———— —————————— ——-——~— A A ‘REV. DR. TALMAGE. THE BROOKLYN DIVINE’S SUN- DAY SERMON, Subject: “Another Chance.” Text: “If the tree fall toward the south or | the | where toward the north, in the plase ve, "Ecclesiastes tree falleth there it shall xi, 8. ¥ There is a hovering hope In the minds of a vast multitudethat there will ho an portunity in the next world to correct the mistakes of this; that if we do make coms { with fright the son tells us that the | tle son sleep at night at the 17 ' a man to a cholera or yellow fever hoep al the | for his health, and the great lagaretto o next world, containing the diseasad and plague struck, will be a poor place for moral | recovery, Ji the surroundings in this world ware crowded of temptation, the surround ings of the next world, after the righteous | have passed up and on, will be a thousand | per cent, more crowded of temptation, The Count of Chateaubriand made his lit. ol a castle and where place, and | almost died WOCOsS | turret, where the winds howle« the sisters spoctors were said to haunt while the motber and | gave him nerves that could not tremble and Op- i plete shipwreck of our earthly life it will be | ; on a shore, up which we may walk to a pal- | that college of inferno, where, after proper ace; that, as a defendant may lose his case in the eirouit court and carry it up to the su- preme court or court of chancery and get a reversal of judgment in his behalf, all the costs being thrown over on the other party, 80, {I we fail in the earthly trial, we may in the higher jurisdiction of aternity have the judgment of the lower court set aside, all the costs remitted, and we may be victorious defendants forever. My object in this ser. mon is to show that common sense as well ns my text declares that such an expectation is chimerical. You say that the impenitent man, having got into the next world and seeing the disaster, will, as a result disaster, turn, the pain the cause of his reformation. But you ean find stances in this world of men who have done wrong, and distress overtook them denly, Did the distress heal them? they went right on. That man was flung of dissipations, *‘You must stop drinking,” said the doctor, “and quit the fast life you are leading, or it will destroy you." The patient suffers paroxysm after paroxysm, but under skillful medical treatment he begins to sit up, begins to walk about the room, begins to go to basiness, And, lo, he goes back to the same grog-shop for his morning dram, and his évening dram. and the drams between. Flat down again Bame doctor! medical warning! Now the {liness is more protracted, the liver is mote stubborn, the stomach more irritadle, and the digestive or- gans are more rebellious, jut after a while he is out again, goes back to the dramshops and goea the same round of sacrilege against his physical health, s that his downward course is run- id ; that his life is a per ninst his marriage vow ; t arted woman wife whom gud. No at that broken b hopeful youn; her old scho ates that his sons are t by the father's dr ters are to pass in tion of a drinking u for this life, ar Bon he n do not recogn ) be taunted for a kenness ; that the life under thes z#» her disreputabla etimes an After awhi rium tremens, with a whole jungle of hissing reptiles his pillow, and neighbors as he Ing, “Take th pale and t says “Now, I want to have a plain talk with you, my dear fellow. The next attack of this kind you have vou will be beyond all medi- cal skill, and you will die,” He gets better and goes forth foto the same fight again, This time medicine takes no effect, Consul- tation of physicians agree in saving there is no hope. Death ends the scene, That process of inebriation, warning and dissolution Is going on within a stone's throw of you, going on in all the neighborhoods of Christendom. Pain does not correct, Suf- fering does not reform. What is true in one Il Spe in all senses a forever be ly men are ex in the next world purzatoriai iow 2 ® up Ahe printed reports of the prisons of the United States, and you will find that the vast majority of the inearcerated have been there before, some of them four, five, six times, With 1,000,000 {ilustrations all work- ing the other way in this world, people are expecting that distress in the next state will be salvatory., Youecannot imagineanvy w torture in any other world than that which some men have suffered here, and with any salutary consequences, Furthe i tion in the next worl than a reformat ! life started with feli let out on relly bed, his Inshes ese things off me!” As he sits ] the doote screams | it of his ou issoent nr “ res rut rmore, the prospect of a reforma- is ore impro while " the case suppo with all the a years ug ther life will nulated bad habits of m Surely it is easier to buil a stroug it of new timber than out an old hulk that gro breakers, If with lunocence to begin wit in this life 8 man does not me g what prospeet is there that in the next world Starting with sin would be a evoluted? Surely the sculptor has aking a fine statue out white Parian marble than kK seamed and eatury, ship ind a& heen i up in the hee there seraph mora rospect of nr of a oek of pure st of an old biae with the stor upon a clean whit [ paper it is sasier 10 write a dead ors will than on a of paper all scribbled and blotted and from top to bott Yet men seem to that, though the life that began paratively periect turns t ¥. the ne Ife will succes failure “Bat,” sare s one, ‘I to have a in this lif cracked Nurely Kk rock a half a aheat sh torn think hers \ tt it starts with a dead think we next life, be iie 8 80» rt it allows only smal portunity hardly have time to tu around between cradle and tomb, the wool of the one almost touching the mar other.” But do you know what made the an clent deluge a necessity It was the longe vity of the antediluvians, They were worse in the see I their lifetime than in the first hun yours, and still worse in the third century, and still worse all the wa on to 700, 500 and 900 years, and the had to be washed and scrubbed and soaked and anchored of sight for than a month before it could be made fit for decent people to live in, Longevity never cures impenitency, Al the pletures of Time represent him with a seythe to cut, but I never saw any ploture of Time with a case of medicines to hea! Seneca says that Nero for the first five years of his public life was set up for an example of clemency and kindness, but his path all the way descendad until at 63 A, D, he be- came a suicide, 11500 vears did not make antediluvians any better, but only made them worse, the ages of eternity could have no effect except prolongation of depravity “But,” says some one, “in the future state evil surroundings will be withdrawn and elevated influences substituted, and hence expurgation nnd sublimation and glorifioa. tion.” Put the righteous, all their sins for- given, have pasasd on Into a beatific state, and consequently the unsaved will be left alone, It cannot be expected that Dr, Duff, who exhausted himself in teaching Hindoos the way to heaven, and Dr, Abel, who his Ife in the evangelization of China, and Adoniram Judson, who tolled for the re demptison of Borneo, should be sent down by some celestial missionary society to educates those who wasted all their sarthly existance, Evangelistic and missionary efforts are ended, The entire kingdom of the morally baakrapt by themselves, where are the salvatory hifluences to come from? Can one speckled and bad apple in a barrel of diss eased apples turn the other apples good? Can those who aro themselves diwn help others up? Can those who have themselves falled in the business of the soul pay the debts of their spiritual insoivents? Can a million wrongs make one right? Poneropolis was a olty where King Philip of Thracla put all the bad people of his kingdow, ft any man had opened k primary school at Foneropolis, I do not think the parents from other cities would have sent their children there, Instead of amendment fu the other world, all the associations, now that the good are evolved, will be era. ting and down. You would not want to send “ tw We le of the nd eentury o 3 ired earth lear out mora of that | 10.000 in- | a courage that never faltered, Buatl don't | think that towers of darkness and the spec. tral world swept by siroeco and euroclydon will ever fit one for the land of shine, eternal sun- | I wonder what is the curriculum of | preparation by the sins of this life, the ean. didate enters, passing on from freshman | lass of depravity to sophomore of abandon. ment, and from sophomore to junior, and | from junior to senior, and day of gradua- | tion comes, and with diploma signed by | satan, the president, and other professorial | demoniacs, attesting that the candidate has long enough under thelr drill, he passes up to enter heaven! Pandemonium a preparative coursa for heavenly admis | sion! Ah, my friends, satan and his colierts have fitted uncounted millions for rain, but | never fitte ! one soul for happiness ! Farthermore, it would not be safe for this | world if men had another chance in the next, If it had been announced that, how- ever wickedly a man might act in this world, | he could fix It upSall right in the next, society would be terribly demoralized, and the human race demolished in a few years I'he foar that if we are bad and unforgiven here it will not be well for us in the next ex- Istence is the chief influanos that keeps civil | ization from rushing back to semibarbar- fsm, and semibarbarism from rushing into mighty savagery, and midnight savagery from extinetion, for it is the astringent im- pression all nations, Christian and heathen, that there is no future chance for been of | those who have wasted this, Same physical anguish ! Same | | bounds would say - is so unlike the | iarried that | lifetime | the | ery- | y H i {or { Are | BR Multitudes of men who are kept within “Go to, now' Let mel get all out of this life there is in it. Come, gluttony and inebriation and uncleanneas and revenge and all sensualities, and wait upon me! My life may be somewhat short ened in this world by dissoluteness, but that will only lnrger scale the 8 fake the saints heavenly tes heavenly indulgence or oner possible, I will over. at Iast and will eater ti ony a nier those who behaved thems ves here n my way to heaven tak» a liftle wider we who were on 0 heaven via gehenna and ice in the ne make little 1 earth ple party in an wir 3 neys that it v rst trial wou hat the secon hich trial woul siresa upon the seco asaxiety, all the expenditure, first Is nothing, ive the race an 1 more important fe, and the ast is everything, { a second an sutesquent life ail the preparation for eternity would be ““post mortem,” post fu- neral, post sepuichral, and the world with one jerk be pitched off into impiety and god lessnions, MEST rAn Os (¢ trial In the Furthermore, | ask why a chance should be given in the next world If we have refused innamerabie chances in this? Suap- pose you give a banquet, and you invite a vast number of friends, but one man de. ‘lines to come or treats your invitation with indifference. You ia the course of twenty years give twenty banquets, and the same man is invited to them ail and treats them all in the same obnoxious way, After a while you remove to another house and bot. | ter, and you again iavite your friends, but | send no invitation to the man who declined neglected the other invitations, you to blame? Has he a right to ext to invited after =» the indigniti has ! God In this world has invited of His grace, He javite ence and His spirit 355 ¢ We Knew our right If wo declinad it every time tation with indifference yr forty or fifty years of ward the ban and preads the banquet ino a more luxurious and kingly piace, amid the beavenly garlens have we a right to expect Him to ins 1 have we a right to blame Him et me eet be aays Band part t juster, ta us again, and if He does not invite us Ifthesteamer ist to get to read in awspaper t : ww two re woes It eyes od 4 enn pd : into t and all heaven get on board AOY moment, and withoat wus, t sot hor to come back the hig! : Ne after awhile COMMON Senses to a might as well go out on lands Navesink and oall to the Majestic alter she has been threes days out wnd expect her to return as t all back an opportunity for fisaven when it once has sped away, Al heaven offered us as a gratuity, and for a lifetime we refuse to take it, and then rush on the bosses of Jehovah's buckler de. manding another chance. There ought to thera can there will no such thing as posthumous opportunity. Thus Our common sense agrees with my text, “If the tree fall toward the south or toward the north, in the place where the tree falleth thers it shall be,” You see this idea lifts this world up from an unimportant way station to a platform of stupendous issues and makes all ofternity whirl srovad this hour. But ous trial for which all the preparation must be made in this world or never unde at all. That piles she ju be, be, be, | up all the emphasesand al the climakos and the destinies into life here, NO other | “hanes! On, how that augmnts the value aud (mportauce of this chgos | Alexander with his army used to surround ou olty aud then would ® t in | token to the people that If su red | bafore that light went out all would be well, gave i | Well | everinsting safety Li 10 Make surrshder to ! | but il ones the light went out Sha Rie bat. tering rams would swing Against wall, and demolition and disaster would follow, all we need do for our present and Christ, the King and Conqueror surrender of our hearts, surrender of our lives, sur. pander of wverything, And He keeps a grout Hight rnin it of gospel tavitation, Nght kindled wi a Wood of the cross and flaming up oguinst the dark night of our sin | and sorrow, Surrender whils that great Hight continues to barn, for after it goss out thers will be no other opportunity of making vanes with God through our Lord Jesus Jhrist, Talk of another chance! Why, this is u supernal chance | ! In the time of Pdward VL, at the battle of Musselburg, a private soldier, seeing that | the Earl of Hantiey had lost his helmet, took off his own helmet and put it upon the head | of the earl. and the of the private sols dier, uncovered, he was soon slain, while fils commander “ode safely out of the battle, | But in our case, iustead of a private soldier | offering helmet to an earl, it is a King pute ting His crown ftipon an unworthy subjest, Ly 1 | Inst day. | but the judge has not yet { trial, ‘become tha King dying that wo might live, Tell it te nll points of the compnss, Tell ft to night and day, Teil it to all earth and haaven, Fell it to all esnturies, all ages, all millenni- ume, that we have such a magnificent chance in this world that we need no other chance in the next, I am in the burnished judgment hall of the A groat white throne fis lifted, taken fit, While we are walting for his arrival I hear immor- tal aplrits in conversation, “What are yon walting hers for?” says a soul that went up from Madagascar to a soul that ascended from Amerion. The Iatter says, “I came from America where forty years I heard the gospel preached and Bible read, and from the prayer that I learned in infancy on my { mother’s knee until my last hour I had gos- pel advantage, but for some reason I did not make the Christian choles, and I am hero wilting for the judge to give me a new trial and another chance,” “Strange!” says the other, "I had but one gospel call in Mada- gasear, and I accepted It, and I do not need another chance,” “Why are you here?" says one who on earth had fosblest intellect to one who had groat brain and slivery tongue and soepters of influence, The latter responds: “Ob, 1 knew more than my fellows, I mastered libraries and had learned titles from col lsges, amd my name was a synonym for eloquencs and power, And yet I neglected my soul, and I am here walting " ©Btrange," says the one o feable sarthly capacity, “I knew but little of worldly knowledge, but I knew Christ and made Him my partner, and have no need of another chance,” Now proacshing chariot, The great of the hall swing open, back?" the celestial ushers, “Stand and lot the judge of quick and dead pass through!" He takes the throne, and looking over the folding doors “Stand } ory back, | . throng of nations He says, “Come to judg | ment, the Inst judgment, the holy judg. ment?’ history of each one flames forth to the sion of Himsel! and all others, “Divide says the judge to the assembly, “Divide! acho the walls, “Divide!” ory the guards angelle, Vie v one flash from the throne all the | y " By one fla from the th we all the £20,000 to found a chair Massachusetts has 107,273 widows. Black toilets are very fashionable, Antelope skin is the newest novelty for tailor-made waistcoats, Chicago has thirty police matrons, with a head matron over all. Women gardeners are in great de- mand in England and Germany. There are 43,000 more women than male inhabitants in New York State, Small fruits appear among the hat and bonnet garnitures of the season, Miss Lorane Mattice has been eleet- od a Trustee of the lowa Industrial Home for the Blind. More women ‘are employed in Gov- ernment positions in England than | anywhere else in the world for a new | . f the | The present season is a popular one | for ostrich feathers, the number worn the ground trembles with the ape | { lives. on stylish hats being very great Maiwatchin, in Mongolia, is the only city in the world where IAD It is a Chinese traders’ city. no w Mrs. Vance is busily engaged on a biography of her husband, the late Benator Vance, of North Carolina Mrs. Caroline Haskill has given Compara. of | tive religion in the Chicago University, painted white and red And now the immortals separate, rushing this way and that, and after awhile there is | a groat alsle between and vacuum widening and widening, and the judge, turning to the throng on one side, says, "He that is righteous, let 3 be right. cous still ; and he that is holy holy still,” and then, turning throng on the opposite side he says, that Is un) let him unjust still; hie that is flithy, let him be flithy still," and then, lifting y hand toward each gros he ds ] them, 1st, be inh Making the Desert to Blossom, “The desert and A na J of pasturage covered of New Mexico broad with herds wastes 1 riZ« may yet of a great | | fields | fattening cattle if the hopes of the | men who are deeply interested in cer- | tain experiments are realized,” said J. F, Wilcox, a large rauch owner the Panhandle country of Texas “The expectations of these men are based upon the wonderful vitality of ia | ing the alfalfa, or Mexican clover, the growth | of which is astonishingly rapid and a | field of which will yield several erops | of the middle ages no in a season. Its roots are said to go far down in search of moisture, some- | times to a depth of eighteen to twenty | feet, and ils nutritious properties and well known. | ! | the avidity with which stock eat it are. The large land and live | indefatigable caller. : stock investment companies which are now operating in New Mexico and | Arizona have, ss an essential part of i of utilizing the desert lands, the growing of large tracts of alfalfa, with which to feed their range At one ranch alone, La Cucoa, in Mora County, New Mexico, 1000 head of range cattle are now being fed fattened for mar. ket Ihe Mexican clover is wlern irrigation down to it tend to Stockmen down faith in th m rain-makers and their schemes, and they are turn. ng their efforts into more practicable their schemes cattie and other stock. and yn alfalfa laid ertiity, have lost all iern HDLEeLs Natritious Fruits, There are many kinds of fruit which to sup- among which may date, banana and n dried, the bean of locust tree, and the frais DAD or mo? of themselves port healthy life, ! ntioned th are sufficient figs wh ba ikey-bread tree, in West sh is eaten by All il starch, wh the natives Afri int, sugar, " these pecten, gum sad San Francisco Chronicle, | contain sufficient | | nitrogenous matter to support healthy | life, given to the banana, which supplies to many millions a permanently nutri- food, and to the fruit of the date palm, or Phoenix dactylilera, which serves as an exclusive article ment in parts of North Africa, Arabia and Persian. ‘‘In all Fezzan," one authority, ‘the date 1s the staple food not only for men, but for camels, horses and dogs. Nineteen-twen- tieths of the population live on dates alone daring nine months of the year.” In the Hadji, or pilgrimages, the price of dates at Mecoa and Me- dina forms the first question asked be- tween the Arab pilgrims going to and returning from the sacred city. Cakes of dates pounded and kneaded into a solid mass constitute the main nutri- ment of the caravans crossing the Sahara. From the fresh juice of the date wine and, also, vinegar arg made, tive and spirits distilled, while the stones’ or seeds are roasted and largely used instead of coffee. —New York Die pateh, . The Lighthouse Dog, A dog owned by Captain Orontt, keeper of the Wood Island light, has famous this week, It is cus tomary for passing steamors to saltte the light and the E sapts returns it by ringing the bell. The other day a tn whistled three times, The captain Ai not hear it, but the dog did. He ran to the door and tried to attract the eaptain's attention by howling, Fail ing to do this he ran away and then came a second time with no beter re- sult, Then he decided to attend to the matter himself, so he seized the rope, which hangs outside, between his teeth snd began fo ring the bell «Lewiston (Me) Journal, Of all these preference must be | of ali- | i says | In Morocco the face of a bride is , and her hands and feet are dyed yellow with henna, Black plames are arranged among colored trimmi of every sort on fashionable hats, whatever the shape may be, 188 It has come to light through statis tical investigation that more than fifty per cent, of the Vassar graduates never IArry, Mrs. E. Lynn Lynton’s new novel is dedicated ‘‘to the sweet girls still left MOGOR us who have no I revolt.” New Zealand accorded the right to vote, mand the privilege of se liament, art inthe new women, aaving 'n de- Par- ed now in There is said to be vor of the old-fashic grris, such as Sarah, Jane, ete. The Princess of Wales and Miss An- nie Paterson, of Dablin, are the only honorary musical doctors in the United Kingdom. A reviv fa- ned Ann, in names for Martha, Nine ladies were successful in pass- recent examination of the London Sanitary Institute for inepec- tors of nuisances. In Europe during the early years woman was al- lowed to appear in church unicss her face was covered with a veil. Mrs. Hoke Smith, wife of the See- of ¥% Interior, ix said to be an She recently made 1000 calls in two weeks, Among washable wool day gowns are Kanka and Yaury Oukes crepes in delicate stripes of ivory or cream white and a color : fabrics for A new Norwegian law makes girls ineligible for matrimony unless they can prodnce certificates of proficiency in knitting, bakiog and spinning Miss Margaret McBride, of Nevada, Mo., has been commissioned a notary public. She is the first woman to hold the office in Vernon County. Among sammer tints for pale rose colorand honeysuckle yellow vie with each other, and often appear together in shot fabrics or trimmings. evening The girls of the graduating class g, the Attica (N. XY.) Free Academy de- cided to dress in ealico this year. This innovation caused much talk in the country. The plan was adopted, it was said, on anoconnt of the hard times, A silver girdle to be worn by gentle woman in the height of summer season has bangles, smelling salts, bon. bon box, and other toilet requisites ingeniously fastened by slender chains on the right of the band, In fect, it is a portable arsenal, the The small lace mask veilshave quite gone out of fashion. A veil now must entirely cover the chin, and is worn much more loosely than has been the custom for the past few years. In- stead of fitting smoothly over the face, it is gathered up in folds at the side and fastened at the back of the head. MADE LIFE A BURDEN. Miss G. F. Onawrono, of Limestone, Me, writes: “For years | suffered monthly from je pains which at mes were so acute to render life a burden Foun using Dr. Pleroe av orite Presert used seven bottles In as Han) months std de. ny so much benefit from it and the home omen. I wish . every won throughout our land, suffering io the same way, may be Induced to nd Ay «Mase v “Favorite Prescrip- CRAWFORD. 