. A— ————— w # - . REV. DR. TALMAGE. THE BROOKLYN DIVINES SUN. DAY SERMON, ———————— Buhject: “The Island of Patmos,” Texts: “When we had discovered Cy- rus we left if on the left hand,” Acts xxi., 3, and “IL John, was in the isle that (s called | : Patmos." —Revelation i., 9, Goodby, Egypt! Although interesting and instructive beyond any country in all the world, excepting the Holy Land, Egypt was to me somewhat depressing, It was a post mortem examination of cities that died four thousand years ago. The mummies, or Yerapped up bodies of the dead, were pre wared with reference to the Resurrection day, the Egyptians departing this life want. ing their bodies to be kept in as good condi- tion as possible so that they would be pre- sentable when they were called again to oc- cypy them. But if when Pharaoh comes to resurrection he finds his body looking as 1 saw his mummy in the museum at Boulac, his soul will become an unwilling tenant, The Sphinx also was to mo a stern monstros- ity, a statue carved out of rock of red gran- ite sixty-two feat high and about one hun- | dred and forty-three feet long, and having the head of a man and the body of a lion, We sat down in the sand of the African desert to study it. With a cold sinile it has looked down upon thousands of years of earthly history, Egyptian civilization, Grecian civilization, Roman civilization; upon the rise and fall of thrones in- numerable ; the victory and defeat of the armies of centuries. It took three thousand years to make one wrinkle on its red cheek, It is dreadful in its stolidity Its eyes have never wept a tear, Its cold ears have not listened to the groans of the Egyptian na. tion, the burden of which I tried to weigh last Sabbath, Its heart is stone It cared not for Pliny when he measure! it in the first century. It will care nothing for the man who looks into its impertubabls coun- tenance in the last century But Egypt will yet come up to the glow of life. The Bible promises it. The aries, like my friend, good and great Dr. Lansing, are sounding a resurrection trumpet above those slain empires. There will be some other Joseph at Memphis, There ill be some other Moses on the banks of the Nile. There will be some other Hypatia to teach good morals to the degraded.” Instead of a destroying angel to slay the firstborn of Egypt the angel of the New Testament will shake everlasting life from his wings over a nation born ina day. When, soon after my arrival in Egypt, | took part in the solemn and tender obsequies of a missionary from our own land, dying there far away from the sepulchers of her fathers, and saw around her the dusky and weeping congregation of those she baa come to save, | said tn myself “Here is 34 Here is heroler r unto God ever. grander than the pyr which thrills the he men of that wi Goodby, the steamer Minerva in ti pelago, the issnds of the New Testament, and islands Peulinian and Johannian in their reminiscence. What Bradshaw's directory is to travelers in and what the rail road guide is to travelers it America, the Book of the Acts in the Bible is to vovagers in the Grecian, or, as I shall call it, the Gos pel archipelago, The Bible geography of that region is accurate without a shadow of mistake, We are sailing this morning on the same waters ths } | satled, but in the opposite direct which Paul voy aged. He was smiling southward and we northward. With him it was Ephesus, Coos, Rhodes, Cyprus. With us it is reversed. and it is Cyprus, Rh , Coos, Ephesus. There is no book in the world so accurate as the Divine Book. My text says that Paul left Cyprus on the left; we, going in an opposite direction, have it on the right. On our ship Minerva were only two or three passengers besides our party, so we had plenty of room to walk the deck, and oh, what a night was Christmas night of 1580 in that archipelago islands of light above, islands of beauty be. neath! It isa royal family of islands, this Grecian archipeiag. win of the world's scenery set with sapphire and emerald and topaz and chrysoprasus, and ablaze with & glory that seemns let down out of landscapes, God evidently made up His mind that just here He would demonstrate the utmost that can be done with islands for the beautification of earthly scenery The steamer had stopped during the night, and in the morning the ship was as quiet as this floor, when we hastened up to the deck and found that bad anchored off the island of Cyprus. In a boat, which the na- tives rowed standing up, as is the custom instead of sitting down, as when we row, we were soon landed on the streets where Paul and Barnabas walked and preached, Yea, when at Antioch, Paul and Barnabas got into a fight—as ministers sometimes did, and sometimes do, for they all have imperfec- tions enough to anchor them to this world till their work is done, | say-— when, because of that bitter controversy, Paul and Barna bas parted. Barnabas came back here