A MARTYR'S TRI UM PH From ths text. Acta 6S-C0, "Behold I see the beareni opened," IEliLJehM f .the toning 01 siepnen and bli glorious death. Stephen' had been preaching a rousing sermon, and the people could not stand It. They re solved to do as men sometimes would like to do la this da If they dared, with some plain preacher of righteous nesskill him. Tb only way to si lence this man was to knock ths breath out of him. 80 they rushed Stephen out of the gates of the city, and with curse and whoop and bellow they brought him to the cliff, as was the custom when they wanted to take away life by stoning. Having brought him to the edge of the cliff, they push ed him off. After ha had fallen they came and looked down, and, seeing that be was not yet dead, they began to drop stones upon him, stone after stone. Amid this horrible rain of missiles Stephen clambers up on his knees and folds his bands, while the blood drips from his temples to his cheeks, from his checks to bis garments, from his garments to the ground, and then, looking up, he makes two prayers one tor himself and one for his murderers. "Lord Jesus, receive my spirit!" That was for himself. "Lord, lay not this sin to their charge! "That was for his assailants. Then, from pain and loss of blood, he swooned away and fell asleep. I want to show you to-day five pic turesStephen gazing into heaven, Stephen looking at Christ, Stephen stoned, Stephen In his dying prayer and Stephen asleep. First look at Stephen gazing into heaven. Before you take a leap you want to know where you are going to land. Before you climb a ladder you want to know to what point that ladder reaches. And It was right that Ste phen, within a few moments of heaven, should be gazing Into It. We would all do well to be found in the same pos ture. There is enough in heaven to keep us gazing. A man of large wealth may have statuary In the hall, and paintings In the sitting room, and works of art In all parts of the house, but he has the chief pictures in the ort gallery, and there hour after hour you walk with catalogue and glass and over Increasing admiration. Well, heaven Is the gallery where God has gathered the chief treasures of his realm. The whole universe is his pal ace. In this lower room where we stop there are many adornments tessella ted floor of amethyst, and on the wind ing cloud stairs are stretched out can vases on which commingle azure and purple and saffron and gold. But heaven Is the gallery in which the chief glories are gathered. There are the brightest robes. There are the richest crowns. There are the highest exhil arations. John says of It, "The kings of the earth shall bring their honor and glory into it." And I see the proces sion forming, and la the line come all empires, and the stars spring up into an arch for the hosts to murch under. The hosts keep step to the sound of earthquake and the pitch of avalanche from the mountains, and the flag they bear la the flame of a consuming world, and all heaven turns out with harps and trumpets and myriad voiced ac- clamatlon of angelic dominion to wel come them in, and bo the kings of the earth bring their honor and glory in to it. Ho you wonder that good people often stand, like Stephen, looking in to heaven? We have many friends , there. i There is not a man In this house to day so isolated in life but there Is some J one in heaven with whom he once shook hands. As a man gets older the number of his celestial acquaintances very rapidly multiplies. We have not tiad one glimpse of them since the nlgbt we kissed them good-by, and they went away, but still we stand gaz ing at heaven. As when some of our friends go across the sea we stand on the dock or on the steam tug and watch thorn, and after awhile the hulk of the vessel disappears, and then there Is only a patch of sail on the sky, and soon that is gone, and they are all out of sight, and yet we stand looking in the same direction, so when our friends go away from us into the future world we keep looking down through the