The Middleburgh post. (Middleburgh, Snyder Co., Pa.) 1883-1916, June 30, 1898, Image 2

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    A 1T2W TaiUUPS-
fffc aee.lt
aaa at fallow
(need. .
A JOYOUS RELIGION
. . iikaaid and rtntliir.
win odto aafferers. Three TwBotU lot
Oil gewly Discovered Keroedlee to Core Caa
umuuon and aU tuu ".roubles,
N.rfwwc onuld In- I sKtf. more pbllantroplc or
.-mjmwvl.' Hie -mi.-u-. ".en the
JZr of the honors .n iawinl.i
tr.T.A.H.um.M.C,otNewor.Ully. . .
H- tH)vv" reUal'le anitatrajluieriir.
."im,i m. 10..I .11 brow-Mai. threat. Iuuk
iM' w.ntltigawav.aa.1 ui make m.t
.t-asly sr-cm .rl rjauM'-JSta un) tmkted roed-lUl-
rW. ' . i '
lr-iiv lit -oewr x.:lf rt:lr sve'eai of UH-dl--iuo"
I.a-Mwrmauentlvcur! Uiousvus 01 ap
"iiiiy impel" ,,
vut iMinliU nt ! not inlv III "nana.
t oui. ...it r..iijiw .i,v duty wiiirU he
. d 'u .s -rtu uf.iuanHy do donate li lu
i v'lt:i',,r. . M
H lin li - .1 i-t Hi "iltvartwl i-oimuinpilon"
O In- Clt- l'.- il.l'll hhvhihI u U'llll.l. In HIlV
, -iltll.tt. H.I.I U.l tit-' til 111 AtU.Tll'UII and
fl.rsaH uta.rm.il.n t'l'iuiiMiiH of heartfelt
. n-i tMiti-i.f If" truii thine Imjiii-IHUmJ
. Vii'l .m.i iii p-i. flit' wiirl.l.i
C u Tti J ; initirv troiitMVs I."") t eon-
' - M1U..I !l'l. Mild tHII'llnlil.'IHI. llt.tlll.MTUll.
-.U.M'1-M0. .!. liU.l u.'lliilll H'h. IHHl't ui'lity
mm!.: f i. i-h. In-1 S'mtilv write T. A. Mocillu,
M r . w i-.iir 'r-i.. New York, giving expreNt
.i.l (.lof.i.wHl.lf'N iim'I ihi" iri- mi-ll.-li.e
Mil ., Hiir.. m i l', -!.! I'im.ho t.'li lue D.x-lor
. OU a i. ix i. , IT III III-
(fiKE PERFECT BED :
DO NOT DESPAIR !
Not atMBVr Uiitrl The
Iovn aud iiihitlon ur fan
Iw rUired to too. Tin' ver
I tv ahf.iluU'hr Piinif hi
l.i:ii,niii.l roliof tu Inwmula
I filtltnK njt'ni.iry auu iiiv
' an1 rtrnlnof lial K.w'ri.liirur
red hv InilNpn'tliiliRUrexreiiiiK
ol i';irl) jours. ln.iirt vlitor
. nm.'.i In Msln wrnm roil 'UM, "'J,'!??
For f-iil" in MiddWiuruli, 1'n., by
MWtlli-lnirf: Drnj? Co., inMt.rhns
nt MH'h I iy ll'iirvlliiriliiir,nrl in
.I Vim's ( nrk ly .1. W. Stiinpoll.
1
HAIR
HEALTH
2
Never fail to Rs- M
new Youthful Color 2
and Life to CraySJ
Hoir.
un. iiAVn
HAIR HEALTH.
IVivra HAI.lv anola
Htnpa dandruff, hair j
la ni. icalo auraanp.
or lloan. Abeolulely
Dm t ataln akla
ha .-mica.
Gives Perfect Satisfaction.
IKI IIAIIl GIlOWEIl DRESSIRO
fnr Mn Womn, Ihllrtren. II ironr hair !
FAI.I.INU. KAIMMJ or Till
;RAi try at once UK
IIBAL.TII.
or TIHiHIJU
HAY'S HAIH
: Only 50 Cents Per Large Bottle.
Prpard hf 1
KD3 HvopdTr, N. V
nrnald. ttiarther With
llAV'H KII.L CORN, onljr tar and
st:ppi.Y co.
who will aen4 It
a raaa of UK.
laatant COHSI ( HtB, on rectlpt
of ulr. thr Mittlrn. 01 C
AT JU-i. LHADINQ DKUOOtSTS. X
If DON'T ACCEPT ANY SUBSTITUTE, j
NESS & HEAD NOISES Cl'RED
Inaiantly. Our INVIHinLB TUBS
Cu-rmin. hlp whr. all u faila. at
I'uarl l.lp ty" B.ii-nuj.".., .-. ya.n.
Whl.r twil. Hrno to.K. Ill.o.i Co, 8S8
ttroadnat , K. " for llluitrted book DDDO
Jid Pnx.fa
DEAF
SFECIAL NOTICES
nihli ii'hrnlun rn' (! Ai iy (li'Sriliilinri.
.Vaiil. sail" r lit ii'. I,.i.'l K.miiil r Hut ih
ici-s iiiH. il. .'. niiiii r il. N l.tiul lur I'li.'-lmli ci-i
i (.? ! ii.r on.' tn--rrlii.il u !"l niii-li'iiri h i flit it
wnrl m.-Ii Mit.- i..ii'iit tn-i'itlon. NulliliK In
scr'i'il lor ,.f,s I hi. i ti'ti iviiIh.
N.-To-Hu
i .1 !.! .1 t
iOt.'O !.l. t)lur ....
for Klfty tenia.
iU'r.i linliil cure. iniiIii'H wi'iilt
I vir.. doc l Ml ' ' i
Eilnrnlo Vour Hnwrlii With I'HWiirrt
Canity finhnrt If, ciin- coimtlpatlon fm-iver.
I'Jo.iZf.. II t:. C. C. lull, ilrut'iriM-sri fuml iiinm y.
A t. from Hie Kill lor.
TU!' .-.litor nf n I. HiliiiK K'nl" iii:r vriti-
K i nn l.ii.l m-cii my iff lnt Jum- niid m: t.i
-.oeeff tiwiiiy you wmilil not U-lifVe ulie ui
ilif taine uoiii'iiir Tlii-n ulif 'n hrnken il.iwn :
jy oervmiN .l. l.ilitv anil millru-.l t.-rril.ly from
oiitiiuilion an iek livailvli. Iln-.ir 'I
try king lor Ilif N.-rvf inii.le ln-r a wull u-oiniin
i un uiic iniiiilli.', V. II. Ili-rniiiii, 'J'rovfl
tile: Miil.llrawurtll & I ' In la. .M.CIlir; II. A.
.i.ri(,'lit. Ainu- will kivh you n frii- Mitiiilc .
;aukui:.' of tin- K"'i' I ' -- i I 1 tfliu-l' Ijirife .
mzci. liV ainl
M I NlSTHATOIfS NOTICE. J..'t
tcriii.l Adltlinihtnitioii i II t Ii f
Mute ol Vr. l-artill Ili'liHT latf of C. nirt twp
Mml.T cuunty. I'n.. ilix 'd, baviim lieen tn.i.li'U
o the ui.J. t'ni .l, all ).rrm Iiiii.kIi.k thein.
elvui- lixlfhlpil to mini P'tntu uru rcoul'Mt.l In
inka luiii'it.hatf .u) input, while tlniK liiKlrv
.altu tvlll .nnui tlieiu duly u ut lif u ' leal e.l ti.
tt. UlJilorMllM.I.
WILLIAM IiKNKKIi
Apr. IK. 1HVK. Ailin'r.
ADTlNISTIJATOlfrt NOTICE Lt
tern or AtluiitilxtrHtioii ill the
rnxntr ol IpO. Kfrn, lu'e of Miihlleb'ltvh.
Hnydpf county, I'a., dc-e'd. havlnic Iw-t-n uraiiteil
tuttiv .iuJpr"iK. c-'l. nil pcTMiim kiiou'inif thrill
ulv iiiilt'tJteil to uld tatp nre re.Urtpil to
make liumudiat,: p.ivmciit. whilv tliow liavinu
, ln.mill prpwnt thuin duly autlieutUati-it to
lite underpinned.
I. A. KKItN.
' av V4. IrP.iH U. M. MOAT..
;jti'ulUIHN-rt, AU'y Adm'r.
5000 BICYCLES
All maJtrMi mnd nnxltjU,
NiHtf tiet'lutrd umt at OfHV.
mjiUd, l.r Ut IH
"htiworo nd aartt
t drl, l U MA.
aaalleK. HhlVIi1 to OH If (Met
m MntioijJ without ailmw.1 dtt-
HjtnltMWiiHiu'enIr bouk tm.
VlLl A Mi tt'X'i'l It
Of HUt work fur iA.UV.t I'HK T Mmple W
ut ri'U r Hvnt. Writ- Rt iw tor ur cll (frr.
r ML MKAIf St FttKNTIttN. IWch-i lit
fJM'PHREYS,
mm
m.'iw wa -5
eaV-
0
10
'G.
J'k.
Nc.
.No.
..No.
No,
"No. in
No, ro
Na 17
DO
Ma 77
Cures Fever.
" In rants' Diseases.
" Diarrhea.
" Neuralgia.
' Headache.
' Dyiepsla.
14 Cuma Skin Diseases.
' Rheumatism.
' Whooping Cough
' Kidney Diseases.
' Urinary Diseases
4 Colds and Orlp.
ftoM by rlrurjrljU. or eent prepaid a poo reoeVpt
aWTteTWUUatB Ut, KoeT York,
Dr. TaJmaice doe
oot advocate lonf
faced Chrletiavne
and la thla aermoi
be apeaka ttroncl)
la favor of health
ful tnuNmenti,
The test la Jud
ges zvi, S3: "An4
K came to - past
when their hearts were oaerry that they
aali!. 'Call for SamjUJn that he may
make ut lDort. And they called foi
Sampson out of the prison house and
he made them sport.'
T:erj were 3.000 people assembled la
the Temple of Daffon. They had oomt
to make sport of eyeless Sampson. They
we: e all ready for entertainment They
b. i. in to clap and pound. Impatient foi
the amusement to begin, and they
in il: "Fetch him ou,t! Fetch him
OLt!" Yonder I see the blind old giant
coining, led by the hand of a child into
Hie vi-iy midst of the temple. At his
nrt"l appearance there goes up a shout
of Lu.. IiUt and derision. The blind old
1,1..:.. ....'tends he is tired and wants t.
a-:., .limatlf against the pillart of the
liui..' . to he says to the lad who leads
liiit.: "lirins me where the main pH
Ium am." The lad does so. Then Hit
sue i. ; ;;u:n I'UtM a.s hand.-i on cno ol
tin.- ;i!l!i r;i, ti:id, with the r.ilKhtlaat
jiu !i narta! ever made, chrows
hliinei. furwarJ unlll the whole hoti.-t
co.!:.-. 'uown in ii.a::.irous crash,
ai.uUir.if the audlcn -e ilko Krapva in
wine presK. "And -to Ii. came to pah!
w.-.i'ii tlicir hearts were merry, th:it
tiiey said 'Call for Sampson that he
nmy ir.alte us sport.' And they called
for Hampiton out of the prison house
ami he made them sport." In other
words, there are amusements tht? are
dtsuuctlve and bring down taster
ami death upon the heads of those who
practice them. While they laugh unj
L-iu-ir tiiey die. The 3,0t'l) who perishej
that il;iy in Uata are nothing compared
lth the tins of thousands who havs
beim destroyed, body, mind and soul,
by bad umuuenients and by good
amusements carried io excess.
In my sermons you must have no
;icivl that 1 have no sympathy with
ecclesiastical straltjackets or with
that wholesale denunciation of amuse
ments to which many are pledged. I
believe the church of Ood has made
a tremendous mistake in trying to sup
preps the aportfulneBS of youth and
drive out from men their love of amuse
ment, if God ever Implantod anything
in us he implanted this desire. But
instead of providing for this demand
of our nature, the church of God hta
for the main part Ignored U. As in a
riot the mayor plants a battery at th
end of the street and has it tired oft,
so that everything Is cut down that
happens to stand in the range, the good
as well as the bad, so there are men
In the church who plant their batteries
of condemnation asd nre away indis
criminately. Our communities are filled with
men and women who have In their
souls unmeasured resources for sport
fulness and frolic. Show me a man
who never lights up with sportfulness
and has no sympathy with the recrea
tions of others, and I will show you a
man who is a stumbling block to the
kingdom of God. Such men are carica
tures of religion. They lead young
people to think that a man is good in
i.ronorilon its he groans and frowns
and looks sallow and that the height
of a man's Christian stature Is in pro
portion to the length of his fuce.
would trade off 5M such nun fur one
bright f.-utd, radiant Christian on
whose fo-e nre the words "Htjoics
evermore!" Kvery niornlntt by his
cheerful fuce he preaches 50 sermons.
1 will go further and jy that I have
no eonlldence in a man who makes a
religion of his gloomy looks. That kind
of a man always turns out badly. I
would not want him for the treasurer
t,t an orphan asylum. The orphan
would suffer.
Among -IO people whom I received in
to the church at one communion, there
was only one applicant of whose piety
I wns suspicious. He had the longest
story to tell, had seen the moBt vi-ti'ins
nnd gave an experience so wonuVrful
that all the other applicants were d.B
ciiuiaged. I was not surprised the year
after to learn that he had run off with
the funds of the bank with which he
i was connected. Who is this black an-
gel that you call religion wings black,
; feet bluck, feathers black? Our relig
i ion Is a bright angel feet bright, eyes
! bright, wings bright, taking her place
j in the soul. She pulls a rope that
i rcui-hes to the tklcs and ni ls all thi
bells of heaven a-chlmlng. There are
! iun:e persons who, when talking to a
minister, always feel it politic to look
lugubrious. Go forth, O people, to your
lawful amusement. God means you
to be happy.. But when there are to
many sources of Innocent pleasure why
tamper with anything that Is danger
ous and polluting? Why stop our ears
to a heaven full of songsters to llHten
to the hist of a dragon? Why turn
back from the mountain aide, all n
bloom with wild flowers and a-da.th
with (he nimble torrents, and with
blistered feet attempt to climb the hot
sides of Cotopaxl?
Now, all oa-era houses, theatres, bow
ling alleys, skating rinks and all styles
of amusement, good and bad, I put on
trial to-day and Judge of them by cer
tain cardinal principles. First, you may
Judge of any amuaenient by Its health
ful result or baneful reaction. There
re people who seem iraada vp of hard
faott. They are a combination of mul
tiplication tablet and ststlstlct If you
how them sa axiiulfttt picture they
wttl begin to dlaciiaw the pigments In
volved Is the color.. . It you show
them s beautiful rote they will sub
mH It to a botannl yu nlrla, which
la only the post mo cam examination ol
a tower. Thay sever. do anything
tsaa feaMr
rest tides of feeling surging up from
the depth of their soul la billow after
blUow of reverberating laughter. They
went aa If nature had buUt them, by
contract and made a bungling Job of
It. , But. blessed be God. there art
people la the world wne bar bright
face and whose life la a ong, aa an
them, a paean of victory. Even their
troubles are like the vines that crawl
up: the aide of a great tower on the
top of which the sunlight alts and the
oft hira of summer hold perpetual car
nival. They are the people you tike
to have come to your house. . They are
the people I like to has come to my
house. Now, It it these exhllarant and
sympathetic and warm-hearted people
that are most tempted to pernicloua
amusements. In proportion at a ahlp
Is swift It wantt a strong helmsman
In proportion at a horse It gay it wants
a strong driver, and these people of
exuberant nature will do well to look
at the reaction of all their amusemertta
If an amusement tends you home at
night nervous to you cannot sleep, and
you rlae la the mornrng not because
you are slept out, but because your
duty drags you from your slumbers,
you have been where you ought not to
have been. There are amusements
that send a man next day to his work
bloodshot, yawning, stupid, nauseated,
and they are wrong kinds of amuse
ments. There are entertainments that
give a man disgust with the drudgery
of life, with tools because they are
swords, with working aprons because
they are not robes, with cattle because
they are not infuriated built of the
arena. M anv amusement sends you
home longing for a life of romance and
thrilling adventure, love that takes poi
son and shoots Itself, moonlight adven
tures and hair breadth escapes, you
may depend upon It that you are the
sacrificed victim of unsanctlfled pleas
ure. , Our recreations are intended to
build ua up, and if they pull ut down
at to our moral or at to our physical
strength you may come to the conclu
sion that they are obnoxlout.
Still further, those amusements are
wrong which lead Into expenditure be
yond your means. Money spent In rec
reation it not thrown away. It la all
folly for ua to come from a place of
amusement feeling that we have wasted
our money and time. You may by
it have made an Investment worth more
than the transaction that yielded you
$100 or 11,000. But how many proper
ties have been riddled by costly amus-
ments? The table has been robbed to
pay the club. The champagne has
cheated the children's wardrobe. The
carousing party has burned up the
boy's primer. The tablecloth of the
corner saloon It In debt to the wlfe't
faded dress. Excursions that in a day
make a tour around a whole month's
wages, ladies whose lifetime it is to
"go shopping," have their counterpart
in uneducafed children, bankrutcles
that shock the money market and ap
pall the church and that send drunken
ness staggering across the richly figu
red carpet of the mansion and dashing
into the mirror, and drowning out the
carol of music with the whooping of
bloated sons come home to break the'r
old mother's heart. When men go into
amusements that they cannot afford
they first borrow whn,t they cannot
earn, and then they steal what they
cannot borrow. First they go Into em
barrassment and then Into theft, and
when a man guts as far on as that he
does not stop short of the penitentiary.
You may judge i f amusements by
their effect upon physical health. Thi
need of many good people Is physical
recuperation. There are Christian men
who writs hard things against their
Immortal souls when there is nothing
the mutter with them but an Incompe
tent liver. There are Christian people
who Beem to think that it is a good
Blgn to be poorly, and because Richard
Baxter and . Robert Hall were invalids
they think 'that by the same sickness
they may come to the same grandeur
of character. I want to tell Christian
people that God will hold you responsi
ble for your invalidism if It is your
own fault and when through right ex
ercise and prudence you mielit be ath
letic and well. The effect of the body
upon the soul you acknowledge.
Agu'n, Judge of the places of amuse
ment by the companionship Into whien
they put you. If you belong to an or
ganization where you have to associ
ate with the Intemperate, with the un
clean, with the abandoned, however
well they may be dresied, In the name
of God quit It: They will despoil you.
nature. They will undermine your mo
ral character. They will drop you
when you are destroyed. They will
not give one cent to support youi'
children when you nre dead. They will
weep not one tear at your burial. They
will chuckle over your damnation. But
the day comes when the men who have
exerted evil Influence upon their fel
lows will be brought to Judgment.
Scene, the last day. tHage, the rock
ing earth. Enter dukes, lords, king,
beggars, clowns. No sword. No tlnsol.
No crown. For footlights, the kindling
flames of a world. For orchestra, the i
replied: "Tea, I a If
aha. "do you remember
"Well." aalJ
who. put' it
i
trumpets that wake the dead. For gal- I
lery, the clouds filled with angel spec
tators. For spplauso, the clapping
Moods of the sea. For curtains, thn
heavens rolled together at a scroll. For
tragedy, the doom of the destroyed.
For farce, the effort to serve the world
and God at the tame time. For tho
last tcene of the fifth act, the tramp
of nationt across the stage, tome to the
right, others to the left
There la not a prison la th land where
than are not victims of unaaaoUfleJ
amusement!. How often Dv I had
parents com to ma and ask tris to ga
and beg their boy off frem the eonaa
nuartoaa of erlmaa that aa had cam
mated against hit tmploVsr tbt taan
there r "Yes," aaid ha. "I 'put It
there." And all the paat seemed to
rush upon h lav By the memory of that
day when m the pisaeace ot men and
angels- you promised to be faithful In
Joy and aorrew and In sickness and la
health; by the memory of those pleas
ant hours, when you aat together In
your new house talking of a. bright
future f by the cradle and the excited
hour when one life waa spared and
another given; by that tick bed, when
the' little one lifted up Ita hand and
called for help and you knew he must
die, and he put one arm around each
of your . necks and brought you very
near together In trial dying kiss; by
the little grave In the" cemetery that
you never think of without a rush of
teart; by the family Bible, where In
In storlea of heavenly love la the brief
but expressive record of births and
deaths; by the neglect of the paat and
the agonies of the future; by a Judg
ment day when husbands and wives,
parents and children, In immortal
groups will stand up to be caught up
in shining array or to shrink down into
darkness by all that I beg you to give
to home your best affections. I look
In your eyes to-day and I ask you the
question that Gehail asked of the Shu
nammlte: "Is It well with thee? Is
It well with thy husband? Is It well
with thy child?" God grant that 11
may be everlasting well!
Let me say to all young men your
style of amusement will decide your
eternal destiny. One night I saw a
young man at a street corner evidently
doubling as to which direction he had
lei.tr take. He had hi hat lifted
blgh enough so that you could see he
had an Intelligent forehead. He had
a stout chest: he had a robust develop
ment Splendid young man. CuHured
young man. Honored young man. Why
did he atop there, while so many were
going up and down? The fact la that
very man has a good angel and a bad
angel contending for the mastery of
his spirit. And there was a good angel
and a bad angel struggling with that
young man's toul at the corner df the
street.
"Come with me," said the good an
gel. "I will take you home. I will
spread my wing over your pathway. I
will lovingly escort you all through life,
I will bless every cup you drink out of,
every couch you rest on, every door
way you enter; I will consecrate your
tears when you weep; your sweat when
you toll; and at the last I will hand
over your grave into the hand of the
bright angel of a Christian resurrec
tion. In answer to yqur father's pe
tition and your mother's prayer I have
been tent of the Lord out of heaven
to be your guardian spirit. Come with
me," aaid the good angel, in a voice of
unearthly symphony. It waa muslo
like that which drops from a lute ot
heaven when a seraph breathes on it
"No! No!" taid tht bad angel, "come
with me. I have something better to
offer. The wines I pour are from chal
ices of bewitching carousal. The dunce
I lead is over floor tessellated with un
restrained Indulgences. There is no God
to frown on the templet of sin where
I worship. The skies are Italian. The
paths 1 tread are through meadows,
daisied and prlmrosed. Come with me!"
The young man hesitated at a time
when hesitation waa ruin, and the bad
angel smote the good angel until it de
parted, spreading wings through the
starlight upward and away until a door
flashed open In the sky and forever the
wings vanished. That was the turning
point in that young man's history, for.
the good angel flown, lie hesitated no
longer, but started on a pathway which
Is beautiful at the opening, but blasted
at tho last. The bad angel, leading
the way, opened gate after gate, anl
at each gate the road became rougher
mid thn sky more lurid, and, w hat was
peculiar, as the gate slammed shut It
came to with a Jar thut indicated that
it would never open.
Passed each portal there was a grin
ding of locks and a shoving of bolt,
and the scenery on either side the
road changed from gardens to deserts,
and the June air became a cutting De
cember blast, and the bright wings of
the bad angel turned tu sackcloth and
the waves of light became hollow with
hopeilt'KS grief, and the fountains that
nt the start had tosssd wine poured
forth bubbling tears and foaming
Mood, and on the right tide of the road
there was a serpent, and the man said
to the bad angel: "What Is that ser
pent?" And the answer was: "That
is the serpent of stinging remorse." On
the left side of the road there was a
lion, and the man acked the bud angel:
"What is that lion?" And the answer
was: "That is the lion of all devour
ing despair." A vulture flew through
thn sky and the man, asked the bad
angel: "What Is that vulture?" And
the answer was: "That Is the vulture
waiting for the carcasses of the slain."
And when the man began to try to
pull off of him the folds of something
that had wound him round and round,
and ho said to the bad angel: "What
Is it that twists me In thla awful con-
Bid Yea Tdz)
Scott's,,
EmuflioEi
through the winter? If so, we
are sure it quieted your coufh,
healed the rawness in your
throat, increased your weight,
gave you more color, and made
you feel better in every way.
But perhaps your cough has
come back again, or you are get
ting a little thin and pale. ,
Then, why not continue the
same helpful remedy right
through the summer? It will do
you as much good as when the
weather is cold.
Its persistent use will certain.,
give you a better appetite and a
stronger digestion.
It will cure your
weak throat and heal
your inflamed lungs.
It will cure every case
of consumption, when
a cure is possible.
Don't be persuaded
to take something they say is just
as good.
All Dragg'sta, ant f i.
SCOrr ot BuWXE, CheaiiMa, K.Y.
Razclir Tti 1
-o- i
SELINSOKOYE 1
hrr.i rat it
aJUTYflL
w ii 'rni. ft)
and fc. .laeqo
my workj-urj
it favors I ,Uoit"2
utinnance of hJ
AifflinbUrg
Aarble Works.
R. H- LANCE. D.. 1?
MARLE AND SCOTCH GRANITE
MoMMts, Ums aid
ACemetery l6t&
Enclosures.
Old Stones Cleaned and Repaired
Prices as Low as the Lovrest.
SATISFACTION GUARANTEED,
J. A. JENKINS, Ag'n,
4JriiH8urove, Pa.
iTlLODDPOISOn
l ertPM Ml I W Prlmar. a
C lcmrflLoD VUISCW
u
Boensnre, It we full to euro. If yoa 4e taken mer
cury. Iodide uotiiah, and etllf hare aches ana
pain, M oeoasVatclww hi oouth Sore Throat
rlmplea. Copper Cslored Hpats, Ulcer on
any part of the body, Ilairor Eybrowe fallinor
oot. It It this Secondare BLOOD Ffliso
nafe easea and challenge tha world for a ! BO W ER & P A WT.TNfl
csaeweoaanotcura. Thla dteiue bat always L V JUXb ve A I IjAJU,
Attornevfl-fit-Law
M. L. MILLER, - - pl
I keep constantly on b.ndanii J
faeture to order all kiuds of
Marble and Granite
iusts And Mw
Old Stones Claanoi and Ileuirri.
LOW PRICES! LOW IMmcJ
I have one of the best Jrnl.rj
ters in tbe Star and .... ?(
turn out jtootl work.
ItiVOotue and aea
Thankful for nast
Sliectfullv aalr a anntln
. - . M.iiiiigutr oi aa
M. L. MILL?
New War Songs and MBit
Two of tbe morit popular piece,,
tu U810 arranged for uiano nH J
have just been issued by the PooS
Music Co,. Indianapolis, Ind "BrJ
Our Heroes Home,' dedicated M
ueroes oi me U. . JJattleHliipJ
is one of tbe finest national Z
ever written. The music is utirS
and the words linjfwith rmtrioti,
Diwev's Battle of Manilla jjt-Two-Step"
in H tine inslruiont
piece and will live forever as a w
oiur ui me greatest naval event
tbe World's hiorr Eit.hor .....
these pieces and Pouplar Manic J?
containing 18 pages f nil sheet mJ
o7ud un reciepc oi crnts.
Address Pofolar Music Co.,
Indianapolis, Ind.
Biioi Wall Cfii
Is Heed for I'lastering IioiiN&
It is-a new dt?cvery
Guaranteed to last lungi
than any other plastsr. j
is preferred to Adamant
For jnirtioulars caU on ocadJrJ
D. A.EM M1DDLESUBG3; II
(Duaticeof the Peace
AND CONVEYANCER.
M. Z. STEIMNGtH.
Middlcburgh, K
F.K. R4MTCK.
K. t. I'AWLhj
filed thaaklll of tha mo.t ......JTiVLVt"
elans. 8300,000 oaartal behind our nncondi.
tlonnl froarantr. Absolute proofs lent sealed on
application. AdaYrwa COOK. REMEDY CoZ
SOI Uasonlo Temple, VUIUWO, UJU
Mr. P. Ketchaia of Pilte City, Oil.,
says : "During my brsther'H late
sickness from sciatic rheumatism,
ChHinbi'ilaiu's Pain BhIlj whb the
only remedy tlia' uuve him anv re
lief." Many others have testified
to tho prompt relief from pain which
this huiinent affords. For Mile by
all Drugeistis.
Offices lu Uank BullOtng.
JA8. O. CROUBE,
aTTOKJ-JIT AT LAW,
MlDDLKBUI18,fj
All bineiB ntrnste.1 to liSscJ
will receive ircmipt attention.
Not Par from .
"lie claims to be a tout hern platter."
"lie doesn't look like one."
"lie is, though. He is a Mobile undc
laker." N. Y. EveningJonrnal.
Noncommittal.
"Whar'd you gitdat chicken, Mose?"
"Skiue me, Mandy, 1 can' tell a lie
an' I don' wnnter commit myself." N.
i. Truth.
Ah, Lost Yemth.
Warwick Your son has no c.xpen
lvo habits, I believe.
Wick wire He husu't? Thntboyhas
had tho bicycle sundry habit for over
threw years, and Inst month was ex
posed to the kodak habit. He's making
the parlor over into a dark room now.
N. Y. Journal.
CHAS. NASH PURVIS,
Collections, Loans
and Investim:
Kent Katnle and Private BanKfi.
Hilliuiuapoi't, Lycoming Co.,
Deposit? M'cepiud, subject todrattsotcM
ruin suy piiri ui me worm.
a. rx. Potticsci
VETERINARY SURCEOiV
SELINSAROVE, PA.
All proA-ssloiiul business entrusted to m;
will receive prompt and careful attention.
Newly Established.
WEST PERRY HOTE
OncftHirf h mile East of RU lHi
Teams free for traveling men todi
to town, beforo or utter net
Kates 75 cents per Day.
T. 33. Hoss, Fro
volution?" And the answer was: "That
It the worm that never diet." And then
the man taid to ths bad angel: "What
does all this mean? I trusted In what
you said at the corner of the street
that night. I trusted It all and why
have you' thus deceived me?" Then
the Istt deception fell off the charmer
and It said: "I waa sent forth from
the pit to destroy your toul. I watch
ed my ohaao for maay a long year.
Whea you hetltated that night on tht
treat I lain my triumph. Now yon
art hare. Bat Mat Tou ar hert! Come
now, Ut us aYU these two challcea of
flrt ssd dtiaft totethar to darkness and
wo ssd dears. Hall, taafll" ' Oh young
man, will the rood angel Mat forth by
Sacrificed to
Blood Poison.
Those who have never had Blood Poi
son can not know what a desperate con
dition it can produce. This terrible
disease which the doctors are totally
unable to cure, la communicated from
one generation to another, Inflicting its
taint upon countless innocent ones
Some yrara ago I wan Inncnlnted with poison
i by a nurse who Infmstcil n:y babe with blood
laint. -inn nine one waa
Unequal to the strugtfle,
ana its me waa yinutra
Up to the fearful poison.
f or six long years i ui
furod untold misery. I
was oovorcd with sores '
and ulcers from head tu
foot, and no language
ean express my feelings
oi woe uunng mose long .
years. I bad the best
medleal treatment. 8ev
eral phytletana succes
sively treated me, but all'
to no nurnnaa. Tha mar.
ciirr and notash seemed to add .fuel to tht
awful name whtoh was devouring me. I was
advised by friends who had seen wonderful
eures made by It, to try Swift's Bpeoine. . We
not two bottles, and I felt hone emln revive In
my breast hope for health and happiness
of fuada sat f tht mptoytr'a lll, , S-'lLir.!', ,
J.I. Ah aaaaaaafal . . - -
ths
SVAw. -l Au - - - - -
I saw v wayward fca4 lUaCM i"r "T.Z ,
at Um 4MU. bed sf .Ute,CaC3krWl dtsUnt. M am.ta ApskaftMS Ml
and I saw her pftlat tftaff a fcsf and ooador la aald-waty. This hour
fager and heard her say t Mr k. may dM.de your tostlar. Ood help yawl
-Ps rH ass that tlaarv Es ts . w iw . M
train I Imnmnll from tha atari, and a flOln
nTi! anil nerfMil aura waa the recall. 8. S. 8,
U tbe only blood remedy whleh reeohes des
perate eases,
-
i-i'W.'.'
. m ur 1
mmm, . " . war..
Montgomery, Ala.
Of the manv blood remedies. 8. S. 8,
is the only one which ean reaoh deep
seated, violent catet. It never fails io
cure perfectly and ' permanently ths
most desperate cases wntcn srs dstoim
the reach ot other remedies. . , t - .
ta Kbslt -vsaiTasUi. and la ths only
blood remedy gaarsntsad to contain no
mercury, potash, or other minsral.
Valuabls books mailed two by Swift
OBTAINS
nATCMTQ
rniLiiiWTEm si
Consult or communicate with the if
of this paper, who will give all netiM.
rcatlon.
A Common Dnuger.
If vnu have ever had a cold which 1
mlttud to "wear away" it may lntroii jj
la waa a tlaiiuvroiM urooeediiiK. 1
Cold and cough whloli is neglected iar
way for coiimiinptloii, broncnitm, a""T
catarrn. Ulto suura. me tuniouar-rnw-i
. MniHic will mi r anv L'Ollxn " l
anil aava vou from Ponaumutton. H'7
II. Herman, iroxoivtiio: animio--i
Vlah, MeClure: II. A. Kbrlght, Alliieanc .
ample bottle free. Irge sizes Vfc "iv
Beattty la Blood Deep.
flnn Mrwul tnnnna a
tic clean your blood and keep it.cH
stirring tip the lasy liver and """"n
nuritiua from til hnilv. lil'JIll lfh)M
banisli pimples, boils, blotches,
nnd that sickly bilious complexion H'l
Lascarets, beauty lor ten cents. ',
gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c.
Union Steam Launi
Adart3 & YoUtz, Prop's.,
. Mfflirburg,
FAULTLESS LINEN
crowning feature of evening
The UNION- FINISH W
this laundry is famous speaks
of painstaking care in every
Collars and cuffs ironed with
Ivory-likk Edges.
. DalAaa ftA l.Vft
ffaV IwWtf 9MW es-ass. - a
We'lcd ; others follow.
, Uca CurUlns a Specif,
G. A. Qtmxiurj, Agt, J
, ( , , .Middlebuit
.-v. ' . A"'-- )
ffW,l!'!J1tllHtW'iW