m .11 .1 :1 it ' A: BROSIOUS BROS- GOD'S GREAT GIFT. Undersell lera And only offer Clothing that is new. bright. up-to-date anil of tlio Finest Qualitj in qiuutitie such as Ins never been shown outside the lare cities. and raat. A tarl&o toCls outside antural world to th spiritual world; w soring- Um abut ment at thl end the bridge, but thJ fog of an unified mystery hiding the abutment on the other end and th' bridge. Whispering gallery of trr souL The human voice Is God's cuWjr the ear. That vole capable of pro ducing 17.S9:,18.044.41 sounds, ant! all that variety made, not for the regale ment of be ait or bird, but for tho hu man ear. About fifteen rears ago, in Vicjce, $3.19 WILL BUY A MAN'S SUIT and every ono is of the latest pattern, and the price does not affect the nobbincs in the least. These suits would be sold by other dealers at not less than $5.00. 7i 98c Is all We ask for A BOY'S SUIT make Ueefer style, of mixed cloth, sizes 5 to 1G years. Last year vc sold more than 500 . of the same style but not as good. We have the first shipment of 800 suits which we 'ex pect to sell at this price. ONE HUNDRED AND SEVENTEEN requests have reached us for Samples. We would like to hear from at lcat One Thousand. "Write at once to s BROSIOUS BROS., SUNBURY, PA. Dr. Til mage plains of the won ders of the ear an how tbe Divine IfRill I W.n.morotha. tte possesses miu' It and that Hit earl. never closet! to the appeals ol Uls people. The text I Psalms M:l "He that planted the ear. shall he no' , Jown ,B deatn on- whom n,any hear?" considered the greatest musical com. Architecture la one of the most fas- 0f tn. century. Struggling on clnatlng arts, and the study of Egyp- up from ,ix TMra 0f age, when he wa tan. Grecian, Etruscan. Roman, MJy- Jeft fatherless, Wagner rose through santlne. Moorish, Renaissance styles ol the obloquy cf the world, and ofttlmet building has been to many a man a all nations seemingly against him. un- sublime life work. Lincoln and York tu ht Kanei nB favor of a king and cathedrals, St Paul's and bu reiers won tne enthusiasm of the opera and arch of Titus and Theban temple noUiei Qf Europe and America. Strug and Alhambra and Parthenon are the fng all the way on to seventy years monuments to the genius of those who ot ajw to conquer the world's ear. In built them. But more wonderful than that same attempt to master the hu any arch they ever lifted or any tran- man ear and gajn supremacy over this sept window they evr illumined or any gate of nte mmortal soul, great bat- Corinthian column they ever crownea ties were fought by Moxart, Cluck and or any Gothic cloister they ever elan- Weber, and by Beethoven and Meyer orated is the human ear. beer, by Rossini and by all the roll ot Among the most skillful and assiau- German and Italian and French com ous physiologists of our time have been D08er. Bome 0f them In the battle those who have given their time to the ieaving their blood on the keynotes examination of the ear and the study 01 and the mU8cal scores. Great battle its arches, Its wills, its floor, its canals, fougnt for tne ear fought with baton, its aqueducts, its galleries, its ltitrlca- wlth 0rgan pipe, with trumpet, with cles, Its convolutions, Us divine ma- Cornet-a-plston, with all Ivory and chlnery, and yet It will take another braten and sliver and golden weapons thousand years before the world comes of tne orcnestra; royal theatre and ca to any adequate appreciation of what thedral and academy of music the for ced did when He planned and executed treases for the contest for the ear. the Infinite and overmastering archltec- Eneland and Egypt fought for the su ture of the human ear. The most of It premacy 0f the Sues Canal, and the Is Invisible, and the microscope breaks gpartanB and the Persians fought for down In the attempt at exploration. in the denie at Thermopylae, but the mu cartilage which we call the ear is only 8)clan8 0f a ages have fought for the the storm door of the great temple clear maatery 0f the auditory canal and the down out of sight, next door to the lm- deflle of the immortal soul and the mortal soul. Thermopylae of struggling cadences, Such scientists as Helmhoitt ana P the conaue8t of the ear, Haydn Conte and De Blalnvllle and Rank and BtrugRied 0n up from the garret where Buck have attempted te walk the Ap- nJ had netner fire nor food, on and on plan way of the human ear, but the until under the too great nervous mysterious pathway has never been Btraln of hearing his own oratorio of fully trodden but by two feet tne root tne ..Creation- performed, he was car MARBIKri. At the resilience ot I 'nali 1'Vsfih'V, Perils LYi-ck,Siiylcnoiiiitv,ly Kev. Sidney Kohlcr, Franklin (ilcs of Moijtoiir.ll!r iin.l Klla Siaiij,l(T. Ajr. JHli, nt tin; Lutheran par- j soniie, Adanislnir;. Iiy Kev. I. V. Kaut, John A. Kennis, ol' I!ea'er town, and Kllic Aurand, of 1'eaver; Springs. At the Mrtliodixt parsonajii1, l'wi.-town, !y ll.w M. li. Smyser, .lolin llnll'nale, of Jiewistown and .'an!c Kline, ot Waiver. Apr. IS, l;y lr. .1. II. Dinim, Daniel 1'. See-Ii.iltz and Lucy .!. 'I'arlieanx. Aj.r. !:'.. ;.v Vw. .W. K. lirili ! :ir. ;u l'.ui fivvertoii. Dr. .1. 10. !;.( : o Mr'.v'es and Cora Anno WiM; of l';ii'!::i!-aii, .iieli. Aj.r. !.y .1. '. ( lander, .1. , at Sliainokin Dam, ( 'harles V. Vry inire of Slianiokin Dam and Chiis-r-'u: . Ke;-n of Sunliiirv . May In, l.y Kev. V. A. Haas, II. ( '. I lendrieks anil I a.M' M. .lar rett, I iut It of Monroe township. DIKI) April in, iiiSelinrove.Mrs. J.F. ( lilliert, seeond daughter of Z. S. K-ely and w ite, ajfe ! 1 I years liino. Jiid "J 1 days. April Id in Sclinj.rrove, .Mrs. Kinney, relict of F,dward Kinney, :t!jed 77 veaiv. Interment Wednes day. April !, mar .Middlelr.irj;, Moses Fry, Iiy his own hand, ajjed (J I yi. April 1 1 , jiear Freelmrij, .loiiasr! Ivissiner, a well known resident of Flint Valley, a-rel S-J yrs. 10 mo. and 22 days. -March :',(), in liristol, Ind., Mrs. (-'atherine lunc, a daughter of (Jeo. Apple, Itorn in Freclmr, 17, 1SS" henee aed (i:) years. April 11, at Xcw Holland, Lan-asU-r (Anility, llev John Kohler, I). D., a native of near Kichfceld, I'a. ael about SI years. KREAMER. James Snvder is riding n new wheel Kolihcrg were in J. E. Mal e's store Tuestlay night of last wifk. They gainwl fiitcranee by tin rear dK)r ly drilling u piwe out of the door. Tlit'V istolt' tK)Is from J. J. Mitfiu'l'tf hop by break ing in through a window. They Htolc tshix-s, clothing and lianm, the work was apparently that offrumps :..A. 0. Smith and J. K. Magee n-turned from the city with a fine Hupnly of Kumnier goods. . . .S. A. A pp and wife were the guests of A. C bmitirw on ounuay......Wm' Snyder was in Selinsgrove liwt Thursday k'tweeu trains Johu Kinney and wife of Salons were the guests of .J, F. Walter's ou Sunday, Letter from Mr. Gift. lilMHiLN, Nr.i!.', Apr. s, lS'.IS. (ieo. W. W'agcnseller, Kd. Middleliurg l'osr. DkakSii:: Knelosed please find my check for !?1.2." which j according to your special published new rue will pay for the Post oie year. I feel greatly interested in forthcoming history of Snyder Co. which you propose to publish in the Post. This alone ought to bring you many new subscribers, and the advantages ot your special low rate to subscribers is a double induce ment. I venture to say it will bring you many hundred new subscriltcrs. I am also very well pleased to see th- effort made by our hiMorieal society ofSnyder Co. It isecrtainly a move in the right direction; a be ginning should haw been made years ago, but it is never too late to pre serve of what hi.-tory we still possess, and will be able to hand over to future generations and interest th" present. Were I at home, I would gladly loud a helpinghand. 1 might be able to assist to some extent, as I am in possession ol genealogical manuscripts gathered some yearsago. In conclusion I can only sav to my old friends, "(!o on with the good work, in such a way that we may Id able to tell future generation:- what the pat and present has been doing, of its success and of its failures, ot its pleasures and sorrows and of its hope tor a future world." Verv trulv von rs, A . K. ( 1 1 1 'I'. John Hepa- s On Saturday evening ulxuit seven o'clock John llepner, a highly re sicctcd citizen of Washington town ship, breathed his last havingattain ed the age of 04 years, lie was twiee married his first wife having died alout8 or 10 years ago. His wk'oihI wife was uMrs. Hitter. Mr. llepner leaves a widow and one daughter Lizzie, married to I). V. Womerat Mt. Pleasant Mills, this county. The funeral took place on Wednesday morning of this week. Nearly all the citizens of the vi cinity of Shriner's church on Chest nut llidgc have signed u petition to the Post OfTu-c department to estal lish a new post cilice in that neigh borhood. The mail of that section is said to be very heavy and under these conditions the department will probably answer, the etitioncr8 favorably. The matter has been referred to Congressman Mabon who will leave no stofie unturned , to secure the object of their desires. If the ost ofHco is estal4ished George A. Kauffman will probably be the first tyfetmnster. BICYCLES $17.50, OH TIME OR CASH. I hut hiii i llh'tjvk until jfim have our ( 'ataloytif. Special price to the first purchaser in every town. J 'right young men and women wanted to distribute our circulars among prospective buyers. Address ipiick. AWEFICVN macHiNe CO. MANUFACTURERS BOX XXX. COLUMBUS, 0. of sound and the foot of God. Three ears on each side the head the exter- "HalMalaar desc drag. Oh, yea, my frteads. we hart ( lookinc for Ood too far away u of looking for him i-lese )ht anj t owi organism! We bo up Into ih. serratorr and look thrcuh cope and see God In Jcyiter utu la Saturn and Ood. In Mars, bv could see more of Him through n. cro scope of an aurtst o fc atlsfled withtonl one reslder.Lcl In Franc It has been Bt. Clo-odj Versailles and the Tullerles. Great Britain It has been Wind,, Balmoral and Osborne. A ruler Dot always prefer the larger. King- of earth and heaven may larger castles and greater palacet,' I do not fhihk there Is any one curiously wrought than the hui ear. The heaven ot heavens contain Him, and yet He says He (I; room to dwell In a contrite heart. I think. In a Christian ear. We have been looking for God Infinite let us look for him In tht finlteslmal. God walking the com of the ear, God speaking along u dltory nerve of the ear, God dwtm In the ear to hear that which tcf from the outside, and so near the and the soul he can hear all that w plres there, Are you ready now for the qu.J of my text? Have you the enduJ to bear Its overwhelming suKgetJ ness? Will you take hold of some lar and balance yourself under planted the ear, shall he not hi Shall the God who gives us the t-J atus with which we hear the sound the world HlmBelf not be able to up song and groan and blasphemy worship? Does he give us a f: which he has not himself? Dm 1 and Gruber and Toynbee invent accumeter and other lnstrumen; which to measure and examine the and do these Instruments know A than the doctors who mado N "He that planted the ear, shall b. hear?" Jupiter of Crede was aid represented In stutuary and pa:J as without ears, suggesting the that ha did not want to be bothered the affairs of the world. But our has ears. "His ears are open to 4 rled out to die, but leaving as his . i ... .in locaev to me woriu no Djmuuimico, tv, rn.i in.i.o ii.... un i B oratorios, 42 uerman ana iiui telegTHphy. o..no-o SO rnnnnn. 385 Knellsh I Theexternalear.n all ages was adorn- - accompanlment and . hath e, . .t hv nrpc oim Rtones or nreeloua met- . i xnose mat reapetn nam entere their wages. Their complaint Imid ly strikes the ear of God, "The irJ ea oy precious eiones or .rt-uiuB ...ei- f ... ... a.i that to cap-, ... . . f"j - i euro 01 me Liora 01 puuaoin. ture tne gaie oi me ouuy God hear that poor girl Inst eJ in rrom tne tympanum iu m ...a.. Bhe threw herBelf on thl w me uaa kP.-uBO ot lru. . b f tne ocean t. , "the three bright drops, her glittering , " .'": :. , uu'"1 uunseu" "u epm. .imnenrtrl from the ear." and "l ",D me mianignt, "UOa nave mercy' many of the adornments of modern times were only copies of her ear Jewel found In Pompellan museum and Etrus- als. The templeof Jerusalem partly built by the contribution of earrings, and Homer In the "Iliad" speaks of Hera, To conquer the ear and take this 1 you nMy th,nk God CQUld hmi gate of the Immortal soul Schubert YeS( Just as easily as when 15 yew. , J , . . . . ,. ' , world over a thousand garnished only by the hand of the Lord MonB ln mU8lc. T( Almighty. The stroke of a key of yon- anJ take th,B of I dor organ sets the air vibrating, and ,, M-,t B MlDDLEBORGH MARKET. the crternal ear catches the undulat Idk sound and pusses It the bonelets of the middle ear to the "He that planted the ear, shall ht hear?" When a soul prays, God does not bolt upright until the prayer tni Immensity and climbs to his ear. Bible says he bends clear over. Corrected wet kly by our uiercliuii Butter Kkk Onions l,iml Tallow Chickens ier ll Turkeys Hide Blionlder Hum Wlimtt Rye . 1'ut.ltt'lHH Old Corn Oats Bran per 100 lbs Middlings " Chop Flour per lib! 14 O'.l ' 4; 4 II - II u : .. '(I US ,4-- 1)1) 3!) . Sil 75 75 . .? 00 ....... 1 kid -... t "JoT-in n rlf. writ- ... L-uuii'oeu in., b . , Bh tt'DH mpic w rn npnripr. Ti.v, inir tho Btnvea nf the mualc on the bill . j . ., ..'A can vase. But while the outer ear may 7 ' ba wpnt onim 'ol"er "er " . . , of fare ln a restaurant, ana went on . ht n j.ed rop drink nf ml ho nWneil liv human art. the tnlddlH ... . ... "5 lur.n. uiuin ui wu . : . until he could leave as a legacy to me and the Internal ears are adorned and , ,voa ninnpnt To conquer the the immortal soul's castle Mozart strugglea on ttirmicrh nnvprtv until he came to a on through j uioie Buys nu uenuo creur uytr. ... , thn pauper s grave, and one chilly, wet af- , more than one pace Isaiuh BalJ hniiv nr him wno eave to , . . . .... Internal ear. and the 3.000 fibres of the .. .... ... DO"eu oown n,s eBr- lu ",ore lnM . ... , , the world tne -Kequiem ana me niape the riaalmlst said he InclM Minor Symiihony" was cruncnea in on D whlch t come to jjeIiv the top of two other paupers Into & God puts hla ear so close down to J grave which to this day is epnapniess. How surpassingly sacred the human ear! You had better be CRi-eful how you lot the sound of blasphemy or un cleanness Btep Into that holy of holies. The Bible says that ln the ancient human brain take up the vibration and roll the sound on Into the soul. The hidden machinery of the ear by physi ologists, called by the names of things familiar to us, like the hamnftr, some thing to strike; like ths anvil, some thing to be smitten; like the stirrup of the saddle with which we mount the stead; like the drum beaten in the lips that he can hear your fain whisper. It Is not God away up H der; It Is God away down here, cl up, so close up that when you pro him It Is not more a whisper thi kiss. Ah, yes, he hear the capli mar h;. the bar' strings, to be ZT.T" IE f " "1 swept with music. Colled like a "snail shell," by which one of the Innermost passages of the ear ts actually called; Obituary. VcriiilliiJauc, vi(i'tf'(j('orff Irving' JWclieiilmt'li, ami (laujlitcrttC Will iam Curvcll,iiiul lii.s wife JiOiiis, was Ikihi April 7 th l!S(U, dial April 2 LS'.IS, iijrtKl HI! years 11 nut. 2(idas. .She Millcred lltr inaiiy years with consumption, Her lust illness was protracted fur 1" weeks, when she was convertal on her sick led, uiul dial more than a conqueror in the the faith of her Saviour. Shortly liefore she died, she culled her hus IniihI and children to her bedside and requested of them to promise her to liecoiuu convertal, and to ma-t her in Heaven. She extended a fare well hand to all who called to see her, and admonished all to make preperation for eternity. She Mas conscious to the end, and had a great desire to depart and be with her Saviour. 1 ler father, who sacii fioxl his life in the war ot the Re bellion for the freedom and liberty of his country. 1 brother, 1 sister and 4 infant children precedal he; to the spirit world. The berieved husla;.d, 3 children her mother, and father and mother-in-law who so tenderly cared for her, 1 brother, 4 sisters and a large circle ot friends are left to mourn her loss. But their loss is her eternal gain. The writer preached the funeral sermon in the U. B. church at Port Travel-ton Pa, from Kev. 3-5. Interment in the Zion's U. B. cemetery. X putting of the blood of a ram on tne lear and the dying syllables cf tip of the ear, the right ear of the Bhlpwrecked Bailor driven on the si prlost. But, my friends, we need all rle8 and the infant's "Now I lay nt in in Via vo the Barred touch of or- i in na Ji.nni.. . like a stairway, the Bound to ascend; " " ,,., ,,lh , hnth """" . , -""- -ui, - k o ,o.i .nno.. "natlon on tne hanging lobe of both near8 tne fortissimo of brazen I like a bent tube of a heating appara- . ..v, (V, ..... ears, and on the arches of the ears. in the Dusseldorf festival, as easi iui, mav nmuu cuicii luuuu ,u ,U t.,ho the MF nn t. ,. ., the mastoid cells of the ear, on the tne 53 squares of English troops J tympanic cavity of the ear, and on aj their batteries at once at Wat' everything from the outside rim of the ; He that planted the ear can hear and round; like a labyrinth with won derful passages into which the trought enters only to be lost In bewilderment. A muscle contracting when the noise outside ear clear In to the point where Is too loud, Just as the pupil of the eya . . 41, ...j,,, .i . 1 sound Bteps off the auditory nerve and Just as sometimes an entratd strain of music will linger in your rolls on down into the unfathomable J fr days after you have heard It, contracts when the light Is too glaring. . C :.. r..rV, . " ' depths of the immortal soul. The Bible j ju8t as a sharp cry of pain I r , , - V- i speaks of "dull ears," and of "unclr- ; heard while passing through Bell nsectlle Invasion. The Internal ear, , . , . .,..,. ,, ; . , I ,u., t h i . ,u fc.., cumclsed ears." and of "itching ears, hospital clung to my ear for " , I" ,' ' , w,c and of "rebellious ears," and of "opened JuBt as a horrid blasphemy In ", 7 "l 7''lr",, y ears," and of those who have all the;8treet sometimes haunts one s ear. Th; r . . r;;;- " nn. - and wh eem day so God not only hears, but- that by the estimate of ono scientist. ? bd,efcaf' 'or " fcCr,e" ':em: "H the 8onB8' P'W i. i, ?AA ....... that ha'h car t0 hear let hlm hear." worship, the blasphemy. How we i. in annH Th- ... To show how much Christ thought of all wondered at the phonograph, A Ing in all kinds of sound, whetir the the human ef' he ne J"" ma,J holds not only the words you wiiu was ueai, t:i&...c ui iw iinii rhu )iui , ouL tne very luiies ui yuur .u, crash of an avalanche or the hum of a bee. The sound passing to the Innet door of the outside ear halts until an other divine mechanism It on by the bonelets of the mid dle ear, and, coming to the inner doot of that second ear, the sound has no power to come farther until another divine mechanism passes It on through Into the inner ear, and then the round comes to the rail track ef the brain branchlet and rolls on and on until It comes to sensation, and there the cur tain drops, and a hundred gates Bhut, and the voice of God seems to say to all human Inspection, "Thus far and no farther." a finger on the right hand into the orifice of the left ear of the patient and put a finger of the left hand Into the passes or,floo of the rfgnt ear of the patient. that 100 years from now, that IW ment turned, the very words you utter and the very tone of your will be reproduced. Amazing m and agitated the tympanum, and graph! But more wonderful ia 4 startled the bonelets, and with a voice that rang clear through into the man's soul cried, "Ephthatha!" and the poly hold growths gave way, and the in flamed auricle cooled off, and that man who had' not heard a sound for many years that night heard the wash of the waves of Galilee against the limestone shelving. To show how much Christ thought of the human ear, when the apostle Peter got mad and with one In this vestlbl. of th. th- lah ot nl word dropped the ear of oul how many kings of thought, of M,chu ,n tn dust chrlBt created medicine, of physiology, have done a "ew ternRl for Malchus eorre penance of lifelong study and got no mlddle e farther than the vestibule! Mysterl- ,ntern8j ar that no ,wor coul1 CP ous home of reverberation and echo. mwa3r'' Grand Central depot of sound. Head-' And t0 ,how wnat th,nk" of the quarters to which there come quick ear w lnformMl of tn fact at n dispatches, part the way by cartilages. tne millennial June which shall roseate part the way by air, part the way by a" tne earth th ,arl of tBe wln bone, part the way by nerve-the slow- """toPP. vascular growths est dispatch plunging Into the ear at one' M deformation of th listening the speed of 1.0M feet a second. Small 0Tgan cure1' corrected. changed. Instrument of mu.lo on which Is play- Bv,rjr beln on.arth d all the music you ever heard, from ln Pct as Ood knows the grandeurs of an August thunder' storm to the softest breathings of how to make It, and all th ears will be ready for that great symphony In flute. Small Instrument of mu.lc, only h,ch " th m.slcal Instruments f a quarter of an Inch of surface and th thinness ot one-two hundred and fif tieth part of an Inch, and that thin ness .divided Into , three layers. In that ear musical v staff, lines, spaces, bat Ih earth shall play th accompani ment, nations of earth and empires of heaven mingling their Yolcee, together with th deep bass of th sea and th alt of th woods, and th tenor Of winds and th baritone of th thundor, power to hold, to retain Better take that organ away froi sound. Better' take it away fro gossip, from all slander, from A nuendo, from all bad Influence of association. Better put It to j to church, to philharmonic. BettH that ear under the blessed touts Christian hymnology. . Better cfl crate It for time and eternity to who planted th ear. -Rousseau. Infldel, fell asleep amid his M manuscripts lying all around tb and In his dream he entered 1 and heard th song of the worshll and It was so sweet he asked sH what It meant Th angel said.' ts th paradis of God, and the you hear Is th anthem of the rd ed." Under another roll of th i tial muslo Rousseau wakened up In th midnight and, as well could, wrote down th strain! muslo that h had heard In tlx derful tun caUed "The Bongi Redeemed." God grant that be not be to you and to mt an dream, but a glorious reality. w com to th night ot death 11 down- to our last alp, wars really b wakened by th of th heavenly tempi, and the and th anthems and th ear th dxolgiss that shall ollnbv leal ladder of that havaly T. f t ' .