to Cyprus, which was his birthplace, Island, wonderful for history! It has been the prize sometimes won by Persia, by Greece, by Egypt, by the Saracens, by the Crusaders, and last of all, not by sword but by pea, and that the pen of the keenest diplomatist of the century, Lord Beaconsfleld, who, under a lease which was as good as a purchase, set Cyprus among jewels of Victoria's crown, We went out into the excavations from which Di Cesnola has enriched our American museums with antiquities, and with no bet ter weapon than our foot we stirred up the mission- floe of the noblest type a Here is a queen Here | ymething g AYeD Here is a t save the world sermon finds us on Orecian archi Europe, i" nt Grecian ~the or celestial we the ground deep enough to get a tear bottle in | which some mourner shed bis tears thou sands of years ago, and a lamp which before | Christ was born lighted the feet of some Jour pligrim on his way. That island of 'Yprus has enough to set an antiquarian wild, The most of its glory is the glory of the past, and the typhoid fevers that swept its const, and the clouds of locusts that often blacken its skies though two hundred thou sand dollars were expended by the British | empire in one year for the extirpation of these noxious insects, yet failing to do the work), and the frequent changes of govern. mental masters hinder prosperity. But when the islands of the sea come to God, Cyprus will come with them, and the agricultural and commere al opulence whic orped it in ages pest will be eclipsed by the agricultural and commercial and reli fous triumphs of the ages to come, Why A the world so stupid that it cannot see that nations are prospered in temporal things in prion as they are prospered in religious ings? Godliness is profitable not only for | individuals, but for nations. Quustions of tariff, questions of silver bill, questions of republic or monarchy have not so much to do with a nation's temporal welfare as ques tions of religion, Give C to Christ’ nd to Christ, ve Amerien to give the world to wil and He will ve them all y unlimited. Why Brooklyn one of the queen cities of the earth? oats It is the queen cities of churches, Blindfold me and lead me into any eoity of the earth so that | cannot see a street or a werehouse or a home, and then leads me into the churches and then remove the bandage from my eyes, from what | see walls, having wen nothing 1) eity's reerchandise, its literature, Ha printing its govern sciences, the steamer Minerva, which had already begun to paw the waves like a courser im- patient to be gone, and then we moved on and up among the islands of this Gospel archipelago. . Night came down on land and sea and the voyage became to me more and more sug. gestive and solemn. If you are pacing it alone a ship's deck in the darkness and at sen is a weird place, and an active imagination may conjure up almost any shape he will, and it shall walk the sea or confront him by the smokestack or meet him under the eap- tain's bridge. But here 1 was alone on ship's deck in the Gospel archipelago, and do you wonder that the sea was populous with the past and that down the ratlines Bible memo- ries descended? Our friends had all gone to their berths “Captain,” I said, “when will we arrive at | the Island of Rhodes? Looking out from under his glazed cap, he responded in sepul- chral voice, “About midnight.” Though it would be keeping unreasonable hours, I con cluded to stay on deck, for I must see Rhodes, one of the islands associated with the name of the greatest missionary the world ever saw or ever will see. Paul landed there, and that was enough to make it famous while the world stands, and fa- mous in heaven when the world has become a charred wreck, | This island has had a wonderful history, With six thousand Knights of St. John, it at hundred the | one time stood ou! against two | thousand warriors under “Solyman | Magnificent.” The city | lossus, which has always since | sidered one of the world, been seven wonders of Con | | | i had three thousand | statues, anda statue to Apollo called Co- | | bank, the | Ht was twelve years in bufiding and | was seventy cubits high, and had a winding | stairs to the top. It stood fifty-six and then was prostrated by an earthquake. | After lying in ruins for nine hundred years, it was purchased to be converted to other and the metal, weighing seven fundred and twenty thousand pounds, was put on nine hundred camels and carried AWay. but vhe lights all up and down the hills show | where the city stands, and nine boats come out to take freight and to bring three pas songers. Yet all the thousands of years of Purposes, yoars | seulptured, hanging gardens, suddenly going pin ernsh | and the pipers cease to pipe, and the trumpets cease to trumpet, and the dust, and the smoke, and the horror flil the canvay, while from above and beneath are volees nnpouncing, ‘Babylon is fallen, ix fallen!” And we halt again to rest from the spectacle, Again the panorama passes before the cavern of Patmos, and John the exile sees n mounted Christ on a snow white charger leading forth the cavalry of heaven, the long line of white chargers galloping through the soene, the clattering of hoofs, the elinking of bridle bits, and the flash of spears, all the earth conquered and all heaven in Doxology. And we halt again to rest from the specta- cle. Again the panorama passes before the cavern of Patmos, and John the exile sees great thrones lifted, thrones of martyrs, thrones of apostles, thrones of prophets, thrones of patriarchs, and a throne higher than all on which Jesus sits, and ponderous books are opened, their leaves turned over, revealing the names of all that have ever lived, the good and the bad, the renowned and the humble, the mighty and the weak, and at the turn of every leal the universe is in rapture of fright, and the sea empties its sarcophagus of all the dead of the sunken shipping, and the earth gives way, and the hoaveus vanish, Again we rest a moment from the spectacle, The panorama moves on belors the cavern of Patmos, and John the exile beholds a city of gold, and a river more beautiful than the Rhine or the Hudson rolls through it, and fruit trees bond their burdens on either and all is surrounded by walls in which the upholstery of autumnal forests, and the sunrises and sunsets of all the ages, and the glory of burning worlds seem to ba commingled. And the inhabitants never | breathe a sigh, or utter a groan, or discuss | 8 difference, or frown a dislike, We wers not permitted to go ashore, | { his its history are eclipsed by the few hours or | | perience lays that Paul stopped there. As I stood thers on the deck of the Min erva, looking out upon the places where the Colossus once stood, I bethought myself of the fact that the world must have a God of some kind. It is to me an infinite pathos this Colossus not only of Rhodes, but the coloss in many parts of the earth. This is only the world's blind reaching up and feel ing after God. Foundered human nature must have a superpatural arm to help it ashore. All the statues and images of heath endom are attempts to bring celestial forces down human affairs. Blessed be our ears that we have heard of an ever present | God, and that through Jesus Christ He comes into our hearts and our homes, and with more than fatherly and and affection He is with us in gles and and Rhodes needs something higher Colossus, and the day will come Christ, whom Paul was serving sailed into the harbor of Rhodes, shall take I" n of that island A ve on up through archi pelago, 1 am reminded f what an important part the island sve taken in the history of the world b are necessary to the balancing of the planet. The two hemis phores must have them, As you pul down into bereavements than wi when the an the he Ix poses £8 We Ih this ay | best you could, I should not wonder if | dying bed were a Patmos, It | so, I was reading of | pecting each breath would be the last | Him, or weep n tear. The fashion they wear is pure white, and their foreheads are encircied by lands, and they who were sick are well, and they who were old are young, and they who were bereft are reunited And as the last figure of that panorama rolled out of sight I think that John must have fallen back into cavern and exbausted, Too much was it for the naked eye to Too much was it for human strength to ex- nerveleoss 100K at, I My friends, I would pot should have a nilar awhile, You will be through with its cares and fatigues and str you have served the Lord and have wonder if you vision alter this world, and if jones the {f your very = often has been a dying boy around sorrowfully, ’ A while = cried whn the family stood Open the gates! Open the gales Happy! {aps John inst to “Oh. fx day ford, in the his life, eriad Him as He is and shal Hap in a tienda Owen, his bas oon | gotten the viol upon a scale the heavy pound weights, and | then the small ounces—and no one thinks of jospising the small weights—so the con tinents are the pounds and the islands are the ounces. A continent u iy a larger island, and an island only a smaller conti nent Something of what part the islands have taken in the world's history you will see when | remind you that the Island of Salamis produced Solon, and that the Island of Chios produced Homer, and the Island of Samos produced Pythagoras, and the Island of Coos produced Hippocrates But there is one island that I longed to see mores than any other. | can afford to mise the princes among the islands, but [ must we the king of the archipelago. The one | longed to see is not so many miles in circumieronce as Cyprus or Crete or Paros or Naxx: or Scio or Mitylene, but [ had rather, in this mil through the Grecian archipelago, see that than all the others; for more of the glories of heaven landed there than on all the islands and continents since the world stood. As we come toward it I feel my pulses quicken that is called Patmos” It Is a pi twenty-eight miles in circumferen: cypresses and inferior olives pump a liviog out of the earth, and one palm tree spreads its foliage. But the barrenuess and gloom and loneliness of the island made it a prison for the banished evangelist, Domitian could not stand his ministry and one day, under armed guard, that min ister of the Gospel stepped from a tossing boat to these dismal rocks and walked up to the dismal cavern which was to be his home and the place where should pass before him all the conflicts of coming time and all the | raptures of a coming eternity. Is it not re markable that nearly all the great revela tions of music and poetry and religion have been made to men in banishment — Homer and Milton banished into blindness: Beeth. oven banished into deafness; Dante writing bis “Divina Commedia” during the ninestesn years of banishment from his native land; Victor Hugo writing his “Les Miserables” exiled from home and country on the island of Guernsey, and the brightest visions of the future have been given to those who by dokness or sorrow were exiled from the outer world into rooms of suffering. Only those who have been imprisoned by very hard surroundings have had great revels tions made to them So Patmos, wild, chill and bleak and ter rible was the best island in all the archi pelago, the best place in all the earth for divine revelations, Before a panorama oan | be successfully seen, the room in which you sit must be darkened, and in the presence of | John was to pass such A panorama as no man ever before saw or ever will see in this world, and henoes the gloom of his surround ings was a help rather than an hindrance All the surroundings of the place affected St. John's imagery when he speaks of | heaven, St. John, hungry from enforced | abstinanos, or baving no food except that at which his appetite revolted, thinks of 3 dream of bountiful tables coversd with luxuries, so Ht, Jobin says of the inhabitants of heaven “They shall buanger no more” Scarcity of fresh water on Patmos and the hot tongue of Bt. John's thirst leads him to | admire heaven as be says, “They shall thirst | no more.” | St John hears the waves of the sea wildly dashing against the rocks, and each wave | has a voloe, and all the waves together make { 8 chorus, and they remind him of the multi. | tudinous anthems of heaven, and he says, ! oneg are like the votoe of many waters" One day, as he looted off upon the sea, the waters were v as it is today that brilliant sea he of heaven and describes mingled with fire” rk cavern of Patmos, though i hungry apd louded with Domitian’s anathe. | mas, Bt, John was the most fortunate man | on earth because of the that before the mouth of that eavern, heaven: and as the famisbed man is apt to | His ne 4 i on Joy Tha: Hodeomer pel's land.” Yeu history of the wor made a Batmos You see | child of God your last ness as mach as Jobin was exiled to Pa You will go into your room not to coms out again, for God is going to do something better and grander and bappies thao He has ever done There will vistons lot down to your plliow as God gives no man if he is ever to return to tl world, The apparcat feeling of uneasiness and restlessness at the time of the Christian's departure, the physicians say, is caused by no real It is an unconscious and involuntary movement, and I think in maoy cases it is the vision of heavenly gladness too cront for mortal endurance. It is only Beaven breaking in on the departing sprit, You see your wor will be done and the Glory, g tan thousand time 1 has the time will « me when ¥ ot Ww axiiad to *yy i be such is tame dist rons | time tor your departure will be at hand, and there will be wings over you and wings un ! dor you, and songs let loose on the air, and “1. John, was in the island | of rocks | A few | your old father and mother gotie for yrs will descend into the room, aod your tte children whom you put away for the last sloop years ago will be at your side, and their kiss will be on your foreheads, and you will soo gardens in full bloom, and the swinging open of shining gates, and will hear voices long ago hushed In many a Christian departure that you bave known and | have known there was in | the phraseology of the departing oaes some- { on that mission | thing that indicated the reappearance of those long deosssad. It is no delirium, no delusion, but a supernal fact Your iied loved ones will hear that you are about to come, and they will say in heaven: “May I go down to show that soul the way up? May I be the celestial escort? May 1 wait for that soul at the adge of the pillow? And the Lord will say: “Yes. You may fly down * And 1 think all your glorified brethren will come down, and they will be in the room, and althougn thos: in health standing around you may hear no voice and see no arrival from the heavenly world, you will see and hear And the mo ment the fleshly bond of the soul shall break. the ery will be: “Follow me! Up this way! By this gilded cloud, past these stars, straight for home, straight for glory, straight for Ged ™ As on that day in the Grecian archipesiago, Patmos began to fade out of sigat, 1 walked Khor | to the stern of the ship that | might kesp my eve on the enchantment as long as I could, and the voice that sounded out of heaven to John the exile in the cavern om Patmos seamed soundiag in the waters that dashed against the side of our ship, “Behold the tab. ernncie of God is with men, and He will dwall with them, and they shall be Fis peo ple and Gold Himself shall be with them and be their God; and God shall wipe away all tears from their eyes, and there shall be no more death, neither sorrow npnor oryng, neither shall there be any more pain, for the former things are passed away.” Will Make Ships Unsinkable. And now a material has been discov erod that will make ships unsinkable. I'he article is called cellulose and is to be manufactured in Philadelphia. The cel- lulose is made from the husks of cocanuts | and has the property of absorbing eight i | immediately closed up again, times its own weight of water. The husks are ground into meal, the meal is placed in sacks, and vessels are lined with it. Owing to the quality of the fiber it Is impossible to make a hole in it. The discovery of the material was acci- dental. A French gunboat was practic. ing at a target set up against a quantity of these wet husks; the shots that struck the target pierced it snd disappeared among the husks, leaving no sigas of their penetration, because the material The hint thus given led to experiments, and those to the manufacture of the new article, If the hull of a vessel be lined with cel. lulose it will make it practically unsinka- ble, Atlanta Constitution. i —I—— FPiager Autographs of Idiots, Im s of the fingertips of idiots have been found by Dr. A'Abundo to show very diferent markings from those In a number idiots the r—— gar-* HOUSEHOLD AFFAIRS. TO BOIL HOMIRY, A half-pint of large hominy 1s sufficient for a family of average size, It swells to four times its original bulk, Put js on the fire in plenty of coid water as soon after breakfast as possible, in order to allow it plenty of time to become thoroughly cooked before dinner. When the water dries out, add more, but let it be hot, Four hours at least are required for the grains to thordughly softened and done, when it is a most wholgsome and palatable article of food. When ready to be dished for dinner, add a teaspoonful of mix thoroughly. become butter, and it in A FPOXDU OF EGGS. A fondu is a ehicese and butter. Parmesan very often in a fondu, good cheese will do, of cheese is but any Grate two ounces preparation Cus, used of cheese into a cooking pan, add half a teaspoonful and a pinch of quarter- pound of add the six egus and stir thor oughly. the whites of six eggs to a froth and add carefully t gredients, Pour the poreelsin-lined fondus in a m olf ait mix io =» into the melted cheese, cayenne; butter beaten yolks of Beat y the other in- little nt JNO mixture I Ally pans derat Lom at and ar safras bark is sprinkled amo t it will keep out the worms, } A bowl of quicklime kept in a board will soon absorb if their be any. Washing old give it a luster almost ¢ cup said to beer is jual to that pos Sesser W Catsup keeps better and pickles also if youput a bitof bh Maeracista in mouth of the Keros ne wil ven i vd th es at have become hard from bing wet, 1 render them as pliable as ever, Twelve pout aches, six poun 1s of vinegar is» is of Pe sugar and one pint i tion for pickled | ach A perfume lamp, which burns cologne a RPT fis a pie saant scent about the room, is among the late household nov cities, To remove ink stains from 1, rabbud in with » off well with strong murnatic acl cloth; afterward waler in bo waler to wash ling meat for extract the Juices, itself alone put soup use id but if the meat is wanted for iato boiling water, When washing fine white flannels add a tablespoonful of pulverized borax ts a pailful of water. ‘This will keep then soft and white, A pound of sulphur burnt in a tightly closed room will destroy every thing in it, from moths snd bed bugs to possible disease germs, uving When decorating rooms for reception use one kind of as rosea for one, flowers for each room, carnations for another, violets in another, ete. If doughnuts are cut out an hour be- fore they are fried, to allow a little time for rising, they will be much lighter, Try cutting at morning. If the hands are rubbed on a stick of celery after peeling onions the smell will be entirely removed. Onions peeled under water without offense to eyes or bands, The leaves of the peach tree, a few at a time, put into the boiling milk of a | custard or blanemange and removed be fore it cools into shape give a delicate almond flavor, The flavor of a young roasted chicken is greatly improved il you place inside it a piece of fresh butter the size of a walnut and with it a bouquet of parsley and a small onion, Aged people, invalids or thoss who ; have feeble digestion or sulfer from dull. ness, as well as growing children, will be greatly heaefited by taking sweet cream in liberal quantities, To cure a felon, wind os cloth loosely | about the flager, leaving the end free. Pow in common gunpowder until the affected part is ootirely covered; then keep the powder wot with strong spirits of camphor, Steaming the face at night over a bowl hot water, and thes bathing it cold water, is the night and frying in the | may be | | daughter who was married a few years | ago, { told him she wanted a house, | | wood, use | | The Miners ‘‘Rustled” for the Bride. Colonel Hart, manager of the Cornu. sopin mine of Neihart, told an interest. kag little story the other evening, says ae Salt Lake (Utah) Herald, Here it is: One of the principal owners of the Mol he Gibson mine at Aspen, Col., had a Shortly after her return from her father and The old wedding trip she went to her gentleman, after a few moments delib eration said: “My girl, I'll tell you what 1'1l do, I'll give you one of any two men in the mine you may lect.” The oride tlought this rather a slim allowance from could well afford to be generous, and she w not to express the pointment which she felt, The young lady was very popular with aay s work one ne slow aisap- the miners, and when they heard of the proposition whic h the chief had made held a meet) workmen These two wi themselves his daughter they thie among their number, pre sented lady pelected two best eR young | after a vast pre liminary bowing spokesman addressed he voay, two . We'll git nd we "BEWARE OF THEM. 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A half to & teaspoonful in hall a tam! f water will in & few minutes cure Cramps, Spasms, Sour stomach, Heariburs, Nervousness, Neeplessnoss, | Siok Headaches, Diarrhora, Dysdiery, Lobe, Vise lency and all Internal pains There i ot 8 remedial arent in the world that wil cure Fever and Ague and all other Maiarious, Filious and other fevers, added by RADWA YS FILLS, poquick ss RADWAY'S HEADY KELIRY, Fifty cents per bottle, Sold by Draggisis * ne SUR E TO GET RADWA | cA Cured to Stay Cured, | HAY FEVER Cured to Stay Cured of every sullorer Inthe UU, %, and : tor i & ASTHMA oo Address ¥, Hareld | Hares, M, BD, Puffala, NV | W. L. DOUCLAS $3 SHOE cenf&aen. The BEST SHOE in the World for the Money, N and LADIES, save GENTLEM AD ad fe A PF TAKE NO SUBSTITUTE on Irate vn boon! siver aed dealers supplying yon. DAY I i » worst rape ture with ease Une Gor Bl CFrCUINE BDO. ( AUSTE ESE Perfect vomvronrt, CURE New atom te ment Lin 4 uted logue and roles EE a wen rel a . Y. HOTRE ¥P 144 Broadway N.Y ony Tt AND fates | dl —— Pot July BLINN (p DR. TALMAGCE’S “LIFE OF CHRIST.” nd from the Christ.Land, erussiesn on the day ooapiial mended Hit: PAY. Dastrated with over $00 wonder of the erection nodors and ten feet in Alwo send names snd PO of § agents or thee rk snd get Talmage's [Dustrated Biograsty F REE. HISTORICAL PUB. CO., UNEXCELLED! APPLIED EXTERNALLY Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Palas in the Limbs, Back or Chast, Mumps, Sor} Throat, Colds, Sprains, Braise; Stings of Insects, Mosquito Bites. TAKEN INTERNALLY It acts Hike a charm lor Cholera Morbas Diarrhea, Dysentery, Colic Cramps, Nase | sen, Siok Headache, do, | Warranted perfectly harmless, “ee oath necompany ing cach bottle, anise direciion jor use, is SOUTHIAM: aad PESLTRA. TING gunlitios are od tmmedialelyr. Try | it mad be con vineed, Price 40 nud o¥ conte, Sold br all dra winin, DEPOT, 40 MURRAY ST, NXIEW TORK. EPAY SALARY, IS men or women, Wok BAY Biv FAY fae part tle Omi 21 Frew ER ba 1 newds od. J. Eugene Whitney, Hochesior, N. ¥, HOW TO SAVE BO por oA, or more a Asp and pet tress, DINE, ete, with illmg Bert FREE, Aponte waned, For ostaiogne with valinabie informa boa, sidrews C HAMMOND, Nvaamvaas, Geneva, NX, Ri CARTED LOOM send #t once tor out Catalogue soe teste momals GC. N. Newcomb, Davenport, lowe NATURE'S ELIXIRS. found the tountnin of perennial yesth, Yar velous, bul true; sil, well or 1H, young or old “send em. Particulars ¥ BR Don't wat for var nnge ad, but witte teil ealth and Convenience Co, Box AW ren, What Ihvacs Deleon soaght vainly bas teen AGENTS WANTED ON SALARY. or comminden 10 handle the New Paton: whom Ink brasing Pencil, Andie making giv ween, Monroe Eraser Mi 'g Uo, La Ure, Wn ® SN GRE SRRiLIh Y, ockarerrss Franimess Porm Fommanenip, Arihmalse, sesroarad, a THoRovawLY (arenrey ATL, Vir nats ifn ante Cellege, 437 wai bars, N What, Nusvors, W ReTORED mofiaie gey SICK fan", oe Ti es tren, Dey By My BVI Bader, Intnl, 8. ¥.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers