8 Doers are othe: Ho rad after the most eventful summer ite, I must shortly and as soon I ro- ron the sea voyage give | : ‘count of our mission of bread to. famine. stricken Russ'a, and of my preaching tour through Germany, Dagzland, Scotland and Ireland = but my first ‘sermon on reaciing here: must be a: hosanna of gratitude to Curist, and fron the text I have chosen, I Fave found that the greates; names in'the oosan saipping, and from Liverpool to Mos. row, and trom flogsow to Lonion and Ea- inbirezh and Belfast and Dublin, 1s Jesus, Every age of the world has had its nis torians, its ohilosophars, its artists, ifs “thinkers and its teacaers. Wers thers his- {tories tio Le written there has Always been o Moses, ‘ora Herolotus, or a Xengophon, or a : hast tvrite theni, Wera there poems io be vonstructed ‘thers has always been 8 Jon ora Homer to construct thom. Were 1uera thrones lustrous and powerful to bs Heed shore has always been’ a ‘David or a Cesar to raise them, Were there teachers demanded for the intallect and the hearts there has been a Socrates, and. a Zo, and 2 Cleanthes, and a Mirsus "Antoninus com: ihe forth on the grand and glorious mission: Every ase of the world has had its trinmphs ‘of reason and morality. Taere has not been ‘a single ag of the worid twhich has nos: nad soine decided systemvof religion. “ Mhe Platonism, orientalism, sboicism, mini Buddhism, considering the 3 you an ac- “Br an es.in shich they (were ef “wot Jacking in ingenuity and Lin this Hine’ 5 benéfisent institutions and ot noble men, there fopears a persoliafe more avonderfui than any predec.ssol, ‘Ha came “from = faniily without any royal ot aristo- - + gratic prétension. He came'a Galilean me: shanic. He had no advantage from the schosle, ‘There were people beside Him day ‘after day who had ne idea that He was going robe anvthing remarkable or do anything vemarxable. Yep notwithstanding all this and without any title or stholarly pro.ession or ‘flaming rhetoric Ha startled the world with the strangest anuounsamsnts, ran in collision with solemn prizst and proud ruler, and with a voice that rang through temple and palace and over ship's: deck and moun: tain top, cxcleimel, ‘lam the lizhi of ths world?’ : 5 i Men wers taken all abacs at the idea that that hand, yet hard from ths uss of the ax, the saw and adz and hatchet, should wave the s2epter ot authority, and vhat upon that brow, trom whaich they hal so often seen’ Rim tips the sweat of toil, there woud yet tome the crown of unparabieled spiendor sind of universal dominion. . We all know tow oifficult it is to think thai anybody weo was at school with us in boyhood has pot to be anything great or famous, and no wonder that those who had been boys with Qhoriat in the streets of NMazarsty and seen Him in atter years in toe days of | His ecom- plete obscurity, should have bean very slow to acknowledge Christ's svonderinl: mission. From this humble point tae stream of life Bowed out. Atfirstit was just a fajno rill, hardly able to nd its way down the voes, but the tears of a weeping Christ added to “its wolume, ‘and it'flowed "On until by "ths beanty: and greenness of the banks you. wight know the path the crysial stream tvas faking, 04 ang ov, untill the lepers wera brought aown and washed of their leorosy, nln toe dead were litsed into, tha water that they mizht heve lie, ani paaris of joy anti ipromiss were gathered fro the brink and ipnumerable caurches gathered on eithe: tank and the tide flows on deeper and stronger and sider Wotil it rolls ind the viver from: under the $arons of Goldy. min: gling bitlow with billow, and brighsaess with brightness, and joy with joy, ‘and bosdnnd with hosauiln.:’ ES Twas loosing at some of the paintinzs of the artist, Mr. Konsett. saw soms pic- tures that were just faiat ouslings; vim some plaees you would see only the branciaes of a tree and no trans; and in anobhos ease tha trunk and no brapcaes., He had not finished the work. 1t would have taken him day: and months peroaps to have completed it. Well, my friends, mn this world we get only the faintest outline of ‘what Christ’ js. It will take ail eternity to fill np tne picoure— 80 loving, so kind, so merciful, so. great! Fant does not, in tals chapser, say of Carist He isgcod, or He is loving, or Hs is patiant, or He 1s kind, buo ih His exciamation of the «text he'embraces everything waen ha says, {Christ isali and aan” 3 I remark in the firss placa, Christ is every: thmgz in the Bible. 