—————— A——— REV. DR. TALMAGE. DIVINE’S SUN. MON. Subject: **The Oarsmen Defeated.” Texr ‘The men rowed hard to hrinz ft to the land, hat they could not, where | i | Ing fore they erisd unto 5,18, 4. Navigation in the Maditteranean Sea a! ways woe parflous, especially so in early times, Vessels were propelled partly by sail and partly by oar, When, by reason of great ptress of weather, it was necessary to roa! the eanvas or haul it in, then the vessel was entirely dependent upon the oars, sometimes twenty or thirty of them on either side of the vessel, You would not venture outside your harbor with such a craft as my text finds Jonah galling in, but he had not much choles of vessels, from the Lord, and when a man is running away from the Lord he has to run very fast, God had told Jonah to go to Ninevehto reach about the de.truction of that eity, onah disobeyed, That always makes rough water, whether in the Mediterranean, orthe Atlantic, or the Pacifle, or the Caspian Sea, It is a very hard thing to scare sailors, I have geen them, when the brow of the vessel was almost nnder water, and they wero walking the deck knee deep in the surf, and the small boats by the side of the vessel hal been orushed as small as kindling wood, whistling ns though nothing had happened, but the Bible says that these marinersof whom I speak were frightened, That which sailors eall “a lump of a sea hag become a blinding, deafening, swamping fury. How mad the wind can get at the water, snd the water ean get at the wind, you de not know unless you have been spectators, I have in the sail of a ship, no larger than the palm of my hand. That plece of canvas was all that was left of the largest sail of the ship Greece, that went into the storm 200 miles off New- foundiand, Oh, what a night that was! [ suppose it was in some such storm as this that Jonah was eaught, He knew that the tempest was on his ae count, and he asked the sallors to throw him overboard, Sallors are a generous hearted race, and they resolved to make their eape, it possible, without resorting to such extreme measures, The salla are of and so they lay hold on their oars. | the long bank of shining blades on either side the vessel, Oh, how they did pall, the bronzed seamen, as they lay back into the oars! But rowing on the sea is very differ. ent from rowing upon ariver, and as the ve. sel hoists the oars skip the wave and the stroke, and the tempest laughs to the fiving paddles. It is of no use, no use, There comes a wave that crashes the last mast and sweeps the oarsmen from their laces and tumbles everything In con. fusion of impending shipwreck, or, as my text has it, “The men rowed hard to bring it to the land, but they not, wherel they eried unto the Lord.” This scene is very su pray God I may have grace enough to represent it inte Years ago I preached a hase of this very subjec rom Houston, Tex,, the writ the reading of that sermon in I< led him 10 God, And I received ter from South Australia, saying that the reading of that sermon in Australia had brought several souls to Christ, And then, | thought why not now take another phase the same su'sj for perhaps that God whe can raise in power that which is s« t weakness may now, through another phase of the same subject, bring salvation to the people who shall hear and salvation to sople who shall read. Men and women who now how to pray, lay hold of the Lord God 4 wrestle for the blessing, timer would stop sometimes in the Lord,"-Jonah fe no use, Boe miss scorn the SY re restive to me , and 1 ngth and stre ae the i the midst of his argument, | ow, I will tell you a fable,” and to-day I would }ike to bring the seene of the text as an illustration of a most important re. Hgious trath. As those Mediterranean oars. men trying to bring J v comfited, I have to tell not the only men wl their paddles and have! on the Lord for help unavailing efforts of OArsmen ave a ¢ Are aking to safety and set their feet on the Rook of ’ art in th souls to the shore o Ages, hasband or id or near friend who is not a bean times when you y about thelr salvatipn, sinister of Christ, whose wife was dying without any hope in Jesus, walked the floor, wrung his hands, eried bitterly and said, “I eve I shall go insane, for I know prepared to meet God,” And there, may have been days of sickness In your house. bold, when you feared it would ather or mother or she 8 be a fatal sickness, and how closely you examined the face of the doctor as he came in and sera- tinized the patient and felt the palse, sal you followed him into the next room and sald, “There isn't any daager, is there, doo tor?” nd the hesitation and uncer. tainty of the reply made two eternities flash befor» your vision. And then you went and talked to the sick one about the great future, Oh, there are those here who have tried to bring their friends to God! They have been unable to bring them to the shor of safety, They are no nearer that point than they were twenty years ago. You think you have got them almost to the shore, whet you are swept back again. What shall do? Put down theoar? Oh, no, I do not advise that, but I advise that you appeal to that God to whom the Maditerra. nean oarsmen appealad-—the Go 1 whe could silence the tempest and bring the alip in safety tothe port! 1 tell you, my frienis, that there has got to be a good deal of pray- ing before our families are brought to Christ, Ab, it Is ar. awful thing to have half a hoygse- hold on one side the line and the other part of the houshold on the other side of the line! Two vessals part on ocean of ones going to the right an | the other to the left—farther apart and farther apart -—aatil the siznals cease to be recognized and thers are only two specks on the horizon, and then they are lost to sight forever! I have to tell you that the unavailing ef forts of these Mediterranean oarsmen have a counterpart in the efforts some of making to bring our children to the shore of safety. There never were so many tempta- tions for young people as there are now the : Go the eternity, to be against their spiritual Interests, perms to he God knows how children. We cannot think heaven without them. Wa to leave this ifs while on the waves of temptation and from God, From which of them We consent to eternally separat i’ Would it be the son? Would it be the daughter? Would it be the sldest? Would it be the youngest? Would it be the ons that is well and stout or the ons that Is slek? Oh, I hear some parent saying to- night © “I have tried my best to bring my children to Christ. T have laid hold of the oars until they bent in my grasp, and I ave braced mysolt against the ribs of the Loat, and I have pulled for their cerns. rescus, but I can't get them to Christ, ' Then I ask you to imitate the men of the taxtand ery mightly unto God, We want more im. poriunate praying for children, such as the father indulged In when he had tried to bring his six sons to Christ and they had wanddéred off into dissipation, Thea he got down In his yers and sald, “0 Gol, take y lite, if through that means m y repent and be brought to Christ,” startlingly answered tho and in a few weeks the father was way, and through the solemnity the pix ed unto God, Ob, that father econld jfford to die for the eternal welfars of his children! He rowed hard to bring them hry could not, and then he cried ANXIOUS Wa are of going d0 not AVY eoulid be He was running away | | meored | would just like to look through the win low my house a plrcoof | | the exhaustion. | yousity, you { of the subject I | Hlastrations, Us are | There ara parents wio ars almost digseonr. aged about their ehiidren, Whera {8 your son to-night? He has wondarad off parhaps to theendeof the earth, It scoms as if he rannot got far enongh away from your Christian connsal, What does he eare about the furrows that come to vour hrow, about the quick whitening of tha halr, about the fact that your back begins to stoop with the burdens? Why, he woull not ears much if he heard you wore deal! Tae black-adgel letter that brought the tidings ho would put in the same package with other letters tell. the story of his shame, What are you going to do? Both paddles broken at the middle of the blade, how ean vou pull him ashore? I throw you one oar now with whish I believe you can bring him into harbor, It isthe glorious promise, “IT will be a God to thae and to thy sead after thee," Oh, broken- hearted father and mother, you have tried werything else: now make an appeal for the help and omnipotenes of the covenant keeping God, and perhaps at your next i Inmily gathoring-—poarhans on Thankselving Day. perhaps next Christmas Day—the prodigal may be home, and if you