rrosious bros. brosious LUOS. CHRISTMAS HERE ALREADY. All Kii)J oj PrpseijLj For Ali) ar)d Boy. The Goad Sensible Kind. t'liristnuis Trees, from 1V. to S1.0. llai-i i.fall kinds fide, to $o.0O. I '.ip- of all kinds iOe. to J?o. 00. Mi n - Suit- hum ..".( Ml to S'J'U'ti. Men's ( v -ivnat- from .".00 to S'J.'i.OO. I'miVs iSuits and Overcoats, fiom $l..0 lo .?7. "0. Moil's Knit Jackets from Sl.MO t. sf.".00. Siit oases from i0 cents to $11' ."0. M ru"s Trousers liom $1.01) to $1 00. Trunks, from Jf'J.'.'S i., $-J.oo. (iloM-.o every known kind 10 o n!-, to $10.0.1. I inlnvllas, from ."tV. lo $7. "'. Sliirts, t'roni -l."ii'ciiis to $;i.00. Fa i ii 'V an.l tuil dress vests $1.00 to $o.0i). s iiokiiiij Jacket ami House Cn.it. $:'. ','S to $S.0O. I I iii.ikrl i lili't'-. (loin cents in $;.oi(. . n' Silk II -t $." oo $t'i.oO ami $00. Mics Skating (aN, $:!..0. BROSIOUS BROS, sUNbUrY, pa. The Most RELIABLE Clothing House. Christmas is Doming Hut on wont know the difference between Xuias w anv other dav, unless vou have a lot of nice :o:Gbpitra Goods, Anil the place to buv them is at EBRIGHT'S, ALINE, PA., 1 h.tve the (,'hokost ami Finest Line of Holiday Hoods to be found any where in the country, consisting of Taney Vases, Mngs, Toys, Christmas Tree Decorations, .Faperjiiul Tinsel Decorations, Mechanical Toys and a . 1 We have a few Ladies' andMisses Coats left that ne will sell at a reduced price, a lull line of Ladies' Dress Skirts :iud Fur Collars, and our line of Dry (ioods and Notions. I'nderwear and Hosierv, RUBBER GOODS, SHOES, Men's and boys Clothing. I - o'UivK-u an d j'!i-'.-s a low :t the lowest. Come vi at id ; you will le pleased with the disjday of i-i. I L.n.k 'iij my many patrons' for past patronage itiiij a i-:,:iim:UH'" of the same, I remain, FOHEST MOXARCHS. Dr. Talmage Draws Inspiration From the Woods. i The Tree of the Woodlands Faralik the Theme For Hit Srrinoa. Urn of Kntere Sjrmbulle of Spiritual Life. ICopyrlght. 1903, by Louis Klopsch. CIlll'AttO, Nov. In tli'.H scrinoi the preacher takes us Into the forests and f roin the life ami death of the wood land munarehs draws an eloquent les son tlint li rich In iinturnl beauty and full of spiritual helpfulness. The text Is Kcclesiastes 11. a, "In the place where the tree falleth there It shall be." Every Intelligent Ktndent has been Impressed with the inexorable se quences of natural causes. If a man Bhoulil allow his row boat to be pushed out intft the nihil!:'' of the roiirlni;, li 'i' Il; 1 ..lv IV-' V 1 I V II... . d.-as tliii;:s itself over i.: ,:i power on V I y Tlie hu ;V.l i uoimli to r.. ,'he oiisweep- :i.;-r than the i. It' a tna M f the KifTol ! . ji from Its 1 In- whirled : was at last h. up of 1111- ii struck the at: rail ion of : -d that body rc. in.' by the .oil M vd . n ; l. .IV rushing river wb! Niagara fails, I., en il h inn !il .i. I man arm i i: stem that awl 'i illK ru-li of i!. .:;'.! WollM lie I Btailil.l'-, HI" n tower hi i' :i summit, hi round . .'H daslioil i : ! ; c -rcconiy.a' I. ra 11 li lieiow gravitation wlii down ioii'iI lit 1 Vibraliiitf ana as II is l.y ihe w ncs of a bird. U i 1 1. launched fioin such a height, could arrest its fall in midair and tlv liiulier and 1 i i 1 n r until it ills iippcanil into the blue sky of the heav ens' dome. There is all inevitable se quence in nature's laws. There Is a natural ipienee in spiritual laws. If a man plants the riht seeil for a spir itual harvest, he will reap a spiritual harvest. If he plants sinful seeds, he shall reap a sinful harvest. Further more, by the same kind of reasoning, after a man's earthly life's work is done, whether it be well or badly done, it is done forever. It 1 liko n tree wliii li hus fallen to the north or to the south. "In the place where the tree falleth there it shall be." I am Koine to use for my pulpit the trunk of a fallen tree upon which we have rested in our wandorliiKx through the woods. 