1 do noi care waere open the Bible, I find Jesus! ‘In whatever potn I start, ¥ coda afwer a waile tp the Bethlepem manzer. I go back to the old dispensation, and seea Iambon the altar and ‘say, ‘*Behold the Lamb of God waiea taketh away the sin of tne world!” Tosa I go and see the manna proviaed for tae Israelites in i the wilderness, and say, *'Jesus, the bread o% lire’! Then I look at the roex waich: ‘was smitten ‘by toe prophet’s rod, and, as tae water gushes out, I say, “Iv is Josus, tha fountain opened forsin and for uncieanness.” I go back and look at tae writings of Job and hear him exclaim, ‘I know thai my Reedecner liveth! Then I go to Ezekiel and I find Christ presented there as ‘'‘a slant of renown,” and then I turn over to ‘feaiah and Christ is spoken of *‘as a sheep before the shearers.” It is Jesus all the way between Genesis ani Malachi,” Then 1 turn over in the New Testament and it is Chriss in the parable, ibis Christ in the miracle. it is Chriss in the eyangelist’s story, it is Christ’ in the apostle’s epistles and it is Carist in tha trumpet peal of the Anocalypsa. 1 know there are a great many pedple who ¢o not find Christ in ths Bible. Hers is a man who studies the Bible as a historian. Well, if you coms as a historian, you will fin? in this book how ths world was made, how tha gees fled to their placas, how empires were established, how nation foazht with nation, javelinrinzing azainst harbc- ogeon, until the earth was ghastly with the dead, You will ses the coronation of princes, the triumph of conguarors, and the world turned unside down ani bac< azain and down again, cleit and scarred with great © agonies of earthquake and tampest and bat- i gles Ibis a wonderful history, putting to the blush all others in ths accuracy of its recital and in tae stupeadons events it re ; s. Homer ani Taucydides and Gibbon could make great stories out of little events: but it took a Moses to tell how the heavens “i and the earl were made in ons chapter, and to give toe history of thousands "ol years sgpon two leaves. | eS W" 5 come to the Bible! | mereiv as aniiguatiah; if youcoms.asan nti sign, yon Willfind a great many odd thing’ in the Bible—psculiarities of mannar and custom, marriage and burial; peculiar- . ities of dre =, tunics sandals. erisping pins, “amulsts and girdles and tinklinz ornamuats. {df yon come: to look af military arrange- mail and jav- Af you lodsk for pz- ents, you: will find nil rams horns. in'tha ‘Bibla cnri- java anlinercmaree anil ! gion that wilt ke:p him great: while, Toere ars those Is Bible as you w Cavill 1" beats, and when | beats, and when verything g beantifu', from th plain stones of thy sya Nano: filling tha trouzh for the camels, and the fish pools of Heshbon, up to ths psatmis! t praising God with diapason off storm and’ wairlwinl, and Job lealinz forth: Ocion, Aveturus and the Pleiades. It is a wonter- ! rul poem, and a graat’ many people read it as they do Thomas Moore's “‘Lalia Roozh,” and Walter Scott's ‘Lady of ths Lake,” and Tennyson's *'Charzso’ thes Lizht Brizale.” They sit dows, and ars so aosirbei in loog- ing at ths shelis on tae suora that tazy for- get to look off on ths great ocaan of Gal's mercy ani salvasion. : Tran thors are othars ‘who coms fo. this book as skeptics. They marshal passag- azyinst passage, and fry to gey Matthaw ans Liike in a qari crepancy buuween whab ‘Paul ani Jamas says about faith and works, anil thay. try the account of Moses concaraing tha crai- tion by mo lern dacisions ia scieass, and re * goive that in all questions betwaen th sciens tific exnlorer anil tha ‘iassired writse they give: the preferangado the 92.0286 hese men — these spiders, I will say — sucs poison out of thy aweeiast f3wvars. Toey fatten heir! infidelity | uvoa. m2 truths whica have lei thousinis to heaven, ani in thir. distorssl wision prophes seams to war wita prophel, ani evangelist with evangelist, and apostle wita apostie, and 1t they can tind Sa ne bad trait ozcharacter in a man 0. God unaationel in ‘that Bible ties carrion cows caw ani flap their wings over tha cardass, . Bscauss they cannot understand ‘bow tus waale swal- lowed Jonah. they. attempt tha mors woa- deriul reat of swallowinz the nidnster wails of moderasseptieisn. They do nob balieve it possible har tha. Bible story saould ba trus which says that the du nb ass spaze, while they themselves prove the thins pos sible by their owautterancss. 1; oo 1. am amused beyond bounds when I haar. one of these mou talkinz about a fupuce life. © Just ask a man who rejects that Biola what heavens, and haar him bsiog yon. soul, He sill tall you tha® heaven 1s. merely the development of ths internal rs- sources of a man; itis an effiorsscence of the dynamic forcss into a state of ethersal and wranscandental lucubration, in close jaxva- position to the ever present “was” and the great “to be’ and ths everlasting “mp. Considerinx themselves wise, they are rools for time, fools for dternity. Thea there is another class of persons who coms to the Bihla'as controvarsialists. They are saormous Presovterians or feres Bap- 1ists or violent Methodists, | Thsy cut the Bible to suit their cread insfead of cutting their creel to suit tae Bible, I7 tha Scrips tures think as they do, well: if not, s6 much the worss for the Scriptures. Tae Bible is 1nerely the whetstone on which they sharpen the dissecting Knife ‘of controversy, They come toit as a government in%¥ime of war comes to armories or arsenals for weapons and munitions. They have declare] evor- lasting war agiinstall other sects, and thay want 50 many broadswords, so many mus kets, so many howitzars, so many eolum- biads, so much graye ani canister, so many fisldpieces with which to rake the field of dispute, for they mean to get the vietory though the heavens be darkenad with the What do btitey caré ‘about thd 'riligion’ of the Lord Jesns Oorist. | $ ; I haveseen some such men coms back from an ecclesiastical massacre as proud of boasting of the number of sciips he has taken. Ihave more admiration for a man ‘who goss forth with nis flits to gat the cham- ‘pionship than Ihave: for these theological pugilists who maka our theolozicil maga- zines ring with their warcery. There are men who sem to think the only use of th» sword of truth is to stick somebody. Thera is one passageof the Scriptures that they like bet- ter than all oth irs, and that is this: “Blessed be ths Linrd which taacheth my handsto war and my fingers to fight.” Woe tousif we come to God's word as confroversialists, or as sireptics, or as connoisseurs, or as fault fin lors, or merely as poets!’ © List us go forth and gasher the trophies; for Jesusi From Goleanda mines wa gather the diznonds, from Ceylon banks wo gather the pearls, from all lands ani kingdoms we gather precions stones, and wo orinz the glittering burdeis and put then down at the teat of Jesus anti say: ‘All thess are Thina, Thou art worthy.” « Wo go forth again for mora vodhies, and into one shenf we gather all tha seapters of th: €arih, of all royalties and dominions, ani then we bring ths shaaf uf seaptrs aad pat it down at fae feat of Jesus and say, “‘fhot art Kinz of kings, and these Thow has cong acre.” And then wa go fort azaia to gather more trophies, and we bil tae redeem2d of ali a ves, thasonsanil dau shitsis of tus Lond Al- mighty, tio come. Ve ask them to coymeand offer their thankszivinzs, ant 513 hasis of heaven bring crown anil pavn antl scp and hares by these hle2: tiny fest, anl uy riven side, and by tis wounlet hears cry, “Blessinz and honor and glory ant power be unto Him that sitb2th usan tae tarogsan | and unto the Lanb fe Tell me of a tsar thay Hs Lurden that He dil nss caer, ol a that de did not ficat, 0a vie ail not acaieve, great plan of redem prion. L remark again, Carisy is everything fd the Caristian in tima of troanie. Who bas escaped trouble? WWa3 muss ail stood down and drink out ol the pitver laxe. The moss bas no tim to grow on tas bDiucgeis that come oii oi tie heart's well dFiopins win tears, Greats trials are apda Our rag: as certain as greyhound pac: oa faa seat ol deer. From our hsarts mn every direction there ars a thousand chords reachiny out binding us to loved ones, an | ever an tianoa sonie of these teadgils snap. Taz winds taat cross this s»a ol iif 3 ars not ali abaft. “Tha @loads that eross our sy aramnot f-athary and alar, straying like flocs o! sise; heavenly pastures, bus wiatatul and somber and gleaming with" ferro they wrap ths mountains in Hee, and coms aowa biying with their thunders throuzh evary gor xe. The richest fruits of blessinz havaa pricsly shell. life here is not lying as ancaor; it is weathering a gale. It ismot slaspinz in a soldiar’s tent with our arms stacked; itisa vayonet charge. We stumble over grave- stones, and we drive on with out waaal deep in the old rut of graves. Trouble has wrinkled your brow, ani it has frosted yoar tisad. Falling in this battle of life, is taera no anzel to tind our wonads? Hath Gol mads this world with so,maay things to hurt and none to heal? Hor this suake- bite of sorrew, is there no herb growint by all the brooks to heal bhe poison? Bisssad be God that in the Gospel we find ths anti- dote! Christ has bottled an oc:an of tars. How many thorns He hath pluzkal out of human agony! Op, Haknows too well srhat it is to carry a cross, not to halp us carry ours] Hs knows too well what it is to elimio tne mountain, not to help us up the steap. He knows tod well what it is to be persecuted, not to help those who are imposed upon. 5 ola battle vy topaz He He iS ws too well what it is to ba sig, not to halp tnose who suffer, Aye, Ha knows too weil whatit is 10 die, not to help us in ourlast extro-nity. Blessed Jesus, Thon knowest it all. Sesing Thy wounded side, and Thy wounded hand, and Thy wounded feet, and Tny wouniei ‘brow, we are sure Thy knowest 1t ally 7 On, when those into whose bosom we used to breathe our sorrows are snatcaed from us, blessed ‘be God, ths heart of Jesus still all other lights go out and sdark, then we see coming out a cloud something ‘so brighs awe kiow it to be the morning s deliverance! 'Thd nand of 8 , or the hand of arrel, and would havea disl “anknown woman andhttle s pollisi 9 8 ; gust had Farsod, ~ No, 8 “wlvic os Sow ths ‘quest, . 0 YE ‘what the freight peaple Lad proper instrlic-. smoke and the earth rent with the thunder. | their achievements as. an Indian warrior | a¥% ‘thought the train had | “front and rear from further: ) s*Av in ail 13 dasa ia bas road, a shop 35 the Fort Wayne day express, i first section of freight No. 73, . going opposit into each ot ] la " C. Smi 0 sided at Crestline, O. freight © Jacksol Tes cd y ¢ 1 known; 0 Ca Mann, postal ¢ rh To in Chicago: H, 8. Allen, postal clerk, reside in Columbina. 0. 1D. £ Hoeks Jostaliclerky resided in Beaver Falls, Pa.; J. D. Patterson, postd] clerk, resided Ma ny 4 Land an girl, * suppose to be from Alliance; O.. In addition to these there are two women whose supposed residence is Espyville, Pa., who are reported missing. : So eet The injured are: Migs # Frank Burk, of Crestline, O.; Joseph Ade, of Upper Sandlisky, 0. 1G. Storkmanve lad of the South Side, Pittsburg; D. D. Rhodes, of Mahoningtown, Pa.;;;W. H.. Brown, of Huntingdon, Indi; ==’ Trekoek, of Massil- lon, O.; M. Armstrong, Noblesville, Ind; J. Earnest, Millville. N. J; Bagoagemaster Williamson; 8. H. Comings, of St. Joe, Mich. A a Z:. FECA TERRIBLE S “0. DeOonikling of A ny, conduéto of the freight and his engineer, A. Bradley, shad instructions fo hold Sir train a the west end. of the Millbrook. two miles this side of the scen 3 ision matil passengertrais’No. 2, Nog and severatifeight trains Sone All had gore by ‘except “sas an hour and » half freightiegniactor or er happened to” disregard” or out has not-been develope: ‘formation obtained fx {ntendent Starr ands % | known till brought out at the Coroner's in- . Thereis no question, however tions, ‘The collision otcurred. on curve nw shallow gully. on a gradedown which the heayy express of 14 cas was rushing at the rate of 45 miles an hour. The crash was a fearful one. The engines mes, recoiled, crashed together aga’n and, rearing up, fell over to one side. Four chy freight cars went on top of them: andthe mail baogage, two exnress and smoking cars ‘of the ‘ex- press piled up on these. Fire broke oub at once and added to the borrible situation. ‘Che passengers injured were ina. passen-. ger conch in the reir of the smoke sith which it partially telescoped. Al ot! baggage, mail and er were de- stroyed by fire. ; Ts "0.1, Walliveber, of Chicago, wasn’ one of the sleepers. Xie says he was partially dwake at the time, and men sligck 15 8 express matt 45 ft the tragic i Then the conductors and porters hnrried throngh, stoning the people gpd advising them to Mr, Walliveber was among the first out and noticing the Tepidity with which the Hames were maki head way, realized that, nnless sontething was speedily done, the en- tire train would be’ y Raising his voice, be called ‘passengers to i d tion of the t had been found impossible {0 sive OF rescue any of those imprisoned inthe ma‘s of wreckage, the heat of the flames having driven all back. : 3 “While the trainmen hurried to guard the. r collisions, the aged’ to Unco] like manner. WOT an: done by the Jurid glare of the burning pile, a verit: able funeral pyre. ~All the bodies but those of the three women and: the litle girl, ‘names unknown, had been recovered, when the passengers wefe removed from the scene, but all 6f the bodies recovered were disfizured by the flames. ahi TRAIN WRECKERS! DEADLY WORK. One of the most destructive train wrecks in the history of the ‘Atchison road took lace two and one-half miles west of Osage Bity, Kansas, on Wednesday morning. It was the work of train wreckers, syhose ob. ject was robbery. | Following are the killed. Bdward Mayer, engineer, of . Topeka Thomas Chaddicks, fireman, of ‘Eopeka; Bloomenthal, express guard; Frank Baxter, express messenger; of Kansas City. Twenty-two persons were more or less seri: ously injured. : 3 The train was the Missouri river night ex: press; from Denver an t San Frandsco. In the pxpress car there was $1,000,000, which was being shipped by the Mexican Central Rail- road Company to its general offices in Bos ton. | The object of the "wreckers was not accomplished; owing to. thed manner ‘ip which the express car was buried by the coaches, that. were: piled up. oniat in general confusion: | Bo nigh was the wreck: ase henped, that it was literally impossible to find the locomotive, let alone the treasure 0X. ALUES SARE SRD OR Several passengers say that they saw sey eral men running for the brush nearby, im: mediately atter the disaster. Officers are scouring. the country im search of ithe wreckers. A COLITSION NFAT FLORIX, PA. A collision oceurred on the . Mount Joy branch of the Pennsylvania railroad, nea) Florin, Pa. botween the Philadelphia ‘ex press, east bou id, and the Pacific ' express west bound, resulting in the death of . Fire- mah William Colwell, aged 83 years, of Philadelphia, and the injuring of several others. . The Jews Growing in Numbers. The Jews, says a foreign corresponds: ¢nt, are much ‘more numerous and wealthy to-day than ever before in ‘the history of the world. In the days of the greaiest prosperity and power of the Jewish kingdom under David and Solomon, they probably did not num- bet all told, more than 5,000,000. Now they nuinber considefably more than twice as many. In‘Asia, their original home, thers urs: not more than half a willion, settled in Syria, Persia, Arabia, India and China. Yerhaps half a mile lion more are to be found in Africa, chiefly in Morocco, the descendants of those Jews who, in tho year of Colum. bus! diseovery of America, were. ex. pelled from Spain. A considerable con- tingent is ta be found in America. Bub {he chief mode:n home of the Jews isin Eastern and Central Bur whers they sottfed inthe days of the crusades, At one time the Kingdom of Poland gon- taincd nine-tenthsof all the Jews in the world. Iwo years ago there the Russian Empire, chicfly in rovincos, full 5 0 olish' provinces of Au eve, % 8, and the iT 4 |iattach Fas to their coal mine coal, and ‘before t et his litt] ad set her clothes o | | THE NEw BAL] 3 © regis is d from} & Depa burg. The change is in ac he Attorney - General's recom The Secretary of State gives not by conxmi sin a cireulhl le panying copies of the ballot; that tht Sere beont in Match neo be. tirely disregarded. The tickets aré arrang {under, three heads—1 Republican,” ) and. “By Nomination Pa} pers,’ they Prohibition candidates; coming under the latter head. Another column is ell blank; for names not printed in thebsl- ot. 5 ER (10 patra odor wore LF The application of Daniel McConnell, - an inmate of the alfifliouse at: Hollidaysburg, ohave hip Ge ters rp let, was denied in court. The cours held that ingts arc} £aftIeas fanthisey § ‘atally’inj uretl by the explosion i owed when Soh fo eplosioy t Stove. ? » Ge k Sy inate EE y sete burned inthe. on heirs at. Car “nie isle, Lipwarp Parrrrr, of Mt. Pleasa sede Ba hot'and, dean, Gan } pel Ca : Jus Troxesox, of Co le a eS Shi was Juuse 82 residing near self in front of a Reading; engine. a mangled to death. Ri By a decree of the Beaver county cotirt SECO a Vek of nd BIS Bea: Aver county ‘Hag heen che fo EMonaca, ho Bete th Pe ly ted name of the postoffice there. : ! .Issxc Harper, of Beaver Fall, was killed atShannopin by a train on the Pittsburg and Lake Erie. yf Tag long:continued drought. in Washing ton'county has made it necessary for the Washington Water Company to shut of ifs Supply £0 CONSUMErs, | in & Ur to date there have been over 250 for- eioners naturalized at the September term of court at Undontown. : : i Foun Italians residing at Wampum, near Beaver Falls, drank freely froma keg of An examination of the keg disclosed in the inside thie deal body, of a Telesnake. The men will recover. © Cee : : Eos pi a it Sea 3 ®'Ohio’ au orif es to-day : stationed qi 2 Oliig, ufo t Smith's Ferryl "They Have built a hospital there for any. possible. ana case of cholera: : Frank Lanor, a resident'of Hahntown, a suburb of Irwin, was killed by a fall of Slate. "ITE wad 50 veArs'old and married.” A Yonse took fright mear Fairbanks, the oceupants.of the bugey, to which he was, ad. being thrown out. dara Lytle killed and Henry Waddle fatally “in- Juredie Gs sel tie oy a Ar New Castle on Saturday a committee in ianacy in the cuse of Warmer «Adams; who was convicted of placing ties on the Xt. Wayne. xailroad, decided that Adams iy suffering from acute insanity. : Tue Washington Heview and \Eraminer, ed:publications «ov. aan Mar Washington Glass Conipany, of Washington, have decided to remove its bottle works to Indiana, where free gas 1 offered. APR a TTS ETE TS aa Ns ROCKAWAY BEACH IN TiN&. Fire Destroys the Principal Buildings | of the Resort. [A Women Loses: Her 'Y.ifs in the Disaster. The Loss Over $1,000,000. «vl : The largest conflagration that ever ogeur- red ‘on the Tiong Island coast destroyed over 100 frame buildings at Rockaway Beach and loft about 160 acres a1 a3 £ yung. The main portion of this, famo . Symmer resort has been completely wiped out. Beaside avenue from the Long Island ; rails way tracks, and about half a mile borth from Seaside ayenue. © ou A : Cs Phié principal losses are: Grand Ocean Hotel, Murra & Doty, $11,000; Grand. Re- public, $8,000, . owned by Morrison; Rar. chell’s grocery store. $10,000; Phillip's New rk. Hotel, + $10,000; Meissner's Hotel, 000; ‘Krauser’s Hotel, $7,000, m0 insur- ance, ] the Globe Hote, ‘Garrison's. bakery,” the Ooltimbus House: Simpson's: Hotel, = the Iron Pier and -bathing. Pavilion, Schubert's Hotel, Seaman's Hotel, the Williamsburg Hotel, St. James Hotel, Albemarle Hotel, “five 'aapartient Hons electric light “plant, Hotel Stuttgart, ; nit bathing pavilion. The total Lo j The tire is sup to be A Clever Swiudle, “There are mon who will do anything Tor money bub éarnit,” observed a trav- olen. the tricks of fakedom, but a new ong was sprang on me the other day. I way ‘coming out of Pes Moines on the east- bound train, and just as we cleared thre: city limits the engineer discovered a man lying on the track. He: slowed up and the conductoravent forward to sce what was the matter. The fellow said out of work, was sick and tired 0 tramping and wanted to die. The eon-. ductor told him to gel aboard and he would give him a litt of 2 few miles did go;. and of course at once be 0B se ‘Acors all thie year around: it would be ‘An Jeknstown, Mrs. Thomps J.arkin was 4 at fol- | and farming implements. "down the’side of the skirt an EE, of Me, Pleasant, while J ARTE MEY | {on “edges, held in place by ‘a jet ngrafe. The tulle is so arranged as to fall ‘a little over | owned by James H. Hopkins, has suspend-' | ‘affected, and turbans of all styles will bein | wal. some cone-shaped and som cated cong ‘The ultra fas The burned district inchudes both sides of | © other places destroyed include’ ¥ Wainright & Smith's: “1 thought I was familiar with alli or them and better for those who grumble ‘Bheir presence; Children arc like birds— TAL crEPOY TORLA CHUD never tire of listening to them sed doors these shrill little notes are apt 1 t ad : our : Dp; and skirt are joined, and ¢ by a ribbon belt. The corsage is crossed ch continue the bottom of the skirt. The 1k or satinettd. © I tourist's shape is ng traveling hat sh Jt is of English straw garnitured | with a veil of blagk tulle with ‘embroidered |: A TRAVELING MAT. the briri, as indicated. At the back there is'an aigrette of black feathers. i A very stylish round hat is pictured in the illustration. The brint is turned up on one side, and is trimmed with black lace, On the left there is a wired lace butterfly | and ‘aigretle. | The crown is of orehids. This fall the Inglish ‘walking hat will, be mu vogue, particularly those with low square. crown and the brim turned up of nearly ¢ equal width, The walking hats will have |.J creased or indented erowns, Toques will be be content with anything: stove-pipe crown, a style, by the way, not becoming to all faces, Plain cut velvet will | enter largely in all kat garniture, and glace'| - ‘sor changeable effects will be popular. Col ors will be rich and elegant, and there will) AE N A BTYLISH ROT he lived in Chicago, was out of money, & forehead and you take th 2,000,000, {n. Germany 750,000, aed United States 1,000,000, iyid tints oppy feds, 0 modish will be. buckles and « Exench gold set with mock sq becoming to | he scheme is artistic tN, 1 divide th ‘entire head strands, right side is | 1 ig the |. wn in the pic}. | a 420i Nog eTTl; New : PLOUR Fancy winter pa Igo Spring. BncyStraight Fa : M 2 FN 0.2 White No.3 White T—No, sre sadn ; NEW: YORK, FLOUR—Patents ? WH Yo, 2ded
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers