RHE BROOKLYN DIVINE'S SUN- DAY SERMON. Subject: ‘“‘Unsafe Lifeboats.”” / Text: “Then the soldiers out off the ropes du boat and let her fall of." —Acts xxvii, # While your faces are yet somewhat bronzed by attendance on the international boat con- test between the Vigilant and the Valkyrie | address you, Goo a Detting or dissipation, invse outdoor sports, We want more fresh air end breeziness in our temperaments and our religion, A stale and slow and lugubrious religion may have done for other times, vot will not do for these, But my text calls our attention toa boat of a different sort, and instead of the Atlantio it is the Mediterranean, and instead of not wiad enough, as the erews of theVigi- lant and the Valkyrie the other day com- ined, there is too much wind and the #woop of a Euroclydon. ¥ I am not calling your attention so much to the famous ship on which Paul was the distinguished passenger, but to the lifeboat of that ship which no one seems to notice, For a fortnight the main vessel had been tossed and driven. For that two weeks, the account says, the passengers had ‘‘contin- ned fasting.” 1 suppose the salt water, dashing over, had spoiled the sea biscuit, and the passengers wers seasick anyhow, The sailors said, *‘It is no use ; this ship Good things when there is no | by one of these central Asia, The gentleman knew it from the fact that the mysterious being left his pocket hand kerolifef, embroidered with his name and Asiatic residence, The most won i derful achievement of tho theosophisis Is | that they keep out of tho Insane asyitm. | They prove thetruth of the statement that no religion ever announced wos so absurd but it pained disciples, Societies in the United States and England and other lands have been established for the promulgation of theosophy. Instead of | needing the revelation of a Bible you can have these spirits from & cave in central Asin { to tell you all you ought to know, and afte { you leave this life you may becomes a pine donna, or a robin, or a gazelle, or a sOt, ! a prize fighter, or a Herod, or a Jebel, and lan be enablad to have creat Variety of experience, rotating through the um vorse, now rising, now falling, now shot out in a straight line and now descril ing a parabola, and on gad on, and up and up, and down snd dewn, and round and round. Don't you see” Now, that theosophio lifeboat has been lpanched. It proposes to take you off the rough ves of doubt into ever. lusting quictude. How do you like the 1A" boat? My opiniop 18 you had batter FNITAT the mariners of wy text and opt »@ the ropes | of that boat ant let her fall off Another lieboat tempting us to enter is made of many planks of good works. It Is really w deautitul boat-—almsgiving, practi. eal sympathies for human suffering, right sous words apd righteous deeds, I must admit I likes®® looks of the prow. and of the rowios® and of the paddles, and of the stooripng®ear, and of many who are think ing go trust themselves on her benches. But thetrouble about that lifeboat is it leaks. I atver knew a man yet good enough to earn or must go down,” and they proposed among{ heaven by his virtues or genorosities, themsalves to lower the lifeboat and get It and take the chances for reaching ) although they pretended they wers gatig to ot over the (A of the big ship wa down to the lifeboat omly to do duty. That was not sailoriike, for the Sailors that I bave known were all ingepfd fellows and would rather go down wish the ship than do such a mean thing aseBose Jack Tars of my Py ) . 8 remy Aed mediterranean last June the Victoris sank-efider the ram of the Camper- down, the Ost majestio thing about that awful scene was that all the sailors stald at their s doing their duty. As a class all overthe world sailors are valorous, but thess gators of the taxt wera exceptional and pre- tended to do duty while they were really pre- parmg for flight in tha lifeboat. But these ‘marines” on board--sea sokdiers—had in especial charge a little missionary who was turning the world upside down, and when these marines saw the trick t' » saliors were about to play they lifted the cutiasses from the girdle and ehop ! went those cut Jasses into the ropss that heid the lifeboat and splash ! it dropped into the sea, My text describes it, “The soldiers ¢ the ropes of the boat and let her fall of As that empty lifeboat dropped and was cag tized on a sea where for two weeks winds and billows had been in battle I think that many on board the main vessel felt thelr last hope of ever reaching home had vanished In that tempestuou a small boat have lived five m as, bject is “Unsafe Lifeboats.” We 3 exaggerates the importance Hteboat. All honor to the memory of Lionel Lukin, the coach builder of Long Acre, Lon- don, who invented the first lifeboat, and ldo not blame him for ordering put on his t pe stone in Kent the inscription that you may till read there “This Lionel Lunkin was the built a lifeboat and was the original of that principle r by which lives and much have served from € 1t the king's patent in the year 1785 All honor to the memory of Sir William Hillary, who, living in the Isle of Man, and after assisting with his own hand in the res- cue of 303 lives of the shipwrecked, stirred the English Partiament to guick action in the coustruction of lifeboats, Thanks to God for the sublime and pathetic and divine mis- sion of the lifeboat. No ons will doubt its important mission who has read of the wreck of the Amazon in the Bay of Biscay, of the Tweed running on the reefs of the Gulf o Mexico, or of the Ocean Monarch on the eoast of Wales, or of the Birkenhead on the Cape of Good Hope, or of the Royal Charter on the coast of Anglesea, or of the Exmouth on the Scotch breakers, or of the Cambria on the Irish coast, or of the Atlantic on the rocks of Nova Scotia, or of the Lexington sz L Isiand Sound. To add still further to the img the lifeboat, remember thers are at least 8,000,000 men following the sea, to say noth fug of the uncounted millions this OCeAD PASSALICrS, We “land-labbers,” as pailors call us, may not knew the difference between a marline spike and a riaghoit, or snything about heaving a log, or rigging out a flying jibboom, or furling a topsail, but we all realize to greater or less extent the im portance of a lifeboat in every marine squip- ment, But do we feel the importance of in the matte: of thesoul's rescues? times when we all feel that we are 0 and as many disturbing and anxious tions strike us as waves struck that against the sides of which the lifeboat of my text dangled. Questions about the church Questions about the world, Questions about God. Questions about our eternal destiny, Every thinking man and woman has these questions, and in proportion asthey arething- ing people do these questions arise There is no wrong in thinking. If God hal not intended us to think and Keep on think- ing. He would not have built under this wheslbouse of the skull this thinking ms chine, which halts not in its revolutions from eradle to grave. Even the miduight does not stop the thinking machine, for when we are in dreams we are thinking, although we do not think ae well. All of us who are a2- customed to thinking want reach some solid shore of safety and satislaction, and If any one has a good lifeboat that we may honorably take I wish be would upswing it from the davits and let us get into itand put for the shore, But I give you fair notice I must first ex- amine the lifeboat before | risk my soul in it or advise you to risk your soul in it. All the splendid Ramsgate lifeboats, and Margate Mhetoats, and South Bhield lifeboats, and American lifeboats were tasted before being put into reaction] use as to their buoyancy and spead and stowage and sell-righting ca- ity. And when you offer my soul a life out must firs) test it, Here is a splendid new lifeboat called Theosophy. It has only a little while been launched, although some of the planks ars really several theusand years old, and from 8 worm eaten ship. but ther are painted over and look new, Thoy are reafly fatalism and pantheism of olden time, But we must Jorget that and call them theosophy. The Graces Darling of this Hleboat was an oars woman by the pame of Mme. Blavatsky, but the varswoman now is Anaie Bssant, Bo many are getting aboard the boat it Is worthy of examination, both because of the safety of thoss who have entered it and be. cause we ourselves are invited to get in Its theory is that everything is God. Horse and star and tree and man are parts of God We have three souls—an animal soul, 8 bu. man sol, a spiritual goul, The animal soul becomes, after awhile, a wandering thing, to express itself through mediums, shop ! 5 cannot of the who ivyentor DY first {or ng : ” nm f importancs 9 341] vVesse) to It enters beasts or enters a hunim being. ! and when you find an effeminate man it becsuss a woman's soul has got into the man, and when you fad a masculine woman ft is because a man's soul has taken posses forty years azo made The soul k and on, snd may have fifty or inou. different forms, and finsily It was God at the start and If there be one person here present on this blessed Sabbath all of whose thoughts have been always right, all of whose actions have always been right, and all of whose words have always been right, lot him stand up, or if al ready standing Jet him lift his hand, and I will know that he lies, Paul had it about right when hesaid, “By the deeds of the law shall no flesh living be justified.” David had it about right when he said, “There is none that doeth good, no not ons," The old book had it about right when it sald, “AN have sinned and come short of the glory of God,” Let a man get off that little steamer called The Maid of the Mist, which sails up to the foot of Niagara Falls, and then elimb to thetop of the falls onthe descending floods, for he ean 4d esasier than say man ever will be able to nb to heaven DY his good works, If your thoughts have always been exactly right, and your words exactly right, your desds alwzses exactly right, you 1 gate yf heaven, and knock tor ad: ush the angels « ’ go up to tk not even sif and p y up and take ou would be so un! ab f s up ir sity ones oO the bottom, mariners of th an the ropes of tt at and let Another lifeboat ia Christian sisteneies, The planks of composed of the split planks That prow is made the jife of a man w and really was anoth oat was the falseh r, and the other {witha « her fall « rofessed one thing One oar of this : shtureh tenn ile yurch me » wickedness minister iquities were not for a Not one plank fr eternal truth in all that lifeboat, planks, by universal admission, are decayed and erambling and fallen apart and rotten and ready to sink “Well, well,” you say, *‘no one will get into that lifeboat Oh, my you are mistaken. That is the most popalar lifeboat aver soted, That is the most popular mt ever lau Millions of people want to get into it. They j other to get the best seat in ould not keeg k th at the gunwales with a club, a8 on our in a hurricanes, and the stearags pas sengers were determined tu me up where they would have beet washed th. offi slood at the top of the clubbing them back Even bw such violenos as that y« could not keep people fr jumping into the most popular lifeboat, made of church member inconsistencies In times of revival when sinnsrs flock int the inquiry room the most of them are Kept from deciding aright they know so many Christians w The inquiry room becomes a World's Fair for exhibition of all the frailties of church members, so that if you believe all Is there told you you would be afraid to enter a church lest you get your pockets picked or get Kno ked down This is the way they talk: “1 was wit of $500 by a leader of a Bibie clam “A Sundar-school teacher gossiped about me and did her best to destroy my good name “1 had a partner ii business who swamped our business concern by his trickery and then rolled up his eyes in Friday night prayer meeting, a8 though he were for Elljah's chariot to make a second trip and take up another passenger of some no while ng while { the oak wan! to frisnd Hinlx nohed wile en them La shi Girmece ” Liat : ana ora sinirn cheated looking But what a cracked and water logged and gaping seamed lifeboat the inconsistencies of others! Put me on ashingle mid-Atlantic and leave me thers rather than in such a yaw! of spiritual confidencs, God forbid that I should get aboard it, and lest some of you make the mistake of getting into it 1 do as the mariners did on that Mediterranean ship w hen the sailors were about to get into the unsafe lifeboat of the text and lose their lives fn that way, “Then the soldiers out off the ropes of the boat and let her fall off “Well,” says somes ome, “‘this subject is very discouraging, for we must have a life. boat if we are ever to get ashore, and you have already condemned three” Ah. it is beenuse | wantto persuade you to take the only safe lifeboat. I will not allow you to be deceived and get on to the wild waves and then capsize or sink. Thank God, thers is a lifeboat that willtake you ssbore in safety, as sure as God is God and heaven is heaven, The keel and ribs of this boat are mads out of a tree that was sot up on a bluff back of Jerusalem a good many years ago, Both of the oars are made out of the sams tree, The rowlocks ars male out of the same tres, | The steering gear is made out of the same tree. The planks of it were hammered to. gother hy the hammers of exscutionsrs who thought they were only killing a Christ, but were really pann ling together an escapes for all imperiind souls of all ages. It is an old boat, but good as new, though it has been carrying passengers from sinking sips to firm shore for ages and has never 10st Wm passenger, what I mean. The fact is that in this way years ago they got off a wreck themselves, | and I do not wonder they smile. It Is not a senseless giggle that means frivolity, but it is un smfle like that on the faces of Christians the moment they leave earth for heaven | you, Hikes the smile of God Himaelf when Ho | | had completed the plan for saving the world, Right after that big tumble of the Atlantis ! Ocean six or seven weoks on the beach at Kast Hampton | met the eaptain of the life saving station and sald, “Captain, you think a lifeboat could Hye in a sea like that?” Although the worst of It was over, | the captain replied, “Xo, I do not think it sould,” But this ifeboat of which I speak mysterious beings from These old Christians begin | to smite beeguss it ia dawning upon them | shipwrecked erawled up on the beach to dis unless some one happened to walk along or some fisherman's hut might be near, ut after the ship Ayrshire was wrecked at Bquan Beach, and the Powhattan left her 500 dead strewn along our coast, and another vessel went on the rocks, 400 lives perishing, the United Btates Government woke up and made an appropristion of $200,000 for Hie staticas, and life lines from fak- fng box are shot over the wild gurl, and hawsers ars stretched from wrk to shore and what with Lyles's gun pad six oared surfboat, with cork at the sides to make it unsinkable, and patrolmen all plight long walking the beach until they moet sach other hango metal tickets, 80 as to show the entire beach has been traversed, and the Coston light flushes hope from shore to sufferer, and surfmgn, incased in Merri MAR 110 SAVING Gress, Ang ae vei Tuisiay via the ropes, thers are many probabilities o rescue for the uafortunate of the sea, But the government of the united heavens has made bett=f provision for the rescue of our #0 close by that this moment we ean yi? hand on its top and swing into it is chin gospel Hfebhost, It will not take you mors than a second to get into it, But while in my text we stand watching the marines with their cutiasses, preparing to sever the ropes of the lifeboat and let her fall off, notice the poor Squithiaent. Only ous lifeboat, Two hundred and seventy-six passengers, as Paul counted them, and only onslifebost, My text uses the singular and not the plural, “Cut off the ropes of the boat.” I do not suppose it would have held more than thirty people, though loaded to the water's edge, I think by marine law all our modern ves. sols have enough lifeboats to hold all the crew and all the passengers in case of emerg- eney, but the marines of my text were stand- ing by the only boat, and that a small boat, and yet 276 passengers, But what thrills me through and through is the fact that though we are wrecked by sin and trouble and thers is only one liebost, that boat is large enough to hold all who are willing to get into it, The gospel hymn expresses it i exo KONA our oome, whos ver will os poor sinners still All may This Man receiv I must haul in that statement a littls, for all in that lifeboat, with just ona Not you-—1 do not mean you, but thers is one exception. There have been sases where ships were in trouble, and the captain got all the passengers and crew into the Hieboats, Lut thers was not room for the captain, He, through the trumpet, shouted : “Shove off now and pall for the beach, Goodby!" And then the captain, with pathetic and sublime self-sacrifice, wont down with the ship. So the Captain of our salvation, Christ the Lord, launches the gos pel Heboat and tells us ali to get in, but He Room exception aon to suffer.” Was 8 se] His agonizing ex- was It nol so? horses pawad ifixion, was it no ww sway with the heavens, was it not » “By healed.” By His death 4 in the deep sea of Yes, ir ial id y rene ’ sun o sale lifeboat a little ride in t sory f bad a lered crallt ¢ On the raging seas | rowed e #1 ’ the night was dark ! radely bow g foundering bark ‘ it and I got pacylation for ows do not me was l OOTAN YA WR fF RAK ut the land, I sannot answer sahiore, and I am rd by His graces wil it the sea, lifobont that thing I know, fam stay ashore, if the L beip me I fowl he Som hat | try it with y right foot with my left foot, and then I try it with both foot, aud it is so pol that I think it woat the old folks used 10 call the Agee And be my remaining days few I am going to spend yending the lifeboat whi or sinter saved by grass jase { a0 the siti t going iu on earth many my time in nh by fon AM rT "om y fet ne st an anki the whole earth, and the rtion it your Campania, and your ir Majestios, and your City of New ¥ but all of them put together smalier than an Indian's canos on Sch ared with this gospel lifeboat take th all Nations, and room for all. Get in! How | I BRK I kaow how you for on the sea of Finland 1 had the The ship in which we sailed 1 not venture nearer than a mile from shore, where stood the Russian palace o! Peterol, and we had to get into » small oat and be rowed ashore. The water was rough. and as we went down the ladder at the side of the ship we haid firmly on to the railing, but in order to get lato the boat we bad at lags to let go How did I know that the boat was good and that the oarsmen were sufficient How did I know that the Finland Sea would not swallow us with one opening of its crystal jaws We had to trust, and we did trust, and our trust was well rewarded in the same way got into this gospal lifeboat Let go! Asiong as you hold on to any other hope you are imperiled, asd you get Lo ad- vantage from the Nisbost Let go! Dces some one here say, "I guess | will hold on a little to my good works, or to a pious parent. age, or to something I can do in the way of achieving my own salvation No, no, let go! Trust the Captain, who would not put you into a rickety or uncertain eraft, For the sake of your present and everiast- ing welfare, with all the urgency of an im- mortal addressing immortals, 1 ery from the depths of my soul and at the top of my voles, Let go! nt East Hampton invited me to come up to the life station and ses the crew practice, for twice & week they are drilled in the impor. tant work assigned them by the United States Government, and they go through all the routine of saving the stipwrecksad, Dut that would give little idea of what they would Aan rks Luranias ar roon Lake eomg that is Jarge enough to Room for How Wel belore jast experience ne fon], summer same wl have to do if some midnight next winter, the | wind driving beachward, a vessel should get in the grasp of a hurricane, See the lights flare from the ship in the | breakers, and then responding lights flaring | son's Eye.water. Drugiists sell at 25 per bottle, from the beach, and hear the rockets buss as they rise, and the lfebost rumbles out, and the gun booms, snd the life line rises and falls across the splintered decks, and the | ons, and the life ear goes to and | fro, carrying the exhausted marivers, and the | hawser ti ocean, as If angered by the Shatehing of the | human prey from the white teeth of its surf and the stroke of its billowing paw, rises | with fmereased fary to assall the land. So now | am engaged in no light drill, practio- ing for what may come over some of your ‘souls, It is with some of you wintry mid. night, and your hopes for this world and the | next are wrecked, But ses! Hes! The lights kindled on the {beach | I throw out the Life line. Haul in, | hand over hand! Ah, there is a lifeboat in | the surf, which all the wrath of earth and hell ennnot swamp, and its Captain with scarred trumpet to Nps us He : “Oh, Israel, thon hast destroyed Rhye | wolf, but fn Mo is thy help.” Put what i# | uso of all this i you to get Into it? { You might as well have buen a sallor on { board that foundering ship of the Medi | tsrranean when the mariners cat the ropes of the boat and let her fall off, ——— A large forgolien reservoir was tapped in Lockport, N.Y, the other fay hx Sark WHS Wake saturate ng fora t belonged to a systom of water works sbandoned Last summer the life saving crew | Ivory white moire is immensely pop- | plar. Stylish hats are still in platean | shape, The bell skirt still maintains its | yogue, Hard times have notably affected the | attondasne at Vaseaar College. Epaulettes appear to be quite as | much a feature of fashion as ever. Lady Isabel Morgesson has devised | a woman's pocket that, she says, can- not be picked. The English Queen's Seoth jour- | neys cat her $25,000 a year for trav- eling expenses, Five men and a woman recently ran a foot race of 200 yards in Henderson County, North Carolina. The woman won essily. Edvard Terry, an English musical editor, says that women compose soma of the finest dance music and some of the bast songs, The number of unmarried women in Englaad and Wales exceeds the num- ber of unmarried men by the majority of nearly 200,000, At Ferncliffe, Mrs, Jolm Jacob As- tor's place at Rhinebeck, N. Y., the fair chatelaine is often seen riding about her grounds on a tricycle. When Queen Elizabeth of Austria entered Paris in 1751 she dragged after ber a train seventy feet in length. It was borne by thirty-five pages. It was after Miss Martha Lumpkin, now Mrs. Campton, that Atlanta, Ga, first named ‘“Marthasville,” in Her father was Governor of the WAS 1848, Nate, Velvet is to be much used ss a trim. ming for hats. Black jetted wings will also be popular. In combination with black, sapphire and peacock-blue will be seen Queen Victoria is a defatigable knitter lad waiting | quilts for the hospitals, The three zr, made tight waist, and treme Nearly all have cape effects about the new winter coats are thirty- ie with a ndous sleeves, nches Jot very coilar and shoulders. The most besutiful silk which has appeared to tempt womankind this season is of heavy satin, with a Baya- dere stripe in velvet. The combines. tions of colors are simply exquisite, Soft, rich tartans of all wool, finished with a corded silk blouse waist, com- pleted by bretelles, sleeve-puffs, and eollar of velvet, are among the pretty dresses designed for wisses’ best wear, The sutumn tints in dress take their hues from the dying woods. Browns, reds and yellows, with modifications of sea greens, are the tints of fall. Suc are seen in the in hats, gowns, such An old-time-looking dress has the skirt finished with seven ruffles, the lower one about five inches deep, and each one growing narrower, the upper very slightly over-lapping the lower ONOA, George Pullman's daughters give the names to the palace cars which their father has built--very pretty names they are, too—and the very pretty little sum of $100 is the fee for the name. —— Catarrh Cannet Be Cured With local applications, as they cannot reach thes seat of the disease, Ontarrh is a blood or constitational disease, and in order to cure it you must take internal remedies Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and acts di. rectly on the blood and mucous surface, Hall's Catarrh Cure is not a quack gaedicine. It was prescribed by one of the best physicians in this country for years, and is a regular prescription, It is composed of the best tonios foots | oom. bined with the best blood purifiers, acting di. rectly on the mucous surfaces, The perfect combination of the two ingredients is what sduoes such wonderful results fn curing ca » Fad for testimonials free. od Caexey & Co, Pro viedo, O, Sold by druggists, price The, pn on ——— In Olden Times People ov erlooked the importance of perma neutly beneficial effects and were satisfied with transien. action, but sow that it Is gen. erally known that Syrap of Pigs will perma. nently cure habitual constipation, welldn. formed people will not buy other laxatives, which set for a foally injure the ystom., time, but A Beanitiful Souvenir Mpoon Will be rent Corian 1 rowp wre paid, Mote. Address, Hoxsie, Buffalo, N, Y. Heecham's Pills cate indigestion and consti. pation. Bescham's-—-no others. 2 ota a box. For Pasumon ia, no other cough syrup equals Hateh's Universal, 25 centsat druggists, If aMicted with sore eyes nse Dr. Isaac Thom pe “Unlike the Dutch Process No Alkalies Other Chemicals 1,000,0 for sale oy theSanwy Pave ——— & DTLOTH RAILROAD Company in Minnesota Bend for Mage and Civeoe aro Abey will pe sent Wo you FREE. HE atm: on ite with every Lottle of Dr, Howie's | Ordered hy mall, post | rm ——— SHOULD be used wher- ever yeast has served heretofore. Yeast acts by fermentation and the destruction of part of the gluten of the four to pro- duce the leavening gas. Royal Baking Powder, through the action of its ingredients upon each other in the loaf while a a ai a baking, itself produces the necessary gas and leaves the wholesome properties of the flour unimpaired. It is not possible with any other leavening agent to make such wholesome and delicious bread, biscuit, rolls, cake, pastry, griddle-cakes, doughnuts, etc. ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO., 106 WALL BT, NEW-YORK, aa a a a » > eedeleleleleie] | §rerietecae a a a ak eh Se ak } | | i | Killed One Hundred Bandits, The Shillelagh., When Mi Xico irsan 1 Maximilian was Emperor of The shillelagh, like the poet, is born, not made Like the poet, It 18 A choles plant, and its ¢ Among 10,000 blackthorn haps not than one become but H FILIATY the conntry was overrun with 1 is slow, ris is destined the robbers. They marched about pers 10 One 10,000 fitness Ag soon marked and dedi- Evervthing in large bands, tore up the tracks snd more One day the train {mre Mexico appears of the five as robbed everybody, from Vera Cruz to the city of was Dounding gavly slong, discovere: 1% Hed with market women an iid FO, cated for future hidalg w at for fut coaches fi peons BETVIOE | farmers. Suddenly to a stand still The : cried out “‘Banditte!” enough, on ¢ ther widg that might hinder removed and any stem is skilfully ent off its development is offshoot of 3 main With « IL came train Sure wid the werd gusrd nstant of the re ruffians CATs it grows thick and £ that « but Sudde niy FrRgue | d up. market desperate hidalgos, farmers peovne, women and KTO® A Shawnee lad, who red t ening volley from botl des he di school in West Virginis Fommy Wil he In- inder the there was & bh id 100 of th bands fell dead. ing + { the 1 Cat, re- $M) 3 ALL RUN DOWN. Tired, Sleepless, Discouraged. Swamp-Root Cured Me. A owt Dr. Efimer & Oo. § Gentlemen] rdam, N. XY. June 9, X.Y. have written you mg of the your re whamton, with Fastes bands, in and Paints which stain the and brn red great g } The Rising Sun Stove Polish is Bril Ione. Durabie, and the consumer pays Swamp-Root {or ssa vockeae with every purchase, et 6 OL CHESTER » Spading Boots beens troubled with THE BEST RUBBER BOOT Disordered Stomach, Inactive Liver, Pain in the Back Ever invented for Farmers, Miners, R. R. hands others The outer or tap sole extends the whole length of and across the k and WES gence had no aw my life was a Dur WES CoOmpetely fe the ie do the hee protecting shank in ditching, digging and Best yasands of : orn i thanks for the wonderful Thousand ‘paid yors mn Mrs. HH. Mabe Suits, IVersally pronouncs 1 the 1 y toot in the 1 At Drraggists, 50 cont and 421.00 size. I tin the market svalidy Gu free Oonsaitation free than She comn Dr. Kilmer & Oo Binghamton, N, Y. Dr. Kilmer's U & 0 Anointment Cures Piles. Frnamels ight are the iro inevs down, aoything: in fact, 1 not seep nights, raged and gave up of I took SWAMP-ROOT and am » mont of the work as ferent Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root Cured It has helped me medicine | have ever Roce mY sim benefit I have derived being a1 usin] and fe and Me. any other f vou to more than eed and 1 beg « her work quality throughout. 1892. Un- st Rube r “ry T hiey cost more Rabber Boot, but are cheapest in the end. ASK YOUR DEALER for them, and don’t be put off with something said to be de to Heald just as good. | MEND YOUR OWN HARNESS WITH THOMSON'S | SLOTTED CLINCH RIVETS. No tools required, Onir s hammer needed to drive snd clindh thems easily and quickiy, saving the cling | absolutely saooth. Kequiring no how 10 be made in | the leather Bor bury for Sedlivels. They are strong tough and durable. Milons now in use lengths, uniform of assorted, put op In bones, Anke Four dealer for them, or send Mo in MRinps For 4 bok of JO, assorted sizes. Mant by | JUDSON L. THOMSON MFG. CO., WALTHAM, MASS, ‘AN IDEAL FAMILY MEDICINE RIPANS TABULES ' 3 SE aay] or ment boy mail. Box hiro i 4 hanes), $2. Kira CHEMICAL ©0., Kew York, A MONEY-MAKER vox AGENTS Josiah Allen's Wite's New Book, [USAMASNTHA at the WORLD'S FAIR" large Fvo, weary (0 pages; over J Dlustrations hy | de Grimm, DOOD copies sure to be soba: Cloth, 85.506 | Half Rassia, 600 A ts wanted now, Apply $0 Funk & Wagnalis Oo. Fab. 10.20 Astor 11 Sew York THE FAMILY PICTORIAL &5 225 20. and Adventure, Comic Pictures, Household, Farm and ChiMren's Departments, Cash prices and pre | miums of watches, diamonds, guns. books, A ork. | wanted, Nos 2 and 88 Nasssn Street, New CENTS (SEL Y ER pays for bandeomme PEOPLES JOURNALS your on trial and sdaress In the © Agen’ of Mrectary © Our patrons bashels T. D. Onanpbed], X 935 Roviston, Ind » Ofensive wil of the No. Easton, NX. ¥. SCROFULOUS ECZEMA FOR 20 YEARS! PARA Samrarania Oo, mail, Tey nt * Well Done Outlives Death,” Even Your Memory Will Shine if You Use SAPOLIO
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers