“KEY. DR. TALMAGE. "THE BROOKLYN DIVINE'S SUN. DAY SERMON Subject: “God Among the Birds” Text: “Behold the yowls of the air!"— Matthew vi., 26. There is silence now in all onr January forests, except as the winds whistle through the bare branches. Our northern woods are deserted concert halle, The organ lofts in the temple of nature are hymnless, Trees which were full of carol and chirp and chant are now waiting for the coming back of rich plumes and warbling voices, solos, duets, quartetes, cantatas and Te Deums. But the Bible is full of birds at all seasons, and proohets and patriots and apostles, and Christ Himself, employ them for moral and religious purposes. My text is an extract from the sermon on the mount, and perhaps it was at a moment when a flock of birds flew past that Christ waved His hand toward them and said, “Bebold the fowls of the air!” And so iy this course of sermons on God everywhere I preach to you this third ser- mon concerning the Ornithology of the Bible: or, God Among the Birds, Most of the other sciences you may study or not study as you please, Use your own Judgment, exerci® your own taste, But about this science of ornithology we have no option. The divine command is positive when it says in my text, “Behold the fowls of the air!” That is, stuiv their habits Examine their colors, Notice their speed. Bee the hand of God in their construction. It is easy for me to obey the command of the text, for I was brought up among the race of wings and from boyhood beard their matings at sunrise and their vespers at sun- set, Their nests have been to me a fascination, and my satisfact ifs that I never robbed one of them any more th child from a cradle, for the sky, and its nest is ti almost human, for they have thelr loves and hates, affinities and antipathies, un joy and grief, have conjugal and materna instinct, wage wars and entertain bave a langu he association, full of them! 101 a bird is a child of + cradle, lerstand derstand the Bible unless we study natural | history. Five bundred and t the Bible allude to 1 tory, and I do not many all and the cs the winged cre roost and ne db inspired w ] ornithological il There are over f nized in the Scriptu 2 Var roon t an on Hird v1 bird, h imes fries fly ‘alestine are atures, an 1 80 many ng aril and w long beak clutching th thrush, which dally dis sky to wa its prey; likes a crov bold and ru ward while w the avd to wind- 7. the swan, at home among 1arshes { «ith feet so constructed itcan walk on leaves of wa- ter plaats; the raven, th pwing, malodor ous and in the Bible der ced as inedibl though it has extraordinary headdress; the stork; the rage, tha bad a habit of drop na stone the turt it had lifted and so ki on one occasion mais Zschylus, the Greed and dropped a famous Ureek; t bead and crimson tipped, but too lazy to build its so having the habit of depositing its 3 in nests bel t i birds; the usjay, the grouse, the plover, the magpie, the kingfisher, the pelican, which is the care cature of all the feathered creation; the owl, the goldfinch, the bitter barrier, the bulbul, the osprey; the vulture, that kiug of geavengers, with neck covered with repulsive down instead of attractive leathers { reisome starling; the swallow flying a mile a minute and sometunes tem hours in succes sion; the heron, the quail the peacock, the os- trich, the lark, the crow, the kite, the bat, the blackbird and many others, with all colory, all sounds, all styles of flight, all habits, all architectures of nests, leaving nothing wanting in suggestiveness. They were at the creation piaced all around on the rocks and in the trees and on the ground to serenade Adam's arrival, Toey took their places on Friday, as toe first man was made on Saturday. Whatever else he had or did not have, he should have music, The first sound that struck the human ear was a wird's voice, Yes, Christian geology-for you know there is a Christian geology as well as an in fidel geology—Christian geology comes in and helps the Bible show what we owe to the bird creation. Before the human race came into this world the world was oo by reptiles and by all sorts of destructive monsters—millions of creatures, loathsome and hideous, God sent huge birds to clear the earth of these creatures before Adam and Eve were create |. The remains of these birds bave been found unbeddei in th rocks. The skeleton of one eagle has been found twenty feet in beizht and ffty feet from tip of wing to tip of wing, Many ar- mies of beaks and claws were necessary to ciear the earth of creatures that would have destroyed tae human race with one olip, | turt wars a own nest, mging to other , the > 4 upied like to find this barmony of revelation and | science, and to have demonstrat xd that the God who made the world made the Bible, Moses, the greatest lawyer of all time and a great man for facts, bad enough senti- ment and try and musical tasty to wel. come the illuminated wings andl the voioes divinely drilled iato the first Genises. How should Noah, the old ship- carpenter, 0 jeara ol age, find out waen the world was fit again for human resi lence after the universal freshet? A bird wiil tell, and nothing else can, No man oan come down from the mountain to lavite Noah and his family out to terra firma, for the mountains were sublnerged. Asa bird first heralded the human race into the world, now a bird will help the humana race back to the world that had shipped a sea that whelmed everything. Noah stands on Sunday morning at the window of the ark, in his band a cooing dove, 80 gentle, so lunocent, so affectionate, and be sald: “Now, my little dove, fly away over these waters, explore and come back and tell us whether it 4 safe to land.” After a long flight it returned hungry and weary and wet, and by its loos and manpers said to Noah and bis family: * Fhe world is not fit for you to disembark,” Noah waited a week, and next Huuday moruing ho let the dove fly again for a secon, * exploration, and Bunday evening it came buck with a leaf that bad the mgn of just having been plucked from a living fruit tres, and the bird reported the worid would do Solerally well for a bird to live in, but not yet su ciently recovered for human residence, Noah waited another week, and next Sun- day morning he sent out the dove on the third exploration, but it returned not, for it found the world »o attractive now it did not want to be caged sgain, and then the emigrants from the antediluvian world landed, It was a bird that told them when to take possession of the resuscitated planet, Bo the human race wers saved by a bird's wag, for, attempting to land too soon, they w have perished, Aye, here comes a whole flock of doves rock dover, ring doves, stock doves—ani shop make fsaian think of great revivals and great awakenings when souls fly for shelter like » flock of pigeons sw ng to the opening of a pigeon coon, and he cries out, “Who are thess that 1y as doves to their windows?” David, with Saul after him, and flying from cavern to cavern, come pares himself a desert partridge, which lly haunts rocky 3 pk hp Ss it runs rather boys and b wih ticks, (oF the partridge than flies, _ Davia, chased and clubbed and harried of dausr- | helquar- | Ay without alighting aa I would steal a | They are hawk, | : a ’ after he was robbed by satan of after b always | | toa sudden devi | higher it flies the harder street and will follow its keeper, | storks, and when the old ones give | chapter of | | | me as a speckled bird; | about are | it is mow, curmere, ®ve, ‘1 am hunted as a nartrides on the mountaine,” Speaking of his forlorn condition, he says, *'1 am like a pelican in the wilderness,” Describing his loneliness, he says, “I ama vwaliow alone on the houses ton.” Hezekiah, in the emaciation of his sickness, compares himself to a crane, thin and wasted, Joh had so much trouble he could not sleep nights, aad he describes his insomnia by saving, *I am a companion to owls” Isaiah compares the desolationa of hanished Israel to an owl and bittern aod cormorant among a city's ruins, Jeremiab, describing the crusty of pa rents toward children, compares them to the ostrich, who leaves its eggs in the sand un- eared for, erving, “The daughter of my neo ple ix become like the ostriches of the wilder. ness.” Among the provisions piled on Bolo- mon's bountiful table he speaks of *‘Iatted fowl.” The Israelites in the desert got tirel of manna and they had qualls—quails for breakfast, quaile for dinner, quails for sup- per, and they died of quails, The Bible re- fers to the migratory habits of the birds ani save, “The stork knoweth her appointed time and the turtle and the crane swallow the time of their going, but my peo ple know not the judgments of the Lor Ry Would the prophet illustrate the fate of fraud, he points to a failure at incubation and says, ‘As a partridge sittath on ezes and batehoth them not, so he that getteth riches and not by right shall leave them in the midst of his days and at his end shall be a fool.” The partridee, the most carale all birds in choice of its nino of nest, hn ing it on the ground and often near a fre- quented road or in a slight depression of ground, without references to safety, and soon a hoof or a scythe or a cart wheel ends all. So says the prophet, a man who gathers Lance say, “I | my hands.” under him dishonest dollars will hateh out of them no peace, no satisfaction, no happi- | ness, no security. W bat vivid similitude! amass a fortune is by iniquity, keeping it. Ever b partridge isd are only a flutt y tedious work yme ned way, and if a man make as much as by r. why not it? sk will bring the The qui tn trouble is about every day some su Panles ol of to bee by one falsehe ears of hard one counter! as One year's labs Lesil as easily ied justry was the was dug, an in estate mortgage, ng y SAD J wu with acutest erty like that aonot do it a per manent dam than warran joed and b r than fire ir ance is defense whic ’ ¢ t here is a man to-day as poor as J everviing he is kine wh yet suddenly to-morrow a rich man, There is no accounting for his sudden affluence, He has vot yet failed often enough to becoma wealthy, No one but his boils, curbal | stoads that rear and neigh like Bu in the grasp of rman, inheritance? No a fortune on purchase snd sale? No, body asks where « The devil sudden y ew hi P will suldeniy let him oo That hitden scheme God saw (rom th wapt the plot That part swilt disaster wn, at his oon I s x Of » is it falls et anw, a9 and I have oft awful mistake of partridges, But from the top of a Bible fir tree the shrill ery of the Jo Jeremiah, speak the stor« large a will R00 str for bird is suppose], pelimes to wing its | way from the region of the Rhine to Afra As winter comes all the storks fly to warmer | climes and the last one of their number that | arrives at the spot to which they migrate is killed by them, What havoe it would make | in our SP ies if those men ware killed who are always bebind! In oriental the | stork is domesticated and walks about on the This Bible #0 cities In the city of Ephesus Isaw a long row of pillars, on ths top of each pillar a stork’s pest. But the word “stork” ordinarily means mercy aod affection, from the fact that this bird was distinguished for its great yve for its parents. It never forsakes them, in migrating the | old storks lean their necks oan the young out the young ones carry them on their backs, i704 forbid that a dumb stork should have mors heart than we, Blessad is that table at which an old father and mother sit; blessed that altar at which an old father | and mother kneel! What it is to have a mother they know best who have lost her, God only knows ha agony she suffered for ug the times she wept over our cradle and the anxious sighs her bosom heaved as we lay upon it, the sick nights when she watche! us long after every one was tired out but God and herself, Her lifeblood beats in our hearts, and her image lives in our face. That maa is grace. less as a cannibal who i'l treats bis pareats, and he who begrudges them daily bread ani clothes them but shabbily, may God have pa- | tience with him; I cannot, heard a man | now have my old mother on | Yo storks on your way with food to your aged parents, shame him! Bat yonder in this Bible sky flies a bird that is speckled, The phet describing the church cries out, ‘Mine heritage is unto the birds rouod ainst her.” Soil was then; = loliness pickel at. Consscra- tion picked at. Benevolence picked at, Usefulness pioked at. A speckisd bird is a peculiar bird; and that arouses thas antip- athy of all the beaks of the forest. The church of God is a peculiar instita- tion, and that is enough to evoke attack of of the world, for it is a spackiel bird to be picked at. The inconsistencies of Christians are a banquet on which multitudes get fat, They ascribe everything you do to wrong motives, Put a dollar in the poor box and they will say that you dropped it thers only that you might hear it ring, Invite them to Christ and they will call you a fanatic, Let there be contention among Christiane and they will say; “Hurrah! The church is in decadence Christ intendal that His church should always remaina speckled bird, Lat birds of another feather piox at her, but they cannot rob her of a single plums, Like the albatross, she ean sleep on the bosom of a tempest. She has gone through the fires of Nebuchadoezzar's furnace and not got burned; through the waters of the Red sea and not been drowned, through the ship. wreck on the breakers of Melitia and not been foundered, Lot all earth and hell try to hunt down this speexied bird, but far above buman scorn and infernal assault it shall sing over every mountain top and fly over every nation, and her triumphant song shall be: “The church of God! The pillar and ground of the truth, The gates of hell shall not prevail agamst her,” But we cannot stop here, From a tall chil banging over the sea | hear the eagle calling unto ths tempest and lifting its to smite the whirlwind, Moss, Jere. m Hosea and Habakkuk at times in their take their pen from the eagle's It is a bird with flarceness in its eye, armed with claws of iron and its and the | | neonle to the The black brawn of itr back, anl the white of ite lower feathers, and tho flrs of ite ave, and the Jonz flap of its wing make glimose of it as it swings down into the val lev to pick un a rabbit, or a lamb, or achild rock something naver to he forgotton, Seats tare about its evrie of altitudinons solitude are the hones of ita conguents, Bat while the beak and the claws of the eagle ars the terror of all the travelers of the air, the mother eagle is most kind and gentle to her vouneg. God compares His treatment of His savie's of the eaglets, Deuteronomy xxxii, 11, “As an eagle stir reth up hernest, fluttersth over her young, spreading abroad her wings, taketh them, beareth them on ber wings, so the Lord alone did lead” The old eagle first shoves the young one ont nf the nest in order to make it flv, and then takes it on her back and flies with it and shakes it off in ths air, and if it seems like falling quickly flies under it and takes it on her wine aziin, 50 God does with us, Disaster, failure in business, disappoint. ment, bereavoment, is only God's way of shakinz us out of our comfortable nest in order that we mav learn how to fly. You who are complaining that vou have no faith or courage of Christian zl have had it too You never will learn to fly in that comfortable nest Like an eagle, Christ has carrisl us on His At times we have been shaken off, oare ansy. back. | and whea we were about to fall He came | under us again and brought us out of the gloomy valley to the sunny mountain, Never an eagle brooded with such love and cars over her voung as Goi's wings have been over us. Aeross what oceans of trouble wo have gone in safety upon the Almighty wings! Prom what mountains of sin we have been carried and at times have been borne up far above the gunshot of the world and the arrow of ths devil! When our time on earth is closed on these rroat wings of God wo shall spsed with in- finite guickpess from earth's mountains to heaven's hills, and as from the eagle's cir. cuit under the sun men on the ground seem sruall and instg vant as lizards on a ro 80 all earthly at speck, and the raging i | r th 4 ¥ y Denoa will saa | Swiss lake. idgments, plot nst a family prop | and azes ’ i ta is swall "1 EwWal | summer tim» | and 4 priests were WT ori | ple and hatchad { of what small | Out of mosses, and even after they become feeble protects | | and provides for them. | sowed together by its owa sharp bill { Mortared together with toe | and the saliva | plan, | a house for a chafflncy, for times that 5 feather td an # in old It was thn great age it wzth and become en this Isaiah alludes hey t on ths Lord strength, Ther shall Even so oung agmin. says; ‘11 hat wait enow his spirit. be young in ardor wrist, and as the body w in elasticity till at lad iehild » gladdene tudy 1 wee As an eagle that { a huagry Mogioal » a". fiy y speed © was unimaginab si and SIXLy mina to ebarnity. ) cracked under swift rush of days and months and years “Swife as an eagle that hastath prey.” Babold the fowls of the air! 1 considered that they have, as you to his Have ¥ { and 1 have not, the power to changes their » | pretends to account for his prinesly ward- | | robe, or the chased sliver, or the full eves so that one minute they may be tals : and the nazi microsropic, now sasing ing a wile away and by telescopic and then dropping to {a food on sndd, able to see it close by and with SCOPRC OF esight? at what a senseless passage of Soripture at is, until you know the fact, which says ‘The sparrow hath found a and the w a nest for raslf, Where shea may ne a'tars O Lord of What has the y altars of the tample 1 know that swallows v tam: and in nto ths wine Jerusilem woers the is SEE lay her young, evan th Hosts, my Kit my God’ wto ad at Jerasalem!? y are all tl w ver they wei t a wil « or y fly § flows and doors build a nest and sticks of the tem. s brought sets on the altars the young sparrows in thoge youag birds : pests, snd David bad seen the pickin ; their way of tha sh old swallows wats sal on temple was orusl enough to distardb either the old swallows or the young swallows, and David burst out in rhapsoly, saying I swallow hath found a nest for herself she may lay her young, even Thine altars » ut i, | O Lord of Hosts, my King and my God What carpenters, what masons, what waavers, what splusers the birds are! Out resources they make ox ~ uisite a home, curved, plllarad, wreathed, out of sticks, out of lichens, ut of horsehair, out of spidery’ wab, out of threads swapt from the door by the house wife, out of the wool of the shesp from the pasturs flald. Upholsterad by leaves actually Cush wan breast, of trees of its own tiny bill symmetry, such adaptation, suca ence, such geometry of stractur Surely thes ; yalit by : &® joned with feathers from its gum Such myen- om»H they did not b just » Who iris neat? God! at if He plans such f an oriole, for a bobolink, for a sparrow, Ha will see to It that you always have a hone! Ye aro more value than many sparrows.’ Woats ever els surrounds you, you can have what the Bible calls “the feathers of th» Al mighty.” Jast think of a nest lite that, the warmth of it, the softness of it, ths walety of it—"'the feathers of the Almigaty.’ No flamingo outflashing the tropical sun. sot ever had sucha orilllancy of pinion; no robin radbreast ever had plumage dashed with suc erimsos anil purple anl orange and gold--‘'the feathers of the Almighty." Do you not feel the tous of then now on forehead and cheek and spirit, and was there ever such tenderness of Lroodiag "the feathers of the Almgaty?' Hoals in this ornithology of ths Bible Gol keeps ime pressing us with the anatony of a birt's wing. Over fifty times doss the old Book aliuile to the wing-""Wings ofa dove” “Wings of the morning.” “Wun of the wind,” “Sun of righteousness with healiag in hie wings,” "“Wiags of thy Almighty,” “All fowl of every wing What doses it all mean? It suggests uplifting. It tells you of flight upward. It meass to remind you that you yeurse!f have wings, David eried out, “Ou, that 1 had wings like a dove, that I might fly away and bs at rest!” Thank God that you have better wings than any dove of longest or swiltest fight. Caged now ia bars of flesh are thoss wings, but the day comes whan they will ve liberate! Gat ready for ascension, Take ths words of the old hymna, and to the tues unto waloa that hymn is married sing: drafted tae pi And do you not think t Rose, my sonal and stretch thy wing: Thy ostler porioa trace. Up out of thew lowlands into the havens of higher experiences and wider prososct, But how shall wa rise? Oaly as Gols holy spirit gives us strength, Bat that is coming now, Not asa condor from a Chimboras) pak, swooping upon the affrightel valley, but ab a dove fixe that which put its soft brown wings over the wet locks of Christ at the baptism in tse Jordon. 13ove ol geatie ness! Dove of peace) Cone, holy apieit, hawvanly dove, With all thy galscealng prwars Come wived abiron | a Saviour s love, And thas shall kindle ours, m——— - ssn. John Cultice, the postmaster of Red. key, Ind., who has kept the place for ten years, is totally blind, Hs Tt is not once in every four hundred yoars that a fifty-ceut piece worth §10,. 000 comes along, and then swings back to its throne on the ! JUST A LITTLE | pain neglected, may become RHEUMATISM, NEURALGIA, SCIATICA, LUMBAGO. SPRAIN may make.a cripple. Just a little Just a little BRUISE may make serious inflammation, Just a little BURN may make an ugly scar. Just a little COST will get a bottle of 8T.JACOBS OIL, A PROMPT AND PERMANENT CURE Years of ( rt against Years of Pain for JUST A LITTLE. copy of i's { mi Lilli } ‘Official Portiolio of mbisn Exp | atid beautifully A the sition des tive ete Ww he gent of 1 in post YoouiLer Cu, age A Sugar as a Stimulant. d or Of n » Brazil is Land Poor. As every school boy knows, Brazil has | about the same aren ns the United States, { but with her something more than $3,200,000 fquare miles of territory the { the 12,000,000 inhabitants, one-third of that are “*Aryan,” or people with a consider able proportion of white blood veins, and in this enervating climate it requires unaduiterated Anglo-Saxon gri lusiry, perseverance--~not, ns the temperate zone, to make the id to cope ith | keep Surprisi 18 *tand pour,” having, by estimate, barely Only about number and | Vie anything, but down the nature, As now known world, Brazil is aratively ny ng energy the commercial upon fis A Com 8irip ail the At from French of t to looked DArrow ng intic running north of GERTeEes Rd Ce an, A, & lew mies he equa and the mouth the ith of the eq ne vast ong the unbroken lorests, e%, An i the mountains no Civili At least untain rang OWS. veel as comp! s Africa i intr which white LS during ET besrt of Deafuess Can't be Cured y ey ‘ t reach the ¥ i BE seg AM f ’ t alarr! aking Hall's Ostarrh Vere , oe. +d. Cuexey & Co. Toledo. O. alm » Royal Bakin o Powder. THE GOVERNMENT TESTS =STABLISH ITS ABSOLUTE SUPERIORITY. from the latest Official Department of Ag 1a J ders Royal is placed first owders, actual strength, 16¢ ' leavening gas per ounce of powder. vernment Report on Baking wulture, Bulletin 13, page 599.) of the cream of tartar .6 cubic inches of Every other powder tested exhibited a much than el 33 per cent, less. Every other lower l strength ng the WA powder Royal, the average likewise howed the S presence of alum or sulphuric acid. The claim t Ju perior streng by the G ov or i this report show 1 sroment officers who made the test s any other powder of irity has been denounced as a falsehood 8, Avoid all baking powders sold with a gift or prize, or at a lower price than the Royal, as they invariably contain alum, lime or sul- phuric acid, and render the food unwholesome. Germar S yrup bb J ite that!l am Druggist and Postmaster here and am there. fore in a position to judge. I have tried many Cough Syrups but for ten years past have found nothing equal to Boschee's German Syrup. I have given it to my baby for Croup with the most satisfactory results, Every mother should have it. J, H. Howes, Druggist and Postmaster, Moffat, Texas. We present facts, living facts, of to-day Boschee's German Syrup gives strength to the body. Take no substitute, Throat, S040 ont wwlere h Osun, Sate OPIUM 3 anes? largest | Amazon, to | many excellent q we | in their | Both the method and results when | Byrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant and refreshing to the taste, and acts gently yet promptly on the Kidoeys, Liver and Bowels, cleanses the sys- tem effectually, dispels colds, head- aches and fevers and cures habitual constipation. Byrup of Figs is the only remedy of its kind ever pro- duced, pleasing to the taste and ac- ceptable to the stomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial in its effects, prepared only from the most , its ualities commend it {to all and have made it the most | popular remedy known. Byrup of 5 is for sale in 50c and $1 bottles by all leading drug gists. Any reliable druggist whe | may not have it on hand will pro cure it promptly for any one who wishes to try it Do not ac cpl any substitute. SYRUP CO. i healthy and agreeable substanc CALIFORNIA FI5 AN FRANCISCO ry LOUISVILLE We Offer You a Remedy which Insures Bajety to Life of Mother and Child. “MOTHER'S FRIEND ™ obs Confinement of ila } Fain, Horror and Risk. | ttle “ Mother's Vriend™ 1 After using one bd red bat Le « ihatl Te — 3 «3 Jan. ih, Se Ccxpress, charges prepald t prio, § por be . Book (0 Bothers maliod free, BRADFIVLD REGULATOR 20. ATLANTA, G4, o LX the “Dufch Process No Alkalies Other Chemicals sued the aration of : BAKER & C0.’S BC: Are Ww. pure and soluble. It has me the rethan three times strength of Cocos mized with March, Arrowrocot oF Sugar, and is far more &0o- ‘ than one cent a cup. pourishing, and EASILY Sold by Grocers everywhere, W. BAKER & CO, Dorchester, Mass, Comping Cona ester Pipe) Ka TER RADIAT NSIO Successfully Prosecytes ate Pr pai Exlgiiner Pens CHES JOMN W MORRIS, Washington, D.C, Ciaigns., n BiTesn . _— “ ling Ma, SLY sion wn WW, TT, Fiasgerald PA | EN f as Washingtos, D.C i 40 page book tree, TRE Thick Neck Cure. Py Hall $1. Ne R LIN, Betlevidie, NJ. PISOS CURE FOR Consnmptives and peop who DAve weak ngs oF Asi on. snouid ose Piso's Cure tor Copramption. It bas enred thowsands. It har BOL INJur od one Its nol bad to take tis the best ough syrup Sold everrwhers. Ble, CONSUMPTION grit W, L, DOUGLAS and prige am orit when 0 ny. sold everywhere, * Better Work Wisely Than Work Hard.” are Unnecessary in House Cleaning if you Use SAPOLIO $3 SHOE witie A sewed shoe that will not rip; Calf, seamless, smooth inside, more comfortable, stylish and durable than any other shoe ever sold at the price. Every style. Equals custom. made shoes costing from §4 to §s. The following are of the same high standard of merit 34.00 and $5.00 Fine Calf, Hand Sewer, 80 Police, Farmers and Letter Carrier. 2.80, $2.28 and $3.00 for Working Men, $2.00 and $1.98 for Youths and Boys. $3.00 Hand Sewed, $2.80 and 2.00 Dongola, 1.78 for Misses. A ——
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers