REV. DR. TALMAGE THE EMINENT DIVINE'S SUNDAY DISCOURSE. Bubject: “Architects of Fate”~Young Men Are the Molders of Their Own Destiny, and They Are Admonished to Build on the Right Foundation, Text: “Run, speak to this young man.” Zechariah ii, 4. There was no snow on the beard of thea prophet of my text and no crows’ feet had left their mark near his eyes, Zechariah was 8 young man, and in a day dream he saw and heard two angels talking about the rebullding of the city of Jerusalem. One of these angels desires that young Zeohariah should be well informed about the rebuilding of that eftv, its ecircumfer- ence and the height of its walls, and he says to the other angel, ‘“‘Run, speak to this young man.” Do not walk, but run, for the message is argent and imminent, So every young man needs to have immediate ad- vice about the dimensions, the height and the oircumterence of that which, under Ood, He is to build—namely, His own character and destiny. No slow or laggard pace will do. A littie further on, and counsel will be of no advantage. Swift footed must be the practical and ime. portant suggestions, “or they might as well never be made at all, Ran at the pace of five miles the hour, and speak to that young man. Ran, before this year of 1898 is ended. Run, before this century is closed. Run, before his character is inexorably deolded for two worlds, this world and the next. How many of us have found out by long and bitter experienca things that we ought to have been told before we wers twenty-five years of age. Now I propose to tell you soms things which, {I you will seriously and praverfully observe, will make youn master of the situation in which you are now placed and master of every situation In which you ever will be placed. And in order that my subject may be cli- macteric, begin on the outside edge of that advice, which will be more and more im- portant as the subject unfolds, Now, if you wouird be master of the situa- tion, do not expend money before you get it. How many yousg men irretrievably that are quite sure to bo theirs, Have the money either in your hend, or ina safety deposit, or in a bank, or {in a United States bond befors you make purchases, or go into expensive enterprises, or hitch a spanking team to a glittering turnout, or contract for the building of a mansion on the Poto- mac or the Hudson, Do not depend cn an inheritanes from your father or uncle. The old man may live on a good deal lounger than vou expect, and the day of your en- forced payment may come before the day of his defense, You cannot depend upon rheumatism or heart failure or senility to do its work. Longevity is so wonderfully improved that you cannot depend upon people dying when you think they ought to. They live to be septuagenarians, or ootogenarians, or nonagenarians, or even centenarians, and meanwhila their heirs go into bankruptey, or, tempted to forgery, or misappropriation of trust funds, or watering of railroad or mining stock, go into the penitentiary, Neither bad you better spread yoursell out because of the fiftesn or twenty per cent. you ex- pect from an investment, Most of the fif- teen or twenty per cent. investments are apt to pay nothing savethe privilege of be- ing assessed to meet the obligations of the company in the affairs of which you get involved. Better get 31{ per cent, from a government bond than be promised fifteen r cent, from a dividend which will never declared, or paid only once or twice, so as to tempt you deeper in before the grand smash up, and you receive, instead of a payment of dividends, a letter from the president and secretary of the company saying that they are very sorry. Do not say you have no chance, but re. member Isase Newton, the greatest astronomer of his day, once idling eab- bages in the street, and Martina Luther singing on the public square for any ennies that he might pick up, and John unyan mending kettles, and the late Judge Bradley, of the United States Bupreme Court, who was the son of a charcoal burner, and Turner, the paifer, who was the son of a barber, and Lord Clive, who saved India to England, shipped by his father to Madras as a useless boy whom he wanted to get rid of, and Prideanx, the world renowned seholar and theologian, scouring pots and pans to work his way through college, and the mother of the late William E. Dodge, the philanthro- pist and magnificent man, keeping a thread and needle store, and Peter Cooper, who worked on small wages in a glue factory, living to give $500,000 for the founding of an institute that has already edueated thousands of the poor sons and daughters of America, and Sowdfiish, the scientist, beginning his useful learning and affluent career by reading the books that bad been driven ashore from a ‘shipwreck at Salem. There is, young man, a great finaneial or literary or moral or religious success awaiting you if you only know how to goup and take it. Then take it or get ready ta take it, The mightier the oppo- sition the grander the triumph when you have conquered, Again, if you wonld mastef the situation, when angry do not utter a word or write a letter, but before you speak a word or write a word sing a verse of some hymn in a tune arranged in minor key and having no stacoato passages. If very angry, sing two verses, If ina posi- tive page, sing three verses, First of all, the uubeaithiest thing on earth is to get mad. It jangles the nerves, oniarges the spleen and sets the heart into a wild thump- ing. Many a man and many a woman has in time of such mental and physical agita- tion dropped dead. Not only that, but it makes enemies out of friends, and makes enemies more virulent, and asger is partial or consummate suicide. Great attorneys, anderstandiog this, have often won their saute MY willtully throwing the opposing sounsel into a rage. There is one man you must manage or one woman you must con trol In order to please God and make [{fea success, and that is yourself, The hardest realm that you will ever have to govern is the realm between your ‘entp and heel. The most dangerous cargo 8 ship can carry Is dynamite, and the most perilous thing in one’s nature is an ex. losive temper. If your nature is hope- essly firascible and tempestuous, then dramatize placidity. If the ship is on fire and you cannot extinguish the finmes, at any rate keep down the hatches, When at some injustice inflicted upon you or some insult offered or some wrong done, the best thing for you to say is to say nothing, and the thing for you to write is to write aot . If the meanness done you is un- bearable or you must express yourself or die, then I commend a plan that I have once or twice successfully adopted. Take 8 sheet of paper. ate it at your tome or office, Then put the wrong- doer's hate iy the head of she Intiee page, without an prefix of “Colon or suffix of 'D. v. and with no term of courtesy, but a bold and abrupt “Bir.” Then follow it with a statement of the wrong be has done you and of the in- dignation you have felt. Put into it the JStrongest terms of execration you can em. ploy without belng profane, Sin your same to the red hot epistle, Fold it. En- Direct ft plainly to the man who Carry the let somplete tm that direction. But do won think you can afford to send it?” That ealm and wise and Christian interrogation of the president stopped the letter, and it was never sent, Young man, before you got for on in life unless vou are an exocep- tion among men, you will be wronged, you will be misinterpreted, you will be out- raged. All your sense of justice will be in conflagration, Let me know how von meet that first great offense, and I will tell yon whether your life is to be a triumph or a failure. You see, equipoise at such = time means so many things, It means self control. It means a eupacity to fore. see results. It means a confidence in your own integrity. It means a faith in the Lord God that He will see you through. Again, if you would be master of the sit. ation put the best interpretation on the sharaoter and behavior of others, Deo not be looking for hypoerites in churches, or thiaving among domaestie servants, or swindlers among business men, or mal. feasance in office. There Is much in life to make men suspicicus of others, and when that characteristic of suspicion becomes dominant a man has secured his own un- happiness, and he has become an offence in ail eircles, religious, commercial and political, The man who moves for a com- mittee of investigation Is generally n moral derelict, The man who goes with his nos- trils inflated trying to discover something malodorus is not a man, but a sleuth- hound! The world is full of more people, genarous people, people who are doing their best—good husbands, good wives, good fathers, good mothers, good offi. cors of the law; good judges, good gov. ernors, good State and nationat leglsia- tors, good rulers. Does some man growl out, “That has not been my experience, and I think just tke opposite,” Wall my brother. I am sorry for your affiiotive cir. cumstances, and that yon had an unfor- tunate ancsstry, and that you have kept such bad company and had such discour- aging environment. I notice that aftera man has been making a violent tirade against his fellow men he is on his way down, and if he live long enqugh he will be asking you for a quarter of a dollar to get a drink or a night's lodging. Behave vour- self wali, oh, young man, and yon will find life a pleasant thing to Jive and the world full of friends and God's benediction avery- where about you. Again, if you would be master of the situ- ation, expect nothing from good luck, or haphazard, or gaming adventures, In this time, when it is estimated that gambling exchanges monay to the amount of $80. 000,000 u day, this remark may be useful, There come times in many a man’s lifes when he hopes to get something for whieh are fifty kinds of gambling. from all of them. Understand that the gambling spirit is a diseases, and the more successful you are the more certain you are to go right onto your own ruin. Hav- ing made his thousagds, why does not the gambler stop and make a sale investment of what he has gained and spend the rest of his life inqguiet or less hazardous style of occupation? The reason is he cannot stop. Nothing but death ever cures a con. firmed gambler, Dr. Keeley's gold cure rescues the drunkard, and thers are antitobacoco preparations that wiil arres® the victim of nicotine, and religion can save any one ax- capt a gambler, sible, no more responsible for keeping on than a man falling from the roof of a four-story ond story. Here end there you may find an instance where a gambler has been re. ported or reports himself as being oon- verted, but fully under the heel of the passion. real gambler is a through passenger to death and perdition. The only use in re- ferring to him is in the way of preven. tion. He began by taking chances on a bookease or a sewing machine at a The peannias for his last valuable in a sroker’'s shoo, bles successfully is the man who loses so fearfully at the start that he is dis- gusted and quits. Let him win at the well to home and heaven. Most meroi. leas of all habits! that a man of a clubhouse {un London and was ear. whether he was dead or not, and when it was proposed to bleed him for his re- cove the gamblers objected that it would affect the fairness of the bet, gamblers, They bet at the races and have ut thestakes of gambling. A good way fora lady to get Into the gamester's habit is by beginning with “progressive euchre.” and began, Afterawhilethe excitement ran high, and the lady who was the hostess fainted and fell under the table, guests arose, but some one sald: “Don’t touch the belli! Let us finish the game, She would have done go hersell and would wish us if she spoke.” cian was called. After examination of the case it was found fthat the lady had been dead twenty minutes. their hands in surprise I exglaim in regard angelic womanhood! improving companionship. Do not low with a big name, but bad habits, for he drinks and swears and is disso- lute, take your arm to walk down the member that sin is the most expensive thing in God's universe, I have read that Bir Brasil, the koalght, tired out with the chase, had a falcon on his wrist, as they did in days of falconry, when with hawks or falcons they went or pigeons, and being very thirsty came to a stream straggling from a rock, and, re- leasing the falcon from his wrist, he took the bugle which he carried, and, stoppin the mouthpiece of his bugle with a tak p. moss, ha put this extemporized cu water which came down drop by dro rom the rock until the cup was tall, an had released with sudden swoop dashed the cup from his hand, By the same process he filled the wy agaln snd was about to drink when the fal swoop dashed down the cup, this {nsolence and violence of the bi eried, “I will wring thy neck {f thou doest that again.” But, having filled the cup a third time and trying to drink a third time the falcon dashed it down. Then Bir Brastl with his fist struck the bird, which flut- tered and looked lovingly and re che fully at him and dropped dead, Then Str Brasil, looking up to the top of the rock whenoe dripped the water, saw a fret green serpent coiled foid above fold, the venom from his mouth Sropping into that hich Bir Brasil had his cup. h laimed the knight, "What a kind thing It Was for the Jaiaon lo Sn, down n cup, and what a thing that I killed him, and what a narrow escape I had!” Bo now thers are no more certainly waters that refresh than waters that . This momegt thers are thot. sands of young men, un and not knowing what they or joaking into The Albatross. Out of the blue vold the albatross comes unhasting on motionless pin- fons, vet at a speed that, one moment a speck hardly discernible, turn but your eyes away, and ere you can look round he is gliding majestically overhead, Nothing in nature conveys to the mind so wonderful an idea of effortless velocity as does his ealin ap- pearance froin vacancy. Like most of the true pelagic birds, he ia a devour- er of offal, the successful pursuit of fish being Impossible to his majestic evolutions. Hig appetite Is enormous, but his powers of abstinence are equally great, and often for days he goes without other nourishment than a drink of the bitter sea, At the Gar- gantuan banquet provided by the car- cass of a dead whale, he will gorge himself until ineapable of rising from the sea, wet still his angry scream may be heard as if protesting against his Inability to find room for more provision against hungry days soon to follow, Despite his Incomparable grace of flight when gliding through mid-air with his mighty wings outspread, when ashore or on deck he Is clumsy and ill at ease. Even seated upon the sea, his proportions appear somewhat ungainly, while his huge hooked beak heavy to be upheld. On land he can hardly balance himself, and the broad, silky webs of his feet Thus his vis. gees too soon become lacerated. its to the lone and generally inaccessi- ble rocks which are his breding places are as brief ag may be, since even con Jugal delights are dearly purchased with hunger and painful restraint. A true child of the alr, land is hateful to him, and only on the win pear to be really at home and easeful. ~The Spectator. Caucasian Watering Places. The of Cau places does not perceptibly differ from watering places the world over Their only peculiarity is that they seem so out of place. Jelyesnovodsk, the easterly of the on a senarate line up ¢ proached through hilly tially wooded t and acacia cirelet asian ‘watering 1 aii most with oak an the fi beech, tess are chalybeate, some unusually hig ferrnginous spring centigrade. A quain overshadowed by a through perature (for 51 tle whose iit tree the degrees station, trunk comes up pumproom with self contained houses of travertine adjoining baths, foundations such The lagts from May to Oe. ROBSON There in the neigh and of Catherine saddest. are colonies nentness and several German thelr from the time borhood ness date the Great. Behind cottages, harled walls and tile non-Caucasian orl the vine-clad acres that sup Hackwood's Mag: compact in “ sets the consti whose gin, port the colonists are The Czar's Slavery to Duty, The Crzar's melancholy visit to Co- penhagen Is nearly over, and soon will be hurrying across to Europe to rejoin the Czarina at Livadia. Apart the occasion self, appears been marked by exceptional The young autocrat modest rooms in the overcrowded pal ace of Bernstorff, and Is sald to have almost his whole day In his little study reading or writing dis Every morning a courier ar- St. Petersburg with a fresh bateh, and every evening an other set out thither to take back the After break- fast he walked for an hour with his that being the the family for a short time at and after meals. He must often have look- ed back with a sigh to the time when he roamed about the place a careless boy in the company of his stalwart father.— London Chronicle, : Poet's Home for Sale. * “A poet's home"-—that of Cowper under the auction. The sale is announced includes the house In which Cowper lived and produced some of his best work, It was to Weston that Cowper was removed by the care of his cousin, Lady Hesketh, who found that the “cruel solitode™ of the little town of Olney bad a most depressing effect upon him, and stirroundings if he was to escape any further attacks of insanity, The house at Weston, which was rented for Cowper In the Autumn of 1784, belonged to his friend, Mr. Thock- morton of Westonhall, It was here that Cowper spent the remainder of hiz life if we except the few sad closing years, and at Weston he was probably happier than he had ever been before—~Montreal Herald. He Was Misundersiood. On an ocean steamship coming to New York, a Frenchman startled the passengers by announcing “I haf mar. ried an American wife and UE In mis. ery.” It threatened the entente cordi. ale; but subsequently It came out he meant he lived in Missourl, and all was pleasant, for pronounciation is not an i casus belli, The stockmen of Colorado and the States have figured It out From Factory to Fireside, Hore is the celebrated Hines How Machine wosrsntesd by ue for 20 years, i made with wood work of Walnut or Onk, best bent cover, skeleton drawer couse, noedivhar take u flat tension, improved read sontroller, staeh regu Jasgr and complete set of at Price—3 Drawer Style, $13.25 Price—5 Drawer Style, $16.00 Price—7 Drawer Style, $18.50 Our art Jithographed catalogue telle you a money-saving story about Carpers, Rugs, Lace Curtains and FPortieres—it shows exact designs in hand-painted colors, so that selections can be made as satisfactorily as though you were here at the mill, Our immense general catalogue of Furniture aad Household Goods, which saves you 6o per cent. on everything, tells you of many bargains similar to this, $5.95 buys our Flora § Hon lange with smooth esslings, asulomse ovens shelf, nickel plate om door snd snd of bearth, Price inciudes 8 joints pipe sud an elbow, Would we te spend. ing a million dollars anpually advertising these catalogues if they were not wo having. Both are free, Which do you want? Address this way, Price, $5.00 Julius Hines & Son, Baltimore, Md., Dept 54 4 OLOR and flavor of fruits, size, quality and ap- pearance of vegetables, weight and plumpness of grain, are all produced by Potash. Potash, properly combined with Phos- phoric Acid and Nitrogen, and liberally applied, will improve and quality of any crop. Write and get Free our pamphlets, which greatest economy and profit. GERMAN KALI WORKS, 93 Nassau St, New York. a Okishoma's governor was & telegraph operator, cures Rheumatism, cares Nearalgia, Jacons OL Jacons Ore Jacons Orn Jacoss On Jacoss On Jacoms On Jacoms OI Jacons Orn Jacons On. cores Backache, Jacons On, cures Muscular Aches. Sr. Br. Sr. Sr. Br Hr. Br. Sr. 8. Br. cures Lumbago, cures Beiatica, cures Sprains, cures Bruises, cures Borenoss, cures Btiffoess, If you would know what it means 10 be rich, find out that It is blessed to give, Beauty Is Blood Deep. Clean blood means a clean skin. No beauty without it. Cascarets, Candy Cathar tic clean your blood and keep it clean, by stirring up the lazy liver and driving all im- purities from the body. Begin today to anish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads, and that sickly bilious complexion by taking Cascareta,—beauty for ten conta. All drug. Sate, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25¢, 50c. Bpeak but little and well, if you wouid be esteemed as a man of merit, Deafness Cannot Be Cured by local applications, as they cannot reach the { Rago) portion of the ear. There is only one way to cure deafness, and that is by constitu. onal remedies, Deafness is caused by an ine amed condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube gets in. flamed you have a rembling sound or immper- foot hearing, and when it is entirely closed Deafness is the result, and unless the inflam. mation oan be taken out and this tobe re- stored to its normal condition, hearing will be destroyed forever, Nine cases out of ten are Sansed by catarrh, which is nothing but atin. flamed condition of the mucous surfaces, We will give One Haundrel Dollars for any case of Deafness (caused by catysreh)thatoan. notbs cured by Hall's Catarrh Care, Send for ciroulars, free, F.J. CuExny & Co, Toledo, 0. Bold by Draggista. 75 Hall's Fami ¥ Pills are the best. An bour of earefol thinking is worth more than ten of careless taiking, Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Sp rup for children Hope writes the poetry of the boy, but memory that of the man, No-To-Bae for Fifty Conta Ouarantond tobacoo habit enre, makes weal men strong, blood pure bo, 8. All druggists “1 don't believe in belog affable to infer. fore.” “You don't? Just think bow lonely you would be if everybody feit teat way.” To Cure A Cosi in Une Day. Take Laxative Hromo Quinine Tablets, Al Druggists refund mans 1718 fila to cure, 30. A Kansas paper, referring 10 & fatal noel. dent which tefel & prominent eltizen, says be “met death at the hands of a horse,” Apt to Affect the Nerves, Cold weather is just as apt to affect the nerves as any other part of the body, and neuralgia sets in. 8t, Jacobs Ol is just as certain to cure It as It cures all the gen. eral pains and aches of the body. Ae The Beoteh thistle Is growing in Greece, although theres it is called the artichoke, A Nl RM Both Mary Queen of Scots and George 111. were buried at midnight, - a Cloth ig now belong successfully made from wood, Don't Tobacco Spit and Smoke Your Life Away, To iit W0ticon easily and forwiers be mug: tte the Sin druggists, 80c or Bl. Cure guamn. teed. and sample free. ve TR nn Nog Aly i Bg Boho No nest in 50 severe as his who labors to subdue himself. in alr castles. RR SOR NMR LU AO. —— MEMORIES OF CHOPIN. Tragedy and Comedy of His Life and George Band's. Chopin sleeps in Pere Lachaise and though the Ariel of memory will add to the rest morceaux of his own noc- turnes and melodies till, if you will, the place be as full of “noises, sounds and sweet airs” as Prospero’s isle, says Chambers’ Journal. It is pleasant to rest awhile, listening to these things, and looking on at what fancy will do to their measures, the visions it will bring, the figures it will shape and un- shape from the fugitive brain scraps you throw it. But among the pictures which come and go, like the faces over the witches’ kettle—dim cathedral, glaring opera house, twilighted draw- ing room, a yellow moon over the trees ~ah, Chopin, what fools you made of us!--come others of an impersonal kind, biographical vignettes which these men around have left on all our minds. ‘There is the Parisian salon, Heine smiling over at Bellini; the fair lady, amused with the mastro’s curls, delicately destroying them with his cane, Not one of them thought that In fourteen days’ time poor Bellini, curls and all, would be under the ground at Pere Lachaise. Then ap- pears a severer awartment: a short, muscular man there, square-jawed and angry-eyed, ag Cherubini turns upon him half bitterly: “Citoyen General, I perceive that you love only that mu- sie which does not prevent you from thinking of your politics.” And the Midas-eared?” man, Napoleon, had alone plauding Paris, belittied And now rises a room in Florence, & litter of books and papers. De Mus- set writing, George Sand dictating. it is Chopin's doing—he has reminded us of them. But now he appears himseif, his plano before him dreaming through his finger tips and making more dreams for his crouching listener, the same George Sand. ‘The tragedy and comedy of those two lives !—they make us weep and smile by turns. The sculptured muse on a composer's tomb sits mourning, lyre in hand. But It is all past now, that sorrowing time. For when Chopin dled, did he not leave us his better angel? The musi- clan's soul of him, does it not dwell purely among us, one of “cholr invisible” which is ever urging us to “larger issues?’ One wishes the fig- ure would lift its head as the sick- hearted do at the last burst in the “March Funebre.” The few bones she weeps over are not Chopin. ¢ For that little, ‘mid ap- the poor emt ———- Fitted Under Diffounltios. An English correspondent in a Cuban prison sent for a talior to mako im a suit of clothes, but on the arrival way found he could only consult with him through the bars, and had to stand quite close to them to be measured. In a few days, however, the taflor again appeared on the scene with the gar- ments cut out and pinned together for fitting on, and this he accomplished by stretching his arms through the window bars as before untii the “fit” was to his mind correct. When the correspondent came to wear this extra- ordinary cuit a short time after he found It most satisfactorily, and well dtting—so much so that it is Leing worn in London now with much pride. Spain still insists that we should give 10 her something more than an ordinary uith matum, Just a Not worth paying attendon to, you say. aps you have had it for weeks. It's annoying because you have a constant desire to cough. It annoys you also because you remember that weak lungs is a family ailing. At first it is a slight cough. At last it is a hemorrhage. At first it is easy to cure. At last, extremely difficult. Ayer’s Cherry Pecioral THE EXCELLENCE OF SYRUP OF FiGS is due not only to the originality and simplicity of the combination, but also to the care and skill with which it is manufactured by scientific processes known to the Carirorxia Fie Syaup Co. only, and we wish to impress upon all the importance of purchasing the true and original remedy. As the genuine Syrup of Figs is manufactured by the Cawromxia Fic Syrup Co. only, a knowledge of that fact will assist one in avoiding the worthless imitations wanufactured by other par- ties. The high standing of the Cavri- FORXIA Fi6 Synur Co. with the medi- cal profession, and the satisfaction which the genuine Syrup of Figs has given to millions of families, makes the name of the Company a guaranty of the excellence of its remedy. It is far in advance of all other laxatives, as it acts on the kidneys, liver and bowels without irritating or weaken- ing them, and it does not gripe nor nauseate. In order to get its beneficial effects, please remember the pame of the Company — CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP C0. SAN FRANCISOO, Cal LOUISVILLE, Ky. NEW YORK. 5. ¥. BE WORMS “A tape worm eighteen feet long a8 least cathe on the scene after my taking two CASCARETS. This I sm sure has caused m” bad health for the t three years. [am stin taking OCascarets, the only cathartic worthy of police by sensible people. Geo. W. Bowipes, Baird, Mass. CANDY CATHARTIC TRADE Mans SE0STERED Do Me Plessant. Palatable ‘otent. Taste Good Good, Never Sicken. Wesken. or Gripe. Ie, 2x CURE CONSTIPATION. wey Bold and guarartesd br all drag. gists 0 CURE Tobacco Habis N0-TO-BAC The Best Holiday Gift of the giver is a subscription to the NEW AND IMPROVED Frank Leslie's Now 10 cts.; $1 a Year. Edited by Mrs. FRANK LESLIE, i Cover in Colors and Gold, i Scores of Rich Illustrations. CONTRIBUTORS: W DD. Howells, Clara Bar. ton, Bret Harte, Walter Camp, Frank R. Stockton, Margaret E Sangster, Julia C. R. Darr, Joaquin Miller, Edgar Fawcett, Egerton Castle, Louise Chandler Moulton, and other famous and popular and Xmas Noe. FREER writers with a $2.00 year’s subscription from January issue — fourteen numbers in all Either art plate GIVEN FREE with a y-monthe’ trial subscription for as cents, COMPLETE Story of the SINKING OF THE ® MERRIMAC ™ and the Capture and Ainpeisonment of the Crow at Santiago, by OSBORN W, DEMINAN, U. § Navy, late helmeman of the Mersimac, in the January Number. Fully Hlustrated, Subscribe Now. Edvtsoms Limited. FRANK LESLIE PUBLISHING HOUSE, Der's B. 145 Fifth Avenue, N. VY. Mention thie poprr when ordering. JA NEW HAIR MATTRESS FOR YOUR OLD FEATHER BED. We will give you your cholos, a new full dd, 40 pound cur i apr npholstersd ag he workmen. covered in best hair hing ar 8 Pure down quilt, or cash for sour old het bed, If Beautiful Art Plate, “A Yard of Pansies” or A Yard of Pup- ples”. also the su Now, you are not sat shied, send back wilt and we will re‘urn your years. Bank rafereness. CANADA EXPORT 00. 53 Derry Street, Brooklyn. [AGENTS WANTED S35; Se £7 ot onoe. HOWARD BROS. ¥. DROPSY rar 2 Dr. NN GREEN'S SOE. Atlanta, Sa Ww Oo
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers