lilDDLEBTJEO P03T. I BROSIOUS BROS. BROSIOUK BROS. BROSIOU3 BR03. BROSIOU8 BROS. Iff. "ml " T LW r ffiMI l l i u. v UIIFfWVI .:'. Fi . JtO A , ..2 1 CrSA AAA PlilTilllie CUBE fiT w w , xj w w tu i mmu uhlil h y Broils Bros.. Sunliun Pa, y - w w j j m To Begin Saturday. Nows Your chance, Suits, Overcoats, Hats. l'ii.!t.rwi-ar, Shirts ami all kinds of Furnishings, For Men Young Men and Boys, At Astonishing Prices. All the very Latest Styles in bints and Overcoats, almost onytliing a man can think of and every ortiele is up to OUR Standard in Quality (No Sluxldv goods handled in THIS Store.) 1,000 PAIRS GLOVES, KID, iron,. 2ree!its"i1!sk00i"' 25 5rlMefi,8t a'ul I5t'st A"tm" "ATS in the County. All the Celebrated Makes, prices 4' ALL are Welcome to Abterjd bl;i? Grat Sal?. BROSIOUS BROS. SMALL -ESSENTIALS. T(Gv. Dr. Talmage on the Im portance of Little Things. I 1. ii i or 1 1: i'r.ii t ii-i- i.l i In- Ml nor i i; . j i.i'j (., I "i. i Toward I I. ;ir;. i rr i- ! II i i ,1..:.; . : ..i. i .:. I y I. i I i : hi. i ' 1 ' N..v. 1". - In i! k -i -riiioii : i:i::'.- a 1 I a f.s- !'. ! .: Jil-.;. lire c f i '. ri-li.lll . ..il .!' ilit1 luiiini' vlruu's Unit i : us;u inukin.u ii. tln sum ' u ,1 l.iir.iiin chMiMoicr. 'i'liu ti'xt ' . i Ii U: Hi, "Wlin luitli U-silsoU ! y ! 'maH ll ires?" '. i i' M's l'Mviniir rvnuclc is tlio p. W'f ;i(!niii'c oliji'i't for immy : 1 - I ''i.l : :isn:.s. Oik tlu rlili-f is - . u Kvcry tourist wiints to 4." infill. i fulls. It is tin- lilitsa-st of ! f:ill. Ami Mount Ev.i-cst. It is i Iii::hfsi of all mountains. And fcilnui'a. Ii'iausc that volcano lias the lit rue-1 crater in the world. We would (":! tlie KitTcl tower. It is higher t'l I'ny oilier lower. And we would f ' U tie Ferris wheel hecailse it is l::uer than any of the other wheels. -'.( iniinau race, conscious that it is .;;te. as.lis to c.iloiv the infinite. .! ".s conceitiou of the Muhliuie is not V:' dwarf. Iitlt the t:nut. Hut. thouL-h tremendous hulk or majr fjtuii'.1 or hugeness or immensity has the liumnii eye i.n nwe inspiring liicinittion, yet today I want to point sv. some sceinitii; insiirttllicances which row essential for the world's f.'iice ami harmony than was the Co Vsa of Hhodes. or tlio hnnv'inK' Kr of r.aliylon. of the leinplc of Di at Kiihesus, or the inlace of Cyrun, i.iiiented with ),'old, or any of the oth trl seven wonders of the world. I find Wt. thoi!','h tny watch has its large T'-ieels and bars ami regulating huud uml inaiiisprlm; and ndHiiiautiuc jew ti. yet it has also its little screws und ftle wheels and little cops and little jtss. wLlch the Jeweler has to study stidcr the clarifying eye of the imtgnl fyine trlasB. I tilso find that the al vncu perhaps of one of these little ktvws or cogs liiifc'ht stop the whole s'tiehinery of my wntcu ns suroly aa if 1 should Buap tie mainspring. Seeming insignificances may be vital sentlnls. Some years ago, when cross ing the Atlantic ocean, the companion lith whom I was travellug one day ortieer passed me, and I asked'. "What in the matter, lieutenant? Is the rud der broken?" "Oh. no," said he. "We are merely testing a new compass. In order to lind out whether it is perfect we had to wait until we were fur nway from t!n magnetic cff.it f rocks and land. Tims-' intl.i,'in-i.s ,iv m ,i srcin to be much, but tiny i -w rircly dc Ilect the accuracy of the compass" iicc dle." Many years mho a Im-l.' -'.i w:is wreckul liii'imsc a small !;, e i f ste, 1 I rum tl;e point of a knife was driven into the wood Hear its enmpHvx box and made the compass- linger a false cjn;,!,.. Tim, kjj- fri, nils. 1 wntil.l take for my theme today the "Small I.'s- iihals'' ol life. I would try to show ymi thai many of the seeming it.sUrn'iioanecs him tlio despised monads are precnant with large IhoikIs of intluetices. every one of which will have huge progenies. A cholera j,.i rm may be s i small that it Is not visible to the naked eye. If. how ever, it Is let alone in Its work of devas tation it can soon crowd the wards of the county hospital with invalids and keep the undertakers' wagons busy by (lay as well as the nurses busy by night. 1 ask the striking ijuestion which Zechariah put In times of old. "Who hath despised the dav of small things?" Small essentliil the first: Appropri ateness and neatness of personal ap parelappropriateness and neatness in reference to tl e ivat a man wears upon his hack, mhi to the shoes on his feet, and especially in reference to the cleanliness of the liivn he wears about Ills neck, ai.d to the modesty with which he is i.rtlivd Itt public. Ood would never ' M-.-e condemned the "cauls and i!.e ch.ih.s and the bracelets and the ruilli s anil bonnets and the or naments of the , -s and the headbands and the tabh Is mid the earrings nnd the nose jeuvls and the changeable suits of app.-fl and the mantles and the wimples and the crisping pins and the glasses and thv fine linen and the hoods and the veils" of the haughty (laughters of Zion, "who walk with stretched foith necks and wanton eyes, walking and mincing as they go, and making a tinkling with their feet," un less there was a direct connection be tween a man's inner character and his "Sartor Kesartus." or "Philosophy of Clothes." I'aul would never have com manded the women of the Corinthian church to veil themselves In public as semblage if he had not been convinced that a woman's disregard of the social customs of the country and the time Implied a lack of modesty nnd purity. There is, there must be, an unbreak able spiritunl link binding a man's per sonal apparel and his heart "Cleanli ness Is next to godliness" Is a trencb- nisldenly flung open my stateroom door nnt .tatemcnt not found In holv writ. tnd cried: "Come on deck! Something but the substance of Its teachings Is Vss happened to the ship!" When I ar- certainly round within the leaves of jled on deck I fouud scores and nun- the Holy BIblo. The elaborate dlrec slreds of passengers excitedly watching j 0ons wj,ich God gave to ttie Israelites -the strange movements of the ship's . tQt ntul and frequent ablutions of urw. Instead of rlowlng ahead, w body and tta ciotbai ahow that be w re slowly moving around to tb h jnaiflOTt to the cleanliness oi Ctrht In a oerfect circia. Juas than mm , those whrijrrjo. 'nto his presence Wc have, therefore, a right to doubt whether a person who is in public I chronically dirty in persou or slovenly ! or Immodest in apparel can offer ac ceptable worship. Yet to hear some slovens 1 n tk one might suppose it was a sign of mental deucner.icy for men and women to In careful of their per.-onal appearance. 'J'hiy pretend to believe that a well groomed ai:d neat man is t . ..'uliai'y 11 weak mail. Therefore they practical ly say that one of the signs of genius is a disregard of the decijieies of life. They cite the example of the Creek mathematician whose appearance in dishabille on the streets shocked all the people who saw him, and the example of Napoleon and Samuel Johnson and Horace (Jreeley, all notorious for their indifference to ordinary neatness of at tire, but such examples are not proofs , of genius, but only of the power of . genius to win its way in life in spite i (f disgusting habits. The genius of Alexandre Pumas triumphed in spite I of the degradation of his birth, and j Henry Fawcett became a statesman I and successful administrator in spite I of his blindness; so, personal unclean- llncss and slovenliness may fall to de feat the true genius, but they can never help him to victory. And yet, deluded by this idea that slovenliness and uncleanllne8s are signs of true greatness, ninny a lawyer, a doctor, a merchant, has ruined his financial chances In life because he would not dress as a gentleman should dress. There are more ways than one of In terpreting that passage of Scripture which says hi reference to the one tal ent man, "And I was afraid nnd went nnd hid thy talent In the earth." Some of "the earth" in which many men hide their talents of life is to be found In tin- mthJuess and In the unkempt con ditions of their wardrobes. If it is necessary to be clean and neat in personal appearance In temporal work, how much more is this neatness essential when we are consecrating our lives to the service of Jesus Christ? The dear Saviour wants us to go out and labor In his name in the same way as he used to work. He was taunted with many reproaches during bis earth ly life, but those who hated him most never charged him with uncleanliuess or slovenliness, and we may be sure that the Pharisee who Invited him to his house nnd the other hosts who entertained him would nev er have welcomed him as a guest if he had been cureless about his person or his dress. The quality of his robe may have been poor, but we may be sure that there were no Impurities upon It or upon him. So, Christian workers, if we go forth in Christ's name, some of us must be more care ful about our personal appearance. Remember, O minister, when you as cend the pulpit, that your clothes may not be expensive, but they should be neat Remember, O Sunday school teacher, that wben you axnonnd the isiDie lesson your scnoiars are learn lng from you what it is to be a Chris tian. They are learning with theii eyes as well as with their ears. Re member. O man of God, that wherever you go your clean skin and pure linen as well us your lips preach in Christ's name. Small essential the next: The little kiiuHiesM's am! i i.urie.-ies whiih we should cMeiid t-1 those with whom we come In il: ;;y i m!a t. The .little ads of dcfc'vnr wh!'-h we siiou'il s' ow to ladies, sii 'li as taking o'T the hat when we st. mil ui'h Ham in an elevator or allowing tliem to piveetio us t!noiU'.h an opened door. I he Thank yi.u. sir," with whiih a holy should ai luiow i. dgf a gentleman's aciion wl.in In rlse. in a street car to ott'er her a seat. The lit tle social calls by which we should welcome a new neighbor or her fra uds into our community. The liitle irifts of delicacies which should be sent to the 1 invalid's room of our neighbor's bouse. All these little attentions and cour- ; tcsies may not seem to be of much ; value at the time, but they are mighty I in the development or the depletion of human character. They are mighty in i deciding whether a man is to live a Hellish or an unselfish life. j How a selfish life? Simply enough. ' I fore, for Instance, is n man who enters a railroad ear. He places his satchel 1 in one seat and his overcoat by his side. I Then be stretches out his long legs, puts his feet upon the opposite sunt and begins to rend a newspaper. After awhile the train Alls up, but he does not remove his incumbrances. The man is an incarnation of Folflsuuess. ' He enres only for his own comfort nnd la oblivious of the rights of others. He ' has paid for but one sitting. He has a ! right to occupy only half n seat. Yet he Is monopolizing four sittings. When the poor old woman with a heavy bun dle comes down the aisle, timidly look ing for a place to rest and to deposit her load, he buries his face yet further in the newspaper and pretends not to see her. The old lady hesitates a little j by bis side, and then passes on. You say: "That man Is not a iollte man. ; He Is not a gentleman." I say Chris ' tlan courtesy means more thnn the two I words "mere politeness" imply. That ' man Is laying the foundations of an ' evil future. For if he Is discourteous ! to bis fellow men, If he is willing to ' crowd his fellow passengers In a rail road train out of the seats which rlght i fully belong to them, be la developing a disposition which, If not checked, may lead him by and by to defraud bis neighbor of the dollars and cents which by right belong to him. Wben Paul said "Be courteous" ha meant more than to be merely polite. He meant "be honest, be fair, -be noble in the lit tle duties and attentions which you should show to your fellow men." Character is not born; it la developed. It springs not tip in a night, aa a Jonah's gourd. It grows gradually. Lyman Beecher once said, 'It took forty yean," when some one asked him the Question, "How. long did tl take to write that sermon r By that Mr. Beecher meant that every year's work was a preparation for the fol lowing year's work. Every act of oar present day is dependent In more ways than oue upon tbe actions of our past When a woman peeks out of her win-do- to see the furniture van unload her new neighbor's furniture and then refuses to call upon that neighbor and I extend to her the rightful social respect ! of the neighborhood, she Is schooling herself to refuse to extend a welcom ing band to her humble sister when she enters ber church. Furthermore, my brother, remember that discourtesy toward others almost Invariably has a reactionary effect. Tbe person who complains most about the rudeness of others Is generally the on who himself is rudest of all. Small essential the next: The absti nence from all appearance of evil. The taking care of your life's actions so that they may never be false lights luring your neighbors and friends upon the fatal rocks of siu. The refusal to eat meat, if by the eating you may cause your brother to offend. "All things may be lawful, but all things are not expedient," was the substance of the Tuiiline injunction to tbe Co rinthian church. "To si cm" may some times be almost as great a sin as "to be." Mark you this: No man can af ford in any way to have his influence cast upon the wrong side of any moral question. Nearly all our great religious teachers have recognized this truth. We must abstain from all appearance of evil on account of our Influence over others. We must abstain from all ap pearance of evil on account also of the reactionary evil influence upon our selves. One of the greatest bulwurks against sin is the God implanted desire to be thought well of by your neigh bors. A man, on account of principle, ought to be ready, if necessary, to defy the scorn nnd the sneer nnd the op probrium nnd the persecution and the misrepresentation and the ridicule of the human race. But every man may desire that his neighbors and friends think well of him; that they should re gard his name as the synonym of hon esty and truth and probity and recti tude. And when any man comes to tbe dangerous condition in which he does not care what his neighbors think about him; when he intentionally and recklessly stirs up a homers' nest of needless criticism; when be tauntingly boasts that it does not inntter what oth ers may Bay, as long as be is nut doing wrong, then that man's feet are trend ing the soft quicksands of temptation and walking along the narrow edge of the precipice of death. My sister, be careful about the char acter of your associates. My brother, you who are an officer or a member of the Christian church, I would not at tend tbe theater again. You may say you saw nothing wrong. You mny say you need the relaxation. But you can fliurthat relaxation In some other way. You cannot afford the rUk. Small essential t,he last: The. Inexo rable duty of keeping an engagement The necessity of doing what you prom ise to do. If you say to u friend, "I will meet you at such and-such a place, nt such nnd such a time," you should be there. You should be there just as certainly as you would be down at the ship's dock on time when it is about to sail lVr 1'urope. and when you have purchiised a $H'0 berth for the pas sage. If you cannot be on time, ac cording to promise, for your engage ment, then you should notify the per son with whom you have the appoint men!. lint the great trouble with many people is that they have no mor al sin-e of the duty of keeping an en gagi wont unless they wisli to do so. They will promise anything, like a dis l.oncM politician just before an elec tion, and like the same dishonest poli tician afP r election they will forget till their promises if it suits their con venience to forget. The result is that the man's character and religious life will be eaten out by these- little fail ures and sins, just as one little worm can tunnel its way into the heart of a great oak and cat out its heart until at last the monarch of the forest will have its backbone snapped by tbe on rushing winds. It is the foxes, the little foxes, that most often spoil the tender vlucs, not tbe elephantine monsters. Once In awhile, however, tbe heavy foot of uu eastern camel might crush them or the paw of a leopard might rip them apart when the midnight prowler, chased by the dogs, Is rushing nway ufter having robbed the sbeepfold, but this is a rare occurrence. It is the lit tle faults, the careless and thoughtless negligences, which do tbe most frequent mischief. It is the little weeds that destroy the gardens and with their bayonet thrusts of thorns stab the flowers to death, not the mighty growths of the cedars of Lebanon or of tbe weeping willows. So It is In evitably tbe small sins, tbe despised sins, tbe ignored sins, the sins of In significance, that most frequently over throw human character, not the behe moth sins, not the monstrous sins, not the sins catalogued In tbe criminal codes of man and of nations. Therefore, O man, I beg and plead with you that you take Christ Into the smallest details of your life. Let the Christ be with you as much In the paying back of a borrowed five cent piece as in the purchase of a store. Let him be with you as much in the clean liness of your wardrobe as In the clean liness of your tongue. Let him belp you in the Christian courtesies which you extend to your neighbors as well as In the Christian exhortations yon offer in your church. May you night and morning always be able to make this prayer: "O Ood, help me tn the lit tle temptations, and then I now that thou wilt make me able to bear the greater trials." With inch a lesson at this for consideration, who to there who wUl dare "to topi tbe 047 man tWngtr . X.: Av er'i You can depend on Aycri Hair Vigor to restore colors your gray .hair, every time. Follow directions and it never fails to do this work. It stops Hair Vigor fallingofthehair.afso. There's great satisfaction in knowing you are not going to be disap. pointed. Isn't that so? ' Mr hair faded mull It ahout wV;,f w took )ut one hottlu of Aver' llnu Yl.-n'.S ri-sliirr it to it former ilark. rlrti r , ', !J Hair Vitfor certainly Uim-s what v.mj.. i J, it." A. 11. UlMMAM, ItUCKUliikulu, .V ! A Alt 00 a lottle. for Fading Hair Sale Register. Ni.tkva of miI' h will l" ins rti .l fi.. 'in hi'ntltnjr hen tlio ImIIh ' l ll U . ill... VII l.ll!u ........ . -"i t:re ') rout will he i lutrKcd. f I ec i i UK to have niH limiM nelt'i l !t have : I11M.TUU in this col num. 1 1 II "A 1 1 1 1, U II Lis r HOW H llUft Ii .t Ifjj lowiiffinp, tiiu aummmiiMtnr- f gu KiniKierwm sell six tnuN r v. rial citato. TCEaiiAr, Doc. 8, 1903, two mil,', w L II I . 1 nn-Biucr, uunam nowrrmix nil) 1 hurties. 4 cows farming implements nounenoia kuouh. it, CASTOR IA For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always l Bears the Signature of i -1 .Ei-ii a v-ures Lioss 01 aititt biek Headache, Dyspepsia, Iutligj tion, Billiousness, Constipation, Dim- ness, Jaundice, Torpid Liver, Han Hum, Foul Breath, etc. Try a bottfcj and be convinced. If it fails to Unefc you your money will be refunded. A3 druggists. Vin-te-na Take VIn-te-na and the 'good eSecS will be Immediate. You wili et strou; you will feel bright, fresh anil active you will feel new, rich blood eouniaj through your veins, your nervofl TiiY "ct steadily, you will feel health id strength and energy coming lackti you. Sold under positive m intee. If it fails l lunef: vou your money will lie re funded. Vin-te-na The World's Gr.-u: T : All riiggist-i. MiDDLEBURGH MARKET. Mutter ttj-Ti - Onions..... Lard" Tallo.v.... Chickens.. Side , Shoulder.. Hani , Turkcvs IS 2G 75 12 5 9 12 12 15 12 Wheat live Com Oats ; Potatoes . .. Brainier 100.1.1 Middling;" 1J Choi U Flour per U1 Hnekw ie:it, Ji Cross? Poor man! He can't help it He eets bilious. He needs good liver pill Ayer's W Thev act directly on thclW cure biliousness. Want your moustache orm a beautiful brown or run diock r BUCKINGHAM'S.! fifty rrn. or lmi'ouwn on m. p. haix v. Widows' Appraisements. Knilna U hkV vIvaH thill tile M-r.r:. r:;T" ?' ...... .i.r , ' n huM l-en fllmt with th Clnrlc ot the Court of Snyder County for conilrin" Mnni UU tin ldtll AM nt 1 l(l'- A. 1'. l-v 1. Appratwment of Sobln Molandfr. " a rw..ll u..l. ...... 1... Ai Mld.llflhunr. V1 ceawd. elected to be taken uudct 111' "n exemption law. AnprHlaement of Amanda Wagner, "' U. w. Wagner, late ol west rerry """J elected to be token under tue tauO.CO ew" 1,W ....... . .LU WtW Appraisement oi ouaannan uruuu, at Ynhn Uruhh. lata ol Centra twl., elected to betaken under tbe KWO.iWei' W" G.M.8HISDKt,Clok&' Mlddleburg, Pa., Norember 14, 1903. Fob Sale. A house and lot sl1 in PAitanvillft in offered fttprlv" The buildings are in good con The home la BUDDlled with fint" water, fruits, etc Write or call Sabah Bowebso Paxtonvi