1 do not cure whether this tree lies upon the steep mountain side covered with moss and creeping Ivy, whether it spans some brook or wheth er it lies at the foot of a Kreat precipice over which it has tumbled. The only thill); I do care about is that this trunk fhould have fallen of its own accord. Hy that 1 mean rt has not been cut down by a woodman's ax. When we study the laws of nature as symbols of the spiritual life we must study them in their simplicity. We must study them as nature was studied by King Solomon, who evidently spent as much time roamins over the Judean hills as he did in the Jerusalem palace. A tree may live to be very old: but, after all. there must come a time when tlie tree's life shall cease to exist. Tin u. atti r it totters and falls, it is al :i ili ad tree. What lias been done by tli:.t tree ha been done forever. N:iie i.ave !. 1ihi r.i 1 1, l.,t,', al:i p.-il have livid Ad: 11. -Mi has ,!, I;.!, H. A. EBRIGHT. Sewing Machines u0;- i !E;? LOT RECEIVED n,,-ni-,tllllitr white. UjUUi Liiniti Wheeler, o . - , , A 'I50."' Choice & Comprehensive pcclalty f om Sib up. Ljne of FVWU?. MCGEL. Middleburg. 'atche Diamonds, Jewelry, also Holiday-Gifts I.tll ii!li ii1 ''.)' 1: ' 'lir i:i!i.i.i; the kili'.'WiUj; : J ni ati'i F'"'i A ii -ri 1 1 riy Ma''iji:n". ' 'ni'.:it W ruiTr-. fiii-i.eU. all L iii'Jc Tii- J-rfiV' M'X'i-. Jjwc Pri'.r-. Ni'-'klt- JJjalel Wiif. 'Jrauil- W'uifr. J 'j!.-. a!! kiii'j-. P'c-Let Juivi-.-. I'lfkt i..k-. (.'l"r. i?:: t,rwaifc, (,'ut Glass, Utu-lire'ia-, I-utlii-r (i jd', Nyvtltiet, aii'J 1 iratJ J-'ottrv. W't: inr'Jially invito vou Vj x tin- .-ler'.i'.(tis niadt now niav I li.-j't witli us until Christmas. Kves MMftitifi'.-allv txaiuinJ f'rt 'il '.'iiurj:. FRANK GAS m Lp-to-date Jewtler and Optician, 249 Market Square, Sunbury, Pa. Lti'-iii'Jiji , MAKKLT J Geo. W. Hackett, bl.N'IiUKV, JJA. Alien A. Orr, xiunty Treasurer, of Mittliu Atuuty, wife tbd on, of Lewiu tuwii; H. H. Hurler mid fauiily, of hunuury: Liuu Noll and wife, of jen irtourg. tod tLe J-liUr kiid wifv tit tLeir 'i'Ljtukgiviug Didmut ut l)t. J. W. Orwijr'a. en known to live nine are even sup r.iiini years. lr. d that the baobab tr of Afrieji M'laeti'.r.es lives to be ,r,.ii j ear old. The explorer lie t'an d";;.. has estimated that the Taxdiutn diiiel.uui lives even to a greater aye i.an that. A Tree's ase can be esfl-u.ati-d by sai:i' the trunk in two and tvi;:it:ia: the - that are found in the w.nvt. every riiis representing a year. I'.ut. though the tree may live e.'" years or even loiici-r. there comes a t:n." when that tree iuut fall. Then a fallen tree i always a dead tree. So tin-re !i.ut come a time when a man's ear:L!y life i done, and it is done for ever. "In the piaee where the tree falMh there it shall be." it nor a startliiiL' thought tTint aft er a man heart om e cvases to beat he raiinnt ihatu-e Hiiythiuir in his past life? Is it not a startlir.j: thought that a iluii who is prK-alent of ihe t'n led States, with an army and navy and fifty trillions of people back of him. a Abraham Lincoln had. can wilhin a few hour l.e a i oid corpse and unable to i.V'T a word"; 'ne niht sitting In Ford's theater: a nhort time afterward wiiii Kdwin Stanton bending over hiia iiud -:iyiriir "IIk is cone: we must have his work to be Judged by the i en turieV" Is it not im overwhelmln;,' faet that a man with all the mental powers of a 'iladi-tone can not arrange his pa ITS after he ig nine dead, but hud to leave them all to his literary executor? Oh. how often we have heard thi sen te:n e :u a house where there has lately been a sad funeral: "If I could only bring blui back for a few moments to nth him what he would like me to do tbout this matter:" But the fallen tree it a dead tree. What that tree ba done Is done forever and can never b undone. What has been left undone li left undone forever. A dying man's last gasp is even more piguinouut and overwhelming than a newborn baby's lirst cry. One la the hing. the other the betting, sun. The cm- ie the first word of story which Is about lo be told and may be told well; the other U tke last word of tlie last sentence of the last pagp, when the story is ended. One la the reveille founding the call to arms; the other 1 a tattoo U-ati-n upon a muffled drum by the side of un open grare. One Is the spring blossom, the other a falling enowfiake. One Is a bird's not sung aiiioug the growing leaves; the other Ig the snapping of a trunk when the old tree la about to make its last plUDge and go down with a crash. Living man ma once ka?t been Uoug at the great tree (or wkoav life "V-orjrp P. Morris pleaded with elo- :t verse, but when the human being . id he cannot even lift Ulnm-lf into it-..nn which uiny have Imv-mi made .mi l,le tree truuk which his own id hewed down. He cannot even ..'....i oi:t to liis own grave, but has to o earned there like a helpless log be- n; dragged to the daui. ' One second after the pulse lias ceased to beat he c-ienot raise hia little flayer oue inch or . Vi'i ;e o:'e word in bin last will and .ps. anient any more than a fallen tne tru-ili. ir It had the power of thought, on id lift itself and stand uimn the ragged stump which the buried roots 1 u'"t are still anchoring in the ground and live 1U life over again. Choice may be given to the living man choice to llva right or wrong; choice to reach after the higher or the lower lift but the time will come when maa, like the tree, which may live mairf centuries beyond the ane of man, shall fall. Then there will lie no power of choice. What has been done by him Is done and never can be changed. What has been left undone by him will be left undone and will never, never be done by him as long as eternity lasls. A fallen log symbolizes it. The fallen tree Is a dead tree, which nearly always falls In the direction it has grown. I say nearly, because there are exceptions, which, though rare, do occur. Once in a great while a tree does not fall In the direction In which it has grown. Hut these exceptions are very rare. They are as exceptional as the man who has always lived a had life and at the last moment is convert ed by a deathbed repentance and who Is thereby able to fall, when the clock is striking l'J, Into the outstretched arms of a loving Christ. Most trees -indeed. It might be said practically all trees when they die fall in the direction in which they have grown. About the tree's trunk and above the tree's branches and underneath the tree's roots are the great ever Influencing laws of specific gravity, a little to the right. It ably falls to the right; If to the left, it falls to the left. When a man conies to die, as a rule, the only thing he ran do is to die. When the messenger conies, lie has not any Inclination to think about any thing else but dying. If the fatal dis ease gnaws at the vitals for many months and perhaps years, the doctor, and nurses and loved ones conceal tho truth from the patient for fear of de pressing him. Or death comes like a stroke of lightning out of a clear sky. It comes, as it did to my father, one moment clear brained and on a preach ing tour, the next upon a deathbed and unable to speak a word. lieatb often comes suddenly as a thief, as a watch In the night A man dies as a tree falls. He dies as he has lived. Among all the Bible records there Is but one exception to this rule. The pages of the Hlble contain only one account of a deathbed repentance. The fallen tree is a dead tree, the In fluence of whose past life never dies. Trees have an earthly mission. They are mighty factors in the planet's dally life. In the celebration of Arbor day by the schools and educational institu tions it would be appropriate, although it is not especially enjoined by statute, to couple with study of trees lessons on our birds and the great importance of their protection. The yi iing people cannot have too great an apple, lalioii of nature or too keen a no of the re lation between 1 1 I- niai'.v liea'llies and utilities. Atmospheric changes are more or les- iniiiienced by tree-. 1'rollgllts and t'le-hets ale often caused by the lack of trees. Many countries of the far cast have been absolutely ruined by the ruthless destruction of tlie fotvMs. I'roin an inhabitable coun try they have been changed into groat wastes of arid deserts. So the inlltieiice ilie that of a tree. The branches are too heavy. The root re too wide to be lifted and moved. The Imperfections of trees may be the nione readily recognizable In their old gre. btit the Influences which caused the tree to grow to the north or to the south nearly always do their work for giHid or evil when the trees-are hardly more ttyn small saplings. If this fart bo true. Is It not of utmost Importance that parents should carefully look after , the work of rearing their children? I ViiltlifV lum'tln T .. ,1,1 til-.. I- just one word to yon. Yon are apt to think that tlie wSod of yith does not to much. I want to tell you that you are now forming the habits that will grow stronger and stronger s the years roll on. The bark of the tree is the place where the life is sup posed to exist. Hut if the Inside of the tree, or the woodeu part, is allowed to be tunneled by a worm the Inside of j the tree will soon bo eaten out. Tlirn the whole tree will soon totter and fill'. ' One small sinful habit can destroy th" i liiiuian heart. One little tug In youth j in the wrung direction can pull oft lh branches of truth and purity and love ai'd honor and make a lopsided tree, j What you do now w ill decide the moral ; character of jour future. Trees l,mu years old are neither more nor less , than the fully developed and expanded perfections and inipci f vtinns of a tree only four, live, ten, twenty, thirty years old. Nearly nil Ihe hardened n One dose of Ayer's Chentt Pectoral at bedtime preveiil night coughs of child,: Cherry Pectoral doctor's medicine for an affections of the throat, broj! chial tubes, and lungs. Sold for over 60 years. "I hurt trd Ayri Chtm Pwtnmi i. famllT lor sight yntt. TliereU n..l"V" to It for milirtil mid fttlila Aalii. aren."-itiu. W. U. uvnaB,8Mi,j, fn-.,mH- pi.uu, j r A'l .lrin-i-i.t. m T ', Night Coughs AyarM i-ills at bodtime, Just bj Sale Rejibier. NntircB of .il n will b I'tu rtfl i lllli llt'flilillK M llt'll till' liilU e ,n t oltl.e Vlii'ii tlm lP ii uri nut until ...ii.... ji in .... i . el-io.l.e.lu l... M.......I , ... ..f .1 I I . "' ' I'lirK.-.l. . - " i-" iiiii "i li" il on i iif. nK lo iv. ,,! llillll I ..., ,. , ill the penitentiary committed their I'nvc u tn-ert ! in film-uium i lirst crime when they were llothlii'.' more than boys under twenty years of age. Many a murderer has started on a quick journey for the gallows by whet ting his taste for blood when as a child he tortured a dog or a caged rat. Hut though a fallen tree Is a dead tree, which nearly always falls In the way it has grown, a living tree, no matter how young or old, can become an Ingrafted tree, drafting may be aci-omplishcd in many different ways. If a tree leans 1 1,1 bodding grafting a hud is selected. almost Invarl- 111011 u strong young branch Is cut life of a human tleVer dies. Its good or evil lives oil and on. long albr the human tree has fall-li. Earthly demise would not be appall ing if when a man dbil the bad he did while upon the earth should die with him. Hut the trouble is that the bad lives on as well as the good. The won derful book of Kugene Sue called "The Wandering Jew" is founded upon a weil known Koman legend. It runs that when Christ had been condemned in I'ilate's judgment ball the Jewish doorkeeper struck at him and cried: "Move on, man! Move on faster! Why dost thou linger? Move on!" With that the condemnid Christ turned and said, "I will go, but thou shalt remain until I come." And so. says the legend, the brutal Jewish doorkcucr wanders up and down the world, begging God for death, but he cannot die. He can not die. Though that is only a legend. It Is a solemn truth that every good word we have spoken or evil deed we have done lives on after we are dead. It lives on In the lives of others with whom we come In contact. We live on in the good we have done. Then we are like that beautiful tree mentioned in an Easter fable whose branches were laden with apples of solid gold and Its leaves covered with silver bells. When the leaves of that tree were shaken by the soft winds those hells would begin to chime the sweetest music, and that would be the signal for the ioor and the starving to come and gather the falling fruit. Or we shall live on after we are dead In the evil we have done to our neighbor. Down through the centuries has the evil been perpetuated of that lirst sin, when a tempted man and woman plucked the fruit hanging from ihe branch of a tree. So through all time the influence of our lives for nA or evil shall goon bringing forth fruit. There is another significant reason why the dead tree nearly always falls la the way It has grown - the direction 1s determined by tlie Intlie s wl.; h were at work upon ! young' r lift The proverb declares Hint "old trees cannot bs transplanted." The knots re too big- The trunk Is too bent our ln crosswise with a sharp knife. Then the bud Is placed upon the bare branch and the four pieces of bark are Joined at the bud's base and the wound Is cov ered over with Japanese matting. So the young human trees may be ingraft ed. They can have Christ's perfections in all their freshness and fragrance made to grow into them. They can grow Into the Christian life so gradu ally and sweetly that they will not he able to tell the exact moment of their conversion. They will be like that young girl who was asked on Joining the church when she commenced to love the Lord Jesus. "Why," she an swered, "I never commenced to love the Saviour. I feel that I have always loved 111 in. liut there is another way of grafting. There is the sprouting grafting. Uy this process whole limbs will be cut off and new limbs from other trees will be placed Into the fork shaped crotches. If necessary nothing need be left but the trunk of. the old tree. .This wos the way Christ's, 'life was ingrafted into raid's. This was the way Baxter and llunyan and Jerry . McAuley and Harry Monroe and the -seven-deviled Mary of ancient and modern times have he. n converted. Whole branches of sin, which have been growing for many years upon these sinful trunks, have been cut off. (iiiarled and worm eaten and disease producing branches, which have only produced poisonous leaves of sin, have been lopped off, and into those sinful trunks have been In grafted the lon.T, healthy, growing branches of the tree of life. My broth er, from the oldest and the weakest and the poorest and the most twisted of human trees there is slill hope that the branches of the beams of the cross ; can be ingrafted in them If they are only willing to have chopped off their branches of sin and to let Christ do the ingrafting. j Hut there is one thought of my text which ought to be emphasized. I do j not believe many people hare stopped to fully consider it. All fallen trees are dead trees. Yes. Hut some trees which are not fallen may be dead trees also. j As we have said, the whole life of the i tree Is In the bark or the outside of the tree. There the sap (lows up and down. There the connection is made between the roots of the tree and the leaves. 1 If that bark can be once broken so that the sap cannot flow, then the tree dies. A short distance from my late country home a farm hand became angry at his employer. One night he took a knife and went Into the orchard and cut a circle of the bark off each tree. In one night the man killed between fifty and sixty trees. For this crime he wos sent to Jail. And, oh, my brother, can It be that sonic? one whom I am now addressing shall soon be a dead tree to Christ, although he Is not a fallen tree? Can it be that, though receiving the gospel invitation again and again, you are going to let Satan take a knife and circle about the bark or the heart of your spiritual life? Then, Indeed, you will lie dead to all heavenly pleas. You will be dead to all the calls of the Holy Kpirlt. You will have no conscience left. Would that Instead of being a dead tree to Christ we could become a liv ing tree In God! Arboriculturists de clare that the roots are Just as wide and strong underneath the ground as the branches of the tree growing over head. I myself in climbing a moun tain have seen a tree which by the strength of its roots bus been able to grow upon tlie side of a precipice. Let us as living trees sink our roots deep and fasten I hem about tlie Calvary Idn k. I't us lift our branches high, that our IcHfy hands limy be cleansed with showers of heavenly benedictions. Then when the time comes for tht hu man tree to fall Christ will lift us up and carry us above to beoome one of the plllarj of the heavenly temple, as h ones carried his own croks toward Calvary. Upon tkat cross b died far i a tj Sen lie vv, Hi-p. 0, lli'iir Kiiw'h ( hurili i, P uoviitii i. inn iiiiiiiiniiiralitrH -fjj iMi"irr win si'ii nix ir.uts .,( tli real i.-t He. TCKHIIAV I!,.... M 1IUI4 I.. i.. . ;;.. ..: . ' : : iv iiiirr, m.wnrn nowi'trm tf lmir. I c.wr fnniu 111,) I. l(lb J rr.1t DIaI ft. .1.41 .1... l'l I llv U' ll "H II, CASTOR IA For Infants aid Children. The Kind You Have Always Boc Ylaara Ilia . 1 Signature of Oux&zMZLh Marriage Llctase. ( Allien C Oenilierling, Selin-ifroJ (i aiueriue j uoy, i rw J INewtnii I. llillgimiuil, lleavenotj l milium li. iv easier, I Herman itickbart, I'mtoivM I Aiary.M. linker, Jtenjatiiin F. Scboll, VenlilW MianiokitiDid Clara E, Wendt, f Adam J. Kaltriter, I Klsie M. Keigel, I James V. Itrousc, I Catherine Wagner, George ( '. Speese. I Husan E. Bowersox (Charles F. Norman, (Lottie M. Troxel, tseaver.Sirii:gJ KratMiii: .Mleni Vicksbwn AdaiiM Tup. Cashier R. C. North was a Middle! barg visitor, Tuesday. I Bold flings 5 FREE ! ( 'In ist ma is coining ami i 'il will be here before many 1 1 ii are ready for it. Now we l.a't made arrangements w lu i. l v can oiler our trade 1") lu-auiilit (old Kings free. Just the tlni.g to give ton friend for a t "h ri-trau piesenl. Kenieinber wcoulyUft -" of these rings and lii! '"ii lirst served. Cottie in ami wi-uii. talk it over. Butter and Eggs in exi lian?. THE RACKET. Yours for Business, Geo. W. Burns. V utch our uilvertisciin nU MlDDLEBURGH MARKET. Wheat i Kyc Corn 1 JSutter 18 Kkrh ' 2G Onions 75 Lard Tallo.... Chickens., Side Vhoiihler . Hani Turkeys 10 Oat Potatoes Until iMfrlOttU 1 10 Middling''!) 1 O il il I - .l!OJI 14 IFlournerlibliA i 13 Jluckwlirat, Dizzu? Appetite poor? Bowc constipated? Tongue coal Head ache? It's voufli Ayer's Pills are liver pills. vegetable. Said for lily yaari. l Want your moustache or beg a beautiful brown or rich black' j BUCKINGHAM'S II Engine For Sale I A twelve horso power wrtutlt''i Engine Is ottered at u Ivat j can m seen at Htrojitown. Iofi E. H, Htboiii, J