1\on is powerful, in- ting tonie and A soothing and sirength- on nervine, purely aguintinl perfectly It regulates promotes all the i gan of womanhood and M.LE0EA CO, Horn Fiqus: MTORRRLE POE IX. a) rd in eng Friis katie th alt whore Ed ig devee tram ln ventors mei live en oh ot YC! M SCHO MAB ve Alri Al fird tw LIS, Sona 0 AGT alt oll a hs 03, Ih. CO Deron, Nien, - BS Ch TE Th Th Tl WWW WET ABSOLUTELY PURE The American Falstaff, The American Falstaff was Dr, Alex ander Bkinner, of Maryland, surgeon of the infantry in Licutenant-Colonel Henry Lee's Legion in the Revolu tionary War. He was a man of sense and good character; full of quaint, original humor, eccentric in mind and manners, In person and in Jove of good cheer, as well as in his direaver sion to the field of battle, he fat Was strongly knight not de WA ready enough to had at. the resembled Shakespeare's In personal courage he field nt, for he fight duel and killed his man in personal com} But he abhorred the battle field, noise and din of which stunned and stupefied him, and he apt to be- come panic-stricken if threatened with danger of mixed up the shouting, shooting ps Still, he d« was not more averse to other gentlemen, and that should honor him with a commission he ld that he was not afraid to push the bayonet His business, was Lo take care of the wounded, and it would not be proper for him to be wi URI NCRS a upon OCCRARION, Was getting hurley-burley of and charging clared that he dying than if Congress in tro wot show he said, mun ficers, wee | Dr. Skinner the ur fee Dr CAVAIrY, Ww hie vigorously had an yo 4 v IUIU0ON I arc when these co: stipation is | engaged. On one when Lee and Marion were pursuing a body of British troops, not far fron { ton, there fa fight at a bridge, and Dr. Irvin came out wounded, Dr. Skinner grumbled | and scolded about the mishap, said that Dr. Irvin at tending to his , Bn 1id not dress his wound until all the wounded privat had attends when he did get arour aged doetor he en OCeas on Char les- was hot, hand-to-hand should have een Dusines been erations witl of his surgical of onus saroastic orable Tremnares tha henceforth carry about on his Dr. Bkinner was if he didn't like Cus gunpowaer wound Ag : the smel St. L H———_—— Lightning Statistics From Britain, the =» n month er mber 1, During with Nove struck | ding werd Th CHAM’S PILLS Lalu o the most frequent cause of al One of the most important things for ev \ that ‘ . earn > 13: amd 4 wi York, for the little b 1en0ee an ICHCCS ali seq i 1 correction reach of a dru HAWAII mo | 2¢.! constipation cal 40 IL CE gist, the puis will be sent by Seg J] than more Nn mail, 25 cents. ree ae # ONE CHANCE OKLY!¢ CVT WwY A Charming History and Magnificent Gallery of Views PRACTIC This Iwi Oleson Hor rof. David IT CONTAINS LARGE EX-QU EEN LIT PRINCESS R1 ehtf po IH ALLY CIVEN AWAY! PHOTO TORTRAITS OF ITOKALANT cone HON, SANFORD B, DOLE... Pres HON. JOHN L. STEVENS CAPT. GILBERT WILTSY KING INFEATHERED ROBE PRINCE These Paotographs are very scarce and could not be bought elsewhere Joss than $1 each For special and pecalinr reasons the p trated with Portraits and Views that oould o ents, barely to cover cost of wa ahi lahers w 1 be bs ng And postage » MY Address HUBBARD PUBLISHING (0. 406 RACE =TH DOOMED TODEATH HULA DANCING GIRLS GROUPOFKANAKAL SCENEOFCAPT. COOK'S DEATH KAMEHAMEHA COLLEGE i NULUAXU AVENUKR....coc cones . The K NATIVECHRISTIANCHURCH ADIES ede kod w y His Mon ume wt Destiy a M ) cane H Balt by Kamehameh this Authentic Wis re for Jess than § ¥ able. Tha " ie offer bs good for tem da ¥ T. PHILADELPHIA 1 ma shit « 1ireot sow h a | Stan fa 9B BBWDVTAWaNS Cc CeBIT ese aa? LOVE WHAT Sirf Send lor our Special We have got jum "ha ¥ CATALOG R HIOH CRADE BICYCLE FOR $43.75 Are oloRing OUL AL THO Aare low PRs, A Pare , They are full sae tw Rte tar a we St AR. > le APPLY to our agenls of AIMSOL 10 We, i wn Rent ton cents (the sotual oost OUR SPORTING GOODS LINE IS UX of In stam yb ap, bebo odo nat hasdesds of other articles, JOHN P. LOVELL ARMS CO. 131 Mrond Stand 147 Washington Ste ee ie he rte SE ed Diamond Cycles { ARE THE BEST MADE. ALL THE LATEST IMPROVEMENTS, HIGH GRADE IN EVERY REsPELT. THE "OURIST'S FAVORITE. TWIEXY 1 THE WONDER OF THE ACE. CALL AND SEE IT, x EXCELLED. of myasy for large Mustrate) four hun “Where Dirt Cathers, Waste Rules.” Creat Saving Results From the Use of
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers