—————————— REV. DR. TALMAGE. BROOKLYN DIVINE'S SUN. DAY SERMON, —————— Subject: “The Vacant Chale” THE Text: “Thou shalt be missed, because thy seat will be empty." 1 Samuel xx., 18, Set on the table the cutlery and the chasad | silverware of the palace, for King Saul will give a state dinner to-day. A distinguished place is kept at the table for his son-in-law, a celebrated warrior, David by name. The guests, jeweled and plumed, come in and take their places. When people are invited to a king's banquet they are very apt to go, But before the covers are lifted from the feast Saul looks around and finds a vacant seat at the table He says within himself, perhaps audibly, “What does this mean? ‘here is my son-in-law? Where is David, the great war rior? I invited him. 1 expected him, What! a vacant chair at the king's banquet!” The fact was that David, the warrior, had been seated for the last time at his father- in-law's table, The day before Jonathan had coaxed David to go and occupy that place at the table, saying to David “in the words of my text, “hou shalt* be missed, because thy seat will be empty.” The pre diction was fulfilled. David was missed. His seat was empty. That one vacant chair spoke louder than all the occupied chairs at the banquet In almost every house the articles of fur. niture take a living personality, That picture—a stranger would not see anything remarkable either in its design or execution, but it is more to you than all the pictures of the Louvre and the Luxembourg, You re member who bought it, and who admired it And that hymn book—you remem ber who sang out of it. And that cradle—you remember who rocked it. And that Hible—~vou remember who ead outof it. And that bed-—you nber who sleptinit. And that room-—you remember who died in it, But there is nothing in all your bouse so eloquent and so mighty voiced as the vacant chair, | suppose ti at before Saul and his guests got up from this banquet there was a great of pitchers, but all that racket was drowned out by the voice that came up from the vacant chair at the table Millions have Quincy Ads representat chair in the vi Clay's vacant chair in the and at Prince Albert's vacant , and at Thiers’ "nen nation reme atter wine gazed and wept at Jobn ns's vacant chair in the house of at Wilson's vacant e-presidency, and at Henry American senate, hair in Wind vacant chair in the But » you as compared ur own household, von TOF us und all these to learn? women than the father’s always like to sit in the same chair, * at home, and s © you are hr ir place and they the room you Jump up sud- “Here. father, here's your y probability is it is an arm- 15 not so strong as he once , and he needs a little upholding. His is a little fr his gums a little dee pressed. for in his earl v davs there was not much dentistry. Perhaps a cane chair and old fashioned apparel, for though you may improvement, fathar r no Grand- wimiration for new va in ne sly have sugested some 2 want any of yo father never had much fangled notiot I sat 1 a former Kreg "i was at the table and the fathe does ne TROT at t thie of or { my parishion - n aged man i on was presiding, somew dat abruptly addressed the son ar aid, “My son, don't try now to MT | the minist is here’ Your father never liked any new customs or manners, he preferred the old way of doing and he never looked ES) happy with his eyes closed. he sat ir in the From ww Lo the tip of the slippers, The wave of thelpast years broke at the foot of that chair metimes he was a little impa sme story id chair how many I hope you did dd chair, and that it did not in the way th I man's chair gels very the way, especially if he has been so « ax to make over all his property to with the understanding that re to take care of him. [| have soem in children crowd the old man's chair t and then crowd it cleans into the street, and then crowd it into the poor house, and keep on crowding it until the old man fell out of it into his grave But your father's chair wasa sacred place The children used to climb up on the rungs of it for a good night kiss, and the longer be stayel the better you liked it. But that chair has beens vacant pow for some time, The furniture dealer would not give you fifty cents for it, but it is a throne of infle- ence in your ircie I saw in the French palace. and in the throne room, the chair that Napoleon used to occupy It was a beautiful chair, but the most nificant part of it was the letter a smtroidersd into the back of the chair in purple and gold. And your father's old chair sits in the throne room of your heart, nad ye back of that old chair in letter “'F Have all the prayers of that old chair been answered! Have all the counsels of that old coair been practiced? Speak out! old armchair History tells us of an old man whose tires ery show SCR Te things is whet corner sometimes told the that hover dren such — the door aomesty Sons were victors in the Olymple game and when they came back these three sone, with their garlands, put them on the father's brow, and old man was so rejolond at the vie tories of his three children that be fell dea! in their arms. And are you, oh man, going t bring a wreath of joy and Christian usel wines and put it on your father’s brow, or on vacant chair, or on the memory of the mrted? Speak out, old armohair! reieorence to your father, the words of my text have been fulfilled, “Thou shalt be missed, because thy seat will be empty I go a little further on in your houss and 1 find the mother's ¢ hair It is very apt to te a rocking clair Nhe had =o many cares and troubles to soothe that it must have rockers 1 re pember It well: it was an old chair, and the rockers were almost worn out, for | was the youngest, and the chair had rocked the whos family made a creaking nolse as It moved there was music in the sound high enough to allow us ehiliren 4 nu hends into her lap was the ban whare we deposited all our hurts ani we Flew, Ab! what a char that was, [It was diferent from the father's chair: It was on tirely different. You ask me how?® | can pot tell; but we all felt If was difsrent Perhaps there was about this chair more gentleness, more teoders mors gre! when we had done wrong hen wa were wayward father sooldal, but motu cond, very wakeful chair. la other thse ne With That opt easly awake. The canir the old lullabies and all thos WOrdiems songs woien mothers sing to ther sick chilren—songs In which all pity and mand sympathetic influence are for a | of endurance, ur affections have emtroided into the | rple and gold the | naticism and your head got hot with your own wy and you went home and you went to bed, and no sooner had you touched the bed than a voloe said: “What! a prayeriess pillow? Man! what fis the matter? This, You are too near your mother's rocking-chair, "Oh, pshaw " you say. “There's nothing inthas, I'm five hundred miles off from where 1 was born, I'm three hundred miles off from the church whose bell was the first music I ever hoard.” 1 cannot help that, You are too near your mother's rocking chair, “Oh” you may. ‘there can't be anything in that, That chair has been vacant a great while,” | cannot help that, It is all the mightier for that, Itis omnipotent, that vacant mother. er's chair, It whispers, it speaks, it weeps, it carols, it mourns, it prays, it warns it thunders. A young man went off and broke his mother's heart, and while he was away from home his mother died, and the telegraph brought the son, and he came into the room where she lay and looked upon her face, and he cried out: “Ob, mother, mother, what your life could not do your death shall effect! This moment I give my heart to God.” And he kept his prom- ise, Another victory for the vacant chalr With reference to your mother the words of my text were fulfilled, “Thou missed, because thy seat will be empty.’ I go on a little further, and 1 come to the invalid's chair, What! How long have you been sick? “Oh! I have been sick ten, twenty, thirty years." Isit possible? What a story There are in many of the families of my congregation these invalids chairs, The occupants of them think they are doing no good in the world, but that in- valid's chair in the mighty pulpit from which they have been preach. ing, all these years, trust fn God. The first time I preached here at Lakeside, Ohio, amid the throngs present, there was nothing that so much impressed me as specticle of just one face —the face of an invalid who was wheelol in on her chair I said to her afterward: “Madam, how long have you been prostrated” for she was lying flat in the chair. “Oh!” she replied | have this way fifteen years I “Do you suffer very much Oh, sho said, “I suffer very much: I su the time: part of the time 1 always st rr." We i keep your courage Uh, yes an happy, very happy indesd , od hn shalt be ' the Lhe bean lind any she said Her fa of ar wns sald, wad it, : HOR the pia me on the ground Oh, what a means of grace t« these invalid man suffering the victory Edward and Richard Baxter Robert Hall, the invalid sand of whom the w but of whom all most cons : e and the eve of a a throne of earth valid's chair who are alwavs suffs plaining these + and neural craeiation will the martyrs, an an wave ti w hen « naire Un that Hon van te t ivi Oh, tort ADAW er iris ¢ i will But ) comes vacant it is N more holsterir up of t . hon N more changing } easy position and the cataplasm and That invalid chair may meen apart i" sat hv never ose it preach MON. siie to get an NO more use of the bandag the fr ph be f \ % quesnly f trust in God Buffering all eade Srwst t tas have becanse thy sat wi valid the been fulfilled I pass on and find It i= a high chair If that chair be o ol 1 moss [ tant ¢ the chairs wa turned toward it David's chair at rate it makes more racket house that be dull init. How that child breaks up woridliness of the place and young to sixty, sev age, If you AGopt one; it [wry It will way morning will give the starting its glow at nig lay a lose, YX dren Then you had baaven for there are = would fairly make ¥ five hundred millions rusty Pharisees told the children away from Him.” they sald; “you Trouble Him! He bas that kind of trouble A plonesr ia California says that fi first your or two after his Sierra Nevada county there dagle child in all the reach of miles But the Fourth of July the miners were gathered together and they were crlebirating the Fourth with ors tion and poem and a botsterous brass band and while the band was playiog an infant's voice was beard erying, and all the miners were startled, and the swarthy men began to think of their homes on the mastern and of their ives and children far away and their heats wore thrilled with home dokness as they heard the babe ory Bat music went on, and the hid orisd louder and louder, and the bras band played louder and louder, trying to drown mt the infantile interruption, when a swarthy miner, the tears rolling down his face, got up and shook his fist and sald, “Stop that noisy band, and give the baby a chance Oh, there was pathos in it, w= well as gooxd cheer in it here Is nothing to arouss and melt and subdue the soul like a child's voice But when it away from you the high chair becomes a higher chair and there is desolation all about you In three-fourths of the homes of this con thon there is a vacant high chair, Bomehow you never get over it There noone to put to bed at night; no owe to ask strange questions about God and heaven Oh, what is the use of that high chair? It is to eall you higher, What a drawing up ward it Is to have children in heaven And then it ls such a preventive against sin It a father is going away into sia he leaves his living children with their mother; bul if a father is golag away into sin woat is be going to do with his dead ohildren float ing about kim acd hovering over his every wayward step, Ob, speak out, vacant igh shale and sav Father, come back from sin, mother, come back from worldlines, | am watching you, | am waiting for sild’s think werhold the chairs Deans more than bandguet At an That is a stra with Saul's On entity and eigh Dave Do woul the ard heerin bot taney Chris trout res: 'anoe in was not a a hundred came, and coast, the Om Xa With respect to your child the words « my | text have been fulfilled, “Thou shalt bx missed, becuse thy seat will be pty , My hearers, | have gathered up the voiom of your departed friends and trisd to intone them into one Invitation upward, set in are rey all the vacant chairs of your homes and of your social circle, and 1 bid them ery out “Time Is short, Eternity bh Be at peace a seat for us kept a seat for Davia, but that seal the outside world shall be vaoant, may we be worshiping God in that place from which washall go out no more forever, 1 thank God thers will be no vacant chaire There we shall meet and HEE gid of i | the son. | tom poser when you thought the departed had come back again, and the room seemed bright with their fmces, and you started up to greet them and in the effort the dream Boke and you found yourself standing amid room in the midnight-<alone Talking it ail over, and thon, hand in baud, walking up and down in the light. No sorrow, no tears, no death, Oh, heaven! beautiful heaven! Heaven where our friends are, Heaven where we expect to be, In the east they take a cage of birds and bring it to | the tomb of the dead, and then they open the door of the cage, and the birds flying out, sing. And I would to-day bring a cage of Christian consolations to the grave of your loved ones, and I would open the door and let them fill all the air with the music of their voloms, Oh, how they bound in these spirits be fore the throne! Bome shout with gladness, Some break forth into uncontrollable weep ing for Joy, Bome stand speechless in their shock of delight, They sing. They quiver with excessive gladness, They weave their joy into gar- spring it into arches, they strike in on timbrels, and then all the loved ones gather in a great circle around the throne of God-—fa- thers, mothers, brothers, sisters, sons and daughters, lovers and friends hand to hand around about the throne of God-—the circle ever widening—hand to hand, joy to joy, jubilee to jubilee, victory to victory, “until the day break and the shadows flee away. Turn thou, my beloved, and be like a roe or a young hart upon ths mountains of Beth. er." each other, lands, they — SCIENTIFIC CC — - AND INDUSTRIAL. Pacific coast uses English coal, Electric buggies are annoanced. Perfumery is made from coal tar, An underground railway for Berlin 1» being discussed by German engineers. It is estimated that at least 1,000,000 pounds of rubber are annually used for bicycle tigers The telephone cables laid beneath the of Berlin estimated to meet the requirements 30,000 subscribers, the 15.000 streets are present number being Coal in the Province in iin, is so dear that there is a great re- over the discovery of an inferior y in a large vein near Albaanchez. recent i” w hie h ben | i f 3 ¥ filli ti English invention is a it tho sem with some yield. $s tubes with An electri fell to the ground and within two inch wire in Pittsburg of a pedestrian, who, though not t by the wire, received a rather severe sh we An while electric car St. the [841 in Paul, Minn., end of a bridge ins heavy min recently, was struck by light. The car on fire and the machinery rendered useless. Not one of the passengers was injured. passing ning Was set flatable passes Among the novelties rubber chamber for bathers, around the underneath rus, making it possible for a bather to float in an erect position without fatigue. It can inflated when desired by means of a tube attached to the neck iS an 10 It » the bust arn be derr Bombel, an apothecary and chem. ist of Neuenhaus, Germany, claims to have discovered a process by which the lymph which Dr. Koch invented may be purged of its dangerous qualities, Ex- periments with lymph purged are said to have met with great success, Wa Some of the single plates of armor for the armored cruiser Maine, building st the Brooklyn (N. Y.) Navy Yard, will weigh fifty tons A construction at Alliance, Ohio, to handle the Maine's armor. The crane be mounted on a railway rusoing sround the edge of the stone dry dock The rate growth of corals is diff}. cult to estimate. At the meeting of the Academy of Natural Sciences, of Phila delphia, Professor Heilprin exhibited a specimen of Porites astraoides which had been taken from an sochor cast in the autumn of 1855. He estimated that the anoual amount of increase was scarcely ove-twentieth of an inch An attempt is to be made by Dr. H. Koplik at the Eastern Dispensary, situ. ated in the tenement district of New York City, to furnish to the poor at a low price sterilized milk. It is hoped by this means to prevent the appalling mortality among the children of this class, The plan was initiated on a small scale last summer by Dr. Koplik, who reports favorable results in the majority of cases. Special crane is in wil f of { _— - — Tur new Archbishop of York, Dr, Maclagan, possesses at least one quali- fieation which will endear him to the hearts of Yorkshiremen, in that he isa good judge of a horse and delights in pquestrian exercise. In spite of this, he would scarcely go so far as another great clerio, who, so tradition savs, in the case of a young nobleman, a candi iate for orders, accepted a throughbred | {rom the father and forgot to “pluck” Few people, however, know De. Maclagan as a hymn writer and of tunes. His powers of srganization, if io the opinion of some too drastio for the diocese, will be ex tremely useful if utilized to weld the | WaLDSNG. Kixxa¥ & Manviy. Wholessle component parts of the great province breeders’ society, and Philadelphia ¢ | comprehensive institution for the wap- pression of excitement of all kinds, Of a verity, Browning, Mr. sod Mrs Russell the grace-experts, and Mr Howells the monotone word painter will have to get upon themselves a goodly hustle or the new fads will ab. sorh all the yawning long-felt wants they bave been attempting to fill for revenue only for these last several —— rs —— Ir you have found your rut, stay in it, They gaze on tho | temples, on the palaces, on the waters, on | triumphal | of the exact stufl i Any case ( i Jisetuel 1 honorable in all - RE NEWS AND NOTES FOR WOMEN, Jeweled laces are new, Church weddings are on the decline. Creamy colored lace is gaining favor. Woman's suffrage is popular at the an- tipodes, Chicago will build a home for work. ing girls. Embroideries seem to be the pet child | of fashion this year. The Government offices at Washington | employ 4000 women. Fhirteen more women than men voted at the municipal election in Cawker City, | Kan, There isa well grounded rumor from Paris that hoop skirts are coming in next year, One costume worn by the donna Emma Abbott pounds, Mrs. Jennie C. Croly, “Jennie June, has been made honorary president for life of Sorosis. The Greensboro (N. C.) Female Col- lege graduates wore dresses of their own weighed 150 " making this year, The very latest craze which is exciting | femininity is to have pocketbooks aade of the gown. Two enterprising Indianapolis (Ind.) | girls recently won a box of gloves by climbing a smokestack 120 feet high. Mrs. Leland Stanford has given $100, 000 for the kindergartens in San Franc permanent support of the five isco, Cal, Light gloves can be cleaned witl meal; black kids, with a teas to which a few d added Mrs, Oscar Wilde and Lady Hubberton are two of the noted Engli t have adopted the divided who { as part of every-day attire. Miss Nellie iz Eyster, President of the Women's Press Ass ciation of the Pacific Barbara Fric heir coast, 18 A gran i niece of ier's heroine nd has more wom any ot! popu dustrial cin 1 1 all misses’ yunt lery, and this is especially fancied for ginghams, Mr. Georgia Kendrick, of Pough- keepsie, N. Y., wife of the late Rev. Dr Kendrick, has been elected to the principalship of Vassar College and has accepted it. the cotton dresses the ! nn of white em! devised rose leaves so as to A Pomona (Cal.) woman has 8 process of drying retain their fragrance, and has secured a market for all she Now York firm Dr. Martha Robinson, of Ohio, has been her father's dentistry for can prepare with a Cleveland, parte or in : 1LI0UN y years past, and th gentleman leaves all difficult oper to her especial care The only woman in America who is an operatic conductor is Miss Emma Steiner, A Southerner by birth, music, as well as read and executed it, by the time she was eleven years old. Belva Lockwood, lawyer, is annoyed at the statement in a well-known book of reference which makes her seventy-one years of age. She declares that she is yet only fifty-nine. she composed the Washington Bismarck’s wife is rather short aad stout. She was never pretty, but has always bad a remarkably fresh and clear complexion, Her gruff husband's devotion to her 1s said to be quite touch lng. Shirring is desirable on the dresses of young girls and children because it is dressy, and it does away with the neces. sity for any other ornamentation, unless it be a few loops of ribboa ro- soties, The wife of Joel Chandler Harris, “Uncle Remus,” is a pretty brunette woman, with beautiful teeth and a charming She il of French Canadian descent and 18 an accom phshed linguist, 3 she or smile, One of England's brightest girl college graduates this season is Miss Mary K. Mootgomery, who has just taken the highest honors at the University of Lon. don. She is a young woman of twenty two, the daughter of a Unitariaa clergy. man, The woman's branch of the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals in Philadelphia, after winning notable victories over fux hunters and pigeon shooters, has begun a determined cam. paign against the docking of horses’ tails, TT How's This ®t We offer One Hundred Dollars reward for oatarrh that cannot be cured by taking Hall's Ustarrh Car 4. Cuexey & Co Yrops , Toledo, O. We, the undersigned, have known PF, J Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe him siness Tras oO. ins, and finsncially able to carry out any ob tions made by their firm, ar & Tuvax, Wholesale Druggista, Toledo, 0, Hy wis, Toledo, O Mall's Cniarrh Cure is taken injernally, act. | ing directly apon the Mood and mucous sar NEw Yonx has an anti-kidnaping | society, Boston a newly formed cat | est imoniale sent Tree, woes of the system, Sold by all draggiets rice 15e, per bottle, FAVANNAY (Ua) Greeks will soon uid a chuweh, gi “Don't Feel Well And yot you sre not sick enough 10 consult & Soo tor, or you refrain from so dolng for fear you will Slrm yourself and friendecwe will tell you just what you need, It Is Hood's Rarsapariiie, which will soon 11 pou out of that ascertain, uwssomfortabie ad dangerous sondition, late a sate of goed health, confides and cheerfulness. You've =o Wea how potent (hie pooling medicine I In such ORME BE yours. KB Be sure to got Hood's Sarsaparilia old by alt wx tor 0 Prepared only wu, bry prd ——" — late prima | medicine. For over fifty years it has been curing all sorts of blood trouble from an ordinary pimple to the THE EverMomer Should Have an Considered Wonderful. Mr. Henry V. Smith, of Belmont, Wes! Virginia, says: “ He considers his cure of Scrofula by 8. 8. 8., one of the most wonderful on record. He had the disease of the worst type all his life until he was 22 years of age, and his whole youth was embitiered by it. Of course he had all sorts of treatment, bul nothing benefited him permanently until he took 8. 8. 8. which cleansed the poison from his sys- tem, and cured him sound and well.” a a cama A ———————— - FOR FIFTY YEARS. Swift Specific S. S. S. hap a record enjoyed by no other 8. B 8. 18 PURELY VEGE.- TABLE, AND I8 HARM. LESS TO THE MOST DELICATE CHILD. worst types of scrofula and blood poison. Rooks on Hlood and Skin Dscases Free, SWIFT SPECIFIC in The House, Dropped on Sugar, Children Love 0 take Jonson's ANopYNe | Bore Throat, Tonsilitie, Colle beves Butumer Complaints ne y THINK In use over 40 YEA LK Jomssox & Oo wd of yor JOMEMN'S AN I have ai] Dr It I» siaty yours sine AXIRENY for ( reg nan, Cramps and Palas He Outs, Bruises like magic OF IT. Re ir one family e | fret LYRE Livimany jl rafent fam cr exierne nd Heptist Chu Every Sufferer vous Headache v Express paid Tu my agenie for w If not for sale In dealer to send for en agency, and get them for you TAKE NO SL W. L. DOUCLAS 83 SHOE cenflfven THE BEST SHOE WN tis 6 sommes alu to hurt the feet vine sud easy, and be grade than any sewed shoes + Tua We hey manu sting fro your the ts f From ation, €O.. Atlanta, Ca. —— UNEXCELLED! APPLIED EXTERNALL i ¥ « Li. Douglas Shoes, piace ask your tnlogue, secure the BSTITUTE. a2 H Rheumatism, Neural?ia, Pains tn the Limbs, Back or Chest, Mumps, Sore Throat, Colds, Sprains, Bruises, Stings of Insects , Mosquito Bites, TAKEN INTERNALLY It mete like a charm Dimrrhen, Dysentery tor ( holeras Morbus, , Colic, Cramps, Nan sen, Sick Headache, &c. Warranted perfectly harmless, necompanying each bottle, Its *OOTHING TING qualities are leh or use, it mand be convinced, Price 40 and 30 cent, ghinin, “er onth anise directions and PEAETHRA- immediately. Try Sold by all drug DEFOT, 40 MI'RRAY ST, NEW YORK EY Xx REY? make facture re how ’ Hegusls BL to B50 $5 00 Genuine Hand-sewed, the finest calf . show " cver ere ried shoes wi 00 Handseowed o Sy ited, comfortabi $a shoe ever offered st this prior willing froes 1 k : we fore i at ; vi # $2 23 and $0.00 Warkingman's ¢ . Bre very ng asd aradiie. 1 hose bo have gives thers 8 trial w Wes? T ther » ‘ Bo 8’ 82.00 and 81.75 school shoes ar y worn by the lees ry her the : t toss made abyown 3 30 Police Shoe; « and Letters re & " heavy three re - Bho bows, 2 ih ioe $2.50 fine cal] Bo ta Rog 1g dig he who want a ab f f wir on thelr merits, as the In Ladies "22° Lz ported show f inmeog are the } Cantlon, Ses thet W Price are stamped on the t \a in 1 for 000; « cont Ty vasing Haodesewed show a verretyl . a comting Troes $400 to B00 Ladies 2.50, 80.080 and $1.75 wo r wat Aine Dongola. $y Tis and 4 juais Fretch on B50 Lo B12.0% Welt Shae, foes eal, © and duratie. The best same grade as cus ne ’ ore. Ha art Far your ter abo ever al = mies show ais Fron Le. Douglas Buds € tom { ench show Ss’ 6 large cities A* I» unive Hewes the large FATEXTEL Strongest and purest Lye made Makes the bes! perfumed BSoapin¥ ing. Itist waler, cioansing waste 3 disinfecting sinks, closets, wash ing bottles, paints, trees PENNA. Gen TURE PATERT AL Es KANSAS FARMS goed pres. Farms Loe sale CHAS BK, WOOLLEY, Weak, NERvous, ¥ LaTomED morta oe Si welt amd kwey els pow Mota a pons san pie ays fren. Dr. J, oh, DY EK naseon CEPT TIEETTTEETTETTTIETETIFIIFs EVEK before in the history of live stock has such success attended the efforts of breeders in perfecting an animal possessing the power to resist disease, and containing the elements of rapid growth and QHIO IMPROVED (heter bogs, two having .. hese facts, logether with our enormous sales in ZAIN ol sae 1? gre weighed 2,800 Agents Phila Hard : minutes wilhowu! boul be owt for softening pes, tor fu end or oal : » ry 3-114, : boa Le seen el SALT MFG. CO. Pa CURED! a A Positively Molds Rupture WOR FIGHT ANT BAY, nd of Real Estate - vg 3 gs 0/7 LYE tate of Bow Fae PIty Associaton, the Astor Ketate 0 . and bundreds of other estates which Powdered and rerfumed, . be meutiohed, In all the great pany ad Tad, parts " 244 Ww ashington ~~. BOSTON, MASS, where photographs of GE). LEONARD, Pres THE NE Cid ® ABSOLUTELY SAFE INVESTMENT. ANNUAL DIVIDENDS, 76 Payable at TRADERS’ Nation'l Bank, BOSTON. Northern Investment Company. omipRny Jurchases strictly central business the rentals of which jay ranily Enews by Dusness mtioually Inorenses ewtaios like the temres Ep commercial # selling today at after Angus 4 June I office of Hoome 8 IVAROe plare ai the A.A HOWE, Tress W METHOD dein, wend for better than the Hall Bretesn. Agesis w HEALTH SUPPLY 00, 106 BROAD™AYL, & & HAY FEVE & ASTHM Wh SG. ¥V Mouse Mra. Co ar TAA Brosnwary. BY Cory U and Mortgages are nll right, Meg ores bargains. Last tisborae, at ree Man, Headln well, Hetper Buffalo, X. ¥ | BF oot Le Venuine he CURED TO r STAY CURED. © want the name and ad emol every sufferer in S. and Canada. ASS F. Barddd Bape, BLD, Sulina, [FRAZER | BEST IN THE WORLD AXLE GREASE the States snd foreign countries, have excited the envy of competitors, who & | r. industries iwi on call in question the facts claimed First come fst served on @ end addrem hy first mall - and secre fret Chance wi th a every Modern We therefore have decided to convinge every one of the superiority of this breed by offering 10 sell a pair ON TIME to the first applicant from each locality with references. Foreign countries having taken steps to re-open their ports for the reception of American pork, also the fact that farmers have sent all sizes to the butcher, has already caused a lively demand for brood sows and pigs for breeden. They see their mistake, and that the raising of a superior breed of bogs thet have & vigorous and strong constitution, with consequent ability to resist the attacks of disease, will in the near future take rank with the most profitable pair on time and an Agency, “Wa The L.B.SILVER CO. Cleveland 0. ll lll ddd dd ddd ddl tal etl Ll hd range indeed thar 3—- tlike SAPOLIO should ‘make everything so bright, but “A needle clothes others,and is itself. naked" Try itin your nexthouse-cleaning What folly it would be to cut VE Fn — pair of scissors! Yed peo-
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers