y REV. DR. TALMAGE. THE BROOKLYN DIVINE’'S SUN- DAY SERMON. Subject: ‘““‘Unappreciated Services.” Text: “Through a window, in a basket was I let down by the wall,” —11 Corinthian .v 33. Damascus is a city of white and glistening architecture sometimes ealled “the eye of the East,” sometimes called *‘a pearl surround- od by emeralds,” at one time distinguished for awords of the best material, masous blades, and upholstery of richest fabric, called damasks. A horseman ot the name oi Paul, riding toward this city, had been thrown from the saddle. The horse had dropped under a flash from the sky, which at the same time was 80 bright it blinded the rider for many days, and I think so permanently injured his eyesight that this defect of vision becamethe thorn in the flesh he afterward speaks of, He started for Damascus to butcher Chris- tians, but after that hard fall from his horse he was a changed man and preached Christ in Damasous till the city was shaken to its foundation, The mayor gives authority for his arrest, and the popular ery is: “Kill him! him!’ lest the Cilician preacher escape. Many of the houses are bailt on above the gardens outside, It was customary to lower baskets out of these balconies and pull up fruits and flowers from the garden. To this day visitors at the monastery of Mount Sinal are lifted and let down in bas- kets, Detectives prowled around from house to house looking for Paul, but hig friends hid him, now in one place, now in another. He is no coward, as fifty incidents of his life demonstrate, jut he feels his work is not done yet, aml so he evades sssassination. “Is that preacher here?” the foaming moh shout at one house door. Is that fanatic here?" door. Bometimes on the street incognito he passes through a crowd of clenched fists, aud sometimes he secretes himself on the hongse. tops. At last the infuriated people get on sure track of him, They have positive evidence that he is in the house of one of the Christians, bal. eony of whoss home reaches over wall, “Here he is! Here he is!" The vocifera- tion and blasphemy aud howling of the pur- suers are at the front They break jo, “Fetch out that gospeliner us hang his head on the city gate, is he? The emergency was terrible. Providentiaily there was a good stout basket in Paul's friends fasten a rope to Paul steps into it. T basket is the edge of the balcony on then while Paul h wn to both bands his friends lower away, carefully and cautiously, slowly, but surely, farthe: down and farther down, until! the basket strikes the earth and the apostle steps out, and afoot and alone starts on that missionary tour, the story of which has as- tonished earth and heaven, Appropriate en- try in Paul's diary of “Through a window, in a basket, was 1 let dow the wall.” Observe first on what a great results hang. The rop.maker who twisted that cord fastened to that lowering basket never knew how m would depend on the strengthof it. H if it had been broken. and the apostie’s Jife had bean dashed out? What woul become of the Chris tian Chureh? All that magnificent mission- ary work in Pamphyiia, Capadocia, Galatia, Macedonia, would never have been accom- plished. All his writings that make up so indispensable and enchanting a part of the New Testament w never have written. The stor resurrection never have beer so glori it. That example of endurance at Philipp: eurociydon, on and at his be- beading would noe diad the conrage of 10.000 martyrde the rope holding that basket, how ; sd on it! So azain and again gr what seemed slen Did ship CTOSSIRe the sag senger as had o taffrail to stern onl r four feet, vessel made waterpros ¥ B00 ! and floating on the Nile wit giver of the Jews on erocodile of the cattle wadiz sink ft? forty guns looking thr ready to the Nile seems t of thunder that be giving, On how much of histories the the ¢ the house, basket, lifted to the wall, and the rope with the famous sl*nder tenure nye been would iy told as he told unaer ve hung on "a, sand tons portant pas. leaves, fr ayer 0 Lhe itumen Inw- hacld should Yeouannls open battle fragile ecralt satied hoy importance, The parsonage at Epworth, England fire in night, ar he father through the halle the resede of children, Seven are on the ground, in remains in t} suming building, That wakes, g ing his bed or and the ing e ling, comes to the window, and two make a ladder of their bodies, one peo standing on the sh down the human ladder the boy John Wesley, If vou would know how mueh depended on that ladder millions of Methodi sea, Ask their mission the world, Ask rasands already asssnded to joi t nder, who would have perished but for the living stair of peasants’ should An English ship stopned a and right in the balism and squalor ered a Christian schools and beautifal style of religion and eivi Years no missionary sd anes had landed there Hight amid a desost i Years before a shi 5h the iren it one Out an is He a beer il are Dus Asante sant slider of the other, and josson du. eRsants, asx the sides of the round ut + § ow irn island, f rannis discov- and nighest r files 3 infla- midst the old aisaster of the sailors, uns » tO save an went to his trunk and took out a his mother had placed there ashore, the Bible held in his testh, The book was read on all unti rough and vicious population were evangal. ized, cod nn cliireh was started, and an ene lightened commonwealth established, and the world's history has no more brillian ge than that which tells of of a nation by ons book. It did not seem of much importance whether the sailor con. tinued to hold the book in his teoth or let it fail in the breakers, but upon what small eir- cumstance depended what mighty resalis! Practical inference—there are no fosignift- eances in onr lives, The minutest thing is part of a magnitude, Infinity is made up of Infinitesimals ; great things an aggregation of small things, Bethishem manger pailing On a star in the eastern sky, One book in a drenched sailor's mouth the evangelization of a multitude, Nile freighted with events for all ages, fate of Christendom In a basket let dows from a window on the wall, What you do, do well. If you make a rope, make stutrong and true, for you know not how much may depend on your workmanship, If you fashion a boat, let it be waterproof, for you know not who may sail in it. sides i the fs he goos irom home, let it be hoard fu your prayers, for it may have a mission as fare reaching as the book which the sailor snr. ried in his testh to the Piteairn bench, The plaicest man's lite is an island between two shoulders, eternity to come touchiog his brow, The easun!, the neeidental, tuat whieh tusrely happened so, are parte of a groat plan, and the rope that Jets the fugitive spos. tie from the Damascus wall fs the cable that holds to its mooring the ship of the chureh in the northeast storm of the centuries Again, notice unrecognized and unrecor ls ed services, Who spun that rope! Who tied it to the basket? Wiio steadied the il. lustrious preacher as he stepped into 17? Who relaxed not a musela of the arm or dis- an anxious look from his face until the basket touched the ground and dis charged its magnificent cargo? Not one of their names has come to us, but thers was no work done that day in Damascus or in all the earth compared with the importance of thelr work, What if they had in their agita- tion tied a knot that could slip? What if the sound of the mob at the door had led them | wo will take eare of ourselves,” | They held the rope, and in i more for the Christian Church than | thousand of us will ever accomplish, God knows and has made eterna their undertaking. No, any But record of And they know, i they read his letters to the Romans, to the rorinthiang, to the Galatians, to the Ephe- sians, to the Philippians, to the Colossians, to the Thessalonians, to Timothy, to Titus, to Philemon, to the Hebrews, and when they heard how he walked out of prison with the earthquake unlocking the door for him and took command of the Alexandrian corn ship when the sailors were nearly scared to death and preached a sermon that nearly shook Felix off his judgment seat! I hearthe men and women who helped him down through {the window and over the wall talkine in right up within arm's reach of the heavenly throne will be many whe, though they could not preach themselves or do great exploits for God, nevertheless held the rope, Come, lot us go right up and accost those on this eirele of heavenly thrones. Surely, they must have killed in battie a million men, Surely they must have been buried with all the cathedrals sounding a dirge, and all the | grief. Who art thou, mighty one of heaven? “I lived by cholee the unmarried daughter in a humble home that I might take care of my parents in their old age, and I endured | glad I am that we effected that rescue! | coming times others may In satisfaction | rope.” There are sald to be about 63.000 ministers | of religion in this country. About 50,000, I warrant, came from early homes, which had to struggle for the necessaries of life, sons of rich bankers and merchants gener ally become bankers and merchants, | most of those who hecome ministers are the sons of those who had terrific struggle to got their everyday bread. The collegiate and i theological education of that son took every ol knowing years. The other children were more scant. ily appareled. The son at college every lit- tle while got a bundle from home, In it were the socks that mother had knit. sitting up Inte at night, her sight not as good as once it was, and there also were some de- Hoaecies from the sister's hand for the vora- elous appetite of a hunery student, i The years go by and the son has been or- { dained and is preaching the glorious gospel, and a great revival comes, and sous bv | scores and hundreds accept the gospel trom i years," Let us pass on round the circle of thrones, Who art thou, mighteene of heaven? I was for thirty years a Christian invalid and suffered all the while, occasionally writing a note of sympathy for those worse off than I, and was general confidant of all those who had trouble, and once in awhile I was strong enough to make a garment for that poor family in the back lane.” Pass ontoanother throne, Who art thou, mighty one of heaven? *I was the mother who mised a whole family of children for God, and they are out in the world Christian merchants, Christian mechanios, Christian wives, and I have had a full reward of all my toil." Let us pass on in the eircle of thrones, “IThada Sabbath-school class, and they were always on my heart, and they all entered the king- dom of God, and 1 am waiting for their ar- rival." But who art thou, the mighty one of heaven on this other throne? “In time of bitter persecution I owned a house in Damascus-—-a house on the wall, A man who preached Christ was hounded from street to street, and I hid him from the as- my house and I could no longer keep him safely I advised him to flee jor his life, and a and mother, quite old now. are visiting the i som at the village parsonage, and at the close of a Sabbath of mighty blessing father and mother retire to their room, the son Hghting the way and asking them if he can do ane. thing to make them more comfortable, sav. to knock on the wall, And then all alone father and mother talk over the gracious influences of the day and say : “Well, it was worth all we went throuch to educate that boy! It was a hard pull, but we held on till the work was dons. The world may not know it : but, mother, we held the rope, dein't we?’ And the voice, tremu- ous with jovial emotion, responds falher : we held the rope, done, ‘Yeu, I Teel my work is Now, Lord, lettest Thou Thy servant depart in peace, for mine ayes'have seen Thy salvation.” ‘“‘Pshaw !" says the father. I never felt 50 much like living in my life as now. 1 want to see what that fellow is going on to do, he has begun 80 well. . Oh, men and women here assembled, you brag sometimes how you have f ght vour way in the world, but I think thers been helpful influences that you have never fally acknowledged, Has there not been that the world cannot see Does there not reach to you from among the New England bills, or from western prairies. or from south. ern plantation, or from English or Seottish or Irish homes, 4 cord of infloer ce that has kept you right when you would have gone astray, and which, after you had made = crooked track, recniled you? The » ype have been as thirty years, miles long or 3000 miles ; : went out of in the rope, You want a very swift horse, and you posd to rowel him with sharpest spurs, and to jet the reins le loose upon the neck and to gives shout to a racer if you are going to f reach of your mother's prayers ship crossing the Atlant i sail away from them ' A malior finds them on IooRout he takes his places, finds them on the mast as he itnes to disentangle a rope in the te nest and finds them swinging on the hammock when he turns in, Why not frank and a: knowledge it? he most is would ; so have gracious and loving han and mightily hel t thers must as long 500 ong, but hands thar rial ride Why. a in seven days can't srt the siimis the rat. heen De i 00 we ah 311 out who these Damsscenss were w ho Eu Face! te tha Fas . . ow red Paul inthe basket and grovt them and all the o have r world BErViIONS, Med fa ew ‘adered to God and : and orded That is going to be ons of the gind excitements of heaven the hunting up sad picking out of Hd great good on earth and got ne erndit for it, Hers the eure has been going on turies, and this 1s probably the ever recognizing the services of the people in that Damascus balcony. Charles G. Pinoey said to a dying Christian, “Give my love to St. Paul wnen you meet him When vou and I meet him, ns we will. I shall ask nim to introduce me to those people wh out of the Damasecens peril, Onee for thirty-six he avery moment 10 go f« bottom of ocean. The waves struck throueh the skv. lights, and rushed down into the hold of the ship, and hissed against the boilers. It was an awful time, but by the Diessing of Ged and the faithfulness of the men in charge we came out of the cvelone, and wa arrived at home, Each one, before leavin z the J thanked Captain Andrews, 1 do not think there was a man or woman that went off that ship without thanking Captain Andrews ana when years after I heard of his death 1 was i Hed to write a letter of to his family in Liverpool, Everybody recognized eotrage, the Kindness of but it ocours me thanked the encineer, amid doing his whole duty, engineer, but God recogniged his hero and his continuance, and his lelity, an there will be just as high reward for the ou. Zinwer who worked oat of sight as the CaAp- tain who stood on the brides of the shin in the midst of the howiing tem pest, : A Christian woman was going along yh Lae srry brent % wii : Ure those wno y ROL him expected the condolenon Captain Andrews, BOW that we never He stood away down the hissing to inthe darkness Bowgy neighbors in the country did not understand how a mother with 80 many cares and angie. tive should waste wo much time as to he idly sauntering out evening by evening. It was found out afterward that she went thers to pray for her household, and while there one evening she wrote that besutiful famous la all ages for cheering Christian hearts : I love to steal awhile away From « very pum Wing eure Amd sped toe Bours o setilog day In bamble. grateful prayer, So —- tending yet ovarinsting servios? We go into long sermon to prove that we will be ubie to recognize people in heaven, | when thers is ono reason we fail to present, i and that Is better than, all God will duce us, Wa shall have them sil pointed i out, You wonld not be guilty of the impos | liteness of having frisnds in your parlor not { introduced, and colesting politeness will de. { mand that we ba made acquainted with all { tha heavenly household, What rehearsal of dences, I If others fall to give introduction, God will and I was one who And 1 said, ‘Is that all?’ And he answered, “That is all,’ And while I was lost in amazement | heard a strong voles that sounded as though it might onee have bean hoarse from many ex- posures and trinmph as though jt might have helonged to one of the martyrs, and it sald, “Not many mighty, not many noble are called, but God hath chosen the weak things of the world to confound the things which are mighty, and base things of the world and things whieh are despised hath vea, nnd things which sre not to bring to naught thines whieh that no flesh should glory in His presence,” And I looked to ses from wheneo the voles came, and, lo! it was the very one who had said, “Through a window in a basket was [ jet down by the wall.’ Henosforth think of nothing as Are, insignid- A little thing may decids your all. A from England for New It was well squipped, but In putting up a stove in the pilot box a nail was driven too near the compass, You koow how the nail would affect the compass, The ship's officer, deceived by that distracted compass, put the ship 200 miles off her right course, lookout eried, “Land, ho!’ and the ship was halted withis a few yards of her demolition on Nantucke: shoals, A sixpenny nail came near wreek ing a Cosarder, Small ropes hold mighty destinies, A minister ssaled in Boston at his table Incking a word, puts his hand behind his head and tilts back his chair to think and the osiling falls and erashes the table and woula have crushed him, A minister in Jamaios at night by the light of an insect, called the eandlefly, is kept from stepping over a prec! plese a hundred feet, F. W. Robertson, the eelabrated Eaglish clergyman, sald that he entered the ministry from a train of elroum stances started by the barking of a dog. Had the wind blown one way on a certain day the Spanish Inquisition would have been established in Eagland, but it blew the other way, and that dropped the sccursed institu tion with 75,000 tons of shipping te the bot tom of the sea or ung the spiintcied logs on Lhe rocks, Nothing unimportant in your life or mine out on the right side of the gure 1 make a thousand, and i the right side of the Sgure | our nothingness placed on the rig be aucmentation Himitable Al time and «ternity affected by the down from a Damascus balcony ! r tiphers on the ages of mae jot : — - Biggest Railroad Station in England. The enlargement of Liverpool street station, London, is proceeding apace, and the alterations are completed the station will be ti gest in the country almost the in the word. The station eighteen platforms and twenty lines t the narrowest part of the approach there will be six lines, and with the signal arrangements and blocks it will be possible to run trains At pres. ent between 700 and 800 trains are run in aud out daily, but the enlargement will enable the company to run in and out 1000 trains a day. All the ron when wil new short in or ont every two minutes is secured a bit of putty in the whole. Handsome open arches form a sapport for the new roof at the point the old baviding. A feature is the new parcels office, 188 feet long by sixty feet wide, with the roadways, in and out, each thirty feet wide. Also, a feature will be the snormons addition to the circulating space; that is the ares between entrance halls and booking and the platform. Space will be gained in ove way by the offices placing all the lavatories underground. Ihe station is to be lighted through- out with the electrio light. — West. minster Gazette, To Prevent Burying Alive, ck The present talk about the danger of persons being buried alive has lod a genius of St. Joseph, Mo., tv invent and patent what he ealls a “grave In the collin is placed a small electric battery, to which is attached an alarm, something like the contriv. The the lid of the A strap is attached to it and to the hand of the corpse, so that the slightest movement will set the alarm in motion, A wite attached to the nlarm is fastened to A alight movemont in the coffin will start the alarm and ring the bell in the by warthly timopleceswhave passad we shall moet and talk with more heavenly eolobritios in the sexton’s house notifies him of the fact at once. The inventor of the “grave alarm” has also provided an iron pipe to be used on the graves where the at. The pive wil? life, and ean be taken np when the friends of the deceased lve becomp fully satisfied that death has really The device has been adopted for use in the Iowa eometery, operation by any of the corpuees — Ts —————— Inspection in 1837, I* !s not generally known to world at large, says the New York Times, that Emperor Napoleon 111. of France wus once behind the in Sing Siog Prison. In the spring of 18387 Prince Louls Napoleon, after- ward Napoleon 1IL, Emperor Frapee, made a visit to Washington of Irvington-on-the-Hudson, accom- panied by a young French count, and escorted by Anthony Constant of Hastings. Prince Napo eon expressed a desire to visit the prison at Sing, and Mr. Constant drove him there. Upon arriving at the prison, the party was welcomed Rowel, who after taking them into his apartments, explained the means that had been attended with the most successful and beneficial results in the government of the prison. The Warden told the Prince, who had been an interested listener. that he had a convict in the prison, a Frenchman, who was an old soldier, and to have ben in with Napoleon, the The Prince paturally asked to see the man. The Warden then plained that the prisuner was dark cell for misconduct; that it was contrary to prison rules to take him several battles first Emperor. visit the cells he would open the door of the Frenchman's cell. the stairs and across the keyvroom and the narrow passages 16 the leries, where the cells were and to thix day. He paused at the ond cell on the right-hand tier of the main galleries and unlocked opened the door. Louis Napoleun are Se. merry twinkle in his eve, turned the key and locked him in. It was guod an opportunity to be lost gentiemen were amused and ming over with fun, when, the noble 100 The brim- alter a door was Frenchman They all en- it sallow countenance reddened perceptibly fur a time and then joined in the laugh raised at his ex- pense. tI scsi Duluth's Flour Output. The fiour output of the Duluth STINGINESS is perverted economy. It is NOW #) | ¢ work. ~ NEW YORK, " Chinese Eat Horsefish, Horsetiesh China great delicacy for centuries habitants, however, for of the kitchen, use almost exclusively animals of rmall breed, little bigger than ponies, which have thin iegs and small bones, and grow fat on little food. They are fed almost en tirely on grass and hay. The meat is solid at comparatively low prices for this reason. Many farmers devote their time almost exclusively to rais- fog these horses for the market heen a The in- thi Purposes in has rms Ii — No More Hand mirrors, Dressing tables with plain glass wings movable on hinges toanyvangle are shown and are a great help wu dressing the hair. The hand gi is quite superseded by them. The wings come attached to quite inex pensive tables, and when not in can be folded back out of the as way. » fd id % A a Ste a i Many times women call on their family rom dyspepsia, another from heart disense, and their easy-going and indifferent, or over. busy doctor, separate and distinct diseases, assuining them to bo such, when, in reality, ali only symptoms caused by some v disorder Too physician, ignorant of ring, encourages his practice large bills sre made. The suffering wmitient gets no better, but probebly worse consoquent complications, cine, like Dr. Pierce's Pavorite Prescription, directed to the cause would have entirely removed the disease, thereby dispelling all comfort instead of prolonged misery, fe Mrs. Ida Coventry, of Huntsville, Logan County, Ohio. Bho had an experience which woe will permit ber to relate In her own language. It illustrates the foregoing. Bhe writes: “1 bad ‘femnle weakness’ very down pains through my back and appetite; no energy. eo family physician was treating me for ‘liver complaint’. I did not get any better under that treatment so I thought I would try Dr, Pierce's Favorite Prescription and his * Golden Medical Dis covery 1 felt better before used one bottle of each, 1 continued their use until 1 tock six bottles of each, time 1 felt #0 well 1 did not think it necessary to take any more. In what Dr. and child and shortens © labor *, surely is the best thing for cholera morbus, or pain in the stomach 1 over need ; it works Like a charm, 1 try never to be without it.” The following is from Mrs, Harriet Hards, of Montpelier, Idabo : “1 have enjoyed bets tor bealth since 1 began treatment with Dr. 4+ BN» wanted to sell Belting, Packing, Bose, eh TOF barge factory F001 POWER MACHINERY COMPLETE OUTFITS Wind or metal workers, without SHER PUWEE, Ba No cpeeal wily com Pte with the terge ho bu oir New Lutor saving Lory, ab 51 aud most proved or pene : pent Sw we, mise for Indnsteial | Chania, Tome Training, ete. Usp Be al WT ree. a Fain 7 Wats M1 Fenton Fai RY comm ——— ribea and uterine debility than 1 have for I am cured of my trouble, Kixtyv-x pounds, whereas my weight for many years stood at one hundred and twenty-five pounds. With pleasure, I remain,” Cv, Lean ds Yours truly, ig from Mrs M J Sr H a Atel The followin “" i me, and I bad ulceration of the womb ; could not pet about. 1 took Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription and it cured mo: 1 feit ten years younger. 1 have not had any I am the mother of thirteen children and I am fifty-three yours than your medicine. 1 have recommended in any case, #0 lot me thank you for the good it did me.” Yours truly, For “worn-out,” “run-down,” debilitated school teachers, milliners, dressmakers, seam- stresses, general housekee pers, and over all restorative tonics, It is not & * cureall” pose, being a most potent specific for all those chronic weaknesses and discnses peen- liar to women, well as uterine, tonic and pervine, and im- t cures weakness of the stomach, indiges- tion, bloating, nervous prosteation debility and sleeplessness sages, Diustrated), on “ Woman and Her Pitennes,” sent eealed in plain envelope, on Invalides’ Hotel and Surgical Institute, Buf. falo, N. Y. It contains a vast number of testimonials with half or photot; portraits of their authors gives the address of each, GOOD LUCK Siri onan i dinars 3 Home Beawtiful, a monthly on Needlework, Stam Ing, ete, postpaid, Bo, Farnhinms, 16 W, 16 N.Y . Te Vai Canti hoop Togs Petr. ! ra he nh u py 10 Eo fe, oi OUR RING CURES RHEUMATISM. Wie fo parcicutes. Waren & Ce Bunty oss } i Wuex pea-e comes, how will Brazil koow thie difference? Many persons ary from over. Vuk OF Jdvise ae Ton Ellers reba fhe #Vstem, al ‘ IN, YEINIVes oy | I Cae minrin. A splendd Noor cures 5 Bindder troubles. umd Cousultation fires, Pamphlet ry Bingbamion, ¥. ¥. Laboraic d who ppaends the ane Impaired digestion cured Pills. Beochamn's—no others, Beecham's ooule a box (300m Very shaliny- i fort SOMeLImes COMMS 10 BM In A OKING carriage, 11 afMicted with sore eyes use D7. lense Thomp. son's Eye-water. Druggiets sell at 25c. per bottle ia man tole any must then DOOOO 3 Gnd you A ping good some go’ 4 he Aer work, and did bit 6 ox pe pu a wavs ieid daw Op, 308 go’ vars 4 armen galvee ra charge wes war pat tare Was © ours te wi goods for the entire Teer wale ashe whieh Ave vou emtioss ie knew wh oh expend the Aerisoter fore bard t ' saws wel that some thet herd sass hod rock bard fires § vig Yo a foresew The erm BE WOE Pg The ep planation tater Then Pur “wn s ee ™me AREMUTOR C8 TORFAIES IT LOOKS AMELn, IPATES, IT RNs WHAT 18 (ORISE, IT RveaWs WHAT SHOULE BE CONIN0, 17 KNOWS 18 ABYARDE WHAT 17 SHAUL P f 4 snd ry wid od prods Te wth Ny i has an ene sve bern, had be A. r $ ak " we . WE BUILD THE NI WE Krew ' 9 . ts e 1h Ercan LENS OF COT, we bw ve we ke + A aa Hy a a se good wd wire peel wrth the sheet her ngs being 3 rivehed So (hiker etal haw holes putaded © A swkre Fig » Vib RAN vets, and water hos parts. Bows ¥ Thin of ood & wed bo good Be Pantin end is AUPE, We wanliis Leell wade of wets puivin. MH yen would pay Sulid the bunt mg That ene fenily ven f the paiva ined rou soy gremni protested WE BUILD FOR THE vou Bn pror printed wheel, wor one sed hetors bring pol Lageiber ue Sunbie price for i. We snd bape. 1 edge we bnew, ward hives, we mb A RA SAR Miss fo Be wiih nd # wd Fonpres Hine Thaw Gms oll pier an be WAN eft Gwe + EC ad as the oneril ww avd wat pry srw nll npweing of {wp wond eiwreind west She moles or 4 wy The section brome or griwey, Bhs grou bore some. dd velielde. J9 fe wzpwetive 88 rd te do. We heap #0 toms I Seg eng t we vem afford 26 do A The »il i ¢ opin end slcasinas when is of shaming Dor & tame forms, wl eomdimation wr alloy whieh ound be pd 1 ahi 8 8 Whew Bined ry ¥ Sedo, wed of wikivh Boel be Sound sithent warehouse. For Toop of the wie seed $50 reek, ¥ the sppesrance of sly. Ne 5 we will one of thew Tracks or Sorwesd Troms Frum (hove & rial offers Bn aronpt orgies wot For Windaille tou ill Thin yesr wvie we of mee wialing what ye y wit hey Pumping or Geared, and if posite we will wake you o Dbweul offer Toe Aerwsotor Up grapes to digitihate SEBG. CAR, IV PRETEEN Tor She boat sumnye wvilton by the wile, son of dungiier oF § Toremed or weer of a windae wnvwering Ue geeaten, SWRY SHOULD § USE 4% AVRNOTOR 1° Por sandition of pon petite and saouieds end pamien of Primes pend fo par Bresiere bo the Avrancber Tie, Uhiospe, te to 3s daameber. #1 Bun Frsnenws, Kanve Cioy, Linesln, Reb, Boas Hy, bons Bin Benroie, Bullets or 65 Park Place, New Terk Cite, fsemolon Pompénhg sid Oeared sare pre, bil $eel of Gulven ion A Pay. Complepion, delivered Free on cars wl Choeage wed whipped to ng one, anywhere, oi She fallewing prices 811. $25. 12-11. 860. 16-7. $120. January 2. " 15. Vebruary i. . whe March 1, * . . . TOTAL. a7 perv cent, We ince paid to ony customers in 60 days, rofite peld Twos each month: money can be withdrawn any tae; $50 10 $1000 can be Inverled, wiite for information, visu =n & ant 36 Brondwar, New Merk, SE TOOT POWBEH Gens JAANE SE TOOTH i BNU 12 ws
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers