. Jumped at Conclusion. Two small boys had strayed in lh mummy room of a certain museum. "Wot's these?" said oite. "Them's guys wot's bin dead a long time," answered the other. "And wot's them letters, B. C. 14. over the guy In the corner?" "Ut'ess that's the number of the tiutonobile wot run over the poo: V.o'-it," TALK ON MAIIRIAUS oxe or the nr.sr diu'skkta- TIOXS ON HATUIMOXY. The Part Played by the Tint, itm Place and the Girl In That Ma mrntoas Ktcb The Authuwlilf I'nknom-n. You may ray what yon like abwnt the "Time the Place and the Girl, hut, after all, the time and the place have a lot more to do with the mak ing of matches than the Girl," said the spinster with a fondness for sta tistics. I'vo been getting up some data en the subject, and I find that la nine cases out of ten the circumstance the mood a man Is In, the clothes girl bnppens to be wearing wheel they meet have more to do with matrimony than the llttlebllnd god l.imse.f. And as to marriages being made In heaven the spinster shrug ged away that suggestion with con tempt. "Kvery wedding leaves sen n, an won.'.eiing 'what be saw In her.' I myself have made the remark apra. pos of half a dozen married wowiea I know, end In several cases when I knew the people pretty well, I've In quired f the husband where, and ai der what circumstances he fell ia love." "And what hare you learaesf she was asked. , "I learned that two of the thtasj thnt most appeal to men are helpless ness and a certain dainty femininity of attire that some women affect which pnts the tailor-made girl ml of business every time. One man told me that he was Imt smitten by love's dart while cross ing the street behind a lady, who. on lifting her skirts from the dust ill. played lingerie of the dainty, fluffy order that stamps a girl, to the mas culine mind, as a 'sweet, feminine creature.' He followed up the r'rl and the opportunity. The result was matrimony and a charming Eat Then he awoke te the fact that the femininity was a mere matter of latin- dry bills; and the lady was In real Ity one of the sort that Insisted o having her own way and his, !o- she was-, tn fsct, a bully of the i-s type. "Another n-.an I Interviewed met his fate n a railroad train. She was tn the act of struggling with a ro fractory car-window. 'Her little handr.' he raid, "locked so pretty and helpless: and, tea. when ho took the stubborn lush la hand and forced It oen. Ma own brawn and mns- V shaved ap veil by fcat! Then wha she looked it him and murmured admiringly Oh. It' lovely to be so strong!' hU doom was sealed. What though she were frekle1 snub-nosed and red-haired? She was a clinging vine, he a sturdy oak Well, he married her, of course, and he greatly fancied bts role for a year or two: but In course of time her ,'Mnglng become monotonous. He has grown tired of It, and, between you and me, I think he has some times been tempted to bring dam. ages against that railroad company for not having Its windows In work ing order. "And whnt conclusion have I reached on the subject you ask? This. That after a few years th re nit In most cases is the same! D's Utuslonment, disappointment, attd dissatisfaction on the man's part." "And the woman?" "As to the woman, she, too, list her dlsenchantmenta, but then (this ts strictly between ourselves) any thing is better than being an old maid!" Hands Age Rapidly, A horrible rerelatlcn ts made In publication devoted to scientific mat ters. It Is that hands age even .itore rapidly than faces. So where as women make every effort to pre lervo the youthful aspect of tltetr 'aces, they foolishly allow their lauds to giv. them away. It la ei-reu-.ely disconcerting to think that 'l.o obsenaut eye is not fixed on the 'ace. or even on the telltal chin, but tn the hands. There are ways, for tunately, by which their treachery -n be cicumvented, bat precautions xr more likely to be neglected la heir case than In that of the fac. Jahnny en Baths. Mr. Phelps Stokes, the young so. elall8t worker, recounted, at a social ist meeting in New York, her amusing experiences amongst slum children. On the subject of baths In winter, she said: "I expostulated the other week with one of those mothers who at the be ginning of cold weather, sew their little ones up in flannels, freeing them with the return of spring. I persuad ed this mother to bathe her children regularly. Then, last week, I visited her again. " 'Well,' I said, to do the winter baths go?' " The children don't like It, ma'am,' said the mother. 'Johnny refused his bath positively yesterday. He said yon could do as you liked, and he would do as he liked. Tou like to be cold and clean he like to b warm and dirty!' " .vV,4o. tiax- -v.; S1 1 f .' T(uc Mams O rK.i.v. Jiivriieftn,i,( tt, miI dMrlpltra mm I'llctif .u,iifii.i our otxrti -u frv maLhr mm lltfll'l' n ! pr. 5l If BK,eiHab!. t'M BttslPtttV tin tm tn.'i It niUl. lluiliock w l'kiAij i-l Jr.. t'l UM j:f fur 4-fcrli.t palfail. I'AIPTt'.a 1kn i:.rVi0 UhHU 4 VP, fllaiTt VirMtDodM, lttKtUtiarw, laid Scientific Jlmcrlcaa. - t honuwimalr tltnftrt(Hl wyf klf. IrtNt tttm 'HaUoli ut anr iwhIiuo JriuruavL 1 nrii, $) m, -., four moTiLbaV. L fiultl bjiUI nde4klr. .USHru New York p Tho New York Tribune Farmer i the most thor oughly practical, helpful, useful and entertaining, national illustrat ed agricultural fe family weekly in the United States. I 1 I PUICE, ONE DOLLAR Send, your name free sample copy 1 Nw York Tribunes rmsjursc BUjko Now York PIKE COUNTY PRESS ...$l,50 A JOB PRINTIlJC Lstter Heads, Cards Posters, Statements till Haads, Envelopes Circulars, Etc., Etc. -fc- NEATLY DOME V THA OE-MARKS rwirtij oUiunol lc nil oiuiiliiu ur lu fi-a Vim atliiiUi BiTrNT I THAT FAV.nWrfmiawUi.miUioiwutUiT.fttovir mc:ifa, rna iK'ip jou w Hetarl model, photo or Bkeifh for rvporf () pteDbilitr. M nark prartir fJllN- PASSINQ RCFCflENCCt. Pa f rw CulJc " on lrnnmtlo ltenii wiltoto J3-BOB Svnth StrtotBt. WASHINGTON, D. C. fCa.vcttt.Awi Traifr-Marica obtained Ana all tmt-i Pent buiifiCTki conducted fur MobCNATT Tzt. tout ftmci it OrroriTr O. fi. rTCT Orricc and wccansccu-c psteatia icti bu UuA trottc (remote from Wuhincton. J t Send modeL tir.x turn or ft'hoU- With deeeriB-i Itioa, We Advise, if patentable or not, free H i-Jurfre. irer lee not due till patent i cura. j C iiiiuirv How to Obtain Patei.c" with) Fro vt Muse in the LT. S. aod toreiga cuutxietj Esent free. Atfdrea. 2 C.A.SNOW&CO. Om. PTtT Omcc. VrftaMiNQTen. D C- - Physician have long been looking for a harmless headaohn oore. It lins been prodaoed by an eminent chemist of the National (Capita). It Is kno-n as Bromo-PepsIN. Besibes coring every form of bnaibii'he 'stantly, Bromo Ptipain Is equally and as promptly efficacious in chronio and acute Indigestion and the nervous disorder tnoidnnt there o. It la efferescent and pleasant to take and may be had of alt np tr date druggists at ten cent a bottle. It come a boon to mankind ant.' womankind. For sale at C. O. Armstrong, Drnpgist. ftei)Aa)6a)AeAA)ne')i)rt)'4)6 NOTICE. The Conmilmoner of Pike County will hereafter hold Regular Mictyig-- the first Monday of each mo. between Ihehonrsoftls in snd 4 p. in. rxocpl Ing lu the mouths when Court uni) be In siiwion, an l then .lu.-inu Court THKO. H. bar nn Couimtrwl nem Clerk absolutely Harmless. Cures on he Spol BROMO-PEPSIN "Nut th Word Cepaln" PIIDCCHt'D,CHE- SlEEPltSSKESS UUn CO INOICtSTIONl NERVOUSNESS All Wruits, loo, asa a soo. for tula by C. O. Aumstiioku, DrupEki WANTS SUPPLIED ! ! If juu want iiotn hearts. Lilt lu-ntU, Irlle bead), statements. hUow cnnls, prorii larye pmtnr. unit' hllU, dnilttYr-i envelope lay bualni ottrdu or job printing eTory description, dnnu tip in the bcM sty fui u In am un-tit-dut. mi id nriihtic muv THR PRK9S PRINT. J. C. CHAMBERLAIN Rtal Iltt Agent. Boaws and Lots and lots wlthonl Houx Dmut In all kinds of Proirty . Notary Public ALL BUSINESS GIVEN PROMPT ATTENTION Office at Residence on Water Street. MilfoH, Pa t Doth papers ono year for only I. OS If you send your . .. ore! or a n d mcnoy to Tho PRESS ' Mi I ford, Pike County, Penn. A YEAR for , to Farmer y, N. 1 YEAR 3 i i..t-i:t.l fa. ' -: ' r rci.-ur Marks. jVoyrichts TTi'rtr-onr tp j h 'rr-.rrcp. OHrtinn u M v Msr.Mrt- -i-T! f Time Table ERIE RAILROAD. a r PORT J Eft VIS Eollil Pullman trains to BulTnlo, NIh are Fulls, Chuntniiqna T.nke, CU-vclnrj'l 'Tilospo and Clut-innatl. Tickpts on salj H I'urt .Tcrrts to i'l points In the Wetland S )nvi-t as tv-r rates than via any otl.m !i i .it.c'ass line. In effect June Blth, U s. Trains Now i,hayk P.mit Jkhvi s Follows. " 48, Daily 41,1 " 6 Daily Kii:v. ... g - " 86, ijooul Kiip.ji Sunday., rt. 10 41 Hulldays ouly tl mi-','- No. S, Dally Kxpre.. .... 64 " 709, Way Sumlsy ln!y . . . 7 gl ' " 42, Lwal t xci pt Sun if.. 1 ; ar, ' 80, Luuil Klur pt tuiiilnir . K, so ' ' 4. Daily Ifxiiii-s,, I 34 r m " 704, Suuilay OmIj .... 5 Jl . ' 1!4, Wny daily Hi-'t -"i.na'y mi 9, Oilly iCimivn . 4 d . 1 !. Waydallj ev j'i Supd' O. i ' 708, L.OOHI Simi hiv f)!Uy..... ",li ' .WTT.-. 11. No 7, iMily Expn .3 lilSA v 47, Daily , . . 3 ;l", ' .17, Dally Milk Tiatn R Ml a" " 1. Dally Kx.r..s H ;ii . " lis, Koi HoM ile K'jw Sim U' tr. r " , Ks,ir..L l,r. lil K ;l j ' i. Dally Ex. S'iu,l .y . 0. (hi " 0. Llmiud liu.lv l'.xi.fs.i 10 06 ' , Trains leave 1" nii.ra s'-iM't, S'i Vurk, for t'..!t -vi. ..11 ....'W .Ian- ( H 3n, 7 15. a 15. 10 i a v.. 1 : . I JO, 4 80, S 16, 7 1.1, v :U Hi', 1 M. On Sand wv 7 . m 13 W. 1.167 i.8.i5 V. M. H I. SI.AI' H)'.' I'l : it Aal. I't.Jor s. ' I . V.'. "tnvriey, IMv'n 1 ' :- Agtmfc. Clia-nK-n M -,i; m Xw Yo-k Witliam B. Ks". :tjj M. 0 Physician : S;nvtm. 0:il m and re i :i. iir uid Slrv. Jext I'niirr. H,.n ."'i'-KUIII). " For S,i!' v. Ii'cnt ISO niTf furnt Un i Wnrnr fariu twj niik'3 leio-.ti!i'ril. Apply to John C AVarii!', Mi .'ord The A:l ford Liverv Stable i. a HORSES AND ARRIAGES to hie with or without driv ers. HARKOHD STIiKK r 0Kwitu ilinft(-i'l Lilirary. SOBIAS HEUSOH Proprietor,