crow! »n his plate more juxuries than on any ther plate at the table I am surs the others will not be jealous, but they { #ill wake up all the musio in tha house, ‘because the dead 18 alive again and because he lost is found." Perhaps your prayers ive been answered already, The vessel | nay ba coming homeward, and by the light | of this night's stars that absent son | aneing the deck of the ship, anxious for the | ima to may be come when he can throw his arm round your neck and ask for forgiveness | for that he has heen wringing your ald heart 10 long. Glorious reunion, that will be too for outsiders to look upon, but I when you have all got together again and iro seated at the banquet, Though parents may In And have thelr heaven in view, They are not haspy tll they see This obil iren happy too Again, I remark that the unavailing effort of the Maditerranean oarsmen terpart in the effort which we are making to wring this world back to Gol, His pardon wind safety, If this world could have been mved by human »ffort, it would have been lone long ago, John Howard took hold of ne oar, and Carey took hold of another oar snd Adoniram Jadson took } another sar, and Luther took hol another ind John Knox took hold they pulled until they Some wrenant Ha has a cout of martyrdom, knives of savages plague struck room of and still the ohains are and still the despotisms are not d« and still the world Is unsaved, Put down the oars and make fl 10 not advise that, Bat I want y fan brethren, to understand and the school and the colle donary soclety are tes, and {this w must and our prayer. “They rc nd, but they con untothe L« some on and ’ fo it, n answer to ing it to nto safely, apon us our cor wives, We say, ht hand, wmnd. and I wil A wave of sin and a wy you in another v to a future w ligion isthe fl They do everything it trust in Christ. They make sixty strokes in a min- ate. They bend forward with ‘sil sarnest. ness, and they le bask until the mussies are {listen ded, and vet they have not mvie ons inch in ten years toward heaven, What is on! Ti is not the way to go to ht as 3 frafl 8 safe taougn you His strength, an rospel 12! journey of this life and at iast thro opening gates of heaven! Hoe is save, Though your sin be long and inexcusable and outrageous, moment you believe I will proclaim pardon quick, full, grand, unconditional, une promising, nitible, infinite, Oh, the grace of God !'l am fn think of it, ed fast to each ot height, Let the chor until all the hausted, that we may touch the the archangel fly in ecireuit of ote trying to sweep around this th grace of God! It is so high, It 1s 80 deep. Glory be to my God where man's oar gives out God's arm begins! Why will ye carry your sins and your sor. rows any longer when Christ offers to take them? Why will you wrestie down your fears when this moment you might up and be saved? Do you not know that every thing is ready? Plenty of room atthe feast ring of His love all hand, Come now and sit down, ones, at the banquet, Ye who of sin, take the robe of Christ, swamped by the breakers around you, ory to Christ to pilot you into smooth, still waters, On account of the peculiar phase have drawn my present you see, chiefly from the water, [ remember that a vessal went to pleces on the Bermudas a great many years ARO, It had a vast treasure on board, bear us on thr out with t the earth line run ables of give Josus has the ready to put upon your yo hungry are in rags Yo who are | But, the vessel being sunk, no effort was | made to The literary and the sosial {nflusnces ssem Christ | iriven almost entirely from the | schoo! and the pleasurable concourse, yot | for our | into | want | they are tossing | After of raise It, many years had passed a company adventurers went oct from Eagland, and after a long woy- age they reached the piace where the vessal was sald to have sunk. ney got into a small boat and hovered over the place, Then the divers went down, and they broke through what looted jike a limestone cover. ing, and the treasares rolled out—-what was found afterward to be, In American money, worth $1,500,000, and the foundation of a great business house, At that time the whole world rejoleed over what was calle | the lack of these adventurers, O, yo who have been rowing toward the shore and have not Leen able to reach it, 1 want to tell you to-night that your boat hovers over infinite treasare | All the riohes of God are at your feet-ireasures that never fall and erowns that never grow dim, Who will go down now and seek them? Who will dive for the pearl of great pric? Who will be prepared for life, for death, for Judgment, for the long eternity? Nee two bands of blood stretched out toward thy soul as Jesus says, “Come aato me, all ye that labor and are heavy laden, and [ wall give you rest.” —————— a] During the Civil War in this country there were 204,700 cases of rheuma- tism among the Union troops, BE ————c—— In 1871 yellow fover oarried off 29, 000 at Buenos Ayres, or over ten per cent. of the population, that | SABBATH SCHOOL, INTERNATIONAL LESSON OCTOBER 28. FoR Lesson Text: “A Paralytic Healed,’” Mark i1., 1-12-Golden Text: Mark 11, 10--Com= mentary. 1. “And again He enterad into Caner paum after roma days, and It wos . that He was in the house,” The Yoper who had been healed hlagad the fact whroad so mueh that Jesus conld no mors Awell in the sity, hut had to find a resting plaos without (chapter '., 45), but wharever He went tha crowds flocked to Him Does not that leper and the lepers of II Kinas vil, 9. pat ns to shame, for surely we have wood th - ines, and yet how many hold thelr neaoa? When Jesus came into Capernaum, it soon hasames known, Io chapter vil, 24, It save, “Ha ronld not ba hid." How is it that many who hear the name of Christian ean #0 hide Him that nn onswould kno from their con- dust nr sanversation that Christ fe in them? | ; i shoes and good circulation, many wese gath- ared together, insomuch that there was no room to recefvn them —no, not =o much as about the door—anl He nranshed the worl unto them.” One wonld think from many devices resorted to nowa iayato draw the peonle to ehurch that thers was no lnngar nowar in Jesne por in His gosnal, Wera it not for Heh, xiil., 8, ons micht think He had greatly changed But knowing that with Him is no variableness, shadow of turning, we wore comnolled to conclude that many praachers do not preach the word : hence the nand of nah exhoria. tions ns Jonah 1, 2; I Tim. tv. 2 “Praach the preaching I bid thee, “Proach thea word.” 8. “And they coma palsy, 2. “Ana stralehtway bringing borneol thus to Him wns Joann unto ww) i sh know thalr one slok nf the four.” When thoan earnestly labor to bring friends Him. it 1s good evidences of thair faith in Him, but what shall we say orthink of those know Him, vet never put say a word to bring an- ft be that they dead or luke. out of His who profess to forth an «ffort other soul to have a name to warm and ready to be spewed mouth (Rav, fii, 1, 16) 4. “And when thoy co nate Him for the press roo! whars He broken it up they the sick of the palsy It says, tha poor woman whom help, ther fait if they oot Ho w blessed confidence in Jesus! naver put to shar We mn wavering Have falth and LL.B 7: Mark x 5. “Whee 1 Him? live, but are Can ald come n thay not ids | unocoverad the they had y 1 wherain 1 wie the In Lak an down lav.” was, lot yuld surely do it Jot 8. “Hat thers were cert sitting there and reasor This no ings wil 1 yon hint. us SDM 1% phomios? Who ean sins but Goi only?” If they had not been sO hariens | scainst Wim, they might have said to His glory and to their soal's good, “Tals mad ta God, for only Gol caw Trey might have thought of fas, xiii, ’ + ba the Lord M easiad an Jos y sOnr LE La forg forgive sine” , aver 1 asm r hearts (1 Chron, xxvill 8 “Whether ia it sasie palsy, Thy sins be Arise and take up anarh t infirmity of the say, The last would est, for bodily grievous thing than uaafor nu ars there are who w i have for health of body who soncernad about the forgive J They are blind and dead to spiritual things and to the unseen and eternal roalitios heaven and hell. 10. “Bat that ye may know that of man hath power on earth to forgive sins (He saith to the sick of the palsy) Here is the truth to be proclaimed around ths worl 3, “The Son of man hath power on earth to lor. give sina.” He recciveth sinners He out none who He blots all sin and will reme mora blood of Jesus Christ (Luke xv., 2; John vi, John i. 7) Many In the giad tidings the first heard them. and multitudes in all countries are vainly seeking rest of soul concerning this because they know not of Him. Where is the faith and seal of these four Iriends? 11. “I say unto thee, Ariss and take up thy bed and go thy way into thine house, This is the word that has all power in it, word that at ereation spake and it was done, sommanded and it stool fast (Ps. xxxiil,, 9), the word that sald, “Let there bo light, and there was light, It is the “hus saith the Lord” of the Old Tratament I'he same voles is saying to many to-day, Awake, thou that sleapsst, and arise from the dead, and Christ shall give thee light" (Eph. v., 4). and will ere long say to Israel, "Arise, shine, for thy light is come, and the glory ol the Lord is risen upon thee" (Isa. Ix. 1) 12. “And immediately he arose, took up the hed and went forth before them all, inso- much that they were all amazed and glori tha Son ante out The sin some to Him mbar it no sleanseth from all 17 fsa. xii, 25 China hava received time they the fled God, saying, We never saw it on this | fashion.” A clean soul and a whols body how suggestive of the resurrection morming, when, having been preserved blameless, we shall be presented fauitioss, Him, even our bodies like His glorious body (I Toows, v., 28; Jude 24; I John fii, 2 Phil. #1, 21), More confidence in Him and more yieldedness to Him would bring more of His power aven in these mortal bodies, te | His great glory and our great joy, Lesson Helper, - Co ——— - A Co-Operative Rolling Mil, The result of an attempt to operato u rolk ing mill at Habbard, Ohlo, on tho co-apern. Hive plan Ia interesting. After paying out sll outstanding Indebtedness there was a mrpius of about twenty-five per cent, to fistribute to the stockholders out of the fifty cont, of the wages that have been ree mined by the managers to ereate a oapital, This is equivalent to a reduction of twenty. five por cent, In wages for the time that the nil was in operation. In other words, in srder to out even the company could nly afford to pay seventy-five per ont, the wage soale, Doubtless the hg tian was the onuse of this ill sucer =, recent ———— ci Banana Plantations Ruined, The Inte storm which Isinnd of Cuba, nimost entirely dest noiead | the | neither | { oard, which reads: We shall be like | ———— ————— Ex-Empress Eugenie is now wixty- eighv years of age and a confirmed in- valid, Miss Anna P. Church, of Tolelo, Ohio, has lately engaged in the under- | taking Business, Mrs. Cleveland's daily mail quently includes 100 letters, and rare: ly less than sixty. There's a hospital in Boo Chow, China, in charge of Dr. Anne Walter, a Mississippi woman, Advaneed society women have prae- tically banished all punctuation points from their letter writin The quickest cure for red hands is loose sleeves and gloves, easy fitting fro. | { count Highest of all in Leavening Power.— Latest U.S. Gov't Report RO al VETS Baking Powder Mysteriously Directed Letters, The postoffice at Washington re. ceives numberless letters from abroad which have failed of delivery on ae- of badly-written addresses. | These mre handled by experts, who | them. exhibit wonderful skill in deciphering Miss Clara Richter, in charge of the foreign division, is a famous hand at such work. The spelling on | some of the envelopes is amazing. For It is now declared that short stock- | ings injure the feet by pressing the kauckles of the toes upward. Mrs. J. E. B. Stuart, widow of the | Confederate cavalryman, is now the Principal of a girl's school in Missouri. Tho charge is made that the Ameri- ean woman is more indisereet in tell. ing secrets than any of her European sisters, A Chicago woman carries a business “General Commis- Dealer in Poultry, Merchant, Eggs, and Calves, gion It is a good plan to make covers for frunks when they are exposed to view in the room. For this purpose dark blue duck is serviceable and sightly. Lawn tennis certainly holds place in the hearts of American men, if one may judge from its uni versality, though it is hard pressed riding. first Wo by The only known woman trainer of thoroughbreds Mrs. Chalmer, of England, whose five sons are all either trainers or jockeys. Bhetrained them herself, 8 “Feo-jee” is “chum” Mawr | : peculiar form of li in the (Pennsylvania dialec . nguistio ecoe 1s not used at any other college so fs as known. Next to singing nothing so well stockings, as It was her custom to the Only three of the maids at Queen Viet alive—the Dowager ford, the Duchs Lady Jane Ellice. In the sixteenth cent iry the faces of ladies were cover enamel, It was were ol Da rt of l with a = brittle, and y liged to preserve a pression of Woarers fixed ex- countenance, If yon don’t think we are going to have a rush of color to the head this season, you've only to step into a bon: net shop to be convinced and at once set right on the subject. Miss Elizabeth Fleming has been appointed crior t United States Circuit and Distriot rts at Port land, Me. Miss Fleming was previ ously the court stenogr spher, C Mre. Rider Haggard, it is said, is the ‘“‘congenial inspiration” of the noted author. What Mr. Haggard writes is read and criticised by Lis wife before it is sent to the publish L. Some Boston clubwomens are talking of a “winter flower mission” which shall give to the costly and beautiful flowers of teas, luncheons and balls a second service, gladdening the sick and deprived. Mrs. Louise Chandler Moulton has a London home at Weymouth street, Portland place, and she is accredited with being one of the half-dozen wo- men in London able to ereate and hold a salon. Dr. Helen Baldwin, a graduate of Wellesley, obtained first honor at a recent competitive examination for the post of Resident Physician in the Philadelphia Hospital, She had eighty-three rivals, Uracked wheat, with milk, honey or stewed fruit, is the best kind of break- fast or supper for girls who wish to grow strong and beautiful. The lime- like material in the grain is very strengthening and healthful, : One objection that has been urged by those who are unwilling that wo. men shonld have the right to vote is that the greatest political excitement generally comes each year just about the time when she is busy putting up tomatoes, Miss Annie Reynolds, of North Haven, Conn., who is to be the first World's Secretary of the Young | membered that twenty years or more | name had | Women's Christian Association, is a | graduate of Wellesley and has been a special student ot Yale. Her head. quarters will be in London, Mrs. 8. F. Grubb, superintendent of work among foreigners, keeps a missionary at the port ¢f New York | and distributes monthly to the incom- ing immigrants 20,000 pages of tracts on topios related to good citizenship. She has published these tracts in seventeen different languages. Mrs. Dunlap Hopkins, founder of the Beohool of Technioal Design in New York, has been invited by Princess Christian to a conference with reference to establishing a sim- ilar school in London. Mra. Hopkins has also been invited by the French Government to give it the benefit of her experience, Mra. EB. Lelend is the basso trombonist of the First Baptist Sun. day-Sohool of Baltimore. She the study of the instrument some timo vic] apr for the benefit of her and she has not only made a sucooss of it musically, but has ex- pradsl hae luge and saproved Doe example, ‘‘Susarmeri” is intended for Sault Ste Marie, That is a compara- tively easy one ““Schinescham, Toulocontus” is Chinese Camp, Tou- lnmne County, *‘Grim Pantewula” is meant for Green Point avenue. Mem- ory is an important element in “blind reading,” as this work is ealled, else on it except “America.” Bhe re AZO & person of the been found at Grand Rapids, Mich The letter was forwarded to that point and reached the intended recipient On one occasion the local posteflice of Washington did not know how to de- liver a letter addressed to ‘“Teserero General de It was adver- tired for ‘*Gen, Teserero.” Miss Richter perceived at once that it was for the Treasurer of the United Btates, It was registered and contained iderable sum of New Or same Nacion."” an money. s Picayune, —_—_——e._—_._”§.™ Speculations About Pompeli, Pompeii in her period could not have 30.000 inhabitants, many the had more than After a sleep of suddenly A. D earth Idings were d¢ 3 of this quake are visible to-day. eruption of A. D. 79 which buried city t depth of than mx It was a shower first of pumice } usands of years, awakened In pre nd many bul the voleano was 63 there was the nitory traces earth It was the I more stone Professor Man lowed by ashes, } n that thes showers were because the as hard as cen PeELIAL catastrophe, the up) por of the bu gs W zt 1 KNOWLEDGE Brings comfort and improvement and tends to personal enjoyment when rightly used. The many, who live bet. ter than others and enjoy life more, with less expenditure, by more promptly adalat the world’s best products to the needs of physical being, will attest the value to fealth of the pure liquid laxative principles embraced in the remedy, Syrup of Figs Its excellence is due to its presenting i in the form most acceptable and pleas ant to the taste, the refreshing and truly beneficial properties of a perfect lax. ative ; effectually cleansing the system, dispelling colds, headaches and fevers And permanently curing constipation. It has given satisfaction to millions and met with the approval of the medical profession, because it acts on the Kid. | neys, Liver and Bowels without weak. | ening them and it is perfectly free from every objectionable substance. Syrup of Figs is for sale by all drug gists in HO and $1 bottles, but it is man. ufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only, whose name is printed on every package, also the name, Syrup of Figs, and being well informed, you will not socept any substitute if offered. is Pearline. Miss | Richter got hold of a letter the other | day with a peculiar name and nothing | most flourishing “01d Hickory’s” Lile Passion, Perhaps no woman who ever lived was loved with a flercer affection than the wife of Andrew Jackson. After keeping his dueling pistols oiled and the hair-trigger of his temper set all his life on her account, Old Hickory said on his deathbed that he would forgive all his enemies except those who had slandered her. Chicago Herald. 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CORDOVAN, FRENCHE ENAMELED CALT, - 34.25 50 FiNg CALF SONGAROY J A Sous, 32. i 2% EXTRA PaMENg $2.%1.75 BovsScuon SHOES, SH SEND FOR CATALOGUE W'L'DOUCLAS, BROCKTON, MASS. You cnn save money by wearing che W. L. Douglas $3.00 Shoe. | Becmuse, we are the largest manufacturers on | this gradeof shoes in the world, and guarantee thels value by stamping the name and price on the bottom, which protect you against high prices and the middioman's profits, Our shoer equal custom work in style essay Alling and wearing gualities We have them sold everywhere atlower prioss for the value givep than any other make. Take no sub stitute, If your dealer tannot supply you, we con. # INENE C900) 11 The “LINENE" sre the Bost and Most Eoonomi. eal Collars and Oulls worn | they are made of fine cloth, both sides finished alike and being reverse bis, abe oollar fe equal to two sy other kind Bt well, woor weil and | weil. A boxof Ten Collars or Five Pairs of Cuffs for Twenty-Five Conta, A Sample Collar and Pair of Ons by mail for Bix Conta. Name style and size. Address BEVERSIBLE COLLAR COMPANT, 7 Franklin St, New York © Kiiby SL, Boston, EAST MAN owt etuost tonal ad vantages at the lywest oot. Healthful; best Inflaences; elective studies. Superior Instroction, Departments of Bock beeping and Business Studies; Shorthand and Type writing: Fnghish and Modern Lawouages; Jenman ship and Drawing: the elementary branches, et NO YACATIONS, Positions abitnived for competent students, Addres, tor Calai-gue 1 CLEMENT O. GAINES, Pres H 0 LLE GE Ment, 30 Washington Street, Poughkeepsie, New York. . ati-Rhen [) H Rar Chewing Gum EL AL LE Ee] Cares and Preveats Rheumatinm, indigestion, * § ox pain, Heartburm, Oataren and Asthma, IF Useful tn Malaria and Fevers, Cleanses the | Teeth and Promotes the Appetite. Swoetens | ¥ the Breath, Cares the Tobmoco Habit, Endorsed | * Ly the Medical Faouity, Send for 3, 15 or 25 *~ | " OOLLBGR, PoronKERrsn, XN. ¥. offers both sexes the pont package Sliver, Stamm or Festal Note, GEO, KR, HALM, 140 West 2h St, New York. ~The Best Thing in Milk Pails That's the solid truth. You get them cleaner, and with less work and fuss, than with anything else you can use. It saves you so much that it's cheaper than the commonest stuff can be. Proof-—the largest dairies and dealers usc Pearline. Some women are afraid of Pearline. They think that where cleaning is made so easy, there must be some harm to the thing washed. nd it can't hurt the finest lace or the milk pails, anyway. softest hands, any more than i Not Dut Pearline can't hurt t hurts milk pails, with the imitations—the fact that they are imita. SO tors or followers proves a lack of something. w= “The More You Say the Less People Remember.” One Word With You, SAPOLIO
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers