MIDUlBUKG POST. BROSIOU3 BROS. BROSIOUS m OS. BROSIOU3 I1K0. BROSIOUS BROS. ..reduce, ,, V ClotfUTU," , U $60,000 ilThli Brosiys Bros.. 7 mm "D U ' AAJtTvtfclt Sunburn, Pa To Begin Saturday. Nows Your chance, Suits, Overcoats, Hats. n,,rwear Shirts art! all kinds of Furni.-hings, F-.r Men Young Men and Boys, At Astonishing Prices. All the very Latent Styles i . mts a Ml Overcoats, almost nothing a man can think of and every irtic'e is up to OUR Standard in Quality (Xo Shodtiv imhU handled in THIS Store.) 1.000 PAIRS GLOVES, KID, 4 ALL are Welcome to A lltei)d bl;i? Grab Sale- BROSIOUS BROS. REST F01( THE AVE All Y Rev. Dr. Talmago Shows Hew to Lighten Life's Burdens. Osi'i n It-lm-ii .i I : simple l In-ix. lill'l l.':ll ii; ;.! il" mill II i-. I'r.spii . h j , 1 til ttl:, i . r. ir i : CM i ' tie ip . paths" tin r.i inly 1 1 H ll'n'S dim 1-S. by I -: i .4 Kl..i..r!i.1 Nov. . Ii 1 1 1 i i si'i":in:i Ui-" return In Hi.' ;! iilllplo Chl'Stintl I" : 1 It 1 1 ill ami hi pn.-.i.ises ji ill.' - Hi' si'ciirin,' tip' greatest (if rclii-f I'i'iiiii tin' i) i-i I vf ,l I ill' tiurdcii ni' lil'i', whii h lii-jir heavily en humanity. Tin- text is Matthew xi. US Tome until mi' alt ye that labor and en- heavy laden, ami I will give you tVt." I.ilie the sensitive opal, this text fliiucs liest when it has heen heateil li ttle tires nl' trilnilatioii. l.iUe the dia timnil. it flitters and sparkles liri'ht rst when it bas been rut ly the lapi ijry of tret. hie. Like sumo of the .autumnal fruits, It is sweetest to the parched lips when it has been frost bitten. Like the nuiruiiii; sunrise, it is the ni'Kt clailly welcomed by the poor. 1it.il invalid, who, unable to s!ie;i durum the luti.i:. weary hours of tie- lit. has tossed upon the hot, Jt'ii'i.i'i! fiilJnw ami wished fur tho day. Like the siu'lit of the old homestead, it i most desired by the racked out cast of u repentant prodigal, wearied with his journey from the far country, lio. sees n'aiu his father's home. aSiere he shall tiud forgiveness tiud love?. 1'heso old promises of the ItiMc, of ferliiK rest and peace to those who arc troubled and in pain and sin. have a far different ineuniii',' to us after we uv heen compelled to lift the cup of 1 3orrw to our lips and drink its con- j tents ro the bitter dreys. When we I first bejjin to study liod's word we are like to that younn man who for the arst time stood before n famous pic ture. All the artistic world was rcn dcriut: homage to that canvas and de- I daring that it was a masterpiece. Yet i what did the yotiny man in his liino- isince say? "Ah. yes. that is a very pretty picture, but I do not see any-. tUltn; so wonderful in It." Nut after j awhile that younj: man boenn to study art. In Ida h unties he developed the Intent or dormant artistic powers of las mind and soul. He not only stud led In the srr Bcho'.: of America, hut be- erosiwd the seas n::d went to the orboals- of France and Italy. He eat at ttie feet of the groat masters. Then, Amu fro:n bis studies, he en me baclc and stood n second time before that as me oleture. Now it ootiuwi tn Mm fllfferoMt canvas from mat 'L lie llrst saw. His cheek Hushed; his eye crew brl.uht; he looked at that picture first from one' side of the room and then from the other. At last, after many minutes of lIuivius soul thought. ! rrird out in rapture: "I'.eantil'nl! Ileautil'tii: Is it nut beautiful:" When youny 11 m -11 and ,Yiuii-r women lirst open the I'.ilile the -npi l promises in reference to mutuus ami li'-avy bur dens do not appeal very stroiiuly P thein. Their horizons are always rain bowed. Their hillsides ."re always hanm.- wardens and terra I vine yards. Their bodies always seem to have the warm, rich blood of perpetual youth coursing through their veins. A physician's prescription is not sought alter by the well nor an oculist by those having yood eyes. Hut when, like that vniiir.' man who studied in tin. art schools of Kuropc, after we have been compelled to take a lone; course in the "school of adversity" ami then postgraduate course after postgraduate course, oh, then how dif ferent (Jod's sweet promises appear to us: Today I would talk to those who have lloundered knee deep and chin deep In the iptieksands of trouble, I would try to Interpret for you what the pis pel rest of my text means. I would interpret it not only for those who have found this rest, but also for those who may be persuaded to seek it as a !od v-lvon blessing at the foot of the cross. What is your burden, my brother? l'crhans it Is some sorrow common to the whole human race. It Is very heavy and no lighter from the fact that others are hearing the same load. I'erhaps it is some trouble pecul iar to yourself that you cannot hear to describe even to a friend. "Kvery heart kuoweth its own bitterness;" but, what ever It may be, the invitation Christ jslvrs is for you. He offers y..u rest from the over whelming burden of sin. This was the heavy pack which nearly crushed the tired pilgrim in I'.unyan's great alle piry. It is the heavy burden that makes the hearts mid brains and eyes and feet n nil hands and the hacks of all terrific ally ache during the sad Journey of life. Von tell lac that n sin committed enn never be undone. You say that the tsullly can never become innocent; that the soul stained and polluted with transgression can never be made clean, r'rom a human standpoint that Is true, :.ut there Is a divine remedy that ef fects even that miracle. Christ has "jorne the penalty for the sins of the vorld, and through his blood shed for on your soul may be cleansed. "He vis wounded for our transgressions; he was bruised for our Iniquities; the chastisement of our peace was niton Urn, and by his stripes we arc healed." The Heavenly Father ofTers rest from financial distress". The older I grow the more I realize that the greatest trtroggle en earth Is after dally bread. Most people arc not fighting for the lnxarlet, but for the bare necessaries. If a ninn guu !f0 or f too nhend In the bank then comes some dangerous sick ness In the family. Ills daughter is threatened with blindness, and she has to go to the best oculist and have the most expensive glasses, or his wife brea'js down, and she must en oil" r,,r rest, and extra servants are hired, and : Hi" whole Mini of mo:;ey is soon swept away. 'IT" i. ial burden is the heavy one to I" : '. M.iM of us are ready to '.'rant , I'.tr.i. That luir.li'ii. too, Christ will, l.ear If ymi commit it to his hands. Your anxiety, your distress, your fore- boding, he will relieve, and he will give yon rest. "Now," says some-one, i "; rem her is talking simple nun- i -. use; If J do not c,,.t out and hustle j and work and worry and get the tnon- I ey to feed and clothe and educate my I rhildrrn !od will never do it for me. i I do not believe in exporting that Cod , will relieve me nf my linanclal distress : any more than I would expect the wa- I ter to boll in the kettle If 1 did not have a tire in the stove or my cupboard be full of food unless I could order it at the grocer's or the butcher's. When 1 you begin to talk about God carrying ' the burden of linanclal distress then 1 you are simply talking about some thing you know nothing about." No, my brother, yon are wrong. The mightiest men of God have always rolled at Christ's feet the burden of financial distress, and God has never failed 'them, liy that I do not mean thesif men have been lazy or Indolent. Hut I do mean that while they were physically and mentally doing their level best to earn the neccssarv amount for their livelihood they were at the j same time placing their financial obll- gat ions before Christ and asking him j to furnish In his own way the neces I sary means. Study the life of Moody. I Who furnished him the money with j which to carry on his great work? : God; emphatically God. When Mr. j Moody received his Invitation to go and j hold evangelistic services In England and Scotland he nractlcallv did not have a cent. He accepted the Invita tion. He engaged passage iiion n trans atlantic steamer. The time grew near er and nearer for him to sail. Some one asked him where he was going to get the money with which to sail. "I do not know." he answered, "hut God will send it In time. I am going upon his mission." About two or three days before he was to sail a gent Ionian walked Into his otiiee and said: "Mr. Moody, I hear you are going to Kurope. I thought you might want a little mon ey. Here is $o(Ki, If you will take it." "Thank you." answered Moody, lie took It. He took not as from man, but from God. That $."KK) paid Mr. Moody's passage over to Kngland, so that he eould preach Jesus Christ hi tlio home of ltoliert McCheyne and John Uobert son and Kowland Hill. . , And, my. dear Christian frfends, this plea to roll the financial distress of your life upon Christ brings up a very Drtlncnt lesson which ouulit tn . i iin uceu ny an our entireties. Io you know why the average Christian church is having such hard work to get along lltiancially? At the end of the year a few rich men have to put their hands in their pockets and make up the heavy deficit. It is because these churches in looking after the temporal life of their members instead of the spiritual are not doing their duty. The best way to get a full church treasury is not, as some people suppose, to have a ba.aar. or an oyster supper, or an evening's entertainment of Mrs. .larley's wax works,' or a con cert. The true way to get a full church treasury is to have a full pray er meeting. If the rich men of a church, tin- leading men oi'iciall.v, would set the light example to the av erage rhuicli nicinbri's and come to ihe weekday meetings and tal.,- a Stind-iy school class ami prat-tin ;itay. r in public as well as in privat then there would be no dilliculty In meeting' the financial obligations of the hoards of trustees. If we, Ihe members of a church, honestly and faithfully do the work of our church in n spiritual way God will see to it that we shall be able to easily carry its financial burdens in a temporal way. The Heavenly Father offers rest al so in reference to the salvation of our children and loved ones. Nearly every healthy normal man has two ambi tions. The one is to live long. If I had my own way and could still live in health and strength and live amid the surroundings I am having today as far as I can make out I would like to live on earth nt least 1.S7.") years. When I think of all the glorious oppor tunities of working on earth for my Iird ami Master I would not volun tarily change places with the brightest robed denizen of all the redeemed Im mortals in heaven. I feel a great deal in reference to my earthly work as did the elder of a I'resbyterlan church. When he was very sick some one came to him and said, "My brother, how hap py you ought to be that you may soon associate with the angels." "Yes," an swered the sick man. "that may all be true, but as far as I can make out I would on earth for a little while at least rather associate with one wo man of flesh and blood, called my wife, whom I know and love, than with any twenty angels with whom nt the pres ent time I am unacquainted." The second ambition which nearly every healthy, normal man has is not only to live long In an earthly sense, but some day to own a large home, in which he can gather all his children and grandchildren and friends and lovedmes about him. And if a man longs to have an earthly home, -where he can collect his loved ones, how much more must the Christian long that in his heavenly home he may be able to collect all his dear ones, his children and brothers and sisters and parents and friends those who are bound to him by ties of love as well as of blood. There Is not a true Christian man or woman who baa not felt, at beart-tb. heavy harden of an unafrvd c&I4.at relative or friend. Ah. that is a heavy burden o bear! If I weald throw thli meeting open to ask for requests (or prayers from all over this bouse people would rise and say: "lray for my hus band," "Fray for my child," 'Tray foi my brother," "Fray for my roommate," "Fray for my sister." But, friend, why do you ask this pulpit to pray for your loved one? Why do you not bring that burden, that heavy burden of the sal vation of your child or husband, to Christ? Does not Jesus want you to do this today? If Christ will carry the heavy burden of financial distress sure ly he will bear the heavier burden of the salvation of your children. Some years ago a noted evangelist was holding n series of meetings in the church of which I was then pastor. Among the thrilling incidents which he told was one that appeared to me at that time very farfetched. I said it could not be so. He described how a mother had a wayward boy who had run away to sea and was at that time in an Asiatic port. This mother care fully studied the F.ihle and came to the conclusion that she had a right to ask for the salvation of her boy and that she would then and there throw the burden of his salvation unon Christ. i She went to her ro un. after giving ' word that; under no condition was she ; to be interrupted. Then she opened t the F.ible, laid it upon a chair and j knelt down. Then she began to pray t for the salvation of that boy. She i said: "O God, Jesus has said that if ( I ask anything in his name thou wilt grant my request. I am going to stay here pleading upon my knees for the salvation of my child until thou hast given to me the sweet consciousness that he is saved." She stayed there from ; until 7, 7 until S, !i until JO, in until 11, until ,i o'clock In the morning that woman stayed. Then she arose from her knees and said, "My Heavenly Father, thou hast answered my prayer." "At that very time," said the evangelist, "the boy in the foreign port , was convicted of sin and sent a letter ! home to his mother that he had given his heart to Christ." Hut as I after ward began to ponder over the story, ' i .i. . . ...... . ui iuc iigui or me scriptures and or personal history, I came to the conclu sion that that story was true or at least Hy gospel promise could be true. We have a right to ask for the salva tion of our loved ones. And if we ask and plead faithfully and truly God will answer our prayers. Oh, that we might, one and all, here and now, enter Into n holy conspiracy of prayer for the salvation of our loved ones! This was the way a great re vival wave was started In one of my old churches. It was h.vtfjhristinn ieo ple, members of that church, getting to gether week after week and praying for distinct Individuals. It was In this way that my grandmother and grand father were converted. Some of you may have heard the wonderful story written by tlie peu or spoken" by the lips of my father; It was by a com pany of earnest and tearful mothers gathering together nt a certain time of the day In the barns to "pray for the salvntion of-tlielr children jmitll scores and hundreds stood up In the little vil lage church of Somervllle to confess Christ, and the whole region was moved j by th" power of the Holy Ghost. It is , by n conspiracy of prayer that a re ; viva I can always be started and our I loved ones swept into the kingdom by j a tidal wave of mercy, j The great trouble with the Christian j church as a whole and with Christians as individuals is that we have broken away from th" old anchorage of gospel truth. We have lost faith in God that he is able to do all things; we have lost faith in prayer; we have lost faith ill the power of the Holy (ihost. And the great mission of the Christian pul pit today is to revive hi the pew the old gospel seeds of faith and hope. When Wjiton .Merle Smith was called to tho Central I'resbyterlan church of New York city he said to the commit tee which waited on him: "You do not want me as your pastor. I am not an intellectual teacher; I am only a simple gospel preacher." "Ah," answered the men, "that is the reason we want you. The people are hungering and thinning nfter the simple gospel truths." And It I is because the simple, salient gospel j beliefs are so much needed today that I am preaching this sermon upon faith and the belief that Christ can save our loved ones if we only pray. Thus, my dear friends, tired and heavy hearted, tramping along the highway of life, I want to lift the heavy burdens off your hearts. It Is these burdens that are crushing you, not the Journey. Many of the older men have reail an essay which was fa mous many years ago. It was written by the "Country Farson" and called "Concerning Feople "Who Carry Weights In Life." The author went on to show that It was the extra weights some had to carry that made them lose the race of life. And it is these extra burdens which we can cast nt the foot of the cross that make us labor and heavy laden. Will you not accept the Invitation of my text? Will you not live In the faith of that blessed promise and die In the hope, as did the beautiful Princess Eliza beth, the daughter of Charles I. of Fiiigland? t'pon her marble monument in Newport church, ereeted by Queen Victoria, Is recorded the fact that she was one morning found dead, with her head pillowed upon the open Bible and her finger pointing to the simple words, "Come unto me all ye that la bor and are heavy lnden, and I will give you rest." Today I urge upon you this wide invitation, with its glorious promise. Christ bids you come with all your burdens and trials, and be will bear them for you. He offers yon rest In this life, rest In death and eternal rest beyond the grave. Come onto him all ye who labor and are heavy laden, and ha wliT ljTt jreo Ayer 3 Give nature three helDs.W nearly every case, of col sumption will recover. Fi-m air, most important of Cherry Pectoral Nourishing food comes ne T- I . men, a mcuicinc to control the cough and heal the lun Ask any good doctor. tflrt nifj ATer'i rhrrr Pwtnril w tn. 1 liuva torn ti-rrlMa i-mtea of li.r? ago. uet riir.-l l.r It. 1 Hill IIHVIT W-IOlm.t .. V ALUKUr li. UAJI1L lO.N. Mdrieti. V, ! Consumption S".'7TT'JT?r", '" "" 'l i,.- Hen'v.i tier lativ action m?. bvv.vols. A' .. '.. o v.'iih Ayor's Pitf Sale Rcgis'cr. Noll.-ot of wit 's will l i .m rl' .: t, lln I K-m 1 1 tr w hfii tin- iiilK ii i-.ii i, OlII.C Wlll'li lilt 1.1 ! ! ir.' lint lll!,'i utile- NI i-i'it will In luirui-il. , I'fC llitf to leie mile "heul'l ., liVL-11 in 'tr tid hi this col ion 11. SatIkuaV, Nov. H, nvnr Kan'z !: will null house liuril kohiIs. SA-rviiuAV, Icc. 0. Injur How' (,'h'ir. 1 tnwn!i'i, llie nilminiitmt.ir. K l(ler will Hell nix tract,. ,,f real est t". TfUI.AV, Dec. H. 190J, two mil,.. Kri'muer, llownrd ItmviT.n i lioe, 4 c iwii farinliiK I1111 let, liiiusuliold xcoil. u H 4ltJ 1 1 CASTOR !A For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bc$ Bears the Signature of VIX-TE-XA run T.wu ,.f Sick Headache, Dyspepsia, Imii,. 11011, uiiiiotisnesh, Constipati Din. ness, Jaundice. Tornld Liver Burn. Foul Ureath, etc. Tryakli aud be convinced. If it fails to Wwlli you your money will be refunded. & .1... 1... . uiuggittia. Jos. Scebold Dies at Xew Berlin The death of Mr. Joseph Sitbold. cur red aims nonie, one mile wh i Xew Merlin Tuesday morning OaS, at 4 o'clock, aged 80 years. heceMeJ was a consistent member of the Lutb eran church as well as a life-long R. null II, ,u,i 1-Tn U au.i,l,,u.l 1... children, one sou and a daughter Thtl funeral services, which were Imnlf' attended, were held on Thmsej' .. ....I.... T At- TT ... .u. nig. Vin-te-na an ar M-n TT Take Vin-te-na mid the good .!! 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The World's On Tonio, will cure all forms of,tW, n t . m , n . un nroncuuu irouiiie. uougns 01 "i Standing, and the earlier stages of C sumption. When cougb syrup n t ike VrX-TE-Xa and if It fails to fit you your money will be cheerfK. refunded. AU druggist. - "1