REV. DR. TALMAGE. THE BROOKLYN DIVINE'S SUN- DAY SERMON, Subject: “The New Year" Text: “This year thou shalt die.” Jere miah xxviii, 16. Jeremiah, accustomed to saying bold things, addressed Hananiah in these words, They proved true had departed this life. This Is the first Sabbath of the year, Itis a time for review and for anticipation. A man must be a genius at stupidity who does not think now. The old year died in giving birth to the new, as the life of Jane Sey- mour, the Eoglish queen, departed when that of her soo, Edward VI, dawned. The old year was a queen. The new shall be a king. The grave of the one and the cradle of the other are side by side. We can hardly 1088 what the child will be. It is only two days old, but I prophesy for it an eventful future. Year of mirth and madness! Year of pageant and conflagration! It will lauzh; it will sing; it will groan; it will die, Is it not a time for earnest thought? The congratulations bave been given, The Christinas trees have been taken down or have well nigh cast their fruit. The friends who came for the holidays are gone in the rail train, While we are looking forward to another twelve months of intense activi ties the text breaks upon us like a bursting thunderhead, ** "bis year thou shalt die™ The text will probably prove true of some of us. The probability is augmented by the fact that all of us who are over thirty-five years of age have gona beyond the average of human life. The note is more than due, It is only by sufference that it is not eoi- lected. We are like a debtor who is tak- ing the “three days’ grace” of the banks Our race started with nine hundred years for a lifetime. We read of but one antedi- luvian youth whose early death disappointed the hopes of his parents by his dying at seven hundred and seventy-seven years of age. The world then may have been ahead of what it is now, for men had so long a time in which to study and invent and plan If an artist or a philosopher has forty years for vy great achieve ments; the artists and ph osophers have « bad nine hundred y ars before the y two thou sand vears Ded longevity be n now, Wash aster he makes near: ont nearly wo until was taken and oniy four person 1 and hundred and ha Curiosity sn 10 « ne Sun . and we go The vast majority of the race passes off before twenty years, To every apple there are Eve blossoms that to be apples. In the y church tue sexton rings the bell rapidly unti through and the tolls it. For awhile th rrily, but with to toll dred years of age is a miles to see him never get countr n ni is more iis year thou shalt ur occupations adds 4 wee who are in the pro dng a sapping of brain and foundations, Literary men in this country are driven with whip and spur to their topmost speed, Not brain worker out of a hundred observe moderation lating in our essayist ol would have own stead of nt and would hav iropped at | someting in ii : 0 predisposes to to disor lers apoplexy, If we be fra tu ing from consumption to paralysis rarely reach fifty years Watchmakers in marking the time for others, shorten their own. Che breathe death In their laboratories, and potters absorb paralysis Painters fal: under their own brush. Foun drymen take death in with the filings. Shoe makers pound away their own lives on the last Overdr merchants measure off their own lives with the yardstick. Millers grind their own lives with the grist. Masons dig their own graves with the trowel. Ani in all our occupations and professions there are the elements of peril Rapid climatic changes threaten our lives By reason of the violent fits of the ther mometer, within two days we live both in the arctic and the tropic. The warm south wind finds us with our furs on. The wintry blast cuts through our thin apparel. The boot, the the firearm, the assassin wait their put us their quietys, | anne it as an impossibility shat three hundred and sixty-fiv lays should pass and leave us all as we now are. In what direction t wt the arrow | know not, and #0 [shoot it at a venture. ‘This year thou shalt In ery nervas fessions are un tha Lhe iy % ANY I here is somethin that if J Edinta had : at thirst Charle whch stout fevers to rang Printers pati we nse disease, | 54 Lee ranging from diseases nists iven wheel, chance to upon y whi oe view of this, 1 advise that you have your temporal matters adjusted. Do not leave your wordly affairs at the mercy of administrators Have your receipts prop erly pasted, and your letters filed, and your books balanced, If you have “trust funds, soe that they are rightly Sapostond and ac counted Let no widow or orphan scrat your tombstone, “This man wronged me of my inberitance” Many a man died jeaving a competency, whose property has through his own carelessness, afterward been divided be tween the administrators, the surrogate, the lawyers and the sheriffs, | charge you, before many days have gone, as far as pos sible, have all your worldly matters made straight, for “This year thou shalt die.” | advise, also that you be busy in Christian work, How many Sabbaths in the year! Fifty-two, If the text be true of you it does not say at what time you may go. and therefore it is unsafe to count on all of the fifty-two Sundays As you are as likely to 0 fo the first f of the year sain the last | far 1 think we had better divide the fifty two into halves and caleuiate only twenty. siz Babratts Come Christian men, Chris tian women, what can you do in twenty six Habbathe! Divide the three hundred and sixty five days into two parts, what oan you do in one hundred and sighty-two days’ What, by the way of saving jour family, the church and the world? You will not, through all the ages of eternity in heaven, | over the dior and the outrage of go. | into glor/, and having helped none up | to the same place. It will be found that | many a Sabbath-school teacher has taken whole class; that Baker, evangelist, took thousands into heaven; that Dod. | Aridyge bas taken in hundreds of thousands, | ’ fon has that Paal took in a hundred millions. How | many will you take in? if you get into heaven and find none thers that you seni and that there are none to (ome through your instromentality, | bag of you to crawl under ome seat in the back ocorper and never come out leet tie re ieemed got thief In sixty days Hananiah | advise all the men and women not ready for eternity to get ready, If the text be true, you have no time to talk about non-essen- tials, asking why God let sin come into the world; or whether the book of Jonah is in- spired; or who Melchisedee was: or what about the eternal decrees. If you are as near etornity as some of you seem to be, thers is no time for anything but the question, “What must | do to besaved?” The drown ing man, when a plank is thrown him, stops not to ask what sawmill made it, or whether it is oak or cedar, or who threw it, The moment it is thrown, he clutches it, | thing but immediately laying hold to God, It is high time to get out of sing, You my, “I have no great transgressions.” But are you not aware that your life has been sinful? The snow comes down on the Alps flake by flake, and it is so light that you may hold it on the tip of the finger without feeling any weight; but the flakes gather; | compact, until some day a traveler's | they foot starts the slide, and it goes down in an avalanche, crushing to deatn the villagers So the sins of your youth, and the sins of your manhood, and the sins of your woman wood may bave seemed only slight in accuracies or trifling divergences from the right—s0 slight that they are hardly worth mentioning; but they have been piling up and piling up, packing together and packing together, until they make a mountain of gin, and one more step of your foot in ths wrong direction may slide down upon you an avalanche of ruin and condemnation. A man crossing a desolate and lonely platens, a hungry wolf took after him. Hs wought his gun to bis shoulder and took aim, and the wolf howled with pain, and the cry woke up a pack of wolves and they came ravening out a the forest from all sides and horribly devoured him. Thou art the man Some one sin of your life summoning on all the rest, they surround thy soul and make the night of thy sin terrible with the assault of their bloody muzzies, Ob, the unpar doned, clmnoring, ravening, all devo sins of thy lifetime! A maniac was found pacing along the road with a torch in one hand and #2 pail of water in the other, and some one asked him what he meant to do with them. He an- rored, “With this torch [ mean to burn ywn heaven, and with this water | mean to put out the fires held Ho was a mania } ) the one ti t as wall uring e could « as hie Or * bring fuse Him fh and say ved, I will I wish you might know jertook when He vary. They crowded They struck Him. They kicked Him, They cuffad yt Him what a job Jesus carried your case to Him to the wal spat on Him. They Him. They scoffed scourged Him They mur jeredd Him lood i! As He stoops wn to lift you up the crimson drops u His brow, from His side, from feel the Warm ous y for thee the hunger, thirst, the thorn sting, the suffocation, struggle, the death. A great plague came in Marseilles. The joctors held a consultation and decide] that a corpse must be dissected or they would ever know how to plagues AD juyon sald, “Tomorrow morning [ w sroceed to a dissection” He made his wi or spared for death; went into the hospita iy wrote out the results of the twelve bh Beaut . Dar Lord Ji and saw a plagu be dissected. H hing to His pe into She reeling on inys His hand to N ir plague He dies—th kK, the pure for the |» for the gulity Behold id the sacrifice! Beh wd the They top the dissected a bo wm and d ol in urs i ow He healthy for the = uted, the innocent the } Beh rescue love! Decide on this Sabbath of the yea whether or not you will bave Jesus H will not stand forever begging for your love With some here His plea ends right speedily ‘This year thou shalt die This great salvation of the Gospel for to every man, woman and child "i w buy it Yo cannot earn it A h writer says that a poor woman on id winter's day looked throug the win low of a king's conservatory and saw a» bunc) of grapes hanging against the glass, She said, "Oh, if I only had that bunch grapes for my sick child at bome™ At her spinning wheel she earned a fow shillings and went to buy the grapes. The king's ardner thrust her very roughly, and said he had no grapes to sel She went of and sold a blanket and got some more shil Hinge, and came back and tried to buy the grapes. But the gardener roughly assaulted her and told hor to be off. The king's daughter was walking in the garien at the time, and she heard the excitement, and seeing the poor woman, said to her, My father is not a merchant to sell, but he isa king and gives’ Then she reached up and plucked the grapes and dropped them in the poor woman's apron. Bo Christ is king, and all the fruits of His pardon He freely gives. They may not be bought Without money and without price, take this sweet cluster from the vineyards of God I am coming to the close of my sermon, | sought for a text approprists for the oocos sion. | thought of taking one in Job: “My days fly as a weaver's shuttle” of a text in Psalms: "80 teach us 10 number our that we may apply our hearts unto wise dom” of the prayer of the vin dresser “Lord, let it alone this year also.” but pressed upon my attention first of all, and last of all, and above all, were the words: “This year thou shalt die.” Perhaps it may mean me. Though in per. fect health pow, It doss pot takes God one week to bring down the strongest physioal constitution. I do not want to die this year, We have plans and projects on foot t 1 want to see completed; but God knows best, and He has a thousand better men than | to do the work yet undone, that, notwithstanding wanderings, 1 shall, RIM a Movs oat ut and in all my sins through the | finite mercy of my Saviour, come out at the right place, 1 Bave nothing to brag of w was of Christian experience; but two thing» | have learned—my ntter helplessness before God and the all abounding grace of the Lord Jesus, If the text means some of you, my hearers, | do not want you to be osught unprepared. [| would lke to have you, either through money you had laid up or a “life insurance.” be ables to leave tie world feeling that your family need not be. come paupers. Mut if you have done your est and you leave not one dollar's worth of | extate, you may confidently trust the Lord | who hath promised to eare for the widow | and fatherioss. | would like to have your | sou! £100 out for eternity, so that if any | thoening or noon or wating or night of [these threes hundred and sixty-five days, { death should look in anil ak, “Are you ready ™ you might, with an outburst of Christian triumph, answer, “Aye, aye! all ready.” 1 know not what cur last words may be, Lord Chesterfield prided himself on his po. and in bis last moment, “Give " If this | | year you are todie, there is no time for any- | your | 3 | committed | days | I have a hope | posing himself on the bench of a court-room, said in his last moment, “Gentlemen of the jury, you will now consider your verdict,” A 474 play actor said: . ‘Drop the curtain, | The farce is played out.” I would rather | havo for my dying words thoss of one greater than Chesterfield or Dr. Adam or Lord Ten. terden. I am now ready to be offered, and { the time of my depurturs is at hand, 1 have | fought a ood fight, 1 have finished m | course, I have kept the faith; henceforth | thore is laid up for me a crown of righteous | ness, which the Lord, the righteous Judge, shall give me.” The sooner the last hour comes the better if we are fitted for entrance in the celestial world. There is no clock in heaven, because it is an everlasting day; ya they keep an | maocount of the passing years, because Shey | are all the time hearing from our work The angels flying through heaven report how many times the earth has turned on its axis, and in that way the angels can keep a diary; and they say it is almost time now for father to come up, or for mother to come up. Some day they see a cohort leaving heaven, and they say, “Whither bound? and the answer is, "To bring up a soul from earth,” and the question is asked, “What | sou And a family eircle in heaven find | that it is one of their own number that is to be brought up, and they come out to watoh, as on the beach we now watch for a ship that is to bring our friends home, After a | while the cohort will heave in sight, flying nearer and nearer, until with a great clang the gates hoist, and with an embrace, wild with the ecstacy of heaven, old friends meet again, Away with your stiff, formal { heaven! 1 want none of it Give mo a piace of infinite and eternal sociality My | foot free from the clods of earth, I shall bound the hills with gladness and break forth in a laugh of triumph. Aba! aba! We weep now, but then we shall laugh. “Abraham's | bosom” means that heaven has open arms to take us in Now we fold our arms over our | heart, and tell the world to stand back, as though our bosom was a two barred gate to keep the world out Heaven stands not with folded arms, but with heart open It is "Abraham's bosom.” | see a mother and her child mesting at the foot of the throne | after some years absence The child disd twenty years ago but it ix a child yot I think the little ones who die will remain ldren thro all eternity It would be the little dar 1 do (row igh ing. 1 ther Linton, what ver that hymn He il stand it-—-the joys that are coming When eaven rises for the doxslogy 1 eannot sow we oan rise with it if all these wave everiasting delight come upon low of joy alter billow of joy Jesus w for the first heaven, yet bere waven at His back But | must ast January t have entered the year, but Within these tw | shut for the last | plant the Christmas New Year's congratulations nation of Joy to some and as & warning to there, | leave in your ears thease five words ff one syllable ea “This year thou shalt i not woo the soul DU Meth day with nks in all uld be enough $ aay He approaches ose this ssrtnon y some who are w te i i —————— Railroad Statisties. railway 163 597 yws the largest Al The United The Staton 18 a} Sates, Ee 8 and spurs, is of rai umber 1797 The t United States is way corporations » oof iocomotives in The n tal num bye 29.925 inbes cars used is 1,164,138 he om ne mile per freight engine is 4,721,627, amber of toas of reight carried and the number of passengers carrie | one is 1,413 142 men employed on mile per passen The total number of the railways is 749 301 The 155 404.06 ara made the basis . ’ sented b ror engine niles of which woe f statistics are » Lhe amount 1s repre riiway canital t of $9,459 444,175, which inl ™n equivalent Assumir to 8 per mile of line thal the mining miieage is ) spitalized atl the ale the total capita of raliroad property in the United States would be $9 804 483 490. The inc for the SAM ation rease in milway capital S$444.263. 798 The total number of persons reported by railways as killed during the past year was 6320, and the number lnjured was 20.034. Of the killa h, 2415 were em ployes, 285 passengers, and 3584 were classed as ‘other persons.” The latter in- | cluded a large number of suicides. Of the injured, 22 390 were employes, 2444 pmsengers, besides 4200 anclassified. I'he largest number of casualties occur to men engaged directly in haodling trains, Rallway travel is found to be the least | safe in the States south of the Potomac and Ohio Rivers. | The express companies of this country | pay to railways as reata's $20,207,711 a year, They are in reality engaged in the | business of quick delivery of freight,and | as such should be amenable to control, « Troy (N. Y.) Standard, inst year 1% The Kilkenny Cala During the rebellion in Ireland in 1808 Kilkenny was garrisoned by a troop of Hessian soldiers, who amusei them- seives in barracks by tying two cals to- gether by their talls and throwing them across a clothes line to fight, The offi. cers hesring of the cruel practice, re- solved to stop it, and deputed one of thelr pumber to wate, The soldiers, on | their part, sot a man to watch for the coming officer, One day the sentinel neglected his duty, and the heavy tramp of the officer was heard ascending the Istaim. One of the troopers, seizing a sword, cut the tails in two as the ani | mals hung across the line. The two eats escaped, minus their tails, through the winqow, sod when the officer inquired the meaning of the two bleeding tails belag left ju the room, he was oooll told that two cats had been fighting had devoured sll but | ee——, wo. I “Ge Curlosities of Panishment. An examinaticn of the different en. tries contained in the Machyn diary sheds a strong light on crime and eriminal punishment during the reign of Mary, who served the English people from 1555 to 1658, First he mentions a young fellow who was tied to a post, **hard by the Stand- ard Chop,” with a collar of irou about his neck, and soundly whipped every two hours ‘for five days by two stout men, for the crime of pretending to see visions. Further on we read: **Cheken, a parson of St, Nicholas, Cold Harbor, was this day driven about the streets of London in a cart, the parson himself dressed in a yellow gown;” all of this because he had sold his wife to the butcher! Was it only a coincidence that a butcher was one of the parties to this transaction, or was it the intention of “the goodly man” to have his better half served up in roasts? As it nearly 450 years since * ‘the parson” com is now mitted that uncanny crime, it is doubt ful if ever find hie ‘“‘went to the skillet” or not, According to other items in we out whether Machyn one can readily see that purveyors of visions were the same kind of m then as they are to-day. They were in chined to palm off their base goods pro rial sound; to use their arts to take customer, only the punishment when the fraud was discos somewhat more personal a it is now Machyn of that time whe says that had expos { was fore meat | the streets the horse's and anoth or sale veal borne Men who » ————— ‘ - Harbor the World in py ite ONE ENJOYS Both the method and results when Syrup of Figsis taken; it is pleasant and refreshing to the taste, and acts goncyyet promptly on the Kidneys, iver and Bowels, cleanses the sys tem effectually, dispels colds, bead aches and fevers and cures habitual constipation. Syrup of Figs is the only remedy of its kind ever duced, pleasing to the taste and ao ceptable to the stomach, prompt in its action and or nits effects. prepared only from the most heaithy and agreeable substances, it* many excellent qualities com mend it to all and have made fit the most poptias remedy known. Syrup of Figs ie for sale in 500 and $1 bottles by all leading drug gists. Any refiable druggist who may not have it on hand will pro cure it promptly for any one who wishes to try it. Do not accept any substitute, CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CQ SAN FRANCISCO, CML, SEW TORR, 0 mall Syrup’ ** I have been a great sufferer from Asth- ma and severe Colds every Winter, and last Fall my friends as well as myself thought because of my feeble condition, and at distress from constant cough: ing, and inability to raise any of the accumulated matter from my lungs, that my ti* was close at hand When nearly worn out for want of sleep and rest, a friend recommend- ed me to try thy valuable medicine, Boschee's German Syrup. I am con fident it saved my life. Almost the first dose gave me great reliefand a gentle re- sleep, such as had not had for weeks, My cough began immedi- ately to loosen and pass away, and I found myself fapidly vaining in health and weight. am pleased to inform thee—unsolicited—that I am in excellent health and do cer tainly attribute it to thy Boschee's German Syrup. C. B. STICKNRY, Picton. Matardo. ¥ PATENTS fed Asthma. Gentle, Refreshing Sleep. freshin | mucous surfaces of the » | of il] health in thelr daughters. and at « | trains over ! frawable after | Wanted Salesmen O'KEEFE $70 There is reported tv be enough coal in Colorado to supply Kansas and Ne. braska. $100 Reward. $100, The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at fonat one dreaded dinoane that sclence has boen able to cure in all its stages, and that is catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure isthe only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity, Catarrh being acon stitutional disease, requires a constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken in. ternally, acting directiy upon the blood and stew, thereby de- stroying the foundation of the disease, and giving the patient strength by buildin constitution and sssisting nature in doling its work. The proprietors Lave so much faith in its curative powers that they offer One Hun- dred Dollars for any case that it falls 10 cure. Bend for Het of testimonials, Addn -. F. J. Caexey & Co,, Told EF Bold by Druggists, 7 AXD Couvans use 'uocues, Like } For Tnroar Diseases really good things, they are : Brows's Broxcmian imitated genuine are sold on y tn boxes, 0. Mothers should watch earefully thos nee us OI} Lydia EK, Pinkham's Vegetable ( will prove a lnsting blessing The Convenience of Bolla ‘I'rains The Erie is the only railway running solid its own tracks between New York snd Chicago, No change of for any class Care | of passengers. Hates lower than vie suy other | first-class line, Wise Hotners risin Croup Cure, slop « RIANE'S (GAMEAT LESTOREN » after first : cures, | | «nt fa Riine, Fii Nenve | Marvels free. ays use nd $2 trial bottle vr, Dn, § WANS Parr } : ’ Jotm cures 1X Nernes ¢ ples free Wo hi ( Hex up the | copra 1 “ How do I look? ™ | That depends, madam, upon how | you feel. If you're suffering from ( functional disturbances, irregulari- ties or weaknesses, you're sure to “look it.” And Dr. Pierce's Fa | vorite Prescription is the remedy. It builds up and invigorates the system, regulates and promotes the proper functions, and restores health and strength, It's a legitimate medicine, not a beverage ; purely vegetable, perfectly harmless, and made especially for woman's needa, In the of all “female com- plaints,” it’s guaranteed to give sate isfaetion. or the money is refunded. No other medicine for women is sold so. Think of that, when the something else ( which dealer says pays kim better) is “ just as good.” cure We “Times have changed.” So have methods. The n improve- ’ IOUS Ess, derangements ] nd bowels cured. ’ x i . 3 ented i | } ven ’ H FARMERS: LOOK You are exposed to sudden el nnge Lo OUT! # of temperature, and lo injuries. ST. JACOBS OIL cures RHEUMATISM, SPRAINS, BRUISES, CUT STIFFNESS, SWELLINCS, SCIATICA, BURNS. A PROMPT AND P DR. TALMACE'S * huis great tr Fe, Through, and from engravings, also & grand 3 TUE aon ) woded. 1514 zs AS _100C AGENTS WANTE BE DECEIVED Fasies, Buamels, and hae re the ron, and be Fiving Sun Btove Polish is Dr $s Darabie, and Lhe Conve a i em GOLD MEDAL, PARIS, 1878 W. BAKER & COS Breakiast Cocoa the excess of of In absolutely re and if 48 soluble No Chemicals . pre Ih + the Re with are tmed aru hae» ree Hwa ar, OTe BOO TN “ne lotus, nour ning, EasLY PIGESTED, a ! for lnvalide 8 well as for persons | d admin Sold by Grocers everywhere, w BAKER & CO. Dorchester, Mass You don"t wast comfort. MW you dont wish 10 look well dressed H you don"t want the best, then dont want the Lace Back Your dealer has it # be your dealer. We will mall 8 pair on receipt of $1.00 Nez: genuine without! the stamp as e Dark “Suspender Oo. HN Prinos fuel, KX § INVESTMENTS, Jemde pabd guarterby on Tully padd certifiontes $10 vied Pak iy stock dowlies In Big yw [7 AT guarasitensd by of first mont Egress om iw Ll vend read stinte and with your, If desired. Safest 1h vestment gown. Werte for full Information you want Eastern Pullding & Loan Association, Syracuse, N.Y Address of an) ABTHMATID PF. Harold Hays B.D. BUFFALO, N, Inv wit CURED TO STAY CURED he . JOMN W, MONKEY, | NSIO »w Sahiihatin Bo rogegytes I Late 1) Rds ension me. Svein dest wor adiodicating claims. stl) slues 1 wey! stows OK eele's 0K, %hor Bincking. the wurda COMI I finest In A Pittsbargh, a ! nFrizes. Word Contest, of details memes 20. amp to W KHAMER & C0, Chanute, Katine Morphine Mabit Cared In is oe OPIUM 7 eisai TWO TEAMS WiLL Mow AN ACRE IN HALF THE TINE OF ONE TEAR. We are anxious Son Forest Congh “syru rected cures Bronchitis, La Grippe, Be. Master, in for Mw days longer, : rous M4 on the chest and Verestine usa Thme eran the My pe up heals while the Plas. ter draws owt the pain Almost 5 81 sine bettie and a 5, WOUNDS, SORENESS, BACKACHE, NEURALCIA ERMANENT ‘LIFE OF the Clint land { the ¢ CHR . i ond mkanes and PP ( et Talmage's [iustrsted § ORICAL PUB. CO.. PuiLa Pa the da «+ PAY. A IST UNEXCELLED! AVFPLIED EXTERNALLY Rheumatism, Kearalda Pains Limos, sack or asst duns, Throat, Colds, Spraiss, oral clings of Insects, Mosquito Bitss. FAREN INTERNALLY It acts like a charm lor Cholera ft Diarrhea, Dysentery, Celi sen, Sok veadacke, & $33, Morvas « LFampa, Naa Warranted periectly harmiess, “Sec onth pecompanying ench bettie, alse directions jer use, Ms SOOTHING and PENETRA- F TING guanlities are tell immediately. Try PF MTand be convinoed, Peloe 49 nnd av rints, DEPOT, 40 MIUNRAY ST, NEW YORK conta, Seld oy all drags Ra ATE ie ie the Carpet ie ving va w for boa Lreenend ey ney Tow Rare star LRP Pe an wast St Monde " — ————— H'eH FIVE OR EUCHRE PARTIES , ho 4 A. C.RLAEP RR, Ohiong TEX CENTS in stampa, r pack for the slickest cards you ever shufMed. For —————— —————————— . ———— + $100.00 IN COLD At easy WAY to raise ms arity work. Send stamp for partioulars 1 role tions SEND [= iru 18a nloge of Music and MISICAL Instraments, W STORY, BH Oentral SL. Boston, Mas OM: STUDY soos xem en, Dasiases Forma bo Fenmanehip, Ards Shorr? oa md, ola, ryant's College, 457 Main st. ou lais A 0 AGENT ale DOD par OL, worh win BTS ANH PRILES om omy cores Helter uelies and med) Hridgmen, should send at onoe HY SEparriax, OG IY LAE you will receive free by express ton pack, will be padd for ome mw We od postage stamp, bought. CH MEXEER] SL Louis, TRORODGILY (avant oy M A TE, Olroaiars free sengde rem Torvory EW war, A ! PFILLOWSHAM HOLDER, AnEnts Wanted S33 70 83 A A UW NUTTING Hesston Vaud Y, ANTED! Salewmen for Nursery Stock. Ad dress the ONTARIO NURSERIES, Geneva, NX, ¥, Piso's Remedy for Ostareh Is the Test, Kandeowt to Tape and Chearent CATARRH Bold by dregs of sent by mail Me KET. Mascitine, Warren, Pa ine Plaster fea Ai THE POOR MAN'S FRIEND - DOING THIS, WHO IS HE? » taken a 4) vaghs, Colds, Comsampth Ae, In Balt a ekie & rid wt" YOUR DEALER. to know every one who wants a piano, new or second-hand. Are you one of them? Then send your address, with request for catalogu to Ivers & Pond Piano Co, e, eto, Boston.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers