Greenfield Evening Republican, Greenfield, Hancock County, 11 November 1895 — Page 4
BELSHAZZAR'S FEAST
REV. DR. TALMAGE PREACHES ON THE HANDWRITING ON THE WALL.
leatoiis rixw it Da liquet of -i. X!it £j1donneH of God'n Jurtpnfnts—A Word of
Warning .ii Echo of the (.
-y*. Nov. 10.—o.iice his
ooming to Washington Dr. Talmage's pulpit experience has been a remarkable one. Not only has the church in which he preaches been filled, but the audiences have overflowed into the adjoining Streets to an extent that has rendered them impassable. Similar scenes were -enacted at today's services, when the jmeacher took for his subject, "Handwriting on the. Wall." the text chosen being Daniel v, 8\ "In that right was
Belshazzar, the king of the Chaldeans, slain." Night was about to come down on Babylon. The shadows of her 250 towers bffr.n to lengthen. The Euphrates rolled on, touched by the fiery splendors of the setting f.un, and gates of brass, burnished and glittering, opened and ahnt like doors of flame. The hanging gardens of Babylon, wet with the heavy dew, began to pour from starlit flowers and dripping leaf a fragrance for many miles around. The streets and squares were lighted for dance and frolic and promenade. The theaters and galleries of art invited the wealth and pomp and grandeur of the city to rare entertainments. Sconce of riot and wassail were xuingled in every street, and godless mirth and outrageous excess and splendid wickedness came to the king's palace to do their mightiest deeds of darkness.
A royal least tonight at the king's palace! Rushing up to the gates are chariots, upholstered with precious cloths from Dedan, and drawn by fire eyed linrpeR from Togarmah, that rear and neigh in the grasp of the charioteers, while a thousand lords dismount, and women, dressed in all the splendors of Syrian emerald, and the color blending of agate, and the chasteness of coral, and the somber glory of Tyrian purple and princely embroideries, brought from afar by camels across the desert and by .ships of Tiirshish across the sea.
Tlio Guests Assemble.
Open wide the gates and let the guests come in.
rihe
chamberlains and cup-
hearers are till ready. Hark to the rustle of the silks, and to the carol of the music! See the blaze of the jewels! Lift the banners. Fill the cups. Clap the cymbals. Blow the trumpets. Let the Bight go by with song and dance and I ovation, and let that Babylonish tongue be palsied that will not say, "O King Belshazzar, live forever!"
Ah, my friends, it was not any com- I inon banquet to which these great peopie came! All parts of the earth had sent their richest viands to that table, Brackets and chandeliers flashed their 'light upon tankards of burnished gold. Fruits, ri'e and luscious, in baskets of silver, cnivr.ned with leaves, plucked from ivy.i.!
i.evvatories.
Vases, inlaid
with emcr?.H "-'1 ridged with exquisite traceries, tilled with nuts that were threshed from forests of distant lands. Wine brought from the royal vats, foamiiig in the decanters and bubbling in the chalices. Tuiis of cassia and frankincense wafting their sweetness from wall and table. Gorgeous banners unfolding in the breeze that came through the open window, bewitched with the perfumes of hanging gardens. Fountains rising up from ivfln^pvps of ivory, in jets of crys„tal, to fall in clattering rain of diamonds and pear is. btatues of mighty men looking down from niches in the wall upon crowns and shields brought from subdried empires. FHls of wonderful work standing on pedestals of precious stones,
Embroideries stooping about the win dows and Yvii'.ppjng pillars of cedar and prejudice against it. drifting on floor inlaid with ivory and agate. Music, mingling the thrum of ..liarps, and the clash of cymbals, and the •blast of trumpets one wave of transport that went rippling along the wall and breathing among the garlands and pouring down the corridors, and thrilling the souls of a thousand banqueters.
The signal is given, and the lords and
ladies, the mighty men and women of black it was at the last! the land, come around the table. Pour out the wine. Let foam and bubble kiss .the rim Hoist every one his cup and drink to tho sentiment, "O King Belv. shazzar, live forever!" Bestarrcd headband and carcanetof royal beauty gleam to the upliited chalices, as again, and again, and again they are emptied.
Away with caro from the palace! Tear *-royal dignity to tatters! Pour out more wine 1 C^ive us more light, wilder music, sweeter perfume! Lord shouts to lord, captain ogles to captain. Goblets clash decautei .("tie. There come in the objv^scene song, and the drunken hiccough, and the hindering lip, and the guffaw of idiotic lankier, bursting from the lips of prime.-*, fl ashed, reeling bloodshot, *?'while mirgling with it all I lxar, "Huzza, hr/.za, for great Belshazzar!" fe, Seen on the Wall.
What is that on the plastering of the -wall? Is it a spirit? Is it a phantom? Is it God? Tho music stops. The goblets fall from tho nerveless grasp. There is a thrill. There is a start. There is a thoueand voiced shriek of horror. Let Daniel be brought in to read that writing. Ho comes in. He reads it, "Weighed in the balance and found wanting."
Meanwhile tho Medes, who for two years had been laying siege to that city, took advantage of that carousal and came in. I hear the feet of the conquerors on the palace stairs. Massacre rushes in with Si thousand gleaming knives. Death bursts upon the scene, and I shut the door of that banqueting hall, for I do not want to look. There is nothing there bat torn banners, and broken -wreaths, and the slush of upset tankards, and the blood of murdered women, and the kicked and tumbled caroass of a dead king. For "in that night was Belshazzar, the king of the Chaldeans, slain,"
I go on to learn some lessons from all Jthia. I Jearn that wheg.Gfid writes any-
thing on the wall a man had better read it as it is. Daniel did not misinterpret or modify the handwriting on the wall. It is all foolishness to expect a minister of the gospel to preach always things that the people 1 rr people choove. Young m-?n of V/^-'hirtftcn. what rhsll I prcr.ch i. of the dignity of human nature? Sk'-'iJ I toll ywti \t "... oT:r ha" ~3a "Teil djo i.!.o Oiiuie iro.u I God." I will. If there is any handwriting on the wall, it is this lesson: "Bepent! Accept of Christ and be saved!"
I might talk of a great many other things, but that is the message, and to I declare it. Jesus never flattered those to whom he preached. He said to those who did wrong and who were offensive in hit sight: "Ye generation of vipers! Yc whited fepulchrr?! How can ye escape tiio damnation of hell!" Paul the apostle preached be'nre a man who was not ready to hear him preach. What snb-„ ject did ho take? Bid ho say, "Oh, you area good man, a very fine man, a very nobleman!1" No. He preached of righteousness to a man who was unrighteous, of temperance to a man who was a victim of hud appetites, of the judgment to come to a man who was I unfit for it. So we must always declare the message that happens to come to us.
Daniel must read it as it is. A minister preached before James I of England, who was James VI of Scotland. What I subject did he take? The king was noted all over the world for being unsettled and wavering in his ideas. What did the minister preach about to this man who was James I of England and James VI of Scotland? He took for his text James i, 6: "He that wavereth is like a wave of the sea driven with the wind and tossed." Hugh Latimer offended the king by a sermon he preached, and the king said, "Hugh Latimer, come and apologize." "I will," said Hugh
Latimer. So the day was appointed, and the king's chapel was full of lords and dukes and the mighty men and women of the country, for Hugh Latimer was to apologize H6 began his sermon by sayiug: "Hugh Latimer, bethink thee! Thou art in the presence of thine earthly king, who can destroy thy body. But bethink thee, Hugh Latimer, that thou art in the presence of the king of heaven and earth, who can destroy both body and soul in hell fire. Then he preached with appalling directness at the king's crimes.
A Ghastly Banquet.
Another lesson that comes to us tonight—there is a great difference beween the opening of tho banquet of s:n and its close. Young man, if you had looked in upon the banquet in the first few hours, you would have wished yon had been invited there and could sit at the feast. "Oh, tho grandeur of Belshazzar's feast!" you would have said, but you look in at the close of the banquet and your blood curdles with horror. The king of terrors has there a ghastlier banquet. Human blood is the wine and dying groans are the music, Sin has made itself a king in the earth, It has crowned itself. It has spread a banquet. It invites all tho -world to come to it. It has hung in its banqueting hall the spoils of all kingdoms and the banners of all nations. It has gathered from all music. It has strewn from its wealth tho tables and floors and
arches. And yet how often is that banquet broken up and how horrible is its end Ever and anon there is a liandwriting on the wall. A king falls. A great culprit is arrested. The knees of wickedness knock together. God's judgment, like an armed host, brakes in upon the banquet, and that night is Belshazzar, the king of the Chaldeans, slain.
Here is a young man who says: "I cannot see why they make "such a fuss about the intoxicating cup. Why, it is exhilarating! It makes mo feel well. I can talk better, think better, feel better. I cannot see why people have such a
Here is a man who begins to read loose novels. "They are so charming," he says. "I will go out and see for myself whether all these things are so." He opens tho gate of a sinful life. He goes in. A sinful sprite meets him with her wand. She waves her wand, and it is all enchantment. Why, it seems as if the angels of God had poured out vials of perfume in tho atmosphere. As he walks on he finds the hills becoming more radiant with foliage and the ravines more resonant with tho falling water. Oh, what a charming landscape he sees! But that sinful sprite, with her wand, meets him again, but now she reverses the wand,'and all the enchantment is gone. The cup is full of poison. The fruit turns to ashes. All the leaves of the bower are forked tongues of hissing serpents. The flowing fountains fail back in a dead pool stenchful with corruption. The luring songs become cursos and screams of demoniac laughter. Lost spirits gather about him and feel for his heart and beckon him on with "Hail brother! Hail, blasted spirit, hail I" He tries to get out. Ho conies to the front door where he entered and tries to push it back, but the door turns against him, and in the jar of that shutting door he hears these words, "This night is Belshazzar, the king of the Chaldeans, slain." Sin may open bright as the morning. It ends dark as the night!
An Unexpected Visitor.
I learn further from this subject that death sometimes breaks in upon a banquet. Why did he not go down to the prisons in Babylon? There were people there that would like to have died. I suppose there were men and women in torture in that city who would have welcomed death, but he comes to the palace, and just at the time when the mirth- is dashing to the tiptop pitch, death breaks in at the banquet. We have
1
A few years pass
on, and he wakes up and finds himself in the clutches of an evil habit which he tries to break, but cannot, and he cries out, "O Lord God, help me!" It seems as though God would not hear his prayer, and in an agony of body and soul ho cries oat, "It bitetli like a serpent, and it stingeth like an adder." How bright it was at the start! How
often seen the same thing illustrated. Here is a young man just come from college. He is kind. He is loving. He is enthusiastic. He is eloquent. By one spring he may bound to heights toward which many men have been struggling for years. A profession opens before him. He is established in the law. His friends cheer him. Eminent men encourage him. After awhile you may see him standing in the American senate or moving a popular assemblage by his eloquence, as trees are moved in a whirlwind. Some night he retires early. A fever is on him. Delirium, like a reckless charioteer, seizes the reins of his intellect. Father and mother stand by and seo the tides of his life going out to the great ocean. The banquet is coming to an end. The lights of thought and mirth and eloquence are being extinguished. The garlands are snatched from tho brow. The vision is gone. Death at the banquet 1
We saw the same thing on a larger scale illustrated in our civil war. Our whole nation had been sitting at a national banquet—north, south, east and west. What grain was there but we grew it on our hills? What invention was thero but our rivers must turn tho new whc-el and rattle the strange shuttle? What warm furs but our traders must bring them from the arctic? What fish but our nets must sweep them fcr the markets? What music but it must sing in our halls? What eloquence but it must speak in our senates? Ho, to the national banquet, reaching from mountain to mountain and from sea to sea! To prepare that banquet, the sheepfolds and the aviaries of the country sent their best treasures. The orchards piled up on the table their sweet fruits. The presses burst out with new wines. To sit at that table came tho yeomanry of New Hampshire, and tho lumbermen of Maine, and the Carolinian from the rice plantation, and tho western emigrant from the pines of Oregon, and we were all brothers—brothers at a banquet. Suddenly the feast ended. What meant those mounds thrown up at Chickanuuiija. Sliiloh, Altanta, Gettysburg, South Mountain? What meant those golden grainlields turned into a pasturing ground for cavalry horses? What meant the cornfields gv.llied with the wheels of the heavy supply train? Why those rivers of tears—those lakes of blood? God was angry! Justice must come. A handwriting on tho wall! The nation had been weighed and found wanting. Darkness 1 Darkness! Woe to the north Woe to the south Woe to the east! Wee to the west! Death at the banquet.
Sure
and
Hem oval bale.
Lii o*(.?cr 10 c5»ock berVro
A
SPECIAL BARGAINS
In all departments of our
BIG FURNITURE STORE.
This is a discount sale that discounts, and will save you big money. W'e have too many goods to move, and every one needing furniture this fall should call at once. It will my you to do so. Our Undertaking Department is complete. Service the best. Prices reasonable.
West Main jStreet.
Sudden.
I have also to learn from the subject that the destruction of the vicious and of those who despise God will be very sudden. The wave of mirth had dashed to the highest point when the invading army broke through. It was unexpected. Suddenly, almost always, comes the doom of thooC who despise God and defy the laws of men. How was it at the deluge? Do you suppose i-t carno through a long northeast storm, so that people for days before were sure it was eomin .. No. I suppose the morning was brig] that calmness brooded on the water:: that beauty sat enthroned on the hill -, when suddenly the heavens burst and the mountains sank like anchors into the sea that dashed clear over tho Andes and the Himalayas.
The Red sea was divided. The Egyptians tried to cross it. There could bo no danger. The Israelites had just gone through. Where they had gone, why not the Egyptians? Oh, it was such a beautiful walking place! A pavement of tinged shells and pearls, and on either side two gieat walls of water—solid. There can Tie no danger. Forward, great host of the Egyptians! Clap the cymbals and blow tho trumpets of victory! After them Wo w7i11catch them yet, and they shall be destroyed. But tho walls begin to tremble! They rock! They fall I Thi rushing waters! The shriek of drowning men The swimming of the war horses in vain for the shore! The strewing of the great host on the bottom of tho sea, or pitched by the angry wave on tho beach—a battered, bruised and loathsome wreck! Suddenly destruction came. One half hour before they could not have believed it. Destroyed, and without remedy.
I am just setting forth a fact, which you have noticed as well as I. Ananias comes to the apostle. The apostle says, "Did you sell the land for so much?" He says, "Yes." It was a lie. Dead, as quick as that 1 Sapphira, his wife, comes in. "Did you sell the land for so much?" "Yes." It was a lie, and quick as that she_ was. dead 1 Gpd's judgments aro
56-A-.
a
--I a—
i\i
ii.k. tu our ttrVv r« win
J. H. ROTTMAN,
oil
upon those who despise ftlrn ana deiy him. They come suddenly. Words of Warning:.
The destroying angel went through Egpyt. Do you suppose that any of the people knew that he was coming? Did they hear the flap of his great wing? No! No! Suddenly, unexpectedly, he came.
Skilled sportsmen do not like to shoot a bird standing on a sprig near by. If they are skilled, they pride themselves on taking it on the wing, and they wait till it starts. Death is an old sportsman and he loves to take men flying under the very sun. He loves to take them on the wing. Oh, flee to God this night! If there be one in this presence who has wandered far away from Christ, though he may not have heard the call of the gospel for many a year, I invite him now to come and be saved. Flee from thy sin! Flee to the stronghold of the gospel Now is the accepted time. Now is the day of salvation.
Good night, my young friends may you have rosy sleep, guarded by him who never slumbers May you awake in the morning strong and well! But, oh, art thou a despiser of God? Is this thy last night on earth Shouldst thou bo awakened in the night by something, thou knowest not what, and there be ehadows floating in the room, and a handwriting on the wall, and you feel that your last, hour is come, and there be a fainting at the heart, and a tremor in the limb, and a catching of the breaui •-then thy doom would be but an echo
of the words of the text: "In that night was Belshar.zar, the king of the Chaldeans, slain.:'
Oh, that my Lord Jesus would now make himself so attractive to your souls that you cannot resist him, and if you have never prayed before "or have net prayed since those days when you knelt down at your morlu v's knee, then that tonight yon might: pi ay. .aying:
Just as I am. witlior.i* one k-a But that tisj
IjIoocI
v.'iis shod ior ino
And that thou Lii.ls.-i mo come to tlioc, O nnh of God: But if you cannot think of so long a prayer as that. I will give you A shorter prayer that you can say, "God be merciful to me, a sinner!" Or, if you cannot think of so long a prayer as thtit, I will give you a still shorter one that you may utter, "Lord save me or I perish Or, if that be too long a prayer, you need not make it. Use the word "help!" Or, if that be too long a word, you need not use any word at all. Just look and live!
KXCUK^ION'S SOU1H.
Lower Kates to Atlanta via IJc»jKirlvauia .Lines.
Three forms of excursion tickets to Atlanta account the Cotton States Exposition are fcr sale via Pennsylvania Lints. One ticket is gocd returning twenty days from date of sale, another is good for return trip until Jan. 7, 189G. and a third gyed returning ten days. Twenty daytickets and those good to return until Jan. 7 may be obtained any time during the exposition. The ten day tickets will he scld only on Oct. 26, Nov. 5, 15, and and Dec. 5 and 16, at special low rates. Ti.e fare is exceptionally ciuap. For de il J'pply to Loarest tick* agent of ivania Lines. d&wtf
Vlorlda and Southeast.
If ycu any intention of going to
the South-:,.!-t
this fall or winter, you
should advi.' yourself of the best route from the Nouh a-id West. This is the Louisville atui Nashville Railroad, which is running doubh tlaily trains from St. Louia, Evansville, Louisville and Cincinnati through to Nashville, Chattanooga, Birmingham, Atlanta, Montgomery, Thomasville, Pensacola, Mobile, Jacksonville and all Florida points. Pullman Sleeping Car Service through. Specially low rates made to Atlanta during the continuance of the Cotton States exposition, amd tourist rates to all points in Florida and Gulf Coast resorts during the season. For particulars as to rates and through car service, write, Jackson Smith, Div. Pass, Agent, Cincinnati, 0. Geo. B. Horner, Div. Pass. Agent, St. Louis, Mo. J. K. Ridgely, N. W. Pass. Agent, Chicago, 111. P. Atmore. Genl. Pass. Agent, Louisville, Ky sept21d-wtf
The fez or red cap universally worn by the Turks is so called because it was first made at Fezzan in the Sahara. The fez is a woolen or felt cap, red and without a visor.
1895 November. 1895
So. Ho. TH. We. Th. Fr. 8a.
1
3 4 5 6 7 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 se 31 22 23 34 2* 28 27 28 29 30
The Philadelphia
Pennsylvania's Foremost Newspaper.
Daily Circulation
OVER
160,000 COPIES.
Sunday Circulation
OVER
120.OOOGOPIE3.
"The Record" spares no expense to collect the very latest news of the World for its readers, and has special departments edited by experts on
HEALTH and HYGEINE, EAR.1VT and HOUSEHOLD, FASHIONS, SCIENCE, ART, LITERATURE, SPORTS, THE TURE, etc.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES.
Mailed postage paid to any part oi the United States or Canada.
Paily'_Edition, 25c per month Daily 'and Sundaj^ 35c per month
Daily Edition, $3.00 per year Daily and Sunday, 4.00 per year
ADDRESS
The Record Publishing Co., 917-919 Chestnut St. Philadelphia.
"BIG FOUR
ROUTM TO
ATLANTA.
Cotton] States and International Exposition.
Travelers to the South during the fall and the early pait of the winter teason will have an unusual opportunity of see ing the South at its best advantage. The Atlanta Exposition is the largest exposi tion of its kind in this country, with the exception of the world's fair at Chicago.
HOW TO REACH ATLANTA.
From Chicago, Peoria, Indianapolis, Terre Haute, LaFayette, Benton Harbor and intermediate points, the North and Northwest, the "Big Four" route offers the choice of the two great gaitways to the South—Cincinnati and Louisville. Solid trains with parlor cars, magnificent sleeping cars and dining cars run daily from Chicago and Indianapolis to Cincinnati and Louisville.
From New York, Boston Buffalo, Cleveland. Coiuinbus, Springfield, Sandusky, Dayton and intermediate points, maguifl cent through trains run daily into Cincinnati. All trains of the "Big Four" arrive at Central Union Station, Cincinnati, making direct connections with through trains of the Queen & Crescent louta to Atlanta. Through sleeping cars via the Q. & C. route run directly to Chattanooga, tiaence via Southern railway to Atlanta. Many points of historical interest as well as beautiful scenery may be enjoyed enroute. Of these Chickam&nga National Park nud. Lookout Mountain at Chattanooga are foremost, and should be visited by everyone on the way ta Atlauta.
For full information as to rates, routes, time ©f trains, etc. call on or address any agent Big Four Route.
D.B.MARTIN
Gen'l Pass. & Ticket Agt.
E. O. M'CORMICK, Pass. Traffic Mgr. 41t8
A Yellowstone ParkTrlp
Will do more to over come that feeling of lassitude or laziness which ever you prefer to call it than all the medicine in the apothecary's shop. Get out of the harness for awhile take a lay off and [go to the park and become renewed in body and mind. See the geysers play, hear the paint pots pop, the cataracts roar, climb about the canyon walls, catch trout in the Yellowstone lake, take on anew life. Send Chas. S. Fee, General Passenger Agent, Northern Pacific railroad, sia cents for the new and Illustrated Tourist book. I 34t6&d.
Chenp JSxeur*tona tho Bountiful harvests are reported all section! of the west »nd north-^tgf, and an exceptionally favorable oppoiftmnity for home-seekere and tl oam deaiitag a change tf 1 location is offered bj eoriee vi low-rata excursion* »iu'oh bain bee» wrangted by the North W«stq£a L1 a®. Ticket* far these exeats: »•*, witk favoi'-aUie LiUi£ •, mit woid ea August 29th, September 10th and 24th to points in Northern Wisconsin and Michigan North-western Iowa, Western Minnesota, Sooth Dakota, Nebraska, Colorado, Wyoming, Utah and a large number #f other p«ints. For full'information apply to agente of connecting linea, or eddBMS A. H. Waggoner, .T. P. A. 7 Jackjfroa Place, Iadianapolin, Ind.
•ke Befkj Nnntalni
Aloujf th# line of tke Northern Paoiflt KnJkoHd abound in large gam tfooagj de«ar..bear, elk, montain liot *, etc., oab yet be found there. The true sportsman is willing to go there for then A little book called "Natural Game Preserves," published by the Northern PuciHc Rajlroad, will be sent upon receipt of fohr cents in stamps by Charles S. Fee. Gen'l Pass. Agent, St. Paul, Minn. 15W
COTTON STATW IXI OSH JOlf,!
Atlanta, «a. S«-pt.l8,Dec 31, 1SS5 The schedule printed below is a comprehensive guide to the shortest opd quickest route to Atlanta from the N«|ih and N rihw*si-, Ci icago, Indianajftms, Terre Haute and Evausville,
P.-i'.nce Day Coache.- und Pullman Sleeping Cars are attached to nil trains shdwn in this schedule.
Extremely low ratis hti\e hem made to Atlanta and return, via tie Nashville, Chattanooga and St* Li uis Railway. All trains run solid between Nashville a?d Atlanta. The train in last column, which leaves Cincinnati at 4:30 P. M., runs solid to Atlanta. This is the route of the ftmious "Dixiw Flyer" through "all the year round" sleeping car line between Nashville, Tenn., and Jacksonville, Fla.
'd'i?. xt ir. v. T. TGOW
-CO-PH I TT I"~ !O Cl I-
2
a. |oo t-
v. 9.
bo®
O
.2
35*3
55
Oet. 21-d&w-tf
5
I I I
sss 1
I
3^
coo
^1-
jjM
sees!
TP I-
11-
ci co
a: ci
7r.t 5H ooc' i-~ ei t~
Pennsylvania.. i'ennsylvania.. Pennsylvania
..
3
t- O
'JCU
2 Is
iii
lit O r-
SSow 'JUG
OOOIS
cc u:
i- I
£55
."t
IT
a! s.2f
a
9
iii .z at 2
02
58 a cs I llll A
2.
lti
t-1 C5
r3 w-E-W f-
5=
-2" -u
For further information addrets Briard F. Hill, Northern Passenger Agent, 32bMarquette Building, Chicago, 111. R. C. Coward in, Western Passenger Agent, 40D Ky. Exchange Building, St. Louis, Mo or D. J. Mullaney, Eastern Passenger Agent, 59 W. Fomth St., Cincinnati, O.
W. L. DAN LEY,
P. & T. A. Nashville, T-nn
vsfsTjfi
$500.00 GUARANTEE. ABSOLUTELY HARMLESS.
Will not in jure hr.nJs or fabric.
No Washboard r.ce!cd, can use hard wat« same as soft. Full Oiroctionr. os every package. Al
8-oz.
package
for cts.
or
6 fur
r5
cts,
Sold by retail grocers everywhere.
1
"When the Hnw H.-.nd"Points to Nine, Have Your Wnshi i~ en tha Line."
tea
ELECTRIC POWER.
DATE
Your News Dealer
1 A MAGAZINE
I
OF POPULAR
ELECTRICAL
1
... SCIENCE.
Subscription,
TRIAL
$2.00 Pen year. 20 CENT3 PEH NUNBCr.
SuaSCRIPTION, 6 Mo 3. $1.00
ELECTRIC POWER,
86 Cortlandt St., New York.