Narrows and gazing and gazing as though we expected that they would come out and stand on some cloud and give us one glimpse of their blissful and transfigured faces. While you long to join their compan ionship, and the years and the days go with such tedium that they break your heart, and the viper of pain and sor row and bereavement keeps gnawing at your vitals, you stand still, like Ste phen, gazing into heaven. You won der if they have changed since you saw them last. You wonder If they would recognize your face now, so changed has it been with trouble. You wonder If amid the myriad delights they have they care as much for you as they used to when they gave you a helping hand and put their shoulder under your bur dens. You wonder If they look any older, and sometimes In the evening tide, when the house Is all quiet, you wonder if you should call them by their first name It they would not answer, and perhaps somstlmes you do make the experiment, and when no on but God and yonrsslf are there you dis- . tlnctry call their aaaes and listen and alt taaina Into fcaarsa. Fim en new and ettertaa looking apoa Christ My tact aas he saw the Cm U eA t 3 naad el Dot. Just bow Christ tooked ta this world. Just how he looks ta heaven, we can not say. A writer la the time 01 Christ says, describing the Savlour't personal appearance, that he had blui eyes and light complexion and a very graceful structure, but I suppose It was all guesswork. The painters of the different ages bars tried to Imagine the features of Christ and put them upon canvas, but we will have to wait until with our own eyes ws see him and with our own ears ws can hear him. And yet there la a way of seeing and hear ing htm now. I have to tell you tnat unless you see and hear Christ ou earth you will never see and hear him In heaven. Belshaxxar gathered the Babylonish nobles to his table. George I enter tained the lords of England at a ban quet. Napoleon III, welcomed the czar of Russia and the sultan of Turkey to bis feast, and the emperor of Germany was glad to have our minister, George Bancroft, sit down with him at his ta ble, but tell me, ys who know most of the world's history, what other king ever asked the abandoned and the for lorn and the wretched and the outcast to com and sit beside him? Oh, wonderful invitation! You can take It today and stand at the head of the darkest alley In any city, and say: "Come! Clothes for your rags, salve for your sores, a throne for your eter nal reigning." A Christ that talks like that and acts Ilk that and pardons Ilk that do you wonder that Stephen stood looking at hlmT I hope to spend eternity doing the same thing. I must see him; I must look Upon that face once clouded with my sin, but now ra diant with my pardon. I want to touch that hand that knocked off my shackles. I want to hear that voice which pronounced my deliverance. Be hold him, little children, for if you live to threescore years and ten you will see none so fair. Behold him, ye aged ones, for he only can shine through the dimness of your failing eyesight. Behold htm, earth. Behold him, heav en. What a moment when all the na tions of the saved shall gather around Christ! All faces that way. All thrones that way, gazing on Jesus. I pass on now and look at SK?Ffce,i stoned. The world has always wuik I to get rid of good men. Their v.; life Is an assault upon wickedness, ul: with Stephen through the gated of the city. Down with him over the r.;evi plces. Let every man come up drop a stone upon his head. But thestt men did not so much kill Stephen .s they killed themselves. Every stone rebounded upon them. While the3 murderers were transfixed by the scorn of all good men Stephen lives In the admiration of all Christendom. Ste phen stoned, but Stephen alive. So all good men must be pelted. All who will live godly In Christ' Jesus must suffer persecution. It is no eulogy of a man to say that everybody likes him. Show me any one man who Is doing all his duty to state or church, and I will show you men who utterly abhor him. If all men speak well of you, it la either because you are a laggard or a dolt. If a steamer makes rapid prog ress through the waves, the water will boll and foam all around It. Brave soldiers of Jesus Christ will hear the carbines click. When I see a man with voice and money and Influence all on the right side and some caricature him and some sneer at him and Borne de nounce him and men who pretend to be actuated by right motives conspire to cripple him, to cast him out, to de stroy him, I say, "Stephen stoned!" When I see a man In some great mor al or religious reform battling against grog-shops, exposing wickedness in high places, by active means trying to purify the church and better the world's estate, and I find that some of the newspapers anathematize htm and men even good men oppose him and denounce him because, though he does good, he does not do it in their way, I say, "Stephen stoned!" .The world, with infinite spite, took after John Frederick Oberlln and Paul and Ste phen of the text, but you notice, my friends, that while they assaulted him they did not succeed really In killing him. You may assault a good man, but you cannot kill him. On the day of his death Stephen spoke before a few people in the sanhe- drln. Now he addresses all Christen dom. Paul the apostle stood on Mars hill addressing a handful of philoso phers who knew not so much about sci ence as a modern schoolgirl. Today he talks to all the millions of Christen dom about the wonders ef justification and the glories of resurrection. John Wesley was howled down by the mob to whom he preached, and they threw bricks at him, and they denounced him, and they jostled htm, and they spat upon htm, and yet to-day, In all lands, he Is admitted to be the great father of Methodism. Booth's bullet vacated the presidential chair, but from that spot of coagulated blood on the floor In the box of Ford's theater there sprang up the new life of a nation. Stephen stoned, but Stephen alive! Pass on now and see Stephen in his dying prayer. His first thought was not how the stones hurt his head, nor what would become of 111 body. His first thought was about his spirit "Lord Jesus, receive my spirit!" The murderer standing on the trapdoor, the black cap being drawn over his head before the execution, may grimace about ths future, but you and I have no shame In confessing som anxiety about where we are going to come out You are not all body. Thar Is within yon a soul. I see It gleam from your syss and I see It Irradiating your coun tenance. Sometimes I am abashed be fore an. ajBdjence. Maje X corns ander their physical eyesight,' but be mum I realise the truth that I stand s may latrtef a?tittt The probability la thai yew body win at bast tad a aspuleasr la som of the cemeteries that surround your town or city. There Is no doubt but that your obsequies will be decent and respectful, and you will be able to pillow your head under the maple, or the Norway spruce, or the cypress, or the blossom ing fir, but this spirit about which Ste phen prayed what direction will that take? What guide will escort It? What gate will open to receive It? What cloud will be cleft for Its path way? After It has got beyond the light t our sun, will there be torches light ed for It the rest of the way? Will the soul have to travel through long des erts before It reaches the good land? If we should lose our pathway, will there be a castle at whose gate we may ask the way to the city? Oh, this mys terious spirit within us! It has two wings, but It Is In a cage now. It Is locked fast to keep It, but let the door of this cage open the least, and that soul Is off. Eagle's wing could not catch It The lightnings are not swift enough to take up with it When the soul leaves the body it takes fifty worlds at a bound. And have I no anxiety about It? Have you no anxi ety about it? ' I do not care what you do with my body when my soul is gone or whether you believe in cremation or Inhuma tion. I shall sleep just as well in a wrapping of sackcloth as In satin lined with eagle's down. But my soul be fore this day passes I will find out where It will land. Thank God for the Intimation of my text, that when we questions for me. What though there were massive bars between here and the city of light, Jesus could remov them. What though there were great Saharaa of darkness, Jesus could re move them. What though I get weary on the way, Christ could lift me on his omnipotent shoulder. What though there were chasms to cross, his hand could transport me. Then let Ste phen's prayer be my dying litany, "Lord Jesus, receive my spirit." Pass on now, and I will show you one more picture, and lb at Is Stephen asleep. With a pathos and simplicity peculiar to the Scriptures the text says of Stephen, "He fell asleep." "Oh," you say, "what a place that was to sleep! 'A hard rock under him, stones falling down upon him, the blood streaming, the mob bowling. What a place it was to sleep!" And yet my text takes that symbol of slum ber to describe his departure, so sweet was It, so contented was it, so peaceful was it. Stephen bad lived a very laborious life. His chief work had been to care for the poor. How many loaves of bread he distributed, how many bare feet he had sandaled, how many cots of Blckness and distress he blessed with ministries of kindness and love I do not know, but from the way he lived and the way he preached and the way he died I know be was a laborious Christian. But that is all over now. He baa pressed the cup to the last fainting Up. He has taken the last Insult from his enemies. The last stone to whose crushing weight he is susceptible has been hurled. Stephen is dead! The disciples come. They take him up. They wash away the blood from the wounds. They straight en out the bruised limbs. They brush back the tangled hair from the brow, and then they pass around to look up on the calm countenance of him whs had lived for the poor and died for the truth. Stephen asleep! I have seen the sea driven with the hurricane until the tangled foam 'caught In the rigging, and wave rising I above wave seemed aB if about to storm the heavens, and then I havs seen the tempest drop and the waves crouch and everything become smooth and burnished as though a camping place for 'the glories of heaven. So 1 have seen a man whose life has been tossed and driven coming down at last to an Infinite calm, in which there was the hush of heaven's lullaby. I have not the faculty to tell the weather. I can never tell by the set ting sun whether there will be a I drought or not I cannot tell by the I blowing of the wind whether it will be fair weather or foul on the morrow, jbut I can prophesy, and I will prophe sy, what weather It will be when you, the Christian, come to die. You may have It very rough now. It may be jthls week one annoyance, the next an other annoyance. It may be this year one bereavement the next another be reavement. Before this year has pass ed you may have to beg for bread or J ask for a scuttle of coal or a pair of shoes, but at the last Christ will come In, and darkness will go out, and, though there may be no hand to close your eyes and no breast on which to rest your dying head and no candle to light the night the odors of God's hanging garden will regale your soul, and at your bedside will halt the char- lots of the King. No more rents to pay, no more agony because flour has gone up, no more struggle with "the world, the flesh and the devil," but peace long, deep, everlasting peace. Stephen asleep! You have seen enough for one morn ing. No one can successfully examine more than five pictures In a day. Therefore we stop, having seen this cluster of divine Raphaels Stephen gssing Into heaven, Stephen looking at Christ Stephen stoned, Stephen In his dying prayer, Stephen asleep. Thee FaalUkera. Penjab Oh, I tall you I am looming right up alongside of Anthony Hope! There Is only on trifling little differ ence ; now between hi stories . and mine. . , . What is thatr . Pajab-Wy, the J publishers tall jump at bis starts and they jump on KKEAalEk. X. CGutelius nihl wife were vis iting friends in Ixiwisburgovcr Sun day... ...David Buck was visiting his daughter Mrs. A. A. Heiutzcl man ot Lewistown over Sunday . . . . Sol. Fagley of Shamokin was in town on Saturday...... H. S. Heiut- relnian left for IVvinos lust Mon day where he will work during lite summer. .... . Jes. Muurer is mak ing preparations to erect a new house on the lot he recently pur chased from Thompson llilbish. . . . Geo. Schoclt ot Selinsirrove was 'in town on Saturday between trains.-. . Fields & Yodcr loaded a car-loud ol timber n Saturday James lloush und wife were called to Sun bury several times last week on account ot the illness of their tlaugh-. ter-in-Iaw, Mrs. John lloush.... Miss Izora Walter is visiting her sister in Monroe township.... Philip lloush and Charles Keck were in Middleburg one day lust week. SELIflSUROVE. The wedding of S. J. Pawling, Esq., and Miss Harriet Kichter was largely attended. The floral deco rations were fiue. They left on the 8:34 p. in. train for a trip South ....The concert by the Boston Ladies Orchestra was grand, every person was delighted with the per tormances. We understand the . 1-.1.1. .1 I 1 . . rf l"" wun 7 T 1 . IL1t'7 whi.nl. I rot urn h.r-. lmv will In. ---- BvvuaBa b.s v i 1 11 aa a ir. greeted by a larger audience than before. .. .Miss Lizzie lleitz of Fisher's Ferry was in town Wed nesday Miss Cora Ann went to MlcniCin nwinir fn I lir illimua ii lu.r a I 1 sister who is living m that state ....-. W eis and M. Millner of Kantzareiu Philadelphia makinir their spring purchiises, and Druggist ! - . .... . , . Anna ivueiiian is visitiinr mends in llairisburir . . y.i .... rg. . . . jicnj. runups ot Mahanoy City, brother of Tailor Phillips, is visitin-r the latter. . . . llev. Chileote has gone to Danville to attend the annual conference of tllO M. l'j. Church . . . .JJolller Ul- le-ii was nwiou r.oinc ny mo serious irowwcu irom iru aim linos of hi nwrflui. V lirj!'uJ.u''P-'."da'.r.nteeUtore- unless oi ins motlier. e in i i .i " ' pleased to say she is improviiur liev. J. II. Wclier of Sunbury on Friday uiWnoon delivered the first of a course of six leetiirts to the students of the University The W. C. T. IT, held a memorial ser vice for Miss Francis E. Willardun Monday aitcriioou in the reading room. Croictltil out la.it tree;, (J. P. Swann, of Oakland, Iowa, is visiting friends in this section. He is engaged in the drug business. (ieo. C Wuirenseller hashnuirht the Shindel property including the dnnr store: we did not learn the price. This is a very desirable pro Mrty. . . .Thomas Earhart, of New York, is visiting his uncle, Kev. P. Bom, I). D. . . . . Mrs. Benson nec Ann returned from Phila. where she had been in a hospital for treat- ment. We understand she has been very much improved in health .... Ilev. J. II. Barb took a business trio to Maryland last week. ' He also represented the Lutheran C. K. society at the convention at Lata wissa The outlook is for a eood audience to greet the Boston Sym phony Club which gives nn enter tainment on Wednesday aiternoon ill the Opera House Tailor Phillips and wife hove gone to Phila. to lay in a sprinir stock of goods. ... .S. Weis is giving bargains to his customers. . . .The shoe fac tory is beine roofed bv Tinner A. N. Gembcrling. The building will lie ready for occupancy some time in April. . . .Dr. Dimni was at Bel- lefonte on Sunday assisting at the i i ti .. . . . . . . installation ol itev. It. C. liallo way. D. .D Mrs. Emma Dav from Mulenburg, Africa, the wife of ur. u&y, deceased, was entertained bv Dr. Dimm and family on Mon- j day and gave a talk to the U. II. & ar r . ai. Society ot Irimty Lutheran church, in the college chapel, Mon- Monti M Cement . Is used for Plastering Houses. It Is a new discovery Guaranteed tO laflt lOnirer Q - than any other plaster. It . . -'. ... . . i - i. a a. . iu ureicrnju w aubuihui. v ' i ii y " jj For particulara call on or address il At m llsjl km j B JSISS aj I lL Shet Qi Own Suck- 8ome wag took one of diaries Forres tame ducks, ami unchored it out in tlie river, near his hotel at McKees Half Falls, and then callel his attention to the wild duck in the river. Charley prides himself on being a crack shot, and getting his gun he proceeded to slay the lively little duck. He fired one shot, the duck swam on, no fly, then another and another followed, the duck still swam on until about teu shot fell, when he killed it. Then there was a liappy landlord. After cheering for some time on his Bucoess, he skirted out on the river, and arriv ing at the duck, he found he had been sold, and then there was a mad laudlord. Tribune. Be Careful! Be CarefuL! In the um of Brand? d urine mnn of bowel complaint. Nothing U ao awful to aaaM In checking cholera morbua or cholera Infantam when ordered by your phyridan as Pure Brand? made aolf from Grape. Bui where and how to gel pure It the queetion. If It U not pure from grape it it poelon and wlU help kill the pattenl, The Old Ullmax Brandy dlitilled from Ore pee by Mr. 8 peer la absolutely pure. Be euro and ere that the Bottle has the cap tamped with Speer, N.J. Wine Co. Get it of your druggist; take no other. Price 11.80 a bottle qt. t l pint. The Sheriff Surprised Sheriff Wagner, of Union county, residing at Lewisburcr. was awaken ed early Thursday morning by a VliTOroilS noiindinu- nn In rdmr nml " I 6" 13 un urgent appeal to be let in. He hvtt8Conl8d;rabl- wounded on com i . - Ulir ClOWD to find thia .!irw 1 LtP wna Elmer Hassenplug who, with another prisoner, escaped troni thejail last wL- Ti n ' : IK ......it ... ! .1... -if -A A. .- I i. .1 ... ... v v wgM.atfjr, UIIU llin MIT - pri8e was gmit ut t)ie vountary re turn of Jlassennlinr. Tl xnlnmi. cupuire me iugitives, and lus sui n of Hassenplug. The cxplana- a given was I hat he was tired of I -11114 A wandering about the country, hidin 'hods and oiitbuildinrs, with u,.........i., 1. ...i . e .Hit.v:i uiii iiiuiir iu lutuuu niu icar ; to tat and recognized. 0f in-ing kchui and ret Invalid und Sacramental Wines. Spcer iKfurmentedGrute Juice la pure and uintoXlcatiuB. it I mxltt ln,i, il,. -.r. uiilntnxicatlug urown Port urai.. grown Port u rupee, eapecinlly for the uxe of ' IUI11 IIn irri.Tn r ii I a...l 11.. I 1 1. 1 n - wmjiiNui If ill. 1 1 1 1 cm unimpaired (or auy period- Much uied lor evening partlea and Invalid who do not uxe llllllUluilt Rev. Hertz Returned. The United Evangelical Confer ence of Central Pennsylvania was Held at Jiughesvillelastwtek. Tiic appointments for Centre District are as follows: A. Stupletcn, presiding elder; Al tooiia,J.A. llollenbauiru; licllwood and Pine Croft. A. 1). (Jiaiulev: - j i liellefoiite, C. 11. lioodiing; Miles burg, G. W. Ileini'v: Howard. J. 11. Sechrist; IS'ittany, H. T. Scarle; kclicrshiirg, W. II. Stover; Centre Hall, W. V. Khoado; Spring Mills, W. M. Brown; Millhcini,. J. J. Ixhr; Sugir Valley, G. F.Garrett; Millmont, I). P. Shaffer: Bulfalo. J. Shambach; New Berlin, C. F. Shiiltz; Penu's Creek, J. H. S. Price; Middeburg, J. H. Hertz; McClure, L. Dice; Port Treverton, W. E. Brillhart. Lewistown, Geo. Joseph; Patterson. S. E. lvoontz: Professor A. E. Goble, D. D., pre sident ot Central Pennsylvania Col leee and member of New Berlin Quarterly Conference. Geo. A. Foltz and wife, who went to Moran. 3 years ago to farm for John School), have returned to Mon roe township and will make their home at Hummers V hart. The S- S. Workers of Snyder County. The executive committee of the county association have made the following division of the county: Adams. Beaver. Beaver West and Spring in charge of II. I. Romig. Perry, Perry est and Chapman in charge of liev. O. G. Romig. Washington and Union in charge Qf William Mover. Penns, Selinserove. Monroe and Jackson in charge of M. L. Wagen seller. . ,a Middleburg, Franklin, Centre and Middlecreek in charge of Rev.' D. E.'McLain. There should be as manv local district conventions held before the a tui t t UUU1UI WU1WIIV1U 1IC1U uctu iinnnlv njiniunfinn aannaeiKIa WUUV WUIVUvaVUf SeMJ pVDUiUtVI BbCw those in charge see to this matter, Ttia1nfA ilw ' LCk The date for the annual convention r , - . - . . . , ha heea fi fo5 Mr 9 and v10 1898, the Evangelical Luthaan church of Middleburg. ,11. a rt i i aT' COURT HOUSS CHIP J. Kale lar Birwrel. " Mrs. Catherine Gill to Lewi Walter, ten acres in Centre town ship for $650., Charles Zarr and Wlftt til Jum, W. Smith, J interest in house aw lot on Isle ot tjue for f 50. T 1 a. it ii . . . xvouen Mt omitn and wile aif Jjell buuth and wife to James Smith J interest in house and lot isle ot lue lor ?40. John S. Rice and wife to John I bwineford, tract No. 1 in UniJ township containing 42 acres aiJ yu perenes, tract JNo. a in ChapnuJ township containing 57acres. fdowJ of $250 on this tract) and tract NJ i tt-: i i ' . i iu uuiuu tuwiisuip containing ; acres and 80 perches for $600. F. P. Decker and wife to A. V Knepp 172 acres and 76 perches fa West Beaver township for $4350. Henry Ott and wife to John Clop; one-half acre lot in Penn townsliii near the Red Bridge for $75. Adam II. Musser and wife t, Jacob B. Herman, 50 acres fa Franklin township for $600. Jacob Hoffer and wife to Wm. J Sandal, 50 acres in Monroe tw for $1,600. Jesse Foltz and wife to Jaeol Holler 50 acres in Monroe twp. fJ $2,300. Esther Werline and Henrv Werline to Edward Taylor, hoi J and lot on Water St reet, Sehnsgrov for $750. Marriage I.leenaeii. S. J. Pawling, Selinsgrovi Harriet Richter, f C. II. Mull, FreeburJ I Mary Jiennage, D. V. X Ron OLD COPIES WANTED. 1 j In order to complete our files I want ths followmcr named issues want t''8 following named issues t'10 I'ost: July 8, Sent. 16. 1SC9: Oct. 13, 1870: Jan. 26. 1871 :Anr. 1 1873 ; Nov. 4, Dec. 23, 1875; Jui 15, 1870: Mar. 7 and July 1878; May 15, 1879; Feb. Mar. 10. 1881: A nr. 23. 18K TVr..m OT I...... T) A.... r nn , UC! J u . . ,Sor T 9 oU i8s" EH'!". It, 188.J ; Jail. It -- f vj vs,e v i I Hi )vo v) 1SS7 ' l Any of our readers having coii of the aliove issues will confer favor by letting us know. Sin copies in good condition will inn niand a fair price. t Isaac F. Walte.' of Mazonna w in Middleburgh on Saturday :ii made a call ut this oHico. A full lino of tinware can i round at Schoeli and Stalilneckc: stand. All kinds of rcnairii iromptly uttoudod to. 11'. Moving Notice. All persons bavin;; business vi tins oluee please remember that m have moved our quarters from Dav Other's building lo the now buil nig on the Bank lot near the conn iail where we shall lie nleasetl greet our many friends and patioi Important to Subscribers. Those of our subscribers who poet to chance their liostofticc al . i . i I dress tins spring, should notity i of the same. Be esoeciallv eareli to cive your oldaddressand the ml one. A Iso send in your name if actly as you hnd it printed on label of your paper. Bv observii! 1 these points vou will be sure to m. vour naivr reirularlv and avoid coif I k o J iusion. Sale Register. TbumUy, Mar. I7th, onp-hl( mile nonl rent o( Klchfleld. Thoa. Rhellenbenrer will H x noraee, one cow ana larmine; Implement!. Monday. Mar. Slut. Jaraee Krdley will mH milee weet ot Middleburgh, lire etook and M Ins impiemenle. Tueedar. Mar. 33. two and one-half mil outhof New Berlin, laoao bllkTr will - noraee, 8 Oowa and farmlua; Imple.neoU. Tuesday March, , on the road leading H MoKeee U Meiaerrllle. Mre. Sadie Bobner.H eell houaehold gorKla. Friday, Mar. SB, two and one-half mllee V Eaat ol Middleburc. Mre. Mary K. Muwer "1 ell one horea, two oowa and farming liuplenx ana noueenoia gooas. MiDDUELici Market. Corrected weekly by oar merchant natter............. Eirra Onions ... Lard ............................. l?all0r....M ........M.........M.Ma... M. Ohlokena oer lb. .- - Bias 8houlder.... "n I Wnsat. ...............a ..M....M..........M.M Potatoes............ M Old Corn..... ........... ..................... uats .............. Brae per 100 lbs.. MWdHags " . .........MM..M H i nnn wvr eeesse eeeeee eeetse 7 fkMur Dsr bbL -,