REV. DR. TALMAGE. | ! THE BROOKLYN DIVINE’S SUN- DAY SERMON. with pale and glock face in invalld’s ohair while he thrilled the American congress with his eloquence, and thousands of invalid preachers and Sabbath-school teachers and Christian workers, Aye, the most glorious being the world ever saw was foreseen by Subject: “The Human Face.” hir far » shall b rendered, ‘the be sweetened,’ Text: “A man's wisdom mabeth to shine, awd the boldness of his fa changed,’ or as it may bv sourness of his face shall Ecclesiastes vili., 1. Thus a little change in our English trans Jation brings out the better meaning of the text. which sets forth that the character of the face is decided by the character of the | soul. The main features of our countenance were decided by the Almighty, and we can- not change them, but under God we decide whether we shall have countenances be. | nignant or baleful, sour or sweet, wrathful | or genial, benevolent or mean, honest or scoundrelly, impudent or modest, courage- ous or cowardly, frank or sneaking. In all the works of Goa there is pothing more wonderful than the human countenance, | Though the longest face is less than twelve inches from the hair line of the forehead to the bottom of the chin and the broadest face is less than eight inches from cheek bone to cheek bone, vet in that small compass God has wrought such differences that the 1,600. - 000,000 of the human race may be dis tinguished from each other by their facial appearance, The face is ordinarily the index of charae- ter. It isthe throne of the emotions. It is the battlefleld of the passions. It is the | eatalogue of character. It is the map of the | mind, Itisthe geography of the soul. And while the Lord decides before our birth whether we shall be handsome or homely, we are by the character we form deciding whether our countenance shall be pleasant or disagreeable, This ix so much so that pome of the most beautiful faces are unattrac- tive beacause of thelr arrogance or their de- ceitfulness, and some of the most rugged and irregular features are attractive because of the kindness that shines through them. Accident or sickness or scarification may veil the face so that it shall not express the soul, but in the majority of cases give men deliberate look at & man's countenance and I will tell you whether he is a cynic, er an optimist. whether he i a miser or a philanthropist, whether he is noble or ignominious, whether he is good or bad. Our first impression of a man woman is generally the accurate impression, You at the first glance make up your mind that some man is noworthy of your friend- ship, but afterward. by circumstances being | put into intimate association with him, you come to like him and trast him. Yet stay with him long enough, and you will be com- Rolled to return to your original estimate of character, but it will be after he has cheated you out of everything he could lay his hands on. It is of God's mercy that we | have these outside indexes eo! character. Phrenology is one index, and while it may be carried to an absurd extent there is no doubt that you can judge somewhat of a man’s character by the shape of his head, Palmistry is another index, and while it may be carried inte the fanciful and nscromantic there is no dount that certain lines in the palm of the hand are indicative of mental and moral traits, Physiognomy is another index, and while the contour of the human face may some- times mislead us we can generaliy, after looking into the eye and noticing the curve of the lip and the spread of the nostril, and the correlation of all the features, come to a right estimate of a man's character, If it were not so, bow would we kuow whom to trust and whom to avoid? Whether we will or not, physiognomy decides a thousand things in commercial and financial and so- cial and religious domains. From one lid of the Bible to the other there is no science so recognized as that of physiognomy, and nothing more thoroughly taken for granted than the power of the soul to transfigure the face. The Bible speaks of the ‘‘face of God” the “lace of Jesus Christ’ the ‘‘face of Esau" the ‘‘lnce Israel.” the ‘lace of Job" the ‘lace of the old man," the shining “‘iace of Moses,” the wrathful “ince of Pharaoh,” the ashes on the face of humiliation, the resurrection ary staff onthe face of the dead child, the hypocrites disfiguring their face, and in my text the Bible declares, “A man's wisdom maketh his face to shine, and the sourness of his face shall be sweetened.” If the Bible has so much to say about physiognomy, we do not wonder that the world has made it a study from the varly ages. In vain the Eng- lish Parliament in the time of George IL orderad publicly whipped and imprisoned | those who stadied physiognomy. Intelligent people always bave studied it and always will study it. The pens of Moses and Joshua and Joo and John and Paul as well as of Homer and Hippocrates and Galen and Aristotle and Socrates and Plato and Lavater have been dipped into it, and whole libraries of wheat and chaff have been gmaered on this theme, Now, what practical religious and eternal use would I make of this subject? I am go- ing to show that while we are not responsi- bile for our features, the Lord Almighty hav- ing decided what they shall be prenatally. as the psalmist declares when he writes, “‘In thy book all my members were written, which in eontinuance were fashioned when | as vet there was none of them,” yet the character which under God we form will chisel the face most mightily, Every man would like to have been made in ap on an Alcibiades, and every woman would like | to have been made a Josephine, We all want to beagreeable, Our usefulness depends so much upon it that I consider it important and Christian for every man and woman to be as agreeable as possible. The slouch, the sioven, the man who does not cars how he looks, all such people lack equipment for | usefulness, A minister who has to throw a quid of tobacco out of his mouth before he beginsto preach or Christians with beard un- | trimmed, making them to look Jike wild | beasts come out of the lair—yea, unkempt, uncombed, unwashed, disagreeable men or | women-—are a hindrance to religion more | thau a recommendation, i Now, my text suggests how we may, inde- | pendent of features, make ourselves agree. | able, “A man’s wisdom maketh his face to! shine, and the sourness of his face shall be sweotensd,” What I say may come too late | for many. Their countenance may by long | years of hardness have been frozen into stol- | idity, or by long years of eruel behavior they | may have Herndized all the machinery of ex- | pressfon, or by loag years of avarice they | may have been Shylocked until their face is as hard as the precious metalthey are hoard- ing, but I am iu time to help multitudes if the Lord will, That it is possible to over come disadvantages of p ognomy was in this country mightily illustrated by ome whose life recently closed after having served in the Presedential cabinet st Washington, By accident of fire in chilahood his face had been more pitecusly scarred than any human visage that I ever saw. By hard study he arose from being a r boy to the very height of the legal pro- ession, and when an Attorney General for | the United States was needed he sntersd the Presidential cabinet. What a triumph over destroyed human countenance ! 1 do not wonder that when an opposing at« torney in a Philadelphia court-room oruelly rafefiol to this pamonal disfigurement Ben- jamin FP. or fed in these words “When I was a babe, I was a beautiful bine- ed child, 1Iknow this because my dear oad mother told me so, but I wae one du playing with my sister when her clothes too fire, and I ran to her relief and saved her, in doing so my clothes took fire, and the : was not put out until my face was as ‘black as the heart of the scoundrel who has fe cou phon” Hai eonqu physie sn oo That scholarly regular for mak features are not nee Le who p bodily or of meelf as in powerful impression wit . pT weak,” and George White visage was so marred, more than any man." So you see that the loveliest face in the uni- verse wis a scarred face, the chisels that work for the disfiguration or irenddintion of the human countenance, One of the sharpest and most destructive of those chisels of the countenance is cynicism. That sours the disposition aud then sours the face, It gives a contemptuous curl to the lip. It draws down the corners of the mouth and inflates the nostril as with a malodor. What David sald in haste they say in their deliber- ation, “All men are liars,” everything is go- ing to ruin. All men and women are bad or are golng to be, Soclety and the church are on the down grade, Tell them of an act of advertise himself, They do not like the for men. They are opposed to the adminis- State and National. Somehow food does not taste as it used to, and they wonder why there are no poets or orators or preachers us when they were boys. Even Solomon, ons of the wisest and one time one of the worst of eries ont in the twenty-first chapter of Pro- veroe, “Who can find a virtuous woman?” If he hal behaved himself better and kept in that interrogition point implying the scarcity Cynicism, if a babir, as it is with tens of thousands of people, writes itself all over the features ; hence =o many sour visages all up and street, all up and down the church and the world, One good way to make the world worse is to say it is worse, Let a depressed nud foreboding opinton of everything take will be a sight to behold, It is the chastise. ment of God that when a mun allows his heart to be cursed with eynicism his face be- comes gloomed and scowie | and lachrymosed But Jet Christian cheeriulness try its chisel upon a man's countenance, Feeling that all things are for his good, and that God rales, snd that the Bible being true the world's floralization is rapidiy approaching, and the day when beer mug and demijohn and distil- lery and bombshell and rifle pit seventy-foar pounders and roulette tables and corrupt book and satanic printing press will have quit work, the brightness that comes from such anticipation not only gives zest to his work, but shines in his eves and glows in his entire countenance, Those are the facts I look for inan audience, Thosecountenanoces are sections of millennial glory. They are They are the seuip turing of God's right hand, They are ho- sannas in human flesh, They are halleiulahs alighted. They are Christ reincarnated. | donot care what your features are or whether you look lke your father or your mother or look like no one under the heavens, to God and man you are beautiful, Michael Angelo, the seulptor, visiting Florence, some one showed him in a back yard a piece of marble that was so shapeiess that it seemed of no use, and Anzelo was asked if he could make anything out of it, and if so was told he could own it, The artist took the marble, and for nine months of it un statue of David with his foot on Go- linth, but the marble was not quite lonz enough at the base to make the prostrate form of the giant, and so the artist fashioned the marble into another figure that is so mous for all time because of its expressive ness, A critic came in and was saked by Angelo for his oriticiem, and he sald it was beautiful, but the nose of the statute was not of right shape, Angelo pieked up from the floor somes sand and it about the face of the statue pretend. ing he was using his chisel to make the improvement suggested by the eritie, “What do you think of it now?" said the artist, “Wonderfully improved.” said the | eritie, “Well.” said the artist, ‘I have not changed it at ail.” My friends, thegraos of | God comes to the heart of & man or woman and then attempts to change a forbidding and prejudicial iace into attractiveness, Per haps the face is most unpromising for the Divine Seuiptor. But having changed the cart it begins to work on the countenance with celestial chisel, and into all the linea pectation that changes it from glory to glory, snd though earthly eriticiam may disapprove ofthis or that in the appearance of the face Christ says of the newly created countenance that which Pilate said of Him, “Behold the mau!” Here is another mightly chisel for the hate or malevolence, This spirit having seven devils under the eyelgows, It crueity into the compression of the You ean tell from the man's looks that he is pursuing some ons and trying to get even with him. There ar suggestions of Nero and Robeapierre and Diocletian and thumb servws and racks all up and down the feat ures, Infernal artists with murderers dag- The revengelul heart has built its perdition in the revengeful countenance, Disfigura- tion of diabolie passion! tut hers comes another chisel to shape the countenance, and it Is kindness, There the whole family of Christian graces, with all their children and grandehildren, and the respond with her superb soul. Her entire face from ear (0 ear becomes the canvas on which sll the best artists of heaven begin to put their finest strokes, and on the small compass of that face are put pletures of sun- up and down ladders all aflash, and mount sine of transfiguration and noonday in heaven, Kindness! It isthe most magnifi- cent sculptor that ever touched human countenance, No one could wonder at the unusual geniality inthe face of William Windom, Sec winegiuss upside down, saying, “I may by doing this offend some, but by not doing it I might damage many.” Be kind to your friends. Be kind to your enemies, Be kind to the young. Be kind to ths old. Be kind to your rulers, Bo kind to your servants, Be kind to your superiors, Be kind to your inferiors. Be kind to your horse, Be kind to your dog. Be kind to your eat, Morn- ing. noon and night be kind, and the effects of it will be written in the language of your face. That is the gospel of physiognomy. A Bayonne merchant was in the south of Europe for his health, and sitting on the ter- race one morning in bis invalidism he saw a rider flung from a horse into a river, and without thinking of his own weakness the merchant flung off his invalid’'s gown and swam to the drowning man, and clatohing him ns he was about to go down the last time bore him in safety to the bank, when glan {sito the face of the rescued man he eried, “My God, i have saved my own son ™ All kindness comes back to us in one way or another ; if not it any other way, then in your uwn face. Kindness! Show it to others, for the time may come when you will need it yourself, Peogle laughed at the Hon because he spared the mouse that ran over him when by one motion of his paw the mon ster could have ernshed the | ifleant dis- turher, But it was well that the Hon had mercy on the mouse, for oneday the Hon was eaught in A trap and roared fearfully because he was held fast by ropes, Then the mouse knawed off the ropes and let the lion go free, You nay consider yourself a lon, you eannot afford to despise a mouse, When Abrabam Lincoln pardoned a young soldier at the request of his mother, the mother went down the stairs of the White House saying “T'hoy have lied about the President's bsing homely, He is the hand field, whose eyes were struck with sirable mus, and Alexander H. Stephens, who sat somest man I over saw.” All over that Prosi- dent's ragged face was written the kindness which he so well illustrated when he sald, “Some of our generals complain that I im pair discipline and subordination in the army by my pardons and respites, but it makes me rested after a hard day's work if I ean find some good excuse for saving a man's life, and I go to bed happier as I think how jovous the sigaing of my name will make him and his family.” Kindness! It makes { the face shine while life Insts and after death | puts gx summer sunset between the still lips and the smoothed hair that makes me say {sometimes at obsequies, ‘‘Bhe seems too beautiful to bury.” But here comes another chisel, and its | name is hypoorisy. Christ, with one terrifio stroke in Hig sermon on the mount described this charreter, ‘When ye fast, be not ns the | hypocrites, of a sad countenance, for they disfigure their faces that they may appear unto men to fast,” Hypocrisy having taken | possession of the soul, it immediately ap- | pears in the countenance, Hypocrites are | always solemn. They carry several country graveyards in their faces, They are tearful when there is nothing to ery about, and in their prayers they cateh for their breath and have such general dolefulness that they dis- gust young people with religion. We had one of them in one of my churches, When he ex- orted, he always deplored the low state of religion in other prople, and when ho prayed it was an attack of hysteria, and he went fnto | & paroxysm of ohs and ahs that seemed to i demand resuscitation. He went on in that way until we had to expel him from the church for stealing the property intrusted to him as administrator and for other vices {that I will not mention, and he wrote me several letters not at all complimentary from | the West, saying that he was dally praying A man can- not have hypocrisy in his heart without some- | how showing it in his face. All intelligent people who witness it know It is nothing but a dramatization. Oh, the power of the human face! I war- rant that you have known faces so magnetic and impressive that, though they vanished long ago, they still hold you with a holy spell, How long since your child went? “Well,” you say, “if she had lived she would have beep ten years old now, or twenty or | thirty vears,"” But does not that infant's face still have tender supremacy over your entire nature? During many an eventide does it not look at you? What & sanctifying, You ean say in the words of the poet, “Bet. ter to have loved and Jost than never to have loved at all,” Or Rt may bave been a sister's face. Perhaps she was the invalid of the family. Perhaps she never went out except on very olear days, and then she faa to be down the stairs to the plazes ov for a short under it all, As that face looks at you Or was it in father's face? The storms of life bad somewhat roughenad it, brightness of the eye had been quenched, and ! the sar was turned with the hand behind it in order to hear at all, that Artist | would mean to you more than any face that Hembrandt ever sketched, bat face, though long ago velled from suman sight, i= as plain in your memory as though you this moment saw it moving gently forward and backward in the rocking -ohair by the stove in the old farmhouse, Or was it your mother’s face? A good mother s lace is never homely to her boys and girie. Itis a ““Ma- donna’ inthe ploture gallery of the memory. What a sympathetic face it was' Did you ever have a joy and that face did not respond tot? Did you ever have a grief and no tears trickle down that maternal cheek? Did you face so vividly that il you were &n cross 17 Ob. it was a sweet face! The spec. tacles with large, round glasses through which she looked at you, how sacrediy they have been kept in bureau or closet! Your mother's face, your mother's smile, your mothers tears! What an overpowering memory! Though you have come on 10 mid- life or old age, how you would like just onoe more to bury your face in ber lap and bavea good cry! Bat I ean tell you of a more sympathetio and more teader and more loving face than snr of the faces 1 have mentioasd. “No, you cannot,” says some one. 1 can, asd | will, It is the face of Jesos Christ as He was on earth and is now in heaveh., When prepar- ine my fe of Christ, entitled “From Man- ger 10 Throne,” I ransa~ked the art galler. ies and portfolios of the world to find a pic expressive, and 1 saw it as Francesoo Francia painted it jn the sixteenth ocentory, sod as | the emerald intaglio of the sixth century presented it, and as a fresco in the catacombs near Rome preserved it, and as Leonardo da looked in the Louvre, and the Luxembourg, | and the Vatican, and the Dresden, and the | Berlin, and Neapoiitan and London galleries for the most inspiring face of Christ, and many of the presentations were wonderful for pathos and majesty and power and exe. ! euition, but although I selected that by Ary | Soheffer as in some respects the most expres. sive I felt aa we all feel that our Christ has never yet besn presented either in sculpture og painting, and that we will have to walt shall ses Him as He is, | What a gentle face it must have been te jndues the babes to struggle out of their mother's arms inte His arme’ What an ex- pressive face it must have been when one re- proving look of it threw staswart Peter into wu fit of tears! What a pleading face it must | have boen to lead the psalmist in prayer to {say ot it, “Look upon the face of thine aniointed I” What a sympathetic face it must have bean to encourage the sick woman | to touch the hem of His garment ! | pended on the perpendicular and horizontal | pieces of the wood of martyrdom, and His | antagonists slap the pallid obeek with | their rough hands and befouled it with the saliva of their blasphemous tremendous face it must have been to lead | 8t. John to describe it in the coming jodg- | ment as soattering the universe when he | says, “From whose face the earth and the | heaven fled away.” O Christ | Once the Nazarene, but now the colestinl | Once of cross, but now of throne | Ones crowned with stinging bramble, but {| now coroneted with the jewels of ransomed | empires! Turn on Thy pardoning face and | forgive us, Thy sympathetic face and console | us, Thy suffering face and have Thy stone- | ment avail for us, Thy omnipotent face and { rescue us, Oh, what a face! Ho soarred, so lacerated, so resplendent, 80 overwhelming iy glorious that the seraphim put wing to wing and with their conjoined fons keep off some of the luster that is too mighty even for eyes chernbic or angelic, and yet this morning turning upon us with a sheathed like that with which He peared when He said to the mothers bashful about presenting their children, “Suffer them to come.” and to the 2 waif of the street, ‘Neither do { ccndemn thee,” and to the eves of the blind beggar of the wayside, ‘Be opened.” 1 think my brother John, the returned foreign mission. ary, dying summer before last at Bound k, caught a glimpse of that face of Christ when in his d ing hour my brother said: “I shall be satisfied when 1 awaken in His like. ness,” And now unto Him that loved us and washed us from our sins in His own blood and hath made ue kings and unto God nnd His Father, to Him be and domin« fon for ever and ever, Amen and amen! and amen ! sana II ABS Amen Oregon's salmon fisheries produce about 600,000 cases a year and its wool clip exceeds 16,000,000 pounds. There are 25,000 square miles of pine forests, and ins annual gold yield exceeds $1, ssi III SIT In the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries nearly all the ralers of Eun- rope were bitten by the alchemists Oyster, A single full-grown oyster produces, at the proper season about a million young, which swim about for a week or 80, and then settle down to home life, attaching their still microscopic shells to any solid body which in their wanderings they have en. countered, They are now about the twentieth of an loch in diameter, and form little white specks, called “spat.” In six months they attain the size of a threepenny-plece. At two years old they are two inches seross, and at three years Lhree inches. ———————— tron snips, The first account we have of armored ship 1s in 1530, It was of the fleet of the Knights of Bt John, entirely sheathed with lead, and is said to have successfully re sisted all the shot of that day. the siege of Gibraltar in 1782 the French and Spaniards employed light fron bomb-proofing over their decks. The first practical use of wrought. fron plates as a defense for the sides of vessels was by the French in the Crimean war in 1853, to be agalnst the Russian forts In Baltic an C—O TA, An Doctor's Combine. The physicians ofg Brussels have re: cently banded themselves into a union, pledged to resist any attempt fixed sum. They have been led take this course by a circular dressed to them by several trial unions, indus attendance at the rate of 30 cents a visit. would be exclusively called in by siek members of the trades unions, — eI Best of AH} use the true and perfect remedy Syrup of Figs Try it Ifthon desire 10 be wise, be 80 Wise as tc bold thy tongue. Deafoces Cannot be Cured applications, as they cannot reach the portion of the ear. way to cure Deafoess, and that Is by constite. Dronf ness ia on by au in fiarned condition of the mucous lining of the Fustschian Tube. When this tubs gets in famed you have a rumuiing sound or lmper- foot hearing. and when 4 Is entirely closed destroyed forever: nine cases oul ten are by eatarrh, which ls nothing but an in We will give One Hundred Dollars for any pot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure, Send fa , Cunsny & Co. Toledo, O. tending ths mind It Pars It pays to read the papers own family , for often in Ao weld Vive are brow or instance, HB. FF. Johawson cially your fs way good ht to your sl- Co. of paying positions to parties who engage with thelr business interests. It might pay you Ww write 10 them The great Iact is that Hile is a service. The For Dyspepais, Indigestion and Stomach disorders, use trown’'s Jron Bitlers-ihe Fret Tonic. It rebuilds the Bicol and strengthens A splendid medicine for weak snd debilitated perecus, Romance bas been clegantiy defined as the *Brosen’s Bromehial Troche™ They have an extraordinary effect in all disorders of Tue Tnaoar He who is firm and resolute in will molds the world to himself Dr. Allmer's Swaxr-RooT cures all Kidney and Bladder troubles, Pamphlet snd Consultation free, Laboratory Binghamton, ¥. ¥. Bpeak but little and well If you would be For impure or thin Blood, Weakness, Maia. ria, Neuralgia, lodigestion and persons strong; pleasant to take. Cupid never shows a wrinkle. Morand walter, no The youth of the soul is everlasting. mena Ee ,,- HR eyes use Dr.leasc soil at 2a, por but hasn't got the necessary 81.50 for ing for a home. Pe p, 3 To ROYAL ERI a Pictares by an Armless Painter. A remarkable art exhibition is an- at Bristol tion eof thirty paintings by Bartram Hiles, an artist who, while quite boy, met with an accident by which he Jost both arms. from childhood shown a strong dis positian and love for drawing, he | was taken in hand by some artistic | friends aod taught to draw, holding the pencil in his mouth. After a time he became a student at the Merchant Venturers' Schools, and studied so assiduously that he wgn a National Scholarship, value £.04, which also carries the privilege of studying at the National Art Train- ing School at South Kepsington for two years, during which time he also won one national sliver medal and two national bronze medals. lo oon sideration of his having won these hopors, the authorities at South Ken- | pounced Jege were lately fined $50 for {ll-treat- i What spoils the comprehensible remarks of the judge | when the students were brought be- He objected to the con- sideration of such cases, and sald that the college authorities ought to | have punished the students without calling in the ald of the Jaw. It is just this idea that college students are not like cther citizens amenable | to civil laws that has been a prolific source of demoralization in cities where colleges are found. Novody should be above obedience to law and pobody should be beneath its pro- tecting shield. reset Incense Closed, but Not “Busted.” A closed bank in Arizona has issued the following notice: *This bagk is pot busted; it owes the people $36. - months to study at the museums, paying all his expenses. The armless painter at Antwerp is well known; but ft will be news to many people to hear of an Eoglish artist contending with the same disability. St James Gazette, In the Early Days of cod-hiver aa oil its use—~, was limited = to casing those far advanced in consumption. Science soon discovered in it the prevention and cure of consumption. Scott's Emulsion of cod-liver cil with Hypo- phosphites of lime and soda has rendered the oil more cfiective, easy of digestion and pleasant to the taste. | Prepered by Seott 4 Bowne, XV. All draggiste, “WALTER BAKER & C0. COCOA and CHOCOLATE Highest Awards (Medals and Diploma) World's mbian On he following articles, tamely Hl BREAKFAST C0004, PRENIUN Neo. 1 CHOCOLATE, ar de -— Por eli, of material” ~apewlleni Baver” and “usd form even componition.” SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE the people who are busted; when they pay we'll pay.” 00000 The fritowing oul shown the oui wikdh svnond sush & Witter oumirr] nanomg She windmill er bibitors 8 the Worid's Fur Ch? Burbanen of the Dept. | in ther model south =» of Agrivwiture winked 8 pol 89 | orpental shalt was osed, to eat and grind feed for the | shh on enhebiaon snd urged | other Windmill Ces pat nd tried te prwvert we They | | § | i i i i i ; for Sghting wa, held mew ran, and appeased semmit | tet sud Br weeks coeup od & greet Sosl of their www Liane and thet of the Wari vw Far 08 eal Wyong te pre vaud we Troe erent ug one, snd our evift wes seis! iy tore Sows and wrecked ote Pven ing Tier Sack, be fore it wes cosipied of ¥ re Chae? of Sen J 3 Crees, “4 pond herd shake, The Toot of the Steel Tower rooted vpon twe tak timbers dad on the rool kirkers So see wa, and in ww grevenoe, he Tre of BW the hermmotor Co ofered to pay Trewhl of supe er Genre vile “FAR that amy wiher wind 4 exhibitors would pt wp and to Pornuh {ed rectors te wreet We rompare the Awvme in prestiesl srk. for the reason thet the 1 vied peared mle olher than hermotors on ox. hibition were experi mented had it wes well koown thal the 1301 woul do were werk then sny 64t wondion wheel bow a high steel Lower ean be pol on a § dr 3 owas, She seth Bere regressed wet the only mil e pubie pet wp vil of wrder in the oighteet pertaesier, though operated by unfamiliar hands, 17 hoping sie wre sped En edge of born dhe tows
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers