The Middleburgh post. (Middleburgh, Snyder Co., Pa.) 1883-1916, August 25, 1898, Image 2
Crippled by Rheumatism. Tboit who have Rheumatism find ttotneslves growing steadily worse ail tbe white. One reason of this is that tb remedies prescribed by the doctors contain mercury and potalh, which ul timately intensify the dlttoase by caus ing the Joint to swell arid stiffen, Producing a severe aching of the bones. . 8. S. lias been curing Rheumatism far twenty yearseven the worst oases which aeeniod almost Incurable. CmM. O.K. Hushes, the po polar railroad ocdantor, of Columbia, 8. 0M bad as expert toe with RheuuieUam. whlaa convinced him Ibat there la onlr cne uf tor that painful dls caw. Bih;i:hI whi frreat twiSerer from mus cular RhtmnatUm for two year. 1 could eat n pwoiDtol relief from any mullein pre en -li.wd by my phyitlolau. 1 took about a aoeen but Its o( rour S. 8. 8., eud row 1 am u well as I ever vrailnmy life. Ian cure that your medtelne eered rie. and I would at,ftn nan il 1 i Ia .n nna aJarlng frum aoybluod dlssise." Everybody knows that Rheamatism is a diseaswl state of the blood, and only a blood remedy is the only proper treatment, but a remedy containing jwtash and mercury only aggravates tins trouble. S.S.SBlood being Purely Vegetable, goes direct to the very cause of the disease and a per manent cure always results. It la the only blood remedy guaranteed to con tain no potash, mercury or other dan. gerous minerals. Books mailed free by Swift Specific Company, Atlanta, Georgia. PENNSYLVANIA KAILROAD. Sonbury A Lewistown Division. In effect June 20, 1898. WSSTWaED I D1S. 8TAT10. kiitwaid f m I 23 4.M 4.M 4.liV 4 01 3 :. Ml xv a m i .1 ii itii 1 '.i 1 is S7 I v Vi.uo VlUt I J. hi Ml. 46' ll.Ki HI.! in.' n.iv 1! Ii 12.iW I I M lli 10.4.1 10 n Id. 81 1'l.JJ !.1T 10 A. I. Lewlatuwn J. Main Street laowlatown Maltlao.l i'aintar Sulmll Waitoar Mmllura Kaob's Mills Adanbnri( F.eavertowo Knl-r M IUIabnrKb elaor li roaroar Pawlton Sallomjrove Sol'.n:'Kroro J. So')'ar a m I. ao 7. S3 7.1 7.4.1 7.4V 7.64 T.S" B AH S.1S S.1V s.vj i.r.i n.40 8 4 344 M II. (kl o.tM 0.19 m .0 Suit S.m 8.20 S.2il J a ' II II IT in IJ at 10 in ?j 17 .3 4 M 8.3 1 1.4S asi 8..V 4x4 4.14 4 2 . 4.f 4.3J 4 4'i 4 41 03 Train leaves Suubury 5 25 p in, ar rives t StiliuRgrove 5 45 p in Trains leave Le wintown Junction : 4 'jS ft m. in n n m,12S7 I' ra.S '17 11 m.T 07 11 M p m AjK-xim, rMttMiuru: and I lie want, r ir Halttui'irH .mil Wahlnton u 35 a m 1 Oi. i : 3 15. 1 l ii m K ir l'lilla'lnlhl anl Nf Vcri; M33 9 ra m. 1 111 1 33 4 43 and 1110 pm For Kurrnlmrn 7 0 1 a in .mil s 24 in Philadelphia A Erie R R Division. AN I) NO.tTUKKN CKNTKAIj RAILWAY Trains have Wunbury dally xce.t Sunilny : I -I u in Ii r I'rie .iti'l I'ana.i'Umu.i .0 n m inr 1! -llnliitita Krlaau.l I'anandalirua 4lam Kir'Lek Hivoii.TiTone aii'l'he Weal. I 10 pin fm lVlti-fMiite Kiocl CatiatdalKU "a !jp m lor hnnnvn mill Klmlra v ; ' ii to inr Willi wuspnit Sunday !l l n in lor Kne ami ('anandaUua n.Mi.i rurliek lUvoa ami Silpin for Wl' 1, iicinmrl i; Hi B tcrr':itawi.a ami lUMlfin tiutni, H 5 ii in 3 ill) a U.I 5 4-lp'nlor Wllkaf- h-"T and llarelton 7 y a uu, H '-'i .i m, I m i in, 5 41 1 tn for Slmmo k' ii n'l M"Uii I'Hrmcl .suuday V .VI i ui l'ir U'llkadiuriS Tmin Inave SelinKrorn Junction V"m o m, f" 'l i.v urrtvliiu nt t'lii I ctolphl ? til v m Nr York S VS p m iUltliuora S 11 p Di S ltiLirti'n 4 lu pin y in lily arrlvinic at I'liilmlelphla . it" in New Ynrk Itum, Hinlmoro 9 IS p m V-Klliut'iii 10 56 p m. nSlpm. wi'-K dy nrrlvliiir at l'lillalolphl I lui a ui New I 'irk 7 31 a in Tn'ns al lanv Sunhury : 1! a in ilaily urrlvliiK ul rtiiladeldhla t 5J n in '.lUimrf 9 ii a in Wanliloiflon 7 4ii am Now Vn'k nil a in Woekdiyi, 10 -A a m Sundays, T r.o a tn week itiivn arriving at I'lillaiiolpliin II 4i a in. Ni-w York 2 1.1 p Ul, H.iltlimre 1156 p in. WanliiiiKtoii i on p m. Ill pui, wevk luya arrlrlnic at flilladelphii J p in. New Yuta v :io p iu, Hallluiora t Jj p m V aoliliiKtou 7 1.1 p 111 Tralna ulru leave Sunhury nt y.lOainamt 321 ai4 p m. tur Hurrleliurtt, I'hlladolplila and rUtloiure I. H. WH(II), (Ipii'I Pa Airent I li HUTCHINSON Oon'l Alanaicer. WHEELS, Too! :UER RODE ONE 1093 MILES III tit HOURS The Eldredge $so.oo The Belvidere W.OO 59crior to all others Irrespective tnf price. Catalogue tells you why. Write for one. tT!3NAL SEWING MiCDMCO, . kOAOWAV. Factory, rww York. BELVIOBRB. ILL. "jjntarlatJI'JAii? Bat Cmwk Syrop. Tuna (iuod. DM I in win tuna i. APiKtrina. ROCK OP ADVERSITY. la this atnnoB Dr. Taimac apeaka those who are surrounded on all sides by ' mlafort naa. The text ts I Samuel xi. 4, There was a sharp rock on the one side and a sharp rock on the other side." The cruel army of the Philistines must be taken and aoattered. There la Juat one man accompanied by thla body guard to do that thing. Jonathan la the hero or the scene. I know . that Dariil cracked th skull of the giant with a few pabbles well slung, and that 100 Oldeonltea scattered 10,000 Amale kltea by the crash of broken crockery, but here is a mors wonderful conflict. Tondtr are the Philistines on the rocks. Here Is Jonathan with his body guard tn the valley. On the other side Is a rock called Boats; on the other slds is a rock called Seneh. These two were as famous in olden times as tn modern times are Plymouth rock and Gibral tar. Thty were precipitous, unscalable and sharp. Between these two rocks Jonathan must make bis ascent The day comes for the scaling of the height. Jonathan, on his hands and feet, begins the ascent With strain and slip and brulae, I auppose, but still on and up, first goes Jonathan and then goes his body guard. Boses on one aide. Bench on the other. After a sharp tug and push and clinging, I see' the head of Jonathan above the hole In the moun tain, and there la a challenge and a fight and a supernatural consternation. These two men, Jonathan and his body guard drive back and drive down the Philistines over the rocks and open a campaign which demolishes the enemies of Israel. I suppose that the over hanging and overshadowing rocks on either side did not balk or dishearten Jonathan or his body guard, but only roused and filled them with enthusiasm as they went up. "There was a sharp rock on the one side and a sharp rock on the other aide." My friends, you have been, or are now, some of you. In thle crisis of the text. If a man meets one trouble he can go through with It He gathers til his energies, concentrates them on one point and in the strength of God or by his own natural determination goes through It But the man who has trou ble to the right of him and trouble to the left of him Is to be pitied. Did eith er trouble come alone, he might endure It, but two troubles, two disasters, two overshadowing misfortunes, are Boses and Btneh. God pity him! "There la a sharp rock on the one side and a sharp rock on the other side." ' In this crisis of the text is that man whose fortune and health fall him at the same time. Nine-tenths of all our merchants capsize In business before they come to 45 years of age. There Is some collision in commercial circles and they stop payment. It seems as If every man must put his name on the back of a note before he learns what a fool a man 1b who rlBks all his own property on the prospect that some man will tell the truth. It seems as It a man must have a large amount of unsalable goods on his own shelf be fore he learns hew much easier It Is to buy than to sell, ft 'seems as If ev ery man must be completely burned out before he learns the Importance of always keeping fully Insured. It seems as If every men must be wrecked In a financial tempest before he learns to keep things snug In case of a sudien curoclydon. When the calamity does come It Is awful. The man goes home In despair and he tells his family "Well, I have to go to the poor house." He takes a do lorous view of everything. It seems as If he never could rise. But a little time passes and he Bays: "Why, I am not so badly off after all. I have my fam ily left." Before the Lord turned Adam out of Paradise he gave him Eve, so that when he lost Paradise he could stand It Permit one who has never read but a few novels In all his life and who has not a great deal of romance In his com position, to say that if when a man's fortunes fall he has a good wife a good Christian wife he ought not to be de spondent "Oh," you say, "that only Increases the embarrassment, since you have her also to take care of." Tou are an Ingrate, for the woman as often supports the man as the man supports the woman. The man may bring all the dollars, but the woman generally brings the courage and the faith In God. Well, this man of whom I am speak ing looks around, and he finds his fam ily is left, and he rallies, and the light comes to his eyes, and the smile to bis face, and the courage to his heart In two years he Is quite over It He makes his financial calamity the first chapter In a new era of prosperity. He met that one trouble conquered It He sat down for a little while under the grim shadow of the rock Boxes, yet he soon rose and began like Jonathan to climb. But how often Is It that physical ailment comes with financial embarrassment When the fortune failed It broke the man's spirit His nerves were shattered. His brain was stunned. I can show you hundreds of men in our cities whose fortune and health failed at the same time. They came prematurely to the staff. Their hand trembled with Incipi ent paralysis. They never saw a well day since the hour when tbey called their creditors together for a compro mise. If such men are Impatient and peculiar and Irritable, excuse them. They hsd two troubles, either one of which they could have met successful ly. If, when the health went, the fort une had been retained, It would not have been so bad. The man could have sought the very bast medical advice, sad he could bsvs had the verr teas attssdaaes aac les Baas ec would have stopped at the front door u isQuire as to bis weirare. out pov erty oa the one slds and sickness oa the other are Boses sad Beaeh, and they iatertock their shadows and drop them oa the poor man's way. God help him! "There Is a sharp rock on the one slds aad a sharp rock oa the other side." . Now. what Is such a mas to doT la the name of Almighty God. I will teU him what to do. Do as Jonathan did climb; climb up Into the sunlight of God's favor aad consolation. I can pro through the churches and show you men who lost fortune aad health at the same time, and yet who sing all day and dream of heaven all night If you have any Idea that sound digestion and steady nerves and clear eyesight and good hearing and plenty of friends are necessary 'to make a man happy, you have miscalculated. I suppose that these overhanging rocks only made Jonathan scramble the harder and the farter to get up and out Into the sun light and this combined shadow of In validism and financial embarrassment has often sent a man up the quicker into the sunlight of God's favor and the noonday of his glorious promises. It Is a difficult thing for a man to feel his dependence upon God when he has 110.000 in the bank and 130,000. tn gov ernment securities, and a block of stores and three ships. "Well," the man says to himself, "It Is silly for me to pray 'Give me this day my dally bread,' when my pantry is full and the canals from the west are crowded with breadatuffs destined for my store houses." Oh, my friends. If the com bined misfortunes and disasters of l!f have made you climb up Into the arms of a sympathetic and compassionate God, through all eternity you will bless him that In this world "there was a sharp rock on the one side and a sharp rock on the other side." Again, that man Is In the crisis of the text who has home troubles and outside persecution at the same time. The world treats a man well just as long as It pays to treat him well. As long as it can manufacture auccess out of his bone and brain and muscle It fa vors him. The world fattens the horse that it wants to drive. But let a man see it his duty to cross the track of the world, then every bush Is full of horns and tusks thrust at him. They will be little him. They will caricature him. They will call his generosity self sir grandlsement and his piety sanctimo niousness. The very worst persecution will sometimes come upon htm from those who profess to be Christians. John Milton great and good John Milton so far forgot himself as to pray In so many words that his ene mies might be eternally thrown dowa into the darkest and deepest gulf of hell, and to be undennost and most dejected, and the lowest down vassals of perdition. And Martin Luther so far forgot himself as to say In regard to his theological opponents, "Put them In whatever sauce you please, roasted or fried or baked or stewed or boiled or hashed, they are nothing but asses." Ah, my friends, II John Milton or Mar tin Luther could come down to such scurrility, what may you not expect from less elevated opponents? Now, sometimes the world takes after them, the newspapers take after them, puo lie opinion takes after them, and the unfortunate man Is lied about until all the dictionary of Billingsgate Is ex hausted on him, Tou often see a man whom you know to be good and pun and honest, set upon by the world and mauled by whole communities, while vicious men take on a supercilious air In condemnation of him, as though Lord Jeffreys should write an essay on gen tleness or Henry VIII talk about pur ity or King Herod take to blessing lit tle children. Now, a certain amount of persecution rouses a man's defiance, stirs his blond for magnificent battle and makes him fifty times more a man than he would have been without the persecution. So It was with the great reformer when he said: "I will not be put down; I will be heard." And so It was with Millard, ftie preacher, In the time of Louis XI. When Louis XI sent word to him that unless he stopped preach ing In that style he would throw him Into the river, he replied: 'Tell the king I will reach heaven sooner by water thaa he will reach It by fast horses." A certain amount of persecu tion Is a tonic and Inspiration, but too much of it and too long continued be comes the rock Boses throwing a dark shadow over a man's life. What Is he to do, then? Go home, you say? Good advice, that That is Just the place for a man to go when the world abuses him. Go home. Blessed be God for our quiet and sympathetic homes. But there Is many a man who has the repu tation of having a home when be has none. Through unthlnklngness or pre cipitation there are many matches made that ought never to have been made. An officiating priest cannot alone unite a couple. The Lord Al mighty must proclaim bans. There are many homes in which there la no sym pathy and no hnpplness and good cheer. The clamor of the battle may not have been heard outside, but God knows, notwithstanding all the playing of the wedding march, and all the odor of the orange blossoms, and the bene diction of the officiating pastor, there has been no marriage. 8o sojnetlmes men have awakened to find on one side of them the rock of persecution and on the other side of them the rock of domestic Infelicity. What shall such a one doT Do as Jonathan did climb. Get up the heights of God'l consola tion, from which you may look down In "triumph upon outside persecution and home trouble. - While good and great John Weslsy was being silenced by the magistrates and having his name written on the board fences of London In doggerel, at that very time his wife was making him as miserable ss she could acting as though lbs was ressesssd by ths tWvfl, as I suppose j.' e was. never doing aim a kindness until the day she ran away, so that he wrote In his diary these words: "l i.i not forsake her. X have not dismis sed her. I will not recall her." P:ant. Inf one foot upon outside persecution and the other foot upon home trouble. John Wesley climbed up tsto the heights of Christian joy, and after preaching 40.000 sermons and travelling 2T0.0C0 miles, reached the heights of heaven, though In this world he had It hard enough "a sharp rock on the one side aad a sharp rock on the oth er." Aca'.n. that woman stands In the cri sis of the'text who has bereavement and a struggle for a livelihood at the same time. Without mentioning names I speak from observation. Ah, It Is a hard' thing for a woman to make an honest living, even when her heart Is not troubled, and she has a fair cheek, and the magnetism . of an exquisite presence. ' But now the husband or ths father is dead. , The expenses of the obsequies have absorbed all that was left In the savings bank, and, wan and wasted with weeping and watching, she goes forth a grave, a hearse, a ooftln behind her to contend for her existence and the existence of her children. When I see such a battle as that open, I shudder at the ghastllness of the spectacle. Men sit with em brlodered slippers and write heartlees essays about women's wages, but that question is made up of tears and bleod, and there is more blood than tears. Oh, give woman free access to all the realms where she can get a livelihood, from the tolegraph office to the pulpit! t.ft men's wages be cut down before hers are cut down. Men have iron In their souls and can stand It Make the way free to her of the broken beast May God put into my hand the cold, bitter cup of privation, and give me nothing but a windowings hut for shel ter for many years rather than that after I am dead there should go out from my home Into the pitiless world a woman's arm to fight the Gettysburg, the Austerllta, the Waterloo of life for bread! And yet how many women there are seated between the rock of bereavement on the one side and the rock of destitution on the other! Boses and Seneh Interlocking tholr shadows and dropping them upon her miserable way. "There Is a sharp rock on the one side and a sharp rock on the other side." What are such to do? Somehow let them climb up Into the heights of the glorious promise: "Leave thy father less chlMren. I will preserve them alive and let thy widows trust In me." Or get up Into the heights of taat other glorious promise: "The Lord preserv eth the stranger and relleveth the wid ow and the fatherless." O ye sewing women on starving wages! O ye wid ows turned out from the once beautiful home! O ye female teachers kept on niggardly stipend! O ye despairing women seeking in vain for work, wan dering along the docks and tnlnklng to throw yourselves Into the river last night! O ye women of weak nerves, and aching sides, and short breath and broken heart you need something more than human sympathy. You need the sympathy of God. Climb up Into his arms. He knows it all, and he loves you more than father or mother or hus band ever could or ever did, and instead of sitting down, wringing your hands In despair, you had better 'begin to climb. There are heights of consolation for you, though now "there Is a sharp rock on the one side and a sharp rock on the other side." Again, that man Is in the crisis of the text who has a wasted life on the one side and an unlllumlnated eternity on the other. Though a man may aS his life have cultured deliberation and self poise, If be gets Into that position all Ms self possession is gone. There are all the wrong thoughts of his ex istence, all the wrong de-ds, all the wrong words strata above strata, granite, ponderous, overshadowing. That rock I call Boses. On the other side are all the retributions of the fut ure, the thrones of judgment the eter nal ages, angry with his lone defiance. That rock I call 8eneh. Between these two rocks 10,000 times 10,000 have per ished. O man Immortal, man redeemed, man blood bought, climb up out of those shadows! Climb up by the way of the cross. Have your wasted life forgiven. Have your eternal life secured. Thla hour Just take one look to the past and and see what It has been, and take on look to the future and see what It threatens to be. You can afford to lose your health, you ean afford to lose your property, you can afford to lose your reputation, but you cannot afford to lose your soul. That bright gleam Ing, glorious, precious, eternal posses sion you must carry aloft tn ths day when the earth burns up and the heav ens burst You see from my subject that when a man gets Into the safety and peace of the gospel ha does not demean him self. There Is nothing tn religion that leads to meanness or unmanllness. Ths gospel of Jesus Christ only asks yeu to climb as Jonathan did climb toward God, climb toward heaven, climb Into the sunshine of God's favor. To be' come a Christian Is not to go meanly down. It Is to come gloriously up up Into the communion of saints, up Into the peace that passeth all under- standing, up Into the companionship of angels. He lives upward; he dies up ward. Oh then accept ths wholesale Invita. tton which I make this day to all the people! Come up from between yonr Invalidism and flnanolal embarrass ments Corns up from between your bereavement and your destitution. Coma up from betwstn a wasted life and an unlllumlned eternity. Like Jonathan, climb up with all your might Instead of sitting dowa to wring your hands In the shadow and In ths dark ness "a sharp rack on ths ons slds and a sharp rack oa the other etde." Perttpi you have cads 1 up your Bind to tatcf1 OsoSiV this Ktimmet. ' . Then look for this picture oq the wrapper, a man witn a bis fish on his back Do not let anyone talk to ' you -of something 44 Just as tooa. 7 , , ... ' when you want cod liver oil and the hypo-, pnospnites you wtnt the very best. You will find 1 them in only one place.; Scon's Emulsion. There Is no other emul-1 slon like it; none other, does the ssme work; snd ; no other hss the ssme record of cures. All Drags lata, aoo. sad fa. BCOTT A Bow KB, Chemists, H. Y. AiffliribUrg Aarble Works. R. H- LANGE, DEALBK IN MARIE AND SCOTCH GRANITE Hoiiuls, iattuuS and Old Stones Cleaned and Repaired. Prices as Low as the Lowest. SATISFACTION GUARANTEED. J. A. JENKINS, Ag't., Cro882rove, Pa. olLDODpoison lA GPECIALTYo f Prlmsre oa 0 codaiyorTs If permaneatlf nary SfiAMjO POISON Mm naiouwH7i, lonoaaMlreatcdas ItomoforsausprtoeandereaaMgnaraii. ooraainl6toS6daya. Ton eaato treated a a r . ii yvv preier loooine) sere wa willoon ' tract to pay railroad f araand botalblllaaiKl re. If we (all lomn If ma h.M Basnejf wa fall o ours. It Ton hare takaa n r. Inalda .! ...... . ill - . . . ' CP, ana still nave aches and aratcbes In moath, 8ore Throat. Kiux aswwua raKun in moaiD, sore Tarotti, mplee, CoDDcr Colored Knots. rl.TT,. DOS Coi lh1 ear part of Ilia body, liiilr or Kvabroara fkiih,. Ulcers os oat. it Is tbls Secondary at, it la tbls Secondary BLOOD roisofl - www w vuiw. n a uucii taw UtMI ODSll- wmmm awauauni ua WOHU lot 'a v. Mannt ,n,.. nhi. ai.u l. elans. 800,000 capital behind our ODcondl. tJnntil foisrantv A nsAiailaeMa.nh . . " w-a a a,v u wis Will OB CIAKE PERFECT tlEII ! DO NOT DESPAIR 1 D Mot SwSwr Lnnr! Tn Joys and ambtlloni of Ufa can be ratored to too. The Tfry woral iiiii of Sorroui Debllf- ?1 am ahanhitAlv mirad h. trac-ru TABLETS. OtTe prompt relief to Inaomnla, falllns memory and the waitc and drain of vital powera.lncur tad by tndlteretlonioreiceaatie of early yeara. Imparl visor ana potency 10 every lanmion SnMiatha aratsm. tilva bloom to tbe ebttaki and lnatra to tbe or old. OneMlo bosrenewa O boxoa at S.SO a oom tead ear or atomy refund-' carried Id veal pocket. Bold yea of young vital energy ; late guarao d. Can be avervwhere or mailed In plain wrapper on aw receiptor prle by TUB PBUrnCTO CO., CaztOB Bids., tnioaso." For sale in Middleburgh, Pa., by Middlcburg Drug Co., inMt. Pleas ant Mills by Henry Harding, and in Penu's Creek by J. V. Sampsell. WHY? "Emlinrecl bnlrl rlxobf nn t'ein 4'nnti lina BUO, bur mlelela flhore rmcl c nt ii nil inn ub rjnua eolirt nnlrnuwl IHf. m'liiHllfwt," THERE YOU HAVE it, Clear as Mud. The original of the above, written wlih a pea, lieu deciphered wan seen to be only an order for a typewriter. It muds: "Kuclofted rind di afj on New York forSVO for which plrnse wud me at once one of your latest Improved type writer." He Is purchasing a machine none too soon, ynn say, MOW AROIT YOl'RNKLFT You dint not write so ioi ly as he does, and your loners nifty not be Illegible, but a type-written communication has s huNlness-Uke appearance which a pen-written one has not That's Why VOir should nse a typo-writer. Tout It does the same work us Hie so-called 'Htandard machines, coats but fo.no, and Is giving satis faction to 85,000 users Is Why YOU SHOULD USE THE "0DELL." Hand for a catalogue and sample of Its work. 0DELL TYPE-WRITER CO. MS-SOS Dearborn St.. CHICAGO, ILL. 4-lB-mo. REVIVO RESTORES VtTAUTT. Made a lit Day. Well Mar 10th Day. Me. Trig urtaAT SOth produces Uia above reealta IntSO daye. It ecu ?werfall asa qalekly. Doras wben all olaera fall osng naa wlU regain their lost aaaakood, and old sua will recover their yoatafal vigor by nalag qweaiy ana sorely voetoree sarvoue- affects of seU-ekase ee exeeaaand Indlac ration, which nanH one tor stadr . bnamaaa or marriage. It am ouir cwaa ny starting at tae (eat c dleaaae, bat If i great oervotoaloaatd Mood bmllder, bring Ing bank the sank glow to pale etseeksendie. sterlnt tba Are of yoath. It wards OS Tnainjly sad ooaaaaistloa. lastes ea asvtag UVIVO, as www. ii eaa oa earnee la vast packet, ay stall, too oar stekase, er sts soy aoe, wttaasssl- vrittaw naraatat to ei aw reiaael We do ay. Ctroolar tree. Aiistss wliLBSI W,X71IliUlTt.CI100.ILL rsr sate at Mlddleburgt, by W, Ml STeURSJCt mm " " -W r aw .aSV LaStTaV M W W of bay. UU.uU.iLvl' lliij t o VSSLi.sSQBOVE it L inr.T.mi . Prot1 mar. -vi . " " "I .- na Q -an, , V A K I 1 . . " - IU1U ma uiii umsr Litaavtaui . a - . -aweuwti sm Kr- laU W JRUB I LOW S I have ona of tha k... 'ere iu tha atavta. T """I. ( toruout good work. ""oe ""ma etiiu are III v OnrW a I .peetfan; " ok . .o"7,. .ullur M. L. MU New.WttSoncsanrl w TWO of tha nnal. nn...i.. mu8.eaiTMKftdJorpi,uoK have just been issued by tb, MuS1o Co.. Indianapolis, Olir HAfrtae TTaswsA W J.. ! . ' - Wl Heroes of tbe U. S. BattfflM wa w UWUira (It'll IflLlali 1 S " music is u;J and tire words r witi, 1.. Pieces wi filiV"8 L"H enir of tha J.t,,f .... i he world's. -SUTJ contaiuiD,. 18 pases full H) SfiUt on romanr nt OK a - " "H . v. v it ii m. Indianapolis, Ind. " lMDtf Fall w I9 iised for Plastering If, iniscs. It Is a new dlscven. Guaranteed io last loj than any other plaster. is prelerred to Adamant Kir iwrticulars eall on or ad J U. A. KERN MIDDLEEUPGH. fl (Du&lice of the Peace AND CONVEYANCER M- 2. STtlMNGEIt Middleburgfc,rj r. IS. HOWEK. E. E. PAOllJ .BOWER & PAWLIKG Attorneys-at-Law Offices in Hank BtiUdlnp;. MiuiMffljl JA8. . CROUSE, ATTORNltT at law, MlDDLKlllRl All business entrimteJ toliisj rin receive prompt attpntau. f!HAS MAHWPTTPVto Collections. Loans and Investment 1 winuiaiBi 1-riVHie liHHfT, Willianirjport, Lvcomirji? Co. DeDOKlta nrW'iiti-fi anhi0.1t , n ,-u,t. . mm aanu van. aTaa.- . wsas sauj ioubUI ui WUTlQe 5L . Pottiege VETEF.INRY SURGEON SELINSOROVC, PA. All professional business entrusiH us; will receive prompt and careful attention. . Newly Established.- WEST PERRY EOTH One-fonrlh mile Baat of KK'liBrM.1 Teams free for traveling men todrf 10 town, oeiore or alter tues itates 7o cents per Day. 7 . Z3. lELoma, Pro PATENTS OBTAINED. HrTvf ti? Consult or communicate witu us ofUils paper, who will give all not-ded matlon. Comrades. Aaitentlon I served from 'en to 'M, and was wdbdWI Ia fa, u ih. 11 ... 1.. , 1. .. wilili.rtal would like to have my comrades knov Celery King has done for me. In !)l' complaint, cnronio aisrranoea, came 1 doctors could not stop It, but Celery IX nurrame.ana 1 am once more rn')i" Fbaks BsiHl.sa. OwonrO, Mich (I.J. r. Y. V. I. ). Celery King for Uie Wervw. Ui and Kidneys Is sold In too. sod W. W. H. Herman. TroaelelhVi MUkUa' uisa, uociure; u. A. sbnghi, aiicd. Beaaty Is Blood Deep. Clean blood means a clran kia-B beauty without it. Cascarets, tanJy tie clean vour h nod ami keen it da stirring up tbe lasy liver and drivin!" E unties irom tne rjoar. jhkiu i" nninh nimnlfHi. Iwiila. (klnrj-hti. bltcu .nil that .iAI. L'sscsrets, beauty for ten cents. AH4 gists, Mtisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 2ki Union Steam Laund Adams & Youtz, Prop's.. Aiffliriburg, FAULTLESS LINEN crowning feature of evening The UNION FINISH for this laundry is famous Bjiaiksi of painstaking care in every Collars and cuflsironed with IVOKV-LIKE EdQEB. Prices the Lweit, . Weleadj others follow. Lies Curtains a Special U. A. UUTELTUB, Agt, J Middleburgi '