REV. DR. The Eminent Brooklyn Divine's Sun- day Sermon, TALNAGE Subject: “The Recret Place of Thunder.” Text: “I answered thee in tha secret place of thunder "Psalms Ixxxi., 7. It is past midnight, and two o'clock in the morning, far enough from sunset and sune rise to make the darkness very thick,aad the Egyptian army in pursuit of the escaping Israelites are on the bottom of the Red Sea, its waters having been set un on either side in masonry of sapphire, for God can make a wall as solid out of water as out of granite, and the trowels with which these two walls were built were none the less powerful be- cause invisible. Such walls had never before been lifted. When [saw the waters of the Red Sea roll- ing through the Suez Canal they were blue and beautiful and flowing like other waters, but to-night, as the Egyptians look up to them built into walle, now on one side and now on the other, they must have been frowning waters, forit was probable that the same power that lifted them up might suddenly fling them prostrate. A great lan. tern of cloud hung over this chasm between the two walls. The door of that lantern was opened toward the Israelites ahead, giving them light, and the back of the lantern was toward the Egyptians, and it growled and rumbled and jarred with thunder, not than- der like that which cheers the earth after a drought, promising the refeshing shower, but charged and surcharged with threats of doom, The Egyptian cantains lost their presence of min, and the horses reared and snorted and would not answer to their bits, and the chariot wheels got interlocked and torn off, and the charioteers were hurled headlong, and the Red Sea fell on all the host. The confusing an confounding thundor was in answer to the praver of the Israelites, With their backs cut by the lash, and their feet asked Almighty God to ensepulcher their Lgyptian pursuers in one great sarcophagus, ov. the spiash and the roar of the Red Bea as it dropped to its natural bed were only bost. That iz the meaning of the text when God says, “I answerad thee in the secret place of thunder.” Now thunder, all up and down the Bible, is the symbol of power. The Egyptian lague of hail was accompanied with this ull diapason of the heavens, While Sam- ing of a lamb, and the Puilistines wers about to attack them, it war by terroriz.ng thun- der they were discomfited. Job, who was a combination of tbe Dantesque and the Mii- tonic, was solomnizad on the reverberation of the heavens, and crie!, “The thunder of His power, who can understand and he challenges the universe by saving, thou thunder with a voice lik* Him" and he throws Rosa Bonheur’s “Horse Fair” into the shade by the Bible photozraph of a war- horse, when he describes his neck as “‘ciothed with thunder.” Becauss of the power James and John, they were called "the sons of thunder.” The iaw given or the basaltic crags of Mount Sinai was emphasizad with this cloudy ebullition. The skies all aroun about St. John at Patmos were full of the thunder of war, and the thunder of Christly triumph, anc the thunder of resurrection, and the thuuder of eternity, But when my text says, “Il answered thee in the secret place of thunder,'’ it suggest there is some mystery about the thunder To the ancients the cause this bombard. ing the earth with loud sound must have been more of a mystery than it is to us. The lightnings, which were to them wild mon. sters ranging through the skies in our time have been domesticated. We harness eiec- tricity to vehicies and we cage it in Inmps and every schoolboy knows something about the fact that it is the passage of elsctricity from cloud to cloud that makes the heavenly racket which we call thunder. But, after all that chemistry has taught the there are mysteries about the skyey reson. ance and my text, true in the time of the Psalmist, ie true now ani always will be true, that there is some secret about the place of thunder To one thing known about the thunder there are a hundred things not known, After all the scientific batteries have been doing their work for a thousand years to come and learned men bave discourse! to the utmost about atmospheric electricity ani magnetic electricity and galvanic electricity and thermotic electricity and frictiona electricity and positive electricity ani neza- tive electricity my text will be as suggestive as it is to-day, when it speaks of the secret place of thunder. Now right along by s natural law there is always a spiritual law, as there is a secret place of moral thunder. In other words, the religious power that you see abroad in the church in the world has a hid- ing place, and io many cases it is never dis. covered at all. | will use a similitade. | can giveonly a dim outiine of a particular case, for many of the remarkable ciroum- stances [ have forgotten. Many years ago there was a large church. It was caaracter- ized by strange and unaccountable conver. sions. There were no great revivals, but individual cases of spiritual arres: and trans- formation A young man sat in one of the front paws, He was a granuate of Yale, brifliant as the north star and notoriously dissolute. Every- body knew him and liked him for bis geni- ality, but deplored his moral errantry. To please his parents morning in church, One day thers was a ringing of the door-bell of the pastor of that church, and that young man, whelmed with repentance, implored prayer and advice, and passed into complete reformation of heart and life. All the neighbornood was aston- ished and asked, “Why was this*” his father and mother had said nothing to him about his soul's welfare. On another aisle of the same church sat an old miser. Hoe paid bis pew reat, but was hard on the poor, and haa no inter st in any philanthropy. Piles of money! And pecple said, “What a struggle he will have when he quits this life to part with his bonds and mortgages.” Une day he wrote to his minister: “‘Fleass to call immediately, | have a matter of great imoortancs avout which | want to see you.” When the pastor cams in the man could not speak for emo- tion, but after awhile he gathered self con- trol enough to ea world too long. want to know if you think I can be saved, and, if so, 1 wish you would tell me how.” Upon his soul the light soon dawned, and the old miser, not ouly revolutionizad in heart but io life, be- gan to scatter bensfactions, and toward all * of of cheerful and bountiful almoner, What was the cause of this change? everybody asked, and no one was capable of giving an intelli gent answer, by Babuath, a beautiful and talente | woman, who was a great society leader, to church because that was a respectable thing to do, and in the neighborhoo | where she lived it was hardly respectable not to go. Worldly was she to the last degree, and all her family worldly, She had at her house the finest germans that were ever danced, and the costliest favors that were ever given, it positively vulgar. Wines, cards, theaters, rounds of costly gayety were to her the highest satisfaction, Jue day a neighbor sent in a visiting card, and this lady eame down the stairs in tears and told the whole story of how she had not slept for several nights, and she feared she was going to lose her soul, and she wondersd if some one would not come around and pray with her. From that time ber entire de meanor was changed, and though she was not called upon to sacrificspny of her ameni- ties of life, she consecrated her beauty, her social position, her family, her all to God and the church and usefulness. Everybody said in regard to her, “Have you noticad the change, and what in the world caused it?" and no one could make satisfactory explana- tion. In the course of two vears, thouzh there was no general awakening in that churbh, many such isolated cases of such unexpected and unaccountable conversions took place. The very people whom no one thought would be affected by such considerations were converted, The pastor and the officers of the church were on the lookout for the solution of this religious phenomenon. “Where is it,” they said, “and who is it and what is it!" At last the discovery was made and all wasexplained. A poor old Christian woman standing in the vestibule of the her breath again befora she went up stairs to the gallery, heard the inquiry and told the secret, For years she had been in the habit of concentrating all her prayers for partioular persons in that church. She would ses some man or some woman present, and, though she might not know the person's name, she would pray for that person until he or she was converted to God, All her prayers were for that one person—just that one, She waited and waited for communion days to #2 when the candidates for membership stood up whether her prayers had been effect. ual. It turne out that thes: marvelous in- stances of conversion were the result of that old woman's pravers as she sat in the gallery poor and unnoticed, A little cloud of consscrated humanity hovering in the galleries. That was the secret place of the thunder, Theres is sdme hidden, unknown, mysterious source ower demonstrated, Not one out of a million— not one out of ten million—prayers ever On public occasions a minister of religion voices the supplications congregation are in silence, bere fs not a That silence of is the secret place of thunder. One Tuesday I lavited Christian men—all of them gone now, except Father Pearson, and he, in blindness and ola age, to come up not more numerous. bad invited them. I took them to the top I said to them: “I have calied you here for special praver. [am in wa pe. Eh >» end they are attentive an 1 respectful, they are saved. Lot us kneel down and each one prav and not leave this room until we are all assured that the blesdng will come and has come.” It was a most intense crying unto Goi. 1 said, “Brethren, Jet this mentinr be a secret.” and they said it would be, That Tuesday mizht special servics ended, On the following Friday night occurred the usual prayer meeting, No one knew of what had occurred on Tuesiay night, bud the meeting was unusually throaged. Men accustomed to pray in public in great com- posurs broke down under The were in tears. There were sobs unusual smotion people other's fac as much does all this meen?’ ing Sabbata came, although we were in a secular place, over four hundred arose for prayers, and a religious awakening took piace that made toat winter memarable for time and for eternity There may this building many who wers brought to , ns to say “What of thetn know that the upper room Christian wea poured out their souls before God, was the secrat placs of thunder The day will come—(God hasten t-—when people will find out the velocity, the ma. Jesty, the multipotence of praver., Webrag about our limited express trains which put us down a thousand miles away in twenty- four hours, but here is something by which in 8a moment we may confront people five thousand miles away. We braz about our telephones, but here is something that beats the telephone in utterances and reply, for Goud says, "Before they call, 1 will hear.” We brag about the phonograph, in which a man can speak, and his words and the tones of his voice can be kept for ages, ani by the turning of a crank the words may coms forth upon the ears of asothsr ceatury, but prayer allows us to speak words into the ears of everlasting remembrance, and on the other side of all eternitios they will be heard, Oh, ye who are wasting your breath and wasting your brains, and wasting your nerves, and wasting your lungs wishing for this good and that goo | for the chures and the worid, why do you not go into the secret piace of taunder “But” says soms one, ‘that is a beautiful theory, yet it does not work in my cass, for I am ina cloud of troable, or a cloud sickness, or a clond of persecution, or a cioud of poverty, or a cloud of bores vement, or a cloud of perplexity.” How glad I am that you told me that, That is exactly the place to which my text refers. It was from a cloud that God answered Israsl—the cloud over the chasm cut through the Red Nea the cloud that was light to ths Ieraelites and darkness to the Egyptians cioud, a tremendous cloud, that Uod made reply. It was a cloud that was the secret place of thunder, Bo you cannot get away from the consolation of my text by talking that way. Let all the people under a cloud hear it. “I answered thee in the secret piace of thunder.” This subject helps me to explain soma and women, and there are multituies of them, and the multitude is multiplying by the minute, Many of them have not a superabuniance of education, If you had their brain in a post-mortem examination, know it, and they feel it, and tlsy cannot get away from it, Two funerals after awhile—~not rrore than two years apart, for it is seldom tliat thers is more than that lapse of time between father's going and mother's going—two funerals put out of sight the old folks, But where are the childran? in homes where they are incarnations of good sense, industry and piety. The sons, perhaps one a farmer, Other a merchant, another a mechanic, another a minister of the Gospel, useful, consistent, admired, honored. What a power for good thos: seven rons and daughters! Where did they get the power? From ths scaools, ani the | seminaries, and the colleges’ Oh, no, thouzh | the, may have helpal, From their superior i metal endowment? No, I do not think | Who ¢ had unusual mental caliber. From ao ci ‘ontal circumstances? No, they had noth- in. of whut is calle! astounding goo! luck. I think we will take a train and ride to the depot nearest to the homestead from which thoss men and women started, The train halts. Lot us stop a few minutes at the vil- lage graveyard andsee the tombstones of tha parents. Yes, the one was seventy-four years of age and the other was seventy-two, and the epitaph savs that “‘after a useful life they died a Christian death.” How appro- priately the Beripture passage cut on the mother's tombstone, **She hath done what i she could.” And how bsautifal the passage | cut on the father's tombstones, ‘‘Blessad are | the dead who dis in the Lord, for they rest { from their labors and their works do follow | them” On over the country roal we ride—the | road a lstle rougn, for the spring weather is not quite settiel, and once down ina rut it is hard to got the wheels out again with- out breaking the shafts. But at last we come to the lane in froat of the farmbouss, Let me get out of the wagon and open the gate while you drive through. Here is the { arbor under which thoss boys and girls many | Yoars ago used to play. But it is quite iout of order now, for the property is in other bands. Yonder is the orchard {| where they used to thrash the trees for | apples, sometimes before they were quite ripe. There {« mow where they hunted for eggs before Easter. There is the doorsill {| upon which they used to sit. Thera is the room in which they had family prayers and | where they all koelt—the father there, the mother thers and the boys and girls there We have got to the fountain of pious and gracious influences at last. That is the piace | that decided those seven earthly and im- | mortal destinies. Behold! Behold! That { is the secret place of thunder, Boys are sel | dom more than thelr fathers will let them te. Girls are seldom more than their mothers | will let thom be, But thers come times when {| It seems that parents cannot control their | children. There come times ina boy's life wonen be thinks he knows more than his father does, and I remember now that | knew more at fifteen years of age than I have ever known sincs, Thers come times in a girl's life when ghe thinks her mother is notional and does not understand what is proper and bed, aod the swest child says, * "Ou, pstiaw ™ and she longs for the time when she will not have to be | dictated to, and she goes out of the door or | goes to bed with pouting lips, and theses mothers remember for themselves that they knew more at fourteen years of age than they have ever known since father But, and mother, do not think you bave lost vour influence over your child. You have a re source of prayer that puts the sympathetio and omnipotent God ints your pareatal un- dertaking. Do not waste your time in read- ing flicsey books about the best wavs to bring up children. Go into the secret place of thunder At nine o'clock Wednesday mornings. June 15 next, on the steamer City of New York, I expect to sail for Liverpool, to be gone un- til September, It is in acceptance of maay | invitations that [ am going oo a presching tour. [ expect to devole my time to proach. ing the Gospel in England, Scotland Ireland and Sweden. I want to see how many souls 1 can gather for the kingdom of God. Those countries have for many years belonged to ny parish, and 1 go to speak to them and shake hands with them I want to wisi more thoroughly taan befors those regions from which my ancestors came, Wales and Sootiand Bat who is sufficient for the work I under- take? leall upon you who have loag been my coadjutors to go into the secrat place of {the Almighty, and every day Irom now until my work is dons on the othw mde of the sea, to have me in your prayers. Ia proportion to the intensity and continuance and faith of the pravers yours and mine will be the results. If you remember me in the devotional circle, that will be well, but what I most want is your importuaing, | your wrestling supplication in ths secret place of thunder. God asd you alone may make humble instrumentality in the redemption of thousands of souls I stall oreach in churches, in chapels and in the fields. | will make it a campaign for God and eternity, and 1 hope to get during this absmcs a baptism of power that will make me of more service to you when I return than 1 ever yet have been. For, brethren and sisters in Christ, our opportunity for usefuiness will soon ba gone, ani we shall have our fac upiiftad to the trove of judg ment, before wnich we must give acount hat day there will be no soret place of thunder, for all the thunders will be out, There will ba the thander of the tumbling rocks. There will be the thander of the bursting waves There will be the thunder of the descending chariots. There | will be the thunder of the parting beavens, Boom ! Boom! But all that dim and uproar and caash will find us unaffrighted, ani will jeave us undismayel if we have made Christ {our confidence, and as after an August shower, when the whole havens have been an unlimbered battery ecannonad. ing the earth, the fields ars more green, ' and the suoarise fs the more radiant, and the waters are more opaline, so the thunders of the last day will make the ! trees of life appear more emerald, and the carbuncie of the wall mors crimson, and the sapphire seas the mors shimmering, and the sunrise of eternal gladness the more am- purpled. The thunders of dissoivin ¢ natare will be followed by a celestial psalmody the souad of which Bt. Johu on Patmos de soribed, when he said, “1 heard a voios like the voice of mighty taundering™ Amen! me the sonal appearance, They are not very fluent of tongue. They pretend to nothing unusual in mental facuity or social influence, but their presence; you are a betty man or a better woman, You know that in intellectual endowment of moral and religicus influence they are vastly your superior. Way is this? To find the revelation of this secret you must go back thirty or forty or perhaps sixty ears to the homestead where this man was brought up, It isa winter morning, and ths kindled, sometimes the shavings hard! enough to start the wood, The mother preparing the breakfast, the blue disoes are on the table, and the lid of the steam, and ths shadow of the industrious woman by the flickering flame on the hearth is moved up and down ths wall. The father is at the barn feeding the stoct-—the oats thrown into the horses’ bin and the cattle craunching the corn. The children, earlier | than they would like and after twing called The blesving of God is asked on the food, and, the meal over, the family Bible is put upon the white tablecioth and a chapter is i read and a prayer made, which includes all | the interests for this world an! the next. | The children pay not mach attention to the | prayer, for it isabout toe same thing day ! after day, but it puts upon them an im | sion that wen thousand years will only make mors vivid and tremendous, As long as the old folks live their prayer is for tueir chile dren and their children's children. Day in i and day out, month in and month out, year | in and year out, 0 in and decades out the s ns and dau thters of that family are {remembered in earnest prayer, and they Escaped a Cloud Burt. Cab Lee, of the Amargosa Valley, tells of sleeping near the mouth of Far. ing scientists are called in camp. It was 80 hot that the bug huater could not About midaight he heard a roar ing noise up the canon, which, as it in- creased in volume, caused him to look up that way. To his surprise he saw, as he supposed, the sky that appeared be- tween the canon walls grow suddenly white. At that moment Lee rolled over and the bug hunter asked him what ailed | the sky. Lee gave one glance, and then yelled : “Cloud burst! Climb!" They scrambled up the steep wall just in time to save their lives, that the foaming wall of water that had whitened the sky was not less than 100 | feet high. —Goldthwaite's Geographical Magazine, II 55. Prohibiting Marriage. The provisional diet of Styria in Aus. trina has taken a very curious step back- ward in the direction of medieval legisla tion by the passage of a law prohibiting indigent people to marry without a license to be issued by the authorities, which means that no licenses shall be granted to the poor. Chicago Herald, THE RUBBER OF COMMERCE, 8 Gathered and Prepared for the Markets of the World. > Central and South America supply the bulk of the crude rubber shipped to the var.ous markets of the world, Brazil especially is territory upon which the commercial world relies, anc throughout the entire Amazon region flow It 1 1 the fortunately the reckless manner |r which the trees are tapped tends to de Biroy thelr vitality and fears are we! ge A nid d tp ft the my L J pro iuct wil boon be restricted to ball of Yhat it is oo present, The trees are tapped by gashes being cut In the bark by hatchets, 1 the cut penetrates the wood the tree ié dcomed to die, otherwise it will continue vielding for thirty or forty years Through the recklessness of the natives in tapping the trees many valuable rub- ber swamps have been partially ruined snd the same extr-vagant system ie being Introduced into new regions, The rubber trees of the Amazon val- ley grow spontaneously and need no care. As many ag 537 will flourish on un acre. In yield fifteen kilos of can be oxtracted from them dally for four or five months—an average f between $400 and $600, When the trees are tapped a milk flows from the Incision and is caught in a small tin This, when collected in large is For this jug- earthenware, called a bolao, open at the bottom and top, and with a small aperture at side to admit the air for the combustion. In this piece of furniture he builds a fire, The black smoke which rolls from the open top of the bolao is the re-agent which congulates the milk, For purpose the rubber gatherer has ircular-bladed paddle, like the which he smears wer with clay so that the rubber will wot adhere to It. This Is suspended by cord from the limb of a tree the smudge. The milk is the blade paddie, which is then turned over and 1» sbout in the smoke, and a few mo- ments the film of rubber | The same pro-ess is of with milk ump until it reaches the weoig! of five } visage] coagulated, shaped furnace, made of the dense this a wr of paddle Bf CADOe, n lust above poured aver ound # coagulated wetting owing from ry and smoking the gr ty iy twenty A Plant Growing from a Caterpillar. The curious fungus which is some times taken for an insect is a fungus that roots itself a caterpillar and grows from it, feeding on the body of he insect Of « in time the in- ct dies, and the is O00 in r rsd fy v& ¥ {fungus then perishes iausted the body of tb as it has ex! ent in the ¢ Cile SAIN” nature as a 161 matures it which new plants same v $ iv wet $4 y ARAL AS are used of some are found nant, when the ex attache © it in the manner of a but it is easily distinguished by insect is filled with if the fungus and ap A Va in North the ‘ are in Central New Zealand country the has all thg hroom which is , a root, its shape. The +) i th ars substan “as same vO Bird Surgery. tienen ting ¢ to the surgic = Cres servations re treatment of broug hit Physical So wrding to the 31in wounds hy birds were ntly v M. Fatio the Hety of Geneva, Acc Medical Review, he quited the case if a snipe which he had often ierved engaged in repairing damages. With its beak and feathers it makes 8 very creditable dressing, applying Jlasters to bleeding wounds and even weuring a broken mb by means of a stout ligature. On one occasion he cilied a snipe which had on the chest i large dressing composed of down taken from other parts of the body ind securely fixed to the wound by he coagulated blood. Twice he had sought home snipe with interwoven leathers strapped on the site of frac ture of one or other limb. i rast t le it before Oh “English as She Ts Spoke,” In a Hartford clothing store win- low a placard recently appeared read- ing: “Any pant in this window, $2." But a still more absurd use of this #noble word is reported from Buffalo, where a merchant announces: “Any Jantsing in this window, 85.” Mes, William Lohr, Of Freeport, JL. began to fall rapidly, Jost all appetite and got into a serious condition from poy om + She could not eat Dyspe I sic 2 pegetablesor meat and even toast distressed her. Had to give ug housework. 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I can recommend it for them as a first-class medicine,” — Take no substitute, @ Here It Is! Went to Jearn all abanut a Hover! Howto Mok Out a possible! Tell the age by he Testh! What to call the Different Parts of the Animal! How 30 Shoe a Horse Properly © All this and other Va'uable Information can be obtained bi reading our JOBPFAGE ILLUSTRATED HORSE BOOK, which we will forward, pes Rid, on receipt of only 35 cents In stamps. BOOK PUB. HOUSE. 134 Leonard Be. Hew York ity, Tun "e ol “/ J ) Wu, Whoo! EST — s COPYRIGHT 1B On the road to health —the consumptive who reasons and thinks. Consumption is developed through the blood It’s a scrofulous affection of the lungs -—a blood-taint. Find a per- fect remedy for scrofula, in all its forms — something that purifies the! blood, as well as claims vo. That,| if it’s taken in time, will cure Con. sumption. : Dr. Pierce has found it. It’s his “ Golden Medical Discovery.” As a strength - restorer, blood - cleanser, and flesh-builder, nothing like 1t is known to medical science, For every form of Scrofula, Bronchial,’ Throat, and Lung affections, Weak Lungs, Severe Coughs, and kindred ailments, the y remedy so sure that it can be guaranteed, If it doesn’t benefit or cure, in every case, you have your money back, oe 3 it's oniy ————————. — : “Yon get well, or yon get 8500. That's what is promised, in good faith, by the proprietors of Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Ponty to sufferers from Catarrh., The worst cases, no matter of how long stand: are ino 2, permanently cured by this Remedy. LR] hy 1f you huave Malaria, Piles, Sick Head- ® ache, Costive Bowels, Dumb Ague or if your food does not assimilate, *Tutt's Tiny Pills® will cure these troubles. Dose small. Price, 25¢. Office, 39 Park Pilasce, NX. X. GECERED a y with Pasties, Enaoels, and Finis which #aln the hands, iniure the fron, and burs off. The Rising Bun Bove Poird is Briksnt, Odor. { Yems, Durables, and the cones pags for ho tis OF iase package With every DUreBosl Led { 9 wo BE { I GENEL: MCOTIONARY ¥ ral price } on ret swevigon'd gives Lnghe wor wgulveiente and erman words wi te WE LOTR : : BOOK FUG BOUSE. 184 Leonard SL, Sew York Olig, « BX U AR RS LA aa Consumptives and poople who have wesk lungs or Asib- mwa. should use Pisc’'s Cure for Consumption. It hes enred thonannds. [thas not infer edone itis not bad 10 take itis Lhe best cough errup fold evervre here. B88e. CONSUMPTION. BECO EEIIPEIGIIEPIENVEIONE® RIPANS TABULES roguiatel the Stoned ver and bowels. go rify the hiond, are sale and of ciual. The best gonersl family g dicine known [or Flioumen g . Fouilg urs. Lowe Depression, @ m, Fuangdee, Sallow T Yoel ing from impure ation, Dyrepe Teadache, Hear eit cnet 3! Freath CTerT grmptom or ee, of rewy A. ore Ne br the stomach. ver of Intestines to perform thelr proper functions. Persghs giver og creronting are benefited by takings TABU | fk ter enh meal Prive by mall J grossed? | bettie lhe. AS eCroms THE RIPANS CHEMICAL OO JoSprooe St X.Y. Agewis Wantedy EIGHTY per semi probe. 3 recssesveererePRIsTOeOR ele DROPSYZE — Treated FREE. m—————— Positively Cared with Vegetable Remedies Have cured thovean de 12 canes, pounced hopeless by best physicians, ermptoms rapidly Sappesr | in 10 days two thirds of all apm ytoms removed, Nerd for tres book of testimonies of miracn ions cures. 10 days’ tremiment free by mail, If pou order trial, ond he. in temps (0 Pay Posts see. DR.OH.OH.GREEN & SONS, Atlanta, Ga, BETTER DEAD THAN ALIVE Dutcber's Fly Killer is certain death. Flier are sb They do not Hive to Use 1 freely. destroy their ogee abd pre. Always ask Tor Dulcher's and FRED'K DUTCHER DRUG C0., Sr, ALnawe, Vr, FRAZER <RE se Ite wearing guaiities are anew , actually vg ineting three boxes of anv other brand, Nog affected by beat. 10 GET THE GENUINE FOR BALE BY DEAL«RE GENERALLY. WANTED iin 1 elt enr eholce Nursery Broo " wie Cuek gos Wie chulor of WerTiory, Address MAY BROTHERS, Soe ROCHESTER, X. ¥. boo SPP POPISPOOOPS vent reprodoction A A ia SAE 85 p 10 al runrang parts, ion Baddie. in i
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers